
Owen Farrell reveals why ‘Lions will learn a hell of a lot' from shock Argentina loss as Andy's son debuts on Sky Sports
OWEN Farrell believes has weighed in on the Lions defeat to Argentina.
And he's sure the
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Sky Sports analyst Owen Farrell weighed in on the Lions defeat to Argentina
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Andy Farrell's side jetted off to Australia today after last night's shock defeat
The
Despite a few attacking glimpses, the home side never found their rhythm and were punished after too many fudamental mistakes.
Speaking on punditry duty for Sky Sports, ex- England captain Owen Farrell said: 'I think a lot of the game was played in the right parts of the field.
"Obviously a lot of balls didn't stick and there will be a lot of images that they'll look back on the game from and learn from.'
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He added: 'Argentina did incredibly well to counter punch when they got the opportunity, whether it be a ball on the floor or a turnover, they seemed to turn things into points pretty quickly.'
'I'm sure the Lions boys will be frustrated, but I think the main thing is that they've played this great game now, this great competitive game that they've played in, and they'll have some images to go off to see what is the standard and what's not.'
'Why some of those balls went down, why some of those decisions were good and some not so good. I think they'll learn a hell of a lot, a hell of a lot about each other, a hell of a lot as a team and it will put them in good stead for next week.'
Head coach Andy Farrell slammed his side in his post-match comments before praising the Pumas' performance and the Lions' flaws.
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The Ireland boss said: 'Yeah, we made it a tough game, didn't we.
'Obviously the first and appropriate thing to say is congratulations to Argentina, they thoroughly deserved to win the Test match.'
'They capitalised very well on the back of quite a few errors from us. Congratulations to them. I'm sure that's a big moment in Argentinean history.'
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'You can try and throw it all around and say we had plenty of opportunities and we should have done better to convert that, but the whole story of the game is that we compounded too many errors.
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"In the end, we weren't able to put the pace on the game because of that.'
'We're not sugar-coating anything because we need to be honest because if we're not honest how do we gain trust with each other.
"We have to say it as it is. There are certain things we said we were going to do and we need to own that and review that properly.'
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British & Irish Lions full schedule
The Lions will play 10 matches in total in 2025, with the first on June 20, and the final game on August 2.
All the fixtures will be at 11am BST, apart from the clash against Argentina in Dublin.
The fixtures are as follows:
vs Argentina, June 20 (8pm BST)
vs Western Force, June 28
vs Queensland Reds, July 2
vs NSW Waratahs, July 5
vs ACT Brumbies, July 9
vs Invitational Australia & New Zealand, July 12
vs First Nations & Pasifika XV, July 22

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Irish Daily Mirror
2 hours ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
British and Irish Lions backrow update as squad travel Down Under
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If Beirne had been put at No6, Scott Cummings could have then the squad was selected to play on fast tracks against an Australia side who's key feature is running, running and running while Farrell can't have expected to watch Duhan van der Merwe implode defensively across the backline and he would have known Fin Smith was a weak defenderBut he won't have been pleased the lightweight-in-the-context-of-this-game Curry missed three of his 12 tackles, similarly challenged Beirne three from nine, Ben Earl two from six while Jac Morgan's contribution from openside was ephemeral, six tackles and four captain Itoje touched on this lack of physicality, the idea the Lions had wild in the face of Argentine beef in the hoof: "At times we were playing tippy-tappy and that's not what we want to be. We want to be an aggressive team. We would have liked to have been kicking off right from the off."It wasn't quite that. We didn't consistently apply pressure, we were nowhere near as accurate or as consistent as we wanted to be. We only showed glimmers of what we can do, we let them off and they caught us slipping at times."Argentina showed us where we are lacking but we are building, we will live, learn and I am happy we had a hard-fought game. This is only match one."Felipe Contepomi, soft-spoken and one helluva coach, has done it Pumas have beaten six of the seven top teams in the world in the space of a year, the British and Irish Lions now added to South Africa, New Zealand, England, France and Australia - Ireland, to whom the Pumas lost by three points in November, are the odd ones out. "It's kind of a one-off," he said, deflecting the credit. "It's an invitation game and the last time, it was 20 years ago, and we were just there and we couldn't beat them."Coming here 20 years later I think it's incredible. We don't know if we'll ever again be invited or not to play and definitely for everyone who's been involved this week it will be memorable."It is special. I know how special it is for an Irish, a Scottish, a Welsh or an English player to be a Lion, and for us to play against the best of the best in these islands, it's nearly a dream."We took a bit of an opportunity because I know they'll be much better in one month's time when they play Australia. They'll be an awesome team, because they have so much quality in there."So, no surprise, Contepomi was a gent. Owen Farrell was apportioning the blame evenly.'A lot of the game was played in the right parts of the field. Obviously, a lot of ball didn't stick. 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