'Closure' for Keane
09/05/2006 - 21:06:15Manchester United 1 Celtic 0
As Roy Keane gained ‘closure’ on his time at Manchester United, another illustrious Red Devil was left to reflect on the pain of rejection.
When Keane launched his infamous MUTV tirade in the aftermath of United’s humiliating defeat at Middlesbrough in October, Ruud van Nistelrooy was one of the few senior members of the United squad to stand by his captain’s brutal comments.
The never-aired interview eventually prompted Keane’s unscheduled departure, so, when he picked up the phone to tell the Irishman why he could not be part of his testimonial parade, there was presumably quite a bit of common ground for Van Nistelrooy to cover.
In the aftermath of his axing for United’s Carling Cup win over Wigan in February, there may have been plenty of rumours about Van Nistelrooy’s likely exit this summer.
But, in saying on Friday how much he was looking forward to playing alongside Keane one last time, Van Nistelrooy clearly never expected his departure was going to come so quickly he would spend this week training with the Dutch national side.
“Missing tonight’s game is the most painful thing of all,” Van Nistelrooy told Sky Sports.
“I wanted to be there to respect Roy but I have not been allowed to.
“I have spoken to Roy about things and he is totally fine about it.”
United are refusing to comment on the meeting between Alex Ferguson and chief executive David Gill which the Red Devils manager pointedly remarked on Sunday would take place in the early part of this week.
However, such is the schism between the Scot and his top scorer that it appears certain any discussion would merely be a rubber-stamping exercise on Van Nistelrooy’s departure.
Dutch coach Marco van Basten has claimed the furore, which saw Van Nistelrooy unceremoniously booted out of United’s team hotel by Ferguson on Sunday for a poor attitude which was undermining team morale, could even help Holland’s World Cup quest.
“Ruud feels hurt and angry, maybe this could be good for us,” suggested Van Basten, himself a striker of world-class talent.
What seems obvious is that the World Cup now represents a massive shop window from which Van Nistelrooy can get the move which will allow him to escape his Old Trafford hell.
The on-going row certainly overshadowed Keane’s testimonial game, which attracted a staggering 69,591 and brought in around £2million in receipts for what is likely to be his last appearance at the Theatre of Dreams.
After 12 largely success-filled years with the club, there were plenty of United fans in the crowd but the near 23,000-strong Celtic contingent showed how much Keane is revered in Glasgow, even though he has only been at Parkhead for five months and will now go on a short holiday with his family before deciding whether to extend his career by one more year.
As predicted, Keane, who made his entrance through a guard of honour from both sides accompanied by his five children, played 45 minutes for each side.
By far the 34-year-old’s most productive work came during the second period, when he was wearing the red shirt of United.
In fact, it was almost like turning the clock back a few years as Ryan Giggs, Paul Scholes, Ole Gunnar Solskjaer and Gary Neville lined up alongside the man they shared so many glory days with.
It should be no surprise that two of them – Scholes and Giggs – combined to set up Cristiano Ronaldo, the player whose reported training ground row with Van Nistelrooy is said to have triggered the Dutchman’s exit.
Ronaldo took his 55th-minute chance with clinical efficiency, unlike the effort he blazed over shortly afterwards.
It was a deserved success, given United, with Rio Ferdinand deployed in midfield in direct opposition to his old skipper, dominated the opening stages, with Giuseppe Rossi, Louis Saha and Ronaldo all going close.
Another United old boy, Dion Dublin, was only denied an equaliser by a brilliant point-blank save from Edwin van der Sar, who, like Keane, had been introduced at half-time following Everton-bound Tim Howard’s last Red Devils appearance for at least 12 months.
But this was Keane’s night. And while there may have been at least one physical disagreement between the two biggest contingents of supporters in the British game, they were united in their acclaim of one of the finest talents Ireland has ever produced.
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