logo
Pollock out as British and Irish Lions face Waratahs in Sydney

Pollock out as British and Irish Lions face Waratahs in Sydney

BBC News05-07-2025
Update:
Date: 10:15 BST
Title: 'Why would you not pick Owen Farrell?'
Content: NSW Waratahs v Lions (11:00 BST)
Danny CareFormer England scrum-half on BBC's Rugby Union Weekly podcast
Why would you not pick Owen Farrell?
Whatever position he is going to play, whatever role he's going to play in that squad, they are only a better squad for having him there.
Care has seen first hand how Farrell sets standards both on and off the pitch.
If Owen turns up and delivers standards and delivers a better performance from the Lions, and overall and you see a more connected team, then you have to go 'what a masterclass and a masterstroke from the coaches'.
Whatever team Owen is in he makes them better. I have no doubt in whatever shape he is, he will slot in absolutely fine.
I hope he hits the ground running, and everyone just gets on with it.
Update:
Date: 10:12 BST
Title: Faz linking up with Faz
Content: NSW Waratahs v Lions (11:00 BST)
Before we get into previewing the game, a huge Lions story broke on Thursday.
No, it was not the announcement I am backing up my Wednesday live text against Queensland Reds.
Owen Farrell has been called up by his father and Lions head coach Andy to replace Elliot Daly, who was ruled out of the tour after fracturing his arm against the Reds.
Farrell's inclusion comes after a difficult season at Racing 92, where he struggled for form and fitness.
With no international rugby in nearly two years, will the returning Saracens fly-half thrive in Australia?
Update:
Date: 10:09 BST
Title: Post
Content: NSW Waratahs v Lions (11:00 BST)
Not risking Henry Pollock because he is in Andy Farrell's Test 23? Hard to say due to the quality in the back row.
They know what the 20-year-old can do at this stage.
Update:
Date: 10:07 BST
Title: Pollock withdrawal 'nothing too serious' - Farrell
Content: NSW Waratahs v Lions (11:00 BST)
British and Irish Lions
Lions head coach Andy Farrell, speaking to Sky Sports: "Yes, he's got a slight problem with his calf - nothing too serious.
"Knowing what we know, we thought it wasn't right to risk him so we reshuffle."
Update:
Date: 10:05 BST
Title: Referee Paul Williams
Content: NSW Waratahs v Lions (11:00 BST)
New Zealand's Paul Williams is in charge for this one.
Update:
Date: 10:01 BST
Title: Team news - Lions
Content: NSW Waratahs v Lions (11:00 BST)
Two new Lions start in Hugo Keenan and Blair Kinghorn.
However we said that on Wednesday about Keenan and he withdrew through illness, so I don't want to jinx him....
Ireland's Tadhg Beirne will captain the side, with James Ryan making his first start on tour.
Watch out for the Scotland centre pairing of Huw Jones and Sione Tuipulotu, when on form those two are on fire together.
Another new Lion is waiting on the bench in Scotland scrum-half Ben White.
Replacements: Sheehan, Genge, Furlong, McCarthy, Morgan, White, M Smith, Van der Merwe.
Update:
Date: 09:58 BST
Title: Pollock out
Content: NSW Waratahs v Lions (11:00 BST)
Some early news, Lions flanker Henry Pollock has withdrawn from the game because of a tight calf.
Don't panic as the Lions have said it is 'precautionary'.
Tadhg Beirne moves to six, Scott Cummings now starts in the second row and Duhan van der Merwe comes onto the bench.
A shame as Pollock has been box office.
Update:
Date: 09:56 BST
Title: Lions, Lions, Lions
Content: NSW Waratahs v Lions (11:00 BST)
The 2025 British and Irish Lions tour is heating up nicely as the Lions play their third game on Australian soil.
Andy Farrell's side are in Sydney to face New South Wales Waratahs.
Two convincing wins over Western Force and Queensland Reds saw plenty of players push for Test spots.
More of the same in Sydney?
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Don't look Baccus in anger...
Don't look Baccus in anger...

BBC News

time21 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Don't look Baccus in anger...

My little grey cells were in overdrive trying to think of a clever Oasis reunion-related pun for a St Mirren intro but I was out of the blue like a champagne supernova (whatever that is) St Mirren re-signed an Australia international and, hey presto, Don't look Baccus in anger fell into my lap. Better to be lucky than good right Liam-like eyebrows were raised last summer when Keanu Baccus left the Buddies for Mansfield Town, who were newly promoted to the third tier of English football, his return last week was an even greater surprise.I didn't expect the Socceroo to go straight into the team a couple of days after signing either, even though manager Stephen Robinson said he expected him to hit the ground was a tough shift for Baccus against a Motherwell side that dominated possession, but he was probably one of the Buddies' better performers on the day. He is clearly going to be an important player for St Mirren this season in a midfield Robinson says is one of the best in the league. No pressure alongside Killian Phillips and Mark O'Hara in the middle of the pitch looks a formidable trio, with the Australian adding a wee bit of extra George looks to be settling in well between the sticks and again St Mirren appear solid defensively with Miguel Freckleton staking a claim as successor to Richard Taylor alongside stalwarts Marcus Fraser and Alex pace and guile in the team too, with much expected from a fit-again Conor McMenamin and Roland squad looks healthy with competition for places all over the pitch, but the Buddies could be doing with another striker to replace force of nature Toyosi Olusanya and challenge Mikael Mandron for a starting you think there is any chance Olusanya might do a Baccus and return to the club where he made his name?The Englishman hasn't featured much for Houston Dynamo since his switch to the MLS after all. I'd like to say Definitely, Maybe, but the best I can muster is Highly (wall) if there's any chance of John McGinn pitching up at the SMiSA.

Aussie footy great Erin Phillips opens up on the 'devastating' family tragedy that left her 'feeling helpless'
Aussie footy great Erin Phillips opens up on the 'devastating' family tragedy that left her 'feeling helpless'

Daily Mail​

time21 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Aussie footy great Erin Phillips opens up on the 'devastating' family tragedy that left her 'feeling helpless'

In an emotional and honest interview, AFLW icon Erin Phillips has opened up on one of the most difficult periods of her life after revealing that her wife, Tracy Gahan, had a miscarriage in 2022. The AFLW trailblazer, aged 40, said she felt 'helpless' upon learning the news, which she added came just three days before she was due to step onto the footy pitch to play in a preliminary final against Fremantle. The cross-code star began her professional sporting career playing basketball, picking up the WNBL title with the Adelaide Lightning in 2008 before winning two WNBA championships with the Indiana Fever and Phoenix Mercury. Her partner Tracy, is also a pro basketball player. The American first met Phillips while they were both playing for the Adelaide Lightning. Phillips, a key component of the Adelaide Crows AFLW side that won flags in 2017, 2019 and again in 2022, revealed to Hamish McLaughlin on Channel 7's Unfiltered that she and her partner had undergone IVF treatment. 'It took us two years before we had Blake and Brooklyn, and we had multiple unsuccessful pregnancies where we couldn't even get pregnant. We tried. We moved on to the IVF route, which is more expensive, obviously,' the Channel 7 footy broadcaster said on Unfiltered. "Tracy miscarriages and it was one of the most devastating, hardest, awful moments. To see your wife go through that, as her wife, there was nothing I could do to make it better, you feel so helpless." An incredibly brave Erin Phillips opens up about one of the most challenging… — 7AFL (@7AFL) August 13, 2025 '(We were) maybe a bit more hopeful in the chances of becoming parents, and we end up getting five embryos. We tried for two, and we were just hopeful to just get one, and we won the lottery. We got two, we got Blake and Brooklyn. 'I thought, after all the sleepless nights and ... just how crazy life was, I thought maybe we'd be done at two, because looking after kids is a full-time job. 'And so we decided to have another one. So we go for three and then we had Drew straight away, no problem. And then we tried for number four, thinking that this is easy, like the hard part's done. Phillips, heartbreakingly, then revealed that the couple lost their fourth child during Tracy's pregnancy. 'We've had one, two and three. All three embryos took. Why wouldn't number four take? And initially it did,' she said on Unfiltered. 'And then three days before the prelim in 2022, three days before we played Fremantle in the prelim at Adelaide Oval, Tracy miscarried. 'And it was one of the most just... devastating, hardest, awful moments to see your wife, your partner, go through that. 'As her wife, there was nothing I could do to make it better. You just feel so helpless to see her go through that. 'We got to the obstetrician thinking it was a regular scan, (but the scan is) saying there's no heartbeat anymore. And it was like, it was a shock. It was like, we can't possibly be hearing that, surely not.' Phillips stated she and Tracy didn't want to tell anyone what they had been going through as the pair 'didn't want others to worry' about them. 'I didn't want anyone to feel like that something was wrong, and I had a prelim, and I know that seems so irrelevant, a game, and it is in many respects, but it was also a big game that I wanted to find the energy and the willpower to go and perform and bring some joy back into our lives. 'And there was also this element of, you know, we were so lucky. We've already got three kids, you know. You know, we miscarried our fourth. Should we even be feeling like we were unlucky or should we even be grieving.' Phillips would start at half-forward for the Crows during the 2022 Preliminary Final against Fremantle. She booted a goal and 13 disposals to help her side secure a 40-26 victory and their passage to the Grand Final. The two-time AFLW best and fairest winner kicked another goal during the Grand Final against Melbourne, to spur her side on to their third AFLW premiership title. During her interview on Unfiltered, she explained that she wanted to bring some joy back to her partner, Tracy, and her family, following such a difficult period. 'There were so many emotions going on at the time when we won the grand final, it was like the final siren was the moment that I could actually just grieve. You know, I just, I just wanted to bring some joy back in that moment for Trace and what we had just been through. She would go on to lead Adelaide to Grand Final glory in 2022, and in June celebrated her induction into the Australian Football Hall of Fame with her family on the Blue Carpet at the Crown Palladium in Melbourne 'And football seemed like such a small part of what we were going through, but we were able to celebrate and find some joy in that moment.' In June, Phillips, who dreamt of playing pro football like her father, was honoured for her glittering career in the AFLW as she was inducted into the Australian Football Hall of Fame. It meant that the three-time All-Australian and her dad, Greg, became the first father-daughter pair to be inducted into the illustrious club. And during the Hall of Fame ceremony, Phillips celebrated the accolade with her partner Tracy and their young family on the blue carpet at the Crown Palladium.

Cricket Australia chief warns some countries risk going bust by playing Tests
Cricket Australia chief warns some countries risk going bust by playing Tests

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Cricket Australia chief warns some countries risk going bust by playing Tests

Cricket Australia chief executive Todd Greenberg has warned some nations will go 'bankrupt' if they continue to play the longest format of the game, stressing he sees a future with less Test nations. Admitting he has become a 'little unpopular' since taking over from Nick Hockley in March, the former Australian Cricketers' Association boss believes 'scarcity in Test cricket is our friend, not our foe'. 'I don't think everyone in world cricket needs to aspire to play Test cricket, and that might be OK,' Greenberg said on Wednesday with 100 days to go before the Ashes. 'A lot of traditionalists might not like that. 'I'm not suggesting I know the number that will play, but literally we're trying to send countries bankrupt if we force them to try to play Test cricket. 'We need to make sure we invest in the right spaces to play Test cricket where it means something, and has jeopardy, and that's why the Ashes will be as enormous and as profitable as it is because it means something.' But there could be more Test cricket played in Australia, with Greenberg open to playing red-ball matches in Queensland and the Northern Territory during winter. Australia are currently hosting South Africa in Twenty20s and ODIs in Darwin, Cairns and Mackay. Tests were last played in Darwin and Cairns more than 20 years ago, with Australia hosting Sri Lanka in 2003, then Bangladesh the following year. 'I was in Darwin on Sunday night (for the first T20),' Greenberg said. 'I went there primarily because it meant a lot to the people of the Northern Territory. They hadn't had international cricket there for the best part of 17 years. 'The one thing when you go there at this time of year is you take the one biggest variable away, which is the weather. Great facilities ... I can see that (Tests) happening.' Greenberg has also been exploring privatisation of the Big Bash League, noting other T20 competitions around the world are backed by money outside the governing cricket boards. 'That will upset some people, and it will set the hares racing and potentially of people debating the merits,' he said. 'It would be completely naive of us sitting here in Australia to not explore it. I'm not suggesting that we're going to do it yet. 'I'm not suggesting there's been a decision made, and ultimately it won't just be my decision or Cricket Australia's decision. 'It will be the whole of leadership of Australian cricket and it has to be beneficial for everyone.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store