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Andy Farrell seeks more bite from Lions for fierce contest against Waratahs

about 13 hours ago
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The stakes are intensifying on all fronts with the first Test now just a fortnight away,The British & Irish Lions are still trying to construct the fundamental forward pillars underpinning their game while some key Wallaby figures are nursing injuries and are missing from their side’s warm-up game against Fiji,These are the moments when, behind the scenes, elite coaches really earn their money,Despite two comfortable victories on Australian soil so far, Andy Farrell will certainly be wanting his side to shift everything up a gear, both for the sake of the collective and their own individual ambitions,For one or two this is in effect a final trial for places in the Test matchday 23, particularly so in certain fiercely contested positions.

A penny for the thoughts of Fin and Marcus Smith, for example, after the high-profile call-up of Owen Farrell to replace the injured Elliot Daly.Professional sport is a relentless dog-eat-dog world and there is a sense that Farrell Sr is seeking a bit more snarl and bite from his Lions, young and old, than he has seen to date.It certainly feels like one of the primary reasons he has opted to summon his son, whose competitive edge is never in doubt.And if Owen’s arrival does happen to coincide with the Lions’ most purposeful performance to date, will that be entirely coincidental? Andy Farrell is a proven winner and, as was the case with Warren Gatland’s decision to drop Brian O’Driscoll before the decisive final Test here in 2013, he has not travelled to Australia to enter a popularity contest.Ultimately his players all respect and understand that reality, not least those who have previously taken the field with Farrell Jr.

“You don’t lose class,” stressed his England colleague Luke Cowan-Dickie, brushing aside any external doubts about the 33-year-old’s recent fitness and form issues.“Faz is a class player, so I’m well happy.He’s one of those players who will definitely add to the group.”Another squad member keen to renew old acquaintances is this weekend’s captain, Tadhg Beirne, who toured with Farrell in South Africa four years ago.“I’ll be really excited to see him,” insisted Beirne, after his team’s gentle eve-of- game session at the picturesque North Sydney Oval.

“Playing with him four years ago I’ve seen all those leadership qualities that he brings,Any type of leadership is only going to enhance the squad,”Clearly they would say that – and this has not yet been a tour notable for its relaxed communications approach – but, equally, the most successful Lions tours are built on blunt honesty and a prevailing over-my-dead-body attitude,Chugging along against moderate opposition simply hoping for the best is not a recipe for guaranteed Test fulfilment,Hence why Farrell has been reluctant to shower his players with post-match platitudes, even though the Lions have so far scored 16 tries and 106 points in their two fixtures in Australia and have yet to concede a second-half point.

To his mind the Lions’ defence has to be tighter in the first quarter of games, in particular.“We want to keep improving our defence because that’s the main thing you’d want to stand for.I know our defence has been pretty good but there’s still room for improvement.”Then there is the ever-crucial battle of the breakdown where Australia will definitely look to come hard in the Test series.If the Lions aspire to the high-tempo game that will give their talented backs the best chance of running free, their coaches have been re-emphasising the need to go harder around the contact area.

“As a forward pack the main thing for us is just the ruck,” revealed James Ryan, Beirne’s fellow Ireland international.“The Waratahs put a huge amount of pressure on the ruck, they’ve the most amount of turnovers in Super Rugby.It’s just about getting that bit right and challenging them when we have the ball.”Hoping to stand firm, among others, will be the English-born flanker Jamie Adamson, formerly of Durham University and England sevens, who came out to Australia to play a season of local club rugby and, to his credit, now finds himself on the bench against the Lions.There will also be a familiar face in the home coaching box where Mike Catt, a Lion in 1997 and 2001, is now the attack coach.

In the corresponding tour game on that 2001 expedition the Waratahs opted to “go the biff”, with Ronan O’Gara being infamously punched up to 11 times on the floor by the Waratahs’ Duncan McRae and Tom Bowman receiving a yellow card – there were five in the game – for catching Danny Grewcock with an elbow within three seconds of the kick- off.The then Lions coach Graham Henry called it “a black night for rugby” but Catt insists these are different times.“Those days are gone,” he told the Sydney Morning Herald.“It’s too fast.You can’t get away with it.

Which Lions star are you going to rough up anyway? They have so many good players so they don’t really rely on one person, do they?”Sign up to The BreakdownThe latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewedafter newsletter promotionIt will still be a physical collision up front, though, particularly with the 148kg (23st 4lb) Taniela Tupou involved,Tupou needs a big game – he rarely has a small one, to be fair – to restore the faith of the Wallaby selectors, already minus the massive Will Skelton and Rob Valetini against Fiji on Sunday,Sydney Football Stadium, Saturday 5 July, 8pm AEST/11am BSTNSW Waratahs: Creighton; Kellaway, Foketi, Walton, Lancaster; Bowen, Wilson; Lambert, Dobbins, Tupou, Lee-Warner, Amatosero, Leota, Gamble, Sinclair (capt),Replacements: Vailanu, Barrett, Botha, Philip, Adamson, Grant, Edmed, O’Donnell,British & Irish Lions: Keenan; Hansen, Jones, Tuipulotu, Kinghorn, F Smith, Mitchell; Schoeman, Cowan-Dickie, Bealham, Beirne (capt), Ryan, Pollock, Van der Flier, Earl.

Replacements: Sheehan, Genge, Furlong, McCarthy, Cummings,Morgan, White, M Smith,The Lions front row, though, are united in their motivation to make their own sizeable impact, their props having even formed a clandestine tea-drinking society from which every other position is excluded,“We are like bison migrating together … we have a secret meeting every night,” revealed the ever-entertaining Pierre Schoeman, the Scotland loose-head who has rapidly forged a bond with England’s Ellis Genge,“I think loose-heads all around the world are very similar.

They are quite weird people.Something isn’t right.We always say that playing rugby you must have a screw loose but playing rugby as a loose-head prop … I won’t even go into the tight-head props.We’re different but similar.We are almost like a gladiator when all the gladiators come together.

”Which just leaves the squad’s scrum coach John Fogarty – “he has the key for the cage to unlock the gladiators, that’s probably the best way to describe him” – with the job of harnessing all this latent horsepower and encouraging the Lions to unleash hell.Lay down a properly physical marker now and the pressure on Australia will further increase.
businessSee all
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‘The bubble had to burst’: the inside story of the Lindsey oil refinery collapse

It was mid-April and the government had just finished nationalising British Steel, to prevent thousands of job losses at the Scunthorpe steelworks, when word reached Whitehall that another national infrastructure asset was wobbling.Prax Group, owner of the Lindsey oil refinery on the Humber estuary in northern England, was rumoured to be in financial trouble, stoking fears about jobs and disruption to critical fuel supplies.In a hastily arranged meeting at the department for energy security and net zero (DESNZ) on 13 May, well-placed sources said, a concerned Ed Miliband, the energy secretary, took solace from Prax’s owner and sole director, Winston Soosaipillai.Prax had suffered some setbacks, the seldom-seen oil boss is understood to have said, but it was not in any imminent danger and was even planning investment for the future. Within weeks, these assurances had crumbled to dust

about 11 hours ago
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Rachel Reeves needs wider headroom against fiscal rules, ex-Bank of England deputy says

The former Bank of England deputy governor Charlie Bean has urged Rachel Reeves to create much wider headroom against her fiscal rules – a decision likely to require significant tax rises or spending cuts.Bean suggested that the current slim margin of less than £10bn, had led the chancellor to “fine-tune” the government’s tax and spending plans to meet the Office for Budget Responsibility’s (OBR) forecasts five years ahead.“Government spending is about one and a quarter trillion, so £10bn is a small number … and it is a small number in the context of typical forecasting errors,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.He added: “She should aim to operate with a larger margin of headroom, so previous chancellors have typically operated with headroom of the order of £30bn.“Because she has chosen about a third of that … it is very easy for numbers to go in the wrong direction and she finds she has to neurotically fine-tune taxes to control the OBR forecast that is several years ahead

about 14 hours ago
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‘An unjust transition’? Teesside locals divided over net zero after deindustrialisation

“We’re basically going through a deindustrialisation of the country at the moment and I think we’re losing a lot of jobs,” says John Mac, over a pot of tea in a bustling Caffè Nero in the centre of Stockton-on-Tees.The local candidate for Reform UK worked for years at the Billingham plant of Imperial Chemical Industries’s (ICI), before taking voluntary redundancy in the 1990s.Having witnessed decades of industrial decline on Teesside first-hand, including the dismantling of the once-mighty industrial behemoth, Nigel Farage’s pivot to court the working class is speaking Mac’s language.The Reform leader is targeting voters in post-industrial communities across Britain, outlined in a Guardian series showing how Farage views the “next Brexit” as reversing net zero to create a manufacturing renaissance.This, the third in the series, looks at the future of another of Britain’s industrial heartlands

about 18 hours ago
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UK electric car sales up by a third in first half of 2025, preliminary data suggests

British electric car sales rose by a third in the first half of 2025 after the strongest June for overall car sales since before the Covid pandemic.The number of battery electric car sales rose 34.6% to 224,838 units in the first six months of the year, according to preliminary data from the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT), a lobby group.New car sales rose 6.8% year-on-year in June to 191,200 units, the best sales figures for the month since 2019

about 19 hours ago
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UK government ‘closely watching’ £120m legal claim against Vodafone

Ministers are closely watching a court case in which Vodafone is alleged to have “unjustly enriched” itself at the expense of franchise operators, and have raised the prospect of a regulatory crackdown on the sector.The small business minister, Gareth Thomas, has said he will “track very carefully” a £120m legal claim brought against Vodafone last year by a group of 62 of about 150 franchise operators.They allege that drastic cuts to commission rates on selling Vodafone products in the group’s high street stores caused many of them to run up huge personal debts. They say they fear for their livelihoods or homes, and some have reported suicidal thoughts.Their court filing claims the company “indiscriminately … operated to enrich Vodafone at the expense of its franchisees”

about 20 hours ago
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First-time buyers turn from rural areas to Britain’s regional cities

With the rise of home working and surging house prices in many urban areas, one might have assumed that British cities had lost some of their appeal to homebuyers over the past decade, but it turns out the opposite is the case.An analysis of the first five months of this year shows the number of would-be first-time buyers in Great Britain looking to move to cities is up by 16% on average compared with the same period in 2015.The location to record the most significant jump in first-time buyer inquiries over that period is Dundee, Scotland’s fourth-largest city and, it is said, its sunniest.Some will be surprised to learn that homebuyers’ love affair with cities has intensified, bearing in mind that the pandemic apparently prompted many to think about a new life on the coast or in the countryside.The data was crunched by the property website Rightmove, which looked at Great Britain’s 50 largest cities, excluding London, and 50 of the most popular coastal areas

1 day ago
sportSee all
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England v India: second men’s cricket Test, day three – as it happened

about 6 hours ago
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Jamie Smith’s sensational century gives England hope but India seize their moment

about 6 hours ago
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Siegemund plays Keys to perfection while Osaka is ‘upset’ by Wimbledon defeat

about 6 hours ago
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Cameron Norrie beats Bellucci to spark memories of Wimbledon semi-final run

about 6 hours ago
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Racing’s leaders lost control of narrative in Oisin Murphy drink-driving case | Greg Wood

about 6 hours ago
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Tim Mayer accuses FIA president Ben Sulayem of ‘reign of terror’ after announcing candidacy

about 6 hours ago