Pubdate: Wed, 26 May 1999 Source: Scotsman (UK) Copyright: The Scotsman Publications Ltd 1999 Contact: http://www.scotsman.com/ Forum: http://www.scotsman.com/ Author: Matt Wells DALLAGLIO: DRUG BOASTS WERE LIES 'Confession' Was Made Up To Clinch Big Sponsorship Deal, Says Rugby Player LAWRENCE Dallaglio sought yesterday to answer the lurid allegations that may yet ruin his rugby career by portraying his boasts about drug use as nothing more than the ramblings of a braggart blinded by greed. Fuelled by the prospect of a UKP500,000 sponsorship deal, generous amounts of champagne and egged on by a young, blonde "marketing executive", the former captain of England claimed he had spun out false tales of drug dealings and chemical highs simply in an attempt to impress. Although he admitted that he had dabbled in drugs when he was younger, the Wasps, England and the British Lions flanker used his first appearance before the media since the story broke to insist that he had never taken illegal substances during his rugby career. A contrite Dallaglio faced intense questions about the News of the World set-up from reporters at Twickenham yesterday. They had had gathered in the same suite that had been used by Rugby Football Union officials the night before to announce the end of the player's captaincy. It was a venue with a rather unfortunate name: "The Spirit of Rugby". Flanked by a member of his management company and a public relations consultant, Dallaglio, 26, repeatedly asserted his naivetE9. It was a performance for which had been preparing for two days. Reading from a prepared statement and thentaking questions, he was determined not to be shaken from his line. Drugs are not cool. Drugs are bad for you. Drugs have no place in sport. But why, then, if his anti-drugs convictions were so strong, did he make up such bizarre claims? After severalattempts by Dallaglio to answer the same question, differently put, it became clear that he had been duped by the offer of a highly lucrative deal. It was a deal, it seems, that he wasdesperate to clinch - at any cost. "I was naive, I was foolish, I was following a line of questioning which was instigated by these reporters. I wanted to try and impress on them that I was someone that, that, that they could, they were offering me something which I was obviously, in terms of the contract they were offering me, they set the whole thing up to ..." Here he was floundering, trying desperately not to admit that he had been blinded by pound signs. Finally, he remembered an apparently far more worthy aspect of the deal. "I mean, I was interested in becoming involved in inner-city rugby. What they were offering me was something which, having been born in Shepherd's Bush, I was genuinely interested in. I have taken part in coaching clinics throughout this country to promote the game of rugby in the past. "And, basically, I was just following the line of questioning that they were taking and I, as I have already admitted, I have lied to these people, I made up stories." As the "executives" made claims about their own drugs use, it appears that Dallaglio constantly sought to go one better. "These reporters were openly admitting to me their confessions of what they had done, what they were into, what they got, what they enjoyed in life; therefore, they were leading me, by those allegations of their own behaviour, into suggesting what I might do or don't do. I played along with that game, totally stupidly and foolishly, and created stories which simply weren't true in an attempt to fit in with them and obviously to try to impress them in some way." It was a strategy which could not have been more badly judged. Yesterday, after having thrown away his chance to lead his national side at this autumn's Rugby World Cup, Dallaglio was desperately seeking to persuade the public that, despite his previous lies, he was now telling the truth. "I strongly deny the allegations that I have taken drugs throughout my playing career. I strongly deny the allegations that I have ever dealt drugs and as I have openly admitted to you here today, I did experiment with drugs when I was a young man. For that, I'm not proud, for that I deeply regret, I recognise that that was wrong and since then I have been completely anti-drugs." Dallaglio declined to go into details about his former drug habits, saying only that he did not condone the use of any drugs. Nor did he name the two other British Lions players whom he is said to have identified as having taken ecstasy on the 1997 tour to South Africa. He tried to portray his sporting success as a saving grace: "Rugby has given me the opportunity to have some sort of purpose in life." But it was here, too, that Dallaglio's arguments unravelled. The lack of conviction in his voice betrayed his own doubts - perhaps he realised that the picture of an Ampelforth-educated university graduate saved from the drug-infested gutter by an unswerving dedication to rugby was a little unconvincing. "All I can say to you is that I have been anti-drugs for many, many years. I detest drugs, they serve no purpose in anyone's life. I have two young children, so I'm well aware of the implications of drugs," he pleaded. His partner, Alice Corbett, by whom he has two daughters, was standing by him, he said. After almost half an hour of questions, one reporter asked about the almost-forgotten aspect of the News of the World scoop - the player's claims that he had enjoyed sex with a dozen Dutch prostitutes. Suddenly, Dallaglio clammed up. There was a signal from his lawyer, who was standing in the wings, and the proceedings were summarily wound up with a terse "Thank you for coming". Despite the player's expressed desire to be "open and frank", There are still some things, it seems, about which it has been judged best to keep quiet. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake