
Andy Farrell adds note of caution as Lions arrive in Melbourne for second Test
British & Irish Lions
tour of Australia changes city, changes climate and changes tone in the pivotal second week of the Test series which culminates in front of a 90,000-plus crowd at the Melbourne Cricket Ground next Saturday. As both sides set up in Melbourne for the week, the
Wallabies
are in do-or-die mode and the Lions are in killer mode.
Both
Joe Schmidt
and
Andy Farrell
have selection issues ahead of Thursday's team announcements. The former Irish head coach has confirmed that Rob Valetini and Will Skelton will both bring their power games to the second Test. The flanker Langi Gleeson will be back in the mix too.
In echoes of the series in 2013, there have been calls for the more experienced James O'Connor to be reinstated at outhalf after his contribution to the Crusaders' Super Rugby Pacific title. But the likelihood is that Schmidt will retain faith in Tom Lynagh rather than jettison him after his full Test debut in the Lions' 27-19 win in Brisbane last Saturday.
Both squads moved on to Melbourne within 24 hours of the first Test ahead of the Lions' match against a Toutai Kefu-coached Pasifika XV in Melbourne's Marvel Stadium, which is likely to include another major figure from the 2013 series, Kurtley Beale.
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Also, in keeping with recent tours, this final midweek game is again assuming an irrelevance at best, and nuisance value at worst. Admittedly, that won't apply to the players chosen for what in most instances will be their last outing in a Lions jersey on this tour and perhaps ever again.
The Lions have called up another Scottish player who featured in their win over Samoa in Auckland last Friday, with lock Gregor Brown travelling with team-mates Rory Sutherland and Ewan Ashman to arrive in Melbourne on Sunday.
In further increasing the travelling squad to 45 players from its original make-up of 38, this underlines the Lions management's concern over
Joe McCarthy's
availability for the second Test.
Joe McCarthy is a doubt for the second Test after coming off in the 43rd minute of the first Test due to plantar fasciitis issues. Photograph: Dan Sheridan/Inpho
McCarthy was taken off in the 43rd minute of Saturday's win and afterwards Farrell confirmed that the 24-year-old Leinster and Ireland lock is suffering from 'plantar fasciitis', which is a painful inflammation to the sole on the foot.
'It was niggling away at him there. We got him off. Hopefully we got him off in time,' added Farrell. The clear signals are that McCarthy will not be able to train this coming week, and whether or not he can play through the pain barrier for another 40 or so minutes next Saturday and/or the week after, ultimately he will need rest and recuperation, and possibly an operation.
Otherwise, it's hard to see Farrell making any alterations to the Lions' starting pack which imposed themselves on the Wallabies for the first 45 minutes or so in Brisbane. The halfback hub of the team,
Jamison Gibson-Park
and
Finn Russell
, who departed due to a little 'cramping', will obviously remain, although the midfield, back three and a bench which didn't have the impact of their Australian counterparts could all return to the mix.
This is also because Blair Kinghorn,
Garry Ringrose
and
Mack Hansen
could all come into consideration after being ruled out last week.
If Kinghorn returns, that could open up the possibility of a 6-2 bench, while there will also be serious consideration of the benefits in bringing
Owen Farrell's
experience and winning mentality to drive the team on in the final quarter, more than was the case last Saturday.
There are some shorter-, and longer-term, weather forecasts suggesting heavy rain for both of the Lions' games in Melbourne, although at least the venue for Tuesday's match has a retractable roof.
Dan Sheehan in action for the Lions against Australia in the first Test. Photograph: Billy Stickland/Inpho
If Brisbane is something of a lucky charm for the Lions – last Saturday was their ninth win out of nine Tests against the Wallabies going back to 1899 – then less so Melbourne, where they have lost on both previous visits, in 2001 and 2013. What's more, on both occasions Australia levelled the series after losing the first Test in Brisbane.
Those who ignore the lessons of history are apt to repeat them and, of course, Farrell was an assistant coach on that 2013 tour, which remains the only Lions series win since 1997.
Andy Farrell said that the Lions would take encouragement from their performance last Saturday, before adding: 'But at the same time we know what is coming and we know what happened in the second half and how much more there is in us.
'So we roll on to the second game knowing full well what happened in 2013 when an Australia team becomes desperate, it is difficult to handle so we expect a different game next week. But having said that we expect more of ourselves as well.'
The Lions' fans appeared to outnumber those clad in gold by about three to two in the 52,000-plus crowd in Suncorp Stadium, but that imbalance in favour of the tourists is likely to be redressed next Saturday. The attendance at the 100,000-capacity MCG is expected to be above 90,000, if a little shy, as things stand, of the record attendance of 95,000 for a Lions match for the first Test against South Africa in Johannesburg in 1955, when the Lions drew the series 2-2.
This is going to be huge.
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Extra.ie
an hour ago
- Extra.ie
How this Lions tour could help Ireland do something special at the next World Cup
Let's park all the Lions chat for now. There will be plenty of time to dive into the next stage of the tour in the coming days. The selection permutations for Saturday's rematch in Melbourne, whether Joe Schmidt's side have the capacity to level the series. And so on… We're in the midst of Lions mania at the moment but if you can take a step back and look at this entire series in a wider context, it's working out very well for Ireland's World Cup ambitions down the line. Will Joe Schmidt's side have the capacity to level the series in the next Test? Pic: INPHO/Tom Maher Andy Farrell, the sizeable number of Ireland backroom staff and an even greater number of players are all likely to be back in this part of the world in two years' time. Australia are hosting the next global showpiece and this Lions series has felt like something of a dress rehearsal for what's coming down the line. We've had a suspicion for quite some time that Farrell has targeted this tour as a key building block towards the next World Cup. There was plenty of criticism aimed at the Ireland head coach when he decided to take a sabbatical and turn his attention towards this project for the best part of a year. We've had a suspicion for quite some time that Farrell has targeted this tour as a key building block towards the next World Cup. Pic: Brendan Moran/Sportsfile Those noises grew even louder when he decided to bring Simon Easterby, Andrew Goodman, John Fogarty and Johnny Sexton along for the journey, too. Plenty of backroom and support staff got the call as well, including chief analyst Vinny Hammond and Aled Walters, the national team's head of athletic performance. Meanwhile, Paul O'Connell – the second interim head coach in the space of a year – was cobbling together a makeshift backroom team to take a squad of rookies to Tbilisi and Lisbon. Paul O'Connell has cobbled together a makeshift backroom team to take a squad of rookies to Tbilisi and Lisbon. Pic: INPHO/Matteo Ciambelli To the critics, it all seemed a bit chaotic and short-sighted. Irish ambitions had been left on the back burner while Farrell and Co focused all their energies on a fairly uninspiring Lions tour against a very limited Australian outfit. All this upheaval midway through a World Cup cycle. Really? Farrell has never struck us as someone who makes it up as he goes along. He has unfinished business when it comes to the World Cup. The class of 2023 felt they were going to do something special in France. If Jordie Barrett hadn't got his arm under Ronan Kelleher in the dying minutes of that frantic quarter-final loss to the All Blacks in Paris, Ireland could have made history at the tournament. Alas, a promising campaign fizzled out at a depressingly familiar juncture. A dejected Bundee Aki after Ireland were eliminated from the 2023 Rugby World Cup. Pic: INPHO/Billy Stickland Farrell wants to make amends in 2027. It's the reason why he signed a contract extension in December of 2023. There was a school of thought that the 50-year-old was going to call it a day when his previous contract expired in 2025. It was all seemingly laid out for a nice exit. Farrell, on the back of a stellar World Cup, would hand the reins over to Easterby and O'Connell before focusing his energies on the Lions. The fact he has a book coming out in a few months' time merely solidifies the theory that Farrell wasn't planning to be in charge of Ireland this autumn. But something changed in his thinking after the last World Cup. The chance to right some wrongs in Australia was a powerful motivator. Perhaps it changed the way he thought about the Lions as well. Rather than a disruptor of the World Cup masterplan, perhaps it could enhance Ireland's chances next time? It was all seemingly laid out for a nice exit with Farrell handing over the reins to Easterby and O'Connell. Pic: INPHO/Andrew Conan The man himself made that argument back in March when he confirmed his Ireland-heavy Lions coaching team. 'I understand why you are asking the question,' he said at the time when asked if this Lions project would come at at cost to the national team. 'But first and foremost, it gives me great pleasure that the IRFU are on the same thinking of where I'm at. They are proud and privileged that their coaches, some of them, get the opportunity to take this on board and put their Lions hat on. 'It's one of the reasons why I jumped at the chance as well, the fact that it's going to grow us all, every coach that's part of it, every part of the high-performance staff and up to 80 people that are going on the tour. It's going to make us all bigger, better, stronger for the future.'

The 42
an hour ago
- The 42
Second Test at the magnificent MCG looms for the Lions
IT DOESN'T TAKE long in Melbourne to get a reminder of how far down the food chain rugby union is in these parts. A run out to the Melbourne Sports Precinct brings you to a point where all you can see in every direction is sports stadiums and training facilities There's the 100,000-capacity Melbourne Cricket Ground [MCG] looming up into view. Referred to simply as 'The G' by locals, it's one of the biggest stadiums in the world. It has hosted two Cricket World Cup finals, an Olympic Games, and is the spiritual home of the Australian Football League [AFL]. The state of Victoria, of which Melbourne is the capital, is home to 10 of the 18 AFL clubs. So there is a constant schedule of Aussie rules games at the imposing MCG, with the remainder taking place across town at the 53,000-capacity Marvel Stadium, where the Lions play their final midweek game tomorrow. On Thursday night, Hawthorn take on Carlton at the MCG, then on Friday night it's Essendon versus the Western Bulldogs at the Marvel. On Sunday, the MCG hosts Richmond against AFL leaders Collingwood, while Marvel is the venue for St Kilda against Melbourne FC. In between on Saturday, there is the Lions' second Test against the Wallabies. The G is home to the Melbourne Stars, who play in Australia's professional Twenty20 cricket competition called the Big Bash League, while the Melbourne Renegades play over in Marvel Stadium. Advertisement An aerial view of the Melbourne Sports Precinct. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo This week, Andy Farrell's men are training at Xavier College out in the eastern suburb of Kew. The grounds of the private school are stunning and the sporting facilities are obviously state-of-the-art. One member of staff at Xavier College who had the physique of a Lions player was bemused today when asked if he plays rugby union. He, like most people around here, is an Aussie Rules man. Xavier College is a major production line for the AFL. Rugby barely registers. One of the lads on the security team said the AFL organisation are 'a bunch of w***ers' who don't put enough money back into the grassroots, but the sport is booming. Back in the Sports Precinct, you glance around at the Rod Laver Arena, John Cain Arena, Margaret Court Arena, and Show Court Arena, the venues where Melbourne hosts the Australian Open tennis tournament. The John Caine Arena is also home to both of Melbourne's professional basketball sides, the South East Melbourne Phoenix and Melbourne United. Basketball is a huge participation sport in Victoria. And they even squeeze Melbourne's two professional netball clubs, the Vixen and the Mavericks, into the same John Caine Arena. Netball is huge among female athletes all over Australia. Just across the road is AFL club Collingwood's vast training facility, with an outdoor oval alongside it. 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When we happened upon a steak restaurant last night and ducked in for a meal, there was a big group of Wallabies players already getting stuck into their food. The staff could see they were big lads but didn't know who they were, although they did confirm that most ordered two mains. And yet, the MCG will welcome a gigantic rugby union crowd on Saturday night for the Lions' Test against the Wallabies. It's expected that there will be more than 90,000 people at The G and though that may be short of the 100,000 capacity, it is still a remarkable number. The record for a Lions game is 95,000 in Johannesburg, South Africa back in 1955 so to even come close to that would be astonishing, all the more so given how much the Wallabies have struggled in recent years. Some will paint it as a negative if the MCG doesn't sell out, but such a big crowd would prove just how big a draw the Lions remain, especially in a country with as many expats as Australia. With many of those Lions fans off touring elsewhere in Australia for the early part of this week, the second Wallabies Test might not impact much on Melbourne life until they roll into town. That won't stop the earlier-arriving media from discovering the city's many cracking restaurants and bars, as well as taking in some of the feast of sport this place can offer. By Saturday night, the place will be rocking with rugby union supporters. And then by the following afternoon, life will have moved swiftly back onto the AFL.


Irish Examiner
2 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
McCarthy injury being monitored as Hansen 'on track' ahead of second Test
Mack Hansen and Joe McCarthy remain doubts for the British & Irish Lions ahead of Saturday's second Test against Australia at the Melbourne Cricket Ground but Blair Kinghorn and Garry Ringrose have been cleared to face the First Nations & Pasifika XV on Tuesday night. Ireland wing Hansen was forced out of the selection mix for last Saturday's series opener with the Wallabies due to a foot injury sustained seven days earlier against an AUSNZ Invitational XV. Ringrose experienced delayed concussion symptoms following that game in Adelaide and was stood down for 12 days with both denied potential Test debuts for the Lions having been in contention for starts. With Tommy Freeman starting on the right wing and Huw Jones at outside centre the Lions forged a 27-19 victory at Brisbane's Suncorp Stadium, a game which saw Irish lock McCarthy removed on 42 minutes with plantar fasciitis, a painful inflammation of the fibrous tissues on the soles of one's feet. Neither Hansen nor McCarthy trained at the Lions' new training base at Melbourne's elite private school Xavier College on Monday following the squad's transfer from Brisbane and although assistant coach Simon Easterby was positive about their recoveries, the pair are running out of time to prove their fitness to be considered for selection ahead of Thursday's team announcement for the second Test. 'Joe is just recovering from that foot issue he had on the weekend, and that's just a wait and see type of injury,' Easterby said on Monday. 'Mack, it's just probably just a bit too soon in terms of playing tomorrow, but he's in good shape. 'He's certainly on track. It's probably one of those where we just have to get through the next 24-48 hours and then make a decision based on how he's recovering based on the stuff he's been doing over the last few days. 'Mack wasn't involved today… he's definitely on the right road to recovery, but tomorrow's game was probably slightly too soon for him. '(McCarthy) didn't train today, but there's no reason why later in the week... like anything, with those types of injuries, there's a little bit of grey around how long they take, and it's really the individual recovery that will allow us to decide whether it's right to pick him or not.' The more positive news came in Monday morning's team announcement for the final midweek game of the tour, at Marvel Stadium in Melbourne, where the opposition will be a team comprised of indigenous Australian players and Pacific islanders, captained by 95-capped Wallabies fly-half Kurtley Beale a veteran of the 2013 series against the Lions. His opposite number will be another survivor of that Lions series win, Owen Farrell who gets his first start since replacing the injured Eliott Daly. Farrell has been named at inside centre with Ireland's Jamie Osborne as his midfield partner outside a half-back pairing of Fin Smith and scrum-half Ben White. There will be an-Scottish back three with Duhan van der Merwe and new arrival Darcy Graham on the wings while Blair Kinghorn makes his comeback at fly-half following a knee injury sustained 13 days earlier at the Brumbies. Graham and Osborne are two of seven players, four of them Scots, added to the tour party specifically for Tuesday's game. England's Jamie George starts at hooker, while the replacement front row of Scotland's Ewan Ashman and Rory Sutherland, and Ireland tighthead Thomas Clarkson, as well as Scottish lock Gregor Brown are on the bench. Like Kinghorn, Ringrose will be given time to stake his claim for a place named in the Lions 23 this Saturday after being named as the outside backs replacement. 'It is great to have those two back,' Easterby said of Kinghorn and Ringrose. 'Both unfortunate with their injuries, both on good form coming into the tour and both probably feel like they want to lay down a bit of a marker for the second and third Test. 'It's also great to have the guys coming in from Scotland Camp and adding and connecting in with us as well. 'It's been impressive out there, seeing everyone training who could train apart from Joe and Mack.' 'If it's as good as the week before the first Test, then it becomes really pivotal in terms of this stage of the tour, creating competition for places towards the back end.' BRITISH & IRISH LIONS (v First Nations & Pasifika): B Kinghorn (Scotland); D Graham (Scotland), J Osborne (Ireland), O Farrell (England) – captain, D van der Merwe (Scotland); F Smith (England), B White (Scotland); P Schoeman (Scotland), J George (England), F Bealham (Ireland); J Ryan (Ireland), S Cummings (Scotland); J Morgan (Wales), J van der Flier (Ireland), H Pollock (England). Replacements: E Ashman (Scotland), R Sutherland (Scotland), T Clarkson (Ireland), G Brown (Scotland), B Earl (England), A Mitchell (England), M Smith (England), G Ringrose (Ireland).