England captain Lewis Moody attends a news conference at
Eden Park after losing the Rugby World Cup quarter-final
match against France. REUTERS/Stefan Wermuth
The England rugby captain has slammed his World Cup
players and said he should have banned them all from boozy
nights out during the campaign.
Lewis Moody retired from international rugby after his
shambolic England team were knocked out of the tournament by
France in the quarter-finals.
The tour was marred by poor performances on the pitch and
numerous high-profile off-field incidents _ the most
distracting involving former skipper Mike Tindall in a
late-night conversation with a "mystery blonde'' in a
Queenstown bar during its now infamous `Mad Midget
Weekender'.
The Rugby Football Union (RFU) is currently conducting a
review of the players' conduct during the tournament after
the series of incidents, including accusations of drunkenness
in Queenstown and inappropriate comments to a hotel worker.
Now, 33-year-old Moody has criticised his former teammates in
his new book, Mad Dog: An Englishman, which was serialised in
UK newspaper Mail On Sunday.
The flanker described the experience as a "disaster.''
He wrote: "If I could change one thing, knowing some of the
characters we had in that squad, it would be to have banned
them from going out at all.
"It is impossible to say how much impact the off-field
stories had on our performances. But clearly they didn't
help.''
Moody questioned the attitude and antics of some of the
players who "believed they were invincible.''
He says: "I had been growing concerned about the attitude in
the camp, which had become apparent pretty much from the
moment we arrived in Auckland.
"To be an international sportsman, you need to be honest.
There had been so much good in my career but England's 2011
World Cup campaign was a disaster.
"For many, it will be remembered for the off-field incidents.
I maintain that they were blown up and taken out of context
but, at the same time, I concede that some of the behaviour
was, at best, naive and, at worst, totally unacceptable.''
Moody was present at the highly-publicised Queenstown night
out, but left early in the evening. He claims England had
been "too free-spirited'' and had "got burned'' as a result.
He says Tindall, who is married to the Queen's grand-daughter
Zara Phillips, did nothing wrong and that CCTV images showing
him with a woman, which he described as "an old friend'',
were blown out of proportion.
Moody added: "We were on the other side of the world, a lot
of the guys were young, well-known, wealthy and believed they
were invincible. I remember thinking that some were not quite
in the right mind-set.
"I have to take some responsibility. As captain, it was my
watch and I don't think I helped by introducing awards for
things like joke of the day, brown-nose of the day and dick
of the day. It was designed to inject some fun but instead
added to the feeling that everything was being taken too
light-heartedly. After a week I canned the awards.''
Despite a team meeting after the wave of bad press, the
controversies kept coming. Coaches Dave Alred and Paul
Stridgeon were suspended for a game after illegally changing
balls and centre Manu Tuilagi was given a warning by Auckland
police for disorderly behaviour after jumping from a ferry as
it was about to berth.
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