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Rooney opens up on alcohol struggles in playing days

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Former England and Manchester United striker Wayne Rooney believes he would be dead were it not for his wife Coleen helping him manage problems with alcohol.

The 39-year-old, United’s record goalscorer, says he was “struggling massively” with his drinking during his playing career and admits he would often do it for two straight days.

“I honestly believe if she weren’t there I’d be dead,” he told the Rio Ferdinand Presents podcast.

“I’ve made mistakes in the past which are well documented and whatever but I’m a little bit different at times and she keeps me on that path and she’s done it for 20-odd years.

“I wanted to go out and enjoy my time with my friends and have a night out. It got to a point where I went too far – that was a moment in my life where I was struggling massively with alcohol.

“I didn’t think I could turn to anyone. I didn’t really want to because I didn’t want to put that burden on anyone.

“I just drank for two days straight. Come training and at the weekend I’d score two goals and then I’d go back and go and drink for two days straight again.

“She’s helped me control that massively. She’s managed me because I needed managing.”

Rooney told his former team-mate he would arrive for United training after a boozy session and use eye drops, chewing gum and aftershave in an attempt to disguise the state he was in.

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Munster prepare to step into new era under McMillan

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THERE WERE PLENTY of interesting nuggets from Clayton McMillan’s first big media briefing as Munster’s new head coach two weeks ago.

One standout was the New Zealander’s take on the highs and lows Munster’s performance levels tend to hit across a season.

“It’s about not necessarily judging ourselves on the days when we’re at our best. It’s about judging ourselves when we’re at our worst,” McMillan said. “It’s trying to achieve that with a good rugby team, where your best day at the office is a 9.5 and a poor one is a 7, not a 4 or a 5.”

Those 4s and 5s have too often left Munster fighting their way out of sticky territory. Think back to the slow start before Graham Rowntree departed the province six games into last year’s URC campaign, including an awful defeat away to Zebre in round two. There was Edinburgh’s rare away win in Cork last February and a frustrating defeat away to Cardiff in April. All in, Munster won just nine of their 18 regular season URC games as they scraped into the playoffs, with a lack of clinical edge in the 22 a common frustration.

That return doesn’t sit right with Munster’s potential on their best days, the most memorable of which last year came in a thrilling Champions Cup win away at La Rochelle. And even with all the disruption that came their way in 2024/25, Munster made it to the Champions Cup quarter-finals and were a penalty shootout away from reaching the URC semi-finals.

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Munster’s 2024/25 URC season ended with a penalty shootout defeat to the Sharks. Steve Haag Sports / Darren Stewart/INPHO


Steve Haag Sports / Darren Stewart/INPHO / Darren Stewart/INPHO

So, how does McMillan shape his Munster into a more consistent force?

For a start, he’ll hope to avoid the horrid run of injuries which plagued the province under Rowntree. Across the busy Christmas period last season, Munster had Peter O’Mahony, Craig Casey, Jean Kleyn, Thaakir Abrahams, Conor Murray, Alex Nankivell, Diarmuid Barron and Jeremy Loughman keeping the physios busy. The province do not have the depth to deal with so many losses.

There has been a focus on adding more grit to Munster’s contact work and as is standard during the early days under most new coaches, training has been tweaked, with some of the pre-season fitness work taking a more old school approach, including hill runs, swimming, rowing and even a spot of boxing. This has been overseen by Brad Mayo, who McMillan brought in as head of athletic performance, alongside new team manager Martyn Vercoe.

Yet interestingly for a new head coach, McMillan’s assistants – Denis Leamy, Mike Prendergast, Mossy Lawler and Alex Codling – all survive, having agreed new contracts before McMillan’s appointment was confirmed. That keeps a core of Munster men in the building to share their views alongside McMillan’s new ideas. It’s a notable boost to now have Codling on board as forwards coach full time, having split those commitments alongside his role with the Ireland women’s team last year – Munster’s lineout memorably fell apart when he wasn’t available to travel for the Champions Cup quarter-final loss to Bordeaux.

If Munster’s lineout finds more consistency and McMillan’s adds the tougher edge he wants to see from his players, the province will improve on their mixed return last year. And if you watched McMillan’s Chiefs teams, you won’t be surprised to see Munster spend plenty of time kicking the ball this season.

McMillan will bring a new feel to things around Munster, as will the absence of so many long-serving Munster men, with Peter O’Mahony, Stephen Archer, Conor Murray and Dave Kilcoyne all hanging up the boots over the summer. With a wealth of leadership and experience walking out the door, it puts an extra onus on others to step up. Tadhg Beirne is clearly growing into the captaincy role and Craig Casey, who captained Ireland over the summer, has been highlighted as an important voice in the squad by McMillan.


McMillan has already highlighted Craig Casey as an important voice in the squad. James Crombie / INPHO


James Crombie / INPHO / INPHO

There’s also a massive opportunity for players like Tom Ahern, John Hodnett and Alex Kendellen to try make this team their own.

As ever, Munster will be targeting a deep run in the URC and hope to make a dent in the Champions Cup knockouts. Yet having flirted with missing out on Champions Cup qualification last season, being in the mix come the business end is no guarantee. 

Squad depth could be an issue, with scrum-half and tighthead potentially light, and it wouldn’t be a surprise if McMillan adds more new faces over the next few weeks.

Some areas have already been strengthened. Lee Barron and Michael Milne were both positive recruits late last year, as was Connacht’s Andrew Smith, while former Ireland U20 international Dan Kelly is a quality signing at centre. Out-half JJ Hanrahan returns for a third spell at Thomond Park and is an experienced support to Jack Crowley, who has come through the most challenging 12 months of his career so far. The highly-rated Edwin Edogbo will also feel like a new signing after overcoming two Achilles injuries.

Munster have a decent start on paper, kicking-off away to Scarlets this weekend before home games against Cardiff and Edinburgh leading into a round four meeting with Leinster at Croke Park, the first real acid test of where McMillan’s Munster stand.

McMillan’s ideas might take some time to fully embed, but building some early-season momentum certainly looks achievable before Munster have to think about the games that will define their campaign. As is always the case at Thomond Park, it will be fascinating to watch how it all plays out.

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Mann recovers from car drama at the British Open

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  • 24 September 2025, 12:53 BST
Updated 42 minutes ago

A flat tyre meant Mitchell Mann was docked a frame after starting his British Open match against Gao Yang late – but he rallied to win 4-3.

The 33-year-old had to abandon his car and started 10 minutes late and already 1-0 down before fighting his way into the third round.

“I was on the hard shoulder and had no spare tyre, I was completely stranded,” said the world number 91.

“Luckily my friends answered my call and they came to pick me up. One of them drove me to Cheltenham and the other waited with my car for the RAC.

“I should have driven down last night, it’s a lesson learned. I have no idea where my car is now!”

Mark Allen is through to the third round with a 4-1 win against Hungary’s Bulcsu Revesz.

The Antrim man made it two wins in as many days, following his victory over Jiang Jun on Tuesday.

Allen made an excellent start by banking the opening two frames, including a break of 60 in the second.

Revesz, who shocked Ali Carter in the same tournament last year, recovered well in the third to pull a frame back.

However, the English Open winner hit back in the fourth and sealed his passage into the third round with a 69 break in the fifth.

He will now face Wales’ Mark Williams on Thursday, while fellow Antrim man Robbie McGuigan faces Ben Mertens in his third-round match following the Belgian’s 4-0 win against England’s Reanne Evans.

Judd Trump beat Leone Crowley 4-1, Shaun Murphy beat Scott Donaldson 4-1 and defending champion Mark Selby hit a 115 break in a 4-3 win over Liu Hongyu.

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Sports

Mann recovers from car drama at the British Open

Published

on

Read the full article on post.

  • 24 September 2025, 12:53 BST
Updated 42 minutes ago

A flat tyre meant Mitchell Mann was docked a frame after starting his British Open match against Gao Yang late – but he rallied to win 4-3.

The 33-year-old had to abandon his car and started 10 minutes late and already 1-0 down before fighting his way into the third round.

“I was on the hard shoulder and had no spare tyre, I was completely stranded,” said the world number 91.

“Luckily my friends answered my call and they came to pick me up. One of them drove me to Cheltenham and the other waited with my car for the RAC.

“I should have driven down last night, it’s a lesson learned. I have no idea where my car is now!”

Mark Allen is through to the third round with a 4-1 win against Hungary’s Bulcsu Revesz.

The Antrim man made it two wins in as many days, following his victory over Jiang Jun on Tuesday.

Allen made an excellent start by banking the opening two frames, including a break of 60 in the second.

Revesz, who shocked Ali Carter in the same tournament last year, recovered well in the third to pull a frame back.

However, the English Open winner hit back in the fourth and sealed his passage into the third round with a 69 break in the fifth.

He will now face Wales’ Mark Williams on Thursday, while fellow Antrim man Robbie McGuigan faces Ben Mertens in his third-round match following the Belgian’s 4-0 win against England’s Reanne Evans.

Judd Trump beat Leone Crowley 4-1, Shaun Murphy beat Scott Donaldson 4-1 and defending champion Mark Selby hit a 115 break in a 4-3 win over Liu Hongyu.

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