
Wales scrum-half Tomos Williams ruled out of rest of Lions tour with hamstring injury
Ben White has been called up from the Scotland squad that is currently in New Zealand to fill the vacancy created by Williams' injury, which occurred early in the second-half at Optus Stadium.
Two appearances into his debut Lions tour and Williams had laid down an early marker for Test selection at scrum-half with his two-try display in Perth placing him in pole position to face the Wallabies on July 19.
But the reigning Gallagher Premiership player of the season is now heading home to reduce Wales' representation in Andy Farrell's squad to a single player, Jac Morgan.
'Unfortunately, Tomos has been ruled out of the rest of the tour with a hamstring injury. Ben White will join us from the Scotland squad and will fly over from New Zealand,' Farrell said.
Williams' withdrawal from the Lions squad is partially offset by Jamison Gibson-Park's recovery from the glute issue that forced him to miss the opening two games against Argentina and the Force.
Gibson-Park makes his first appearance of the tour in Wednesday's clash with the Reds in Brisbane, taking the number nine jersey with Alex Mitchell providing cover from the bench.
England half-back Mitchell will be the only player on tour to appear in all three matches if he is involved at Suncorp Stadium.
'This is desperately sad news for Tomos and we wish him all the very best in his recovery,' Lions manager Ieuan Evans said.
'Tomos is an exemplary Lion who has had a brilliant season, having joined the tour after being named Premiership Rugby's player-of-the-season. He lit up this Lions tour with his personality and his talent.'
Lions captain Maro Itoje returns to the second row after being stood down for the 54-7 victory over the Force, forming an engine room partnership with Ollie Chessum.
Full-back Hugo Keenan makes his first appearance of the tour after recovering from a calf injury, while Finn Russell continues at fly-half having impressed at Optus Stadium.
The British and Irish Lions team to play Queensland Reds at Suncorp Stadium, Brisbane, on Wednesday July 2, KO 1100 BST:
H Keenan (Leinster Rugby/Ireland); T Freeman (Northampton Saints/England), H Jones (Glasgow Warriors/Scotland), B Aki (Connacht Rugby/Ireland), D van der Merwe (Edinburgh Rugby/Scotland); F Russell (Bath Rugby/Scotland), J Gibson-Park (Leinster Rugby/Ireland); A Porter (Leinster Rugby/Ireland), R Kelleher (Leinster Rugby/Ireland), W Stuart (Bath Rugby/England), M Itoje (Saracens/England, capt), O Chessum (Leicester Tigers/England), T Curry (Sale Sharks/England), J Morgan (Ospreys/Wales), J Conan (Leinster Rugby/Ireland).
Replacements: L Cowan-Dickie (Sale Sharks/England), E Genge (Bristol Bears/ England), F Bealham (Connacht Rugby/Ireland), J Ryan (Leinster Rugby/Ireland), B Earl (Saracens/England), A Mitchell (Northampton Saints/England), F Smith (Northampton Saints/England), G Ringrose (Leinster Rugby/Ireland).

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Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
'I want to be one of the best players in the world,' says loan star Mikey Moore as Jayden Meghoma joins him at Rangers
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Daily Mail
2 hours ago
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Rangers boss Russell Martin says it will all work out fine, but there is no sign of a plan clicking
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That it took a 90th-minute finish from substitute Findlay Curtis to make this game safe for Rangers is bonkers. It's all bonkers, really. This is a Rangers side failing to keep possession, continually playing silly passes into silly areas and looking nothing at all like a cohesive unit. In previous domestic meetings against Motherwell and Dundee, two teams expected to end up bottom six in the Premiership, they were sliced open over and over again. And there's nothing to suggest that pattern is going to change any time soon. As for sorting out this riot of a rearguard? Is a 19-year-old left-back on loan from Brentford in Jayden Meghoma — when there's a reported £6m coming into the coffers from the sale of Jefte to Palmeiras — a copper-bottomed answer? Is a defence full of players on temporary agreements an answer either? Djiga's on loan from Wolves. Aarons, dreadful so far, is on loan from Bournemouth. Meghoma's now in the building. Listen, Rangers are in a big rebuild. 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If Rothwell doesn't keep his place for a game as big as a Champions League play-off, what does it say about how things are working out for him? There are umpteen other issues you could talk about too. Why Tavernier, now 33, looks like he needs to start because no one else is up to it? Why Dowell is still getting game time? Why so much dead wood remains in the squad? No one can realistically expect Rangers to dispose of Brugge over two legs. And it's not the end of the world if they don't. Martin's bigger problem is that the visit of Celtic to Ibrox on August 31 is now thundering over the horizon and defeat there is not going to go down at all well inside a stadium which has already threatened to turn toxic this term. The head coach keeps talking about how players are learning and how everything is going to work out fine in time, but all he is offering so far is words. Evidence that his plan looks like clicking is non-existent. Yes, Rangers have burned through too many managers in recent years. However, the words of vice-chair Paraag Marathe in his first media appearance at the end of June cannot be ignored as the team stumbles from one dismal display to another. 'There's no such thing as a honeymoon period in football,' stated the man who is also Leeds United chairman and president of 49ers Enterprises. So far, life under Martin has been no honeymoon. A couple of bad results at Ibrox over the next two weeks and you can be sure an increasing number of understandably irate punters will be bellowing for divorce. Rangers (4-3-3): Kelly 6; Aarons 5, Fernandez 5, Djiga 5, Rice 4 (Tavernier 45); Rothwell 6 (Barron 68), Dowell 4, BAJRAMI 7; Cortes 5 (Curtis 84), Danilo 4 (Igamane 68), Moore 6 (Aasgaard 69). Booked: Barron. Manager: Russell Martin 5. Alloa (4-3-3): McFarlane 7; Foster 6, Devine 6.5, Taggart 6.5, Waters 6; Scougall 6, Hetherington 6 (Bruin 90), Roberts 6 (Donnelly 86); Buchanan 7, Rankin 5 (Sammon 59), Orsi 6 (O'Donnell 59). Booked: Hetherington, Devine, O'Donnell. Manager: Andy Graham 6. Referee: Dan McFarlane. Attendance: 33,959.


Glasgow Times
2 hours ago
- Glasgow Times
Racing tax: What is it and why is the sport going on strike
For the first time in the modern history of the sport in Britain, its participants will voluntarily go on strike for a day. A day of protest will be held in Westminster. What does that mean? It means there will be no racing in Britain on September 10. The meetings scheduled for Lingfield, Carlisle, Uttoxeter and Kempton that day will not take place. They have been rescheduled to other dates. And why has all this come about? The strike announcement has come as part of British racing's 'Axe the Racing Tax' campaign, which is urging the Government to axe the Treasury's proposal to bring existing online betting duties into one single rate. Why would tax rises be so bad? Economic analysis commissioned by the British Horseracing Authority has shown that aligning the current tax rate paid by bookmakers on racing with that of online games of chance could see a £330 million revenue hit to the industry in the first five years, putting 2,752 jobs at risk in the first year alone. Strike action will surely cost the sport money? It will, it is estimated it will cost around £200,000 in lost revenue on the day. So does the racing industry support the strike move? In a word, yes. Racecourses, owners and trainers are all in agreement. The National Trainers Federation said cancelling fixtures was 'a huge sacrifice' which 'should serve as a stark reminder to the Government of the impact its tax raid will have on our sport'. Is this is a one-off, or will there be more strikes? No more strikes are planned, as things stand. Can I still have a bet anywhere that day? Yes, there will actually be one meeting in Ireland, at Cork. Irish racing is run completely separately to British racing.