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Ringrose and Kinghorn return from injury as Farrell captains Lions for First Nations and Pasifika clash

Ringrose and Kinghorn return from injury as Farrell captains Lions for First Nations and Pasifika clash

Irish Examiner21-07-2025
Garry Ringrose and Blair Kinghorn will return from injury for the British & Irish Lions against the First Nations and Pasifika at Marvel Stadium on Tuesday in a side to be captained by Owen Farrell.
There will be Lions debuts for recent squad additions including Ireland centre Jamie Osborne and replacement tighthead prop Thomas Clarkson, as well as four Scotland internationals drafted in from their nation's New Zealand-based tour and former England skipper Jamie George.
Yet seen through the eyes of head coach Andy Farrell's selection for the Lions' second Test against Australia at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on Saturday, the returns of Kinghorn at full-back and Ringrose as the outside backs replacement seem to be opportunities for them to prove their fitness and stake a claim to places in the matchday 23 of a potential series decider.
There are also chances for back-rowers Jac Morgan of Wales, Ireland's Josh van der Flier and No.8 Henry Pollock, who were seen as unfortunate omissions from last Saturday's first Test in Brisbane, though Farrell senior's selections of Tadhg Beirne at blindside and Tom Curry at openside were vindicated by outstanding performances in a 27-19 at Suncorp Stadium. First Test back-row replacement Ben Earl is named on the bench for Marvel Stadium.
Toulouse star Kinghorn will start at full-back 13 days after injuring his knee against the Brumbies and in an all-Scottish back three with wings Darcy Graham, one of the four recent arrivals, and Duhan van der Merwe.
The Osborne-Owen Farrell midfield will sit outside Fin Smith at fly-half with Ben White getting his second start at scrum-half since replacing the injured Tomos Williams earlier in the tour.
Geroge, like Owen Farrell an England Test centurion, packs down between loosehead Pierre Schoeman and Finlay Bealham at tighthead with a James Ryan and Scott Cummings second row scrummaging behind them.
Ringrose, cleared to play following a concussion against the AUSNZ Invitational in Adelaide 12 days ago, is one of three backline replacements alongside England half-backs Alex Mitchell and Marcus Smith, who served those duties last Saturday against the Australians. Yet there is still no return for Ireland wing Mack Hansen, whose foot injury against the AUSNZ side kept him out of the first Test.
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).
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Meet the League One trio leading the sudden rise of Irish managers in England
Meet the League One trio leading the sudden rise of Irish managers in England

The 42

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  • The 42

Meet the League One trio leading the sudden rise of Irish managers in England

A YEAR AGO, Mark Kennedy of Swindon Town was the sole Irish manager across England's 92 clubs, stretching from the Premier League down to League Two. Twelve months on and the picture has changed. Though Kennedy's currently out of work, there are six Irish managers in English league club positions as their respective 25/26 seasons begin. Keith Andrews has been the shock hire at Premier League Brentford, of course, while Athlone native Alan Sheehan is in permanent charge of Championship side Swansea having steadied the club during his caretaker term last season. Elsewhere, Dubliner Dean Brennan has led Barnet to League Two, while there are a trio of Irish managers in League One, whose childhood homes are all fall within a hundred-mile radius. There are similarities in the journeys of Brian Barry-Murphy (Cardiff City), Noel Hunt (Reading), and Conor Hourihane (Barnsley), but each have trod a different path to this point of mutual convergence. Brian Barry-Murphy. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo Barry-Murphy is the only one of the trio not to be capped at senior international level – his most elevated cap was at U21 level – but it is he who arrives into League One from the highest-profile environment, buttressing his coaching reputation as head coach of Manchester City's elite development squad (their U23s in more plainspeak.) Barry-Murphy is, of course, the son of Jimmy, a fact he could not escape in Ireland, especially when playing hurling. Speaking a couple of years ago to an in-house Man City podcast, he explained he drifted to playing soccer almost sub-consciously, as there he felt less pressure at being his father's son. He didn't have the traditional career experience of the time, playing first-team LOI football with Cork City before getting a break in the UK, initially with Preston under David Moyes. He went on to find more regular football with Sheffield Wednesday, Bury, and finally League One Rochdale, where he evolved from player to player/coach to caretaker manager to outright manager, succeeding Keith Hill. Determined to do something different with a comparatively meagre budget at Rochdale, Barry-Murphy evolved the style of play to that which would catch Manchester City's eye, under the persuasive principle that 'if we have the ball, the opposition can't score.' He twice kept Rochdale in England's third tier before succumbing to gravity in his third season, resigning after relegation before being hired by City. This was a chance for Barry-Murphy to see the game's cutting edge, for he had spent his career in England to that point at the sport's more jagged edges. Life as Rochdale manager was about avoiding relegation, and that was experience for much of his playing days: while he went up to League One with Rochdale in 2014, there were more relegation battles than promotion pushes and his average league finish across 15 seasons with Wednesday, Bury and Rochdale was 13th. Advertisement This bred in him a certain anxiety that he might be forced to go back to Ireland for work, then widely seen as an admission of failure. It wasn't until his playing days were drawing to a close that he learned to stop worrying about these kinds of consequences, and he took this lesson into his work with young players at City. 'I no longer had a sense of fear or anxiety of failing anymore, or going back home, and it was liberating', Barry-Murphy told City's in-house podcast. 'I thought if I had this when I was younger. . . if I can show young players the value of being confident and expressive and almost enjoy making mistakes, it would give them better careers. What held me back wouldn't hold them back.' He won back-to-back PL2 titles with City's academy, where he worked with Cole Palmer, Liam Delap, Morgan Rogers, and Romeo Lavia. He bridles at the notion that stepping away from men's first-team football for City's academy meant stepping away from pressure, telling that City podcast that he had never been under such pressure, given he had to give Pep Guardiola players on a daily basis, and they had to be ready to fulfil Guardiola's exacting demands. Fail to do so, and Guardiola would train upon Barry-Murphy his icy stare during which, in Barry-Murphy's own words, 'time stood still.' He also benefitted from studying Guardiola first-hand, and says today that he always knew what he wanted to do as a first-team manager, but Guardiola showed him how to do it. Barry-Murphy's belief in possession-based football has not wavered, but he speaks now of a desire to be more aggressive in getting the ball forward more quickly, to deny opponents a chance to flood their defence. Barry-Murphy left City's academy last year, feeling his own education complete, but retains close relationships at the club. He did some Premier League radio commentaries for Off the Ball last season, and rarely have so many City players and staff stopped in a post-game mixed zone as when Barry-Murphy made an appearance after City's loss at Anfield last season. City are far from Barry-Murphy's only admirers: Stephen Kenny once sounded him out for a then-vacant role on his Irish coaching staff. He spent the latter half of last season as a coach at Leicester City – brought in after Ruud Van Nistelrooy's appointment as manager – but failed to salvage a sinking ship. He has now been handed the keys to Cardiff City, who meet the description of a fallen giant. The capital club are suddenly the poor relation of Welsh football: relegation last season saw them drop out of England's top two tiers for the first time in more than 20 years, while they were passed out by Wrexham on the way up. A club drifting for some time has turned to Barry-Murphy not just for success but also to instil a sense of identity. He will be expected to deliver promotion, however, though he has not exactly been dealt a strong hand. The club has sold Callum O'Dowda to Ferencvaros and are thus far yet to make a significant signing. Still, it could be worse. Even by the EFL's regular standards of dysfunction, Reading have stood out in the last couple of years. Things looked promising when they were bought by Chinese investor Dai Yongge in 2017, with the club agonisingly close to a Premier League return later that year, beaten on penalties in the play-off final. It was to be the acme of Yongge's ownership. His interest dwindled and the club slid, dropping into League One in 2023. The late filing of accounts and missed payments led to points deductions totalling 18 points, along with frequent transfer embargoes. The women's team withdrew from the league when Yongge cut funding, and a men's league game against Port Vale was abandoned when protesting fans stormed the pitch. Yongge was disqualified as a director by the EFL in April and forced to sell up, and a failure to do so would have risked the club's expulsion from the EFL. A deal has mercifully been done, and American Rob Couhig has taken over, and it is into this light at the end of the tunnel that Noel Hunt is now stepping. Noel Hunt. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo Hunt's rugged, tenacious style of play as a player belied his more forward-thinking qualities, and he worked with a sports psychologist throughout his career. He is bringing some of that perspective to management, explaining he has a philosophy of 'no disappointments.' Pain is merely information on what must be improved. This is perhaps what kept him sane at Reading. Having first joined the club as a development coach in 2022, he briefly served as interim coach in 2023 before taking charge permanently last December, after Ruben Selles packed it in for a job at Hull. Given his constraints – the club couldn't sign anyone in January – Hunt did a remarkable job, steering Reading to a seventh-place finish, finishing just three points outside the play-off places. A recent interview with The Sunday Times offered some insight into how Hunt dealt with the turbulence: when staff were spun into a panic having heard Yongge had put the training ground up for sale, Hunt expressed unity by organising a staff football match, pulling in a couple of players as referees. The build-up to this season has been one of comparative normality, even if it began with only six senior players remaining under contract. Hunt has a very young squad – only two outfield players are over 28 – so he has added some experience with the free transfer of Paudie O'Connor. New owner Couhig has made it clear his preference is for Hunt to shop for loan players or free agents. Goalscoring looks to be Reading's main challenge this season, as they have lost Harvey Knibbs and Sam Smith, who scored 25 goals between them last year. Hunt has signed Irish underage striker Mark O'Mahony on loan from Brighton, whose performances will likely dictate Reading's ceiling this season. Conor Hourihane. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo Perhaps most intriguing of all is how Conor Hourihane performs at Barnsley. Hourihane is just 34, and has quickly ascended to his first managerial gig. He joined Barnsley in a player-coach role at the start of last season, but retired during Christmas week to replace Dean Whitehead on the coaching staff, and was in temporary charge of the whole ship by March. He signed a two-year contract a month later. While it's a speedy ascent, those who knew Hourihane even from international camps are unsurprised at his career change. He undertook his B-licence badges with the FAI during 2020, and then coached part-time Stourbridge for a year while he was doing his A-licence. Then, when playing at Derby County, he took charge of Aston Villa's U16s. He has given a lengthy run-down of his coaching style and attitude to the terrific Coach's Voice website, during which he gave an insight into the modernity of his ideas. Less relevant than formations, he says, are principles of play, specifically on how his team will build from the back and how they will press from the front. 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Farrell's Lions out to finish with a bang against Schmidt's Wallabies
Farrell's Lions out to finish with a bang against Schmidt's Wallabies

The 42

time34 minutes ago

  • The 42

Farrell's Lions out to finish with a bang against Schmidt's Wallabies

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Jack O'Connor in a place in Kerry football where he will be celebrated and not forgotten
Jack O'Connor in a place in Kerry football where he will be celebrated and not forgotten

The 42

time34 minutes ago

  • The 42

Jack O'Connor in a place in Kerry football where he will be celebrated and not forgotten

ONE OF THE gifts Jarlath Burns has brought to the office of the GAA presidency is his intuition when reading the room. The committee is king in the GAA political world, which inevitably and understandably frames the world view of those who clamber to the top and who, in their big moments always lean on appreciation for the collective ahead of the individual; the county committees, the match officials, the diaspora, the grassroot volunteers and the players. But in an All-Ireland final in which the build-up was dominated by three individuals, Michael Murphy, David Clifford and Jim McGuinness, Burns acknowledged that reality in his presentation speech. He celebrated Murphy as the legend he is who came within a game of even bending time to his will as he sought to write the greatest comeback story ever written. He astutely ducked the challenge of articulating the greatness of Clifford, recognising what those of us in the press box have known for an age, that words are as ill equipped to describe the Fossa genius as zonal defences are in curbing him. And he hailed Jack O'Connor for winning a fifth All-Ireland to remind that the game we had just witnessed had been played out to his blueprint rather that of another great manager – despite McGuinness' repeated and genuine efforts all year to give credit exclusively to his players – who was sold as the one who was in the business of winning matches. Advertisement Kerry manager Jack O'Connor commiserates with Donegal manager Jim McGuinness. Morgan Treacy / INPHO Morgan Treacy / INPHO / INPHO Okay, it is more likely that Burns just wanted to remind that in a year when football lost its greatest manager how fitting it was that another from up the road in the parish of Waterville had his greatness cemented. It was timely too, because this could be the end for him. O'Connor said as much earlier in the year, pretty much confirmed it in the post final press conference before hiding behind mature reflection the following day to muddy the water around his intentions by suggesting he would take a bit of time over it. That might be genuine; he may have had his head turned by heartfelt pleas from his players on a giddy banquet night in the Burlo to give it one more go or, perhaps more likely, he may not have wanted his imminent departure to steal the thunder of his players glorious present. We have the latter on our betting slip. He has a track record of knowing his own mind, which is why he has left this post twice and returned to it twice. And if Carlsberg did departures this is how it would be, winning four trophies despite only entering three competitions, on the grounds that Kerry are now also the unofficial Ulster champions. He radiated a calmness and satisfaction when it was all over on Sunday evening that was a world away from the man who raged against his team's critics just 28 days earlier. He is 64 now and there is a time when living in a pressure cooker is neither good for man nor mind. Kerry manager Jack O'Connor during the homecoming in Tralee on Monday night. Ben Brady / INPHO Ben Brady / INPHO / INPHO Those who might think that the demands on managing Kerry are over-egged, a quick yarn which this column witnessed first hand. When Sam Maguire came calling to Caherciveen on the Friday night after the 2009 All-Ireland final win over Cork, heavy rain invited shelter as we waited for the team's arrival. As they finally made their way up the street, we made our way to the doorway of the hostelry where we were joined by another high stool pilot. 'Well, will you look at them there now with the cup and not a word about the All-Ireland that they fucked away last year,' he declared. It is not just the eaten bread that is quickly forgotten, sometimes the bread just baked is too. But O'Connor has not put himself in a place in Kerry football where not only will he not be forgotten, he will be celebrated too. Rightly. There are many attributes that made him the manager he has become, but perhaps the most obvious is a word he likes to use himself, 'cajones.' He has never been afraid to roll the dice. Trace a finger over all his All-Ireland wins and they have been marked by big calls. The introduction of Paul Galvin and Aidan O'Mahony in 2004 providing the raw physical edge that had been exploited up north, going back to the future to put a big man at the edge of the square in the 2006, the reshaping of the spine of his defence in the mid-summer of 2009 by luring Michael McCarthy out of retirement while having to drop Tomas Ó Sé and Gooch Cooper, and, of course, importing a Tyrone coach in Paddy Tally in 2022, which was a poke in the eye to local puritans. This year, he defied a run of critical injuries not by accident but by design, moving Graham O'Sullivan from the full-back line to half-forward became even more valuable as middle options contracted, while the integration of back-up midfielders Sean O'Brien and Mark O'Shea was a masterclass in clarity of coaching and purpose. Related Reads The top 10 moments of the 2025 All-Ireland football championship Where to now for Donegal after a final where they were thoroughly outplayed and outthought? A day of days for Kerry as they complete the Ulster clean sweep Kerry manager Jack O'Connor celebrates the final whistle with Cian O'Connor and Ger O'Mahony. Morgan Treacy / INPHO Morgan Treacy / INPHO / INPHO His other gift is his nose for management team talent. His recruitment of an athletics coach in Pat Flanagan gave his team of the noughties an explosive edge, the detailing of Eamon Fitzmaurice on video analysis moulded an All-Ireland winning manager and the most insightful pundit to ever be introduced to a microphone in one fell swoop, the introduction of Tally turned the Kerry defence from a leaking sieve into a strong-box. And, then he goes and leaves his best trick for possibly his last one. Working with an entire new management team in a brand new game, he brought in Cian O'Neill – and the desire for Jack to stay will be accentuated by hope that relationship extends to another season – with the focus of returning to a more direct style, providing a different play-book but not necessarily a brand new one. The sight of David Clifford drifting out to the half-forward line last Sunday invited an obvious comparison with James O'Donoghue's selfless role in the 2014 final, when O'Neill was Fitzmaurice's coach. The difference was that the scale of Clifford's talent and rule changes that have left blanket defences wafer thin, meant that this time it was designed to sting and not just stretch. In all of that, O'Connor has left a body of work behind him which has left football's most challenging and irksome constituents with barely a bone to pick. In a land that has made a sport out of doing just that, it may be his greatest validation of all. *****

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