Shamed France international
Mathieu Bastareaud has been admitted to hospital with
“severe psychological problems” in the latest twist of a
tawdry affair that shows no signs of abating.
His hospitalization
follows earlier media reports that the 20-year-old Stade
Francais player had sustained his now infamous facial
injuries after being punched by a teammate.
Max Guazzini, president
of Bastareaud’s club Stade Francais, said the player had
returned early from a Caribbean holiday and was now under
medical supervision in a “specialized institution” in Paris.
Guazzini said he was likely to remain in hospital for a
fortnight and refused to give its exact location.
Guazzani blamed what
appears to be some sort of mental breakdown on the
“relentlessness of the press against a boy of twenty years.
Journalists have gone to his home and that of his parents.
It is completely destroyed, we must leave him alone,” he
told AFP.
The latest development
is a further blow to both the player and to French rugby
generally as a
web of lies and half-truths slowly
unravels.
Bastareaud initially
said he had been mugged outside his team hotel in
Wellington, New Zealand, but was forced into a public
apology after police proved that he had entered the hotel
uninjured at 5.22am on June 21.
The Stade Francais
player then claimed he had slipped and hit his cheek on a
table in his hotel room after a drunken evening out, but now
a third version of events is beginning to formulate.
French newspaper Le
Parisien now claims the player was hit by one of his own
colleagues after returning to the hotel. Team-mates Louis
Picamoles and Fulgence Ouedraogo have been named as the two
players who returned to the hotel – in company with two
females – at the same time as Bastareaud, although both are
denying their involvement.
“Drunk and aggressive,
Bastareaud was reportedly calmed down by a fist from one of
his team-mates,” said Le Parisien.
Inspector Peter Cowan,
who led the New Zealand police investigation into the
alleged mugging, had already confirmed that there was a 25
minute window between Bastareaud entering the hotel and
returning to his own room.
“What happened in that
25 minutes is obviously open to a lot of speculation,” he
said last week. “Now I’m now in a position to tell you, all
I can tell you is Mr Bastareaud was not assaulted outside
the hotel by four or five mugs.”
Le Parisien says an
internal team investigation has concluded that Picamoles and
Ouedraogo returned to the hotel in a taxi accompanied by two
un-named women. Bastareaud apparently arrived at the same
time in a separate taxi.
Picamoles and
Bastareaud were subsequently flown home to France due to
injuries, with Ouedraogo staying on to play against
Australia last weekend.
The newspaper says
Bastareaud now faces a French disciplinary commission which
could either fine or suspend him from the national team.
It is another sorry
turn in a turgid tale of lies and half-truths, with
Bastareaud’s reputation already in tatters. Whether other
players, or even the management team, get fingered for their
roles in the episode remains to be seen as the full story
slowly emerges.
Meanwhile, France head
coach Marc Lièvremont has reiterated his belief that
Australia are currently a better side than New Zealand.
Lievremont made his
comments after France concluded their southern hemisphere
tour with a
22-6 defeat against the Wallabies in
Sydney on Saturday. It followed a drawn two-match
series with the All Blacks.
“They [Australia] were
probably better organized than New Zealand, they don’t make
any mistakes,” he said. “They had a better start and maybe
what we did wrong during the last two games was okay for
that, but in this game we paid dearly. A very good
Australian team showed us maybe a real level,” he added.
Lièvremont conceded that the Australia match had been “one
game too many” after a long domestic and international
season, but said he remained up-beat about his players’
development.
“Winning in New Zealand
showed the quality of this squad, the players have learned
and improved their rugby during the tour. The regret I’ve
got is that we did not play the game as we planned to,” he
explained after the Australia defeat. “We have to grow up
and get more experienced.”
His All Blacks
counterpart Graham Henry was less enthused with his players’
efforts after their laboured 27-6 win over Italy. “It was a
very disappointing performance, I thought we lacked edge,”
he said.