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Today's rugby news as Lions make historic change and Wallabies start mind games with swipe

Today's rugby news as Lions make historic change and Wallabies start mind games with swipe

Wales Online6 hours ago

Today's rugby news as Lions make historic change and Wallabies start mind games with swipe
The latest rugby news from Wales and around the world
Andy Farrell's Lions team will have names on the backs of their jerseys tonight
(Image: Getty Images )
These are your morning headlines on Friday, June 20
Lions shirts to bear names
The British & Irish Lions will wear names on the backs of their shirts for the first time against Argentina this evening. Andy Farrell's side take on the Pumas in a warm-up match in Dublin tonight in preparation for their three-Test tour of Australia. And for the first-ever time, the touring side will enter the field with the players' names on their jerseys.

This practice has been commonplace in football for the best part of three decades but in rugby it is a relatively new thing. The 2024 edition of the Six Nations saw each union have names on shirts.

It is understood the name will be placed above the number on the back of the jersey. The new development is being viewed as a positive to help market the game to the global masses. Sign up to Inside Welsh rugby on Substack to get exclusive news stories and insight from behind the scenes in Welsh rugby.
RFU chief executive Bill Sweeney said in 2022 of England's move to do it: 'We think player names on shirts may have the potential to bring fans closer to the international stars of our game and we look forward to seeing the reaction to this initiative.'
Schmidt takes swipe
Wallabies head coach Joe Schmidt has aimed a swipe at the Lions' foreign-born stars, labelling Bundee Aki and Sione Tuipulotu the 'southern hemisphere centre partnership'.
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The Lions have already hit back at Schmidt's comments, with Richard Wigglesworth, the Lions assistant coach, believing the comment to be a distraction method.
Schmidt actually handed Aki his Ireland debut and was generally complimentary, but first said: 'Yeah, the southern hemisphere centre partnership, they'll be pretty formidable.'
He added: 'I coached Bundee for a number of years and know him really well. I respect him massively as a player. Sione I've had glancing conversations with. You don't get to be captain of a national team without being a great bloke and really professional.'

Wigglesworth responded: 'I think it's [been said] just to get guys like you to ask a question and to take us away from the thing that is a hell of a lot more important.
'I don't know if they are questioning their commitment. Everyone has earned the right to pull on the Lions jersey. They are, to a man, incredibly proud to be here and we've not talked about anything around your background or how you have got here, it is what sort of player you are and what sort of man you are, and we have got great men and great players.'
Wood: Give Lions players next summer off
Ireland legend Keith Wood believes players who tour with the Lions should be given the following summer off to avoid burnout.

The rugby schedule is becoming increasing congested, with seasons crammed in around international windows and tournaments.
Wood is well placed to comment on the potential risks to players, having toured with the Lions in 1997 and 2001. And he feels player welfare should be brought into consideration.
He said: 'The Lions could be the last bastion for some of the original Corinthian values of the sport and I don't think that is overplaying it.

'The Lions should never be marginalised into a smaller window and I am a big proponent of player welfare and players are playing for far too long in the season and far too much rugby is going on and the level of hits are so much bigger.
'I am in awe of some of the fitness levels of the players and I am happy enough for the Lions to always be in a four-year window but I wish the following year they would have no summer tour for the players that go on it.
'They need a summer off in a four-year cycle and we want these players to play on and on because they are that good. I had two tours a year after my Lions tours and they were extraordinarily difficult.

'What the Lions takes out of you needs some time to put back in and what it takes out of you is this huge mental and physical toll that you have to go through to understand how everyone else plays in about four weeks. It's incredibly intense and worth every single bit of it.
'A Lions tour that succeeds tends to put everything that makes you good as a player and as a team out on the table for everyone else to see. All your strengths and weaknesses and that is one of the hardest things you can do.
'On a Lions tour, it doesn't guarantee success but by God does it go a long way to loving those guys you are with. I lose it when I see the guys from 97 – these are guys we put our bodies on the block together and it was that honesty that goes into it.

'My dad played for the Lions in 1959 and I grew up in Lions house and I love it for what the players are going to experience (in Australia) and it is one of the pinnacles you can have in your career and all you want is that they embrace it with that level of honesty and they can see every bit of it and that is pretty magic.'
Borthwick wants 'as many England players as possible' with Lions
By Robert O'Connor, PA
England head coach Steve Borthwick wants 'as many England players as possible' involved with the Lions as he prepares an unfamiliar line-up to face France at Twickenham on Saturday.

There are five uncapped names in an experimental England squad that was announced on Thursday, three of whom are set to start the match, with 14 players currently in Dublin with Andy Farrell's side for Friday's game against Argentina following Jack van Poortvliet's call-up this week.
Amongst those playing from the start in west London will be Gloucester centre Seb Atkinson, selected after an impressive year in what was only a second professional season at Kingsholm for the 23-year-old, during which he ranked top in carries, tackles, and passes amongst centres in the Premiership.
With this summer's tour of Argentina and the United States overlapping with the Lions' time in Australia, Borthwick is looking forward to experimenting with his side beyond Saturday's non-cap international.

'We've spoken very publicly, we want as many England players in that Lions squad as possible,' he said. 'JVP is over there at the minute with them. There might be situations where other England players join that squad and we'll be delighted for our players to do that.
'It creates opportunities for others in the England squad. What I'm seeing so far this week is players grabbing that opportunity.
'Seb Atkinson, starting at 12 this week, the way he has embraced training, the way he's jumped into it. He's smashed every record we have on GPS in terms of his running.

'We have a group of players – Sladey (Henry Slade), Tommy Freeman, Freddie Steward – Seb has come in and put himself right in that mix or even just above that. When that happens, you're raising the standard of everybody.'
Also set to start on Saturday is Bath flanker Guy Pepper fresh from a starring role in Saturday's Premiership final win over Leicester.
The 22-year-old, who was awarded man of the match as Bath ended a 29-year wait for the title, was called up to train with the team during the 2024 Six Nations having made an impression on Borthwick during his time at Newcastle.

'You've seen enormous growth in Guy,' he said. 'The first time I met Guy was about 18 months ago at a hotel in Newcastle airport. I had a coffee with Guy and watched his game the next day.
'He hurt his hip and had to leave the field after about 30 minutes but in that 30 minutes he played so well. I thought then this is a player that's got a future in the England team.
'Since then his game has grown and grown. You saw his performance Saturday in the Premiership final, he's been tremendous. I'm looking forward to seeing him at this level.'

Borthwick pointed to the emergence of Tom Curry for England in 2017 when the Lions were touring as reason why Saturday's non-cap match should be respected.
'The way change happens is, when opportunity comes along, somebody grabs it,' said Borthwick. 'The players understand that.
'The number of players in 2017 who emerged on that tour that summer who played such significant roles in a team that went to the World Cup final a few years later in 2019, the likes of Sam Underhill, Tom Curry, Mark Wilson emerged on that tour.
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'That's the opportunity that presents itself this summer.'

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Jac Morgan has just been left lost for words after receiving special surprise from Lions
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Jac Morgan has just been left lost for words after receiving special surprise from Lions

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British and Irish Lions 2025: Where are they playing this summer?
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British and Irish Lions 2025: Where are they playing this summer?

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Joe Schmidt not just fighting to win but to save rugby union in Australia
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Australian rugby is not in a good place. The Wallabies are a lowly eighth, below Scotland and Argentina, in the world rankings. They finished last in both the 2023 and 2024 Rugby Championship campaigns. In the 2023 World Cup they were eliminated at the pool stage for the first time in their history. The Green and Gold lost 40-6 to Wales. That in itself tells quite a tale. As did the decision to hire Eddie Jones. Joe Schmidt has initiated some improvement. His team did beat England and avenged themselves against Wales last autumn but they also suffered the worst defeat in their history, 67-27, at the hands of Argentina. Domestically their Super Rugby Pacific season ended in mostly premature failure. The Queensland Reds failed to make the knockout section. So too the New South Wales and Western Australian franchises. The Brumbies, from Australia Capital Territories, managed a morale-boosting quarter-final victory against the Hurricanes before the Chiefs — from New Zealand, like the Hurricanes — overwhelmed them in the semi-final. The actual tournament is struggling to retain much interest because it has become an exclusively New Zealand competition at the sharp end. It is ten years since the Wallabies won the Rugby Championship, and 11 since Michael Cheika's Waratahs beat the Crusaders in front of nearly 62,000 supporters in Sydney, the last time an Australian team won the Super Rugby title. The reflection of this in crowd sizes is glaring. The average attendance in Sydney was 16,000 this season, while it was 1,000 less in the union stronghold of Brisbane. Twenty years ago, these averages were almost double today's figures. When the Brumbies beat the Hurricanes, I was horrified with the endless rows of empty seats in Canberra. As for Western Australia, they have averaged a fraction over 6,700. Rugby league averages 21,000 per game compared with Australian Super Rugby's 12,000. Aussie Rules packs in 39,000 spectators on an average match day. Football is also on the rise. On a Sunday morning there are throngs of kids playing 'touch footie' in Sydney and plenty of supporters turn up for the city's Shute Shield, featuring the long-established union clubs. It is predominantly middle class — but that's no different to England. In some ways, the two countries have similar problems. New South Wales and Queensland continue as the nation's rugby epicentre — for fans, clubs and schools — but it struggles to make an impact in other parts of the country. Just as the Premiership has struggled to understand that outside the traditional strongholds the sport has stagnated so it has failed to thrive in Victoria and Western Australia. The failure of Melbourne to maintain a team was testament to Aussie Rules' grip over union. Whereas Aussie Rules has made dents in the union markets of Sydney, union has not been able to nationalise rugby union. Last weekend, at the Optus Stadium in Perth, where the British & Irish Lions tour to Australia kicks off for real, 31,000-plus turned up on the Saturday for North Melbourne v Fremantle Dockers, and nearly 44,000 for the next day's game, West Coast Eagles v Carlton. These are figures beyond union's dreams. Until now. The Lions begin their tour against Western Force in Perth, Western Australia, next Saturday. The legion of Lions supporters, anticipated to number about 40,000 through the tour, will pack the stands, almost certainly outnumbering the locals with their average crowd of 6,700. That life support for the union code is the Lions playing doctor and revitalising the sport's ailing body. Australia needs an end to echoing stadiums and, more than any team in the world, the Lions quartet of nations guarantees non-stop atmosphere. But what — other than to replenished coffers — are the long-term implications should the tour degenerate into a sequence of one-sided affairs before the Test series? The Wallabies' so-called 'Super' teams will be stripped of some of their Test performers. And though Schmidt does not have the strength in depth to risk all of his core players, he has made more than expected available for Western Force. On Thursday revealed that Wallabies squad members Nick Champion de Crespigny, Tom Robertson, Darcy Swain, Tom Robertson, Dylan Pietsch and Nic White would all be free to play. For the tour, this is promising news. Andy Farrell's job isn't to play the part of rugby missionary and go easy on the opposition. The Lions have hit Western Force for a century of points in the past. If they thrash them on June 28, where does that leave the already sparse loyal core of 6,700 fans? It may be pure coincidence but this week the venue for the first Lions match hosted rugby league's showpiece, the State of Origin; New South Wales versus Queensland brings the East Coast of Australia to a grinding halt. This match, the second of the three-game series, was played at the Optus Stadium in Perth a mere ten days before the Lions kick off. Queensland, having lost in Brisbane, fought back to level the series at 1-1, with the decider now set for Sydney. The marketing men couldn't be more delighted with the way the State of Origin has panned out in the distant west. It will take a stunning performance from Western Force to eclipse the 26-24 windswept Origin thriller. League has made the sort of mark in Western Australia that union can only dream of. As for the Tests, Australia have one warm-up game against Fiji before the series. The Lions have the advantage in terms of preparation and strength. Schmidt has to gamble with his stars, arguably throwing the warm-up games. Nothing but a compelling Test series stops Australia from sliding further away from its already tenuous position among the nation's winter sports. On the terraces and in the bars the tour will be a riotous carnival. The Lions' combined support base guarantees colour in abundance. On the pitch, however, Schmidt is tasked with the toughest test for Australia's coach since the game turned pro. They triumphed in 2001, two years after winning their second World Cup and two years before losing to England in the 2003 final. That was a great Aussie team and the series went dramatically down to the dying seconds. If Australia lose the series and the Lions leave a trail of hammerings in their wake, the 2027 World Cup in Australia is going to rely on tourists and ex-pats. This tour is about more than the future of the Wallabies. It is a threat to the entire code of rugby union.

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