logo
Andy Farrell leaps to the defence of his new Lions star Henry Pollock: 'He's NOT a pest - he's a humble kid with a great attitude'

Andy Farrell leaps to the defence of his new Lions star Henry Pollock: 'He's NOT a pest - he's a humble kid with a great attitude'

Daily Mail​5 hours ago

Henry Pollock will have the licence to express himself when he starts for the Lions on Saturday – including the freedom to celebrate tries as he sees fit.
In light of recent controversy, it was relevant to clarify this issue with Andy Farrell, after he named Pollock at No 8 to face Western Force at Optus Stadium.
So, the tourists' head coach was asked if the English rookie sensation has the freedom to celebrate? 'Of course he does,' was the emphatic reply.
Farrell and the Lions want to see Northampton's 20-year-old back-row prodigy in his element, full of self-belief and swagger and innate exuberance.
They will not expect him to temper his response to touching down – which he has been doing with impressive regularity – despite what happened after the Champions Cup Final last month, when Bordeaux eclipsed the Saints.
The French side had evidently taken a dislike to Pollock and prop Jefferson Poirot was hit with a two-match ban for grabbing him by the throat in a confrontation following the final whistle in Cardiff.
Later, Bordeaux players and staff continued to mock Pollock in their changing-room and even back in their home city during a victory parade; by mimicking the fingers-on-neck, pulse-check celebration he produced after a stunning solo try in the semi-final win over Leinster.
That bizarre sideshow has not fazed Farrell in the least.
First, he included Pollock at the base of the scrum in an Irish-dominated side to be led by hooker Dan Sheehan.
Then, he spoke passionately about wanting the Saints wonder-kid to stay true to his natural instincts.
At the end of the Six Nations, England captain Maro Itoje joked that Pollock had been a 'pest' behind the scenes, but the man in charge of the Lions delivered a far more favourable verdict.
'He's not been a pest, definitely not,' said Farrell, after announcing a starting XV featuring 13 personnel changes, from the team beaten 28-24 by Argentina last Friday.
'He's been great. You can see that he's hungry to learn and that he's got a real point of difference.
'He wants to make a difference the whole time. But he also understands what parts of his game he needs to improve.
'He's got a great attitude.'
Farrell was adamant that Pollock's confident streak is not excessive, adding: 'You want them to be like that, but he's a humble kid as well.
'He doesn't think he's got it all, far from that. You want people with confidence and belief, that helps when he takes the field.
'He's certainly not over-awed! I love that. You want these kids to be themselves.
'You don't want a kid to go under the radar and in three weeks' time just settle into a side.
'You pick him for a reason. He's a Lion just like the eldest player.
'His character is infectious to everyone. He's a great lad.'
Within the Lions squad, Irish, Scottish and Welsh players have been hurriedly getting used to the Pollock brand of relentless energy, enthusiasm and brash assertiveness.
They would have already formed impressions from afar, due to the fanfare around the breakthrough star, but now they can form more informed, first-hand opinions and Mack Hansen spoke warmly about the squad's youngest player.
'He's a great fella, he really is,' said the Ireland wing. 'People say he does things for the camera and all that, but from getting to know him I think, that's just him.
'He just loves it. He's living his dream. So, I don't think it's fake by any means.
'He's just loving being here. He's 20 years old. Who would have thought…?
'He's been good. He's just been himself. That's the main message that Faz gives everyone.
'Just be yourself. He's doing that.'
Australia's rugby community is catching up with the Pollock bandwagon, but an enquiry to Farrell about just how good the talented tyro could be drew a cautious response, designed to keep the noise around him in check.
'I can tell now that you're trying to hype him up,' said the head coach.
As the youngest man on tour, Pollock must look after BIL the Lion at all times in Australia
'Honestly, he's just another player like everyone else and that's how he wants to be.
'His point of difference is his ability to see things quickly and act upon that and his line running, for example, is pretty good.
'His awareness of space and how sharp he is in his mind and his athletic abilities are up there with the other lads in the squad.'
Frankly, his line running is more than 'pretty good'. His awareness of space and athletic abilities are more than 'up there with the other lads', but Farrell knows that, which is why he has picked him to start.
He is giving him a shot in a position which is wide open, after Caelan Doris was ruled out of this tour due to injury.
Ben Earl's Dublin audition didn't go to plan and Jack Conan will take his turn as the only specialist No 8, but Pollock can make a statement first about his Test credentials.
'He knows what we want from our eights, but he's got to find his own version of that, as that's what we want; him being himself,' said Farrell.
'The (Champions Cup) final was perfect for him as the top end of club level. He's had one of those where it all didn't go his team's way.
England's Ben Earl (left) and Ireland's Jack Conan (right) are Pollock's main number 8 rivals
He's got to find a way within that. That's going to happen on a tour like this.
'He has to go through it and then (the coaches) make the judgement about whether it's the right thing for the team or not.
'We'll see what the performances are over the next couple of weeks, like everyone else.'
The Lions simply don't have enough time for futile experiments, so the decision to deploy Pollock at No 8 is fascinating and means he must be a genuine Test contender.
When the tourists face the Force, it will be just three weeks until their series opener against Australia in Brisbane.
A storming performance could propel Pollock into contention for a place in the first-choice side for the internationals.
Why not? He has been on an unstoppable rise, so there's no reason why it can't take him all the way into the Lions Test XV.
What a feat and a story that would be.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Head and Webster dig in to slow West Indies charge
Head and Webster dig in to slow West Indies charge

BBC News

time39 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Head and Webster dig in to slow West Indies charge

First Test, Bridgetown (day two of five)Australia: 180 (Head 59, Khawaja 47; Seales 5-60) and 92-4 (Webster 19*; S Joseph 1-15)West Indies: 190 (Hope 48, Chase 44; Starc 3-65)Australia lead by 82 runsScorecard Australia ground out an 82-run lead with six wickets remaining in their second innings after another dramatic day in the first Test against West Indies in tourists trailed by 10 runs after West Indies made 190 in their first then looked to be trouble for Australia as they lost early wickets batting second time around, before the fifth-wicket pair of Travis Head and Beau Webster steered the team to stumps at the end of day faced 37 balls for his 13 not out, while Webster scored more briskly, reaching 19 in just 24 deliveries, as they crucially stayed together for eight testing 14 wickets fell on day one, hosts West Indies resumed their first innings on 57-4 at the start of Thursday's play and soon lost Brandon King, bowled by Josh Hazlewood for Shai Hope joined captain Roston Chase in the middle and the pair put on 67 before the latter was controversially given out lbw to Pat Cummins for 44 despite appearing to possibly edge the ball on to his Indies lost wickets at regular intervals before being bowled out, with a late Alzarri Joseph flurry handing them a 10-run lead. Hope top-scored with will begin day three on 92-4, looking for Head and Webster to propel them towards a healthy lead. Mitchell Starc, who was arguably the pick of the Australia bowlers in taking 3-65 in West Indies' first innings, predicted the match would continue to follow a familiar said of West Indies' effort with the bat: "They had a partnership in the middle and played pretty well, but the bowlers have been in the game and no doubt it will be the same tomorrow."There were a couple that stayed low and a couple that popped up. It will be interesting to see how it changes on Friday."Asked about the controversial dismissal of Chase, Starc added: "We can only ask the questions and then it goes to the officials. One of those went against us and a couple went against the West Indies."It is only the end of day two so there is still a lot of time. We will try and get as many runs as we can and hopefully it is a total we can defend as bowlers."

Australia edge ahead on day of close calls in Barbados
Australia edge ahead on day of close calls in Barbados

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Australia edge ahead on day of close calls in Barbados

June 26 (Reuters) - Australia carved out an 82-run lead over West Indies on day two of the first test in Barbados on Thursday, with the hosts frustrated by several close umpiring calls that went against them. Australia, who were 92 for four at stumps in their second innings, continued their top-order struggles for a second consecutive day on a zippy Kensington Oval pitch that offered plenty for the pacers. West Indies resumed on 57 for four, trailing the tourists by 123 runs after bowling Australia out for 180 in their first innings. Two contentious umpiring calls helped Australia's bowling attack claw back control of the contest, dismissing the hosts for 190. What began as West Indies' day threatened to unravel after lunch, when captain Roston Chase was given out lbw to Pat Cummins for 44, despite his protestations that he had inside-edged the ball onto his pads. The Ultraedge technology offered no definitive evidence either way, sending an exasperated Chase back to the pavilion after his watchful 108-ball innings. The morning session belonged decisively to the home side as Chase and white-ball skipper Shai Hope, returning to test cricket after a four-year absence, navigated the Australian attack with increasing assurance in their 67-run sixth-wicket partnership. Controversy struck again when Hope, cruising towards a half-century on 48, edged Beau Webster into Alex Carey's diving gloves. Replays suggested the ball may have grazed the turf as the wicketkeeper completed a spectacular one-handed catch, but third umpire Adrian Holdstock ruled in Australia's favour. "We can only ask the questions, and then it goes to the officials," Aussie pacer Mitchell Starc said. "One went against us, a couple against them. That's what we have technology for." The twin dismissals proved to be the turning point, halting West Indies' momentum when a substantial lead seemed within grasp. At lunch, they had looked comfortable at 135 for five, with both batsmen displaying the patience and technique to potentially build a match-defining advantage. Instead, the Australian attack, led by Webster's probing line and Cummins' persistence, systematically dismantled the West Indies lower order to restrict the first-innings deficit to just 10 runs. The marginal decisions added another layer of intrigue to an already absorbing test match. "There was a partnership there between Roston and Shai," Starc added. "They showed if you could absorb pressure, there were runs to be scored. That is a bit of a blueprint. There are runs out there, but it is not going to be easy." Australia's second innings quickly mirrored their first-day struggles as Alzarri Joseph trapped Usman Khawaja lbw for 15, before teenage debutant Sam Konstas chopped Shamar Joseph onto his stumps for five. Josh Inglis departed shouldering arms to Seales, while Cameron Green edged to slip off Greaves for 15, leaving Travis Head and Beau Webster to navigate through to stumps on a pitch where runs remain precious currency. "It's an indifferent wicket," Starc said. "If you bowl the right areas for long enough, there are enough chances. There are a few bare patches, a few grassy patches, so it depends on where the ball is pitching."

Matildas start a new era with 3-0 win - but the best moment happened off the field with Sam Kerr
Matildas start a new era with 3-0 win - but the best moment happened off the field with Sam Kerr

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Matildas start a new era with 3-0 win - but the best moment happened off the field with Sam Kerr

Holly McNamara has scored her first international goal but new Matildas coach Joe Montemurro was left with plenty to ponder after his side scratched out an unconvincing 3-0 win over Slovenia in Perth. But arguably the best moments of the win on Thursday night came after fulltime, when Sam Kerr thrilled fans by getting up close and personal with them. One young spectator broke down in tears of joy as she shared a moment with the injured striker, who made a surprise trip to her home town to train with the Tillies as she continues to fight her way back from a knee injury. Emily Gielnik's third-minute strike at HBF Park got the 15th-ranked Matildas off to a flyer, but it wasn't until McNamara scored in the 86th minute that the win was safe. Hayley Raso added the icing on the cake in the 87th minute when she waltzed through the midfield untouched before unleashing a strike from outside the box. Although the 3-0 scoreline looked good on paper, the performance was far from slick in front of a crowd of just 8678. The under-strength Matildas were error-prone throughout the night, especially in defence where they attempted to play their way out of trouble at every chance. Montemurro's possession-based game plan was always going to have teething problems, but the sheer amount of errors will be a huge concern. Things started brightly when Gielnik stayed persistent in a goalmouth scrap to score the opener. But the Matildas' determination to retain possession at all costs led to numerous sloppy turnovers, many of which should have been punished. Time and again, the Matildas opted to go backwards instead of finding the gaps further ahead - leading to problems whenever Slovenia were able to pick off the pass. One such turnover let Spela Kolbl off the leash in the 15th minute, with her floating cross glancing off the crossbar. The Matildas' best opportunities in the first half generally came when defender Ellie Carpenter found some space to charge forward, with her pace and physicality proving hard to stop. The Matildas' worst defensive error of the night arrived in the 52nd minute when Clare Hunt was unaware an opponent was bearing down on her as she attempted a short pass. She got stripped of the ball but was left breathing a huge sigh of relief when Slovenia striker Zara Kramzar fired straight at Matildas keeper Teagan Micah from close range. It was Alanna Kennedy's turn to commit a horror mistake 10 minutes later when her clumsy attempt to control the bouncing ball while running back to defend resulted in a costly deflection. Slovenian substitute Nina Kajzba pounced on the mistake, with her strike forcing Micah to make a fine diving save. McNamara, who has endured three knee reconstructions during her career, was a threat throughout the match. The 22-year-old, playing her 10th international, finally received her reward when she put away a header at the far post following a sublime cross from Raso. 'She's a player that's very, very smart in arriving in space,' Montemurro said of McNamara. 'And what I mean by that she makes her runs very, very late, which is very hard to mark. 'That's a feeling - you can't coach that.' A minute after McNamara's goal, Raso went on a run and curled in a precision strike from the edge of the box. The Matildas went into the international window missing a host of their best players, including injured superstars Sam Kerr (knee) and Mary Fowler (knee). Steph Catley, Caitlin Foord, Katrina Gorry and Cortnee Vine are all on personal leave, while Clare Wheeler left the camp earlier this week due to personal reasons.

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