Football
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England's Wayne Rooney: I respect Roy Hodgson's rotation decision

Wayne Rooney says he will be fresher for England's round-of-16 clash with Iceland as the result of Roy Hodgson's controversial squad rotation.

Hodgson made six changes for the final Group B clash against Slovakia, including a rest for Rooney in midfield, and saw his side held to a goalless draw.

That result left them second behind Wales, meaning they will play Iceland in Nice on Monday rather than Northern Ireland in Paris on Saturday, but more significantly they are now in the same half of the draw as Italy, Spain, Germany and France.

The Guardian reported that some Football Association board members looked upon Hodgson's decision unfavourably and that Rooney was also "aggrieved" at being left out, but the England captain said he backs the manager's judgement.

"I think it's a decision we had to make in terms of keeping players fresh for the knockout stages," he told a news conference on Thursday.

"I respect Roy's decision to play me or rest me. He's the manager, it's his decision, not my decision, and I have to respect that. As a player you want to play, of course, but in terms of me now going into the game on Monday I'll be a lot fresher.

"It's a great chance for the players who had the rest to use the energy we gained from not playing the 90 minutes and I'm sure that'll be good for us in the later stages of the tournament.

"He had a tough call with what he had to do and he decided to leave six players out from the previous game. I'm along with the manager, I go with the manager and respect the decisions he made."

While England will be heavy favourites to see off Iceland, rated 34th in the world and the smallest nation ever to reach a major finals, the remainder of their potential route looks decidedly tricky.

Hosts France would await in the quarterfinal should they manage to see off Republic of Ireland, with one of Spain, Italy or Germany likely to emerge in the last four.

However, Rooney said: "I've seen a lot words saying that England will have to beat Iceland then France, Spain... whoever -- but who says they are going to go through? Who says we are going through?

"This tournament has already thrown up a lot of surprises. If we're to go further in this competition we're going to have to beat some very good teams.

"We have to concentrate on Iceland now and try to get the win and see who we face after that. By us being in that side of the draw, everyone else in that side will be looking at us rather than us looking at them."

Rooney is set to win his 115th cap at Stade de Nice, equalling the country's outfield record set by David Beckham.

At the age of 30 he should soon reel in goalkeeper Peter Shilton's national record of 125 appearances, particularly having gained a new lease of life in his deeper playmaking position.

"I'm enjoying my football," he said. "For me at this tournament it's a new chapter, a new position. I'm hoping it's the start of a very good chapter for me in international football.

"We'll see but I'm enjoying it and have no plans to change."

Rooney also said he is "not bothered" that Wales, Northern Ireland and Republic of Ireland have joined England in the knockout stage.

Asked if he was willing the other three teams on, the England skipper said: "Not really. For us we're happy England are through.

"Wales, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland are competitors to us, so I'm not bothered if they're through or not to be honest."

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