The Rugby Paper

Rebel Manu begs for his Tigers job back

- By PETER JACKSON

MANU Tuilagi made a forlorn attempt to save his Leicester career before the Tigers confirmed his departure on Friday after ten eventful seasons.

The England centre made a last-minute plea for reinstatem­ent but without making any concession towards settling his pay dispute.

“Manu wanted to come back,’’ a Tigers’ source told

The Rugby Paper. “But he wanted to come back on the same terms which we had rejected. We only want people at the Tigers who really want to play for the shirt.

“Our decision will have come as a shock to him. Maybe Manu thought we would cave in but the financial crisis facing the game throughout England and beyond made that impossible.

“We are all losing ridiculous amounts of money. Therefore, we had no option but to make a stand which is important going forward. It’s a reminder of an old tradition at Leicester Tigers, that no individual is bigger than the club. That means as much now as it did in the days of Dean Richards and before that.

“We are all very sad it has ended liked this. Over the years we as a club have done everything we could to help Manu over various problems he faced during his time with us.’’

Tuilagi had been given a July 1 deadline to agree to a 25 per cent cut in his salary, understood to have been £500,000-a-year. When he and four other players failed to agree before the July 1 deadline, the club announced that all five had been ‘stood down.’

Two of the five, Tongan

full-back Telusa Veainu and Irish centre Noel Reid, agreed deals with Stade Francais and Albi respective­ly. Tuilagi is believed to be the only one called the club asking: ‘Can I have my job back?’

Since his debut ten years ago, Tuilagi has made 96 Premiershi­p appearance­s and 32 in Europe. While he averaged 15 matches per season over the first four years, the average over the last six seasons had dropped to below ten, prompting Leicester to wonder whether they were getting value.

As the club game prepares for next month’s scheduled restart, another major club has warned of dire financial consequenc­es for players across the Premiershi­p.

“Players on or around £300,000-a-year will find out very soon that from next season they will be worth £120,000 – at the very most,’’ one club chairman said. “What’s happening at Leicester is only the tip of a very nasty iceberg.

“The cut in the salary cap from £6.4m to £5m means that loads of players at clubs like Wasps, Worcester, Gloucester and London Irish are available. We have told the agents involved: ‘You need to realise what’s happening all around the world.’

“There is a general feeling that some agents haven’t helped the players very much in terms of spelling out the realities.’’

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