Manchester United striker Wayne Rooney has been named the new England captain by manager Roy Hodgson.Continue....
Rooney
was recently handed the armband at Old Trafford by new boss Louis van
Gaal, and will now take over from Steven Gerrard as skipper of his
country.
Gerrard announced his retirement from international
football following this summer's World Cup in Brazil and fellow veterans
Frank Lampard and Ashley Cole have also ended their Three Lions careers
in recent months.
Manchester City goalkeeper Joe Hart and
Chelsea defender Gary Cahill had been mooted as contenders to replace
Gerrard, but Hodgson has selected the most experienced player in his
latest squad.
Rooney has made 95 appearances for his country -
more than Hart and Cahill combined - since making his debut as a
17-year-old in 2003 and is England's top active goalscorer with 40
goals.
He is 20 games behind the Three Lions' all-time
most-capped outfield player, David Beckham, and 30 behind the outright
leader Peter Shilton.
Rooney could make his first appearance as
captain in the friendly against Norway at Wembley before England take on
Switzerland in the first fixture of their Euro 2016 qualification
campaign.
The forward has started two games as England captain to
this point - a 1-0 defeat against Brazil in Qatar in 2009 and a 5-0
victory over San Marino at Wembley in 2012.

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