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AUSTRALIAN rugby's most sought-after player, James O'Connor, intends making a decision on his future this week and when he does he'll base it on what is best for his game.
"I haven't made a decision yet, but it'll be a footy decision," O'Connor told The Australian yesterday.
The 20-year-old 27-Test Wallaby is at the centre of a four-way tug-of-war involving his existing club, the Western Force, and the three franchises who have all made attractive offers for him, the Queensland Reds, ACT Brumbies and Melbourne Rebels.
So distracting was the whole process becoming that O'Connor agreed with Force coach Richard Graham to postpone any decision until the week of the bye for the Perth franchise which has now arrived following the heartbreaking loss to the Waratahs in Sydney on Saturday night.
O'Connor remained in Sydney yesterday for a photo shoot with Qantas, the Wallabies' major sponsor, but will return to Perth today.
"This is the time frame I wanted to look at, this week," he said. "Until now I just wanted to focus on football. But now I will just go through everything and see who is going to be best for me."
Each contender has its tugging points.
The Rebels, who have been pursuing him the longest and most aggressively, offer him the chance to be coached by 1999 World Cup winning coach Rod Macqueen and to play in a fast-maturing side alongside their one confirmed star signing for next season, Test fullback Kurtley Beale.
The Brumbies, too, are offering up a World Cup-winning coach in South Africa's Jake White, who has made a point of phoning O'Connor on several occasions.
And with Matt Giteau, Adam Ashley-Cooper and almost certainly Rocky Elsom leaving Canberra at the end of what has turned into a disastrous Super Rugby season, O'Connor would instantly step into the role of senior player in Australia's most successful franchise.
The Reds have dangled the lure of a return to his native Queensland to play as a member of one of the most exciting teams in world rugby, running off his close friend Quade Cooper and coached by the man who surely will be the next Wallabies coach, Ewen McKenzie.
The Force doesn't have a superstar coach, with Richard Graham in his first year in charge of a team. Nor, with only three wins and a draw to show from 11 games, can it match the success of the Reds.
But it was the club that nurtured O'Connor and turned him into a Wallaby. And it will not hurt its case that it enjoys more third-party sponsorship and support than any other Australian Super rugby club.
Force chief executive Vern Reid hinted yesterday that the offer the club made to O'Connor 12 weeks ago may be enhanced this week, a further indication that the battle for his services has turned into an open tender.
Certainly the Force is well aware how vital it is for the club to retain him. "It's extremely important," said Reid.
"There is James' value to the team and then there is James' value to the franchise. What James does is complete our retention puzzle and puts a sparkle on it. We see him being fundamental to our successful development."
Graham believes the Brumbies could pose the greatest threat. "I have no doubt Jake White would want to make a statement and what better statement could a new coach make than capturing James O'Connor," Graham said.
But Brumbies chief executive Andrew Fagan is far less sanguine about recruiting O'Connor. "We don't sit here with any great confidence," Fagan said. "I never do with any player who is not with us. You always start off as an underdog with any starting player for another franchise."
Macqueen and McKenzie both were content simply to wait on O'Connor to make up his mind. "He's going to make a decision and that's where we are," said Macqueen.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news...-1226052836309