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Gareth Thomas backs Blair Kinghorn to shine on late link up with British and Irish Lions Tour
Gareth Thomas backs Blair Kinghorn to shine on late link up with British and Irish Lions Tour

Daily Record

time9 hours ago

  • Sport
  • Daily Record

Gareth Thomas backs Blair Kinghorn to shine on late link up with British and Irish Lions Tour

Scotland full-back Blair Kinghorn, who will run out at the Stade de France on Saturday night for the Top 14 final for club side Toulouse against European champions Bordeaux. Of the 38 players selected by Andy Farrell for the 2025 British & Irish Lions Tour of Australia, 37 are currently Down Under. The exception is Scotland full-back Blair Kinghorn, who will run out at the Stade de France on Saturday night for the Top 14 final for club side Toulouse against European champions Bordeaux. Even after a stellar Six Nations, in which nominated for Player of the Championship, the lack of availability for the first three matches of the Tour, at least, might count against the Scot. But Gareth Thomas believes otherwise. ‌ The former Wales skipper went through this exact scenario 20 years ago, remaining with Toulouse for the knockouts of the French domestic league and linking up late with the Lions in New Zealand. Despite that, he was able to get up to speed and ended the tour as captain after Brian O'Driscoll was spear-tackled out of the Test series by Tana Umaga and Keven Mealamu. ‌ 'It's deemed a little difficult but sometimes joining when the tour is on, is kind of easier than the whole rigmarole and faffing around, doing this and that and getting to know this person or that person,' said Thomas, who has been embarking on the Snowdonia 10 Peak Challenge for Tackle HIV, in a bid to tackle misunderstanding of HIV as well as addressing the stigma around it. 'Sometimes when you are thrown into it and told 'go and play rugby', it's easier. You can't do it as a collective but when you are a small piece of this huge jigsaw, it's nearly complete and allows you to fit in. In a way, for that individual, coming in can be easier because the group is established and all you have to do is establish your little part. 'Even though I captained the team, I captained a team that had gone through the hard work and they allowed me to come in and stand in front and lead them out. The hard work had been done weeks and weeks before.' Thomas and Kinghorn are far from the only examples of players based overseas being called up by the Lions, with Bath fly-half Finn Russell plying his trade at Racing 92 at the time of the last tour. Some have ducked out of their domestic seasons early, notably Leigh Halfpenny in 2017 when he missed the Top 14 final to fly out to New Zealand. Kinghorn has decided otherwise, and Thomas explained just why he took the exact same decision two decades ago. He said: 'I made my commitment. There was no way I was going the whole season playing in Toulouse, potentially reach a final and then not play in the final. That is not to say I had a lack of commitment to the Lions, which is once every four years. 'What it said is that I had a huge commitment to Toulouse, who I played for and where I was living every day of my life. It was important that I showed Toulouse what they as a club had done for me, rather than on the flipside saying to the Lions that I don't care, I did. 'For me, to leave was never an option and I totally get it if people do leave their club. But for me, the players you are with every day, you work every day of your life for so many years, to miss out on the big games almost becomes unthinkable as a rugby player.' Tackle HIV is a campaign led by Gareth Thomas in partnership with ViiV Healthcare, with Terrence Higgins Trust as the charity partner, which aims to tackle the stigma and misunderstanding around HIV. For more information visit and follow @tacklehiv

Doris could be sidelined for six months as Leinster prepare to move on from 'fall-out' after Northampton loss
Doris could be sidelined for six months as Leinster prepare to move on from 'fall-out' after Northampton loss

Irish Examiner

time10-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Irish Examiner

Doris could be sidelined for six months as Leinster prepare to move on from 'fall-out' after Northampton loss

On the day he was set to undergo surgery, Leinster head coach Leo Cullen expressed his hope that Caelan Doris would make a speedy recovery from the injury that ruled him out of contention for this summer's British & Irish Lions Tour of Australia. Earmarked for a number of months as a potential captain of the side, Mayo native Doris ultimately wasn't included in Andy Farrell's official Lions selection on Thursday after hurting his shoulder in Leinster's surprise European Champions Cup semi-final exit to Northampton Saints at the Aviva Stadium last Saturday. Earlier in the week, the province's senior coach Jacques Nienaber suggested Doris (who will now be absent for Leinster's United Rugby Championship run-in) could be facing an absence of between four and six months if he had suffered structural damage to his shoulder. While stating it can be difficult to predict a precise recovery period, Cullen revealed yesterday he could potentially be sidelined for this length of time. 'He is going for surgery as we speak and depending on how that is, it's a four to six months' time frame from what I understand. It's dangerous throwing out timelines as we know, but that's what reports are. Hopefully it's not as bad as that, but that is what is being talked about certainly in terms of timelines,' Cullen remarked ahead of this evening's URC clash with Zebre at the Aviva Stadium. 'It's been a tough week with the fall-out after the game. You could see Caelan when he did it at the time, he's down the sideline and he's trying to get an offload away. Even after that, he scores a try, rips the ball out of a guy's arms and puts in a 50-22. 'He's gutted about the team. That was hurting him more at the start of the week. He's been outstanding here. We wish him a speedy recovery and hopefully he will get another chance to go on a trip like that [the Lions] again. Unfortunately it's not going to be for him this time.' While his side's disappointing performance is a significant part of the 'fall-out' from the Northampton game, a lot has been made of the decision by referee Pierre Brousset and his match officials not to award a penalty try to Leinster in the dying moments of the contest. Alex Coles was yellow carded in the 79th minute for his illegal intervention on Josh van der Flier as the openside flanker found himself within inches of the whitewash, but a penalty and a numerical advantage were the only things Leinster garnered from this incident. Cullen explained he has been in official communication with the proper authorities in relation to the decision not to award an automatic seven points to his side in a game they lost by just three (37-34). Although he sensed there wasn't a complete agreement on the matter, the Leinster supremo believes the general view is that it should have been a late penalty try to the eastern province. 'We've had conversations. It's an incredibly tight decision. They'll have calibration meetings with different referee selectors. I don't think it's quite unanimous is the sense I get, but the majority would say it should be a penalty try,' Cullen added. 'Because you're talking about the probability of Josh scoring and the probability is, if the ball is not being ripped out of his hands, he's rolling towards the line and he's just falling and scoring. The probability is, it is a try. That is the feedback. 'This doesn't help, unfortunately, the result and that's the process you go through. That's sport, isn't it? Sport, it can be incredibly cruel.'

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