EXCLUSIVE: SOME of Australian rugby's biggest names are locked in a million-dollar legal stoush over an email allegedly sent in the aftermath of the Wallabies' 2007 World Cup demise.
Former Wallabies coach John Connolly is suing the Australian Rugby Union and its chief executive John O'Neill for $1.1 million after he was allegedly defamed in the February 2008 email.
Civil documents filed to the Brisbane Supreme Court allege O'Neill wrote to some of the ARU's top coaches and managers claiming that Connolly "adds no credit to the game" and his "days of pandering evil and mischievous propaganda will shortly come to an end".
Connolly alleges the email did considerable damage to his reputation and led to his inability to obtain high-level coaching positions.
Connolly was Wallabies coach from 2005 until 2007, presiding over the team's World Cup quarter-final loss to England.
O'Neill returned as ARU CEO in June 2007 and the relationship between the pair soured after Connolly retired.
Connolly's statement of claim alleges O'Neill sent the email to Pat Howard, who was the ARU high-performance manager at the time, Wallabies team manager Phil Thompson, Wallabies assistant coach Michael Foley and the ARU Management Committee warning them to steer clear of Connolly.
"If you do have any contact and communication with him, tell him on my behalf that his days of pandering evil and mischievous propaganda will shortly come to an end," O'Neill said in the email.
"John is sadly a person who adds no credit to the game in this country and I can assure you that his involvement in rugby is at an end from an ARU perspective.
"Do yourself a favour and don't talk to him and convey that to people close to you as well."
In the email O'Neill expressed anger over a "very inaccurate and hurtful" article by Sun Herald columnist Danny Weidler, published the day before.
O'Neill also demanded to know if the email recipients had had recent conversations with Connolly or Rugby Union Players' Association CEO Tony Dempsey about the ARU.
"Weidler largely relies on Tony Dempsey and John Connolly for such scuttlebutt," O'Neill said.
"The question remains as to who has provided Connolly and/or Dempsey with the nonsense that is then handed on to Weidler."
Weidler's column speculated that Howard planned to leave the ARU after tension with O'Neill.
Connolly alleges as a result of the email he lost the opportunity to be re-employed as a coach of the Queensland Reds or as a coach for the yet-to-be-established Super 15 consortium.
An ARU spokesman said the ARU was yet to receive the court documents and was not in a position to comment at this stage.
Connolly did not return phone calls yesterday.
http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,23739,26391818-952,00.html