Northern Edition
Select Edition
Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

Racing 92 owner levels scathing rebuke at Owen Farrell in French press

Owen Farrell of the British & Irish Lions reacts with teammates after the third test of the series between Australia Wallabies and British & Irish Lions at Stadium Australia on August 2, 2025 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Steve Christo - Corbis/Corbis via Getty Images)

Jacky Lorenzetti has launched a stinging attack on Owen Farrell, accusing the former England captain of dishonesty in the manner of his departure from Racing 92 earlier this summer.

ADVERTISEMENT

The comments come just two and a half months after Racing and Saracens reached an agreement for Farrell to tear up the final year of his contract in Paris, paving the way for a return to North London.

Racing, who had originally paid £500,000 to buy Farrell out of his Saracens deal in 2023, were determined to recoup as much as possible of that outlay.

After a tense round of negotiations, a compromise fee was agreed, thought to be in the region of €225,000, ending Farrell’s underwhelming spell in France.

The 33-year-old had signed a two-year contract at La Défense Arena but managed just 17 appearances, his stay blighted by injuries and speculation about his long-term future.

Lorenzetti had previously defended his marquee signing in public, describing him as “an incredible leader” even as Racing slipped to tenth place in the Top 14.

His tone has now hardened dramatically.

For the Racing owner, it seems it was Farrell’s appearance over the summer for the British & Irish Lions that has left a sour taste in his mouth.

ADVERTISEMENT

Just weeks after cutting short his unhappy stint at Racing 92, the 33-year-old fly-half was back in a red jersey, called up by father Andy Farrell for the tour of Australia. He made four appearances for the Lions despite having allegedly told Racing he needed to scale back his playing commitments.

Speaking this weekend, the Racing owner told L’Équipe: “I felt like throwing up. He left us saying: ‘I’m injured, I have a headache, I want to play less. Saracens are offering me this opportunity, etc.’

“And suddenly we find him with the Lions. It’s something I don’t understand. It’s called lying. You have to tell it like it is. It feels good to let him go! I felt like I’d been betrayed.”

Lorenzetti has form for turning on his stars, having previously criticised Siya Kolisi’s impact at Racing and branded Johan Goosen’s sudden 2016 retirement.

ADVERTISEMENT

Farrell’s return to Saracens always looked inevitable, despite interest from Leicester Tigers and other Premiership sides.

The fly-half, who has 112 England caps and three World Cups to his name, is understood to have accepted a significant pay cut from the £685,000 a year reported in the French press to fit within Mark McCall’s wage structure at StoneX Stadium.

For Racing, the Farrell affair was the latest in a line of costly misfires in their “galacticos” recruitment drive, which also brought Siya Kolisi to the club after his World Cup heroics. Farrell, twice named European Player of the Year, was supposed to be the missing piece in the Parisian side’s pursuit of a first Champions Cup.

RugbyPass understands that Racing 92 are now moving away from the superstar model of recruitment, due to what Lorenzetti feels have been repeated high-profile dud signings for the club.

Although he specifically excluded Owen Farrell, Stuart Lancaster’s recent comments about his time at the club would seem to support the idea that there was a group of overpaid and underperforming stars employed at the Parisian side.

“In the environment I’ve just left [Racing 92], without naming names, there were a group of players… it was driving me insane. You know, on good money, turning up, checking in, checking out. Happy if they’re playing, happy if they’re not playing.

“They weren’t disruptive and they weren’t bad people. They were all good guys. But they didn’t have that desire to want to be the best they can be, and that really frustrated me at the time.”

Related

ADVERTISEMENT
Play Video
LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

21 Comments
Load More Comments

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Long Reads

Comments on RugbyPass

T
Tom 22 minutes ago
Change at the top is only answer for England – Andy Goode

We aren't miles ahead of any other nation in terms of talent at all. I agree Borthwick is a mediocre coach but let's not get carried away. France have won the u20 world cup three out of the last five times and just beat us in both the u20 and u18 six nations… and I don't think many people would claim we've got more talent than SA or the ABs either. Ibitoye isn't someone you want in a test match, he's so unpredictable. In a tight test match there are very few scoring opportunities for wingers but there are lots of opportunities for wingers to make defensive misreads and balls things up. In a tightly contested, low scoring game, you'd much rather have someone like Feyi Wabosi who has X factor but can be relied upon to defend properly or not have a brain farts, we've got other good wingers without needing Ibitoye.

I agree in general with your sentiment but we should be realistic. We've won the u20 WC once in the last decade, won the six nations only twice. A prem club hasn't won anything in Europe since Bristol won the challenge cup when they had Piutau, Radradra. There is talent out there for sure but our clubs and u20s aren't enjoying the level of success which could support statements about us having the most talent in the world. If a new coach comes in they aren't going to wave a magic wand and make us the best team in the world. There are a lot of structural problems and engrained attitudes which need to be overcome within the RFU and Prem etc. Plus any new coach is going to have to undo the damage Borthwick and Wigglesworth have done. They're going to have their work cut out for them.



...

34 Go to comments
Close
ADVERTISEMENT