Well, that didn’t last long. Little more than a week since it became clear Chelsea would do business with Manchester United over Juan Mata, and the first casualty of the decision is already known.
Wayne Rooney in a Chelsea shirt. Whoomp, as the song goes, there it is.
Turns out there was no cunning plan, no deal struck behind closed doors. Losing Mata was not just another stage of some wider negotiations to be continued this summer. Chelsea really did sell last season’s player of the year to one of their most significant rivals simply for the money. We will not be tuning in for the next thrilling instalment when the series returns in June.
In fact, so off-the-table was Rooney that the clubs did not even speak directly about Mata for fear of his name coming up. The deal was conducted through intermediaries because United knew Chelsea would ask about Rooney, and they knew what the answer was going to be, and they didn’t want the inevitable frostiness to derail the transfer on which they could agree.
If the Glazers have one regret about their time at Manchester United, it is caving in over Cristiano Ronaldo’s transfer to Real Madrid. Having rejected the first bid, they became convinced that Ronaldo’s departure was inevitable and Sir Alex Ferguson told the player that if he stayed one more season and Madrid remained interested, he could go.
Privately, the Glazer brothers now wish they had not been so easily persuaded. They wonder if there were any terms that could have kept Ronaldo from Madrid’s clutches — a deal like the £300,000 being offered to Rooney.
Either way, they regret not digging in, even if it meant Ronaldo running down his contract and leaving for nothing. That would certainly have been the policy had Rooney refused this new deal point blank. Maybe United’s intransigence has even helped to make up his mind.
So what happens next? Rooney signs a very expensive contract sooner rather than later, it seems. And some will say its size smacks of desperation on United’s part, and that he has held them to ransom once again.
Yet if Rooney stays it will be another big statement, like the signing of Mata, a victory for the club and David Moyes in dark times.
Chelsea were hoping to achieve more than a mild loss of face at Old Trafford with their pursuit of Rooney. They were solving a big problem, recruiting United’s best player, dealing a savage blow to morale and damaging a rival in a way that would be irreparable in the short term. The opposite may now have happened. It is Chelsea who appear weaker, albeit £37m richer.
Nobody can guarantee that Mata’s transfer will succeed, or that United can be propelled towards next season’s Champions League after such a miserable start, but changing Rooney’s attitude is a huge step.
Before the Mata saga began it was widely suspected that his departure from Old Trafford was more when than if. Now, however extravagant the numbers, he looks ready to commit. He may have played United’s negotiators like violins, but most regard that as preferable to playing them with a supporting net

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