Rooney excited by 'fearless' England
Wayne Rooney will make his final farewell as England's greatest ever goalscorer in a friendly against the United States on Thursday, but is excited at what a young squad can achieve under "fearless" coach Gareth Southgate in the years to come.
Rooney, 33, made the last of his 119 international appearances midway through England's World Cup qualifying campaign two years ago.
In contrast to his prime when a "golden generation" disappointed at tournaments and never made it beyond the quarterfinals, Southgate's charges surpassed expectations by making it to the semifinals of a World Cup for the first time in 28 years.
"Fearless," said Rooney when asked what set Southgate apart from the five England managers he played under. "Because a lot of the other managers didn't really give the youth the opportunity to express themselves and come into the team and have an impact."
Rooney insisted he has no regrets on retiring from international football a year before the World Cup, but admitted even he was surprised at how quickly Southgate's squad matured into contenders to be world champions.
"I saw over two years ago the talent we had with the young players," he added. "I believed those players, maybe not in the World Cup but the one after that, would be good enough to have a go at it. They proved me wrong by doing so well in this World Cup."
England carried on the momentum from their World Cup campaign by inflicting Spain's first competitive defeat on home soil for 15 years in a thrilling 3-2 victory in Seville last month. Should Luis Enrique's men fail to bounce back with victory in Croatia on Thursday, England will have the chance to progress to the inaugural Nations League semi-finals by beating the Croats at Wembley on Sunday.
However, the long-term target remains success at Euro 2020 with the extra incentive of the semi-finals and final to be played at Wembley. "I'm of the opinion the squad is growing, getting better. I'm excited to see them in the next tournament."
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