The accidental Lion: how an Irish Queenslander ended up in a red jersey
Ahead of this year's British and Irish Lions series, players nervously tuned into a live squad announcement at the O2 Arena in London in front of fans who had paid $135 dollars for the privilege.
The last time the Lions visited these shores, 12 years ago, Queenslander Tom Court's call-up to the iconic invitational team was slightly different. The former Ireland prop was on holiday on the Gold Coast, about to tuck into a Thai takeaway, when he got a call that changed his career.
Court had grown up in rural Queensland as an elite shot-putter with dreams of making the Australian Olympic team before he took up rugby at university at 23 years old on the advice of a friend and eventually transformed himself into a seasoned prop for Ulster and Ireland.
Court's late arrival to rugby left him largely unfamiliar with the nuanced history of the game, completely unaware he was about to become only the second Australian to represent the Lions in Australia after Alec Timms in 1899.
After winning the first Test in Brisbane, the Lions were battling injuries, including first-choice loosehead prop, England's Alex Corbisiero, having damaged his calf. As the Lions searched for a solution, coach Warren Gatland found out that Court happened to be on holiday in the same state with his family.
'I never really even thought about the Lions,' Court said. 'I know it sounds trite, but I didn't grow up playing rugby, I always saw it as so far out of reach, it wasn't realistic. I genuinely hadn't thought about it at all. I just wanted to get a good run for Ireland.
'I had a missed call from [British and Irish Lions director of operations] Guy Richardson, but I thought it was some of the Irish boys just taking the piss. I heard the voicemail and I was like, 'Yeah right, OK, nice one', and then just left it.
'About an hour later I had a call from Mick Kearney, who was the team manager for Ireland at the time and I had his number saved so I knew it was him and he called and pretty much said Gats [Warren Gatland] had a couple of injuries and they need you to come down [to Brisbane] and it was just surreal. I remember it was slow motion when he was telling me because it wasn't even excitement, it wasn't fear, I was sort of frozen.'
The Lions had a single midweek fixture to complete against the Melbourne Rebels ahead of the final two Tests and needed to keep their remaining props fresh.
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IT was the first thing Charlie Hawke would see when he bounced through the doors at Arnold Swim for training each morning. Just past the old entrance was a framed picture of Thomas Fraser-Holmes in his Australian Dolphins team uniform. It featured on a wall of fame at the iconic Junction swimming centre and home of Hunter Swim Club, which Hawke joined when he was 13. Now, 22, Hawke has earned his own slice of history after being named in the Australian Dolphins team to contest the World Championships in Singapore, starting July 27. Like Fraser-Holmes, Hawke is a part of the 4 x 200 metre freestyle relay squad. He qualified after finishing fourth in the final at the national selection trials in Adelaide last week, clocking a personal best of 1:46.10. "It was a massive relief," Hawke said of his selection. "I have been very close in the past couple of years. I didn't know for sure that I was in the team until the last night of competition. It is up to the selectors' discretion. 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"Tommy was definitely an idol of mine growing up and is a great friend to have now," Hawke said. "I've has many chats with Tommy on the pool deck. "He is a great mentor to have and has been fantastic over the past couople of years. I was just off the team and he was great to chat to. Talk through that process. He is a really good connection to have." Hawke is joined in the relay team by the top three from the trials Ed Sommerville, Sam Short, and Flynn Southam and Max Giuliani and Elijah Wittingham. Sommerville and Short will contest in the individual 200m freestyle in Singapore. The four fastest swimmers from the six will compete in the relay final. "The aim is to post a fast enough time in the preliminaries to get into the fastest four for the final," Hawke said. "The ultimate goal is to win gold. We are not going into the competition to accept a bronze. A podium finish is the goal and hopefully move up the podium." 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IT was the first thing Charlie Hawke would see when he bounced through the doors at Arnold Swim for training each morning. Just past the old entrance was a framed picture of Thomas Fraser-Holmes in his Australian Dolphins team uniform. It featured on a wall of fame at the iconic Junction swimming centre and home of Hunter Swim Club, which Hawke joined when he was 13. Now, 22, Hawke has earned his own slice of history after being named in the Australian Dolphins team to contest the World Championships in Singapore, starting July 27. Like Fraser-Holmes, Hawke is a part of the 4 x 200 metre freestyle relay squad. He qualified after finishing fourth in the final at the national selection trials in Adelaide last week, clocking a personal best of 1:46.10. "It was a massive relief," Hawke said of his selection. "I have been very close in the past couple of years. I didn't know for sure that I was in the team until the last night of competition. It is up to the selectors' discretion. To finally get it done was a big feeling of relief." Hawke, who has been in an Australian A team before, has spent the past four years at the University of Alabama, but competes for Hunter Swim Club. "It is nice to represent my home town," Hawke said. "I grew up in Kurri Kurri, which was my first swim club. I moved to Arnolds when I was about 13 and started taking swimming more seriously. I trained under Shane Arnold and coach Kerry [Saunders]. I learned a lot there and formed good habits." Fraser-Holmes was a part of the Australian 4 x 200 metre freestyle relay teams that won gold at the World Championships in South Korea in 2019 and brone in Russia four years earlier. A two-time Olympian, he also boastes five Commonwealth Games medals, including gold in the 4 x 200m relay in Delhi (2010) and Glasgow (2014). Now 33, Fraser-Holmes is a coach at Griffith University Swim Club on the Gold Coast. "Tommy was definitely an idol of mine growing up and is a great friend to have now," Hawke said. "I've has many chats with Tommy on the pool deck. "He is a great mentor to have and has been fantastic over the past couople of years. I was just off the team and he was great to chat to. Talk through that process. He is a really good connection to have." Hawke is joined in the relay team by the top three from the trials Ed Sommerville, Sam Short, and Flynn Southam and Max Giuliani and Elijah Wittingham. Sommerville and Short will contest in the individual 200m freestyle in Singapore. The four fastest swimmers from the six will compete in the relay final. "The aim is to post a fast enough time in the preliminaries to get into the fastest four for the final," Hawke said. "The ultimate goal is to win gold. We are not going into the competition to accept a bronze. A podium finish is the goal and hopefully move up the podium." Hawke is in Brisbane for a three-week training block alongside Short at Rackley Swim Club, before heading to Darwin for a Dolphins pre-championship camp. "We have six weeks before we race," Hawke said. "That is enough time to get some good work in again before a short rest." Hawke in April graduated from the University of Alabama with a double degree in Electrical Engineering and Physics. "Going over to the States was fantastic. The big selling point on that was being able to incorporate my studies and swimming," he said. "The connections I made, friends from all over the world. I learnt so much from them about swimming and about life in general." Hawke spent time back in Newcastle in the lead-up to the national selections trials. "It was nice to catch up with mum and dad and my sister Isabella," he said. "My parents came over to the States about once a year. It is always special when they get to watch me swim."