
Wayne Rooney hailed a "brilliant" display from Steven Gerrard after England reached the Euro 2012 quarter-finals with a 1-0 win over Ukraine.
Rooney returned from suspension to decide the outcome with the only goal early in the second period - his first in tournament football for eight years spanning 10 games.
But the supplier was Gerrard who turned in another man of the match display to help set up a last-eight meeting with Italy.
Rooney said: "Steven's delivery has been exceptional in this tournament.
"He's a world-class player and I thought tonight he was really brilliant.
"He drove us on at times. We're lucky to have a player like that in the team."
Rooney was delighted to settle the outcome after being banned for the opening two games against France and Sweden.
He said: "It was great to get three points and its always a great feeling to score.
"My overall game could have been a bit better but it was my first game for a while.
"The one thing I was delighted with was that I was always putting myself in goalscoring opportunities. I could have done better with a couple more but I got the goal and its three points."
Rooney celebrated the goal in bizarre fashion by pretending to spray his hair.
He explained: "I used Andy Carroll's hair product and before the game he asked me to do it if I scored - and so I did it."
England have avoided a meeting with defending champions Spain by topping their group but Gerrard has warned England that Italy will provide a stern test.
He said: "People say we've avoided Spain but I don't want to underestimate the Italians.
"Italy isn't going to be an easy game. Spain are a fantastic team, sure, but our plan was to finish top of the group.
"Now we're going to concentrate on the next match, which is Italy."
Update:
Hello, regular commenting on Orange News and Sport pages closes on Thursday 30 May 2013. We will continue to provide a commenting facility on major news and sport events on orangeworld.co.uk. Contact us via http://oran.ge/OWfeedback if you have any further questions. Thanks.








