Impeccable pedigree, but Nick Champion de Crespigny will bring mongrel against Lions
Arriving at Sydney University as an economics student in 2015, Champion de Crespigny had to make a choice and plumped for the rugby club. His decision was vindicated two years later when he won the Shute Shield playing alongside Wallabies Harry Potter and Jake Gordon.
After graduating, Champion de Crespigny found work in property development while trying and ultimately failing to nail down a spot with the Waratahs.
An offer to play as a full-time professional in France with Castres eventually followed, and the back-rower moved to the country of his forefathers.
Castres is home to just over 40,000 people, and most of them are well-acquainted with the town's rugby team.
Champion de Crespigny embraced life in France, helping his new side defeat an Antoine Dupont-led Toulouse in the Top 14 semi-finals in 2022 before playing in front of 78,245 fans at the Stade de France in the final against eventual champions Montpellier.
In front of a packed Optus Stadium in Perth on Saturday, Champion de Crespigny will face the toughest challenge of his professional career when the Force go head-to-head with the Lions in the tourists' first match on Australian soil.
'I actually reflect most days. I had the privilege of not having the most linear path to professional rugby and I really appreciate it,' Champion de Crespigny said.
' I remember labouring during the day, training at night, and studying, and then getting up at 6am to get to the gym before having to go work in the city for another day.
'I've seen the other side of life where you're trying to balance it all, so I think every single day, wow, this is amazing. This week's been a bit of a whirlwind with everything going on. But I'm starting to really get excited and sit back and go, what a journey it's been.'
One of Champion de Crespigny's possible opponents on Saturday, Pierre Schoeman, is reflecting on his own unique journey to the Lions series. The prop moved from South Africa to Scotland seven years ago and qualified for his adopted country three years later.
Schoeman played for South Africa's under-20s, but has now fully embraced life as part of the British and Irish Lions squad.
'Scotland is home for us, my wife and myself, I know other players as well, like Mack Hansen has made Ireland home, you embrace that, you fully take that on,' Schoeman said.
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'It's like the movie Outlander, you move to a different country, and now that's your house, you live there. If you work for one of the big four in finance, you get the opportunity, you're going to go for them and you can really make that home.
'But this is much different. You buy into the culture and now to represent the British and Irish Lions, you fully buy into that, you fully submerge into that, nothing else matters.'

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"The experience of that World Cup and playing in that Fiji game, that experience itself definitely helped a lot of us moving forward," the 26-year-old said. "I do definitely think that most of us have the runs on the board now to be able to go out and execute, and win games against whoever the opposition is." The Western Force flyhalf is in a three-way battle to wear the No.10 jersey in the opening Test, up against the Queensland Reds' Tom Lynagh and ACT Brumbies incumbent Noah Lolesio. Donaldson said that Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt had been cracking the whip in the camp as competition heated up between the trio. "This week's been pretty tough and there's been some high expectations already from the coaches," he said. "Obviously people always say there's great competition for spots in this squad and that's the only way you get better, right? "For us, it's just about working hard, knuckling down, getting over our knowledge, and really driving this team around. "We can't use the excuse that we're young anymore because we've been here for a fair few years so really trying to have that voice in the squad." Playmaker Ben Donaldson insists the Wallabies bear no scars from their last Test against Fiji as the Pacific islanders loom as a giant threat to Australia's build-up for the British & Irish Lions. The Wallabies have just the one match, against Fiji in Newcastle on July 6, to prepare for their first Test against the touring Lions in Brisbane on July 19. In their last clash at the 2023 Rugby World Cup, the Fijians effectively derailed Australia's campaign in their pool match, cracking their first win since 1954. Donaldson is one of ten players left in the squad that crashed 23-15 in Saint-Etienne and insisted the Wallabies had well and truly moved on. "It wasn't a great day for us or Australian Rugby, but that's in the past now and we just look forward," Donaldson said from the Wallabies camp in Sydney. "We haven't really talked about the past. It's just about what's coming day by day, getting better each day as an individual and as a team as well. "It's been two years now ... a lot of boys have had a lot of growth since then and played superbly in Super Rugby and had Test match experience and we're full of confidence and we back everyone here in the squad." Donaldson felt the pressure of that World Cup had built experience and resilience, which would hold them in good stead against the elite four-nation selection. "The experience of that World Cup and playing in that Fiji game, that experience itself definitely helped a lot of us moving forward," the 26-year-old said. "I do definitely think that most of us have the runs on the board now to be able to go out and execute, and win games against whoever the opposition is." The Western Force flyhalf is in a three-way battle to wear the No.10 jersey in the opening Test, up against the Queensland Reds' Tom Lynagh and ACT Brumbies incumbent Noah Lolesio. Donaldson said that Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt had been cracking the whip in the camp as competition heated up between the trio. "This week's been pretty tough and there's been some high expectations already from the coaches," he said. "Obviously people always say there's great competition for spots in this squad and that's the only way you get better, right? "For us, it's just about working hard, knuckling down, getting over our knowledge, and really driving this team around. "We can't use the excuse that we're young anymore because we've been here for a fair few years so really trying to have that voice in the squad."

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4 hours ago
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Impeccable pedigree, but Nick Champion de Crespigny will bring mongrel against Lions
Arriving at Sydney University as an economics student in 2015, Champion de Crespigny had to make a choice and plumped for the rugby club. His decision was vindicated two years later when he won the Shute Shield playing alongside Wallabies Harry Potter and Jake Gordon. After graduating, Champion de Crespigny found work in property development while trying and ultimately failing to nail down a spot with the Waratahs. An offer to play as a full-time professional in France with Castres eventually followed, and the back-rower moved to the country of his forefathers. Castres is home to just over 40,000 people, and most of them are well-acquainted with the town's rugby team. Champion de Crespigny embraced life in France, helping his new side defeat an Antoine Dupont-led Toulouse in the Top 14 semi-finals in 2022 before playing in front of 78,245 fans at the Stade de France in the final against eventual champions Montpellier. In front of a packed Optus Stadium in Perth on Saturday, Champion de Crespigny will face the toughest challenge of his professional career when the Force go head-to-head with the Lions in the tourists' first match on Australian soil. 'I actually reflect most days. I had the privilege of not having the most linear path to professional rugby and I really appreciate it,' Champion de Crespigny said. ' I remember labouring during the day, training at night, and studying, and then getting up at 6am to get to the gym before having to go work in the city for another day. 'I've seen the other side of life where you're trying to balance it all, so I think every single day, wow, this is amazing. This week's been a bit of a whirlwind with everything going on. But I'm starting to really get excited and sit back and go, what a journey it's been.' One of Champion de Crespigny's possible opponents on Saturday, Pierre Schoeman, is reflecting on his own unique journey to the Lions series. The prop moved from South Africa to Scotland seven years ago and qualified for his adopted country three years later. Schoeman played for South Africa's under-20s, but has now fully embraced life as part of the British and Irish Lions squad. 'Scotland is home for us, my wife and myself, I know other players as well, like Mack Hansen has made Ireland home, you embrace that, you fully take that on,' Schoeman said. Loading 'It's like the movie Outlander, you move to a different country, and now that's your house, you live there. If you work for one of the big four in finance, you get the opportunity, you're going to go for them and you can really make that home. 'But this is much different. You buy into the culture and now to represent the British and Irish Lions, you fully buy into that, you fully submerge into that, nothing else matters.'