logo
Itoje picked as Lions captain for Australia tour

Itoje picked as Lions captain for Australia tour

Japan Today08-05-2025

FILE - England's Maro Itoje takes a line out during the Six Nations rugby union match between England and Scotland at Twickenham in London, Saturday, Feb. 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Ian Walton, File)
rugby union
By STEVE DOUGLAS
Maro Itoje will captain a British and Irish Lions squad for the rugby tour of Australia that contains 15 Irish players, just two Welshmen and an Englishman with only one international cap to his name.
The 38-man squad was announced on Thursday in front of an audience of more than 2,000 rugby fans at The O2 arena in London, with the 30-year-old Itoje becoming first English player to captain the Lions since Martin Johnson in 2001. The lock will be heading on his third tour, after 2017 and 2021.
When his name was read out by Lions coach Andy Farrell, Itoje walked out in full Lions uniform — holding the lion mascot, Bill — to warm applause.
'It's a tremendous honor and a tremendous privilege,' Itoje said.
He revealed he got a phone call from Farrell on Tuesday but could barely hear him speak because it was a bad line. After hanging up, Farrell needed to phone Itoje back to offer him the captaincy.
Itoje is England captain but only since January. He has just led his country to a second-place finish in the Six Nations and has made 93 caps for England across nine years.
Itoje's path to the Lions captaincy might have been cleared by Caelan Doris, the Ireland captain, who injured his shoulder playing for Leinster against Northampton last weekend. Doris, a star No. 8, didn't even make the squad.
Henry Pollock did, even though he has played only once for England — as a late, try-scoring replacement against Wales in the recent Six Nations. He started the championship with the England Under-20s.
The 20-year-old Pollock has been impressing at club level with Northampton Saints, including a man-of-the-match display in a Champions Cup semifinal win over Leinster last weekend, and was the surprise name selected by Farrell in a squad containing the best players from England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales.
An Englishman not picked was Owen Farrell, the son of the coach and someone hoping to go on a fourth straight Lions tour.
He was overlooked, however, as fellow Englishmen Fin Smith and Marcus Smith and Scotland's Finn Russell were the preferred options at flyhalf.
Farrell hasn't played international rugby since the 2023 World Cup, after which he stepped down from national duty to protect his mental health. He has since quit English rugby and moved to France to play for Racing 92 in Paris.
Only Ireland has more players than England's 13. Scotland will have eight representatives and just two are from Wales — scrumhalf Tomos Williams and flanker Jack Morgan — with their nation on a losing run of 17 tests stretching back to 2023. It's Wales smallest representation since World War II.
'It's the top of the mountain — you can't get higher than this achievement,' said Williams, who shed a tear when he heard his name announced.
The Lions won the test series against the Wallabies the last time they toured Australia, in 2013. They have since drawn the series against New Zealand in 2017 and lost in South Africa in 2021.
For the latest tour, the Lions will play three tests against the Wallabies, along with six more games in Australia — against Western Force, Queensland Reds, NSW Waratahs, ACT Brumbies, an Invitational Australia and New Zealand XV, and a First Nations and Pasifika XV.
The tour begins with a match against Argentina in Dublin on June 20 and ends with the series-closing third test on Aug. 2.
Forwards: Tadhg Beirne (Ireland), Ollie Chessum (England), Jack Conan (Ireland), Luke Cowan-Dickie (England), Scott Cummings (Scotland), Tom Curry (England), Ben Earl (England), Zander Fagerson (Scotland), Tadhg Furlong (Ireland), Ellis Genge (England), Maro Itoje (England, captain), Ronan Kelleher (Ireland), Joe McCarthy (Ireland), Jac Morgan (Wales), Henry Pollock (England), Andrew Porter (Ireland), James Ryan (Ireland), Pierre Schoeman (Scotland), Dan Sheehan (Ireland), Will Stuart (England), Josh van der Flier (Ireland).
Backs: Bundee Aki (Ireland), Elliot Daly (England), Tommy Freeman (England), Jamison Gibson-Park (Ireland), Mack Hansen (Ireland), Huw Jones (Scotland), Hugo Keenan (Ireland), Blair Kinghorn (Scotland), James Lowe (Ireland), Alex Mitchell (England), Gary Ringrose (Ireland), Finn Russell (Scotland), Fin Smith (England), Marcus Smith (England), Sione Tuipulotu (Scotland), Duane van der Merwe (Scotland), Tomos Williams (Wales).
Games
Friday, June 20 vs. Argentina, Dublin
Saturday, June 28 vs. Western Force, Perth
Wednesday, July 2 vs. Queensland Reds, Brisbane
Saturday, July 5 vs. NSW Waratahs, Sydney
Wednesday, July 9 vs. ACT Brumbies, Canberra
Saturday, July 12 vs. Invitational Australia and New Zealand, Adelaide
Saturday, July 19 vs. Australia, Brisbane, first test
Tuesday, July 22 vs. First Nations and Pasifika XV, Melbourne
Saturday, July 26 vs. Australia, Melbourne, second test
Saturday, Aug. 2 vs. Australia, Sydney, third test
© Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Urawa fans certain to bring noise to Club World Cup final
Urawa fans certain to bring noise to Club World Cup final

Japan Today

timea day ago

  • Japan Today

Urawa fans certain to bring noise to Club World Cup final

Japan's Urawa Reds will compete at the Club World Cup in the United States soccer By Andrew McKIRDY Their raucous fans are the self-styled bad boys of Japanese soccer and the team's red shirts, white shorts and black socks bear more than a passing resemblance to Manchester United. But while the fallen English giants won't be at the Club World Cup, Urawa Reds will and are set to be roared on in the United States by more than 5,000 followers. Japan's best-supported club face Inter Milan, River Plate and Monterrey in the opening round when the revamped competition starts on June 14. Urawa is a nondescript suburb about an hour north of Tokyo and the team have been known to draw crowds of over 50,000 to their Saitama Stadium home. Crowd trouble is extremely rare in Japan but Urawa were banned from last season's domestic cup after "ultra" supporters ripped down barriers and threatened opposition fans. In 2014 they were forced to play a game behind closed doors after fans displayed a racist banner. Supporters say they are misunderstood and are looking forward to hoisting their flags and belting out their songs in front of a global audience. "People who aren't really interested in soccer think that we're scary people, but I always tell them that's not true," Urawa fan Kakeru Inoue told AFP before a recent game. "I often bring workmates to games to show them what it's really like." Urawa began life as Mitsubishi's company team and their official name of Urawa Red Diamonds is a nod to the industrial behemoth's corporate logo. They were originally called Mitsubishi Urawa Football Club, or MUFC, another link to the Premier League side. Despite having been crowned Asian champions three times, Urawa have only won the domestic once, in 2006 under German former player and 1990 World Cup winner Guido Buchwald. Urawa have appeared at the Club World Cup three times, most recently losing 3-0 to Manchester City in the semi-finals in 2023. Veteran goalkeeper Shusaku Nishikawa says they are proud to be the only Japanese team at the inaugural 32-team Club World Cup. "The competition will get a lot of attention from around the world and it has a big meaning for us," he said. "Who knows whether a Japanese team will play in it again because you need to become Asian champions to earn that right." Professional football only started in Japan in 1993 but it took root quickly in Urawa. The club signed overseas players including Buchwald and brought through homegrown internationals like Shinji Ono, Makoto Hasebe and current Japan goalkeeper Zion Suzuki. The club's achievements have at times been overshadowed by their fans, who hung a banner reading "Japanese only" over an entrance to the stands before a 2014 game. The incident earned Urawa the dubious distinction of becoming the first Japanese club to be ordered to play a game behind closed doors. One Urawa fan who has attended games since the began said the club were "all about ultra culture". "That's something you can only get in Urawa," said the supporter, who gave his name only as Nakaji. "No other club can match us." Urawa are coached by Poland's Maciej Skorza, who is back for a second spell after leading the club to the Asian Champions League title in 2023. The Club World Cup is being played in the middle of the season, which runs from February to December. Urawa have made a strong start to their domestic campaign and look poised to challenge for the title, having finished 13th last season. Norwegian defender Marius Hoibraten says the Club World Cup is "a motivation rather than a distraction". "Being able to meet the best teams from other countries is a nice experience for us, everyone is buzzing," said the 30-year-old, one of the few non-Japanese players in Urawa's squad. "It's a little bit of unknown water. Everyone is really looking forward to it." © 2025 AFP

All Blacks great Stu Wilson, known for his ebullient personality and pioneering play, dies at 70
All Blacks great Stu Wilson, known for his ebullient personality and pioneering play, dies at 70

Japan Today

time3 days ago

  • Japan Today

All Blacks great Stu Wilson, known for his ebullient personality and pioneering play, dies at 70

rugby union By STEVE McMORRAN Stu Wilson, an elusive All Blacks winger whose playing style reflected his ebullient personality, has died. He was 70. Wilson's death was confirmed by New Zealand Rugby, which did not specify a cause. He died in his sleep Sunday at his home in Tauranga on New Zealand's North Island. Wilson was a natural joker whose play was many years ahead of its time. He foreshadowed the larger, stronger wingers who are now commonplace but he also had pace, balance and an ability to break tackles. Wilson scored 19 tries in 35 tests for the All Blacks which, at the time of his retirement, was the all-time record for New Zealand. That included a hat-trick of tries against the British and Irish Lions at Dunedin in 1983. He captained the All Blacks on their 1983 tour to Britain and formed a brilliant attacking partnership at provincial and international level with his fellow winger and friend Bernie Fraser. After retiring Wilson became an amusing and popular commentator for television. David Campese, an ex-Australia winger who made his test debut opposite Wilson in 1982, told Television New Zealand 'as a player, Stu made rugby look easy and earned huge respect as captain in 1983.' 'He had a swerve to beat anyone, extreme pace, intellect and power, able to break through tacklers, making him a try-scoring machine.' © Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

Triple-hosted World Cup: Huge ambition at a hefty cost to planet
Triple-hosted World Cup: Huge ambition at a hefty cost to planet

Japan Today

time3 days ago

  • Japan Today

Triple-hosted World Cup: Huge ambition at a hefty cost to planet

Qatar used an air conditioning system to blow cold air onto pitches at the 2022 World Cup soccer By Coralie FEBVRE The largest and most far-flung World Cup kicks off in 12 months with a record 48 teams spread across Canada, the United States and Mexico and sceptics are asking whether its frenzied growth is worth the environmental cost. FIFA, the governing body of world football, like the International Olympic Committee, insists it is working to reduce the carbon footprint. But the expansion from 32 competing nations to 48 and the resulting shift to multiple hosts both next year and in 2030, leads critics to question that claim. "Unlike the case of the Olympic Games, where the carbon footprints have been reducing over the last several editions, this is totally opposite in the case of the men's World Cup," David Gogishvili, a geographer at the University of Lausanne and a specialist in mega-sports events, told AFP. While the 2022 World Cup in Qatar was certainly compact, it drew criticism for its oversized, air-conditioned stadiums built at breakneck speed in a small country with a scorching climate. For 2026, all 16 stadiums -- ranging in capacity from the 45,000-capacity Toronto Stadium to the 94,000-capacity cauldron of Dallas Stadium -- already existed when the bid was made. '5 million fans' One problem is the distances. Foxborough Stadium, outside Boston, is 3,700 kilometers from the Azteca in Mexico City. The Stadium at BC Place in Vancouver is 4,500 km from Miami Stadium. That multiplies air travel for teams, officials, media and the "more than five million fans" who, FIFA says, "are expected to attend". Organizers say the 72 matches in the first round -- when teams will play in 12 four-team groups -- will pivot on three "regional hubs". Yet distances will still be huge. Group B, for example, has matches in Toronto as well as in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle and Vancouver on the Pacific Coast. For the 32 matches in the five-round knockout phase teams will be flying all over the map. FIFA, whose president Gianni Infantino proclaimed his "determination" to combat global warming at COP 26 in Glasgow, committed itself in 2018 to "measuring, reducing and offsetting" the emissions associated with its World Cups. Yet, since it was nailed in June 2023 by the Swiss Fairness Commission for boasting of the "climate neutrality" of the 2022 World Cup, without being able to prove the claim, FIFA has refrained from making assessments or promises concerning 2026. The only official estimate of the carbon impact -- a record 3.7 million tonnes of CO2 -- was made before the number of matches was increased from 80 to 104. "FIFA's insatiable appetite towards growth," Gogishvili said, means "more athletes, more fans, more hotel infrastructure, more flights. It's kind of a never-ending cycle". 'Environmental denial' A joint British report on football and the environment published in February by the New Weather Institute and Scientists for Global Responsibility, punningly entitled 'Dirty Tackle', said one men's World Cup finals match generates emissions "between 26 times and 42 times that for a domestic elite game" or the equivalent of "between 31,500 and 51,500 average UK cars driven for a whole year". "With every game added to the football calendar, international football associations make the world less safe," the report said. Next year's World Cup is not a blip. "It seems that the environmental denial of the FIFA World Cups will continue," wrote Gilles Pache, professor at the University of Aix-Marseille, in the Journal of Management. He pointed to 2030 that will open with matches in Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay, to celebrate the centenary of the first World Cup, before switching across the Atlantic to the three hosts Morocco, Spain and Portugal for the remaining 101 matches. The 2034 World Cup, will be held in Saudi Arabia, in a climate comparable to that of Qatar, but with 40 more matches. Saudi giant Aramco, the world's leading oil company, became a major FIFA sponsor of FIFA last year. © 2025 AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store