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Thirteen Lions calls Andy Farrell must get right

Thirteen Lions calls Andy Farrell must get right

Telegraph07-05-2025

A shadowy process in which the participants are sworn to secrecy, the papal conclave would do well to learn from the levels of mystery and intrigue surrounding Andy Farrell's final Lions selection meeting at an undisclosed location in London on Wednesday.
Telegraph Sport raises 13 topics that will determine the make-up of the squad, to be announced on Thursday afternoon.
Rule by debate or dictatorship?
As head coach, Farrell will have the final say on squad selection. The question is how much input will his assistants have? While Richard Wigglesworth, Simon Easterby, John Dalziel, Andrew Goodman, Johnny Sexton and John Fogarty are all fine individual coaches, this is not a cabinet of heavyweights like Ian McGeechan assembled in 2009 or Warren Gatland in 2017. Fogarty and Dalziel have been coaching at international level for five years while the others are relative novices and none have coached on a Lions tour before. Certainly Sexton will not be shy in sharing his opinion – see his thoughts on Finn Russell – but how much sway will that have in the final decision? Speaking in March, Farrell suggested none of his thoughts will be set in stone when he walks into a room. 'I am open-minded enough to be persuaded in my opinion, I am not too pig- headed for that,' Farrell said. 'But if it comes down to a 50-50 I'd be happy to make the call. The way I like to do it when you start getting to the point or near the point where you start to play devil's advocate on everyone's opinion and the truth definitely comes out then.'
Recency bias vs class is permanent
Since the last Lions tour, Ireland have been by far the best-performing home nation – significant World Cup hiccup aside – winning two Six Nations titles as well as three Triple Crowns, reaching world No 1 status as well as securing landmark victories in South Africa and New Zealand. However, their form has dipped significantly with an underwhelming loss to the All Blacks in the autumn followed by a rout at home to France. A Leinster side containing 20 Irish internationals then lost to Northampton in the Champions Cup semi-final. Farrell's selections as Ireland head coach demonstrate that he is loyal – some would say to a fault – to players whose form might be wavering. Can he afford to apply the same principles to Lions selection? Or will he weigh the most recent high-level performances more prominently in that final selection call. 'Some teams are the worst in the world or the best in the world after two rounds and then how they finish they are now the best in the world or the worst in the world,' Farrell said. 'I just have to make sure I am level-headed enough to just see the reality of it.'
We need to talk about Sam...
On that subject, fly-half Sam Prendergast was conspicuously poor in both Ireland's loss to France loss and against Northampton last Saturday. His defence is simply a liability and one that would be ruthlessly exploited by a master manipulator such as Joe Schmidt. In a way, this should not be a surprise for a young fly-half who has not yet played 50 games of senior rugby and has a few rough edges. With his sumptuous range of passing and kicking you can see why Farrell is so smitten with Prendergast as Ireland's future No 10. Sexton too is a huge admirer. It has been suggested Prendergast would learn a lot from going to Australia but that is anathema to what the Lions should stand for. They are no development vehicle. Prendergast has plenty of attributes to be a successful Test fly-half but the flaws may appear too big to ignore.
…. and Owen
If Prendergast's selection ahead of, say Fin Smith or Finn Russell, would be incendiary then Owen Farrell going in the same circumstances would trigger a thermonuclear reaction on social media and beyond. Farrell has the experience of three previous tours and through force of personality would set internal standards that are so crucial to the Lions success over the tour, as former team-mate Alex Goode attests to. However, Farrell does not have the crucial commodity of form to merit selection after a rough first season with Racing 92. Farrell senior has said his only criteria is selecting players who give the Lions the best possible chance of success Down Under, but however alien the idea of nepotism might be to him, he has to at the very least consider the optics of selecting his son.
The French connection
The plus side of selecting Farrell is that barring a late surge Racing should not be involved in the Top 14 play-offs, allowing him to be called up instantly. Same for Courtney Lawes at Brive. For other contenders such as Blair Kinghorn and Jack Willis with Toulouse and Ben White, Kyle Sinckler and David Ribbans with Toulon, who are currently first and third in the Top 14, the situation is more complicated. Should either side reach the Top 14 final on June 28 then they will miss at least the Lions' first three fixtures against Argentina in Dublin on June 22, Western Force in Perth on June 28 and Queensland Reds in Brisbane on July 2. This, needless to say, would be far-from-ideal preparation and while Farrell previously appeared relaxed about it, he may only be able to make one or two rather than four or five exemptions.
Witness the fitness
The other big factor the coaches will need to consider is the current injury list which sadly now includes Caelan Doris who appears increasingly unlikely to make the tour. Centre Ollie Lawrence, wing Ollie Sleightholme and second row George Martin, who featured in England's Six Nations, are all out. Then comes a list of players who are currently injured but working their way back to fitness such as George Furbank, Mack Hansen, Sione Tuipulotu, Huw Jones, Blair Kinghorn, Zander Fagerson, Matt Fagerson, Duhan van der Merwe and Immanuel Feyi-Waboso. Some are due back before the end of the club season but Farrell can only take so many risks in a squad touring the other side of the world.
Price of utilities
Now if Farrell does intend to take some French-based players as well as some players who might at the very least be far from 100 per cent, this will place an added premium on certain individuals to cover multiple positions, especially in the backline. Elliot Daly and Jamie Obsorne can seamlessly slot between the centres as well as the back three while Blair Murray can feature there and at fly-half. In a specialist role like No 10, where game minutes may be limited, the ability to fill other positions is especially important which may well play into Marcus Smith's hands. 'You need versatility in a Lions squad,' Danny Wilson, the Harlequins head coach, said. 'He can genuinely do that. He's shown it at 10 and 15 internationally.' Then there is Asher Opoku-Fordjour, that rarest of beasts as a prop who can double up at loosehead and tighthead, which was noted by scrum coach John Fogarty. 'Something like that is valuable, isn't it?' While it is valuable, there is also a balance between having Jacks of all trades and too few specialist masters.
Combo deals or mix and match?
With time so limited on a Lions tour, there will be a strong temptation to pick a couple of flat-pack combinations off the shelf rather than mix and match. Hence picking ready-made centre pairings of Tuipulotu and Jones or Bundee Aki and Garry Ringrose. Same with the half-backs where there is an added appeal of picking Alex Mitchell and Fin Smith or Jamison Gibson-Park who play for both club and country. If Maro Itoje is going to be your main lineout target, that counts in the favour of Jamie George who has thrown to Itoje more than any individual. However, there is a danger that if you go down that path then you end up with the entire Ireland team.
Can Welsh dragons bring fire?
Picking on a combination basis would work against Wales players. So would picking on the basis of Test results. With no Welsh coach in the room, there may not be anyone banging the table on their behalf. The job for Farrell and his team is to separate the individual quality from the team's performances. There are very few backs in world rugby who look like a million dollars behind a retreating pack, but Tomos Williams has given frequent demonstrations with Gloucester how dangerous he can be when given something of a platform. Same with Murray with the Scarlets. Jac Morgan is competing in the most fiendishly competitive position at openside but do you give his consistently excellent performances for Wales extra credit – or does he have more involvements because he is on the back foot so much? But Farrell was brutally clear that he is not going to kowtow to the notion that each nation deserves a set representation.
Need for speed
Go back through past Lions squads, whether Louis Rees-Zammit in 2021, Anthony Watson in 2017 or Jason Robinson in 2001, and there has always been a gas merchant. Now pace is relative. The majority of the likely backline are by no means slow but by Test standards there is a lack of an out-and-out speedster, with the possible exception of Scotland's Darcy Graham who is as much elusive as electric. How much will this play into the hands of Feyi-Waboso as he slowly recovers from the shoulder surgery which was botched between the Rugby Football Union and Exeter? Or does Farrell have another candidate in mind to inject some raw speed into his backline?
Dropping a Pollock
At this stage, Henry Pollock can no longer be considered a long shot from left field. Only the astounding depth in the back row prevents him from being a certain selection given his recent performances. Either way it will be a controversial call: overlooking possibly the form player in Europe or selecting a one-cap England flanker ahead of far more established options such as Ben Curry, who was one England's best performers in the Six Nations, or Josh van der Flier. Pollock could still arrive as a call-up from England's tour to Argentina but Farrell must be tempted to unleash that youthful fearlessness that he once possessed in spades for Wigan and Great Britain.
Avoiding 'off-tour' adventures
Picking a Lions squad is not simply about picking the best of the best, it is also about the blend of personalities and the ability to be a good tourist. This is not to say that anyone will be selected for the quality of their banter or that they will not fight tooth and nail to get a starting shirt, but it is crucial that those players not picked for the first Test do not go 'off tour' as has happened previously. Farrell will have done his homework on those who react well to being overlooked. Several players for instance have commented that George Ford was instrumental in keeping standards high in England's training despite only being selected for the final match. Another factor that needs to be considered is the experience of Lions tours. Even those who went to South Africa in 2021 will not have had a full taste of it behind closed doors. There needs to be at least a cohort of senior players who can relay their experiences, both good and bad, to the rest of the group so the squad are not caught unawares by the intensity of a full-fat tour with fans.
About Schmidt
Finally, there is he who must not be named. Australia head coach Joe Schmidt has an outsized influence on the coaching careers of five of their coaches from his time in Ireland setting up a fascinating master-v-apprentices dynamic this summer. While Australia lost to Ireland in the autumn, the Wallabies often appeared to be one step ahead of what Farrell's team were doing, which was doubtless a sign of Schmidt's influence. The Lions coaching team want to be unpredictable in how they play Australia; might this also be reflected in a couple of curveball selections?

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Jordan Henderson showed the attitude his England teammates were lacking
Jordan Henderson showed the attitude his England teammates were lacking

The Guardian

time15 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Jordan Henderson showed the attitude his England teammates were lacking

The tendency is always to gloom. How could it not be? Nobody could have sat through England's 1-0 win over Andorra on Saturday and not felt a profound sense of frustration. Six million years of human evolution has culminated in this? When the England manager shrugs and says he can't blame the fans for booing, you know it was bad. Thomas Tuchel was a short-term appointment. He's not in the post for pathways or development or creating a culture. He's here to win the World Cup next summer. In the boozy, drowsy somnolence of the RCDE Stadium, that felt a preposterous ambition. Look at England's rivals. Argentina are playing mesmerising football and top the Conmebol standing by 10 points. Spain were brilliant European champions having incorporated two young and devastating wide forwards into their passing carousel. France are pumping out teenagers of extraordinary technical quality by the bucketload to elevate the dour structures of Didier Deschamps. Portugal beat Germany in their Nations League semi-final last week, but both looked high-level sides. Even Brazil have finally accepted reality and turned to a foreign coach in Carlo Ancelotti. Everybody else knows what they're doing and there's witless old England struggling to make runs in behind against Andorra. Except … England's position actually improved on Saturday. Albania and Serbia drew, which gives England breathing space. Argentina are beginning to detect in the distance the rumbling of perhaps the hardest question of all: should Lionel Messi still start games? Portugal have been failing to answer their version of that question since the last World Cup, and the fact Cristiano Ronaldo got their winner against Germany last week has only made it harder. Ancelotti began with a 0-0 draw against Ecuador. And nobody could have watched Spain beat France 5-4 on Thursday and thought: 'There are two defences that could win the World Cup.' It's the June international break: everybody's knackered and anything goes. At which point, before descending into a fug of futility, it's perhaps worth looking at what Tuchel has been trying to do and what he has achieved. Results are the great betrayers. England may have reached the final of the Euros in Germany but they played far worse than they had in any of the previous three tournaments. Gareth Southgate's legacy to Tuchel was not as healthy as it may have appeared. After the years of careful planning and gradual progression, Southgate made radical changes for Euro 2024, leaving out a number of stalwarts and selecting young attacking talent he ultimately didn't quite seem to know what to do with. The spirit in the squad was damaged in the process, and that is something that needs to be restored. That's one of the reasons Tuchel arranged a week-long camp in Spain before Saturday's game, and why he took the players to the Barcelona grand prix last weekend. But it's not just about ensuring the players get on with each other, trying to create something akin to a club atmosphere with the national team. It's also about ensuring they approach games with the right attitude, and that was something Tuchel clearly felt was lacking on Saturday. Perhaps it's going too far to suggest England didn't sufficiently respect their opponents, but Tuchel's comments about 'attitude' and 'body language', about his side lacking 'the seriousness and the urgency that is needed in a World Cup qualifier' hinted in that direction. And that perhaps explains one of his decisions that has drawn the most criticism: the selection of Jordan Henderson. Saturday was Henderson's first start since the 2-0 win over Malta in November 2023. He was not in the squad at the Euros, his international career – as well as his reputation as an LBGTQ+ ally – seemingly scuppered by his transfer to Saudi Arabia. That move was quickly aborted, and a year at Ajax has not gone well, notable largely for a late-season collapse that cost them the league title as well as some spiky exchanges with Dutch journalists. The assumption was that Henderson, who will turn 35 later this month, was navigating the fag end of his days as a player, a disappointing coda to an excellent career that would rapidly fade in the collective memory as his achievements with Liverpool were celebrated. And then Tuchel brought him back. Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion The details of Henderson's performance against Andorra are largely irrelevant. Some players thrive against minnows, some struggle in a game very different from the high-level fixtures with which they are more familiar. How you play against Andorra is not going to determine whether you have a part in a potential World Cup-winning side. But one recovery run to stymie an Andorra counter after Dan Burn had lost possession caught the eye; Henderson, at least, was switched on. And it was after he was substituted after 63 minutes that England slipped into the individualism that so annoyed Tuchel. Henderson is a professional, the NCO maintaining discipline and morale, ensuring the plan is followed and standards maintained. He has captained a team that won the league and the Champions League. During the Covid lockdown, he emerged as a de facto spokesperson for the players. He has the respect of his peers. And that is no small thing. Whether that's enough to earn Henderson a place in the 11 or even the squad for the US next summer is debatable, but it's understandable why Tuchel would want him involved in some capacity. There's a lot to be said for getting the egos pointing in the same direction.

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BBC News

time21 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Padel: 'I want to play the sport but I can't afford it'

A shorter racket, a smaller court and an undearm tennis is one of the fastest-growing sports in the world, thanks to its basic skill level and social rise of the racquet sport - usually played in doubles on an enclosed court where balls can be played off the walls - has been helped by influencers and celebrity players such as demand grows, the number of venues isn't keeping up, but the cost of playing is. Research by Ray Algar, an expert on the economics of sport and exercise, shows that the average off-peak court hire in the UK is about £30, but peak time prices can reach £80 at some venues. 'I sometimes take a month off' Rosie Hepworth got into padel about a year ago after seeing the sport on social media, but has found it's become too expensive. "I can't afford to play regularly," she tells BBC Newsbeat. "It definitely slows down how much I can improve."The trainee accountant only gets on the courts every few weeks and says her budget means she spends an average of £30 a month on padel, but has spent up to £70 before."If I have other financial commitments, then I might take a month off," she Rosie's friends could no longer afford the high cost, she started playing in a league with strangers as a third or fourth says these open matches work out cheaper, and increase the number of available games."In central London, it's hard to find a court that is free," she says. "They are so booked up that you have to book at least a week in advance."According to the Lawn Tennis Association (LTA), there are currently around 800 padel courts in Britain, but over 400,000 cycles up to 50 minutes away from her home to courts that are almost half the price and quieter at peak times. "I find it frustrating to have to travel so far for affordable courts," the 24-year-old says. "But it's just about worth it because it's become a hobby I really enjoy." Master's student Barnaby Stephenson took up the sport about two years ago and helped the University of Edinburgh's first padel 24-year-old says the city has fewer courts than others and getting to and from practices means a two-hour round-trip, which he describes as a "struggle".Barnaby's club had provided free balls and rackets to new members and charged just £2 per session, but the society had to stop offering social memberships due to "unprecedented demand".Barnaby wants to see more grassroots investment in state schools and public parks to make the sport more accessible."There needs to be more pressure and focus on developing padel in every community, rather than concentrating on middle-class areas," he says. Where are the courts? The BBC asked all of the local councils in the UK if they had put money into providing padel the 330 that responded, only three said that they the LTA has spent more than £6m on the sport, this only accounts for 10% of all padel courts of the rest are independently owned, driving up booking costs and increasing the number of private members' also tracked where courts were located across Britain using data from The Padel Directory, and found that most were in the wealthiest areas, with the highest numbers in the south of other countries it's a very different picture. "We're one of the last nations in Europe to catch this padel wave," says Tom Murray, the LTA's head of the organisation that looks after padel in the UK, the LTA has launched a new five-year strategy that aims to work with local authorities to build more hopes to increase accessibility as other countries have done."In Spain it started as that premium elitist sport, but now it's far from it - it's second to football in terms of participation."Madrid will host this year's Euro Padel Cup in July - with a record 40 nations taking an event Team GB players Catherine Rose and Nikhil Mohindra are training for. British number two Catherine began playing three years ago and recalls "driving around the country" to find was a different story for Nikhil, who says he was lucky enough to have a friend nearby he could practise with."I don't know how I would've played otherwise," the 22-year-old want to boost participation. Catherine says there are fewer female players in the UK, and Nikhil thinks efforts could be made to improve says he's seen how diverse the sport can be during his visits to India as a padel ambassador. "When I go there, I see courts being used 24 hours a day by everyone," he says."Anyone from any background can play - it's about opening up more courts in ethnic minority areas." Tanaya Lai, who began playing tennis at four years old, says she's used to being "surrounded by white people".It's something she's noticed since joining the University of Plymouth's padel team, but doesn't see it as a barrier."I am happy to be an Asian woman in sport," she says."Asian women need to know that they aren't excluded from these spaces and they can join if they want to."However, the 22-year-old does think that there are other obstacles. "It's viewed as a posh, more upper-class sport because of how expensive courts are," she says. "There need to be more public and cheaper courts."Like Rosie and Barnaby, Tanaya cannot afford to play padel as regularly as she would like and feels it has hindered her progress."I only really play league matches because it is expensive to just book a court and play for an hour or two," she explains. "Otherwise I'd be able to play more." Additional reporting by Lauren Woodhead Listen to Newsbeat live at 12:45 and 17:45 weekdays - or listen back here.

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