"Manu loves being at Leicester, but we can't go to where other teams can with finances.
"We hope that he will stay but if he doesn't it will be onwards and upwards."
Geordan Murphy gave an update on Manu Tuilagi's potential move earlier today 🐯 pic.twitter.com/5RZLA848t1
— Rugby on BT Sport (@btsportrugby) February 24, 2019
Dual code international Te’o, who has spent club union spells at Leinster and Worcester, insists finances are key to any decision.
“Manu has to do what’s best for him,” Te’o said. “We’ve all got decisions to make in this game.
“You’ve got to secure your family. It’s a business, you know. It’s his decision – for him and his family.
“I don’t really have any advice for him, he has to make up his own mind and I’m sure he will.”Te’o is coming to the end of his Worcester contract (Daniel Hambury/PA)
Te’o himself will be out of contract at Worcester at the end of the season and the 32-year-old has yet to decide what his future holds.
He continued: “I said to myself that I’d come to the Six Nations and enjoy it, enjoy the experience, try to win it and after that I can focus on what happens.
“There are only two weeks left to go and then I can start planning.”
Te’o is the son of a Samoan father and having played for Samoa as a rugby league international, is opposed to the proposal for the creation of a World League that would exclude the Pacific Islands.
The global tournament that is the brainchild of World Rugby has been criticised for favouring richer nations at the expense of the likes of Samoa, Fiji and Georgia.
“The Island nations are rugby nations that give a lot to the game, in the past and in the present,” Te’o said.
“Financially they are unions who need a lot of help.
“Coming from rugby league, the biggest thing about union is that it’s a global game. That’s it’s real selling point and where it has the advantage.
“You have to look after the smaller nations.”Te’o has been kept on the sidelines during the Six Nations (Adam Davy/PA)
Te’o would have started the 32-20 victory over Ireland on February 2 but for a side strain and he has watched from the sidelines since due to Tuilagi taking his chance at inside centre.
“I wouldn’t say it’s frustrating because you have to come to terms with these things. I was happy to see the boys on fire in Dublin and really rip into France,” Te’o said.
“It’s unfortunate when you miss out but you have to think about the team and the squad.
“I was just so happy it went well and to see Manu back firing after a few tough years for him. Maybe we’ll get the chance to play together one time.”
– Press Association
-
CJ Stander: ‘When I was six, my dad ran over me with the truck. That was worse than this’
-
World Rugby defends plans for global Nations Championship
-
Brian Carney gives ‘geography and sovereignty lesson’ on Sky Sports over ‘Great Britain Lions’
-
From the hunters to the hunted: Steve Hansen says Ireland are struggling to cope with ‘top dog’ pressure
Sourse: breakingnews.ie