
Trio return for final Lions Test but ‘devastated' Garry Ringrose misses out
McCarthy, Tuipulotu and Hansen are in contention for the Sydney showdown after missing Saturday's 29-26 victory over the Wallabies that clinched the series with a game to spare.
All three have completed their rehab for their respective foot, hamstring and foot injuries and took part in Tuesday's low-key training session.
However, Ringrose has been left 'devastated' as the 12-day minimum return-to-play protocol for concussion means he will miss the entirety of a series which he entered as first choice outside centre.
The Ireland star self-reported his concussion symptoms shortly before the team for the second Test was named last Thursday, resulting in his withdrawal from the starting XV.
'Garry was playing some amazing rugby throughout this tour,' attack coach Andrew Goodman said.
'It's been a dream of his for so long to represent the Lions and he's managed to do that, but he wanted to be a Test-match Lion so it's been devastating for him.
'He's disappointed for himself, but he's getting around everyone and making sure he helps prepare everyone as much as he can.'
Andy Farrell announces his team for the third Test on Thursday and must decide to what extent he should freshen up his matchday 23 given they went toe to toe with the Wallabies for 80 gripping minutes at Melbourne Cricket Ground.
There is also the question of whether to rotate in players as reward for those who have missed out so far in the series, but Goodman has discounted this approach.
'It will be the best team available to win the series. That might look like some changes, that might look like consistency,' he said.
'You've got to reward form when guys have been playing well and are match-hardened in those Test matches. It is a balance.'
The Lions celebrated their success with friends and family for two days but have now hardened their resolve to become the first side to record a whitewash since the 1927 visit to Argentina and first side to go unbeaten in the Tests since the 1974 expedition to South Africa.
'It's huge. It's everything for us as a group to get excited about,' Goodman said.
'It was 1974 the last time a Lions team went through the Test series unbeaten, so there's huge motivation for the group.
'Andy has been massive on that since the start, his expectation not just of the players but us as management and coaches to be the most successful team.
'It has been driving us not just as players, but as a management group every day to get better every day and push each other forward.
'After two hard, physical Tests it's about getting the battery filled up and making sure we're good to go by the end of the week.'

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Wales Online
21 minutes ago
- Wales Online
What the 2029 Lions team could look like as Louis Rees-Zammit joins Jac Morgan
What the 2029 Lions team could look like as Louis Rees-Zammit joins Jac Morgan With the 2025 series now done and dusted, attention is already turning to the tour of New Zealand in four years time Morgan and Rees-Zammit could both feature for the Lions in 2029 (Image: Adam Pretty - World Rugby/World Rugby via Getty Images) The 2025 British & Irish Lions tour is done and dusted, with Andy Farrell's squad heading home from Australia as series winners. It wasn't always easy, with only a last-gasp Hugo Keenan try in the second Test separating them from a series defeat in the end, but Farrell's men still managed to win all but one of their games Down Under, becoming the first triumphant touring side since 2013. However, while the action has only just come to an end, focus is already switching to the next tour in four years' time. The scheduled 2029 tour will see the Lions head back to New Zealand, where they tied the series with the All Blacks on their last visit back in 2017. Sign up to Inside Welsh rugby on Substack to get exclusive news stories and insight from behind the scenes in Welsh rugby. Just days after the third and final Test of this year's tour in Brisbane, there is already debate over who will be involved next time around. Head coach Farrell has received backing to lead the squad again in 2029, but what about the players? Many of this year's tourists will be out of contention by the time the next tour comes around, while there is also likely to be some currently-unknown talents who will put themselves in the mix over the next four years. That said, we've had a go at predicting what the Lions team may look like come 2029, with Jac Morgan no longer the only Welsh player involved. Article continues below Of course, four years is a very long time in rugby, so this could well end up being completely wrong. However, on the off-chance that I could look like a genius, let's take a look into the crystal ball. Back three: Two past tourists and one debutant in this pacey back-three, with Kinghorn making it on to successive tours and Rees-Zammit making a return to a Lions squad eight years on from being a bolter for the 2021 tour of South Africa. Scotland star Kinghorn is a class act who added dynamism to the Lions attack Down Under, proving a threat with his pace, aerial ability and impressive boot. While he will be 32 by the time the next tour rolls around, the versatile Toulouse back has improved with age and if he can continue to follow that trajectory, he will be hard to shift from the starting side. Rees-Zammit's inclusion here may well raise a few eyebrows given his 18-month break from rugby to try to crack the NFL. But the Welshman has now announced his return and there are very few players in world rugby that can match him for athletic ability and star factor. Four years - by which time he'll be 28 - is more than enough time for him to work his way into contention for a Lions starting spot. Last year, it looked as though Cardiff-born Feyi-Waboso was destined to make it into Andy Farrell's squad for this summer's tour, but a lengthy layoff with a shoulder injury scuppered his chances. However, if he can stay injury-free, his outstanding pace and power should make him another potential starter. There are plenty of honourable mentions to be made here, however, with the likes of Mack Hansen, Freddie Steward and Henry Arundell among the names that will also be pushing to be involved. From a Welsh perspective, Blair Murray and Tom Rogers could well be in a position to challenge for a place four years down the line too. Centres: Tommy Freeman, Sione Tuipulotu While has played most of his rugby to date on the wing, Freeman admits that a more permanent transition to centre "is on the cards" for England and he will have likely become assured in the position at Test level by 2029. With impressive athleticism and a powerful carry, he is a formidable attacking option on his day and should be at his peak when the tour of New Zealand comes around. There may well be a few more question marks over Tuipulotu's involvement, but the Scotland star - who will be 32 in 2029 - is an explosive carrier with strong footwork and distribution skills and, at the moment at least, is the best option that the Lions have going into the next tour. Of course, though, four years is an awful long time in rugby and some new stars may well force their way into the conversation before the next tour. In Wales, it is hoped that the highly-rated 20-year-old Macs Page will light up the international stage in the coming years, while Mason Grady will also be entering his peak if he can stay injury-free. England's Ollie Lawrence is also very unlucky not to get the nod here, while Scotland's Tom Jordan and Ireland's Jamie Osborne are also contenders. Meanwhile, Osborne's experienced international team-mate Garry Ringrose could well be picked for successive tours at the age of 34. Half-backs: Fin Smith, Ben White Northampton Saints star Smith went straight into the Lions starting XV for the warm-up against Argentina and he is the leading contender to take the No.10 jersey on the next tour. The Englishman has already proven himself to be an assured, reliable match-winner and this tour will have been invaluable to his development. Scotland scrum-half Ben White should also be at the top of his game by the time 2029 comes around, with the likes of Jamison Gibson-Park and Tomos Williams set to be either retired or reaching the tail-end of their careers. Marcus Smith, Sam Prendergast and Jack Crowley are all likely to be in the picture at fly-half, with the former - the more experienced of the Smiths - potentially aggrieved to not be starting. Meanwhile, England duo Alex Mitchell and Jack van Poortvliet are also set to be scrum-half candidates. Front row: Asher Opoku-Fordjour, Dan Sheehan, Will Stuart Into the forwards, and there is a degree of familiarity with Sheehan and Stuart both making the cut. Ireland hooker Sheehan was a real contender for the player of the tour this summer, and is currently one of the best in the world, combining the power of a forward with a pace of a back and scoring a bucketload of tries at the same time. He could even be a candidate for captain in four years' time. Stuart, meanwhile, had a quieter tour than the Irishman but got better as the summer went on. The Bath tighthead is now the cornerstone of England's scrum and, at 33, will be a highly-experienced Test veteran by the time of the New Zealand tour. At the other end of the front row, Opoku-Fordjour is set to be one of the youngest members of the next Lions tour, having already got a flavour for it at the age of 20 after being called in to train with Farrell's squad this summer. While he currently has a solitary cap for England, the Sale man has massive potential and is a powerful scrummager who can play at both loosehead and tighthead. Honourable mentions for the props go to 2025 tourists Ellis Genge and Andrew Porter, as well as the likes of Fin Baxter, Zander Fagerson and Afolabi Fasogbon. Wales star Dewi Lake is also expected to provide competition at hooker, while Theo Dan will also be in the mix. Second row: Maro Itoje, Joe McCarthy Not much change here as the lock combination for the opening Test against the Wallabies returns to the engine room four years later. Itoje led Farrell's men admirably Down Under and while, at 34, he will be reaching the tail end of his career by the time the New Zealand tour comes around, there are few better operators in world rugby and he will be an experienced, dependable presence at the heart of the pack. His absence in the second half of the final Test against the Wallabies was very noticeable. McCarthy, meanwhile, was one of the form players this summer, before a plantar fasciitis issue robbed him of further involvement in the second and third Tests. Boasting immense physicality, he will be 28 and at the peak of his powers in New Zealand, which should make him one of the first names on the teamsheet. However, England's Ollie Chessum will also fancy his chances of making successive tours, while Wales star Dafydd Jenkins has also been tipped to push for a Lions place in four years' time. By that time, highly-rated English teenager Junior Kpoku could also be an option. Back row: Henry Pollock, Jac Morgan, Caelan Doris (capt) Another familiar feel to the back row, with Pollock and Morgan both making the cut for a second tour. While he may have been the bolter for this year's tour, Pollock would be 24 in New Zealand and, if he can keep his remarkable trajectory going, could well be one of the best back row players in the world by that time. Morgan, meanwhile, did Wales proud this summer as the nation's only representative for much of the tour following Tomos Williams' early departure. While, hopefully, the Ospreys man will not be so outnumbered in four years' time, he will likely still be the standout Welsh talent at the Lions coach's disposal and should take the starting jersey that he missed out on during this year's Test series. Finally, while it will come four years later than he would have hoped, Doris should become a Test Lion, having missed this summer's tour due to a cruel injury blow just days before Farrell named his squad. The Irish talisman was the favourite to be named captain for the tour Down Under before that setback, but will be older (31) and wiser in four years' time and should have the honour bestowed on him then. Article continues below As for honourable mentions, Tom Curry was one of the standout performers of the 2025 tour, but whether his body will be able to sustain four more years of high-level rugby remains to be seen. Ben Earl will also be right in the mix for the 2029 tour, while the very highly-rated Morgan Morse could be an outside bet if he breaks on to the international stage with Wales. Potential Lions 2029 XV: 15. Blair Kinghorn; 14. Immanuel Feyi-Waboso, 13. Tommy Freeman, 12. Sione Tuipulotu, 11. Louis Rees-Zammit; 10. Fin Smith, 9. Ben White; 1. Asher Opoku-Fordjour, 2. Dan Sheehan, 3. Will Stuart; 4. Maro Itoje, 5. Joe McCarthy; 6. Henry Pollock, 7. Jac Morgan, 8. Caelan Doris (capt) (7 x England, 3 x Scotland, 3 x Ireland, 2 x Wales)


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Henry Pollock, Dan Sheehan and five players who could shape the next British and Irish Lions tour
With a series victory secured in Australia, the British and Irish Lions hierarchy now head home to debrief the tour and begin to look ahead to their next trip to New Zealand. A number of changes to the structure of the quadrennial adventure are on the table as the Lions prepare to take on the All Blacks in 2029, a journey that will follow the inaugural women's tour to the country in two years' time. Sketching out a squad at this stage would be pure folly – so much can and will change in the next four years, while the identity of the head coach, even if Andy Farrell again, will dictate plenty. New stars will emerge in the intervening period while others will fade, though one hopes that each nation's fluctuating fortunes will come together to leave a more equal spread of representation across the squad. While any predictions of this ilk are purely speculative at this juncture, here are five players who could shape the series next time around: Caelan Doris, Ireland Let's begin with something of a forgotten man in the last seven weeks, a would-be skipper denied his first British and Irish Lions tour by the most cruelly-timed injury. Caelan Doris had established himself as both certain starter and leadership linchpin ahead of a 2025 trip where he surely would have thrived. It is a slightly strange quirk that Jack Conan has started the last six Lions Tests without ever really commanding a first-choice place at No 8 for Ireland. Having turned 33 during the trip, his time in red is surely at an end, perhaps clearing the way for another Irishman to take the shirt. Perhaps the Doris/Farrell axis will have found a way to end their nation's World Cup woe by then… Henry Pollock, England As a learning experience for a young player experiencing a quite extraordinary rise, the Lions tour felt just about perfect for Henry Pollock. The 20-year-old flashed at times, showcasing his unique blend of speed and skill in wide channels and the work as a connector and collector that earmarks him as such a special prospect. It always felt, though, a long shot that he would feature in the Tests given the depth of options available on the flanks. One would expect Pollock to be fully established at international level by the time the 2029 tour rolls around. That said, the England back row room is suddenly looking incredibly crowded – Tom Curry's standards refuse to slip, Sam Underhill was back with a bang in Argentina, Ben Curry and Ben Earl are incumbent options; Guy Pepper looks a force on the rise. Add in Tom Willis and Chandler Cunningham-South and Pollock might have a fight on his hands for autumn involvement. Dan Sheehan, Ireland One unsavoury clearout on Tom Lynagh slightly marred an otherwise exemplary trip to Australia for Dan Sheehan. The Irish hooker set the tone right from the very start Down Under, captaining and scoring inside the first two minutes of the win over the Western Force. A hooker very much in the modern mould, his lineout darts can go forgotten but he was rock solid in that area in contrast to a couple of his colleagues until the wretched conditions of the third Test. At only 26, he must have another tour or two in him. Farrell clearly rates his leadership, too, and may look to further develop that side of Sheehan's game in the run up to the 2027 World Cup after a significant recent loss of experience from his Irish squad. It is tough to see, at this stage, a challenger emerging for the Lions hooker berth but watch out for Kepu Tuipulotu down at Bath. Macs Page, Wales Probably the boldest call of this quintet but there is so much to be excited about Macs Page. In a relatively compact frame, Page packs plenty of pace and power and his capacity to play at outside centre and on the wing is valuable in an era where backline positional versatility is increasingly a must as six/two benches become more and more common. Page toured Japan with Wales this summer without making an appearance but his time will surely come after a solid season with the Scarlets. The return of Louis Rees-Zammit, who is thought to have agreed a deal with the breakaway R360 league but may still return to traditional club rugby beforehand, could complicate matters, and others including Mason Grady and Blair Murray will also be eyeing those outside back spots under new Welsh coach Steve Tandy. Of versatile backs elsewhere, the development of Jamie Dobie may be one to monitor with the Scotland scrum half increasingly deployed as a wing option. Maro Itoje, England Already assured of a rich Lions legacy for his role in three tours so far, would a return to the nation where he first made his name in the famous jersey appeal for Maro Itoje in four years' time? There is little reason why a durable and uber-consistent figure cannot make it to New Zealand in 2029 with the lock continuing to hit the high peaks of which he is capable and bedding in nicely as a captain, too. It is now eight straight Test starts for the 30-year-old after an initial outing off the bench in 2017 – surpassing Alun Wyn Jones's professional era record of nine is surely in Itoje's sights. The Saracens and England forward has spoken about a possible retirement at the age of 35, a birthday that would come mere months after a possible fourth Lions tour.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Ben Stokes hails Chris Woakes after injured hero came out to bat with one arm - as England captain admits 'bitter disappointment' at drawing series
Ben Stokes saluted the 'unbelievable' bravery of Chris Woakes for coming out to bat with his arm in a sling - despite England falling to a dramatic six-run defeat to draw the series with India. Needing 35 runs on the final day of the fifth Test to clinch a 3-1 series victory, the hosts fell agonisingly short at the Oval when Gus Atkinson was bowled by inspired India hero Mohammed Siraj. Atkinson had shared a 10-run partnership for the final wicket with Woakes, who came to the crease despite dislocating his shoulder on the first day and was in clear pain as he ran between the wickets, although he did not have to face a ball. 'It was unbelievable, but it was never going to be a question for him to go out there,' said England captain Stokes, who missed the match with his own shoulder injury. 'He was in a lot of discomfort running between the wickets, but he went out there to try and get his team over the line with a dislocated shoulder. 'Coming off there, I said, 'Great effort', and he just shrugged his shoulder and was like, 'I wouldn't have done anything else'. It shows what it means to play for your country and to fight to win games.' Asked whether the Woakes situation showed that injury substitutes are needed in Test cricket, Stokes replied: 'I don't see it being a thing. If someone gets injured, tough s***. Deal with it.' Woakes was also praised by his victorious opponents, as India captain Shubman Gill added: 'He was very, very brave. I didn't expect him to come out like that, batting with one hand, the other in the sweater. But good on him for showing that courage.' England had looked set to complete their second-highest successful run chase of 374 when they raced to 301 for three on Sunday, with Harry Brook and Joe Root both hitting centuries. But they lost their final seven wickets for 66 runs, with Jamie Smith, Jamie Overton, Josh Tongue and Atkinson falling yesterday morning at a packed-out Oval. Man of the match Siraj, who took three of the final four wickets to finish with five for 104, said: 'When I woke up today, I thought I could do it. I downloaded a picture from Google saying, 'Believe'. I feel amazing.' Stokes added: 'I'm bitterly disappointed we couldn't get over the line here, but I'm incredibly proud of my team and everything they've thrown into it. We would have loved to come away with the series win, but it wasn't meant to be. From a cricket fan's point of view, 2-2 is probably fair. 'Myself being a massive advocate of the game of Test cricket, this series has been an unbelievable advert for it across the world. All the doubters saying it's dying a death, this series has said the opposite.' Stokes conceded that dropping six catches in India's second innings 'cost' England, while Brook bemoaned the extravagant shot which brought his downfall on Sunday. 'I wish I didn't play that shot, but at the time I was very confident,' admitted England's player of the series. 'If I got a quick 30 over the next two overs, then the game is done. I always try and take the game on. Obviously, I wish I was there at the end, but you can't write those things.' England coach Brendan McCullum added: 'It has been one of the all-time best Test matches. We are disappointed, but at the same time we have had a hell of a series.'