Wayne Rooney tipped for immediate return to dugout in Premier League
Today at 08:41 AM
Wayne Rooney has been tipped for an immediate return to football with boyhood club Everton.
It's all change on the blue side of Merseyside after the recent takeover of the club by American businessman Dan Friedkin.
The new owner made his presence felt on Thursday after wielding the axe on boss Sean Dyche just hours before the Toffees' FA Cup third-round win over Peterborough.
The 53-year-old's two-year spell in charge came to an abrupt end with Everton sitting a point above the bottom three and on a torrid run of just one win in 11 games.
Former manager David Moyes is expected to make a stunning return to Goodison Park and it seems he might not be the only club legend coming back.
Discussing Everton's next move, talkSPORT's chief football correspondent Alex Crook lifted the lid on who could be Moyes' future right-hand man.
Asked whether that could be former Everton star and recent England interim boss Lee Carsley, Crook said: "Carsley won't leave England Under 21s to be a No.2."
When Watford legend Troy Deeney tipped Rooney for the job, Crook responded: "Yeah, I wouldn't rule that out."
Rooney was sacked as Plymouth manager on New Year's Eve – just seven months into a three year deal at the club.
The 39-year-old will be keen to return to football in some capacity after an ill-fated managerial stint at Birmingham before getting his chance at the Devon-based club.
And that could see him return to the place he made his name as a teenager in 2002.
Rooney netted 28 times in 117 games for the Merseyside club over two spells either side of a trophy-laden 13-year stint at Manchester United.
Moyes has been out of work since leaving west ham at the end of last season[/caption]Speaking about his emotional return to Goodison Park in 2017, Rooney said: “I knew that coming back to Everton was more pressure – that’s what I wanted.
"I wanted to prove myself again to the Everton fans and to try to help this club move forward and win silverware.
“I think it was the perfect fit for me and hopefully in the next two or three years we can do that.”
It was Moyes who handed Rooney his league debut 23 years ago against Tottenham – six months after taking over as manager.
The prospect of the pair teaming up to help turn around Everton's fortunes is likely to whet the appetite of an Everton fanbase who have had little to cheer about in recent seasons.
Everton are not in action again until next Wednesday when they host Aston Villa in the Premier League.
By then, things could look very different although vastly familiar in the Toffees dugout as they bid to stave off relegation for a fourth-consecutive campaign.