London - Sam Burgess's decision to reject rugby union and head back
to the 13-man code in Australia has left the English game at an all-time
low, according to World Cup-winning coach Clive Woodward.
Weeks after being selected at centre for England's World Cup showdown
with Wales, code-switching Burgess has left his club Bath to rejoin
South Sydney Rabbitohs.
Although Burgess said his decision was for family reasons, the
timing, just after England's humiliating early exit from their own World
Cup, could not be worse for the Rugby Football Union (RFU) as it starts
the post-mortem into what went wrong.
When Burgess joined Bath little over a year ago, the RFU trumpeted
the fact that one of rugby league's biggest stars had switched codes and
his rapid elevation to the England ranks suggested a long career would
follow.
The 26-year-old Yorkshireman who made his name with Bradford Bulls
has seen enough, however, and Woodward does not blame him for turning
his back on those who welcomed him.
“I said last week that Sam Burgess is not to blame for this mess and I
stand by it,” Woodward, who plotted England's 2003 World Cup triumph in
Australia, told the Daily Mail.
“But with his return to rugby league we've reached one of the
all-time lows and most embarrassing points in English rugby history.”
Woodward believes the RFU needed to take the blame for England's
World Cup debacle, saying the organisation had “marched confidently into
a total mess by wrongly appointing Stuart Lancaster as coach.
“The review after (the) 2011 (World Cup) was a shambles,” he said.
“Players and coaches let down by media leaks, good men exposed as
scapegoats and lesser men hiding and shirking responsibility. Nothing
has changed.
“The panel chosen to identify (former coach) Martin Johnson's
successor somehow selected Stuart Lancaster, a coach lacking any true
coaching experience at any level to prepare our national team for a home
World Cup.
“We are the laughing stock of not only world rugby but also sport and business.”
Woodward said Burgess had been made a scapegoat after England went
out of the World Cup at the group stage, even though the hosts were
beating Wales until late on and only fell behind after Burgess was
substituted.
“It is a real shame, but it does not surprise me,” he told BBC Radio 5 live.
“He came over to rugby union and had nothing but bad press. Part of
me is gutted he is going back but I can understand it. He wasn't given
the time.”

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