Throwback:Manchester United’s Wayne Rooney ‘knocked out in kitchen boxing bout’.

Manchester United's Wayne Rooney is known to be a fan of boxing
Manchester United's Wayne Rooney is known to be a fan of boxing but chose football as a 
A video has been released that appears to show the England captain, Wayne Rooney, being knocked out cold by his former team-mate Phil Bardsley in a sparring session in the Manchester United player’s kitchen.
The Sun claims the footage was shot on 22 February – the day after Manchester United’s 2-1 defeat by Swansea City.
In the video, the two former team-mates pull on boxing gloves and trade blows as they spar in Rooney’s Cheshire mansion. Stoke City’s Bardsley then catches Rooney square in the face with a left jab, sending the United captain plummeting to the floor. Rooney lays prostrate and the video comes to an abrupt end.
Rooney is due to lead out United at Old Trafford on Sunday afternoon for their Premier League match against Tottenham.
The club refused to comment on the video and Rooney’s representative did not return calls.

The reaction to the incident was a mix of disappointment and humour. The former Birmingham and Sheffield United midfielder Curtis Woodhouse – who swapped football for boxing and became the British light-welterweight champion – saw the funny side of it, posting on Twitter beside two pictures of himself boxing and playing football: “Some can, some think they can ?? £Rooney... not everybody can do it!!! it’s not as easy as I made it look £RooneyRooneyRooney.”
When asked by one Twitter user whether he would consider fighting Rooney for charity, Woodhouse replied: “When he wakes up maybe.”
Rooney has spoken of his love for boxing in the past. The 29-year-old is friends with the Manchester fighter Anthony Crolla and the super-middleweight boxer Paul Smith, who is from Liverpool.
Rooney once also carried Ricky Hatton’s belt into the ring prior to his fight against José Luis Castillo in Las Vegas eight years ago.
Rooney started boxing when he was in the youth team at Everton and revealed last November he would have considered taking the sport up professionally if he had not made it as a footballer. “I would have tried it as a career,” he said.
In 2008, Rooney said of the sport: “I’ve always loved watching boxing and I went boxing training for about three or four years when I was younger. It’s a sport I’ve always been involved in. I was doing both boxing and football training at one stage when I was about 15 but Everton, who I was with at the time, said I had to concentrate on one of them and I opted for football.”


theguardian.

Popular posts from this blog

UK GENERAL ELECTIONS:Inquiry announced into memo alleging Sturgeon wants Tory election victory.

Ebola Outbreak: Guinea Declares Emergency As Overall Deaths From Ebola Rise To 1,069