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Optimistic Joe Schmidt 'desperate to keep the series alive'

Optimistic Joe Schmidt 'desperate to keep the series alive'

RTÉ News​5 hours ago
The British and Irish Lions may have looked a level above Australia in Saturday's first Test in Brisbane, but Joe Schmidt cut an optimistic figure at Suncorp Stadium.
The Wallabies had been outclassed by the Lions who raced into a 24-5 lead after just over 40 minutes in Brisbane, and while the Wallabies put some respect on the scoreboard with second half tries from Carlo Tizzano and Tate McDermott, it was never enough to set up a dramatic finale.
Twelve years ago the Wallabies were in similar place when they lost the opening Test – albeit in more dramatic circumstances – before responding in Melbourne to set up a series decider in Melbourne.
It's 28-years since the Lions last went into a final Test with the series secure in their favour, and the Australia head coach says he saw enough from his side in that final quarter to suggest they can still make this series the "celebration of rugby" it deserves to be.
"I honestly thought the players' efforts tonight showed a desperation," Schmidt said after his side's 27-19 defeat.
"A desperation that they are so committed to playing for their country, that they are desperate to compete at all the contest areas in the game.
"We've got to keep learning fast and hit the ground running next week. Otherwise, it becomes a dead-rubber in Sydney.
"I felt we're desperate today, but inevitably you're desperate to keep the series alive. I know that the Lions will want to close that out in Melbourne. I think Melbourne is going to be massive for both teams."
Ahead of Saturday's first Test, the former Ireland and Leinster coach referenced the Wallabies fight for attention in the vast Australian sporting landscape, admitting that in the past his side probably haven't done enough to earn the support of their fans.
And with plenty of tickets yet to be shifted for Saturday's second Test at the iconic, 100,000 capacity Melbourne Cricket Ground, Schmidt (below) believes his players are starting to win people over again.
"One thing I do feel that we earned today is we probably earned some support and we got some fantastic support. I think people who came along to support the Wallabies today, they could go away feeling that they may not quite have been good enough, but they didn't lack for effort and they showed real character to climb their way back into the game.
"I know it's a cliche, but you can't coach character. You live and die by the effort you make to contribute to the team. I just felt guys kept getting up and contributing.
"It's tough against the quality they've got and some of the momentum they've built. I thought we stayed in the fight."
The New Zealander admitted his side were physically dominated by the Lions pack in the opening half, but declared influential pair Will Skelton (below) and Rob Valetini fit for the MCG next week.
The Lions, meanwhile, will be sweating on the fitness of second row Joe McCarthy, who departed early in the second half with a flare-up of plantar fasciitis.
And Schmidt believes his side can close the gap in physicality within a week.
"Rob's fit, Will Skelton's fit. They both trained really well this morning
"We didn't know if that was going to be close enough to game time or not and so we worked on the premise that we're excited about Nick Champion de Crespigny stepping in.
"I think Nick Frost and Jeremy Williams, they served us really well last year and they're both, in terms of lock stocks, they're both young men, you know, mid-20s. They've got their best locking days ahead of them and so every time they get an opportunity in a Test arena like this, where the pressure is what it is, that's a growth opportunity for them.
"We'll definitely take our learnings from that first half. I think they were definitely winning that physical battle early around the breakdown and we'll have to take some lessons from there.
"We'll definitely take some confidence from that second half and look to what we did there and how we can do that next game. It definitely was a game of two halves there, we take a lot of confidence from that second half."
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‘Made him bow' – Incredible new footage of Usyk's stunning KO of Dubois leaves boxing fans stunned
‘Made him bow' – Incredible new footage of Usyk's stunning KO of Dubois leaves boxing fans stunned

The Irish Sun

time23 minutes ago

  • The Irish Sun

‘Made him bow' – Incredible new footage of Usyk's stunning KO of Dubois leaves boxing fans stunned

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Andy Farrell adds note of caution as Lions arrive in Melbourne for second Test
Andy Farrell adds note of caution as Lions arrive in Melbourne for second Test

Irish Times

time26 minutes ago

  • Irish Times

Andy Farrell adds note of caution as Lions arrive in Melbourne for second Test

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Photograph: Billy Stickland/Inpho If Brisbane is something of a lucky charm for the Lions – last Saturday was their ninth win out of nine Tests against the Wallabies going back to 1899 – then less so Melbourne, where they have lost on both previous visits, in 2001 and 2013. What's more, on both occasions Australia levelled the series after losing the first Test in Brisbane. Those who ignore the lessons of history are apt to repeat them and, of course, Farrell was an assistant coach on that 2013 tour, which remains the only Lions series win since 1997. Andy Farrell said that the Lions would take encouragement from their performance last Saturday, before adding: 'But at the same time we know what is coming and we know what happened in the second half and how much more there is in us. 'So we roll on to the second game knowing full well what happened in 2013 when an Australia team becomes desperate, it is difficult to handle so we expect a different game next week. But having said that we expect more of ourselves as well.' The Lions' fans appeared to outnumber those clad in gold by about three to two in the 52,000-plus crowd in Suncorp Stadium, but that imbalance in favour of the tourists is likely to be redressed next Saturday. The attendance at the 100,000-capacity MCG is expected to be above 90,000, if a little shy, as things stand, of the record attendance of 95,000 for a Lions match for the first Test against South Africa in Johannesburg in 1955, when the Lions drew the series 2-2. This is going to be huge.

Fury wants third fight with Usyk, Pacquiao draws on comeback
Fury wants third fight with Usyk, Pacquiao draws on comeback

Irish Examiner

timean hour ago

  • Irish Examiner

Fury wants third fight with Usyk, Pacquiao draws on comeback

TYSON Fury has thrown his hat in the ring to fight new undisputed world heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk for a third time. Former WBC-belt holder Fury was at BOXPARK Wembley on Saturday but did not stick around to watch Usyk dismantle fellow British boxer Daniel Dubois in scintillating fashion at the national stadium. Usyk's brutal fifth-round stoppage of Dubois made him undisputed world heavyweight champion for a second time after he initially won all the belts against Fury last May in Riyadh before he was forced to vacate his IBF title. Fury went into retirement after he tasted a second defeat to Usyk on a split decision last December but signalled his intentions to return earlier this month and served notice to the undefeated Ukrainian in the early hours of Sunday morning. During a video of Fury on a run on his Instagram, the 36-year-old 'Gypsy King' said: "Massive shout out to Oleksandr Usyk. He did a fantastic performance tonight over Daniel Dubois, a good, young, game lad who came for a good tear, so congratulations to both men but Oleksandr Usyk knows there is only one man who can beat him. "I did it twice before and the world knows it. I have been f***** good and proper. I took it like a man and here is me, not f****** around at some boxing match, I am out on the road running. "I am running tonight. I came home, I did my job and I got myself back and I am the man. I am the f****** spartan and no matter what anyone wants to say, I won those fights. Guaranteed, 100 per cent. There is only one man. GK (Gypsy King) all day every day. Get up!" Queensberry chief Frank Warren, Fury's promoter, acknowledged a third fight with Usyk would be "big" but reiterated WBO mandatory Joseph Parker is next in line. "Tyson has made it very clear to me he would love to fight at Wembley and would love do that fight. And it would be a big fight, I am quite sure of it," Warren admitted. "As a fan, I would like to see the Joe Parker fight. Joe deserves it, he is on a run himself similar to what Daniel was on and that is the fight that has been ordered. "One way or another it will either happen or Joe will fight for the vacant title." Usyk floored Dubois in the fifth round of a thrilling contest at Wembley Stadium on Saturday to once again become the undisputed heavyweight boxing world champion. The win saw Usyk retain his WBC, WBA and WBO belts and reclaim the IBF belt he vacated last year before a rematch with Fury, with Dubois upgraded to champion and then defending the title against Anthony Joshua last September. Usyk's skill was evident from the outset as he sidestepped everything thrown his way with deceptive ease and connected repeatedly with his jab, putting on a masterclass in counter-punching against an opponent 11 years younger than him. Usyk said: "38 is a young guy, remember! 38 is only (the) start! I want to say thank you to Jesus Christ. I want to say thank you to my team and Wembley, thank you so much! It's for the people. Nothing is next. It's enough, next, I don't know. I want to rest. My family, my wife, my children, I want to rest now. Two or three months, I want to just rest." Usyk, who improved his professional record to 24-0, is now a three-time undisputed champion, twice in the heavyweight division and once as a cruiserweight. Despite weighing in at a career-heaviest 227.3 pounds, Usyk floated around the ring with an almost balletic grace and prevented Dubois from making the most of his superior size. The Ukrainian comfortably outclassed his opponent in three of the first four rounds, but most of the damage was dealt out in a brutal fifth-round beatdown. The Ukrainian sent his opponent to the canvas with an overhand right, before a booming left hand right on the chin dashed Dubois' dreams and brought an end to the bout. Meanwhile, Manny Pacquiao's bid to become the oldest welterweight champion in boxing history fell short Saturday night as he failed to beat Mario Barrios at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. But he didn't lose, either. Instead, the 46-year-old Pacquiao and the 30-year-old Barrios fought to a majority draw, with one judge giving Barrios a 115-113 win and the other two judges scoring it a 114-114 draw. The result allowed Barrios (29-2-2, 18 KOs) to retain his WBC welterweight belt. "I thought I won the fight," Pacquiao said afterward. "I mean, it was a close fight. My opponent was very tough. It was a wonderful fight. It was good." Pacquiao (62-8-3, 39 KOs) already holds the record for oldest welterweight champion, winning the belt via split-decision over Keith Thurman in 2019. The Filipino legend was enshrined into the International Boxing Hall of Fame last month. Pacquiao dominated Saturday's fight early on, showing energy against his younger foe. Ultimately, though, CompuBox stats had Barrios landing more punches (120-101) and more jabs (45-20), though Pacquiao landed 81 power punches to Barrios' 75. Pacquiao held the lead on all three cards after 10 rounds, but Barrios took all three rounds on all three scorecards to avoid the upset. Age and stamina were definitely on Pacquiao's mind after the fight. "I need to continue my training for longer going into a championship fight," said Pacquiao, who lost his senatorial bid in the Philippines in May. "Because of the election, I started late, but it's OK. Of course I'd like a rematch. I want to leave a legacy and make the Filipino people proud." Don't tell that to Barrios. "His stamina is crazy," the champion said. "He's still strong as hell and his timing is real. He's still a very awkward fighter to try to figure out." As for a rematch, Barrios is ready. "I'll do the rematch. Absolutely. This was huge for boxing. I'd love to do it again." Reuters

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