
Ringrose and Kinghorn return from injury as Farrell captains Lions for First Nations and Pasifika clash
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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The Irish Sun
30 minutes ago
- The Irish Sun
Jim McGuinness reveals Donegal team for clash against Kerry with 13 stars set for All-Ireland final debut at Croke Park
JIM McGUINNESS looks set to keep Caolán McGonagle in reserve again for tomorrow's All-Ireland SFC final against Kerry. While adjustments can still be made before throw-in, the Donegal boss has 2 Jim McGuinness has named his Donegal team for the All-Ireland final Credit: Seb Daly/Sportsfile 2 Caolan McGonagle starts on the bench Credit: Ramsey Cardy/Sportsfile Meanwhile, Diarmuid O'Connor's presence on the Kerry bench for tomorrow's showdown has been confirmed by boss Jack O'Connor, who has also McGonagle, who was an All-Star nominee last year, came off the bench against the Royals after being sidelined since a foot injury forced him off in Donegal's defeat to Tyrone in their group-stage opener. Thirteen of McGuinness' starters will feature in a Sam Maguire final for the first time. Ryan McHugh and Michael Murphy are the surviving members of the loss to the Kingdom 11 years ago, along with sub and captain Paddy McBrearty. Kerry midfielder O'Connor, who has not featured since the preliminary quarter-final against Cavan due to a shoulder injury, was included on a list of 13 subs unveiled on Thursday. Read More on GAA That has been trimmed to 11, with Conor Geaney and Dara Moynihan omitted. DONEGAL : S Patton; F Roarty, B McCole, P Mogan; R McHugh, EB Gallagher, C McColgan; H McFadden, M Langan; S O'Donnell, C Thompson, C Moore; C O'Donnell, M Murphy, O Gallen. Subs : G Mulreaney, S McMenamin, O McFadden Ferry, E McHugh, C McGonagle, O Doherty, P McBrearty, J Brennan, N O'Donnell, D Ó Baoill, J McGee. KERRY : S Ryan; P Murphy, J Foley, D Casey; B Ó Beaglaioch, M Breen, G White; S O'Brien, M O'Shea; J O'Connor, S O'Shea, G O'Sullivan; D Clifford, P Clifford, D Geaney. Subs : S Murphy, K Spillane, E Looney, TL O'Sullivan, T Morley, P Geaney, M Burns, T Brosnan, A Heinrich, T Kennedy, D O'Connor.


Irish Examiner
30 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
What exactly makes Cian O'Neill such a good coach?
In early 2006, South Africa lit the Kerry bat signal. They were looking for a Gaelic football specialist to tour their Super 14 rugby clubs and teach the fundamentals of fielding. Mickey Ned O'Sullivan, a coaching enthusiast to his bones, answered the call. The invitation came through former Irish rugby international Conor O'Shea, whose father, Jerome, was a Kerry legend. O'Sullivan, a 1975 All-Ireland winner, was managing the Limerick footballers but made room in his schedule for a whirlwind, eight-day odyssey. Also on the trip was former England full-back Jonathan Callard and the two struck up a friendship. A year later, Callard got in touch. He was helping England prepare for the Rugby World Cup and wondered if O'Sullivan would come over to assist. O'Sullivan declined but suggested a meeting instead. Cian O'Neill was over Limerick's strength and conditioning then with Donie Buckley as their coach. 'I was telling Cian about this call,' says O'Sullivan. 'He said he'd love to meet him as well. He was mad to engage in those sorts of conversations. 'Jonathan flew to Cork airport for a meeting. We talked about his coaching and ideas that were prominent in Gaelic football at the time. He wanted to apply some of these principles to rugby. We had a good long chat and he flew back that night.' For over two decades, O'Neill has left fingerprints everywhere he's gone: Limerick, Tipperary, Mayo, Kerry, Kildare, Cork, Galway and now, back to the Kingdom. This is his ninth All-Ireland final. His tally includes 11 provincial titles and two All-Irelands. He has been involved in county titles across Kildare, Limerick and Cork. 'He is interested in connecting with people,' says Ed Coughlan, a lecturer at Munster Technological University where O'Neill works as head of the sports and leisure department. 'The first time I met him was when he came into Mayo. It didn't take long to realise he wasn't another cog in the wheel, he engaged deeply with everything that goes on.' Players crave structure and preparation. O'Neill coached against Kerry in 2020 and 2021, one a victory for the ages and the other a drubbing. His initial impact on that Cork team was visceral. Seán Powter still remembers that covid contest, standing on a rain-soaked pitch, with O'Neill's voice echoing in his mind. 'The first year or so we got real benefits from him. He was the first coach to go properly into video analysis with us. We did 40, 50 minutes of it. 'Cian was the main fella running them. He'd go after patterns that other teams play. We did basic kickouts and stuff before but he would go after the opposition big time. I'll never forget when we beat Kerry in the Páirc in 2020, the stuff he did before that. Clifford will do this three out of four times, so you knew what he was going to try to do. 'Every time Stephen O'Brien or Gavin White got the ball, he said standoff them. They will run down the line themselves. It worked a treat. I remember thinking during the game, this coach really knows his stuff.' Before every gym session, players did 20–30 minutes of ball work beside the bus lane at the back of Páirc Uí Chaoimh. Hundreds of touches, nothing wasted. Powter relished all of the detail. Text a question and you'd get an essay back within minutes. Earlier this championship after Cork's win over Roscommon, a message arrived, O'Neill offering heartfelt congratulations. He brought occlusion goggles to Kildare, an innovation met with national scepticism, as if he'd turned up with magic beans. None of that lessened their value. He kept them in his kit and brought it to Cork too. 'We used to call it drunk glasses,' says Powter. 'I remember thinking my ball skills were crap with them. My skills definitely improved under Cian. Every group is going to have cynics but he was big on one percenters. If it benefits someone one percent, why not go for it.' Coaching is a brittle science. The learning curve is relentless. Part of O'Neill's draw is his willingness to ride that curve. In an online coaching and games webinar for Louth GAA a few years ago, he detailed what went right for that 2020 Munster semi-final victory and what went wrong for the final against Tipperary. The two pillars of his philosophy were role clarity and role execution. Against Kerry, they had a long prep window and a clean bill of health. But key players were unavailable for the final, including Powter. Did the replacements fully understand their roles? Did they execute? Was that O'Neill's failing? He admitted he had to learn from it all. The self-critique was candid. 'I think the coaching modules and the coaching systems in the last couple of decades are very much prescriptive,' he said in criticism during the discussion. 'Very much focused on how to perform a skill, how to kick a ball over the bar, how to pick the ball with your dominant foot or non-dominant foot, but very rarely in a coaching course I have been at has there been a real focus on the why. Why did you execute a certain skill at a certain time in a certain context? What was the reason behind that.' In Galway, O'Neill ran video sessions like open forums. The management team would stand together at the top of the room and declare that they were four heads, facing them were 40. Each player had on-field experience of their principles or plays, the coaches did not. He craved input. But that didn't mean he was easily swayed. Rigor in prep demanded rigor in response. 'Every block in training had a learning outcome from it,' recalls Niall Daly, who joined the panel in 2022, the same year O'Neill arrived. 'You could see the planning that went into each drill. It was clear to see what we were aiming to achieve with each session. He was really systems focused. In 2022, the system to beat Mayo with the two wing backs tucking in and our two wing forwards getting back, a lot of time and effort went into that to counter their running game. 'That was my only championship start. The repetition of that system, every single person knew exactly what we were doing. It felt like pieces on a chess board.' The Kildare native has been admirably frank about the entire ride. A car crash in 2002 left him with chronic back issues. Coaching become a kind refuge. As the road miles piled up, so did the pain. He spoke openly about how he tried to make his car an office, scheduling calls and utilising a Dictaphone to record his own journalling. Last year, he let Denis Walsh sit in on a commute from Cork to Galway for training. Nothing was off the table. They explored everything from his tactical systems to his relationship and starting a family. 'I often marvelled at how he did it,' says Daly. 'How can a man maintain a really good job, his wife and a kid with all the travel? We could finish training in Lough George on some miserable evening, and I'm hoping into the car at 10pm. I'm only 15 minutes from training, but you had Cian going back to Cork and PJ going back to Kildare. The commitment players give is often mentioned. You see them give even more.' Cian O'Neill holds a degree in Physical Education and a PhD in Sport and Exercise Science. For Powter, academic credentials were never the clincher. What mattered was the connection. 'I've had many coaches who have Masters and everything but I didn't find them too good. Their personal skills and man-management wouldn't have been hectic. Cian was great at that. Don't get me wrong, if you cross him, he'd let you know how felt as well. 'The main determining factor for me with a coach is the people skills. Can you get along?'


RTÉ News
an hour ago
- RTÉ News
Eviston inspired by Tipperary hurlers success ahead of semi-final showdown with Galway
Mairead Eviston is hoping that Tipperary's inspirational All-Ireland comeback victory can provide the momentum to take the camogie counterparts into this year's decider. The Premier County's camogie side have not reached the final since 2006, which signalled an end to the all-conquering era around the turn of the millennium when Tipperary won five All-Ireland titles in six years. However, this year Eviston & Co are seeking to right that wrong and go one step further than their 2024 campaign and beat Galway at UPMC Nowlan Park in this afternoon's semi-final. It's the first game of the Kilkenny double-header as Tipp and Galway resume rivalries before reigning All-Ireland champions Cork take on Waterford in the other semi-final. And Eviston is hoping that the momentum within the county can help inspire the team to a performance to take them into the final. "It was a brilliant distraction on Sunday," said Eviston, speaking to RTE Sport. "You could soak up all the energy around the stadium. It was an incredible game and an incredible result for us. "I don't think anyone in the country gave us any hope at the weekend. Even at half time, I suppose a lot of people were like, Cork are going to kick on here. "I know the lads, they'd never give up. I knew they'd keep fighting and that's exactly what they did. I think it just really goes to show a bit of hard work and determination that you can really hurt opposing teams. "It's great energy now for us coming into our semi-final." Tipperary qualified for the quarter-finals after securing second place in their group, and they then moved into the last four by beating a strong Kilkenny side with six points to spare at the end of extra-time. But things looked a lot different back at the end of May as Tipperary disappointed in their opening group game, emphatically losing to Cork by 18 points at The Ragg. However, that overwhelming defeat to the reigning champions would help kick-start Tipp's campaign, as they bounced back in style to hammer seven goals past Wexford, before easily accounting for both Limerick and Clare. "I suppose starting off with Cork, it was a real upset for us," admitted Eviston. "I think in hindsight, it's probably something that we needed. We had a lot of tough conversations after that and then really applied ourselves at training and seemed to kick on from that. "We did exactly what we needed to do to get over our group games, and I think we definitely needed a competitive game, so getting a quarter-final was probably very beneficial for us. "Particularly getting the 80 minutes into the legs as well against a top-class team and grinding out the win," she added, regarding the extra-time win over Kilkenny in the quarters. "I think that just brings great confidence into the group. Having the three weeks now as well to get the body right has been very beneficial." Eviston believes that the run of form will take them into the last-four clash with full belief that they can progress to this year's All-Ireland final. And the Drom & Inch woman also feels that Tipperary are a much-improved side that bowed out of the competition at the semi-final stage last summer, which she puts down to stronger mental resolve combined with the arrival of the next generation. "We have the team there. We have the squad to do it. We've put in really hard work this year now to better our performances in what has probably let us down in the last two semi-finals. Even from a mental aspect, that has been a huge focus element for us this year," she said. "Particularly that Kilkenny match, I think that just really goes to show where the mental growth has come this year in comparison to last year's semi-final. "Probably the previous Tipp team would have put the head down and allowed Kilkenny to kick on and win that game. "We didn't. We really pushed on in extra time to win by a good few points. I think that really showed the growth from last year. "And we're very lucky to have players coming from the junior team that won the All-Ireland last year and also from the minor All-Ireland winning team last year. "They're coming with great experience and they're really pushing us all on at training. "I think players themselves have really taken their own individual performances to another level as well, which is really helping us as a collective." Looking ahead to the challenge of Galway, should Tipp progress, they will have the luxury of sitting back in Nowlan Park to enjoy the second semi-final to assess what lies beyond in the final, and Eviston is happy to be playing in the early game this afternoon. "Against them, you know you're going to get a hard-fought game," she said. "It's going to go right down to the wire and we're going to have to keep tuned in for every single ball that's pucked around the field. "At this stage, we can only really focus on our own performance and just ensure that we're bringing that high energy throughout the game. Starting right from the beginning and not waiting 15-20 minutes or even to half-time to really kick-start. "I suppose for us the importance will be coming down the home stretch as well. No matter what position we're in, we keep kicking on and keep our performance high right down to the final whistle." "I think so," she added, when asked if she was happy to play in the first game of the doubleheader. "I definitely think there's benefits to it. You're in the first game, you're not coming in to play the second game knowing who's won the first game and who's playing in the final. "You can really set the tone, you're coming into a calmer stadium as well to get your preparation right. "I would definitely say there's merit in it and I would prefer it to be the first game."