England manager Martin Johnson has denied suggestions his treatment of Danny Cipriani forced the fly-half to move to Australia.
Wasps fly-half Cipriani effectively put his England career on hold last week when he announced he was joining the Melbourne Rebels, Australia’s new Super 15 franchise, at the end of the current European season.
“We spoke last week and I wished him good luck,” Johnson said at England’s training base on Tuesday. “He has got bags of potential but lots of players in our squad have that.”
As a teenager, Cipriani masterminded England’s crushing 33-10 victory over Ireland at Twickenham to such an extent that when Jonny Wilkinson came off the bench he played at inside center rather than at fly-half.
But on Tuesday it was Wilkinson who was named in the starting side to play Ireland in the Six Nations at Twickenham on Saturday with Cipriani, who last played for England in 2008, having long since dropped out of Test contention.
Who to blame for Cipriani’s England exile is one of the hot topics in English rugby.
Two months after his sparkling display against Ireland, in May 2008, Cipriani fractured his ankle in a Premiership match.
He returned to England duty for Johnson’s first November series later that year but appeared to have been rushed back, suffering from a succession of charged-down kicks.
His last international appearance came off the bench later that month against New Zealand, since when he has been restricted to the Saxons, England’s reserve team.
During the past two years there have been repeated allegations Cipriani is a poor team man but his supporters argue the England management have been negligently inflexible in their treatment of a player of rare talent, forcing his move to Melbourne.
However, Johnson said: “I probably spent more time talking to him than any other player.”
And England attack coach Brian Smith added: “When we picked the squad for this series, Cips had been injured. He didn’t have any form behind him ... He understood where we were coming from.”
Cipriani’s move has placed a question mark against his participation in next year’s World Cup in New Zealand but Smith appeared unconcerned, saying, “We have five or six guys who could do a job for us at the World Cup.”
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