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Five things we learned from Lions' flawed win over  Queensland Reds

Five things we learned from Lions' flawed win over Queensland Reds

Irish Timesa day ago
We'll have to learn to live with mistakes
Fin Smith of the British and Irish Lions in action during the win over Queensland Reds on Wednesday. Photograph:It is probably something everyone will have to get used to, if they haven't already done so. The three
Lions
' outings so far against Argentina, Western Force and the Reds have been full of mistakes, some handling errors, a lot of misplaced passes and some misreading of what team-mates are doing or where they are going to run. In all three games the opposition have taken advantage of that and rattled the Lions' cage. The payback for having international players start the game and then flood in from the bench early in the second half is offset by the steep learning curve the players are on to gel as a team. As England World Cup winner and former Lion Lawrence Dallaglio said before the tour started, the whole Lions enterprise is set up to fail. But the second 50-point win in a row says something is solid.
Fewer replays makes for refreshing viewing
British and Irish Lions' Jac Morgan scores a try against Queensland Reds in Brisbane on Wednesday. Photograph: Jason O'Brien/PA Wire
By design or just the way things are rolling, there have not been many TMO referrals and replays in the opening two matches played in Australia. There was at least one referral against the Reds, and a try was awarded to the Lions after review. But the experience so far is that people are generally content with the referee diving into a pile of bodies and making the call without going through all of the angles and prolonging the game. The replays have become part of the rugby entertainment business but less of them and allowing the match to move on quickly on is quite refreshing in its own old-fashioned way.
Smooth Jamison Gibson-Park operates well with
Finn Russell
Jamison Gibson-Park showed his vision and plenty of other qualities for the British and Irish Lions against Queensland Reds on Wednesday. Photograph: Billy Stickland/Inpho
It was encouraging to see the Irish nine,
Jamison Gibson-Park
, back playing competitive rugby. It is only when he is away from the game and returns that the smooth tempo he gives a team - compared with Alex Mitchell's staccato style of play - is so eye-catching. Ronan O'Gara rightly said on television that at his best Gibson-Park is up there with French nine Antoine Dupont. Although he clearly has another gear or two above what he showed against the Reds, his linking with outhalf Finn Russell, his control at the base of rucks, accurate kicking game, snipe threat and temperament were all on display. Already connections within the squad are beginning to form and although it was the halfbacks' first time out together the Irish scrumhalf and Scottish pivot have the look of a Test-match pairing despite having much more to add to their game than the outing against the Reds showed.
Ben Earl holds court in Lions centre
Ben Earl tries to go on the rampage for the British and Irish Lions against the Queensland Reds in Brisbane. Photograph:Irish centre
Bundee Aki
was replaced at the end of the match by England backrow Ben Earl. It was an interesting decision by
Andy Farrell
, giving the forward 15 minutes to try his hand in a star-studded backline. Earl is a dynamic player and has some pace. Not as much as Henry Pollack, another Lions backrow, but enough to possibly cause havoc in the midfield. Indeed, after providing cover in the centre against Wales during the Six Nations, Earls said 'it is not too dissimilar'. 'Half the stuff I do is as a 12 anyway,' he explained at the time. He also played the last six minutes of England's 47-24 victory over Italy during the Six Nations at centre and scored the final try. Steve Borthwick first used him in the backline during England's victory over Japan last summer. A hybrid player. Watch this space in Australia.
READ MORE
Freescoring Lions are going to be hard for Australia to keep at bay
Maro Itoje scores a try for the British and Irish Lions against the Queensland Reds. Photograph: Billy Stickland/Inpho
How will former Ireland and current
Wallabies
coach
Joe Schmidt
counter the Lions change of gear when the teams meet later this month? In the two games on Australian soil the cogs have shifted and the tries have flowed. Only four minutes into the second half agaisnt the Reds, Maro Itoje triggered the surge, scoring a try after good work from Aki. Nine minutes later it was flanker and player of the match Jac Morgan who ran a great line to take a flat pass and dive over. Just four minutes after that England wing Tommy Freeman twisted and used his strength to force himself over the line, and Huw Jones ran most of the length of the field to touch down on 65 minutes. Replacement Garry Ringrose ended the try fest on 80+4 minutes, touching down in the corner. No doubt Schmidt is already on it.
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Lions v Waratahs: What time is kick-off and where can I watch it in Ireland?
Lions v Waratahs: What time is kick-off and where can I watch it in Ireland?

Irish Times

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  • Irish Times

Lions v Waratahs: What time is kick-off and where can I watch it in Ireland?

Who is playing, when and where? The British & Irish Lions are playing against the New South Wales Waratahs at the Allianz Stadium in Sydney. Kick-off is at 11am Irish time on Saturday. How can I watch? Viewers in Ireland can watch the game live on Sky Sports Main Event and Sky Sports Action, with coverage getting under way at 10am. You can also follow our live blog on The Irish Times website. How are the Lions looking, and what are their chances? The Lions lost their curtain-raiser game against Argentina in Dublin, before putting 50 past Western Force (54-7) and Reds (52-12). More of the same would be expected against Waratahs, who are eighth out of 11 teams in the Super Rugby table. Certain bookmakers are giving a 40-point handicap. What is the team news? After Elliot Daly's injury, a high-profile replacement has been called up, none other than head coach Andy Farrell's son, Owen . He doesn't make the squad for this one though, which includes six Ireland players in the starting XV (Hugo Keenan, Mack Hansen, Finlay Bealham, Tadhg Beirne, James Ryan and Josh van der Flier) and three more on the bench (Tadhg Furlong, Joe McCarthy and Dan Sheehan). After Sheehan got a go at captaincy in a previous game, the honour falls to Munster man Beirne this time. He will be the seventh Munster captain of the Lions since 2001 (Keith Wood, Ronan O'Gara, Paul O'Connell, Peter O'Mahony, Donncha O'Callaghan and Conor Murray). READ MORE Dangerous centre Joseph Sua'ali'i misses out for Waratahs as he is in Australia's squad to play Fiji, but they have a few Australian internationals including Taniela Tupou, Andrew Kellaway and Rob Leota. LIONS: Hugo Keenan (Ireland); Mack Hansen (Ireland), Huw Jones (Scotland), Sione Tuipulotu (Scotland), Blair Kinghorn (Scotland); Fin Smith (England), Alex Mitchell (England); Pierre Schoeman (Scotland), Luke Cowan-Dickie (England), Finlay Bealham (Ireland); Tadhg Beirne (Ireland, capt), James Ryan (Ireland); Henry Pollock (England), Josh van der Flier (Ireland), Ben Earl (England). Replacements: Dan Sheehan (Ireland), Ellis Genge (England), Tadhg Furlong (Ireland), Joe McCarthy (Ireland), Scott Cummings (Scotland), Jac Morgan (Wales), Ben White (Scotland), Marcus Smith (England). WARATAHS: Lawson Creighton; Andrew Kellaway, Lalakai Foketi, Joey Walton, Darby Lancaster; Jack Bowen, Teddy Wilson; Tom Lambert, Ethan Dobbins, Taniela Tupou; Fergus Lee-Warner, Miles Amatosero; Rob Leota, Charlie Gamble, Hugh Sinclair. Replacements: Mahe Vailanu, Jack Barrett, Daniel Botha, Matt Philip, Jamie Adamson, Jack Grant, Tane Edmed, Henry O'Donnell.

Andy Farrell ups the Lions ante with call for prodigal son Owen
Andy Farrell ups the Lions ante with call for prodigal son Owen

Irish Examiner

timean hour ago

  • Irish Examiner

Andy Farrell ups the Lions ante with call for prodigal son Owen

Andy Farrell says the arrival of his son Owen will 'inject a bit of life and experience' into the British & Irish Lions squad in Australia and is backing him to sharpen the team's competitive edge. Farrell also said he had no hesitation in picking the former England captain despite the fact he has not played Test rugby for 20 months and struggled for form and fitness this year. Farrell Jr is due to fly in to join the squad on Friday as a replacement for the luckless Elliot Daly who broke a forearm in the 52-12 win against the Queensland Reds. It is a big call for a number of reasons but Farrell Sr insists it is the right one for the squad as they build towards their best-of-three Test series against the Wallabies which kicks off in just over a fortnight. Farrell Jr has not played any rugby at all in the last two months and is not a like-for-like positional swap for Daly but his father is focused on the impact he could have on a squad which is not overflowing with Lions experience. With his 112 caps for England and six Lions Test appearances, there is certainly no questioning Farrell's big game mindset as he flies in for his fourth Lions tour. Owen Farrell of the British & Irish Lions during the Castle Lager Lions Series, First Test match at the Cape Town Stadium, Cape Town, South Africa. Picture date: Saturday July 24, 2021. In January last year Farrell announced he was stepping away from Test rugby to 'prioritise his and his family's mental wellbeing', but his father suggested when the squad was announced that the door could yet reopen. Sure enough, the Lions' prodigal son is now en route, his dad having lobbed a large rock into a previously tranquil touring pool. Listening to Farrell Sr, it sounded very much as if that was his deliberate intention. Far from worrying about accusations of nepotism or whether the decision implied a lack of faith in his younger English 10s Marcus Smith and Fin Smith, the management seem more concerned with upping the ante before a potentially intense series. 'We have said from minute one that the only thing we want is competition,' said Farrell Sr, stressing that Owen could yet be a contender for the Test squad. 'If he didn't have a chance then what is the point? Everybody should be competing, that is what everyone in the group would want.' Farrell Sr also cited 'the experience he brings, the support that you need for the group and how you make the room feel' among the reasons why Farrell has leapfrogged ahead of assorted other contenders including Scotland's Tom Jordan, Ireland's Jamie Osborne and England's George Ford. 'He's the right man at this moment in time for us. We see him adding to the group and injecting a bit of life and experience as far as what he can bring to the squad.' Farrell Jr, who will turn 34 in September, will be the sole player on tour who has tasted a previous Lions series victory. He is also a longtime Saracens colleague of the Lions captain Maro Itoje and assistant coach Richard Wigglesworth and his father stressed the whole management team had been consulted. 'There are other coaches in that conversation; it's not just on me. Obviously I make the final call and I'm happy to do that, but these conversations have been going on in the background the whole time about all sorts of players and that's the call we came to.' Not since Colin Cowdrey was summoned from the depths of an English winter in 1974-75 to take on Dennis Lillee and Jeff Thomson in an Ashes series at the age of 41, has a tour replacement arrived with more fanfare and less recent match practice. The jury of social media will also be keen to see if Farrell is picked on the bench against the ACT Brumbies on Wednesday – his father predicted he would feature 'soon enough' – almost two years on from the persistent online abuse which contributed to him stepping away from the international game. 'Look, I hope people can get past that,' said Farrell snr. 'There has been a lot of that nonsense for some time. That was in the past. We all just need to move on and embrace what the Lions is all about and what we have got coming ahead.' In the short term the priority is now this weekend's looming game against the Waratahs. Tadhg Beirne will captain the Lions for the first time with Hugo Keenan and Blair Kinghorn finally making their belated debuts. There is also a 6-2 forward bench split with Ben Earl covering the centre positions should injury strike Huw Jones or Sione Tuipulotu. LIONS (v NSW Waratahs): H Keenan (Ireland); M Hansen (Ireland), H Jones (Scotland), S Tuipulotu (Scotland), B Kinghorn (Scotland); F Smith (England), A Mitchell (England); P Schoeman (Scotland), L Cowan-Dickie (England), F Bealham (Ireland); T Beirne (Ireland, capt), J Ryan (Ireland); H Pollock (England), J van der Flier (Ireland), B Earl (England). Replacements: D Sheehan (Ireland), E Genge (England), T Furlong (Ireland), J McCarthy (Ireland), S Cummings (Scotland), J Morgan (Wales), B White (Scotland), M Smith (England). Guardian

'There has been a lot of that nonsense. That was in the past'
'There has been a lot of that nonsense. That was in the past'

The 42

time2 hours ago

  • The 42

'There has been a lot of that nonsense. That was in the past'

IT ALWAYS FELT likely that Owen Farrell would play some part in this Lions campaign. Even as his season with Racing 92 was disrupted by injury and even when Farrell struggled to find his best form as a result, it just seemed that the Lions would find it hard to overlook his record. Farrell is now a four-time Lion. In achieving that remarkable honour, he joins just two others who have done it in the professional era: Brian O'Driscoll and Alun Wyn Jones. That's the kind of company Farrell keeps. We know that the Lions have always valued and cherished their history. They love big characters remaining part of the family after their first involvement. Owen's dad, Andy, is another who fits into that category. Andy Farrell loves everything about the Lions and they love him back. Andy Farrell also knows better than anyone how much Owen Farrell can bring to a rugby squad. Yet, you don't need to be Owen Farrell's father to see what he brings. This past season hasn't been a happy one for the 33-year-old but his record speaks for itself. Even without form on his side, it's not difficult to imagine Farrell landing an important goal-kick for the Lions in the coming weeks. He has a head for these heights. Speaking in Sydney today, Lions boss Andy explained his decision to replace the desperately unlucky Elliot Daly, whose tour is over due to a fractured arm, with a different type of player in Owen. Advertisement Daly plays at fullback, outside centre, or on the wing, while Farrell is an out-half or inside centre. 'It's what we need for the squad in the here and now with Elliot going and Blair [Kinghorn] coming in, the options we've got at 15, there are plenty of options we've got at 13, and wing,' said Farrell. 'A little bit vulnerable there in and around the 12 piece and obviously he can play 10 as well. Elliot Daly's tour is over. Billy Stickland / INPHO Billy Stickland / INPHO / INPHO 'When you look at the experience that Elliot's had, I mean the experience isn't just the playing side, it's how you make the group feel. The little chats that you have around the place to make sure that everything's gelled together and obviously Owen would bring a lot of that into the group.' Farrell will certainly add huge experience to the group when he arrives in Sydney on Friday evening. The Lions expect him to fit in seamlessly with a squad that has already had to adapt to people coming in at different stages of the past few weeks. Farrell, who has re-joined Saracens after one season with Racing, has recently been dealing with concussion but his father said he's fit and ready to go. 'Well he's fit or else he wouldn't be picked,' said Farrell. 'I know that the guys have been keeping close touch with him and others in regards to that and he's been training full bore for quite some time now. 'He's been on with the doctor in the last couple of weeks and gone through all the protocols, etc. There might be a little bit of something to do when he first comes back, but everyone's up to speed with where he's at – fully fit and raring to go.' Farrell hasn't played since his final appearance for Racing back on 4 May, nearly nine weeks ago. His most recent Test cap for England was at the 2023 World Cup, all of 20 months ago. When Lions boss Farrell was asked if that lack of recent high-level game time makes this a huge ask for Owen, he initially seemed somewhat frustrated, before pointing out that others in the Lions squad only recently returned from injury. '20 months? A Test match? There's plenty of players who don't play for quite some time,' said Farrell. 'There are players who didn't play in this Six Nations, or didn't play for 12 weeks. I get the questions in isolation but there are stories like that all over the place.' Owen stepped away from England duty in the wake of the last World Cup before moving to France due to the scathing criticism he so often received. He was even booed by England fans at that tournament. Owen and Andy Farrell on the 2017 Lions tour. Dan Sheridan / INPHO Dan Sheridan / INPHO / INPHO So there seemed to be a doubt as to whether Farrell would open himself up to that kind of furore again by accepting a call from his father to join the Lions. Andy said there was no hesitation on Owen's part. 'Look, I hope people can get past that,' said Andy. 'There has been a lot of that nonsense for some time. That was in the past. We all just need to move on and embrace what the Lions is all about and what we have got coming ahead. Related Reads Tadhg Beirne to captain Lions against Waratahs Owen Farrell called up by the Lions as Elliot Daly's tour ended 4 Lions players who enhanced their Test chances in victory over the Reds 'The timing has to be right for him, first and foremost, for him and for the squad. 'And we obviously feel that the timing is right now, that we can all move on and push on, not just with Owen's career, but what we're trying to achieve here with the Lions.' Farrell was also keen to underline how sad it was for the Lions to be bidding farewell to Daly, who had started his third tour so impressively. He is 'a Lions legend,' said Farrell, as he explained that Daly announced the Lions' matchday 23 for Saturday's game against the Waratahs to the players before he headed for Sydney Airport. Owen Farrell lands there tomorrow, no doubt eager to make a huge impact on this tour.

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