Winning the 2003 World Cup was the worst thing to
happen to English rugby because it concealed the dispute between
club and country over the availability of players.
That's the view of Clive Woodward, who said he coached England to
the World Cup title in spite of, rather than because of, the Rugby
Football Union.
England is without a coach after Andy Robinson quit on Nov. 29.
He'd lost 13 of 22 matches since replacing Woodward in 2004, during
which England slipped from first to seventh in the world rankings.
``What has happened over the last few weeks was so predictable,''
Woodward told the Sunday Telegraph newspaper. ``This hasn't happened
since the World Cup. This goes back to 1999 and 2000. The breakdown
has occurred because of the way we're trying to run the game.''
Woodward said that RFU chief executive Francis Baron and RFU
director of elite rugby Rob Andrew are ``fundamentally responsible
for the complete mess we're in.''
Woodward, who unsuccessfully applied for Andrew's job, said
England ``got away'' with winning the World Cup because of a strong
management team and an ``awesome'' group of players.
``But I believe the worst thing that happened to England was
winning the World Cup because we learned all the wrong lessons,'' he
said.
The England coach should have total control of his players _
rather than answering to Andrew _ including dictating when they
could play for their clubs, Woodward said.
``Would this be unfair as some players would miss more club games
that others?'' asked Woodward in the Sunday Times. ``Who cares if
England are successful.''
Now a consultant with the British Olympic Association after a
brief foray into soccer coaching, Woodward said former South African
coach Nick Mallett and former England captain Martin Johnson, as a
selector, were the men to change English rugby.
© The Canadian Press, 2007