Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Wales Online
Wales Online
Sport
Andy Howell

Liam Williams and Scarlets hold crunch talks over pay dispute before he's even played a match

Liam Williams will sit down with the Scarlets on Thursday in an attempt to thrash out his future amid a bombshell contract wrangle.

He hasn’t appeared for them since rejoining the Llanelli-based outfit ahead of the Six Nations from Champions Cup holders Saracens.

And the Wales and Lions star's situation is now shrouded in uncertainty if a resolution can't be found.

The 63-times Wales cap last December signed a three-year contract worth £400,000 a year in a deal which would have netted him a staggering £1.2m.

But he could lose up to a quarter of it after being asked to take a long term 25 per cent pay cut following the financial crisis which has engulfed rugby in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic.

Williams, along with the rest of the Scarlets squad, has been requested to accept a deal put forward by paymasters at Parc y Scarlets.

It’s understood most of them have but fearless full-back or wing Williams, who will be 30 next year and has suffered from a worrying number of injuries since 2017, wants to safeguard his long-term financial future and is reluctant to follow suit.

He hopes to be able to reach an acceptable agreement with Scarlets bosses with talks due to take place on Thursday.

Williams would become a free agent if he doesn’t accept the terms he has been offered or any other deal the Scarlets may consider putting forward.

That would enable him to follow the lead of England centre powerhouse Manu Tuilagi, who left Leicester Tigers for Sale Sharks after refusing a reduced contract at Welford Road.

Scarlets last week announced 17 players had agreed new contracts ahead of the start of next season.

Among them were Wales internationals Leigh Halfpenny, outside-half Rhys Patchell, scrum-half Gareth Davies and prop Samson Lee.

They were among those whose existing contracts were coming to an end and who were offered longer deals as a sweetener in return for taking a pay cut.

Williams made 111 outings for the Scarlets before signing for Saracens in 2017.

A serious ankle injury sustained in training forced him out of last year’s World Cup in Japan ahead of Wales’ semi-final defeat to South Africa.

He returned to action during Wales’ last match, the 33-30 defeat to England at Twickenham on March 7, where he started at left-wing.

If Williams were to leave the Scarlets and sign for a club in another country, he would still be eligible for coach Wayne Pivac’s team because he has passed the WRU’s 60-cap threshold for exiles.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.