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Wayne Rooney's Latest Take: The Roy Keane Debate, Gerrard & The 'Complete Midfielders'

Sports ✍️ Paul Brennan 🕒 2026-03-21 07:41 🔥 Views: 3

There's something about a quiet international break that gets the old guard talking, isn't there? Just when you think the debate over who was the toughest, most complete midfielder in Premier League history had finally been put to rest—or at least relegated to a late-night argument at the corner bar—here comes Wayne Rooney to throw gasoline on the fire.

Wayne Rooney in a punditry role

It's all heating up on The Wayne Rooney Show. And look, when Wazza talks, you listen. Not just because he's the all-time leading scorer for Manchester United and England, but because the guy knows what it takes. He shared a locker room with some of the names he's now breaking down. On a recent episode, he didn't just dip his toe into the old Roy Keane versus Steven Gerrard argument—he grabbed it by the throat.

"People ask me about the best I played with or against," Rooney said, leaning back with that familiar knowing look. "For me, the conversation always starts and ends with Roy in that defensive role. But Stevie? He could win a game on his own from the center of the park. They were different kinds of animals, but they dominated in ways we just don't see anymore."

It's a classic barroom debate, but it's the context that makes it fascinating. For years, Liverpool fans have pointed to Gerrard's ability to drag a team through a Champions League final, while United fans—and the rest of Ireland, let's be honest—will defend Keane's influence as the ultimate on-field general. Rooney seems to land on the idea that there isn't a right answer, but there is an exclusive club. A club he believes has only five members.

This is where Wayne Rooney's Street Striker mentality comes in—that instinct to spot raw, undeniable quality. He argued that in the history of the Premier League, there have only been five "complete midfield players". He named Keane and Gerrard, obviously. But then he threw a curveball that had Arsenal fans nodding their heads in agreement.

According to Rooney, the list includes Patrick Vieira. Not a shocker, right? The battles between Keane and Vieira at Highbury are the stuff of legend. But he went further, naming a specific Gunner that he insists was the "complete" package. While he didn't name the entire XI, the implication is clear: the midfielders who could defend, attack, lead, and intimidate in equal measure are a dying breed.

It made me think back to that era. The intensity wasn't just about skill; it was about presence. When you look at the modern game, you see specialists. But back then, you had these guys who would nutmeg you, then put you into the advertising boards two minutes later. Rooney's list of "complete" players isn't just about trophies. It's about a certain DNA.

Here's how I'd break down what makes that list—and why Rooney's point hits home for anyone who grew up watching the Premier League in the 2000s:

  • The Keane Standard: He was the heartbeat. Didn't matter if it was a rainy Wednesday in Bradford or a Champions League semifinal in Turin. His level never dropped. Tactically, he was a genius off the ball.
  • The Gerrard Factor: That ability to grab a game by the throat. A last-minute screamer, a tackle to stop a sure goal, a 60-yard pass. He was a one-man army.
  • The Vieira Presence: Long legs, an even longer fuse. He combined the grace of a baller with the grit of a street fighter. When he walked onto the pitch, he made the opposition feel smaller.
  • The Scholes Paradox: Rooney always mentions him. The quiet one who didn't tackle, but somehow ran every game he played in. The metronome.

What I love about Wayne Rooney Live is that he's not just sitting there being polite. He's giving you the unfiltered version. He knows the modern player, he knows the history, and he knows that if you put a prime Keane or Vieira in today's midfield, the conversation about "tactical fouling" would be very different.

Of course, the Rooney name isn't just dominating the airwaves. There's a new generation coming up. I've been keeping an eye on Kai Wayne Rooney, who's starting to make his own waves in the youth ranks. The name carries weight, and you can see the technique there. It's the same kind of low center of gravity and that natural eye for goal that we saw from his old man at Goodison Park all those years ago. It's a reminder that the legacy isn't just about the debates we have on TV—it's happening on the grassroots pitches right now.

At the end of the day, whether you think Gerrard was better than Keane, or whether Vieira sits above them both, what Rooney has done with his latest appearance is remind us why we love this game. It's the arguments. It's the nostalgia. It's the sheer audacity of saying there are only five who did it right.

And let's be honest, if you're sitting in a pub in Dublin or Cork this weekend, you're going to try and name that fifth player Rooney was thinking of before he finishes his pint. That's the beauty of The Wayne Rooney Show—it brings the debate back to the people.