News
Dusautoir speaks on Bastareaud case
August 07 2009
Thierry Dusautoir believes France team-mate Mathieu Bastareaud has been "sufficiently punished" for lying about being mugged during Les Bleus' summer tour of the southern hemisphere.
Bastareaud is facing a lengthy international ban after he was forced to retract his original claim that he was the subject of an unprovoked attack following a night out after France's 14-10 Test defeat to New Zealand in Wellington in June.
His claim caused New Zealand Prime Minister John Key to publicly apologise on behalf of the country and a police investigation was launched, before the 20-year-old centre admitted he had made the story up and had actually hit his head falling over because he had drunk too much.
The Stade Francais star will discover next month what sanction he will face from the French Rugby Federation (FFR) but Dusautoir, who was France's stand-in captain this summer, is pleading for leniency.
"If he lied, I think he has been sufficiently punished for that," he told French sports daily L'Equipe.
"This affair has been taken out of proportion. It would be good that we left it there."
Stade president Max Guazzini has revealed Bastareaud was admitted to a Paris psychiatric facility after the incident.
Bastareaud is back in training with Stade but FFR president Francois Alguacil told newspaper Le Parisien on Thursday that the centre could be banned from the France squad for between one and three years.
"I am a little sad for him because he is someone who is gentle and I am sorry something happened to him in New Zealand," added Dusautoir.
"I also think that in saying what he said, he was far from imagining the consequences of this lie and that he was taken over by the events."
Dusautoir, who was captain of the French team at the time of the incident, also hastened to add that he was in no way involved after it was reported that he was seen returning to the team hotel with Bastareaud.
"I came back earlier with another player, which a number of people witnessed" he said.
"I'd like to know who saw me on those images and that they show me the video. I'd like to meet this person because either they got it wrong or they are lying."
