Sam Burgess’ decision to quit Bath to return to rugby league after just one season in union let down “the lads who would die for this club,” former clubmate George Ford said.
Ford insists Stuart Hooper was right to deny Burgess the chance to meet the Bath squad and say a proper farewell before returning to Australia.
Bath captain Hooper stopped Burgess from leaving the Recreation Ground on his own terms by addressing the players — and gained England flyhalf Ford’s full support.
Photo: Reuters
Head coach Mike Ford criticized Burgess’ return to the South Sydney Rabbitohs just 12 months into his three-year Bath deal, claiming the 26-year-old “didn’t have the stomach” to stay and fight.
“People have had a go at Stuart for it, but he’s the best captain I’ve worked under,” George Ford said on Hooper’s decision to shun Burgess.
“Every decision he makes is normally 99 percent right and we back him every time,” he said.
“There’s lads who would die for the club — those lads who have come through the academy, and other lads like me who have been here for two or three years and are passionate about it,” George Ford said.
“The lads who would die for this club sacrificed a lot for Sam when he came over and committed to him, and put time and effort into making him the player he was at the back end of last year when he was named in that World Cup squad,” he said.
“I feel for the lads and back Stuart 100 percent,” George Ford said.
Burgess wrote in his Daily Mail column that he was “disappointed” to leave Bath.
Speaking about his decision, Burgess told Tuesday’s edition of the Daily Mail: “I wanted to spend the rest of my career playing the game that’s in my heart,” referring to rugby league.
England head coach Stuart Lancaster’s entire tenure could easily fall on his decision to include Burgess in their ill-fated World Cup campaign.
Lancaster’s side became the worst-performing host nation in tournament history after failing to progress from the World Cup’s group stages.
Burgess’ presence eventually became a divisive issue, with Northampton center Luther Burrell overlooked despite previously earning mainstay status.
Mike Ford insisted he laid bare the size of Bath’s investment to Burgess, from both players and staff.
The former England defense coach admitted that he was left frustrated by Burgess’ subsequent decision to quit Bath rather than persevere to become a first-rate back-row forward.
“All I know is that he didn’t have the stomach to see out his contract,” said Mike Ford, who always viewed Burgess as a flanker, despite England deploying him at center.
“For me this was the time to roll his sleeves up and become the player that I thought he could be — and he chose not to,” he added.
“You don’t know what he was thinking, it wasn’t until the final talk I had with him that I felt there was nothing more I could do, but I did speak to him about that and about what a fantastic player he could be, and about the investment the club and the players had made in him, and that it was time to repay that, but he chose differently,” he said.
George Ford also defended Bath captain Hooper for refusing to allow Burgess to address the whole squad to explain his decision to leave.
“I think Sam asked to come back in on the Friday,” George Ford said.
“We had a lot of distractions. We’d not started the season brilliantly, we had a really important game against London Irish and we just wanted to concentrate on the game,” he said.
“Stuart said to him: ‘Look, we’ve got a day off on Monday — come back in and see the lads then,’” George Ford said.
“That’s all it was,” he added.
George Ford stood alongside Burgess in England’s abortive World Cup battle, but revealed few loyalties in breaking ranks to criticize his former teammate.
“I’m really disappointed, massively disappointed,” George Ford said.
“We believed he could have been a world-class rugby union player, especially in an environment like this,” he said.
“Nothing ever gets given to you. Nothing is ever easy. If it was easy, everyone would be doing it,” he added.
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