Northern Edition

Select Edition

Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

The bizarre Allen Clarke situation at Ospreys has taken another twist

Ospreys have been in turmoil in 2019/20 (Photo by Harry Trump/Getty Images)

PRO14 strugglers Ospreys held a media conference on Friday aimed at clarifying the confusion surrounding the Welsh club over whether Allen Clarke is still with them or has been sacked as coach. 

ADVERTISEMENT

However, it emerged at the event that the situation surrounding Clarke – handed a three-year deal in April 2018 – remains in limbo due to legal matters. 

Minus their Wales World Cup contingent, Ospreys started the season horribly, losing five of their six PRO14 matches and getting well-beaten in their two Champions Cup outings. 

That led to reports on Tuesday that Clarke was sacked. It took the club more than 24 hours to respond on Twitter that the matter was being handled by legal and that situation hasn’t changed judging by what Ospreys had to say about the matter on Friday.  

Clarke’s impending departure was now apparently a “personal conduct” issue, according to chairman Rob Davies and managing director Andrew Millward.

(Continue reading below…)

Video Spacer

According to reports on walesonline.co.uk, it was admitted that the Irishman is still legally employed by the region but had relinquished his position of the team ahead of Saturday’s league match with Cheetahs in Neath. 

Davies said: “It became a matter of personal conduct. When it’s a matter of personal conduct, it’s very difficult to comment because of the legal ramifications.

ADVERTISEMENT

“You cannot go off-piste and that’s what happened at the start of this week. I’ve been around a long time, it’s pretty unusual but it’s impossible to say anything other than it being a matter of personal conduct. Today, he is still legally an employee but he’s not in charge of rugby matters.”

How Ospreys have handled the situation was much criticised on Wednesday after James Hook and assistant coach Richie Pugh attended a PRO14 event at Cardiff City Stadium but refused to take questions regarding Clarke and whether or not he was still the team boss.

Millward claimed: “The purpose of the PRO14 meeting was to talk about PRO14 and rugby so we were obliged to supply a coach and a player, not management, so it was unavoidable other than you [the media)] could have chosen not to ask them kind of questions to the people you had in front of you and you didn’t.”

WATCH: Warren Gatland on what it will be like taking on his old team Wales this weekend as Barbarians coach

ADVERTISEMENT
Video Spacer
ADVERTISEMENT

LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

0 Comments
Be the first to comment...

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

M
MA 3 hours ago
How the four-team format will help the Wallabies defeat the Lions

In regards to Mack Hansen, Tuipoloto and others who talent wasnt 'seen'..

If we look at acting, soccer and cricket as examples, Hugh Jackman, the Heminsworths in acting; Keith Urban in Nashville, Mike Hussey and various cricketers who played in UK and made the Australian team; and many soccer players playing overseas.


My opinion is that perhaps the ' 'potential' or latent talent is there, but it's just below the surface.


ANd that decision, as made by Tane Edmed, Noah, Will Skelton to go overseas is the catalyst to activate the latent and bring it to the surface.


Based on my personal experience of leaving Oz and spending 14 months o/s, I was fully away from home and all usual support systems and past memories that reminded me of the past.


Ooverseas, they weren't there. I had t o survive, I could invent myself as who I wanted, and there was no one to blame but me.


It bought me alive, focused my efforts towards what I wanted and people largely accepted me for who I was and how I turned up.


So my suggestion is to make overseas scholarships for younger players and older too so they can benefit from the value offered by overseas coaching acumen, established systems, higher intensity competition which like the pressure that turns coal into diamonds, can produce more Skeltons, Arnold's, Kellaways and the like.


After the Lion's tour say, create 20 x $10,000 scholarships for players to travel and play overseas.


Set up a HECS style arrangement if necessary to recycle these funds ongoingly.


Ooverseas travel, like parenthood or difficult life situations brings out people's physical and emotional strengths in my own experiences, let's use it in rugby.

68 Go to comments
LONG READ
LONG READ Money not everything in Toulouse ‘paradise’ as rivals try to rein in champions Money not everything in Toulouse ‘paradise’ as rivals try to rein in champions
Search