
'A great fit' - Aussie weapon hailed by the Lions
Glasgow Warriors tighthead Fagerson has been ruled out of the summer tour to Australia with a calf problem, prompting Farrell to bring in the Canberra-born Bealham, who he's coached when in charge of Ireland.
The news of Fagerson's withdrawal came a day before the squad - minus those involved in Premiership and United Rugby Championship finals - headed out to Portugal for a training camp.
Farrell, though, accepts such situations are part of the game, with the group now looking to sharpen focus towards a warm-up fixture against Argentina in Dublin on June 20.
"It is heartbreaking, but at the same time, he (Fagerson) is a realist. All rugby players know that's the game," Farrell said.
"He will work unbelievably hard to get himself fit and who knows what's going to happen down the track."
On Ireland's Bealham being added to the squad, Farrell said: "Finlay has been called up in his place and he is in good form. He is very good at what he does.
"He was certainly right up there in the conversation from the very start as well, and he would have been disappointed not to make the group.
"So we just know he will be a great fit for the group going forward. He is the only conversation that I was able to have because of the way we did the squad announcement.
"By giving him a phone call and telling him he was selected within the squad, unfortunately for Zander, but it was one of the best phone conversations I have ever had.
"The emotion that went through the phone actually welled me up. It was great to be able to do that."
With 15 of the selected players still on club duty - including 12 from Leinster - England duo Jamie George and Asher Opoku-Fordjour have also joined the five-day training camp at Quinta do Lago to provide some front-row cover.
The fixture against Argentina is set to be a first Lions game played in Ireland.
The tour of Australia schedule - which features three Tests against the Wallabies - begins against Western Force in Perth on June 28.
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The Advertiser
an hour ago
- The Advertiser
Aussie darts star set for Gong clash with fenom Littler
World champion Luke Littler has survived a scare to set up a blockbuster quarter-final with the hosts' top thrower Damon Heta at the Australian Darts Masters in Wollongong. Australian No.1 Heta was inspired on his homecoming, proving the star of the night as he averaged 109.98 and landed four ton-plus check-outs to dispatch Melbourne veteran James Bailey in six straight legs at the star-studded event on Friday. It earned him a mouth-watering last-eight clash with the English teenage phenomenon Littler, who was far from his best as he had to survive being taken to the last leg by New Zealand's world No.94 Haupai Puha before emerging with a 6-5 victory. Littler averaged only 91.8 and will need to improve drastically if he's to get past world no.10 Heta, who was in dazzling form from the start at the WIN Entertainment Centre, kicking off with successive 121 finishes, while also taking out 117 and 104 en route to his 6-0 win. "I just want to perform, so to do that in front of my friends and family, loved it," said Heta, the 37-year-old from Perth who's known as 'the Heat' on the PDC circuit. "I'm forever grateful that I can come home and get this support, and hopefully I can build on that performance tomorrow." Littler, fresh from his triumph at the World Matchplay in England, blamed his sluggish performance on jet-lag. "It's not always the prettiest, but I am happy to get over the line," said the 18-year-old. "I had to grind it out, I'll be honest, not much practice has been put in, people don't see behind the scenes, body clock, not sleeping, it has an effect." Friday's opening round featured eight of the world's best players, including Heta, up against the cream of Australian and New Zealand darts, with the PDC stars emerging with a clean sweep. Indeed, Littler was the closest of all to losing as Puha had a glorious chance to prevail when throwing first in the deciding leg. Northern Irishman Josh Rock, who was beaten in the Matchplay semi-final by Littler, was almost as impressive as Heta as he averaged 108.16 while thumping Australian darts icon, "the wizard of Oz" Simon Whitlock 6-1. England's world No.1 Luke Humphries also got through to Saturday's finals day, after beating New Zealand's Jonny Tata 6-3, while Welsh defending champion Gerwyn Price beat Western Australian Joe Comito 6-3. Results at the Australian Darts Masters: First round: Mike De Decker (Belgium) 6-2 Brandon Weening (Australia)Gerwyn Price (Wales) 6-3 Joe Comito (Australia)Stephen Bunting (England) 6-1 Brody Klinge (Australia)Luke Humphries (England) 6-3 Jonny Tata (New Zealand)Damon Heta (Australia) 6-0 James Bailey (Australia)Luke Littler (England) 6-5 Haupai Puha (New Zealand)Josh Rock (Northern Ireland) 6-1 Simon Whitlock (Australia)Chris Dobey (England) 6-4 Tim Pusey (Australia) Saturday's quarter-final draw: Bunting v RockLittler v HetaPrice v DobeyHumphries v De Decker World champion Luke Littler has survived a scare to set up a blockbuster quarter-final with the hosts' top thrower Damon Heta at the Australian Darts Masters in Wollongong. Australian No.1 Heta was inspired on his homecoming, proving the star of the night as he averaged 109.98 and landed four ton-plus check-outs to dispatch Melbourne veteran James Bailey in six straight legs at the star-studded event on Friday. It earned him a mouth-watering last-eight clash with the English teenage phenomenon Littler, who was far from his best as he had to survive being taken to the last leg by New Zealand's world No.94 Haupai Puha before emerging with a 6-5 victory. Littler averaged only 91.8 and will need to improve drastically if he's to get past world no.10 Heta, who was in dazzling form from the start at the WIN Entertainment Centre, kicking off with successive 121 finishes, while also taking out 117 and 104 en route to his 6-0 win. "I just want to perform, so to do that in front of my friends and family, loved it," said Heta, the 37-year-old from Perth who's known as 'the Heat' on the PDC circuit. "I'm forever grateful that I can come home and get this support, and hopefully I can build on that performance tomorrow." Littler, fresh from his triumph at the World Matchplay in England, blamed his sluggish performance on jet-lag. "It's not always the prettiest, but I am happy to get over the line," said the 18-year-old. "I had to grind it out, I'll be honest, not much practice has been put in, people don't see behind the scenes, body clock, not sleeping, it has an effect." Friday's opening round featured eight of the world's best players, including Heta, up against the cream of Australian and New Zealand darts, with the PDC stars emerging with a clean sweep. Indeed, Littler was the closest of all to losing as Puha had a glorious chance to prevail when throwing first in the deciding leg. Northern Irishman Josh Rock, who was beaten in the Matchplay semi-final by Littler, was almost as impressive as Heta as he averaged 108.16 while thumping Australian darts icon, "the wizard of Oz" Simon Whitlock 6-1. England's world No.1 Luke Humphries also got through to Saturday's finals day, after beating New Zealand's Jonny Tata 6-3, while Welsh defending champion Gerwyn Price beat Western Australian Joe Comito 6-3. Results at the Australian Darts Masters: First round: Mike De Decker (Belgium) 6-2 Brandon Weening (Australia)Gerwyn Price (Wales) 6-3 Joe Comito (Australia)Stephen Bunting (England) 6-1 Brody Klinge (Australia)Luke Humphries (England) 6-3 Jonny Tata (New Zealand)Damon Heta (Australia) 6-0 James Bailey (Australia)Luke Littler (England) 6-5 Haupai Puha (New Zealand)Josh Rock (Northern Ireland) 6-1 Simon Whitlock (Australia)Chris Dobey (England) 6-4 Tim Pusey (Australia) Saturday's quarter-final draw: Bunting v RockLittler v HetaPrice v DobeyHumphries v De Decker World champion Luke Littler has survived a scare to set up a blockbuster quarter-final with the hosts' top thrower Damon Heta at the Australian Darts Masters in Wollongong. Australian No.1 Heta was inspired on his homecoming, proving the star of the night as he averaged 109.98 and landed four ton-plus check-outs to dispatch Melbourne veteran James Bailey in six straight legs at the star-studded event on Friday. It earned him a mouth-watering last-eight clash with the English teenage phenomenon Littler, who was far from his best as he had to survive being taken to the last leg by New Zealand's world No.94 Haupai Puha before emerging with a 6-5 victory. Littler averaged only 91.8 and will need to improve drastically if he's to get past world no.10 Heta, who was in dazzling form from the start at the WIN Entertainment Centre, kicking off with successive 121 finishes, while also taking out 117 and 104 en route to his 6-0 win. "I just want to perform, so to do that in front of my friends and family, loved it," said Heta, the 37-year-old from Perth who's known as 'the Heat' on the PDC circuit. "I'm forever grateful that I can come home and get this support, and hopefully I can build on that performance tomorrow." Littler, fresh from his triumph at the World Matchplay in England, blamed his sluggish performance on jet-lag. "It's not always the prettiest, but I am happy to get over the line," said the 18-year-old. "I had to grind it out, I'll be honest, not much practice has been put in, people don't see behind the scenes, body clock, not sleeping, it has an effect." Friday's opening round featured eight of the world's best players, including Heta, up against the cream of Australian and New Zealand darts, with the PDC stars emerging with a clean sweep. Indeed, Littler was the closest of all to losing as Puha had a glorious chance to prevail when throwing first in the deciding leg. Northern Irishman Josh Rock, who was beaten in the Matchplay semi-final by Littler, was almost as impressive as Heta as he averaged 108.16 while thumping Australian darts icon, "the wizard of Oz" Simon Whitlock 6-1. England's world No.1 Luke Humphries also got through to Saturday's finals day, after beating New Zealand's Jonny Tata 6-3, while Welsh defending champion Gerwyn Price beat Western Australian Joe Comito 6-3. Results at the Australian Darts Masters: First round: Mike De Decker (Belgium) 6-2 Brandon Weening (Australia)Gerwyn Price (Wales) 6-3 Joe Comito (Australia)Stephen Bunting (England) 6-1 Brody Klinge (Australia)Luke Humphries (England) 6-3 Jonny Tata (New Zealand)Damon Heta (Australia) 6-0 James Bailey (Australia)Luke Littler (England) 6-5 Haupai Puha (New Zealand)Josh Rock (Northern Ireland) 6-1 Simon Whitlock (Australia)Chris Dobey (England) 6-4 Tim Pusey (Australia) Saturday's quarter-final draw: Bunting v RockLittler v HetaPrice v DobeyHumphries v De Decker


The Advertiser
an hour ago
- The Advertiser
Raiders partying like it's 1990 after downing Manly
The tantalising prospect of a retro Canberra-versus-Penrith grand final is gathering speed following the Raiders' rapid-fire return to the top of the NRL ladder. Coach Ricky Stuart glowingly compared Ethan Strange to Raiders legend Laurie Daley after the 20-year-old's try-scoring hat-trick helped the hosts repel a Manly ambush and add to the Sea Eagles' woes with a 28-12 win in chilly Canberra on Friday night. Rebounding from a shock first defeat in 10 starts last week against St George Illawarra, the Raiders' pivotal win knocked Melbourne off a perch the Storm only enjoyed for 24 hours after Thursday night's 22-2 triumph over Brisbane. With the purring Panthers entering the top four for the first time all season after extending their own mid-season winning run to nine games earlier on Friday with a 48-12 rout in Newcastle, fans are daring to dream of a repeat of the classic 1990 and 1991 title deciders. With a favourable run home, Canberra remain warm favourites to secure a first-week final in the national capital, quite possibly against the four-time defending premiers from Penrith. But Manly's troubles only deepen, especially for under-siege coach Anthony Seibold. After threatening to inflict a first-ever Friday night defeat on the Raiders in the freezing national capital in July or August, the Sea Eagles now need to win their last four games to have a hope of scraping into the finals. As well as potentially slipping two wins outside of the top eight with only four rounds remaining, Manly have also likely lost Jake Trbojevic for two games after their inspirational skipper suffered a category one concussion in a nasty second-half collision with Josh Papalii."Yeah, it is hard to watch. He cares so much about the team," Seibold said. "Josh Papalii is one of the biggest players in the competition and Jake goes down there and he's trying to turn the tide for us and ... "The good thing is, he's sitting up inside the dressing room there. "But it's category one, so he'll definitely miss next week. That might be the third (concussion) this season so it's really disappointing for him and us. "We're already missing six or seven forwards." Trbojevic's setback came in between the Raiders running in two tries in nine minutes to turn a precarious four-point lead into a match-winning buffer at GIO Stadium. A length-of-the-field team effort finished off by superstar fullback Tom Trbojevic in the third minute and a Tolutau Koula strike early in the second half had cancelled out Strange's opening five-pointer and one to slippery winger Xavier Savage. But that's when Strange took the game by the scruff off the neck. First he took on and beat the Manly defence to storm over in the 54th minute. Then Strange skilfully reeled in a spectacular flick pass from coach Stuart's son Jed down the left wing to realistically put the game beyond Manly's reach. "He's got qualities of a representative player already as a young person and I don't say that outlandishly," Stuart said. "For a young player such as Ethan to be able to give off energy to his teammates is similar to Laurie Daley when Laurie was a young player." The only concern for Canberra was hard-nosed lock Corey Horsburgh being placed on report for a senseless later shoulder charge on Manly hooker Jazz Tevaga. The tantalising prospect of a retro Canberra-versus-Penrith grand final is gathering speed following the Raiders' rapid-fire return to the top of the NRL ladder. Coach Ricky Stuart glowingly compared Ethan Strange to Raiders legend Laurie Daley after the 20-year-old's try-scoring hat-trick helped the hosts repel a Manly ambush and add to the Sea Eagles' woes with a 28-12 win in chilly Canberra on Friday night. Rebounding from a shock first defeat in 10 starts last week against St George Illawarra, the Raiders' pivotal win knocked Melbourne off a perch the Storm only enjoyed for 24 hours after Thursday night's 22-2 triumph over Brisbane. With the purring Panthers entering the top four for the first time all season after extending their own mid-season winning run to nine games earlier on Friday with a 48-12 rout in Newcastle, fans are daring to dream of a repeat of the classic 1990 and 1991 title deciders. With a favourable run home, Canberra remain warm favourites to secure a first-week final in the national capital, quite possibly against the four-time defending premiers from Penrith. But Manly's troubles only deepen, especially for under-siege coach Anthony Seibold. After threatening to inflict a first-ever Friday night defeat on the Raiders in the freezing national capital in July or August, the Sea Eagles now need to win their last four games to have a hope of scraping into the finals. As well as potentially slipping two wins outside of the top eight with only four rounds remaining, Manly have also likely lost Jake Trbojevic for two games after their inspirational skipper suffered a category one concussion in a nasty second-half collision with Josh Papalii."Yeah, it is hard to watch. He cares so much about the team," Seibold said. "Josh Papalii is one of the biggest players in the competition and Jake goes down there and he's trying to turn the tide for us and ... "The good thing is, he's sitting up inside the dressing room there. "But it's category one, so he'll definitely miss next week. That might be the third (concussion) this season so it's really disappointing for him and us. "We're already missing six or seven forwards." Trbojevic's setback came in between the Raiders running in two tries in nine minutes to turn a precarious four-point lead into a match-winning buffer at GIO Stadium. A length-of-the-field team effort finished off by superstar fullback Tom Trbojevic in the third minute and a Tolutau Koula strike early in the second half had cancelled out Strange's opening five-pointer and one to slippery winger Xavier Savage. But that's when Strange took the game by the scruff off the neck. First he took on and beat the Manly defence to storm over in the 54th minute. Then Strange skilfully reeled in a spectacular flick pass from coach Stuart's son Jed down the left wing to realistically put the game beyond Manly's reach. "He's got qualities of a representative player already as a young person and I don't say that outlandishly," Stuart said. "For a young player such as Ethan to be able to give off energy to his teammates is similar to Laurie Daley when Laurie was a young player." The only concern for Canberra was hard-nosed lock Corey Horsburgh being placed on report for a senseless later shoulder charge on Manly hooker Jazz Tevaga. The tantalising prospect of a retro Canberra-versus-Penrith grand final is gathering speed following the Raiders' rapid-fire return to the top of the NRL ladder. Coach Ricky Stuart glowingly compared Ethan Strange to Raiders legend Laurie Daley after the 20-year-old's try-scoring hat-trick helped the hosts repel a Manly ambush and add to the Sea Eagles' woes with a 28-12 win in chilly Canberra on Friday night. Rebounding from a shock first defeat in 10 starts last week against St George Illawarra, the Raiders' pivotal win knocked Melbourne off a perch the Storm only enjoyed for 24 hours after Thursday night's 22-2 triumph over Brisbane. With the purring Panthers entering the top four for the first time all season after extending their own mid-season winning run to nine games earlier on Friday with a 48-12 rout in Newcastle, fans are daring to dream of a repeat of the classic 1990 and 1991 title deciders. With a favourable run home, Canberra remain warm favourites to secure a first-week final in the national capital, quite possibly against the four-time defending premiers from Penrith. But Manly's troubles only deepen, especially for under-siege coach Anthony Seibold. After threatening to inflict a first-ever Friday night defeat on the Raiders in the freezing national capital in July or August, the Sea Eagles now need to win their last four games to have a hope of scraping into the finals. As well as potentially slipping two wins outside of the top eight with only four rounds remaining, Manly have also likely lost Jake Trbojevic for two games after their inspirational skipper suffered a category one concussion in a nasty second-half collision with Josh Papalii."Yeah, it is hard to watch. He cares so much about the team," Seibold said. "Josh Papalii is one of the biggest players in the competition and Jake goes down there and he's trying to turn the tide for us and ... "The good thing is, he's sitting up inside the dressing room there. "But it's category one, so he'll definitely miss next week. That might be the third (concussion) this season so it's really disappointing for him and us. "We're already missing six or seven forwards." Trbojevic's setback came in between the Raiders running in two tries in nine minutes to turn a precarious four-point lead into a match-winning buffer at GIO Stadium. A length-of-the-field team effort finished off by superstar fullback Tom Trbojevic in the third minute and a Tolutau Koula strike early in the second half had cancelled out Strange's opening five-pointer and one to slippery winger Xavier Savage. But that's when Strange took the game by the scruff off the neck. First he took on and beat the Manly defence to storm over in the 54th minute. Then Strange skilfully reeled in a spectacular flick pass from coach Stuart's son Jed down the left wing to realistically put the game beyond Manly's reach. "He's got qualities of a representative player already as a young person and I don't say that outlandishly," Stuart said. "For a young player such as Ethan to be able to give off energy to his teammates is similar to Laurie Daley when Laurie was a young player." The only concern for Canberra was hard-nosed lock Corey Horsburgh being placed on report for a senseless later shoulder charge on Manly hooker Jazz Tevaga.

Sydney Morning Herald
9 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Every second counts: Bush galloper set to go past Tom Melbourne's mark
She's the country version of racing's favourite runner-up, Tom Melbourne, only Dollar Magic has seen her rack up 14 second placings in 28 starts. And if she goes one better on Saturday at Randwick, either to 15 seconds, or even a fifth win, her Scone trainer and part-owner Scott Singleton will be happy. 'The fact that they earn such good prize money running second, it takes the frustration out of it because you feel like a winner anyway,' said Singleton, who owns 20 per cent of the galloper, which has earned $559,690 from 28 starts. 'But that last start, you can't say she ran second because she wants to. You could just tell she was trying her heart out. It's just how it's worked out with her. 'I wouldn't say it's frustrating. I'd just love her to win one for her.' Now-retired Tom Melbourne, an import bought for just $7800, rose to cult status with 14 seconds and just five wins across 50 Australian starts, often at stakes level, to earn $1.4 million. While Dollar Magic has never challenged those heights, she is a consistent performer, winning four races and missing a place just six times. Twelve of her runner-up efforts have been on a Saturday in town. Her only Saturday metro win came at home, on Scone's annual standalone meeting, last year. The seven-year-old mare, a homebred daughter of Shamus Award for Singleton's long-time clients Wal and Anne Lanham, went to 14 seconds last time out at Rosehill in a 1200m fillies and mares benchmark 78 handicap on July 19. She returns to town for an identical race, the third on the card, and Singleton is confident she can challenge again. Out of the Lanhams' mare Last Dollars, Dollar Magic was matched with Shamus Award when he stood for $22,000 at Widden Stud.