No Mack, Kiwi-esque 10: An IRISH and British Lions team to smack Wallabies - and the doctrine Farrell must follow

By Harry Jones / Expert

The 2025 Lions will tour Australia as the Irish and British Lions.

Surely half of Andy Farrell’s selections will be green.

The final cuts will hurt the most, but Farrell is surely not going to repeat Warren Gatland’s errors in South Africa (a lack of proven Test specialists at seven and thirteen).

No arbitrary cap exists on the size of his squad; he can load up on Wallaby beaters.

The most successful team in beating Australia is New Zealand, a side Farrell is well-acquainted with: when the Bledisloe is all blackest the longest, the Kiwi edge is sharpest in the halves, strongest in the tight five, better in the loose and most heartbreaking on the counterattack from the very back.

The Lions should embrace these age old doctrines in their choices.

The Wallabies look dejected after losing the winner takes all third Test against the British & Irish Lions at ANZ Stadium on July 6, 2013 in Sydney. (Photo by Scott Barbour/Getty Images)

Back in the late Seventies in the leafy southern suburbs of the Cape, a few sharp and useless types (and I) were roaming with bamboo sticks, barefoot and sweatered in the rain in the bush by a chutney factory on Main Road when we found an abandoned shed and in that decayed shed: an inoperable two-door Triumph Toledo a few cc’s short of 1300 and half a tree impaling the small roof.

We brought the car to life with scavenged parts, siphoned petrol, an axe, Meneer Leibbrandt’s commandeered welding torch and an ingenious modification: we turned the Holy Toledo into a convertible. If the doors would not open, we dispensed with most of the top.

Our most difficult engineering problem was the failure of first and third gears, and the resultant flooding as we gunned it to begin.

Finally, in order to have this car be our mode of transport to the beach, and become the 11 and 12-year old kings of Muizenberg Beach, windows punched out, nodding at the girls as we lurched from second to fourth and back, stalling on Boyes Drive, our back door to the beach to avoid the cops, we had to decide: who drives it.

Selection of a Lions team is not about finding a lock or a scrum or speed or a skilled operator. Talent in droves awaits the coaches; the key is to know who can slip a gear, be the boss, and hit the ground running.

If the Lions were a car, a 1971 Triumph blow torched by feral adolescents might well be the brand.

The last tour was dull and relatively unsuccessful when viewed in retrospect (pandemic and Rassiegate aside); this time, a deeper danger looms. If the Lions cannot beat the woebegone Wallabies next year, who the hell can they beat?

The home team has about a dozen Tests to resurrect fortunes, has no coach, is drawing from only one successful club team and four strugglers, with a couple dozen top players abroad.

Andy Farrell must back his Irish chargers in 2025 to beat the Wallabies. (Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images)

Farrell does not appear to be a man cursed with overconfidence. He will approach his final team sheet with care and will not allow an unknown Scottish outside centre to displace a Leinsterman he knows full well.

A fool’s errand: I select a 39-man Lions squad for Farrell to consider: impeccable in the set piece, merciless in the collision zone, legally rough at breakdown, quick to reload, excellent at finishing, expert in the red zone, immune to high ball high jinks, and ready to defend all eighty all over.

Loose-head prop:

Ireland’s angry Andrew Porter can attract a referee’s whistle at times, but would be fancied to give the likes of Taniela Tupou or Alan Alaalatoa a proper examination. In the loose, he is improving, as is his understudy, the JockBok Pierre Schoeman, whose new shaved head makes him look even more menacing. Ellis Genge fans will cry heresy, but I would have stout Welshman Gareth Thomas as the third choice prop on the left side.

Hooker:

The Irish starting front row continues with athletic Dan Sheehan, who is reminiscent of Kiwi hookers in the open field, but I would bring rotund Jamie George in for the late Test lineouts. He is like an aging PGA golfer who still reads the greens best, and is a proper scrum master to feed on the Wallaby replacements. The best impression of a Dane Coles might be George Turner of Scotland, and with two Scots in the first two positions, I am a bit alarmed.

Tight-head:

Tadgh Furlong may not be setting records for passes out the back anymore, but he is still the best prop in Ireland or Britain. He is also just the right dimension to counter big Angus Bell and split him from his hooker. Backing the Leinsterman should be one of Zander Fagerson or the tall Leicester Tiger Joe Heyes. Heyes might be a surprise for some but he is entering his prime.

Tadhg Furlong is favoured to start for the British and Irish Lions against the Wallabies. (Photo By Ashley Vlotman/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Lock:

Who should bolster the Irish front row in the first hour? Who will finish? Who are the swing 5.5 locks who can shift to or from the blindside; a vital feature of the modern game and with Australia underpowered and outmanned, a potential decider.

The Tiger tandem of hard George Martin and rangy Ollie Chessum are perhaps my most controversial inclusions but have been the form second row of the Premiership this season; both excelled in the Rugby World Cup, too. However, the more seasoned claims of defensive maestro Maro Itoje, long lineout lion Richie Gray, and Irish firebrand James Ryan would likely keep one or both to an RG Snyman-like bomb squad role. But a year can be a long time for big fellows. Locks are hard to keep healthy; I’d take big Will Rowlands as insurance and lineout caller for the club matches.

Together with the switch sixes named below, this would be a Barrett-Brodie-Sam-Frizzell or Eben-Lood-RG-PSDT attack on the Wallaby pack.

Blind-side:

English legend Courtney Lawes does not look retired, resigned, or relaxed. He is a man on a mission, pulling the Saints to the top. But I would start Tadgh Beirne here, bringing the starting Irish quotient in the pack to either four or five so far.
Young captain Jac Morgan can play any loose position, and might lead the team versus the Waratahs or Rebels.

Courtney Lawes (L) and Maro Itoje (M) could well feature for the Lions against the Wallabies in 2025. (Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images)

Open-side:

The Lions have three genuine on-the-ball practitioners in former World Player of the Year Josh van der Flier, the still-young Tom Curry, and pesky Tommy Reffell. The best pilfer or slow to ping ratio merchant is the Dutch Disciple. Winning a series in Australia usually comes down to the breakdown or set piece. Having a fresh fetcher on the pitch at all times is crucial.

No. 8:

Caelan Doris has quietly surpassed van der Flier in the Irish team. Now, he is one of the best handful of eighth men in the world. Ben Earl will be a capable backup on fast pitches. As many as seven Irish start up front.

Scrum-half:

This is one of the simplest positions to staff: quick ball is the coin of the realm. Beating Australia starts and ends with less than three second rucks. Quick thinking Jamison Gibson-Park and the rising Alex Mitchell could vie for top spot. Both bring speed and precision. Ben White of Scotland would be a fine third stringer with his zippy pass and excellent mechanics.

Fly-half:

Returning to our theory of Kiwiness, the North has one player in particular who evokes a New Zealand string puller. Unless one of Johnny Sexton’s successors find their way in time, it should be the almighty Finn Russell leading things at ten. It is no coincidence that Bath is finally living up to the hype: the canny playmaker thrives on the big moments.

On the bench, two wee Englishmen (but not the coach’s son) are ready to come in early or late: Marcus Smith or George Ford. A chaser or a manager, depending on the game, and both certified goal kickers with ability to play 15.

Scottish playmaker Finn Russell is the right man to sink the Wallabies. (Photo by Stu Forster/Getty Images)

Midfield:

Bundee Aki will have old scores to settle, and if he get his body height right from now till the tour, there is little holding him back.

Garry Ringrose surely will be given every consideration, because he links so well with Ali and most wings, yet knows when to put his head down and run downhill.

Evergreen Eliot Daly and his big silky boot has the value of deep experience and rarely lets his teams down in the crucial Tests, but if targeted by Wallaby wings coming in off the edge, he may lack top end agility.

In an Aussie twist, granite Sione Tuipolotu (but not Huw Jones) makes the squad.

Wings:

To chase, cover, and finish, the trio of fiery James Lowe, the Afrikaner Android Duhan van der Merwe, and quicksilver Louis Rees-Zammit can cover the bases, with Daly as backup. This is one area where Australia could have the advantage over one wing at least, and this is why I’ve opted not to name Mack Hansen, who I believe might feel daunted by the homecoming.

Duhan van der Merwe featured for the British and Irish Lions against the Springboks at Cape Town Stadium. (Photo By Ashley Vlotman/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Fullbacks:

The most consistently excellent fullback in rugby over the last few years is the quiet man, the unassuming Hugo Keenan, who would not be profiled in street clothes as a player; perhaps a ref.

He would cover the corners and return fire, setting up strike runners like Duhan and Ringrose.

Bomb defuser Freddie Steward is a tool needed if the series turns turgid.

As a utility player, fullback Blair Kinghorn is sure to have grown an arm and a leg by next year.

A likely game day squad (with a 6-2 bench) to drive to triumph over the unsettled Wallabies:

1. Porter (Ireland)
2. Sheehan (Ireland)
3. Furlong (Ireland)
4. Gray (Scotland)
5. Itoje (England)
6. Beirne (Ireland)
7. Van der Flier (Ireland)
8. Doris (Ireland)
9. Gibson-Park (Ireland)
10. Russell (Scotland)
11. Lowe (Ireland)
12. Aki (Ireland)
13. Ringrose (Ireland)
14. Van der Merwe (Scotland)
15. Keenan (Ireland)

Reserves

16. George (England)
17. Schoeman (Scotland)
18. Fagerson (Scotland)
19. Martin (England)
20. Lawes (England)
21. Curry (England)
22. Mitchell (England)
23. Smith (England)

Fast enough, clever too, and rough up front. The recipe, and at the moment, very Irish.

The Crowd Says:

2024-02-16T02:31:32+00:00

BBR

Roar Rookie


Really? Is that how you view him? I think the first thing I noticed was how powerful he was. Big lad.

2024-01-18T09:07:53+00:00

HenryHoneyBalls

Roar Rookie


2022, the six nations before last in Paris, Carbery played 10. Also Sexton was missing in the Ireland v France fixture in 2021, Billy Burns started and Ireland lost by 2 points.

2024-01-18T00:29:43+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


There are no ABs in Japan. Just EX ABs Brendan

2024-01-18T00:28:30+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


Fiwi if it was in the UK they would sell 80k to each test. In NZ they will get 20k. I believe holding it in NZ is dumb but having it at all is dumber. The mens Lions tours are fast becoming a total farce and we are already questioning the value of them. Why start a tradition no one wants?

2024-01-18T00:26:38+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


They should tell WR to stick the tour up their clackers. There is no benifit to NZR and unless WR is covering the losses Id ignore the requests. Get the womens Lions to tour SA. They are so strong arnt they? Dont they select all their players from OS? Womens rugby loses money.

2024-01-18T00:24:31+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


Its up to your union to stop this 20mth playing BS. Very bad for players and does nothing for winning tests. Very dumb of the UK to play so much and its clear from recent statements that players feel faking injury is the only way to get a rest.

2024-01-18T00:23:05+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


WHAT!!!!!!!!!! The Test players DIDNT PLAY in the widweek games so its clear it NOIT written in any BS agreement you are trying to fabricate. Even the Maori ABs were withdrawn from SR teams. What rubbish about the tours down under. You have absolutely no idea about results being different if certain players went on tour.

2024-01-18T00:19:39+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


English do find most things difficult FB. I see no reason to believe you are any different. It gets very emotional for you I guess. Name one time NZ toured the UK where they left a lot of players at home tom"rest" from test rugby and you will clearly find England rugby are very arrogant. And no good lol.

2024-01-18T00:17:25+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


That exact example shows how pathetic the world game currently is then doesnt it. Let the NH sides come down under and lose when the league starts and they will very soon find themselves at 7 and below in rankings. Come wc time that will hurt them

2024-01-17T21:07:57+00:00

fiwiboy7042

Roar Rookie


Well, NZ are world champs -- again. And there is talk of bringing in FPC sides. Worth giving the women an old-fashioned tour to see how it goes. And NZ may yet surprise you with their crowds. WXV lacks the legacy of a Lion's tour.

2024-01-17T17:28:12+00:00

Olly

Roar Rookie


Fiji = too many injuries :laughing:. I think we will have to wait and see with the Lions. A few players hitting that injury prone, slowing down age stage of their career.

2024-01-17T15:23:06+00:00

Busted Fullback

Roar Rookie


All true… but still hopeful. :thumbup:

2024-01-17T14:50:03+00:00

Brendan NH Fan

Roar Rookie


I think that Farrell will go with combinations in the early rounds. Some players have played together at club level, others at test level and others with the Lions. 2017 of the 7 warm up games the Lions won 4, drew 1, and lost 2 one by 1pt. 2021 was not close as all. Squad will be together for about 2 weeks before the Argentina game which is a week before the Force game. Queensland lost by 10 points and the Brumbies won 14-12 in the midweek before the the first test. Rebels, Tahs and Force lost by a combined 117pts (average of 39 per game). Its been a long time since the Lions didn't win the majority of their mid week games. Even in 2001 at the peak of Oz SR strength the three teams all lost.

2024-01-17T14:02:36+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


For many years, now, the team that has been at or near the top of the kicking stats has been...............the ABs.

2024-01-17T13:59:32+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


I think you might need a new calendar or a concept of history, Jacko. :happy:

2024-01-17T13:58:16+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


You're right, james. We must be more like the Aussies, Kiwis and Saffas, who seem to spend all their waking hours trying to work out how they can pump more money into the coffers at Twickenham.

2024-01-17T13:55:07+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


I don't now whether you've been in a cave for the last decade or so, but it's been a long time since NH teams sent deliberately 'weakened' teams down to the SH (other than because of extensive injury lists at the end of long seasons). France had a weakened team in Oz in 2022 because the playoffs in the French league hadn't completed. England will send a strong squad to NZ, although what state they'll be in and how many injured after virtually 20 months of non-stop rugby is anyone's guess.

2024-01-17T13:50:22+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


I always love it when an AB fan plays the 'arrogance' card about England. It's difficult to know whether to laugh or cry.

2024-01-17T13:39:43+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


I agree Brendan. I'm just not entirely convinced, as an England fan, that pouring money into the coffers of NZR and RA is an adequate justification for screwing up the international season for England every four years. Can you imagine if the boot was on the other foot? The Kiwis whine incessantly because the English RFU don't give them half the profits from the Twickenham internationals that are part of the international calendar and under which there's a global agreement.

2024-01-17T13:35:48+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


Come back to me when you finish whining about 1995 and 2007. :happy:

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