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Wayne Rooney launches new side hustle as Man Utd legend and BBC pundit releases statement

Wayne Rooney launches new side hustle as Man Utd legend and BBC pundit releases statement

The Irish Sun2 days ago
WAYNE ROONEY has celebrated the launch of a new post-playing side hustle.
The Manchester United and England legend delved into the punditry and management worlds after bringing the curtain down on his glittering playing career.
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Wayne Rooney has dabbled in management and punditry since retirement
Credit: GETTY
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Wazza has recently launched 'The Wayne Rooney Show' podcast with the BBC
Credit: INSTAGRAM@BBCSPORT
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The 39-year-old officially launched the podcast at the special Beeb event on Friday
Credit: PA
But Wazza can now officially call himself a podcaster after teaming up with the BBC to launch 'The Wayne Rooney Show.'
The 39-year-old and his wife, Colleen, celebrated the launch of his new venture on Friday at a special BBC event.
Rooney proudly posted a snap of himself with his other half at the shindig to his Instagram late last night.
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His accompanying caption read: "Great event last night celebrating the start of a new football season with @bbcsport and the launch of my new podcast, The Wayne Rooney Show!
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"Episode 1 is out now, available on @bbciplayer, @bbcsport YouTube, and @bbcsounds."
Rooney talked about his ill-fated spell in charge of Birmingham City, who he managed for just 83 days, in the first episode of his new show.
And he didn't mince his words when talking about the viral clip of Blues minority owner Tom Brady questioning his "work ethic".
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He said: "I think Tom came in once, which was the day before a game where the days are a little bit lighter anyway.
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Wayne Rooney's record-breaking career
WAYNE Rooney took the football world by storm when he made his debut for 2002 with Everton.
He quickly became the club's youngest-ever goalscorer aged 16 years and 342 days and was named the BBC's Young Sports Personality of the Year.
The striker joined Manchester United in 2004 and spent 13 years at Old Trafford. He went on to make 559 appearances for the Red Devils and scored 253 goals. To this day he is still the club's all-time leading goalscorer.
Following his spell with United, Rooney returned to Everton for a season. He also spent one-season stints with D.C. United and Derby County at the end of his career.
As well as his impressive club career, Rooney is also England's second-highest goalscorer with 53 goals in 120 appearances, behind only Harry Kane.
After hanging up his boots, the England icon turned to a career in management.
He took charge of Derby County in 2020 and managed to just about save the club from relegation from the Championship at the end of his first season.
However, with Derby handed a 21-point deduction the following campaign, he was unable to keep them up again and subsequently left.
Then came a 15-month spell in charge of MLS side D.C. United. He failed to impress during his time in Washington and parted ways with the club at the end of the 2023 regular season.
Rooney was controversially handed the Birmingham job in October 2023, replacing John Eustace with the club doing well and sixth in the Championship table.
However, in 15 games he suffered nine defeats and managed just two wins. He was sacked in January 2024 with Birmingham down in 20th. The club were relegated to League One at the end of the campaign.
He returned to management in May with Plymouth Argyle but managed just five wins in 25 games. The United legend now finds himself out of work once again.
"And I don't think he really understood football that well.
"But what he does understand is, he's a hard worker, we know that."
'I don't think he understood football' - Wayne Rooney hits back at 'unfair' Tom Brady comments questioning work ethic
He added: "Listen, I respect Tom Brady massively.
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"He's one of the greatest, if not the greatest athletes of all time and Birmingham do look like they're getting it right now, which is good.
"And I think what they have done is got the players out that they needed to get out."
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'My life is on hold. It has been a kick in the balls' - Colin Hawkins opens up
'My life is on hold. It has been a kick in the balls' - Colin Hawkins opens up

Irish Daily Mirror

time27 minutes ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

'My life is on hold. It has been a kick in the balls' - Colin Hawkins opens up

His day began in a waiting room, a real-life purgatory. The clock ticked past nine when he took his seat. He recalls the noise of the water cooler; the rise and fall in volume as people passed along the corridor. Otherwise there was silence, which is not an uncommon thing on the seventh floor of the Mater Hospital, where cancer patients get their treatment. Read more: AZ Almaar manager's snappy response to question about Troy Parrott's future Read more: Shock report suggests Manchester United and Liverpool are eyeing up Ireland star And on this sunny Friday morning, this was where Colin Hawkins, one of only 20 Irish footballers to win a medal at an official World Cup event, went to discover if the cancer drug they'd given him would save his life. The clock ticked on. It was just after ten when he left his chair to take in the view from the seventh floor window; Croke Park to the right, Dalymount Park to the left. It was Dayler where Hawkins played when he was 25-years-old and considered the best defender in the League of Ireland. 'You felt invincible,' he says of his days as a professional footballer. But no one ever is. Still, at that stage of his life, the midpoint of a professional career, it is no exaggeration to say he was among the country's healthy elite. Now, as a 47-year-old man, his feelings of invincibility are over. So he sat back down for his appointment and waited, every second feeling like a minute, every minute an hour. Time passed. Time didn't heal. He thought about his upbringing. He was one of ten children, the only one of his siblings to become a professional athlete, a four-times winner of the League of Ireland, later a player with Coventry City in England's Championship, Europe's fifth best attended league. 'I probably took my health for granted,' he says. 'Put it this way, it was a big shock to my nine siblings that I was the one who got so ill. 'It can't be you, you are the sports guy', they said.' But it was him because cancer is a democratic illness. Anyone can be diagnosed with it. A King of England died from it. It doesn't discriminate against rich or poor. 'It is two-and-a-half years since I was first diagnosed,' Hawkins says. 'And the thing you learn about this life is that you don't know when your time is (up). 'I don't feel punished or whatever. It is just unlucky. Still, if you ever want a wake-up call about why you should enjoy every day of your life, go into the Mater every Friday. 'Walk to the seventh floor. Go into the waiting room where you receive your treatment. You are handed a number. A person sits to your left, another to your right. 'I keep asking, 'how is this place so busy? Are more and more people getting cancer than ever before?' Their answer is actually reaffirming. 'No,' they tell me, 'more and more people are surviving.' Colin Hawkins is drawing the positives from life. (Image: ©INPHO/Donall Farmer) By now it was 11am. He still had the ticket in his hand. It resembled a small raffle ticket, a beige colour. He waited and thought back to 2023 when he started to feel unwell. By the time he discovered he had cancer in his blood, the pain became practically unbearable. He subsequently needed surgery on his neck and his back. 'When the myeloma is alive and active, that is when your bones break,' he says matter of factly. 'When it is gone and under control, all that pain is gone.' Good news came. He received stem cell treatment and entered remission. Then terrible news followed. His wife, Elaine, was diagnosed with breast cancer. Telling their three children this news was the hardest day of their lives. Better days came after that. Elaine's treatment worked. She, thankfully, is in remission. Life returned to normal for a while until his old pains resurfaced. He visited Dr O'Gorman in the Mater to review a new drug he had been on for six weeks. 'Your numbers have gone through the roof and your myeloma has gone crazy again,' he was told. 'We need to take you off this drug and get you on a new one.' That was three months ago. He had to check into the hospital that night and ended up staying for a month to see if he could deal with the side-effects of the drug. He got pancreatitis. There is pain and then there is pain. Pancreatitis was hell. But this feeling he had on that Friday morning was way worse, sitting on a blue chair, holding a beige-coloured ticket, staring at the clock, waiting and wondering. If the news was good, if he was told the drug was working, then life would go on. He'd return to work 'to CPM, the best employers in the world who have looked after me while I have been ill'. But if this drug wasn't working, what then? Was there a fifth drug they could try? He hadn't asked. 'Sitting in that room, waiting for that news was the first time I was seriously worried. Three treatments had failed. 'I had my bloods taken the day before. I had scans. As the clock ticked towards noon. I was waiting to be told if my numbers had improved or got worse. 'I have always fought it (his cancer) head on. This was the first time when I realised this was a trial drug; so if this doesn't work then what the hell is the next treatment?' The stem cell transplant he had received was supposed to give him ten years in remission. 'For the cancer to come back after 18 months was kind of unheard of for my age. I was obviously nervous waiting for the result.' Nervous waiting for a result! He remembers the first time he issued those words, back in 1998. He was a St Pat's player then. They won that year's League of Ireland title on the last day of the season, beating Kilkenny City away. But to become champions, they needed Dundalk to defeat their rivals, Shelbourne. So they waited for a result from Oriel Park. They got the news they wanted. The following year something similar happened, Pat's beating Bray on the final day of the season to win back-to-back titles. Consumed by the game, he worked to make the most of what he had, reaching an incredibly high level, representing his country at underage level, winning bronze at the 1997 Under 20 World Cup. And when he spent a month in the Mater Hospital over Easter, all those players from all those teams came in to visit. Brian Kerr, his Ireland manager in 1997, checks in at least once a week. Brian Kerr, the former St Pat's and Ireland manager, is still a regular at Saints games (Image: ©INPHO/Tom Maher) 'Brian has been incredible,' Hawkins says. 'He has such a big heart. Football people, they're great. They don't forget. They remember the big nights, you being there for them on the pitch. "This time they were there for me. All these years later and the dressing room spirit is still strong. It's why football is special.' Yet now all those characteristics which made him such a winner were being put to the test. He says: 'My life is on hold. Thursday I get the bloods done, Friday my treatment. It has been a kick in the balls. That is where my life is at the moment. 'I am not working because I don't have the energy. My immune system is really low. I kind of feel I have a permanent flu or a chest infection.' Yet he isn't feeling sorry for himself because he has spoken to people in the chair next to him in that waiting room, swiftly realising if they have no hope. And on this Friday morning three and a half hours elapsed before Dr O'Gorman called. And that was when the man who played in a World Cup U20 semi-final for Ireland, got up off the blue chair and walked into a doctor's office. In those steps, the fact he had been a champion footballer on four different occasions ceased to matter. He was just another number, waiting to hear if his cancer drug was helping. 'It is,' said Professor O'Gorman. 'You are responding well.' That was eight weeks ago. Today Colin Hawkins is in remission. This champion football player has just won the biggest prize of his life. Get the latest sports headlines straight to your inbox by signing up for free email .

BBC drops Ozzy Osbourne documentary, new date to be announced
BBC drops Ozzy Osbourne documentary, new date to be announced

RTÉ News​

timean hour ago

  • RTÉ News​

BBC drops Ozzy Osbourne documentary, new date to be announced

The BBC has dropped its Ozzy Osbourne documentary from Monday's schedule with a new air date to be announced. Ozzy Osbourne: Coming Home was due to be shown on BBC One at 9pm but has now been replaced with an episode of Fake or Fortune?, with no reason given for the change in schedule. A BBC spokesperson said: "The film has moved in the schedules and we'll confirm new TX (transmission) details in due course." The hour-long documentary will show the late Black Sabbath frontman reuniting with the band on stage as part of the Back to the Beginning farewell concert in Birmingham on Saturday 5 July. The legendary singer died on 22 July from a reported heart attack. He was 76. The film was originally conceived as a series, announced in 2022, and called Home to Roost. It was intended to document Osbourne and his wife Sharon's move back from the US, where they had lived for more than two decades, to rural Buckinghamshire. But the project "evolved as Ozzy's health deteriorated" into the one-hour film, according to the BBC. The BBC has said the documentary sees the story of the concert told through "unique and intimate access to the whole Osbourne family", including Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne and their children Kelly and Jack. Ozzy Osbourne in five songs It was filmed over three years and "captures the extraordinary rollercoaster of their lives" as the famous couple "attempt to complete their long-held dream of moving back to the UK", the BBC has said. Watch: Ozzy Osbourne at Black Sabbath's farewell show at Villa Park in Birmingham on 5 July Ozzy Osbourne: Coming Home also captures the musician as he "heroically battles to get fit enough to perform" and the family dealing with "the dramatic consequences of his ill health". The rocker had been diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in 2019. Last month, fans gathered alongside Osbourne's family to pay tribute to the star as his funeral cortège travelled through Birmingham. Sharon Osbourne and the couple's children could be seen wiping away tears when they arrived at the Black Sabbath bench, where thousands of tributes, balloons, and flowers were left. Musicians from Bostin Brass played Black Sabbath songs to accompany the cortège, and fans threw flowers at the hearse as it passed slowly through the city.

Manchester United's opening defeat throws up more questions than answers
Manchester United's opening defeat throws up more questions than answers

Irish Times

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Manchester United's opening defeat throws up more questions than answers

Points the whole point? A great appeal of football is the myriad pub and parlour opinions any game conjures. In the wake of Manchester United 's 1-0 defeat against Arsenal on Sunday, social media lit-up with differing takes from those of a United persuasion. The case for optimism featured United's 22 shots to Arsenal's eight and the beginnings of what may flower into an on-field bromance between Bryan Mbeumo and Matheus Cunha. The case for pessimism: a crisis at No 1, with Altay Bayindir's timidness leading to Riccardo Calafiori's winner and André Onana's ongoing flakiness. Then there is the bottom line: United were defeated. As midfielder Casemiro said afterwards: 'I'm not going to say that losing is OK; we have to win. Manchester United always has to win. I think we have shown good moments, and we have played much better, but we have to look for the victory.' Everything but the goal Within a few seconds of the game on Sunday, Mbeumo charged down the right wing and then picked out Cunha after hearing the yells of his fellow No 10. Here, then, was a glimpse of how the new boys may gel beyond the weekend, which would have been heartening to see for all United fans. READ MORE Manchester United's Bryan Mbeumo misses a shot from an overhead kick. Photograph:Mbeumo's skill-set features a killer touch, a cut-throat running ability, a calibrated pass radar and an eye for a shot. Cunha has the same abilities, as well as an ability to purr past opponents, as he did in one game-breaking run during the first half. And operating as a No 9, the Brazilian also showed he can be a differing option in that position to Benjamin Sesko. Yet neither Mbeumo nor Cunha scored, spurning a slew of chances. This has to be fixed. Sesko needs fast start Sesko arrived at Old Trafford on a £73.7 million ticket of being a tall, awkward, skilful, fast No 9 and, in a 25-minute debut on Sunday after coming on as a substitute, the Slovenian offered glimpses of those traits. But, as is the case with Mbeumo and Cunha, the heat is on the 22-year-old to tear up defences and stick the ball in the net. New recruit Benjamin Sesko replaces Mason Mount for Manchester United during the second half against Arsenal. Photograph:United managed a paltry 44 Premier League goals last season and if Ruben Amorim cannot get more out of his newly-established attack then the head coach will be the latest to have his career sucked into an Old Trafford-shaped black hole. Sesko needs to start at Fulham on Sunday and be allowed to show he has what it takes to lead the line for Amorim's side. Managing expectations All No 1s are a few bad games away from pressure but in the fevered hothouse of United, scrutiny is a 24-7 occupation. Amorim has spent £200 million-plus on Mbeumo, Cunha and Sesko, is in the market for a new No 6 and goalkeeper, and has had since early November to implement his ideas. Oh, and there is no European football, meaning more time on the training ground. What, then, is a reasonable expectation from the Amorim's United this season? Ruben Amorim during Sunday's game at Old Trafford. Photograph:No one should expect them to mount a top-four challenge, but a return to continental competition seems a reasonable expectation via an upturn in performance, meaning discernible patterns of attractive and controlled front-foot play. The United results graph for last season read 11 wins and 18 defeats for 42 points, and a goal difference of -10 and a 15th-place finish. This has to be reversed. Six appeal Amorim continuing to select Casemiro ahead of Manuel Ugarte and Kobbie Mainoo is a red flag regarding the weakness of United's midfield department. Casemiro, himself, is content. 'I am very happy here,' he told 'My family is happy here. I enjoy every day at Carrington [the training base] and at Old Trafford. If people talk from the outside, that's fine, it doesn't interest me. I just want to focus on winning.' Manchester United's Casemiro in action against Arsenal's Declan Rice. Photograph: Nick Potts/PA To have a man with five Champions Leagues on the CV is a boon for Amorim as he bids to pull off what proved a Sisyphean task for David Moyes, Louis van Gaal, José Mourinho, Ole Gunnar Solskjær and Erik ten Hag: make United great again. And if a No 6 can be recruited before the close of the transfer window, then Casemiro can be eased back to the bench where his experience and professionalism can continue to influence team-mates. – Guardian

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