Daily Mail

SARRIES CHAOS

Players told the club is going down Meetings arranged so Farrell and Co can thrash out their futures

- By CHRIS FOY, WILL KELLEHER and NIK SIMON

OWEN FARRELL and the rest of Saracens’ England players face emergency meetings with the club hierarchy next week to work out their futures in light of looming relegation.

The Premiershi­p and European champions gathered their squad together yesterday morning to confirm the seismic news that they will be automatica­lly demoted to the Championsh­ip at the end this season as a result of another breach of the league’s salary cap.

Several stars of England’s recent World Cup campaign — such as Farrell, Maro Itoje, the Vunipola brothers, Jamie George and Elliot Daly — are suddenly coming to terms with short-term career uncertaint­y.

Saracens have been plunged into turmoil after Tuesday’s meeting of the Premiershi­p Rugby board, at which the north London club were issued with a stark ultimatum by their rivals. They were told they would have to slash £2million from their wage bill with immediate effect, hand back their trophies and give auditors full access to their accounts — or accept relegation.

It became apparent yesterday that Sarries had been unable to offload players to ensure they will come under the cap for the current season. It was also rumoured that they were reluctant to open their accounts. As a result, players gathered at the training base near St Albans at 8.30am and in a meeting which lasted barely half an hour, they were informed of their doomsday fate.

With PRL officials maintainin­g a

low profile, it was unclear exactly how automatic relegation would be imposed, but sources suggested that the action may be separate from the salary cap regulation­s, which do not allow for such an eventualit­y.

It is thought the players were told there would be another deduction of 35 points, which would give Saracens no hope of survival, although that had not been confirmed last night.

What did become clear was that Saracens face a two-year absence from the Heineken European Champions Cup — and one year out of Europe altogether. The holders of the primary continenta­l title are seeking to defend their crown and can advance to the quarter-finals if they beat Racing 92 at Allianz Park tomorrow.

However, even if they go on to be European champions for the fourth time in five years, there will be no defence next season as Saracens would not be eligible to participat­e if they are not in the Premiershi­p.

That would have the additional impact of denying them a shot at reaching a home-town final in 2021 at Tottenham’s new stadium. A five-year deal for Saracens to stage marquee league games at the futuristic football arena would be jeopardise­d by relegation.

There would be plenty of jeopardy on other levels, with jobs and careers at risk as a result of the club’s wrongdoing being exposed and punished.

While staff roles may come under threat, the playing squad must also be cut urgently as the salary cap still applies to a PRL shareholde­r club down in the Championsh­ip. Finding £2m of savings will not be easy, especially if players refuse to consider pay cuts, a drastic measure that apparently was not discussed yesterday.

The RFU have reiterated that there is no policy that prevents an England head coach from selecting players who are operating below the elite domestic league, but such call-ups are a rarity.

Sportsmail understand­s that the chaos gripping their club will not prevent Saracens players from being included in the England squad for the Six Nations, which is due to be announced by Eddie Jones on Monday.

But the internatio­nal dimension would change if the club are dispatched to a league featuring teams including part-timers and students.

Farrell, Itoje, the Vunipolas and Co will need to address a dilemma — whether or not to request release from their contracts to move elsewhere or at least go on loan for a season, as Mark Wilson has done in joining Sale after Newcastle went down.

There was some speculatio­n yesterday that the RFU might be forced to suspend the policy of preventing players based abroad from being picked for England in order to allow Saracens players to seek contracts in France or in other home nations. But Sportsmail understand­s there is no prospect of the Union relenting.

It will come down to whether Jones decides that a player based in the Championsh­ip — however profession­al he might be — can report for national service in the right condition and state of mental readiness if he is playing at a lower intensity week after week. There is unlikely to be a one-sizefits-all view, so some of Saracens’ leading lights may be able to stay, whereas others may have to go to protect their Test selection hopes.

The whole saga has turned ugly and bitter. One leading English rugby official yesterday claimed that many in the game have turned on Saracens and their former chairman Nigel Wray, who recently succumbed to pressure and resigned, like ‘rabid dogs’. But anger and suspicion has not been dispelled by the initial cap-breach sanction — the loss of 35 points and a £5.4million fine.

Life has already been uncomforta­ble in the eye of this raging storm, even before relegation became an inevitabil­ity. Speaking earlier this

week, saracens director of rugby, Mark McCall, said: ‘We can’t feel sorry for ourselves; we’ve brought some of this on ourselves, there is no question about that.’

the ulsterman was speaking just hours before the PRL board meeting which has left his club in a state of disarray.

Asked if he had considered walking away, McCall — unaware that automatic relegation was looming — added: ‘no, I have never thought that, because I love the club. the club’s been brilliant to me and brilliant for my family. I have been here over a fifth of my life. this is my 11th year at the club and you’re not going to run away at the first sign of... a bit of hardship. this is where we need a bit of leadership. We need people to fight and stick around.’

those words carry even greater resonance now. Yesterday, McCall named a strong line-up for the clash with Racing tomorrow. It felt like business as usual. But it isn’t. It really, really isn’t.

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