
Joe McCarthy enjoying unexpected friendship with England starlet
Joe McCarthy and Henry Pollock, rookies of the British and Irish Lions, have formed an unlikely bond as they intensify their pursuit for Test selection.
The forwards put on a show during Saturday's 54-7 triumph over Western Force in Perth, capitalising on their opportunities just three weeks ahead of the series opener against Australia.
McCarthy was named man of the match after combining a robust defensive performance with some impactful attacking moments. Meanwhile, Pollock compensated for occasional lapses in discipline with his unique dynamism in the back row.
Off the field, Ireland enforcer McCarthy has found himself forming an unlikely bromance with the swaggering England flanker.
'Henry's actually a good fella. He's proper high-energy and he's been very sound,' McCarthy said.
'He can be a bit much at times but he is himself and I've probably got on with him way better than I thought I would. Like we saw against the Force, he's class to have in your team as well.'
McCarthy was part of the Leinster side that were knocked out of the Champions Cup semi-finals by Pollock's Northampton, leading to some awkward initial moments when the rivals first entered Lions camp earlier this month.
'We got there and were thinking 'oh for f***'s sake, it's these fellas again!',' McCarthy said.
'But I've played golf with Alex Mitchell and me and Tommy Freeman are doing 'thought for the day' on the bus, so it's interesting to hear Tommy's thoughts.
'One I liked was 'today is the oldest you ever have been and the youngest you ever will be'.'
McCarthy admits he felt under pressure to deliver against the Force as he became the first second row to put his hand up for selection alongside captain Maro Itoje in the Lions engine room against the Wallabies on July 19.
The display was reminiscent of his night against France in last year's Six Nations when he first served notice of his potential, but consistency has been elusive for the 24-year-old.
'It's hard to put your finger on it, sometimes things just happen for you. But then you might prepare super well for a game and things don't happen for you,' McCarthy said.
'Here it feels like a level up. During the week I was nervous and on edge about playing well but I'm probably at my best when I feel like my back's against the wall a little bit.
'Andy Farrell wants us to be super physical, on the edge, but he also tells us 'don't be desperate, don't force things – earn the right to get off the line, make tackles and make turnovers'.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Irish Sun
24 minutes ago
- The Irish Sun
Millwall slapped with fine and put on ‘extended action plan' after homophobic chants towards Ben Chilwell
MILLWALL have been fined £15,000 by the FA after their fans made homophobic chants towards Chelsea star Ben Chilwell. Lions supporters were heard shouting a homophobic slur during their FA Cup clash at Selhurst Park in March while the left-back was on loan at 3 Chilwell was at the receiving end of homophobic chants from Millwall fans Credit: Getty 3 Millwall fans were slammed by the FA for their behaviour Credit: Getty 3 A section of Millwall fans during the game Credit: Rex FA big-wigs have also put the Championship club on an 'extended action plan' which requires them to do more work to eradicate all forms of discrimination. The chants were directed at Chilwell in the fifth and 20th minutes of a fiery fifth-round tie that Palace ran out 3-1 winners. Matata needed 10 minutes of treatment before being taken to hospital with a nasty gash on his head that required 25 stitches. READ MORE FOOTBALL NEWS The While the South London club were condemned by the FA for their fans' behaviour at Selhurst Park, they did praise and accept their efforts in tackling discrimination. In a written statement the FA said the Lions 'exceed the requirements' set out for clubs to be anti-discriminatory and said they should be encouraged to continue this work. The FA's extended action plan for Millwall covers communication ahead of games about their stance on anti-discrimination, sending their own stewards to high-risk games and ensuring they have an equality, diversity and inclusion committee. Most read in Football BEST ONLINE CASINOS - TOP SITES IN THE UK They also want the Lions to put together an article each month to summarise their community and EDI work. A Lions spokesman said: 'Millwall FC condemns all forms of discrimination and acknowledges the FA's decision. Eberechi Eze to Tottenham LATEST | Transfers Exposed 'The club will continue to do all it can to tackle discriminatory abuse through its equality steering committee and dedicated anti-discrimination campaign All 'Wall. 'The term 'Chelsea rent boy' is officially recognised as a homophobic slur and is condemned by the club. 'Since January 2022 the chant has been classified as a prosecutable offence by the Crown Prosecution Service for anyone found using it. Anyone identified in doing so will be banned. 'The club reaffirms its zero-tolerance policy towards all forms of discrimination. Such behaviour has no place in society and is entirely at odds with the values Millwall stands for.


The Irish Sun
24 minutes ago
- The Irish Sun
Brit, 21, misses out on nearly £100k payday despite winning in Wimbledon first round to set up Carlos Alcaraz clash
STUDENT star Oliver Tarvey aced his first Wimbledon exam - to set up a potential round two magic match-up with defending champion Carlos Alcaraz. Tarvet, 21, is the lowest-ranked player in the men's draw, standing a lowly 733 in the world and just 33rd in the British ladder. Advertisement 5 Brit Oliver Tarvet raced into the second round of Wimbledon Credit: Getty His status as an amateur student at the University of San Diego means he is restricted to earning just £10,000 in prize money every year - although he can spend extra cash on his support team. Maybe it was a book on accounting that he picked up to read between games - although perhaps it was a guide on keeping calm when his opponent is losing it with the umpire, as Swiss Leandro Riedi did under the broiling sun. Doubtless Tarvet will be asked to clarify later. But while the straight sets 6-4 6-4 6-4 win over the whinging Swiss would otherwise be worth £99,000, the bigger prize is the chance to walk out on either Centre Court or No1 on Wednesday against the Spanish reigning king of SW19. Advertisement READ MORE ON WIMBLEDON Tarvet showed real maturity, too, on his Grand Slam debut - as Riedi went loco with his home opponent AND the umpire. After Tarvet had taken the opener in 45 minutes, taking one against the serve in the ninth game, he broke Riedi to love in the third game of the second set. That sparked an angry reaction at the changeover as Riedi implicitly accused German umpire Miriam Bley of favouring the St Albans-born Tarvet. While Tarvet sat on his chair, Riedi moaned about him taking too long between points, then ordering Bley 'do something about it'. Advertisement Most read in Tennis Breaking CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS The row ignited when Riedi stared at the umpire, suggesting her lack of action was 'because he's British', implying the chair official was not impartial. When Bley stated 'I'm not British', Riedi answered back: 'I don't care.' 5 Advertisement Wimbledon 2025 LIVE - And that brought a stern rebuke: 'I would be careful with statements like that.' Riedi continued to chunter as the home fans warmed to the task under the blistering sun, cries of 'Oliver' - in both British and American accents. They were interspersed with shouts of 'Gareth' from his team - a nickname relating to his resemblance to former Spurs, Real Madrid and Wales superstar Gareth Bale. Advertisement Tarvet, keeping cool by using an iced towel around his neck at every opportunity, held his nerve again to serve out to double his advantage and leave himself one set from victory. And when the Swiss went long on Tarvet's second break point in the seventh game, it was a matter of the Brit holding his nerve and his serve. Target did exactly that, successive aces bringing three match points, and sealing the deal as Riedi sent a backhand well beyond the baseline. After a one-handed salute he went to the other side of the net, clenching both fists and punching the air before rushing to the end of the court and hugging his entire support team. Advertisement 5 The Hertfordshire star dumped out fellow qualifier Leandro Riedi 6-4 6-4 6-4 on Court 4 Credit: Reuters 5 Tarvet must forego his prize money as a college player in the USA Credit: Getty 5 Tarvet took in the adulation of the home crowd after securing victory Credit: BBC Men's singles draw in full Sinner v Nardi Tseng v Vukic Martinez v Loffhagen Navone v Shapovalov Dimitrov v Nishioka Comesana v Moutet Ofner v Medjedovic Monday v Paul Shelton v Bolt Hijikata v Goffin Kovacevic v Fucsovics Monfils v Hubert Nakashima v Ba Schevchenko v Opelka Faria v Sonego Basilashvili v Musetti Draper v Baez Collingnon v Cilic McCabe v Marozsan Munar v Bublik Cobolli v Zhukayev Etcheverry v Pinnington Jones Giron v Ugo Carabelli Gaston v Mesnik De Minaur v Carballes Baena Cazaux v Walton Halys v Holmgren Dzumhur v Machac Michelsen v Kecmanovic De Jong v Eubanks Evans v Clarke Muller v Djokovic Fritz v Mpetshi Perricard Diallo v Altmaier Arnaldi v Van de Zanschulp Holt v Davidovich Fokina Popyrin v Fery Darderi v Safiullin Kopriva v Thompson Bonzi v Medvedev Cerundolo v Borges Harris v Hurkacz Mochizuki v Zeppieri McDonald v Khachanov Berrettini v Majchrzak Quinn v Searle Carreno Busta v Rodesch Rinderknech v Zverev Rune v Jarry Tien v Basavareddy Fearnley v Fonseca Brooksby v Griekspoor Lehecka v Dellien Bellucci v Crawford Norrie v Bautista Agut Moller v Tiafoe Rublev v Djere Bergs v Harris Mannarino v O'Connell Royer v Tsitsipas Auger-Aliassime v Duckworth Struff v Misolic Tarvet v Riedi Fognini v Alcaraz

The 42
an hour ago
- The 42
'Just play footy like we normally do' - JGP expects Russell partnership to flourish for Lions
JAMISON GIBSON-PARK BELIEVES his half-back alliance with Finn Russell will develop quickly as the British and Irish Lions prepare to unleash the much-hyped combination for the first time. Gibson-Park and Russell form a creative axis for Wednesday's clash against the Queensland Reds after the Ireland scrum-half was given the green light to make his comeback from a glute injury. As the pre-tour favourites to start the Test series against Australia in the number nine and 10 jerseys, expectations are high for the partnership even if they will have been limited to a single training session together ahead of the Brisbane showdown. In a sign of the urgency to deploy them in tandem, especially after Tomos Williams was ruled out of the tour by a hamstring injury, Russell will be starting his second game in five days. Andy Farrell has urged caution over anticipation levels, stating they will be 'all singing, all dancing everything going to plan, but that won't be the case', but the ultimate fantasy pairing in British and Irish rugby is ready to shine. Advertisement 'We know each other pretty well – we have played against each other enough,' Gibson-Park said ahead of his first outing with the Scotland fly-half. 'Myself and Finn have already had conversations and hopefully we don't have to change too much up, just play footy like we normally do. 'For all the stuff you see of Finn and his ability to break a game open, he's pretty calculated in the way he manages the game as well, so it will make my job easier hopefully. 'There is a gelling period with any nine and 10 combination. When you are largely in charge of driving the game there's going to be a bit of a feeling out period, but it has been good and hopefully we can see it out there on Wednesday.' Russell arrived into Lions camp having piloted Bath to the Gallagher Premiership title and Gibson-Park has since got to know a former rival who is more studious than his joyful on-field persona suggests. 'Finn's a hugely impressive player. Every team he is in, he has a huge impact,' he said. 'He plays the game with a smile on his face and that's refreshing to see sometimes. But you guys don't see him in the meeting rooms, so there is a serious side to him. Related Reads Havili, Frizell among All Blacks in Australia-NZ XV to face Lions Tomos Williams ruled out of Lions tour as Farrell names side to face Reds Lions boss Farrell hails McCarthy, Hansen after Australian tour opener 'He understands the impact he can have on a team and that's pretty important here.' Farrell says the duo have found ways to make up for their lack of game time together. 'They understand one another and understood each other's traits even before they got on the plane because that is what players do,' he said. 'They look out for how the best do things. They are two characters who want to see the game from similar eyes as far as where space is. 'They have attacking mindsets but they both know how important game control is.'