Robert McNamara, 24, of Scarborough, had pleaded guilty at Chester Crown Court to attempting to enter as a trespasser with intent to steal.
The alarm at the footballer’s £6m property in Prestbury, Cheshire, was triggered on 3 August, the court heard.
McNamara was sentenced to two years and eight months.
Rooney, his wife, Coleen, and their three sons, Kai, Klay and Kit, were attending the charity tribute game against his first club Everton when the break-in bid took place.
In a victim impact statement read in court, Mrs Rooney said the incident had caused “sleepless nights” and had made her fear for the safety of their three children while they played in the garden.
She said the couple had spent extra money on security since the incident as she “no longer felt comfortable” at home unless accompanied.
McNamara, of Newby Farm Crescent, Scalby, was arrested six days after he tried to break in and pleaded guilty at Chester Crown Court in October.
CCTV showed him walking around the grounds, with his face covered by a balaclava, and trying a door handle, setting off a perimeter alarm.
Police found a rucksack containing cable ties, a head torch and a balaclava which had McNamara’s DNA on it.
A second rucksack found in his home contained a ski mask with black tape over it which the court heard could have been used as a blindfold.
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