The Australian Rugby Union (ARU) said yesterday it is outraged and betrayed by South African Rugby's (SAR) decision to send an under-strength squad to Australia and New Zealand for their remaining Tri-Nations Tests.
Springbok coach Jake White has opted to rest his big guns for the Australasian leg, saying on Sunday it would be "a ludicrous risk" to take all his players on tour in a World Cup year.
It is a decision that has not gone down well in Australia, with ARU chairman Peter McGrath saying the Australian rugby public had purchased tickets for the July 7 Test in Sydney in good faith of a full-strength South African team.
PHOTO: AP
"We had previously sought, and received, an assurance that they would be sending their best available Test team," McGrath said in a statement yesterday.
"We recognize that the rugby public has purchased tickets for this match in good faith and would feel betrayed by this decision by the South Africans. The ARU understands their outrage. We are seeking an urgent meeting of SANZAR [the partnership body governing Tri-Nations rugby] to overturn this decision," McGrath said.
"The agreement between us clearly calls for each nation to field its best team and with SAR's decision this is clearly not the case. On behalf of the fans, those people who in good faith bought tickets to the Wallabies' Test against South Africa, we will pursue this issue and seek to get the decision reversed," he said.
PHOTO: AP
"It may be a Rugby World Cup year and the Springboks may have played five Tests in a row but we face the same situation. We all knew the Test schedule well in advance, we all knew about the Rugby World Cup. South Africa needs to look to a future beyond the World Cup and address these concerns urgently," he said.
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