England captain Owen Farrell: Online abuse of Tom Curry not acceptable
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Owen Farrell has condemned the online vilification of Tom Curry after the England flanker alleged he was racially abused in Saturdayâs World Cup semi-final defeat by South Africa.
England are furious that Curry has been targeted online for claiming to referee Ben OâKeeffe that he had been called a âwhite c***â by Springboks hooker Bongi Mbonambi.
World Rugby is examining audio and video footage from the Stade de France clash as part of its investigation into the incident which is still ongoing, but in the meantime Curry has been the victim of a social media pile-on described by his club Sale as âdisgustingâ.
A visibly angry Farrell on Wednesday defended his team-mate, who wins his 50th cap in Fridayâs bronze final against Argentina.
âTom has been first class this week, like he always is. Heâs one of the most honest, most hard working blokes Iâve ever played with,â England captain Farrell said.
âWhat isnât understandable is the amount of abuse heâs got. The effect that has on him is the bit that I, and we, really donât understand.
âAnd I know it seems to be going more and more like this, but it shouldnât be, it shouldnât be.
âYou are dealing with people, with human beings. Just because youâre saying stuff on your phone or behind a computer screen doesnât make it acceptable. I donât think itâs acceptable.
âThis doesnât make me look fondly at engaging with people outside of the people that are close to you.â
Head coach Steve Borthwick has made it clear that Curry has been unjustly thrust into the eye of the storm in a doubling down of Englandâs claim that the Sale forward was racially abused by Mbonambi.
âThis is not a Tom Curry incident. Somebody said something in a game that he has reported,â Borthwick said.
âNow this is a World Rugby and SA Rugby matter to deal with, not an England rugby nor a Tom Curry matter.â
Curry continues in the back row, although he shifts from openside to blindside flanker as one of 10 changes â eight in personnel â made to the side to face Argentina.
Borthwick insists he had no hesitation in standing Curry down for the rematch of the Pool D opener which England won despite having the 25-year-old sent off in the third minute for a dangerous tackle.
âThe way Tom play means he has more involvements than any other player on the pitch. And they are physically powerful involvements,â Borthwick said.
âWhen he came off the pitch against South Africa he was cut and bloodied and thatâs exactly how Tom Curry plays.
âI chatted to him early in the week about how he was physically with another six-day turnaround and he looked straight at me and point blank said: âI am desperate to play on Friday nightâ.
âThis guy wants to play. There is no doubt in my mind he wants to be out there and the way he has prepared through the week has been incredible.
âBut thatâs Tom Curry. Itâs the way he does it every single week so I couldnât be more proud of him.â
With no indication of when World Rugbyâs inquiry will conclude, Mbonambi will take part in Saturdayâs World Cup final against New Zealand with a cloud hanging over him.
He has completed the last two matches â fierce battles against France and England â and given the lack of front line hooker cover, is set to play another 80 minutes against the All Blacks.
South Africa assistant coach Felix Jones said: âBongi has come through both of those games fine. Any player who is getting ready to play in a World Cup final wonât moan about how many minutes theyâve had. Theyâll be ready to go.â
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