
Henry Pollock to make first British and Irish Lions start against Western Force
Henry Pollock will make his first start for the British and Irish Lions in Saturday's opening fixture on Australian soil against Western Force in Perth.
Pollock made his debut off the bench in Friday's 28-24 defeat by Argentina at the Aviva Stadium and the 20-year-old rising star of English rugby features at number eight in an early opportunity to press his claim for Test selection.
Lions captain Maro Itoje has been stood down for this weekend so hooker Dan Sheehan leads the team at Optus Stadium, having skippered Ireland for the first time against Wales in this year's Six Nations.
Sheehan is one of five starters who will make their Lions debuts with his Ireland team-mates Garry Ringrose, James Lowe, Joe McCarthy and Josh van der Flier completing the list.
There are two survivors from the side that faced the Pumas in Sione Tuipulotu and Tadhg Beirne, although on this occasion they have been switched to inside centre and blindside flanker respectively.
'Dan Sheehan gets the opportunity to lead the side against Western Force, which is a great honour for him and his family – so congratulations to Dan as he captains the side on his Lions debut,' Itoje said.
'We know the quality and experience the Force have and the opportunity to play against the Lions always brings out special performances from the Super Rugby sides, so we expect them to be at their best.'
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The Independent
25 minutes ago
- The Independent
Dan Sheehan warns Lions will match Western Force's hunger
Dan Sheehan insists his British and Irish Lions will use their pride in the jersey to match the determination of a Western Force side who are targeting a famous victory in Perth. Lions captain Maro Itoje has been stood down for the opening fixture on Australian soil so Ireland hooker Sheehan takes charge of Andy Farrell's men at Optus Stadium on Saturday. Henry Pollock makes his first start for the elite of British and Irish rugby after being picked at number eight while Finn Russell, the early favourite to take the playmaking duties against the Wallabies, is given his maiden outing of the tour at fly-half. The Lions know they are being targeted by Super Rugby teams eager to make history but Sheehan, who skippered Ireland against Wales in the Six Nations, declares they will not have a monopoly on passion. 'It's important to know where the opposition's mindset is and how they approach a game that only comes around every 12 years, like it does for the Western Force,' said the 26-year-old, who is one of nine players in the matchday 23 set to make their Lions debuts. 'I'm sure the Force will be 150 per cent of what they usually are. They will be flying into it and that bit of extra hunger can produce some powerful things. 'They would have been eyeing this game up since they probably first stepped into that Western Force change room. It'll mean an awful lot to them. 'But I don't want them to think that they're going to be hungrier than us. We have to demonstrate back our own mindset because this will be the first time I will be putting on the jersey, along with a few other lads.' The Force is the second game of a tour that began with a 28-24 defeat by Argentina in Dublin and while matches will soon come thick and fast, chances to impress Lions boss Andy Farrell will be limited. Farrell, however, has cautioned over the danger of players wanting a Test place too much. 'That's desperation and that's what we don't want because desperation leads to people being distorted in the way they go about the game,' he said. There are two survivors from the side that faced the Pumas in Sione Tuipulotu and Tadhg Beirne, although they have been switched to inside centre and blindside flanker respectively. Three-time Lions tourist Tadhg Furlong is given the chance to improve his match fitness with a start at tighthead prop following a season that has been heavily interrupted by calf injuries. 'There wasn't a big bang moment when you're out for six months and you're trying to scramble back, they were all short-term injuries,' Furlong said. 'It was tough because as the weeks went on we still thought we had a fighting chance for getting back for Leinster at the end of the season, but it just wasn't right. It would have been very risky to chance something. 'As desperate as you are to get on to the pitch, you also have a situation where you can't push. 'In some ways you can live with yourself because you're doing everything you can to get out there. When you can't, you can't.'


BBC News
39 minutes ago
- BBC News
Archer makes long-awaited return to Test squad
Jofra Archer is in line for a first Test appearance in more than four years after being named in England's 14-man squad for next week's match against India at 30-year-old made a thrilling start to international cricket in 2019 but has not played a Test since 2021 after a series of injuries.A recurring stress fracture in his elbow has required multiple operations, while a stress fracture in his back ruled him out of an entire summer in 2022. Archer returned to white-ball cricket in early 2023 but when the elbow issue returned he missed the summer once is the only addition to an otherwise unchanged squad from England's thrilling first-Test win at Headingley. The second Test in Birmingham begins on Archer and England this is a significant moment. His recovery has been carefully managed - until this month a diet exclusively of white-ball cricket - in the hope he could work towards a return this summer and in the Ashes against Australia this winter. Archer played his first red-ball match since May 2021 this week and returned figures of 1-32 from 18 overs in the only innings Sussex bowled on their trip to bowling in whites for the first time in 1,501 days, he said he felt ready to return to Test cricket."Yeah. I guess so," he said."I just want to get through the game. I'm glad I've finished a day of four-day cricket."Archer was viewed as a generational talent after he made his international debut six years ago. He bowled the deciding super over in England's World Cup win and later that summer bowled an electric spell of short bowling to Steve Smith in the Ashes, which ended when the Australia batter was hit in the neck and had to retire took 22 wickets at 20.27 across four Tests in that series and 42 from 13 Tests overall, including three five-wicket elbow problems began the following winter, however, when he was ruled out of a Test in South Africa with struggled through the next year across formats before undergoing surgery on the elbow in May 2021 - three months after his most recent Test, the third against India in Ahmedabad that February. England squad for second Test against India: Ben Stokes (captain), Ben Duckett, Zak Crawley, Ollie Pope, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Jamie Smith (wicketkeeper), Chris Woakes, Brydon Carse, Josh Tongue, Jofra Archer, Sam Cook, Jamie Overton, Shoaib Bashir. Archer's return eases pressure on an England fast-bowling department that has been hit by a number of Wood, Gus Atkinson, Olly Stone, Josh Hull and the uncapped Sonny Baker have all been joins Chris Woakes, Brydon Carse, Josh Tongue, Sam Cook and Jamie Overton as fast bowlers in the Carse and Tongue played in the win at Headingley and England could be tempted to stick with the same XI at the win in Leeds, former England captain Michael Vaughan told Test Match Special: "The good thing is that Jofra is back in the equation - but I'd like to see him play another four-day game."He's not played the longer format for four years so why, on the back of one game for Sussex against Durham, would you rush him back?"We know the intensity at Test-match level is so different to county cricket. Let him play another four-day game - I would go with the same line-up, as long as the bowlers are fine and there are no niggles."Sussex coach Paul Farbrace, also a former England assistant coach, told BBC Radio 5 Sports Extra: "He bowled with good pace, good accuracy and his body's in good shape which is fantastic"We would all love to see Jofra playing for England because he makes England a much better team, and he would give them a much better chance of winning the big series."Let's look after him, let's be careful with him. All I will report back to them is that he bowled nicely, he looks like he's in good rhythm, he's bowled 18 overs and it's up to them whether they pick him."One scenario could be for Archer to sit out the Edgbaston Test, spend the week around the England team, then be available for the third Test at Lord's the following is the ground where he made his Test debut in 2019, famously duelling with Australia's Steve Smith. Analysis - The moment that has been waited for This is the moment England, their supporters and Archer have waited so long for, one that seemed so unlikely to excitement around Archer, even before he made his England debut, was immense. When he pulled on the Three Lions, he delivered. His exploits in the 2019 World Cup and Ashes that followed more than lived up to the followed were false dawns, mis-management, injuries and misery. When Archer was ruled out of the home Ashes series in 2023, a Test return seemed impossible. Few would have blamed him for walking away to become a franchise and meticulously, Archer has battled back. He deserves immense credit for his desire to rebuild a Test career. England have stuck by him, contract after contract, in the hope their loyalty would be rewarded with more Test Archer's first iteration as a Test cricketer, England were starved bowlers of his high pace. Now, they have a number who can hit 90mph and above. It remains to be seen if he is the same red-ball bowler as before and where he fits into the debate over whether Archer should have played again for Sussex is a moot point. Their next game is this Sunday and he would have been unlikely to play back-to-back Championship matches. They do not have another until 22 England have the decision over when to unleash him. The Headingley win means team changes are unlikely, giving Archer an extra week to rev up for Lord's. What a story that would be.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
What Henry Pollock's selection for Lions tells us about Andy Farrell's thinking - and the questions we must ask about Maro Itoje after his exclusion, writes CHRIS FOY
The Lions simply don't have enough time for futile experiments, so the decision to deploy Henry Pollock at No 8 is fascinating and means the English rookie must be a genuine Test contender. When the tourists face Western Force at Optus Stadium on Saturday, it will be just three weeks until their series opener against Australia in Brisbane. A storming performance by the youngest member of the British and Irish squad could propel him into contention to earn a place in the first-choice side for the internationals. Why not? He has been on an unstoppable rise, so there's no reason why it can't take him all the way into the Lions Test XV. Having only turned 20 at the beginning of this year, Northampton back-rower Pollock has been on a remarkably rapid rise. An England debut at the end of the Six Nations yielded two tries. Following that momentous personal landmark, he became even more influential for the Saints, not least in their epic Champions Cup semi-final win over Leinster in Dublin, when he scored a stunning solo try with a blistering break down the left flank. Many of the men he and his club-mates conquered that day will be alongside Pollock this weekend, as Andy Farrell has brought in many of his late-arriving Irish contingent en masse. Operating from the base of the scrum, the ultra-confident tyro has the ability to wreak havoc, which may lead to Lions fans adopting his trademark headband look, which has become a familiar sight in the stands at Northampton and wherever the Saints have travelled in recent months. In the pre-tour fixture against Argentina in Dublin last Friday, Pollock made his Lions debut as a fired-up replacement and was caught up in the tide of handling and defensive lapses which allowed the Pumas to snatch a 28-24 victory. But, undeterred by the experience, he has been a typically exuberant presence since arriving Down Under and set about carefully protecting tour mascot BIL – a role always performed by the youngest player in the ranks. On Tuesday, before an important Lions training session on the outskirts of Perth, Pollock bounded around the pitch joking with team-mates and staff, and repeatedly kicking rugby balls and footballs at the posts, with the air of a man who has supreme belief in his skills with the boot. In fact, one of his eye-catching tries for Northampton after the Six Nations was a chip-and-chase effort against Sale up at Salford, which further demonstrated his rare repertoire at such a young age. Really, why shouldn't he come into the mix at No 8? He's not a giant figure at the base of the scrum in the classical mould, but the Lions don't have any of those. Ben Earl operated there in Dublin, as he has done so often for England, but he was unable to make a powerful claim on the position, so now the next chance falls to Pollock. On the bench, Jack Conan will await his own opportunity, as the sole specialist, following the untimely injury which ruled Ireland captain Caelan Doris out of the tour. Conan has been a Test Lion before, he is an athletic carrier and a canny, experienced leader, but there is no sense at this stage that the No 8 shirt already has his name on it. If Pollock ignites against the Force, it will add an intriguing twist to the selection equation in the middle of the back row. It is heartening to see head coach Andy Farrell give him his shot, knowing that the dynamic prodigy will bring an X-factor dimension to the visiting team. Sure, he may make some mistakes, but there is every likelihood that he will be far more of an asset than a liability. Sure, it is a risk, but the Lions won't amount to much if they don't take a few of those. There has already been a negative reaction to Pollock from certain ex-Wallabies in these parts. His performance against Argentina has drawn some dismissive Australian claims that the newcomer can't hope to be in the Test mix, but he could make an impact in midweek. Pollock will doubtless relish the chance to make a mockery of such a verdict. Meanwhile, it is understood that Lions captain Maro Itoje was deemed fully fit for selection but has been left out of this encounter with the Force, which is sure to raise questions about how he will be used and managed over the coming weeks. Playing in the Saturday team puts any player in what will become the Test rotation, so the absence of the skipper raises the possibility he will be on duty against the Reds in Brisbane next Wednesday. That in turn will cast doubt on how Itoje can be integrated into the Saturday side, for subsequent weekend fixtures against the Waratahs in Sydney and an Australian-New Zealand invitational team in Adelaide on July 12 – a week out from the first Test. There will be a plan, of course, which may involve a bench role in midweek before a return to starting duty. Time will tell, but as one of the few Test certainties, Itoje must be shrewdly managed. Elliot Daly has been given a prime opportunity to prove his credentials at full-back, with a view to being a likely bench asset in the Test series, as someone who can cover 15, 13 and 11, while also offering long-range goal-kicking and vast experience. And, with Hugo Keenan still not fully fit, any problem fast-tracking Blair Kinghorn into a tour debut after he has completed his commitments to Toulouse would leave the door open for Daly to push himself into starting contention. The Lions midfield has a far more balanced look to it this time, after the clunky partnership between two heavy carriers in Dublin. Scotland captain Sione Tuipulotu will operate in his favoured role at inside centre but it might have made more sense to turn to his familiar side-kick, Huw Jones, rather than Ireland's Garry Ringrose. But Jones has been unable to train fully, which surely explains why he is being held back as a replacement. Another position which appears to be up for grabs is scrum-half, with Tomos Williams the sole Welsh player in this Lions XV, as due reward for his magnificent club campaign in the colours of Gloucester. He has a chance to make a statement after Alex Mitchell struggled in the defeat against the Pumas, before Jamison Gibson-Park belatedly enters the fray after recovering from a nagging glute injury. If the Kiwi-Irishman is rusty after a lay-off, Williams could come through to claim the No 9 shirt.