John Terry won over the boo-boys and England recovered from a similarly unpromising start to defeat Egypt 3-1 at Wembley.
On his first appearance for his country since news of the scandal that resulted in him being stripped of the captaincy by Fabio Capello came to light, Terry must have had a slight sense of foreboding.
There were plenty of boos as his name was read out before kick-off.
But the reception was not terrible by any means and by the end, the fans were solidly behind the Chelsea man.
They were also solidly behind England after Capello's men scored three times in the second half, Peter Crouch's brace sandwiching a Shaun Wright-Phillips effort after the African Nations Cup winners went ahead through Mohamed Zidan.
By the time England play again, against Mexico in May, Capello will have named his provisional squad and an expectant nation will begin to dream.
The pitch was an issue, again. Terry slipped to allow Wael Gomaa to bounce a volley goalwards that Robert Green seemed content to let head towards his net as Jermain Defoe was on the line to clear.
Matthew Upson lost his footing to provide Zidan with his scoring opportunity shortly afterwards, the crisp finish equal to something a very similar sounding Frenchman could produce.
It was the pivotal point of a very disappointing opening half-hour, lacking cohesion and fluency.
Their slick passing and movement was beguiling and provided the perfect test ahead of a Group C encounter with Algeria - who qualified at Egypt's expense - in Cape Town on June 18.
But Crouch's introduction for Defoe was the telling one.
Crouch is like Defoe in not being a target man but his size offers a quite different problem for defences.
Gangly and awkward, Crouch has an unerring habit of being in the right place at the right time. He was at the near post when Gareth Barry reacted to Gerrard's through-ball and fired a low cross into the six-yard box, just right for Crouch to steer home.
Rooney had sprung to life too. An audacious overhead kick required excellent technique, even if the referee deemed the approach had been too physical for his liking.
The Manchester United man then cut a shot wide of the far post after darting past more flailing Egyptian defenders.
He ended up leading England from the front too, as Rooney took the armband off Gerrard when the Liverpool man was replaced by James Milner.
It took just two minutes for that double change to produce results as Milner's shot required a flying stop from El Hadary to keep it out, only for the keeper to be totally deceived by the flight of fellow substitute Wright-Phillips' follow-up.
Wright-Phillips turned provider on the Three Lions' next attack to set up a clearly offside Crouch for his second, his 20th goal in 37 games for his country.
CROUCH DOUBLE FUELS ENGLAND REVIVAL
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