Manchester United 0-0 Everton: Wayne Rooney plays 53 minutes of his testimonial match as Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Jose Mourinho make Old Trafford bows

  • Manchester United captain Wayne Rooney played 53 minutes of his testimonial match against Everton
  • Both managers named strong teams but neither side could break the deadlock at Old Trafford
  • Rooney raised money for his four chosen charities - the NSPCC, Manchester United Foundation, Alder Hey Children's Charity and Claire House Children's Hospice
  • Jose Mourinho, Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Eric Bailly and Henrikh Mkhitaryan all made their Old Trafford bows

He arrived at Old Trafford 12 years ago this month as a pugnacious teenager. When Wayne Rooney walked out at Old Trafford for his testimonial on Wednesday night, he was the man in every sense.

Captain of Manchester United, captain of his country for now, and father of three boys – Kai, Klay and Kit – who joined him on the walk out of the tunnel to an ovation from the United fans and those of his old club Everton, Rooney has come a long way. He is England’s record scorer and soon to be United’s as well.

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There have been a few bumps along the way, not least the two times when he came close to leaving Old Trafford before signing a new contract, but few would dispute that he has lived up to expectations since making that £30million move from Merseyside in 2004. 

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Manchester United captain Wayne Rooney applauds his fans as he is replaced after 53 minutes of his testimonial match
Rooney (right) is congratulated by Manchester United boss Jose Mourinho as he makes his way off the Old Trafford pitch
Everton midfielder Gareth Barry tries to stop Rooney in his tracks as the two Premier League clubs gear up for the new season
Manchester United teenager Marcus Rashford came off the bench to replace Rooney with 37 minutes still left on the clock
Zlatan Ibrahimovic lets out a roar after squandering a chance to break the deadlock in Rooney's testimonial match

MATCH FACTS 

MANCHESTER UNITED XI (4-2-3-1): De Gea (Romero 66mins); Valencia (Darmian 66), Bailly (Jones 46), Blind (Mata 66), Shaw (Rojo 46); Carrick (Schneiderlin 46), Herrera (Fellaini 46); Lingard (Mkhitaryan 46), Rooney (Rashford 53), Martial (Young 46); Ibrahimovic (Depay 66)

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Subs not used: Johnstone

EVERTON XI (3-5-1-1): Stekelenburg (Robles 46); Funes Mori, Stones, Holgate (Besic 66, Davies 77); Coleman, McCarthy (Kone 66), Barry (Cleverley 66), Barkley (Oviedo 66), Baines (Lennon 66); Deulofeu (Mirallas 47); Lukaku (Gibson 66)

Subs not used: Galloway, Hewelt

Referee: Michael Oliver

As an occasion to celebrate more than a decade of goals and glory, this was perhaps not the most thrilling of nights. But Rooney the fierce competitor would have welcomed the fact that both United and Everton treated the game as a full-scale warm-up for the new season as they fielded strong line-ups and cancelled each other out in a game of few chances.

Jose Mourinho’s team face champions Leicester in the Community Shield at Wembley on Sunday ahead of the start of the new Premier League season, and it was an opportunity for him to give the senior players who missed the club’s tour of China another run-out following Saturday’s win over Galatasaray in Gothenburg.

It meant home debuts for new signings Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Eric Bailly, with Henrik Mkhitaryan coming on as a second-half substitute. Mourinho, too, was making his first appearance in the Old Trafford dugout, having sidestepped the task of coaching an England XI here at Soccer Aid in June after his appointment was confirmed.

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The Portuguese coach stood in the technical area for most of the match but, interestingly, kept returning to a seat at ground level alongside his backroom staff, preferring the viewpoint they had at Chelsea to the elevated dugout at Old Trafford.

Everton also used the game as serious preparation for the new season with their new manager Ronald Koeman naming a strong line-up following their involvement in the Dresden Cup last weekend.

John Stones played at the heart of back-three but is likely to become a more permanent fixture in Manchester if City can strike a compromise deal with Everton for the England defender. Koeman could lose another player for the start of the season if a second-half injury to substitute Muhamed Besic is as bad as it first appeared. 

Everton defender John Stones and summer signing Maarten Stekelenburg exchange words during the friendly encounter
Everton striker Romelu Lukaku, who has been linked with a return to Chelsea, outmuscles Michael Carrick during the clash 
Substitutes Marouane Fellaini and Ashley Young keep a close eye on Everton and England midfielder Ross Barkley

Rooney was given a rousing welcome by the crowd of 58,597 who were aware that all the proceeds are going to children’s charities. It was a good turnout considering the game was being shown live on BT Sport and was also the first match between two Premier League clubs to be streamed on Facebook.

He lined up in the No 10 role he will occupy this season behind Ibrahimovic who described the United captain as the ‘perfect partner’ before kick-off. They scored three of United’s five goals against Galatasaray, and Rooney duly supplied the passes that gave the Swede his only two openings here.

The first was fired straight at Maarten Stekelenburg from a tight angle, and easily parried by Everton’s new goalkeeper. The second, after Ibrahimovic brought down Rooney’s cross and slipped past Stones, was again too close to Stekelenburg who came out to block. 

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Luke Shaw also went close with a fierce attempt from the edge of the box which took a slight deflection off Stones as it hurtled just wide of the post, and the lack of chances underlined the intent of both teams to treat this as a serious warm-up for the new season rather than an exhibition game.

Everton’s best chances arrived either side of half-time. Ross Barkley was denied by David de Gea after the ball ran into his path 20 yards from goal when Romelu Lukaku’s shot was blocked. Lukaku headed just wide from Seamus Coleman’s cross and Kevin Mirallas, one of a raft of half-time changes, fired into the side-netting from a promising position soon after the restart.

Rooney departed in the 53rd minute to make way for Marcus Rashford and spent the rest of the game watching from the bench alongside his oldest son Kai.

At the final whistle he addressed the crowd from the centre circle, thanking Everton before telling the home supporters: ‘I’d just like to say to the Manchester United fans I’ve spent 12 great years here with plenty of success, and hopefully more to come.’ 

Everton defenders Leighton Baines and Ramiro Funes Mori (right) close down United new boy Henrikh Mkhitaryan
Both sets of players form a guard of honour for Rooney as he walks out of the Old Trafford tunnel with his three sons
Rooney was joined by his three sons - Kit (pictured in his arm), eldest son Kai and Klay - before the match at Old Trafford
The 30-year-old acknowledges the Old Trafford crowd as Premier League official Michael Oliver looks on from the distance
Kai Rooney watches the action from Manchester United's dugout as he keeps a close on his dad during the first half
Rooney's wife Coleen was also at Manchester United's stomping ground to cheer on her husband and his team-mates
Ibrahimovic, who joined United on a free transfer from Paris Saint-Germain, made his home debut for the Red Devils
Portuguese tactician Mourinho stands on the Old Trafford touchline for the first time as Manchester United manager
The ex-Chelsea boss, who replaced Louis van Gaal as United boss at the end of May, signs his autograph onto a programme
Mourinho and his trusted coaching staff were forced into forming a temporary managerial dugout due to the amount of subs
Supporters turned up in their numbers to support Rooney and his four chosen charities - the NSPCC, Manchester United Foundation, Alder Hey Children's Charity and Claire House Children's Hospice
Mourinho (centre) walks around the Old Trafford pitch with Manchester United's current first-team stars
Rooney (left) addresses the Old Trafford crowd following the goalless draw between Manchester United and Everton