
Teenager Konstas not out to prove himself ahead of West Indies return
June 21 (Reuters) - Teenage batter Sam Konstas has vowed to take a more conventional approach than in his early test appearances for Australia after earning a recall to the team that will face the West Indies in the two nations' first test in Bridgetown from Wednesday.
The 19-year-old has been drafted into the side to replace opener Marnus Labuschagne, having made headlines with his outlandish shot selection and rapid scoring during his debut against India in Melbourne in the Boxing Day test.
"I still can't believe it," Konstas told Australian media when asked about his swashbuckling introduction to test cricket. "I don't know what was going through my mind at that time. I thought it was right in the moment. It was good fun.
"The emotions probably got to me with the crowd. It was good reflecting and having a bit of time off, trying to strengthen my game. Hopefully we get to win the next test match.
"I feel like I trust people that I work with and they understand my game. I'm not trying to prove to anyone how I'm going to play. I just want to be myself and obviously understand when to take the game on."
Konstas hit 60 runs in his debut innings and kept his place for the following test in Sydney as the Australians wrapped up a 3-1 series win over Virat Kohli and company.
He was included in the squad that travelled for a two-test series against Sri Lanka later in January, but was not selected for either match.
Konstas has earned a recall for the three-test series in the Caribbean due to Labuschagne's struggles with the bat, while Josh Inglis has also been recalled as a result of a finger injury sustained by Steve Smith.
"Obviously, it's a tough team to crack and (they have) got legends of the game in that team," Konstas said.
"Very excited for the opportunity, and hopefully I can grab it with both hands.
"I've been training really hard and I understand the reasons why they picked (other players in recent tests).
"I'm just trying to be in the present moment, trying to focus on a few key areas with my batting coach, and feel like I've come a long way. Hopefully, I can display that in the next few test matches.
"It's a dream come true, to be honest. Nineteen years old, playing for your country, travelling the world, getting to experience different cultures and against the best players as well. I'm lucky to be where I am."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
11 minutes ago
- Reuters
List of Super Rugby champions
SYDNEY, June 21 (Reuters) - Super Rugby champions since the competition began in 1996 (home team in CAPS): Year Champions Runners-up Score 2025 CANTERBURY CRUSADERS Waikato Chiefs 16-12 2024 AUCKLAND BLUES Chiefs 41-10 2023 Crusaders CHIEFS 25-20 2022 Crusaders BLUES 21-7 2021 Local competitions due to COVID pandemic 2020 Local competitions due to COVID pandemic 2019 CRUSADERS Jaguares 19-3 2018 CRUSADERS Lions 37-18 2017 Crusaders LIONS 25-17 2016 WELLINGTON HURRICANES Lions 20-3 2015 Otago Highlanders HURRICANES 21-14 2014 NSW WARATAHS Crusaders 33-32 2013 CHIEFS ACT Brumbies 27-22 2012 CHIEFS Sharks 37-6 2011 QUEENSLAND REDS Crusaders 18-13 2010 BULLS Stormers 25-17 2009 BULLS Chiefs 61-17 2008 CRUSADERS Waratahs 20-12 2007 Bulls SHARKS 20-19 2006 CRUSADERS Hurricanes 19-12 2005 CRUSADERS Waratahs 35-25 2004 BRUMBIES Crusaders 47-38 2003 BLUES Crusaders 21-17 2002 CRUSADERS Brumbies 31-13 2001 BRUMBIES Sharks 36-6 2000 Crusaders BRUMBIES 20-19 1999 Crusaders HIGHLANDERS 24-19 1998 Crusaders BLUES 20-13 1997 BLUES Brumbies 23-7 1996 BLUES Sharks 45-21 Super 12 from 1996 Super 14 from 2006 Super Rugby (15 teams) from 2011 Super Rugby (18 teams) from 2016 Super Rugby (15 teams) from 2018 Super Rugby Pacific (12/11 teams) from 2022


Telegraph
13 minutes ago
- Telegraph
The many reasons to be cheerful about Lions despite defeat
A 28-24 loss to Argentina means the British and Irish Lions will head to Australia on a note of frustration. For anyone keen for a good omen, the last time they lost their opening game was in 1971, and that did not turn out badly. Andy Farrell refused to offer caveats for what he called a 'disconnected' display. Indeed, he positively squirmed at any hint of mitigation for a disappointing result. That said, a strange evening presented plenty of encouraging aspects for the class of 2025. And, frankly, Farrell cannot disregard them because his team has a foundation on which to build in Australia. Strength of opposition Put simply, unless the Invitational Australia and New Zealand side is loaded with All Blacks, the Lions are unlikely to face opposition as strong as they did on Friday evening until July 19 when the Test series against the Wallabies begins in Brisbane. It always seemed punchy that Argentina were 17-point underdogs with some bookies, and so it proved. Despite fielding a few relative rookies who will have been unfamiliar to viewers outside of South America, they were always going to pose attacking threats. Argentina spoil the party in Dublin as Ignacio Mendy scores the opening try 🇦🇷 — Sky Sports (@SkySports) June 20, 2025 Their cohesion and clinical edge, and strength of their progress under Felipe Contepomi, were crystalised in three fine tries. The first was created when Santiago Carreras ghosted onto a pass from Tomás Albornoz. Juan Martín González sparked the second, which was finished by Albornoz, by pouncing on a loose ball. Then, for the third, Argentina thrived in open space once more. Albornoz was the architect, stepping past Tom Curry and brushing off Henry Pollock before offloading to Joaquin Oviedo. Justo Piccardo took it on and two replacements, Matias Moroni and Santiago Cordero, capped the 70-metre move as the former grubbered ahead for the latter. 'We took our chances,' said head coach Contepomi afterwards. This was the difference. The Pumas capitalise on the Lions' sloppiness and take the lead right before half-time 👀 — Sky Sports (@SkySports) June 20, 2025 Shades of shape… Intricate and varied phase play is Farrell's calling card and, while the end product went missing too often, the Lions did seem to have made impressive progress in that facet. How often do we hear coaches insist that attack is the last piece of the puzzle to come together? There were no such pleas here. On the back of an Argentina drop-out in the eighth minute, the Lions retained possession and probed on both flanks, with Fin Smith ghosting behind a four-man pod before Tommy Freeman arced all the way from the right wing onto the left a phase later. Smith's attempted kick-pass towards Jac Morgan, one of the many forwards who migrated to the touchline, was then plucked by Ignacio Mendy. Patience and greater accuracy can enhance such foundations. The PACE from Cordero ⚡️ Argentina hit back ‼️ — Sky Sports (@SkySports) June 20, 2025 …and a line-out that is bound to improve Maro Itoje admitted that the Lions were short of line-out rhythm after both Luke Cowan-Dickie and Ronan Kelleher missed their men over the 80 minutes. Just as the presence of Ollie Chessum immediately polished England's line-out during the Six Nations earlier this season, so he will better the Lions' scruffy set-piece efforts upon being introduced in Australia. The second-row shake-up is fascinating with Joe McCarthy and James Ryan also returning and Scott Cummings bound to strive for more game-time. Jack Conan rather than Ben Earl at No 8 would provide another outlet and Chessum can always slip to blindside flanker to tighten everything up. Intent from the off An alternative perspective on the frustration voiced by Farrell and his players regarding the slew of errant offloads is that the Lions evidently felt free enough to attempt them. While that might seem like an attempt to clutch at straws, Farrell's men will have to throw ambitious passes to seize try-scoring chances Down Under. A head coach like Farrell would probably prefer to refine ambition rather than coax a conservative side out of its shell. Busy wings Freeman was particularly proactive as far as hunting touches. Mack Hansen arrived from the bench to replace Duhan van der Merwe and looked for work as well. Farrell believes in a 'messy' attacking system where wings are given licence to circle into midfield and this was a seriously promising start. Scrum a resounding success Argentina have not been particularly imposing in the scrum for some time, but Ellis Genge and Finlay Bealham still took them to the cleaners. Both props laid down statement performances, which is a significant bonus with Andrew Porter and Will Stuart yet to be used. One area that Farrell did endorse was the Lions 'aggressive' scrummaging, which can be a destructive point of difference against the Wallabies. "Argentina caught us slipping" 🗣️ Maro Itoje says the Lions showed signs of promise despite defeat to Argentina 🔴 — Sky Sports (@SkySports) June 20, 2025 Two 12s – now for a 13 Bundee Aki candidly conceded that he did not feel able to bring Sione Tuipulotu into the game as much as he would have liked. To reinforce the same point, Tuipulotu seemed to grow more prominent in attack after Elliot Daly replaced Aki on the hour mark. As far as balancing backlines, the pair of specialist outside centres in Garry Ringrose and Huw Jones will be important figures on this tour. The plus point is that, in Aki and Tuipulotu, the Lions have two combative, skilful focal points to deploy in the 12 jersey. Here come the cavalry From Finn Russell to Chessum via Conan and the Leinster cohort, Farrell will be close to a full complement from here on out. They are waiting only on Blair Kinghorn, capable of starring either at full-back or on the wing once his Toulouse commitments are done. THE FIRST TRY OF THE 2025 LIONS TOUR ‼️ Bundee Aki finally gets the Lions opening try on familiar territory 🔥 — Sky Sports (@SkySports) June 20, 2025 Costly lessons Reviewing a tight and painful loss – one that was underpinned by a number of straightforward fixes – is a surefire way to move forward. As early as the second minute, after Argentina won back a high ball, the Lions clustered around a ruck catastrophically. The Pumas could play to space all too easily, and eventually eked out three points. Argentina's first try was another elementary spacing issue. It was inexcusable that the Lions were outflanked on the second phase after a line-out, which came from an inability to fold around the breakdown quickly enough. "Not acceptable... dissapointed" ‼️ Andy Farrell's scathing assessment of the Lions defeat 🗣️ — Sky Sports (@SkySports) June 20, 2025 Contact skills were lacking for the next three points, with Pablo Matera pouncing, and the Albornoz try – a real sucker-punch – was spawned directly from a Van der Merwe fumble inside the Pumas 22. Tadhg Beirne's neck-roll was another costly lapse and Rodrigo Isgró was far too quick for Pollock's supporting colleagues at the death, darting in for a clean pilfer.


Telegraph
13 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Live England vs India: Score and latest updates from first Test, day two at Headingley
10:00AM Can England fight back on day two? It is advantage India after day one of the series as they ended the first day at Headingley on 359/3. Centuries from Yashasvi Jaiswal and new captain Shubman Gil led India to a dominant day despite being put into bat by Ben Stokes. It was a chastening day for England in the field having won the toss and opted to bowl first. Stokes' decision at the toss was a talking point after the first day's play, with former England captain Michael Vaughan particularly critical of that call. 'Within the first hour it was a good pitch, so it is not easy to restrict runs,' Vaughan said on Test Match Special. 'Ben Stokes is still positive and he will come back tomorrow [today] saying let's get seven wickets. 'I am an old-school traditionalist here at Leeds that when the sun is shining, with dry weather, you bat. I was staggered when he said he was going to bowl. Traditions are out the window. You always have to pick your decisions on that moment, and not things that you did here years ago. It cannot affect what the decision is today [yesterday]. 'You look at the England side and their strength is in the batting. And there is inexperience in the bowling. Ben clearly had a gut feeling, and sometimes it has worked. We always say that on this surface, it is flat. But we will not know that for sure until we see Jasprit Bumrah bowl.' In the last nine home Tests England have won the toss, they have batted first once and won six of those matches. The last six Test matches on this ground have been won by the team bowling first. Jaiswal's incredible record against England continued yesterday; it was his fifth Test century and third against England. In the last series played between these sides in India in 2024, Jaiswal scored a mammoth 712 runs. Speaking after the first day's play, Jaiswal expressed his delight at his performance and spoke of the importance of their preparation for this series. 'It was very, very good and we all did well today. It was amazing to go out and bat, enjoy the English summer as well so we are very happy. I just try to be myself and go out there and enjoy the game. That is what I do all the time. We had very good practice sessions and matches for a few weeks. We were trying to make it as simple as possible. If there is a loose ball I try to go for it. I was just thinking to focus on my process because I have worked very hard in my preparation. I was just trying in myself and have that desire to do well. I really enjoyed it.' Gill has taken over the Test captaincy from Rohit Sharma and yesterday marked his first Test ton outside of Asia. Day two gets under way at 11am BST.