Wayne Rooney Net Worth, Earnings 2014: How Much Does Man United, England Player Make?

Wayne Rooney is one of England’s most recognized players today.
Wayne Rooney Net Worth, Earnings 2014: How Much Does Man United, England Player Make?
Wayne Rooney of Manchester United celebrates scoring the opening goal during the Barclays Premier League match between Manchester United and Reading at Old Trafford on March 16, 2013 in Manchester, England. (Michael Regan/Getty Images)
6/19/2014
Updated:
6/19/2014

Wayne Rooney is one of England’s most recognized players today.

Rooney, or “Wazza,” as he is known colloquially, first rose to prominence in the football scene as a 16-year-old youngster at Everton. In 2002, Rooney became Everton’s younger ever goalscorer at age 16, and at 17, he made his first senior international debut for England.

Two years later, he was poached by Manchester United in a £25.6 million ($43.6 million), and has since gone on to score 216 goals in 442 appearances for the Red Devils.

Rooney’s net worth is $125 million, according to CelebrityNetworth. He currently makes $23.4 million as of June 2014, and is the 43rd highest paid athlete in the world, according to Forbes

Wazza makes $18.4 million from salary and winnings, and $5 million from endorsements.

Check out an AP article on England’s World Cup 2014 match against Uruguay.

Suarez Returns From Injury, Rooney Pressure Mounts

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — With their World Cup fates already in jeopardy, Uruguay and England will be counting on their unpredictable strikers to revive their campaigns in Sao Paulo on Thursday.

Luis Suarez is preparing to return from Uruguay’s treatment room and hoping his scoring abilities have not been impeded by injury. Wayne Rooney, England’s one-time teenage prodigy, will be seeking to prove his critics wrong by finally scoring at the pinnacle of international football.

Uruguay and England desperately need their star forwards to deliver after both teams made a losing start to their World Cup campaigns.

England was seen as a gallant loser in Group D on Saturday, showing a real willingness to attack but still going down 2-1 to Italy. On the same day, Uruguay, a favorite after reaching the 2010 semifinals, was unexpectedly ripped apart in a 3-1 defeat by Costa Rica.

Suarez was forced to endure Uruguay’s desolation from the bench, but has declared himself fit following knee surgery, and will be eager to make an impression on the tournament.

A controversial figure, the Liverpool striker has caused outrage in England for incidents that led to two lengthy bans, one for racism and the other for biting an opponent. Before those, Suarez was condemned at the 2010 World Cup for a cynical handball on the goal-line that allowed Uruguay to advance to the semifinals.

Liverpool teammate Daniel Sturridge, who could be leading England’s strike force, wouldn’t break the rules like that.

“We don’t like to cheat to win. We want to play in an honest way,” Sturridge said in response to a general question about Uruguay. “I’m going to do anything in my power to win this game, provided it’s within the rules of the game, but I’m not going to dive and I’m not going to handball a goal shot because it’s not in my nature.”

Sturridge is one of six Liverpool players on England’s 23-man squad. Suarez contributed 31 goals as Liverpool mounted an unexpected Premier League title challenge before finishing second.

“I know all the players in the England squad either because they’re my teammates or because I’ve faced them,” Suarez said. “They have some defensive flaws we can exploit.”

It didn’t need intelligence from Suarez for coach Oscar Tabarez to know that. For all the English were stirring in attack against Italy, they looked susceptible in a defense lacking tournament veterans. Video analysis of Suarez and his teammates has been on the agenda at the England camp this week.

How sharp Suarez will be in front of goal, though, remains uncertain after more than a month on the sidelines. Uruguay could be left relying on Diego Forlan, who was voted the 2010 World Cup’s top player but is now 35, and Edinson Cavani, who cost Paris Saint-Germain $84 million last year but could only score a penalty against a Costa Rica side ranked 28th in the world.

Perhaps Uruguay’s fixation on the progress of Suarez’s recovery is only matched by England’s concern over Rooney’s failure to score now at a third World Cup. Shunted out of position on the left wing, Rooney was denied his favored central role by Daniel Sturridge.

Amid scrutiny from pundits, players and managers, England midfielder Frank Lampard lamented the fact that a “furor has been built up around” Rooney.

“Take Wayne’s name away and you look at his performance and his work rate and the ball he put in for the goal and people might look at it differently,” Lampard said Tuesday. “Here we are dwelling on something we don’t need to look for. It’s about a team performance ... so I think we do need to drop the agenda and look at the team.”

Rooney was spotted training with the backup players on Monday, which was interpreted in British newspapers as a sign he could be dropped against Uruguay. The Manchester United forward maintained on Tuesday that he was just putting in extra scoring practice.

“I said from the start I want to do everything I can to make sure I’m ready for these World Cup games and as part of that I was doing extra training a week before the squad joined up,” Rooney wrote on Facebook. “That’s exactly what I did yesterday, my own extra training because that’s what I wanted to do.”

Now Rooney has a point to prove at the Itaquerao Stadium in Sao Paulo. Just like Suarez.

Larry Ong is a New York-based journalist with Epoch Times. He writes about China and Hong Kong. He is also a graduate of the National University of Singapore, where he read history.
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