2004–05 season
Rooney's agent snubbed a three-year, £12,000-a-week contract offer from Everton in August 2004, leaving Manchester United and Newcastle United to compete for his signature. Everton rejected a bid of £20 million from Newcastle,[46] and Manchester United ultimately won the bidding war with Rooney signing for them at the end of the month after a £25.6 million deal with Everton was reached.[47] It was the highest fee ever paid for a player under 20 years old; Rooney was still only 18 when he left Everton.
Rooney was given the number 8 shirt upon his arrival at Old Trafford.[49] He made his United debut on 28 September in a 6–2 home win over Fenerbahçe in the Champions League, scoring a hat-trick and laying on an assist.[50] These goals made Rooney the youngest player to score a hat-trick in the Champions League aged 18 years 335 days.[51] However, his first season with Manchester United ended without winning a trophy as they could only manage a third place finish in the league,[52] and failed to progress to the last eight of the Champions League.[53] United had more success in the cup competitions, but were edged out of the League Cup in the semi finals by a Chelsea side[54] who also won the Premier League title that season,[55] and a goalless draw with Arsenal in the FA Cup final was followed by a penalty shoot-out defeat.[56] However, Rooney was United's top league scorer that season with 11 goals, and was credited with the PFA Young Player of the Year award.[57]
2005–07
Rooney during United's 3–1 win over Manchester City in the derby, in which he scored the game's first goal
In September 2005, Rooney was sent off in a Champions League clash with Villarreal of Spain (which ended in a goalless draw) for sarcastically clapping the referee who had booked him for an unintentional foul on an opponent.[58] His first trophy with United came in the 2006 League Cup,[59] and he was also named man of the match after scoring twice in United's 4–0 win over Wigan Athletic in the final.[60] In the Premier League, however, an erratic start to the season left title glory looking unlikely for United and their title hopes were ended in late April when they lost 3–0 at home to champions Chelsea and had to settle for second place.[61] Rooney sustained a broken metatarsal in that game after a tackle made by Paulo Ferreira.[62] Rooney's goalscoring further improved in the 2005–06 season, as he managed 16 goals in 36 Premier League games.[63]
Rooney was sent off in an Amsterdam Tournament match against Porto on 4 August 2006 after hitting Porto defender Pepe with an elbow.[64] He was punished with a three-match ban by the FA, following their receipt of a 23-page report from referee Ruud Bossen that explained his decision.[65] Rooney wrote a letter of protest to the FA, citing the lack of punishment handed down to other players who were sent off in friendlies. He also threatened to withdraw the FA's permission to use his image rights if they did not revoke the ban, but the FA had no power to make such a decision.[66]
During the first half of the 2006–07 season, Rooney ended a ten-game scoreless streak with a hat-trick against Bolton Wanderers,[67] and he signed a two-year contract extension the next month that tied him to United until 2012. By the end of April, a combination of two goals in an 8–3 aggregate quarter-final win over Roma and two more in a 3–2 semi-final first leg victory over Milan.[68] By the end of that season, he had scored 14 league goals.[69] Rooney collected his first Premier League title winner's medal at the end of the 2006–07 season.[70]