
Wallaby Ikitau looking forward to midfield connection with 'natural' Suaalii
Ikitau and rugby league convert Suaalii are expected to be coach Joe Schmidt's preferred centres for the three-match Lions series starting in Brisbane on July 19, having first combined on Suaalii's test debut against England last November.
"He's a natural footballer. He knows how to play whatever position he's put in," Ikitau told reporters of the New South Wales Waratahs back.
"He's smart in defence, in attack. So I think he'll come back to it when he's in training."
Rugby Australia and the Waratahs lavished a reported A$5 million ($3.28 million) to lure Suaalii away from the National Rugby League, and the hulking 21-year-old has impressed in his four-test career to date.
Suaalii's first Super Rugby season was less successful, suffering a complex toe injury early on and then a broken jaw that ended his campaign early for the struggling Waratahs.
Suaalii will likely return to action against Fiji on Sunday in Newcastle, the Wallabies' last warmup before facing the Lions.
Home fans are eager to see whether Suaalii can deliver in the pressure cooker of a Lions series.
"What I learnt from him last year is he's a harsh critic, he's pretty harsh on the way he plays," said Ikitau.
"If he makes a mistake he's really harsh on himself. But in terms of his football, we saw on the spring tour just the kind of plays that he comes up with. They're special."
($1 = 1.5244 Australian dollars)
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BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Farrell muddies waters & Kinghorn's class
In the face of their disappointment at the Allianz Stadium the British and Irish Lions tried their best to talk up the positives of their unconvincing 21-10 win over the Waratahs, but it was the hardest of hard coach Andy Farrell said that the 50-point victories against the Western Force and the Queensland Reds weren't what real touring was all about. "The 50-pointers aren't reality, really, are they?" said Farrell. He sounded like a man who thought they were real enough when they happened."It was a different type of game [against the Waratahs] but we are we glad that's happened to us," he added, before saying: "It is good, isn't it?"So it's good, apparently, that a scare and a visit to the dark side will hold them in good stead for the Test match series with the Wallabies. It's one way of looking at it, but there are others. Farrell lets himself down with pitch comments The Lions got turned over so many times and became helter-skelter in attack. Farrell owned that to an extent, but his complaints about the pitch being watered were a touch cringe-inducing."The pitch was very wet and I was asking Mike Catt after the game and he was laughing," said Farrell of the former England international who is now on the coaching staff of the Waratahs. "I mean, that's good tactics from them, isn't it? That the ball's slippery."He was asked directly if he believed the Waratahs deliberately watered the pitch before the game to make it harder for the Lions. "I don't know," he replied. "I mean, Catty just laughed. We've seen that done plenty of times. I don't know whether the pitch needed watering."As a piece of excuse-making it was wildly out of place. Maybe that's why Farrell started to row back subsequently. Was he not aware that the pitch at the Allianz is infamously greasy because of terrible drainage? Did he not know that they're intending to dig it up soon? Did he not know that a 'bomb cyclone', external hit Sydney earlier in the week?"We know all that," said Farrell. "But we have been here for two days now and it has been glorious. The pitch was OK and we are not complaining."It very much sounded like he was. Lock forward Scott Cummings, who made an impressive return to form, said later that the pitch was "a bit boggy". It really wasn't. But even if it was, so what? These are the British and Irish Lions we're talking about. The elite. A wet ball? Who cares?Waratahs coach Dan McKellar had a bit of fun at Farrell's expense when talking about the rain that fell on the city. "Andy was probably sunning himself in Brisbane on Tuesday, but it wasn't pleasant in Sydney, that's for sure."Famed for an attention to detail and a no-excuse culture, this was odd stuff from Farrell. Smith struggles and door opens for Owen Farrell The power of Owen Farrell is something to behold. When the cameras panned to him at the Allianz on Saturday the entire crowd reacted, some with pantomime booing, others with cheering. The one thing they weren't doing was being who arrived in Sydney on Friday, took it well, smiling and laughing. The guy is pure box office. We're all still talking about why he's been parachuted into this squad. The coach's son, yes, fine, we get it. But what else is going on here?Some observers say that this was always going to happen and that Farrell will definitely be in the Test 23 for Brisbane. They're convinced of it. The intrigue is father's official explanation in midweek is that he felt his squad was a little short at inside centre with Sione Tuipulotu and Bundee Aki the only options. Terrific ones, in there more to it? Does he have doubts about Fin Smith's readiness to back-up Finn Russell on the bench? Does he have issues around the leadership of the squad - is everyone too nice and/or too quiet?If those are views he shares then Saturday might have only reinforced things. Smith struggled in running the backline and the direction of the team was all over the place for most of the enter Faz Jnr, but when? Not on Wednesday against the Brumbies, says his father. He might still be getting over the jet-lag. Next Saturday in Adelaide against the invitational Australia-New Zealand team? All things being equal, about after that? If you believe that Owen can step into a Lions Test match squad (covering 10 and maybe 12) after not playing in nine weeks, having not played particularly well before that and having not featured in an international game for 20 months, then you're convinced that he can return to his best stuff at the mere sight of the red jersey, as if the last year doesn't he can. And maybe he will be given the chance for a fairy tale tour, but the stakes are monstrously high. Smith's struggles made Owen's elevation a bit more likely. But will he be any good? Kinghorn looks classy and a Test Lion in the making Playing for Toulouse gives you a certain aura, especially when you're holding down a place every week and have just won back-to-back French Kinghorn, who arrived in Australia on Monday, played nicely on the left wing but he will be in the 15 jersey come the Tests, unless things go badly awry. The Scot has authority, athleticism, a big boot and a fantastic running game. Not many improved their chances on Saturday but Kinghorn certainly did. McKellar gives Schmidt plenty to think about The Waratahs had a depleted squad on Saturday but gave the Lions a mighty scare. What was McKellar's gameplan?"We wanted to put them under a lot of pressure with our press defence," he said before the match. "They're an outstanding team but they've got two arms and two legs and if we take away their time and space, and if we back that up with accuracy in our physicality, then we can create turnover opportunities."And, boy, did they create turnover opportunities. Charlie Gamble, who we can be safe to call an unheralded openside, won turnover and after turnover. The Lions were routed on the floor. They coughed up possession 20 times and gave away 13 head coach Joe Schmidt will be square-eyed from watching the footage of the Waratahs causing the Lions so much grief. No need to panic, there's still a fine 23-man Test squad available The Waratahs severely dented the Test match hopes of a number of Lions. Hugo Keenan was praised by Farrell for playing the game - maybe the effects of a bug were still with him to an extent - but he had a really rough Hansen, praised to the hilt by Farrell after his performance in Perth, probably took a step back. Huw Jones and his partnership with Sione Tuipulotu had its moments, but what's with all the touchline-to-touchline rugby from the 28-year-old? He's devastating when going direct. Is this lateral movement part of Farrell's grand plan?"We made line breaks the whole time when we were direct and it didn't matter if we were playing off nine or off 10," said Farrell. "When we were direct we were good." So why not go direct more often?The call between 'Huwipulotu' and 'Ringaki' (humble apologies Garry Ringrose and Bundee Aki) is as tight as a drum. Does Farrell go with his trusted Irish pair? Jones bounced right back into contention with his two tries. He looks like he's regaining his edge again after picked a prospective squad in this space last week and there are a few somebody thundered that this writer should be sent home because Jac Morgan was left out of the 23. Time is running out and emotions are running squad: Kinghorn, Freeman, Jones, Tuipulotu (Aki), Lowe, Russell (F Smith*), Gibson-Park (Mitchell); Genge (Schoeman), Sheehan (Cowan-Dickie), Bealham (Furlong), Itoje, McCarthy, Chessum (Beirne), Van der Flier, Conan (Pollock)*Farrell isn't here to hold tackle bags. If he looks decent next Saturday then he might well be in the 23 and the skies may fall in rugbyland.


North Wales Chronicle
an hour ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Off-colour Lions made to work for victory over New South Wales Waratahs
A fortnight out from the first Test against the Wallabies and the Lions struggled to put away a side that finished eighth in the Super Rugby table and had lost five of their last six matches. Even the arrival of a heavyweight bench could not provide the lift Andy Farrell's men needed at Allianz Stadium and a dismal second-half made for grim viewing with Alex Mitchell's 55th-minute try at least providing some breathing space. Full time in Sydney 🦁#Lions2025 — British & Irish Lions (@lionsofficial) July 5, 2025 Henry Pollock was withdrawn from the back row shortly before kick-off because of a tight calf and it was a good match for the rising star of English rugby to miss with a number of Lions playing their way out of Test match contention. Only Scotland centres Sione Tuipulotu and Huw Jones and props Pierre Schoeman and Finlay Bealham distinguished themselves with the impressive Jones finishing with two tries, lifting his total for the tour to three. Owen Farrell arrived into camp on Friday after being called-up as a replacement for the injured Elliot Daly and witnessed a display that fell well short of previous outings against Western Force and Queensland Reds. The former England captain smiled as he was booed and cheered when shown on the big screen, with team-mate Will Stuart comically joining the jeering coming from home fans. The Waratahs fought their hearts out even though they were missing several key players such as Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii and Angus Bell to Australia duty against Fiji on Sunday. Taniela Tupou, dubbed the 'Tongan Thor', had at least been released back to the franchise in the hope he would find some form ahead of the Tests but instead he struggled as the Lions mined three scrum penalties in the opening quarter. Huw Jones at the double in the first half 🦁#Lions2025 — British & Irish Lions (@lionsofficial) July 5, 2025 The tourists were dominating the set-piece, but it was the understanding of centres Tuipulotu and Jones that led to an opening try that was forged in Scotland. Jones crossed after being sent through a gap with a short pass from his Scotland centre colleague and then powered over for a second having also made the initial carry that drove the hosts backwards. Waratahs openside Charlie Gamble had seen a try chalked off for offside at the line-out but his team eventually succeeded in the 35th minute when Darby Lancaster capitalised on hesitant defending on the Lions' right wing. Hugo Keenan was enduring a nightmare debut after making error after error but he was far from alone as the familiar theme of dropped passes and poor handling continued to haunt Farrell's men. They led just 14-5 at the interval and when Ethan Dobbin finished a maul try one minute into the second half they suddenly found themselves in a tight spot, playing poorly against a side that was scrapping for everything. Mitchell settled the nerves when he took advantage of an overlap to dummy his way over and the Lions were unable to break through again in a desperately scrappy final quarter.


Telegraph
2 hours ago
- Telegraph
The moment that summed up Lions' limp display – and will leave Farrell furious
It seemed every time that the camera cut to the Lions coaching box, Andy Farrell was shaking his head. The Lions head coach had much to be disappointed by as a dozen or so players played their way out of Test contention in a collective performance against New South Wales Waratahs that lacked any fire. More than anything, what Farrell prizes in a Lions setting are those players who bust a gut for their team-mates. The happiest that he has been on this trip was in discussing Mack Hansen's double effort to get back to retrieve Ben Donaldson's kick ahead before chasing his own kick to force a scrum. It was far from a consequential moment in a routine victory against the Western Force, but, as Farrell said, it epitomised 'the type of spirit that we want throughout the team'. It was also notable that on Saturday night Farrell name-checked Scott Cummings, who had endured a difficult match against the Western Force, after his try-saving intervention, sprinting back to snuff out a Waratahs breakout from a turnover. Yet amid the multitude of knock-ons, missed tackles and bad kicks, there was one incident that summed up the Lions' night and will leave Farrell especially furious. It came in the 58th minute with the Lions in possession in midfield. Flanker Josh van der Flier steps off his right foot to initiate a line-break with Ellis Genge going with him. Van der Flier offloads to Genge who is quickly tackled by Matt Philip. This is a perfect attacking opportunity with front-foot ball on the edge of the Waratahs' 22. However, Van der Flier overruns his clear-out and suddenly the Lions are in trouble as the outstanding Charlie Gamble enters the scene. Scrum-half Alex Mitchell is initially the only player to arrive in support and the Waratahs openside flanker duly wins a holding-on penalty. What would have alarmed Farrell the most was that when Genge is tackled, five Waratahs forwards get back to fold into the defensive line before Tadhg Beirne finally arrives in support of Mitchell's losing battle. At the point that Van der Flier makes his step, there are five forwards, including Genge, in his immediate vicinity as well as Fin Smith and Sione Tuipulotu. This was a simple failure of effort. The Waratahs forwards worked harder to get back onside than the Lions pack did to administer the clean-out. Skill-execution errors – and there were plenty of those – are forgivable in Farrell's eyes; being out-hustled and outfought are not, especially by a side whom the local media expected to ship 70 points. It is a shameful act of bias towards the winning side that man of the match was awarded to Van der Flier when he and all the Lions forwards were played off the park by Gamble, who came up with four turnovers. Gamble, who sports a superb Australian moustache, has never played Test rugby. In fact, just a few years ago he was playing semi-professionally in the NSW Suburban Rugby while working as a beer delivery driver. 'I was rolling kegs and delivering beers to pub, it was actually pretty cool,' said Gamble who looked every bit the equal if not superior to Van der Flier, the 2022 World Player of the Year. In total, the Waratahs won 10 turnovers to the Lions' one – the tourists also committed 20 turnovers – as part of a premeditated assault on the breakdown. The Waratahs had studied the way in which Argentina had also caused the Lions all manner of problems in the 28-24 victory in Dublin and felt that both the Western Force and Queensland Reds, who both took 50-point beatings, had been too passive in that area. 'We watched a bit of film,' Gamble said. 'We thought Argentina really put pressure on them, came off the line and gave them less time to play the ball to the edge. We thought the Force and Reds held back. Our game plan was always to press off the line and try to force an error. They were probably pretty frustrated at how they looked after the breakdown and the breakdown was at the centre of our game plan. Our brutality is key to how we play.' Joe Schmidt, the Australia head coach, who is preparing for the Wallabies' own warm-up match against Fiji in Newcastle on Sunday, will have been taking copious notes. Had the Waratahs scrum been remotely solid then the Lions would have been in serious trouble. The set-piece was one area that noticeably improved from the past two performances on Australian soil, but, like whack a mole, as soon as one problem is solved then another one appears, giving Farrell much to chew over when the Lions jump on the bus to Canberra on Monday.