Farrell on the bench for Lions against Australia-New Zealand
Owen Farrell was named Thursday on the bench for the British and Irish Lions side to face a combined Australia-New Zealand team in Adelaide.
The former England captain is set to end a period in the international wilderness as the Lions continue their nine-game tour with their fifth and final warm-up on Saturday.
Advertisement
Farrell made the dash to Australia last week after his father, Lions coach Andy Farrell, summoned him as cover when utility back Elliot Daly broke his arm.
The 33-year-old, on his fourth Lions tour, earned the last of his 112 Test caps at the 2023 World Cup, and is coming off an underwhelming and injury-plagued season with French club Racing 92.
The Lions are unbeaten in four matches in Australia after wins over four Super Rugby sides, including 36-24 against ACT Brumbies on Wednesday in Canberra.
But they endured a sloppy performance against the Brumbies, with notable issues around the breakdown.
Advertisement
- Numerous changes -
The Lions have made numerous changes with Tadhg Beirne to take the captaincy reins, while young star Henry Pollock returns.
Scrum-half Ben White will make his first start for the Lions.
The Australia-New Zealand side, the first time the powerhouses have joined forces since 1989, will be led jointly by David Havili and Lukhan Salakaia-Loto.
Coach Les Kiss picked 17 internationals in his matchday 23 for Saturday's final warm-up game for the Lions before they face Australia in the opening Test on July 19 in Brisbane.
"We are in a great position just over a week out from the first Test," coach Farrell said.
Advertisement
"The players now have another chance to put in a strong team performance and put a hand up for selection for the Test matches against the Wallabies.
"Les Kiss has assembled a strong squad with lots of international experience and we know that he will have them well organised and they will bring a lot of physicality to the contest.'
British Lions XV (15-1):Hugo Keenan; Mack Hansen, Huw Jones, Sione Tuipulotu, Duhan van Der Merwe; Fin Smith, Ben White; Ben Earl, Jac Morgan, Henry Pollock; Tadhg Beirne (capt), James Ryan; Will Stuart, Luke Cowan-Dickie, Pierre Schoeman
Replacements: Ronan Kelleher, Andrew Porter, Finlay Bealham, Scott Cummings, Josh van der Flier, Alex Mitchell, Marcus Smith, Owen Farrell
tl/fox
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
TNT Sports to show England's 2025-26 Ashes series in Australia
TNT Sports will show the men's Ashes series this winter after striking a one-year deal with Cricket Australia. England head Down Under looking to end Australia's grip on the urn, which they have held since 2018. It follows a thrilling contest with India, which culminated in a six-run fifth-Test win and 2-2 series draw at The Oval on Monday. 'We are privileged to be able to bring every ball of this much-anticipated, iconic series to TNT Sports this winter. This story began in 1882 and it never fails to deliver,' said Scott Young, EVP at parent company WBD Sports Europe. 'Quite simply, the Ashes transcends cricket. This winter, we will have two great sides led by two fantastic captains in Pat Cummins and Ben Stokes who lead their teams in different styles go toe-to-toe in one of sport's biggest rivalries. 'It will be compelling, must-watch sporting drama at its finest.' This winter's Ashes series begins in Perth on 21 November and finishes in Sydney with the New Year's Test. TNT takes all Australia home internationals England have not won an Ashes Test in Australia since January 2011, losing the last two series 4-0. The last two home series have ended in 2-2 draws. This will be the first in Australia under pioneering England head coach Brendon McCullum. TNT Sports and its predecessor BT Sport have tended to show England's away Ashes series, with Sky Sports sticking to broadcasting all of the team's home internationals. It also has the rights to England's white-ball series in Ireland, New Zealand and Sri Lanka over the next five months. The one-year deal will also see TNT Sports show all Australia men's and women's home internationals until March 2026. 'We're pleased to extend our longstanding partnership with TNT Sports and that they will again be instrumental in showcasing the Australian summer of cricket to UK audiences,' said Todd Greenberg, Chief Executive Officer at Cricket Australia. 'With a highly anticipated season ahead, including the NRMA Insurance Ashes, high-profile BKT Tyres men's series against India and South Africa, and a multi-format women's series against India, our partnership with TNT Sports ensures fans across the UK will get great coverage and won't miss a moment of the action.' Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
The England selection decision looming large before The Ashes
On a quiet autumn afternoon at Lord's in October, captain Ben Stokes and head coach Brendon McCullum will meet national selector Luke Wright and ECB director Rob Key to pick England's Ashes squad. Wright used to be the one who would make the phone calls, delivering the good news and the painful blows, but McCullum has since taken on that responsibility, seeing it as his duty to speak personally and honestly with each player. Wright will often follow up with a call to those closest to the cut to explain the decision in more detail and discuss a path for their return. Wright will have spent the summer receiving briefings from scouts across county cricket and beyond, while analysts will have drilled down through deep data wells to model whose game will suit the Australian summer. The reality, however, is that McCullum is a man who trusts his gut over spreadsheets and algorithms, and his squad is mostly set. There is little chance to alter minds now, with no more Tests between Monday's dramatic finale at The Oval and the first ball in Perth in November. England already have their top seven set in stone, despite the struggles of Ollie Pope and Zak Crawley. The seam attack starts to pick itself if fitness allows, with Mark Wood and Jofra Archer requiring cryogenic preservation over the autumn in time to thaw in the Australian sun. What did England learn from this compelling series with India, what golden lessons can they take with them on the plane? Not many. England will face a very different bowling attack in contrasting conditions on other-worldly surfaces compared to the flat roads of home, with the Kookaburra ball in hand. Playing India at Headingley on the solstice and Australia at the MCG on Boxing Day are both, technically, incidents of elite Test cricket, but they are entirely unique endeavours. England, and cricket, will undoubtedly have picked up some new fans over the past few weeks, and it is only right that they are made aware of the humbling circle on which the Test game runs: your team will compete gamely in home conditions, looking genuinely good at this, before travelling to a far-flung part of the world where most of their skills will become irrelevant. England have at least reaffirmed a few things. Crawley averaged about 30 here and will forever average about 30. Ben Duckett will be occasionally magnificent and get out to the straight ball. Pope will get out. England have the best middle order in the world. England's bowling attack isn't quite good enough. Gus Atkinson remains the most likely seamer to join Archer and Wood when fit, and he will be required to put in an almighty shift when they're not. Brydon Carse will have a big part to play, Josh Tongue is dangerous when he finds his radar, while Jamie Overton was less effective albeit able to hit 90mph at The Oval – he is a favourite of McCullum, and Key has spoken about pace as an essential tool in Australia. Other were questions left unanswered, like what to do with Jacob Bethell's uncorked talent. His summer carrying drinks was not particularly instructive, or beneficial for his development. Will he spend the winter being dragged around Australia as England's back-up batter? There will at least be some Lions games alongside the Tests in which to build red-ball experience. Chris Woakes may not have been in line to travel anyway but his dislocated shoulder will further damage his chances. The more significant shoulder injury is Ben Stokes, who must be fit to bat, bowl and throw himself around the field for five Tests if England are to pull off a first series win over Australia since 2015. And then there is the question of spin. Will England need a front-line spinner in every Test? Yes, certainly, insisted Ricky Ponting this week, even in Perth where pace prevails. Ponting endorsed Shoaib Bashir, whose height and bounce he likened to Nathan Lyon and whose off-breaks could find some turn in Mitchell Starc's foot marks. Bashir had his moments against India, winning the Lord's Test with the final wicket of Mohammed Siraj before a broken finger ended his series. But if he is picked for an Australian pitch which later fails to degrade into a turning track, there is little upside in a 21-year-old whose batting and fielding are akin to that of a garden cricketer. Liam Dawson didn't seize his chance at Old Trafford and that may ultimately count against him, and against the notion that the County Championship is the place to find Test players. Jack Leach is bowling well for Somerset and carries rich Ashes hinterland while Tom Hartley has impressed for Lancashire this summer. But once you've been dropped from McCullum's Test side, it is notoriously difficult to earn a recall on county form. Rehan Ahmed is the wildcard, a genuine all-rounder who could even replace Pope at No 3 should England need a reshuffle during the series. Ahmed is still raw and his leg-spin is not a typically English weapon, but he would complement Joe Root's off-breaks when Stokes needs variety in attack. Yet it is Bashir who still holds the spinner's place right now. He is a pet project that Key and McCullum started back in 2023, at a Lions training camp in the UAE when they were wowed by his smooth style and high release, and chose to catapult him into the Test team. When they sit down with Stokes and Wright in October, there will be many names to discuss and scenarios to consider. But if there's one thing we know about Bazball, rarely does it lose faith in its chosen ones. Ashes 2025-26 Test matches First Test, Optus Stadium in Perth: 21-25 November Second Test, Gabba in Brisbane: 4-8 December Third Test, Adelaide Oval in Adelaide: 17-21 December (day-night Test) Fourth Test, MCG in Melbourne: 26-30 December Fifth Test, SCG in Sydney: 4-8 January
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
Comeback Kid Announce ‘Wake The Dead' 20th Anniversary Australian Tour
Comeback Kid have announced an Australian tour for early 2026, taking place across late January and early February. The tour will mark the band's first in three years, and comes after their recent announcement on the Froth & Fury line-up alongside the likes of Polaris, Soulfly and In Hearts Wake. The full list of tour dates, as well as pre-sale and ticketing information, can be found below. The tour will see the Canadian hardcore veterans playing their breakthrough album Wake The Dead in its entirety, to celebrate its 20th anniversary. They will be joined on all dates by American hardcore band Gridiron, who are making their debut in Australia as part of the tour, as well as Sydney band Phantoms for all dates except the Perth date and the Froth & Fury festival in Adelaide. In a statement shared to social media, the band noted that Australia was the first place that they performed Wake The Dead live when they toured in 2005. 'What a place to celebrate this amazing year,' they wrote. Comeback Kid – 'Wake The Dead' Wake The Dead, Comeback Kid's second album, was released in February 2005. It was the band's last to feature their original lead vocalist Scott Wade, who departed the band a year after its release. Andrew Neufeld, who was the band's rhythm guitarist at the time, took over on vocals and has held the position ever since. Only he and lead guitarist Jeremy Hiebert remain from the band's original line-up; they have been joined by rhythm guitarist Stu Ross since 2012 and bassist Chase Brenneman since 2015. Their current touring drummer is Terrance Pettitt. Gridiron were formed in 2020, featuring alumni from hardcore bands such as Year Of The Knife and Never Ending Game. Their second studio album, Poetry From Pain, was released earlier this year. Phantoms, meanwhile, are veterans of the Australian hardcore scene. Originally prominent in the mid-to-late 2000s, the band reunited a handful of years ago and have since released two EPs of new material: 2022's Hell Is Empty and 2024's All The Devils Are Here, both on Last Ride Records. Comeback Kid Wake The Dead 2026 Tour Friday, January 30th – Amplifier Bar, Perth WA* Saturday, January 31st – Adelaide Showgrounds, Adelaide SA* Sunday, February 1st – Prince Bandroom, Melbourne VIC Wednesday, February 4th – Manning Bar, Sydney NSW Thursday, February 5th – Hamilton Station Hotel, Newcastle NSW Friday, February 6th – Crowbar, Brisbane QLD * – Phantoms not appearing. A pre-sale for the tour will go live from 5pm local time today (Wednesday, July 30th). General sale will follow on Thursday, July 31st at 11am local time. Both can be accessed via . Bullet For My Valentine Announce 2025 Australian Tour Prince of Darkness Departs: Ozzy Osbourne Dies Aged 76 The Darkness Announce 'Dreams On Toast' 2026 Australian Tour The post Comeback Kid Announce 'Wake The Dead' 20th Anniversary Australian Tour appeared first on Music Feeds. Solve the daily Crossword