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Wayne Rooney should follow Ryan Giggs' lead and move into Manchester United's central midfield, says David Beckham

Giggs was still playing at Old Trafford at 40

Tom Sheen
Wednesday 07 October 2015 10:52 BST
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Wayne Rooney should follow the example of Ryan Giggs and move into central midfield as he ages, says former Manchester United star David Beckham.

Rooney, the club captain, has struggled for form this season and only has one Premier League goal in seven matches so far this season, although he has four in four games in the Champions League and Capital One Cup.

Beckham believes that the misfiring striker, who turns 30 this month, will have to adapt as he gets older and in assistant coach Giggs has an obvious example.

After bursting onto the scene as a brilliant teenage winger, Giggs, who retired at age 40, spent his later years in central midfield once his pace had deserted him. Beckham also played into his late-30s by moving into central midfield.

"I don’t think you can ever write off a player that’s scored the number of goals [Rooney] has," said Beckham, who will play in a Unicef charity match at Old Trafford in November.

"Players like that can always make you eat your words. But I think when you get older, you have to adapt your play.

"Giggsy was a prime example. He got to a certain age and then dropped into midfield a lot more and played that central role.

"I think Wayne will do the same.

"He’s an out-and-out goalscorer, but I think with Wayne, he’s proved he can step into the midfield and play. If you’re comfortable on the ball, as players such as Wayne and Giggsy are, you can do that."

Beckham also said that despite the club being without a trophy since Sir Alex Ferguson left the club in 2013, they are currently heading in the right direction under Louis van Gaal.

"There were a couple of seasons where we didn’t win things," added Beckham. "We ended up with the FA Cup but not doing well in Champions League and the Premier League. So these things do happen at clubs.

"We’ve been spoilt over the years at United — being so successful over the last 20 years... there are tough moments, and I think the [Arsenal defeat] was a tough loss but, other than that, we seem to be slowly gradually getting back to some excitement."

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