
'He knows exactly what we think of him': Farrell lauds non-Test Lion Van der Flier
The head coach has stuck with a tried and tested starting back row for Saturday's third and final Test against the Wallabies with Tom Curry retained in van der Flier's position at openside flanker alongside Irish duo Tadhg Beirne, on the blindside, and No.8 Jack Conan.
That trio will have started all three Tests barring any last-minute disruptions while the replacement back-rower for the series opener in Brisbane was Ben Earl, and Jac Morgan in last Saturday's dramatic second-Test win at the MCG in Melbourne.
On Thursday, Farrell switched from a 5:3 bench to a 6:2 split of forwards and backs but again looked past van der Flier in favour of both Earl and Morgan.
The Leinster star, world player of the year in 2022, has been a Farrell favourite since he became national team head coach after the 2019 World Cup, starting van der Flier in 44 of the 50 Ireland Tests, calling him off the bench a further three times against Italy (twice) and Romania for a 2023 World Cup pool game.
Indeed the only matches the 32-year-old has missed were against Tier Two opponents Fiji and the USA and the Italians again in a World Cup warm-up two summers ago.
Yet though van der Flier will return home to Ireland a proud British & Irish Lion, number 874, he will be one of a dozen squad members not to have played a minute of Test rugby against the Wallabies.
Finley Bealham, Luke Cowan-Dickie, Scott Cummings, Henry Pollock, Fin Smith, Pierre Schoeman and Duhan van der Merwe of the original squad of 38 plus late arrivals Thomas Clarkson, Jamie George, Jamie Osborne and Ben White are the non-Test squad members.
Elliot Daly and Tomos Williams were early departures from the tour due to injury, while Mack Hansen and Garry Ringrose have also missed out due to fitness issues and would likely have started.
Farrell credited them all for their commitment to the cause throughout the tour but said of van der Flier: 'Josh has epitomised what it takes to be a Lions tourist.
'Him, like the rest of the guys who haven't put the shirt on as far as the Test matches are concerned, is disappointed but at the same time delighted. The conversation I had with him over the last three or four weeks, and obviously there have been many conversations with everyone, it is just about the nature of the position and how competitive that is and the balance of the back row.
'He knows exactly what we think of him and his response to all that has always been to train the house down and prepare the team as best he could and the other thing he said after his disappointment yesterday would have been that he has had the time of his life. It says everything about the man.'
Farrell has made no apology for his selection policy and in using just 27 players across the three Tests has utilised four fewer than his Lions predecessor, Warren Gatland, in South Africa four years ago.
'We all came together from day one and said it's not just about the squad, the only thing that matters is the squad and that's it, full stop.
'So we've all been in this together from day one. Every single one of us, there's been no separation, we've all trained together, it doesn't matter whether you've played the day before or whatever, you've always helped the next team that's going out there and you all know that the modern-day game is always about the 23 that take the field, not the 15 anymore.
'But it's way beyond that for us. It was about the 38 or the 41 or the 44, whichever way you want to look at it.'
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Irish Examiner
29 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
All Blacks return to World number one following Springboks defeat to the Wallabies
New Zealand moved to the top of the World Rugby rankings after earning a 41-24 victory over Argentina Sevu Reece and Samisoni Taukei'aho both crossed over twice as the All Blacks clinched a six-try win in Cordoba. The victory sends New Zealand to the summit of the World Rugby rankings for the first time in four years and knocked South Africa off the top spot, following their defeat to Australia on Saturday Cortez Ratima and Ardie Saves also scored tries for New Zealand while Rodrigo Isgro, Tomas Albornoz and Joaquin Oviedo went over for the home team. Beauden Barrett kicked a penalty and four conversions while Albornoz slotted over penalty and three conversions for a personal tally of 14 points. "We talked about starting well and I think we did that. We finished the second half quite strong - it was a bit of a statement there," said All Blacks captain Scott Barrett. "In the second half we were a little bit slow and probably a little bit of indiscipline fed their game, which was disappointing and allowed the crowd to get in behind them. "They threw a lot of punches at us and I'm pleased the guys who finished the game were able to win some arm wrestles, get some territory and most importantly come away with a good win." The defeat extends Argentina's winless record on home soil against New Zealand to 15 matches with the All Blacks' superiority evident throughout, although they had to see off a second-half surge from Argentina who were 31-10 down at the break but fought back to trail 31-24 before New Zealand closed out the match. The visitors were ahead after four minutes as Barrett set the tone with a penalty before Will Jordan's long pass sent Reece over in the corner to put New Zealand 10-0 up inside the opening 10 minutes. Argentina quickly countered with a try of their own as a long pass out to right winger Isgro reduced the lead to three points. New Zealand powered ahead with three tries before the break as Jordan sliced through from the halfway line to set up Ratima, followed by another try for Ardie Savea who powered over from a lineout drive. There was still time for another New Zealand try before the break as their forwards hammered away at the try line before Ratima swung the ball out to Reece and he went over in the corner. Argentina reduced the deficit 11 minutes into the second half as Albornoz attacked the line at pace and dived over as the All Black defence was caught napping. When Billy Proctor was sent to the sin bin, there was renewed hope for the home side and they took advantage of their numerical superiority as Oviedo went over in the 64th minute to make the score 31-24. New Zealand ended Argentine hopes of a recovery, however, as a lineout maul put Taukei'aho over and he added another try to seal the win. The sides meet in Buenos Aires again next Saturday. Meanwhile, Rassie Erasmus pulled no punches as he laid into his South Africa side following their second half capitulation in the stunning 38-22 loss to Australia in their Rugby Championship opener at Ellis Park. The Springboks were cruising as they led 22-0 inside the first quarter, but while Australia grew into the game and began to win the individual contests, the home side wilted in the second half as the visitors scored 38 unanswered points. "I can try to butter it up and bottle it up to sound cool and respectful. The effort was maybe there but the accuracy or precision wasn't," Erasmus said. "It was a bad loss in a bad way. Not against a bad team, we just didn't have fight right until the end, and that's not what we want to give South Africa. "There was a stage where I felt our heads were dropping and shoulders were slumping, and that was part of the disappointment." Australia dominated at the breakdown, an area that has troubled the Springboks this season as they try to move to a more expansive, running style of play, which makes for a looser contest on the floor. "We didn't scrum them and they beat us in the lineouts," Erasmus said. "In the first 25 minutes, I thought we were really good in the breakdown. After that, when Siya (Kolisi) got injured and Marco (van Staden) went for a (head-injury assessment), it slipped away. "They beat us in most departments. We as coaches got it terribly wrong and we must look firstly at ourselves." The two teams meet again in Cape Town on Saturday and Erasmus, who has already announced his side for the match to the players, says there may be a rethink. "We know from now until next Saturday we are going to take a lot of flak. We take the credit when we do well, now we must take the flak when we do badly. "We already picked next week's that will probably change. "We'll have to rethink it. They tactically outsmarted us and physically dominated us." Reuters


Irish Examiner
29 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
Andrews finds flickers of positivity and pride as Forest blitz lays bare task ahead
Nottingham Forest 3 Brentford 1 As an early gauge of Keith Andrews' managerial potential, a game against Nottingham Forest should be about as good as it gets. Visitors are not cowed into submission by the thought of an assignment at the City Ground. But Nuno Espirito Santo's team, as their finishing position in the Premier League underlined last season, are still good enough to test the very best. They were certainly too good for a Brentford side which has lost some of its most influential performers this summer. However, the manner in which his players conceded the game will cause Andrews more concern than the result, with Chris Wood twice taking advantage of some woeful defending and Dan Ndoye, Forest's £36m signing from Bologna, heading home after easily escaping Rico Henry's clutches in between. 'It was tough, that's a fair assessment,' Andrews acknowledged after seeing Igor Thiago net Brentford's late consolation from the penalty spot. 'I stressed during the week that structure would be needed because of how Forest respectfully play the game. 'Also the 'basics' which is not the dirty word some people seem to think it is. Still, we showed pride after that which was positive and gives us something to build on.' Read More Flying Forest subject Andrews to tough Premier League baptism Beyond the confines of the Gtech Community Stadium, Andrews' appointment as Thomas Frank's successor came as something of a surprise. But the former Republic of Ireland international, who has remodelled himself as a coach following a period as a television analyst, commands the confidence of those who patrol its corridors of power. The best measure of their belief in Andrews' ability came on the eve of this fixture, when Dango Ouattara was signed from Bournemouth for a club record fee of £42m. Acquired too late to be available for selection in the east Midlands, Ouattara's purchase nevertheless underlines owner Matthew Benham's conviction that the Dubliner, despite his relative lack of experience, is the right man to replace the Dane. 'No, I didn't, because everything was geared towards the result,' Andrews replied, when asked if he had enjoyed his debut as a top-flight manager. 'I was asked during a staff question-and-answer session recently what my individual goals are and I stressed I didn't have any. It's all about the collective. 'It won't take time, it's not about imposing my philosophy. I'm not looking to rip things up.' With goalkeeper Caoimhin Kelleher also being parachuted into a squad captained by Leixlip's Nathan Collins, there is a strong Irish flavour to Brentford's work this term. Unfortunately, as Wood demonstrated by outmuscling three defenders to poke home Elliot Anderson's fifth-minute corner, there is a vulnerability too. Andrews shook his head in dismay when replays of the strike were broadcast inside the stadium. It was exactly the kind of mistake which causes coaching staff sleepless nights. It also eroded Brentford's faith in their ability to cause Forest a problem, with Nuno's men laying siege to Kelleher's area from that moment on. Yehor Yarmoliuk's low drive, which was well saved by Matz Sels. provided some much needed respite. But nowhere near enough. 'It's frustrating to be honest,' Collins admitted, absolving Andrews of any responsibility. 'I think we put ourselves in danger and didn't start the way we should have done. 'We were far too passive on the ball and that needs to be better. What we showed after half-time was much more positive, even though it's not easy to come out here at 3-0 down. Read More Workmanlike Arsenal dig in to cloud new Manchester United dawn 'But we won the second-half and that's a good step forward.' Landing Ouattara is designed to compensate for the loss of Bryan Mbeumo to Manchester United. With Yoane Wissa also absent as speculation rages about his future, Andrews could do little about Brentford's lack of penetration. Nor the lapses in concentration which saw Ndoye open his account following Morgan Gibbs-White's delightful assist before Wood latched onto Anderson's pass to stretch Forest's lead. 'Dango is really versatile and I see him as Bryan's replacement,' Andrews said. 'We didn't know he was available and so when we discovered that he was I was pleased that the club could get that business done.' Shorn of some influential talents and losing Mikkel Damsgaard ahead of kick-off - 'His wife gave birth during the early hours so he was withdrawn,' Andrews revealed - there was inevitably a naivety about Brentford's work. The introduction of Jordan Henderson, previously of Liverpool and Ajax, injected some much-needed authority. Andrews could be tempted to hand him a much more prominent role moving forward, with his entrance coinciding with the visitors' best spell of the game. Thiago converted after Ibrahim Sangare handled in the box but the Brazilian's otherwise forgettable contribution means Quattara is also likely to be immediately drafted in when Brentford host Aston Villa on Saturday. 'We controlled the game and that is what you want as a coach,' Nuno said. 'That's always the aspiration.' Nottingham Forest: M Sels, O Aina, N Milenkovic, Murillo, N Williams, I Sangare, E Anderson, D Ndoye (J Silva 78), M Gibbs-White (J Yates 84), C Hudson-Odoi, C Wood (I Jesus 78). Not used: A Gunn, Morato, T Awoniyi, Jair, W Boly, Z Abbott. Brentford: C Kelleher, M Kayode, N Collins, S van den Berg, R Henry (A Hickey 88), Y Yarmoliuk, M Jensen (J Henderson 68), K Lewis-Potter (F Onyeka 68), A Milambo (K Schade 46), F Carvalho, I Thiago. Not used: Valdimarsson, K Ajer, M Peart-Harris, M Roerslev, B Arthur. Referee: Peter Bankes


Irish Times
an hour ago
- Irish Times
The little-known story of the Trinity student shot during the War of Independence
When Kathleen Alexanderson Wright, an arts student, was shot dead at a game of cricket in Trinity College Dublin during the War of Independence , she did not cry out in pain. In fact, she barely made a sound. Her fiance, George Herbert Ardill, only realised something was wrong when he heard her gently moaning. 'I opened the coat which she was wearing at the time and then I noticed blood on the front of her blouse,' he later said. 'I tore open the blouse and saw a wound on the right side of the breast.' By this point a crowd had gathered around Wright, who was 21. Three men stepped forward to help, saying they were doctors. An ambulance was called but one of the doctors remarked to the crowd that her 'case was hopeless and that the lady would only live a few minutes'. Undeterred, Ardill carried her out to the ambulance. Wright was pronounced dead on arrival at Sir Patrick Dun's Hospital, Grand Canal Street. READ MORE She was shot at about 5.20pm in the evening. Play resumed in the cricket game for about 15 minutes before the Trinity provost, Dr JH Bernard, called for the match to be abandoned. Thirty-four years later Pádraig Ó Conchubhair gave a statement to the Irish Bureau of Military History about his time in the IRA during the War of Independence. (The bureau, established in 1947, gathered 1,773 witness statements and other records from the conflict.) Ó Conchubhair described how he and fellow IRA man Jimmy McGuinness opened fire on the crowd watching the cricket match from behind the TCD boundary wall at Lincoln Place. They had been ordered to 'stop this match taking place' as it was a charity game between the Gentlemen of Ireland and members of the British military, with tickets sold for the benefit of Great War veterans. As Ó Conchubhair put it: 'After the first couple of rounds were fired, a lady spectator jumped up from one of the seats and got killed by a stray shot. The match was not proceeded with.' He never mentioned Wright by name. Although this story is not well known to the public, it is familiar to some historians who specialise in the Irish Revolutionary period. Wright's killing was the moment when the reality of the War of Independence first struck many students of the university. 'The tragic death of a lady student who was shot in College Park while looking on at a cricket match ... somehow, marked a closed chapter on the carefree days,' one student observed a year after the shooting. What happened next, however, has never been publicly discussed. Like many other stories from those violent times, it was hidden among the voluminous records of the National Archives in Dublin. The facade of Trinity College Dublin, on College Green, circa 1920. Photograph:I had not gone to the archives looking for information about Wright's death. I had recently graduated from Trinity with a history degree and was starting research on a project that involved going through many of the War of Independence personal injury compensation files. On my first day in the archive I was surprised to see the description for Wright's file. Why had no one mentioned her when I was studying in the college, specialising in this period? The more I looked into her story, the more this struck me. On the day that Wright was killed, June 3rd, 1921, Ireland was just over a month away from the Truce that was the key step towards the ending of the War of Independence. However, June 1921 saw the most military and police casualties of the conflict , meaning she died as levels of violence and disorder peaked. One regional newspaper, the Lurgan Mail, gave over just one small paragraph on the last page to her killing. The war brought about a complete breakdown in long-established institutions of law and order. Nationalists contested the legitimacy of such structures, seeking to replace them with Republican Courts. In addition, the Westminster parliament passed the Restoration of Order in Ireland Act of August 1920. This law empowered the British military to imprison people without a trail and to hold trials behind closed doors with no juries and the authority to sentence people to death. [ From Turmoil to Truce: A mature reflection on the War of Independence Opens in new window ] Coroners' courts, which sit after someone dies suspiciously or unnaturally to decide whether the case warrants further investigation, were suspended. They were replaced with private 'military courts of inquiry'. The 'Court of Inquiry in lieu of Inquest' into Wright's killing sat in Sir Patrick Dun's, three days after she was declared dead there. The witnesses included her fiance Ardill, who was from Sligo, and Dr William Bernard Pemberton, who had declared her dead. Evidence was also taken from Godfrey Marcus Goodbody, a member of the RIC who had arrived at the scene moments after the shooting. The fourth and final witness was Joseph Marshall, then chief steward of the college. 'Immediately after the shots were fired, I saw a young lady who had been sitting on a bench about three or four yards from where I was sitting lying on the ground. Some person remarked that she was 'in a faint'. I looked at her and said, 'no, she is dead'.' In the moments before the shooting, Marshall 'saw two gentlemen coming down Kildare Street whom I knew'. These men were heading in the direction of Lincoln Place, where the shooters opened fire on the crowd. None of the military personnel presiding over this inquiry asked any follow-up questions regarding the identity of the two men. The written judgment was issued by Captain EJ Earle, president of the inquiry, and Lieutenant AV Greenfield and 2nd Lieutenant AC Gilbert: 'Kathleen Wright of Trinity College Dublin died ... from shock and haemorrhage caused by gunshot wounds inflicted by some person or persons unknown, such person or persons being thereby guilty of willful murder.' No one was ever charged in relation to her death. The only real insight we are offered into who Wright was as an individual, and who she might have become, is a letter of 1924 from her father, Rev Ernest Alexanderson Wright, an Irishman and vicar of All Saints, Clapham Park, London. Three years after his daughter's death, he instructed his London solicitors to write to the UK minister for Ireland to begin the process of making a claim for compensation for the expenses of her funeral. He had heard that other parents whose children were killed in Ireland had been reimbursed for the costs of their funeral and some of the expenses of their children's education. Wright's funeral had been particularly expensive as her body had to be brought to London for burial. Though Rev Wright was born in Belfast to an Irish family, his job as a vicar had taken him across Britain and Ireland. He was ordained a priest in 1889 and had been the curate of churches in Cahir and Seapatrick, before moving to Liverpool, Hull and Brixton in South London. The total funeral expenses came to just over £131. In the letter Rev Wright is described as 'not being a man of means and holding only a small living'. His annual income was later reported as being £370, meaning the funeral had cost him more than a third of his pay for the year. It is here that we get a glimpse into Wright's plans and dreams for her future. When she died she 'was about to earn her own living, [and] had expressed her intention of repaying her father the cost of her education', said her father. In 1921 it was still something new for daughters of upstanding members of society to attend university, and even more unusual for them to desire to work outside the home. TCD first admitted female students in January 1904, when three women were accepted into the college. By the time Wright studied there in the early 1920s, women made up about 15 per cent of the student population. Female students were subjected to strict rules meant to enforce the separation of men and women in all aspects of student life, apart from lectures and exams. Women were denied campus accommodation. At the time of her death Wright lived in Trinity Halls, Milltown, which was housing built for female students four kilometres from the city centre. Rev Wright told an English newspaper that four or five generations of his family had studied in TCD. However, it is very likely that his daughter was the first women in her family to do so. It is also possible that Wright faced pushback within her family for enrolling in university. Her uncle was Sir Almroth Edward Wright, a well-known bacteriologist. Eight years before her death he had published an uncompromising argument against giving women the vote. In The Unexpurgated Case Against Woman Suffrage, Sir Almroth claimed women had innate 'intellectual defects' that meant they could never equal men intellectually. He also railed against the notion that 'women shall be included in ... every masculine foundation, university, school of learning, academy, trade union, professional corporation ... until we shall have everywhere one vast cock-and-hen show'. There was more: 'The proposal to bring man and woman together everywhere into extremely intimate relationships raises very grave questions.' In the end Rev Wright received £200 to cover the expenses of his daughter's funeral and some of the costs of her education. The compensation came under a 50/50 arrangement whereby the British and Irish states each agreed to pay half of the compensation. This occurred in cases when it was unclear which government was liable for the victim's death. There was a certain morbidness in the state providing compensation for the costs of Wright's education, as if returning funds for a failed investment. Wright's family were devastated by her death. Her brother, Ruthven Alexanderson Wright, was also a TCD student. He had not been present at the fateful cricket match and found out about his sister's murder from Ardill, who was 'unable to say very much as he was in a state of collapse'. A journalist for the London Evening Standard described her parents as 'pitiful ... wandering about the house overcome with grief' when he visited them. Rev Wright had planned to travel to Ireland to bring her body to London for burial but 'was advised not to make the journey' due to his emotional state. Three years later, he expressed willingness to go Dublin or the hearing of this compensation claim if it was 'absolutely necessary'. But in view of 'the painful circumstances connected with it he trusts that it can be dealt with effectively in his absence'. Rev Wright died suddenly 11 months after sending that letter. Ó Conchubhair went on to have a successful military career. On his retirement he became the governor of Limerick Prison and was awarded a pension for his service. In 1950 he recounted his experiences of fighting in the War of Independence, describing the decade after he joined the Irish Volunteers in 1913 as 'the liveliest and best time of my life – so far'. He died of heart failure in 1953 and received a military funeral. Today you can read his entry in the National Dictionary of Irish Biography, though you will not find mention of Wright in it. There is no plaque, no memorial. In fact there is nothing at all to commemorate Wright on the TCD campus. There is, however, a plaque for Private Arthur Charles Smith, a British soldier killed during the 1916 Easter Rising, whose body was initially buried in the college campus before being moved to Grangegorman. His plaque is on Trinity's boundary wall, facing the cricket pitch where Kathleen Alexanderson Wright was shot.