Showing posts with label Lions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lions. Show all posts

Friday, May 10, 2013

Gatland's Lions squad has the X factor

By Bryn Palmer BBC Sport So after the endless speculation and selection parlour games, what to make of Warren Gatland's 2013 British and Irish Lions squad?

If around 30 of the names unveiled on Tuesday were predictable enough, the identity of the last half-dozen or so still provided plenty of intrigue and, in some cases, surprise.

Gatland's 37-man party contains a balance of experienced old hands, talented young thrusters and players with the required 'X factor' to provide something a little bit different.

Brian O'Driscoll will deservedly become only the third player ever - and the third Irishman - to go on four Lions tours. Two other legends, Willie John McBride and Mike Gibson, both made five.

Wales (15) - Leigh Halfpenny, Alex Cuthbert, George North, Jonathan Davies, Jamie Roberts, Mike Phillips, Gethin Jenkins, Adam Jones, Richard Hibbard, Ian Evans, Alun-Wyn Jones, Toby Faletau, Dan Lydiate, Justin Tipuric, Sam Warburton

England (10) - Manu Tuilagi, Owen Farrell, Ben Youngs, Dan Cole, Matt Stevens, Mako Vunipola, Dylan Hartley, Tom Youngs, Geoff Parling, Tom Croft.

Ireland (9) - Rob Kearney, Tommy Bowe, Brian O'Driscoll, Jonathan Sexton, Conor Murray, Cian Healy, Paul O'Connell, Jamie Heaslip, Sean O'Brien

Scotland (3) - Stuart Hogg, Sean Maitland, Richie Gray

Ireland's Paul O'Connell and Welshman Gethin Jenkins are summoned for their third tour of duty, while nine other players will be embarking on a second Lions adventure.

One of them, Matt Stevens, was the closest thing to a 'wildcard' selection, even though the prop has toured with the Lions previously, in 2005. He is the only member of the party not currently playing Test rugby, having retired from England duty last summer to spend more time with his young family.

At 30 he is still relatively young in rugby terms, more so given his enforced two-year break from the game in 2009 after testing positive for cocaine while at Bath.

The Lions could have chosen another pure set-piece tight-head specialist such as Ireland's Mike Ross or Scotland's Euan Murray to back up the frontline choices Adam Jones and Dan Cole, but the "all-round game input" - as Lions forwards coach Graham Rowntree put it - of Stevens's ball-carrying and offloading skills swayed it.

The South Africa-born prop, who returned to rugby with Saracens in 2011, is also the sort of colourful character - former Celebrity X Factor finalist, coffee-bar entrepreneur - that tends to thrive on a Lions tour.

"He is very popular within any team environment, and is a good tourist," Gatland said.

Stevens's Saracens team-mate Mako Vunipola was another whose "points of difference" - the phrase of the day among the coaches - proved decisive, securing him the other available spot in the props department. Gatland has summoned plenty of power to the task of winning down under, but on hard, fast grounds he also needs forwards comfortable with a mobile, offloading game played at speed. And not many 20-stone props fit that bill.

With Richard Hibbard providing scrummaging ballast and Tom Youngs dynamism around the field, Dylan Hartley's "aggressive edge"- and superior line-out accuracy - gave the England man the nod over Ireland's unfortunate Rory Best for the third hooking berth.

If the front-row fraternity were the main points of interest among the forwards, the balance of options among the backs - particularly in midfield - was also a hot topic.

Stuart Hogg scores a spectacular 80m interception solo try against Italy Hogg scores stunning try for Scotland

Will two fly-halves be enough? The rationale behind it is sound enough: if you take three specialists, trying to give everyone enough game time to stake a claim for the most pivotal role actually works against the main objective - making sure everyone is fully tuned up before the first Test in Brisbane.

With only six games beforehand, Jonny Sexton and Owen Farrell will probably play no more than three games each anyway.

"We want to accelerate that preparation by giving Jonny and Owen the best opportunity to navigate a Lions team around the park," explained backs coach Rob Howley.

But when it came to nominating the player who would most suit the role of a 'utility' back able to cover several positions including 10 - James Hook? Billy Twelvetrees? Ian Madigan? - not many pundits had Stuart Hogg, the baby of the party, down in that capacity.

The 20-year-old flier made his Scotland debut on the wing, scored a couple of sensational tries from full-back in this year's Six Nations, and has also played outside centre for his club Glasgow, but has little or no experience at 10.

"He has that X factor about him, whether as a full-back or at 13," said backs coach Rob Howley. "I think he can play 10 as well. There is something about the magic of the Lions jersey and there may be an opportunity where he might play 10 and can cover that."

As well as limiting the squad's frontline goal-kicking options to the two fly-halves and full-back Leigh Halfpenny, the absence of a Hook or Twelvetrees is more surprising given that Jamie Roberts is the only specialist inside centre named. But Gatland appears comfortable with the option of also using either O'Driscoll or Jonathan Davies, both more accustomed to the 13 jersey, at 12.

Sean Maitland, the New Zealand-born Scot whom Gatland selected for Waikato while still a schoolboy before he moved on to the Canterbury Crusaders, may be the least experienced player in the party, with only five caps to his name.

But the 24-year-old impressed sufficiently with his all-round rugby intelligence during his debut Six Nations campaign to claim the final wing berth ahead of the likes of Ireland's Simon Zebo, Scotland team-mate Tim Visser and England's Chris Ashton.

"He doesn't make a lot of mistakes," Gatland said. "He is a big man who can run sub-11 seconds for the 100m and has experience of playing Super Rugby in Australia."

Sat 1 June v Barbarians, Hong Kong Wed 5 June v Western Force, Perth Sat 8 June, Queensland Reds, Brisbane Tue 11 June, Combined NSW-Queensland, Newcastle Sat 15 June, NSW Waratahs, Sydney Tue 18 June, ACT Brumbies, Canberra Sat 22 June v Australia, Brisbane Tue 25 June, v Melbourne Rebels, Melbourne Sat 29 June, v Australia, Melbourne Sat 6 July, v Australia, Sydney Wales, as predicted, have their biggest contingent on a Lions tour since the 16 initially chosen in 1977, but there was little argument about any of those picked, with only fly-half Dan Biggar - of the side that humbled England in Cardiff - missing out.

Flanker Dan Lydiate may have only played four games since returning from a broken ankle, but Gatland's admiration for the 2012 Six Nations Player of the Tournament is well documented, and the first Test against the Wallabies is still seven weeks away.

The blind-side bruiser's punishing defence marks him out from the other options in that position - similarly the athleticism and line-out prowess of Englishman Tom Croft, and Irishman Sean O'Brien's ball-carrying and work-rate. With captain Sam Warburton also able to play at six, it is conceivable that none of those three might even make the Test side, with Justin Tipuric's creative instincts offering another enticing option at open-side.

The back row was always going to provide some notable casualties, with two national captains - England's Chris Robshaw and Scotland's Kelly Brown - among those to miss out.

Robshaw "was desperately, desperately unlucky," according to Rowntree, who admitted he faces a "difficult conversation" with the Harlequins man about his exclusion. "I feel for him because he has been exceptional. But I would like to think if we have an injury we would go straight for Chris."

And therein lies hope for those missing the initial cut. Robshaw is still a reasonable bet to make it to Australia, with an average of five replacements being summoned over the past four tours and four of the original party not even making it onto the plane to South Africa four years ago.

With two pre-tour training camps, in Wales and Ireland, scheduled over the next few weeks, and at least 23 of the squad involved in Premiership and Pro12 semi-finals and finals before departure on 27 May, the chances of all 37 making it to Australia in one piece are slim.

The squad announcement is just the start of the process. Whatever Test team you might like to pick now, the side that steps out at Brisbane's Suncorp Stadium on 22 June is just as likely to include someone who is not even invited to the party yet.


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Thursday, May 9, 2013

McBride questions Lions captaincy

Legendary Lions captain Willie John McBride says he would have made Brian O'Driscoll skipper for the summer tour of Australia ahead of Sam Warburton.

The Wales flanker will lead the Lions on the 10-match tour Down Under.

But McBride, who captained the Lions on their unbeaten 22-game tour of South Africa in 1974,  has reservations.

"[It] worries me a little bit that he [Warburton] wasn't prepared to take on that responsibility [captaincy] for Wales during the year," McBride said.

"I must admit that personally I would have taken O'Driscoll [as captain], who relishes the captaincy and he's playing well, and he's been around a long time [and] he has a lot of experience at captaincy.

Sat 1 June v Barbarians, Hong Kong Wed 5 June v Western Force, Perth Sat 8 June, Queensland Reds, Brisbane Tue 11 June, Combined NSW-Queensland, Newcastle Sat 15 June, NSW Waratahs, Sydney Tue 18 June, ACT Brumbies, Canberra Sat 22 June v Australia, Brisbane Tue 25 June, v Melbourne Rebels, Melbourne Sat 29 June, v Australia, Melbourne Sat 6 July, v Australia, Sydney "But there you are, Warburton's the man and we wish him good luck and I hope he does well."

Warburton led Wales in their 30-22 defeat by Ireland in their opening 2013 Six Nations game.

But the Cardiff Blues open-side missed the second game in France with injury and then came off the bench against Italy, while Ryan Jones led Wales in their 28-18 win over Scotland.

And Gethin Jenkins captained the side in the championship decider against England after Jones was injured, with Warburton admitting he wanted to concentrate on his own game.

He said at the time: "I can go out and just focus on myself and try and perform the same way as I did last Saturday."

McBride says that decision is a concern for him.

"That would have been a great experience for him in building up to a Lions tour," said the Ulsterman, who played on five British and Irish Lions tours between 1962 and 1974.

"I don't quite know why he did that [opt against captaining Wales], I think he felt that it might interfere with his game and that's a little bit worrying.

"But obviously [Lions coach] Warren Gatland knows him and is happy enough, and he's his choice as captain and so we've got to go with that."

McBride, 72, says captaining the Lions is the biggest honour for any rugby player from Britain or Ireland.

But he added: "With the honour comes responsibility and you mustn't forget you have players from the four countries.

"You don't have Welsh Lions or Irish Lions or English Lions or Scottish Lions - they're all Lions, and the first thing he [Warburton] has to do is weld them into a team and forget about the nationalities.

"After that he's obviously got to play well and lead well, not only on the field but off the field. And obviously it carries a lot of responsibility with it if you're going to win."


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VIDEO: Warburton honoured by Lions captaincy

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Wednesday, May 8, 2013

The Lions down under over the years

30 April 2013 Last updated at 05:23 GMT

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Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Guide to the British and Irish Lions

BBC Sport - Guide to the British and Irish Lions BBC Accessibility links Skip to content Skip to local navigation Accessibility Help bbc.co.uk navigation News Sport Weather Travel Future Autos TV Radio More… Search term: BBC Sport Rugby Union Home Football Formula 1 Cricket Rugby U Rugby L Tennis Golf More Sport American Football Archery Athletics Badminton Baseball Basketball Bowls Boxing Canoeing Commonwealth Games Cycling Darts Disability Sport Diving Equestrian Fencing Gaelic Games Gymnastics Handball Hockey Horse Racing Ice Hockey Judo Modern Pentathlon MotoGP Netball Olympics Rowing Sailing Shooting Snooker Sports Personality Squash Swimming Table Tennis Taekwondo Triathlon Volleyball Weightlifting Winter Sports Wrestling Around the UK England Northern Ireland   Scotland   Wales Results Fixtures Tables Live Scores All Teams English Premiership Bath Exeter Gloucester Harlequins Leicester London Irish London Wasps London Welsh Northampton Sale Saracens Worcester Pro12 League Cardiff Blues Connacht Edinburgh Glasgow Leinster Munster NG Dragons Ospreys Scarlets Ulster 30 April 2013Last updated at 13:58 GMT

Share this page print Guide to the British and Irish Lions The Lions' 37-man squad for this summer's tour to Australia:

Full-backs: Leigh Halfpenny Leigh Halfpenny (Wales) Cardiff Blues Age: 24 Tests: 44 Lions in 2009 Stuart Hogg (Scotland) Stuart Hogg (Scotland) Glasgow Warriors Age: 20 Tests: 15 Lions debutant Rob Kearney (Ireland) Rob Kearney (Ireland) Leinster Age: 27 Tests: 49 (3 for Lions) Lions in 2009 Wings: Tommy Bowe (Ireland) Tommy Bowe (Ireland) Ulster Age: 29 Tests: 54 (3 for Lions) Lions in 2009 Alex Cuthbert Alex Cuthbert (Wales) Cardiff Blues Age: 23 Tests: 18 Lions debutant Sean Maitland Sean Maitland (Scotland) Glasgow Warriors Age: 24 Tests: 5 Lions debutant George North George North (Wales) Llanelli Scarlets Age: 21 Tests: 31 Lions debutant Centres: Jonathan Davies Jonathan Davies (Wales) Llanelli Scarlets Age: 25 Tests: 36 Lions debutant Brian O'Driscoll Brian O'Driscoll (Ireland) Leinster Age: 34 Tests: 131 (6 for Lions) Lions in 2001, 2005, 2009 Jamie Roberts Jamie Roberts (Wales) Cardiff Blues Age: 26 Tests: 55 (2 for Lions) Lions in 2009 Manu Tuilagi Manu Tuilagi (England) Leicester Tigers Age: 21 Tests: 21 Lions debutant Fly-halves: Owen Farrell Owen Farrell (England) Saracens Age: 21 Tests: 16 Lions debutant Jonny Sexton Jonny Sexton (Ireland) Leinster Age: 27 Tests: 36 Lions debutant Scrum-halves: Mike Phillips Mike Phillips (Wales) Bayonne Age: 30 Tests: 80 (3 for Lions) Lions in 2009 Ben Youngs Ben Youngs (England) Leicester Tigers Age: 23 Tests: 33 Lions debutant Ben Youngs Conor Murray (Ireland) Munster Age: 24 Tests: 19 Lions debutant Props: Cian Healy Cian Healy (Ireland) Leinster Age: 25 Tests: 39 Lions debutant Gethin Jenkins Gethin Jenkins (Wales) Ospreys Age: 32 Tests: 103 (5 for Lions) Lions in 2005, 2009 Dan Cole Dan Cole (England) Leicester Tigers Age: 25 Tests: 40 Lions debutant Adam Jones Adam Jones (Wales) Ospreys Age: 32 Tests: 90 (2 for Lions) Lions in 2009 Matt Stevens Matt Stevens (England) Saracens Age: 30 Tests: 44 Lions in 2005 Mako Vunipola Mako Vunipola (England) Saracens Age: 22 Tests: 9 Lions debutant Hookers: Richard Hibbard Richard Hibbard (Wales) Ospreys Age: 29 Tests: 23 Lions debutant Matt Stevens Dylan Hartley (England) Northampton Age: 27 Tests: 47 Lions debutant Tom Youngs Tom Youngs (England) Leicester Tigers Age: 26 Tests: 9 Lions debutant Locks: Ian Evans Ian Evans (Wales) Ospreys Age: 28 Tests: 30 Lions debutant Richie Gray Richie Gray (Scotland) Sale Sharks Age: 23 Tests: 31 Lions debutant Paul O'Connell Paul O'Connell (Ireland) Munster Age: 33 Tests: 91 (6 for Lions) Lions in 2005 and 2009 Alun Wyn Jones Alun-Wyn Jones (Wales) Ospreys Age: 27 Tests: 73 (3 for Lions) Lions in 2009 Geoff Parling Geoff Parling (England) Leicester Tigers Age: 29 Tests: 17 Lions debutant Flankers: Tom Croft Tom Croft (England) Leicester Tigers Age: 27 Tests: 41 (3 for Lions) Lions in 2009 Dan Lydiate Dan Lydiate (Wales) Newport-Gwent Dragons Age: 25 Tests: 27 Lions debutant Sean O'Brien Sean O'Brien (Ireland) Leinster Age: 26 Tests: 27 Lions debutant Justin Tipuric Justin Tipuric (Wales) Ospreys Age: 23 Tests: 15 Lions debutant Sam Warburton Sam Warburton (Wales - captain) Cardiff Blues Age: 24 Tests: 38 Lions debutant Number eights: Toby Faletau Toby Faletau (Wales) Newport-Gwent Dragons Age: 22 Tests: 26 Lions debutant Jamie Heaslip Jamie Heaslip (Ireland) Leinster Age: 29 Tests: 60 (3 for Lions) Lions in 2009 Also related to this story Gatland's Lions squad has the X factor 30 Apr 2013Rugby Union Wilkinson misses out on Lions tour 30 Apr 2013Rugby Union Gallery The Lions down under over the years 30 Apr 2013Rugby Union Jeremy Guscott reflects on the Lions squad 30 Apr 2013Rugby Union Share this story Share this page print Related to this story Gatland's Lions squad has the X factor 30 Apr 2013Rugby Union Wilkinson misses out on Lions tour 30 Apr 2013Rugby Union Featured in this story Rugby union on the BBC External site British & Irish Lions External site International Rugby Board External site Rugby Football Union Lions tour of Australia Lions Watch British and Irish Lions fixtures

Gatland's Lions squad has the X factor Stevens is the surprise inclusion - Guscott Guide to the British and Irish Lions squad Gallery The Lions down under over the years Official Lions website More from Rugby Union Warren Gatland and Lions captain Sam Warburton Welsh set to dominate Lions opener 01 May 2013Rugby Union Brian O'Driscoll O'Driscoll considers another season 01 May 2013Irish Rugby Listen to audio 5 live Lions special podcast Watch video O'Driscoll hints at another year 01 May 2013Irish Rugby McBride questions Lions captaincy 01 May 2013Welsh Rugby Best omission short-sighted - Wood 01 May 2013Rugby Union Robshaw 'unlucky' to miss Lions 01 May 2013Rugby Union Absent Wilkinson remains a headline act 30 Apr 2013Rugby Union Elsewhere on the BBC Nomadic life Nomadic life Experience life in a traditional camp located in the remote Mongolian grasslands

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