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Schmidt backs Gordon's skills but no hints on Wallabies captaincy

Schmidt backs Gordon's skills but no hints on Wallabies captaincy

Reutersa day ago

SYDNEY, June 11 (Reuters) - Australia coach Joe Schmidt has given a glowing review of Jake Gordon's importance to the Wallabies as a player but offered no clue to where the experienced scrumhalf fits in his leadership plans for the British & Irish Lions series.
Schmidt, who will name his squad over the next two weeks, has not yet confirmed who will captain the Wallabies against the Lions but an Australian media report said last week it would be Gordon.
The New South Wales Waratahs skipper was left out of the squad for the last World Cup by Eddie Jones but his test career was revived by Schmidt and he started all nine tests last year ahead of Tate McDermott and Nic White.
"Jake, he's one of the leaders in the group, but so is Nic White ... and Tate McDermott has been a former captain," Schmidt told reporters in Perth.
"Jake has a really good skill-set, mature player, very nice kicking game, one of the sharper passes around and he is utterly committed when he's on the grass.
"His ability to cover corners and make tackles, involved in the physical stuff he's a multi-purpose sort of player, but at the sharp edge of his game is really his pass-kick, which were very helpful to us last year."
The Lions play Argentina in Dublin next week before heading to Australia for seven tour matches and the three-test series in late July and early August.
Schmidt said he knew from his time as Ireland coach just how special the Lions jersey was to the players who wore it and warned the Wallabies would really need to roll their sleeves up to be ready for the tests.
"They can play in so many different ways," he said of the tourists.
"They can be really physical, they can be square and coming at you. They can get you on the edges. They have got the likes of Tommy Freeman and Hugo Keenan, who are so good in the air that you're going to have to be good there.
"We can just try to work as hard as we can, to be as well prepared to understand the threats they're going to bring, and be ready to combat them and also to try to put our stamp on the game a little bit, and take the initiative when we can."

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Footy great posts hilarious video showing how he turned the tables on a scammer who tried to fleece him for $1000
Footy great posts hilarious video showing how he turned the tables on a scammer who tried to fleece him for $1000

Daily Mail​

time41 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Footy great posts hilarious video showing how he turned the tables on a scammer who tried to fleece him for $1000

A former footy great has revealed how he has turned the tables an online scammer. Parramatta great Eric Grothe Jnr shared a hilarious interaction he had with an online fraudster on his Instagram, revealing how he had been approached by the scammer, who tried to dupe him for a large sum of cash. Grothe posted three videos on his Instagram showcasing the interaction with the scammer who had asked him to send him money as well as buy him gift cards from Amazon. Gift card scams have become a prevalent way for con artists to obtain money from individuals as they are often hard to trace and give victims little protection to recover their funds. The interaction between Grothe and the scammer began with the individual asking the former rugby league star to send him $200 US before he began toying with the scammer. The fraudster had appeared to drop into the 45-year-old's direct messages on Instagram, with Grothe replying: 'What do you need the money for?' View this post on Instagram A post shared by Eric Grothe Jr (@ericgrothejr) 'Medicine,' the individual replied. Appearing cautious at the start, Grothe responded: 'If you really need the money and you're legitimate I'm sure you'd understand that there are so many scams out there that I can't give money without proof. 'Can you please send me a photo of yourself holding a piece of paper with my name on it? If so, I can help you out.' The scammer appeared to have created a false identity by taking pictures of another individual and falsely using them for their display picture. The scammer later replied by sending back a heavily photoshopped image of a woman, holding a piece of paper. The person appeared to have scribbled the name 'Eric Grothe' in poor handwriting that looked like it had been written digitally on a program like Photoshop. 'I will be so happy if you really help me out Eric,' the fraudster added. Grothe replied: 'OK and last one and I will give you the money straight away. With that exact same piece of paper, also hold up four fingers and make sure your face is showing as well. 'Once this is done I will forward the money to you immediately. Thank you.' Grothe enjoyed a distinguished career in rugby league's top flight, making 142 appearances cumulatively for the Eels and the Roosters, while also being capped for the Kangaroos once. The trickster then questioned how they might complete his request before attempting to give the former Eels star a guilt trip. 'I'm feeling really weak I just tried my best to do that so if you're really gonna help me just do it now,' they wrote adding two 'crying face emojis'. The conversation continued, with the fraudster asking Grothe where he lived and whether he used PayPal. According to ScamWatch, the Australian government has reported 72,230 scams in the past six months with losses from fishing, romance and investment frauds costing Australians approximately $118,993,148.20. 'Scams work because they look like the real thing and scammers contact you when you're not expecting it or are busy trying to do many things at once,' ScamWatch wrote. It adds that scammers attempt to 'create believable stories that convince you to give them your money, financial or personal details.' 'Scammers try to use your good nature against you. They tell heartbreaking or tragic stories to convince you to help them and give them money. 'Always be wary of any appeal for money and never give more money than you are willing to lose if you can't independently confirm that the story is true.' Grothe then began to joke with the fraudster, writing: 'A rich grandparent passed away and left my brother and I almost $4.5million each. I really want to share it with trustworthy people.' The scammer pressed him again: 'If you're really going to help me, just do it dear am not feeling so good.' Grothe questioned whether the individual was sick, to which they replied: 'Yes I am having hot temperatures and headaches. So I wanna visit a hospital but am so broke now to do anything cause my work has not been good lately.' Grothe responded: 'OK that's not a good sign. I'm going to have to help you. Tell me, does it also feel like somebody slammed your body down and wound it all around?' 'Yes, my bones feel so weak now,' the scammer said, before asking again whether to send their PayPal details. Grothe hilariously then joked that he was starting to fall 'completely in love' with the scammer. 'Aahh man I can't believe I'm saying this. Do you feel what I feel? You do. I know it,' he wrote, before adding that he was going to send the scammer 'so much money today' before asking how. 'OK darling you might be the right man for me so am not gonna say no,' the scammer replied. But Grothe pushed the joke further: 'My whole family are helping me write this because I'm so emotional.' He hilariously told the fraudster he loved them before adding: 'Whatever is mine is yours.' The fraudster again asked him if he could send the money over so that they could visit the hospital. Grothe, instead, deflected the question again confessing his love for the fraudster adding that he was going to send them half of his inheritance. 'I know we are supposed to be together,' he joked. 'I know I'm coming on a little strong but when you know, you understand and when you understand you finally come to get it and then you work it out and once you've worked it out, it's there for all to see!' The scammer simply replied: 'OK' before again asking him to send them the money on multiple occasions, adding that they would accept $2,000 instead of $2m. The conversation continued as Grothe continued to play the scammer at their own game, joking: 'I'm so lucky to be your man.' Appearing more frustrated as the back and forth continued, the scammer wrote: 'My man must care about my health, it seems you just lie to me about helping me with some money.' Grothe kept up the running joke, replying: 'Baby! We can work it out!' 'Life is very short and there's no time for fussing and fighting my friend. I have always thought that it was a crime. So I will ask you once again. 'Won't you try to see it my way? Do I have to keep on talking till I can't go on? 'If you need this money, help me send it to you right now. I'm sick of all this back and forth. I'm an action-taker. If I see action I will take it. A taker of action, if you will.' The exchange continued on in the same fashion, with Grothe seeing through the fraudster's scheme, as they repeatedly asked him if he used PayPal. 'Don't call me Pal,' Grothe hilariously quipped back. In a later video, the former NRL star revealed that the scammer had then asked him to buy them multiple Steam vouchers on Amazon, totalling around $1,000. The conversation even went as far as seeing the scammer explain to the former Eels star how to redeem the vouchers, with Grothe hilariously playing dumb, purposefully wasting the scammer's time. He even went as far as sending them back a video of the fuel dial on his car, when the scammer asked him to click on a link to buy the vouchers. The scammer continued to press him, but Grothe continued to mislead the individual by hilariously joking that his ex had come back. The scammer appeared furious replying: 'You don't seem to have respect for me.' They added: 'You sound so annoying, you talk about your ex every minute I don't want to share my man if you're for me you should be only for me and no one else.' The long exchange culminated in a rather humerous ending with Grothe saying: 'I think I'm done.' The scammer replied: 'OK'. ScamWatch urges caution to individuals before giving money or personal information to those they don't know or are unsure of. They urge members of the public to 'stop' and 'check'. 'Ask yourself: "Could the message or call be fake?"' They urge members of the public to 'act quickly and contact a bank if a scammer gets your money and report scams to ScamWatch.'

Owen Farrell to join Sky Sports punditry team for Lions opener
Owen Farrell to join Sky Sports punditry team for Lions opener

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

Owen Farrell to join Sky Sports punditry team for Lions opener

Owen Farrell will join the Sky Sports punditry team for the British and Irish Lions ' match against Argentina in Dublin a week on Friday. It is understood that this commitment would not rule the 33-year-old out of a tour call-up, even though Farrell has not played for his club, Racing 92, since early May. Farrell will be unveiled on Thursday as part of a Sky Sports line-up that also features Telegraph Sport columnists Warren Gatland, Will Greenwood and Sir Ian McGeechan as well as Dan Biggar, Sam Warburton and Ronan O'Gara. Kyle Sinckler, John Barclay and Danielle Waterman are all set to appear at some point over the coming weeks, though Farrell is understood to be working only on the Aviva Stadium fixture at this stage. Alex Payne will front the coverage, which will be studio-based for the warm-up matches until moving over to Australia when the Test series begins on July 19. Gatland, Biggar and O'Gara are due to travel as well, though Warburton, who captained the Lions in 2013 and 2017, will remain in the United Kingdom in a tactical analysis role. Biggar, who retired from playing this season, has been earmarked as a lead summariser for Sky Sports, four years after starting all three Tests for the Lions against South Africa at fly-half. Andy Farrell, the Lions head coach, suggested that there could be a way for Owen to be involved in the tour despite not picking his son in the initial squad of 38 that was unveiled on May 8. 'He was in the conversation, obviously,' said Andy Farrell of Owen. 'An experienced player like that who is going for his fourth tour. You cover all bases, that's for sure, with the leadership qualities and all of that. But we got to a point where, like a few other players as well, we feel that Owen's still trying to find his way a little bit back to fitness. 'There's 38 picked, which leaves a couple of slots open for us during the track if and when needed. And Owen, like a few other guys as well, would be in that type of bracket. 'We've left ourselves some wiggle room to be able to see how people progress because there are a few guys that are trying to play back into fitness, form, etc, so we'll see what we've got and if or when that's needed, we'd like to call them. 'Do we need a blend of a player that can play a couple different positions? Is there a player that's carrying a bit of an injury and might need to manage it within training? Is there a guy that might be over for three weeks, but he's definitely worth taking? Is it leadership that we need? We'll see.' Fin Smith and Marcus Smith are the fly-halves who are currently part of the Lions' preparations in Portugal, with centres Sione Tuipulotu and Bundee Aki also having joined up with the squad. Owen Farrell suffered a concussion in Racing 92's loss to Lyon in the Challenge Cup on May 4 and has not featured for the Paris side since amid rumours of a return to Saracens. Racing 92 finished a disappointing Top 14 campaign by beating Lyon 47-34 last weekend, the departing Henry Arundell scoring two tries to help them register 10th place. Sinckler, a former England team-mate of Farrell now poised to be a Sky Sports colleague, must be an attractive proposition for the Lions given the injury issues at tighthead prop that have seen Zander Fagerson drop out and Asher Opoku-Fordjour come in as training cover. Andy Farrell would have to wait to bring in Sinckler, though, given that Toulon have qualified for the quarter-final round of the Top 14 and are hosting Castres on Saturday.

Owen Farrell to air views on dad Andy and the Lions on Sky for tour opener
Owen Farrell to air views on dad Andy and the Lions on Sky for tour opener

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Owen Farrell to air views on dad Andy and the Lions on Sky for tour opener

Owen Farrell will run the rule over the first match for the British & Irish Lions, against Argentina next week, after joining Sky Sports' punditry team. FThe 33-year-old will be at the Aviva Stadium next Friday to give his views on how the side, coached by his dad, Andy, fares. Farrell Jr has been part of the three previous tours, having made his bow against Australia in 2013, but was omitted from the 38-man squad last month after a torrid first season with Racing 92. Finn Russell, Fin Smith and Marcus Smith were preferred as the fly-halves. His insight into how the Lions fare against the Pumas will be intriguing. When announcing his squad, Farrell Sr left the door open for his son – who has made six Lions Test appearances – to be called upon at a later stage but he was not among the additional players recruited for the training camp in Portugal this week. Instead, he will be pitchside in Dublin as part of a Sky Sports lineup for the tour that includes Sam Warburton, Dan Biggar, Ronan O'Gara, Will Greenwood, Kyle Sinckler, John Barclay, Conor Murray and Nolli Waterman as well as the former Lions coaches Warren Gatland and Ian McGeechan. Farrell is not scheduled to be in Australia, ensuring he will be available for selection for the tour in a playing capacity. He has not featured for Racing since suffering a head injury during their Challenge Cup semi-final loss to Lyon last month. While still under contract at Racing, Farrell has informed the Top 14 club of his desire to leave early and return to the Premiership. Saracens are keen to re-sign the former England captain, but will need to agree personal terms as well as a compensation package with Racing. Sign up to The Breakdown The latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewed after newsletter promotion The former England head coach Eddie Jones will be working on the tour for TalkSport, the station announced last month. Jones has had two spells in charge of the Wallabies, either side of his six-and-a-half year stint leading England.

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