Rooney back with a bang

Bolton  - 0 Manchester Utd - 4:  There is so much to admire about Manchester United at present that Alex Ferguson's only worry…

Bolton  - 0 Manchester Utd - 4: There is so much to admire about Manchester United at present that Alex Ferguson's only worry might be whether they have peaked too soon. The Premiership's top side are playing with such panache, with Wayne Rooney now inviting so many superlatives, that there is only one conclusion to draw - that this is a side on the point of a significant arrival.

There were suggestions the transfer of Ruud van Nistelrooy could be a devastating blow to United's hopes of catching and overhauling Chelsea. Questions have been asked about whether United could get by without the player Ferguson habitually trumpeted as the best striker in Europe. Legitimate questions, too.

Yet the overwhelming weight of evidence is that United have developed into a more sleek, polished team without Van Nistelrooy. This looks particularly true now that Rooney - who ended his 10-game run without a goal in the most emphatic way on Saturday - has reacted to the beginnings of a personal crisis like a man swatting away a bothersome fly.

Paul Parker, the former United player now working as an MUTV summariser, suggested recently that Van Nistelrooy had become a liability. "I can't stand lazy players," said the former England international, fuel for the argument that Ferguson has pulled off his most daring masterstroke yet.

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"Ruud scored 30 goals a season for us, he was someone I really liked and I was sad to see him go, but we have found a way of playing without him," Louis Saha volunteered after this display of one-touch, pass-them-to-death football.

"We are scoring goals from all parts of the pitch now. This is not an attack on anyone, but we are definitely playing more together this season."

It is a statement backed up by the fact that this time last year United had managed a dreary 14 goals from their opening 10 games, Van Nistelrooy getting eight of them. This season the figure is 23, courtesy of 10 different players and, for now, United have re-established themselves as the league's most penetrative and entertaining side. Some of their football here was of a quality usually seen only on a computer - though Rooney was clearly helped by some obliging Bolton defending.

Sam Allardyce bemoaned "dreadful mistakes" by his centre-halves Abdoulaye Meite and Abdoulaye Faye, but there was still something bewitching about the manner in which Rooney clinically dispatched every opportunity. He operated in a more orthodox centre-forward role than usual and the two Abdoulayes were made to look like a pair of training-ground cones.

"The people who questioned Wayne really don't know anything about football," Saha said. "He has answered everyone with his goals. He's a terrific player, a great. We never doubted him once."

On the same weekend last season United were 13 points adrift of Chelsea, their title challenge over before the leaves had dropped from the trees. A year on and Ferguson's demeanour is of a man who cannot possibly see how they can go wrong. He complained recently we were living in "an era of over-reaction" so perhaps this is no time to suggest they look more credible champions than Chelsea, but the emphatic way they are dismantling opponents speaks for itself.

Rooney's renascent form will be the most worrying aspect for those at Stamford Bridge, but Ferguson will be just as delighted by the long-awaited emergence of Nemanja Vidic and Patrice Evra as accomplished Premiership performers. Likewise, Michael Carrick's exquisite passing unlocked Bolton's defence for two of the goals. And then there are the enduring qualities of the timelessly brilliant Paul Scholes and Ryan Giggs.

One moment in the first half when Giggs elegantly brought down a high ball invited applause even from the home supporters.

Saha, too, is playing with an athleticism that could trouble the most robust opponents. His powerful running unsettled Bolton's defenders, never more so than when presenting Cristiano Ronaldo with his goal, and his emergence as a bona-fide replacement for Van Nistelrooy ranks as another triumph for Ferguson as he nears 20 years at Old Trafford.

"We could have played the greatest game we had ever played, and still not beaten them," Gary Speed, the Bolton midfielder, said. "I have played against some great teams in the past, but nothing like that."

Guardian Service