logo
No form, but Owen Farrell picked to drive Lions standards like no other

No form, but Owen Farrell picked to drive Lions standards like no other

Times20 hours ago
Surprise, surprise! Owen Farrell is en route to join the British & Irish Lions; a development that has been trailed from the moment he was omitted from the original squad on fitness grounds. When coaches out here in Australia are talking privately about what Farrell could add to this squad, it felt inevitable that the former England captain would be parachuted in to join his fourth Lions tour.
The trigger for Farrell's call-up was the fractured arm sustained by Elliot Daly in a cruel twist of fate during the Lions' 52-12 victory over Queensland Reds on Wednesday. Daly was not supposed to be playing, but he answered the call after Hugo Keenan fell ill and is now heading home, his arm in a cast. Daly's final act on tour was to announce to the players the team for Saturday's game against NSW Waratahs.
Heading in the opposite direction, and bound for a fourth Lions tour, is his club-mate Farrell, a selection made on faith, not form; experience, not evidence. In performance terms, it defies logic. Farrell barely played for Racing 92 last season because of a groin operation and then concussion, from which he has not yet received the official all-clear. The former England captain has not played Test rugby in 20 months, since stepping back after the 2023 World Cup in order to prioritise his mental health.
But the Lions coaching staff are prepared to overlook the fact that Farrell has no recent body of work and to trust that his experience gleaned from a 112-cap Test career, his rugby intelligence and his leadership, will enhance the squad. It is quite the leap of faith. No other player in the home nations would receive a Lions call-up in these circumstances.
The same could have been said in 2021 of Alun Wyn Jones, who was recalled to the Lions tour three weeks after suffering a dislocated shoulder in the opening game of the campaign. Some people just operate by different rules. Farrell will join Jones in the elite club of Lions to have been on four tours, alongside Willie John McBride, Brian O'Driscoll and Mike Gibson.
'He should be proud of himself,' Andy Farrell, the Lions head coach, said. 'But it's the here and now that matters.'
Multiple sources told The Times that Owen Farrell would have been in the original 38-man squad had he not been injured at the time of the announcement, because he has multiple acolytes among the coaching staff.
Farrell forged a close relationship with Johnny Sexton, now a Lions assistant coach, on the 2013 and 2017 tours. Last November, before he took up his role with the Lions, Sexton told The Times that Farrell would be his Test fly half.
'If Owen Farrell was Irish, he'd be considered the greatest player that we've had,' Sexton said. 'An amazing competitor. He's one of the best team-mates I've ever had. He's one of the best players I've ever played with. It's tough to see him not playing international rugby. He's someone that should be playing international rugby still and captaining England. I have nothing but admiration for him. When you know him as a person, you see the real Owen Farrell.'
Farrell won multiple Premiership and European titles at Saracens alongside Richard Wigglesworth, also a Lions assistant coach. And nobody understands his winning mentality and desire to drive standards better than his father, Andy, the Lions head coach, because it is a quality they share.
So, to that extent it is no surprise at all that Farrell is heading down under. And yet many are stunned by the decision. For example, a Welshman, working as a hotel receptionist in Sydney, reacted to the news with a series of expletives. Safe to say, he was not impressed. And he was not alone.
Dan Biggar, the Lions Test fly half in 2021, struggled to comprehend the decision. Others in the game described it as appalling, questioned whether he was good enough any more to compete at the highest level, or saw the whole thing as a needless distraction that could disrupt the balance of the squad.
How will Finn Russell, who finally gets the chance to be the Lions Test fly half, and Fin Smith respond to this new competition, having spent a combined total of six weeks working on shaping the attack? If Marcus Smith did not already know his place within this squad, then he does now.
So why risk the disruption and the distraction? Why is Owen Farrell flying to Sydney instead of George Ford, who will win his 100th England cap in Argentina on Saturday and is now destined to never be a Lion. Why not turn to a player of similar positional versatility to Daly, such as Scotland's Tom Jordan?
The first clue that something was afoot came in the post-match press conference on Wednesday, when Andy Farrell was asked about his options at No15 without Daly, who had been the form candidate on the tour. 'We have plenty of full backs,' he said. Keenan and Blair Kinghorn both make their first tour appearances on Saturday, but they can comfortably slot into the role. Plus Marcus Smith, Tommy Freeman, Huw Jones and Mack Hansen can fill in.
What is harder to replace is Daly's experience as a three-tour Lion, who had played in 18 of a possible 22 games in New Zealand (2017), South Africa (2021) and Australia. Maro Itoje and Tadhg Furlong are the only Lions in this squad who would have experienced the challenges of a proper tour, having also been in New Zealand in 2017. 'He [Daly] knows how it is and what it's like to tour,' Andy Farrell said.
So too does Owen Farrell. Only Alun Wyn Jones, Matt Dawson and Mako Vunipola have played more Lions games in the professional era. Sexton's comment about Owen Farrell's qualities as a team-mate also came racing to mind — because they chime exactly with a theme that Andy Farrell has been striking on this tour, in multiple addresses to his players.
'If we get competition for places like we know we can, and if we team that with being the best team-mates we possibly can be, we are in for a hell of a ride,' Andy Farrell said.
Owen Farrell will tick both of those boxes. He has been brought to Australia predominantly as an inside centre, the position he played for two Tests on the 2017 Lions tour. His ability to also play fly half has the potential to immediately change the dynamic of the selection conversation.
Instead of selecting three specialists on the bench — such as Alex Mitchell, Fin Smith and Bundee Aki — the Lions could cover more bases with Mitchell, Farrell and a Freeman or Hansen. All of that, of course, is predicated on the assumption that Farrell is fit enough to play. He needs to complete the contact elements of the concussion return protocols to play when he lands.
'We are a little bit vulnerable in and around the No12 position and obviously Owen can play No10 as well. He's the right man at this moment in time for us,' Farrell Sr said.
'If he didn't have a chance of the Test, then what is the point? The experience Owen brings, the support that you need for the group and how you make the room feel. We have said from minute one that the only thing we want is competition.
'I understand all the questions. I know the players on the inside, their characters. You're talking about the No10s [and how they might react]. They're great characters, professionals, people and understand what it is to be a great team-mate on a tour like this.'
Farrell Sr had the unique honour of calling Owen to invite him on the Lions tour after a turbulent couple of years, during which he was abused on social media, booed at the World Cup and relocated to Paris in a club move to escape England that didn't really work out. It is quite the comeback.
They would have both known how this selection would kick up a storm. But Farrell Jr did not hesitate in accepting the opportunity; indeed, he had been in regular touch with the Lions medics over his fitness.
'He didn't cry like Finlay Bealham did [at his call-up],' Andy Farrell said. 'The timing had to be right for him. We feel that the timing is right now and that we can all move on and push on, not just with Owen's career, but what we're trying to achieve here with the Lions. We see him adding to the group and injecting a bit of life and experience into the squad.'
Waratahs v British & Irish Lions
Allianz Stadium, Sydney
Saturday, 11am
TV Sky Sports Main Event
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hothouse kid Jamie Smith starts as he goes on and changes Test in 20 minutes
Hothouse kid Jamie Smith starts as he goes on and changes Test in 20 minutes

The Guardian

time13 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Hothouse kid Jamie Smith starts as he goes on and changes Test in 20 minutes

It started in the worst possible way. By the second over of the day England were 84 for five, five hundred runs and a thousand miles behind. Their best batter, Joe Root had just been caught off the ninth ball of the morning, and their captain, Ben Stokes, who has worked so many miracles for them before, had been caught off the 10th, done by a wicked, lifting delivery, nasty, brutish and short, which brushed off his glove on its way through to the keeper. The bowler, Mohammad Siraj, was on a hat-trick, and here comes England's No 7, Jamie Smith, 24 years old, playing his 19th Test innings. The field was set, the slips were waiting, the crowd was up. There was, everyone watching felt sure, only one way the game was heading. The ball was a good one, on a length just outside off and moving in towards middle. Smith took a half-step forwards and, crack, thumped it back down the ground for four. Everyone else in this England team had to unlearn a lot of what they had been taught to begin to bat like this. But not Smith. He and Harry Brook are hothouse kids. Brendon McCullum is the only coach they have had in Test cricket and his way of playing is all they have known. Between the two of them, they turned this into one the great days of Test cricket. If you offered the 25,000 fans who were lucky enough to be inside the ground the chance to spend this July Friday anywhere else, you would have struggled to find one person among them who would not have turned you down flat and snapped their head back to the match. You can berate England, you can shake your head, puff out your cheeks and suck your teeth, but you surely can not take your eyes off them. Where any number of England sides before them would have tried to poke, prod and block their way towards the end of the innings, and the inevitable defeat lying beyond it, this one decided to crash, bang and wallop their way ahead instead. It was like watching Butch and Sundance come charging out of the building in the final reel. In the first innings in the first Test at Headingley, Smith had been caught on the boundary when he had scored 40, trying to hook a second consecutive six off a short ball from Prasidh Krishna. Time was when English cricket would not have forgiven a shot like that. Sign up to The Spin Subscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week's action after newsletter promotion But Smith revealed that instead of giving him a 'smack on the wrist' all Brendon McCullum said was that he felt the shot had been the right choice because Smith was hitting with the wind. Which Smith said left him thinking he would do the same thing all over again the next time he found himself in a similar position. That happened sooner than Smith might have imagined. After he had been in for 20 minutes on Friday, Krishna hammered a short ball in at his ribs, which Smith whipped away for four. India already had two men back on the leg-side boundary, waiting for him to play it that way, and Shubman Gill decided to move a third back to join them. Krishna bowled a second short ball and Smith hit this one up and over the fielders for six. So Gill moved two more fielders over to the leg side. India now had six men there ready and waiting. Krishna bowled a third short ball and this time Smith whistled his pull shot away for four. So Krishna tried a fourth and Smith hit it the same way. Krishna pitched the sixth ball up full. So Smith hit it back past him for four more. The over went for 23 and counting from that first four onwards Smith took 35 off 13 balls Krishna bowled to him. The game changed in that 20-minute stretch. All of a sudden, England were up and running. Smith had raised his fifty one minute and overtaken Brook in the next and before you knew it he was closing in on Gilbert Jessop's record for the fastest Test century by an Englishman. He did not quite make it. His hundred came in the last over before lunch off the 80th delivery he had faced. When it was all over, at the far end of the day, England trailed by 180 and had 10 wickets left to get. The field was set, the slips were waiting, the crowd was up, there was, everyone watching felt sure, only one way the game was heading …

Fifa Club World Cup: Chelsea face Palmeiras in quarter-final
Fifa Club World Cup: Chelsea face Palmeiras in quarter-final

BBC News

time33 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Fifa Club World Cup: Chelsea face Palmeiras in quarter-final

Update: Date: 01:32 BST Title: Neto starts, Delap retains place Content: Palmeiras v Chelsea (02:00 BST) Chelsea winger Pedro Neto has opted to play after the tragic passing of his former teammate for club and country Diogo Jota. The Blues left the choice up to the Portugal international, who has three goals in three games at the Club World Cup, and he has opted to play after missing training through compassionate leave yesterday. Liam Delap starts ahead of Nicolas Jackson despite his return from suspension and Estevao Willian, who will join Chelsea after the tournament, starts for Palmeiras. Chelsea XI: Sanchez; Gusto, Chalobah, Colwill, Cucurella, James, Fernandez; Palmer, Nkunku, Neto, Delap Subs: Jorgensen, Penders, Slonina, Acheampong, Tosin, Sarr, Aneselmino, Essugo, Andrey Santos, Dewsbury-Hall, Madueke, George, Joao Pedro, Jackson, Guiu Palmeiras XI: Weverton, Agustin, Michael, Vanderlan, Rios, Martinez, Estevao, Torres, Allan, Vitor Roque Subs: Mateus, Marcelo Lomba, Marcos Rocha, Mayke, Naves, Benedetti, Moreno, Felipe Anderson, Raphael Veiga, Lucas Evangelista, Luighi, Thalys, Mauricio, Lopez Update: Date: 01:26 BST Title: Post Content: Palmeiras v Chelsea (02:00 BST) Hello and welcome to live text of Chelsea's Fifa Club World Cup quarter-final against Palmeiras. Can they keep English hopes alive in this tournament - or will they be on their way home tomorrow?

Super Sonay! Emma Raducanu's great childhood rival - and daughter of kebab shop owner - steps out of her shadow with a big win
Super Sonay! Emma Raducanu's great childhood rival - and daughter of kebab shop owner - steps out of her shadow with a big win

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Super Sonay! Emma Raducanu's great childhood rival - and daughter of kebab shop owner - steps out of her shadow with a big win

They grew up as tennis rivals, fiercely playing against each other at the National Tennis Centre in 2011 as nine-year-olds. But breakout star Sonay Kartal looks to be finally stepping out from under the shadow of her famous friend Emma Raducanu as she soared into the last 16 at SW19 for the first time yesterday. The 23-year-old wildcard eased past French qualifier Diane Parry with a flawless straight set 6-4, 6-2 victory. Meanwhile British No 1 Ms Raducanu was in action against number one seed Aryna Sabalenka on Centre Court last night. She was again cheered on by former tennis prodigy Benjamin Heynold, 24, with rumours of a possible romance between the pair continuing to spread. Ms Kartal said it was an 'honour' to be one of three Britons still standing at Wimbledon – despite a record start at SW19 for the nation with 23 home players – after Cameron Norrie also booked his place in the fourth round by defeating Mattia Bellucci in straight sets. Coming from humble beginnings in Brighton where her parents ran a kebab shop, rising star Ms Kartal is now on the brink of becoming a millionaire. If she makes the quarter finals she will have clocked up £400,000 in prize money – she has already pocketed £240,000 by making the fourth round, bringing her total career earnings to £972,000. Ms Kartal, who is 5ft 4in tall, vowed to come out swinging in her next match against the World No 50, Russian Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, tomorrow. Talking about how she would handle the pressure, Ms Kartal said: 'I enjoy it. I think it's an honour. Obviously, you've got a lot of attention on you, it means you're doing good things. 'I feel like I'm going to go out on the court in the next round kind of with nothing to lose at the minute. 'I'm going to go swinging. I think the pressure that I'll feel is the pressure I will be putting on myself just wanting to perform as best as I can.' Ms Kartal said her 'closest family' was in her box on Court One cheering her on while her 'club members that I've known since I was six' were in the stands. 'That was super special,' she said. 'I couldn't necessarily see them, but I could hear a lot of familiar voices in the crowd, which was definitely nice.' Born in Sidcup, Kent, to Clare and Muharrem Kartal, she had a modest upbringing in Brighton where her father owned two Turkish restaurants. She started playing when she was six by following her brother to a training session after an invitation from a coach who ate in their father's restaurant. Earlier this week the player spoke out about how her family could not afford a full-time coach and that she was forced to go to some of the tournaments herself while her coaches undercharged her to help out. The British No 3 said: 'Obviously tennis is super expensive. When I was growing up, I kind of did quite a lot of tournaments on my own because I couldn't afford to pay a coach week in, week out. 'My coaches back in the day, they would charge me I guess the lowest fee and would try to help me out as much as possible.' While Ms Raducanu was riding high after her US Open win, Ms Kartal had little support until she received LTA backing aged 19 which meant she received Pro Scholarship Programme funding. Ms Kartal has previously said that she sees her former rival as an inspiration. 'I grew up playing Emma, so it proves to me that the dream of making it in tennis is not too far away,' she said. The British hopeful also saw her career blighted by injuries in her teenage years – a wrist problem from the ages of 14 to 17 left her struggling to pick up a racket, which was followed by two abdominal tears. Speaking about the difficulties of those years, Ms Kartal said last night: 'It was a bit hit or miss. I was injured for a few years on and off. I kind of never really got consistent. 'I was still playing at the club I'm at today down in Brighton. I was playing national events, the LTA events, doing the nationals for each age group. 'Then I would just go missing a little bit because I'd have an injury or something like that. So it was never consistent.' Ms Kartal's success this week has seen her rankings soar – this time last year she was just inside the top 300 in the world but now she sits in 51st place, and is likely to rise further. As well as being applauded for her impressive run at SW19, Ms Kartal, who has 14 tattoos, is also being hailed as a trendsetter with her throwback 70s baggy Adidas kit. After her win yesterday, she invited fans to make suggestions for designs her 15th tattoo to mark her impressive run. 'If people want to send me their ideas, I will most likely pick one of them and will probably chuck it on somewhere,' she said.

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