England's Wayne Rooney applauds the fans at the end of the game. (Reuters)
Rooney will remain England captain, Allardyce says
Rooney, 30, took over as captain from Steven Gerrard in 2014 and is on course to become England’s most-capped outfield player
Manchester United striker Wayne Rooney will stay on as England skipper under new manager Sam Allardyce.
“Wayne has been an excellent captain for England and the manner in which he has fulfilled the role made it an easy decision for me to ask him to continue,” Allardyce told the FA website (www.thefa.com) on Monday.
Rooney, 30, took over as captain from Steven Gerrard in 2014 and is on course to become England’s most-capped outfield player.
If he plays in the World Cup qualifier against Slovakia on Sunday, the forward will be making his 116th international appearance, overtaking David Beckham.
Only former goalkeeper Peter Shilton (125) won more England caps.
“Wayne’s record speaks for itself,” said Allardyce who took over last month after England crashed out of the European Championship in the round of 16. “He is the most senior member of the squad and is hugely respected by his peers.
“All of these factors point toward him being the right choice to lead the team.”
Rooney said earlier this month that he would make himself available for England through to the 2018 World Cup in Russia and would then decide on his international future.
Also Read
Editor's Choice
-
US-led effort to boost Lebanon’s army emerges as key pillar of Hezbollah disarmament Middle East 04 June ,2026 -
US, Iran send mixed signals on potential deal after latest attacks Middle East 28 May ,2026 -
Al Arabiya obtains final draft of preliminary US-Iran memorandum of understanding Middle East 25 May ,2026 -
Saudi position on Palestinian issue remains unchanged: Source Saudi Arabia 25 May ,2026