Wayne Rooney has admitted he was 'wrong' to suggest Virgil van Dijk had 'downed tools'

Wayne Rooney has backtracked after criticising Virgil van Dijk’s attitude and being blasted for ‘lazy’ punditry by the Liverpool captain.

The England legend has admitted he was wrong for insinuating that a new £400,000-a-week deal, which he signed in April, has led to him ‘downing tools’.

But Rooney stands by his view that the Dutchman’s form has dipped and now thinks that his reaction to criticism betrays how he is distracted too much by ‘outside noise’.

‘My job now is to give my opinions, and I like to think I’m straight and honest with my opinions and how I feel,’ he began on The Overlap Fan Debate with Sky Bet. 

‘The one thing where I maybe went a bit too strong is where I said he’s downed tools since he signed his new contract – that’s a big thing to say, and maybe I was wrong on that. 

‘But from a performance level, from what we’ve seen from Van Dijk, I don’t think he’s been at that level this season, and I said I’m sure as captain he’d be speaking to players, taking them out for food, which he said he has done. Clearly if he’s felt he’s done that, if he had to do that, there’s something not right.

Wayne Rooney has admitted he was 'wrong' to suggest Virgil van Dijk had 'downed tools'

Wayne Rooney has admitted he was ‘wrong’ to suggest Virgil van Dijk had ‘downed tools’ 

Van Dijk criticised 'lazy' punditry after Rooney suggested his £400,000-a-week contract had affected his body language and leadership

Van Dijk criticised ‘lazy’ punditry after Rooney suggested his £400,000-a-week contract had affected his body language and leadership

‘As champions, you can’t lose four games in a row. If you lose one game, there’s questions, and if you lose four in a row, there’s something not quite right. 

‘I think getting involved too much in the outside noise – that’s our job [as pundits], focus on your game. As a younger player, I’d be looking at Van Dijk and how he reacts to this – how is it going to help them? You have to get on with your game and speak internally.’

Van Dijk could have been a hero for Liverpool at the weekend after seemingly heading in their equaliser against Manchester City, only for it to be ruled out in one of the most controversial calls of the season. It was judged that Andy Robertson, who was in an offside position, had impeded Gianluigi Donnarumma’s view. 

The game got away from Liverpool from there and they lost 3-0. All the same, their Dutch skipper is not one to make excuses and has owned up to the fact that Liverpool must do better. 

The Reds sit eighth in the Premier League after 11 games. They are already 10 points worse off than they were at this stage last season, when they topped the table with 28 points after nine wins, a draw, and a loss. 

Responding to Rooney’s accusation that his and Mohamed Salah’s ‘body language’ has changed since they penned new deals, Van Dijk said: ‘I didn’t hear him last year.

‘It doesn’t hurt me. Just to come back to this particular player, obviously a legend, a big player of the game who inspired so many, I can say only positive things but I feel that comment is just I would say it’s a bit of a lazy criticism.

‘It’s easy to blame the other players but he knows we do it together, trying to help each and every one of us to try to get out of this. Last year when things go well you don’t hear that at all. It is what it is.

Rooney and Van Dijk came face-to-face days after the dispute as Liverpool beat Real Madrid

Rooney and Van Dijk came face-to-face days after the dispute as Liverpool beat Real Madrid 

Rooney defended his original criticism but Van Dijk would not let him off the hook

Rooney defended his original criticism but Van Dijk would not let him off the hook 

‘[Pundits] have to do that job. He has an opinion and we have to deal with it. There’s no hard feelings. I don’t take it personally.’

Van Dijk and Rooney came face-to-face in a tense moment on TNT Sports after Liverpool’s 1-0 win over Real Madrid on Tuesday night last week.  

”If you lose games as a Liverpool player, four or five in a row, it’s a fair criticism, but I think its over the top at times as well. But that’s because we live in a world where there’s so many platforms, so many people can say stuff and will be picked up and made bigger,’ Van Dijk said, seemingly in a nod to Rooney’s punditry.

And the Manchester United legend replied: ‘I’m not saying anything any more, I think I’ve spurred them on and put them on a winning streak!’ 

Rooney had indeed come down hard on the 34-year-old by essentially implying he had stopped working as hard ever since being put on his bumper deal, which made him Europe’s highest-paid defender. 

He said on his BBC podcast in October: ‘Virgil van Dijk and Mohamed Salah, they’ve signed new deals but I don’t think they’ve really led that team this season.

‘I think body language tells you a lot, and I think we’re seeing slightly different body language from the two of them. They are the top two players in that team and if their body language is not right, that affects everyone else. I might be wrong on this, but if I was a Liverpool fan or the manager, that would be a big concern for me.’

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