logo
Josh Macleod returning from injury ‘massive' for Wales

Josh Macleod returning from injury ‘massive' for Wales

Yahoo21 hours ago
Wales boss Matt Sherratt has hailed the return of Josh Macleod as 'massive' after selecting the Scarlets flanker for their Test opener in Japan.
Macleod has been plagued by Achilles and shoulder injuries in recent years and makes his first appearance since the 2022 Autumn Nations Series.
Advertisement
But the Scarlets skipper joins Taulupe Faletau and Alex Mann in the back row for Saturday's First Test in Kitakyushu, as Sherratt makes 11 changes from the side humbled 68-14 by England in the Six Nations Championship in March.
Faletau, prop Nicky Smith, centre Ben Thomas and full-back Blair Murray are the survivors from that record Cardiff defeat.
'There's a number of players who've worked their way back into the squad,' said Sherratt, who remains in interim charge after replacing Warren Gatland during the Six Nations and is seeking to end a run of 17 consecutive Test defeats for Wales.
'(It's) Something we made a big point of in the first team meeting.
Advertisement
'Josh Macleod is an obvious one. He's struggled with some injuries, had a real rollercoaster over the last three or four years, so him coming back in is massive.
'I think you could tell from the players' reaction when Liam Belcher was selected (on the bench) how much he deserves it.
'He's been in the regional game for 10 years. He's changed clubs.
'He's gone back to university to do an electrician's degree and then he's managed to work his way into the national squad. So yeah, delighted for Liam.'
The uncapped Belcher takes his place among the replacements with Sherratt having plumped for a relatively new-look pack.
Advertisement
Captain Dewi Lake returns at hooker and is joined in the front row by Smith and Keiron Assiratti.
With second-row forwards Dafydd Jenkins and Will Rowlands unavailable for various reasons, Ben Carter and Teddy Williams step into the engine room.
Interim head coach Matt Sherratt is seeking to end a run of 17 consecutive Test defeats for Wales in Japan (David Davies/PA)
The changes in the back division see recalls for wingers Josh Adams and Tom Rogers, as well as centre Johnny Williams, who last featured for Wales at the 2023 World Cup.
Kieran Hardy and Sam Costelow form a new half-back partnership, with Tomos Williams – who along with skipper Jac Morgan was selected for the British and Irish Lions tour of Australia – and Gareth Anscombe having started against England.
Advertisement
Costelow and Carter missed the Six Nations campaign through injury.
Sherratt said: 'We've had a very good build-up. We tried to give everyone a fair chance of selection.
'One of the key messages was it's going to be a 23-man job.
'So, we've tried to spread the experience out in terms of getting some experience coming off the bench.
'I think an 80-minute performance, that physical edge and making sure that we transfer training into the game is going to be the biggest thing for us.
'It's going to be humid. It's going to be hot. Japan traditionally play quite a fast brand of rugby, so us getting up to speed with that is going to be key.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Green part of five-way tie for lead in DP Tour event
Green part of five-way tie for lead in DP Tour event

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Green part of five-way tie for lead in DP Tour event

Malaysian Gavin Green is part of a five-way tie at the top of a logjammed leaderboard after the first round of the BMW International Open. Green had six birdies and a bogey in his five-under-par 67 at Golfclub Munchen Eichenried on Thursday. China's Ding Wenyi birdied four of his final five holes - to go with an eagle, another gain and two dropped shots - in his round while Dutchman Darius van Driel signed for six birdies and a bogey to reach the summit. France's Ugo Coussaud produced the round of the day with his flawless 67, while Englishman Marco Penge carded eight birdies, a dropped shot and double bogey. Five way tie for the lead 👀How it finished after the opening round in Munich 📊#BMWInternationalOpen — DP World Tour (@DPWorldTour) July 3, 2025 "This course is one that I've been looking forward to coming back to," Penge said. "Personally, I feel like for a long hitter there's quite a few big advantages. "Quite a lot of tee-shots that you can gain a lot of strokes. It's nice to be at a golf course where you can kind of let it rip a bit. And coming from last week, last week was like the polar opposite. I was really looking forward to coming here. "Getting a PGA Tour card is my biggest goal, my main goal for the season." Eighteen players are within two shots of the leading quintet, with English trio Nathan Kimsey, Richard Mansell and Jordan Smith and Scotland's Scott Jamieson leading the chasing pack at four under. The Scottish pair of Richie Ramsay and Grant Forrest head the 10-strong group at three under, however compatriot and defending champion Ewen Ferguson is at three over. Jason Scrivener, David Micheluzzi and Daniel Gale are the best of the Australian contingent, all at even par.

Wales coach explains why he's benched two of Wales' best players for must-win Japan game
Wales coach explains why he's benched two of Wales' best players for must-win Japan game

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Wales coach explains why he's benched two of Wales' best players for must-win Japan game

Matt Sherratt has explained the bold back-row call that has seen Aaron Wainwright and Tommy Reffell named on the bench for the first Test against Japan in Kitakyushu on Saturday. The pair have 84 caps between them, but Sherratt has turned to Cardiff blindside Alex Mann and Scarlets openside Josh Macleod to pack down with Taulupe Faletau in the back-row. Faletau accounts for 108 of the Welsh back-row's 115 Test caps - with it being one of the few places where Eddie Jones' inexperienced Japan boast more international appearances. Advertisement Few would have predicted a starting line-up without either Wainwright or Reffell ahead of this summer's tour. Wainwright was one of Wales' standout players in 2024, while Reffell seemed the obvious openside with Jac Morgan in Australia on Lions duty. "We wanted to reward players who had performed for their clubs," said Sherratt about naming Scarlets captain Macleod in his starting XV. "I think Josh and Johnny (Williams) have had really good seasons for the Scarlets. "Josh has had some real ups and downs in terms of injures. The last time he was in the squad was 2022. "As a Cardiff coach, I know that when he's picked, we always preview him. He's a really good player." Sign up to Inside Welsh rugby on Substack for the exclusive five-week tour diary from Japan and Australia. Advertisement Sherratt has backed Macleod to continue his fine regional form after three years away from the Welsh jersey, while Mann - who tends to empty the tank for Cardiff, sometimes quite literally - is also afforded a Test recall after falling out of favour under Gatland. Crucially though, Sherratt believes having the experience of Wainwright and Reffell on the bench should prove crucial in the final quarter. "Obviously, we've had three weeks prep," added the Wales interim coach. "So it's really a mixture of recent club form, trying to get combinations together, what we've seen in training. "It's a new coaching group. The opinion of Danny (Wilson) coming in as forwards coach. Gethin (Jenkins) is pretty familiar with a lot of the players, but not all of them, is in as defence coach. Advertisement "It's trying to let the players start on a even field and select on what we've seen. What's added to that which is a really point is trying to spread experience out. "What we wanted to do is put experienced players on the bench. The likes of Aaron Wainwright, Gareth Thomas, Tommy Reffell. "We feel conditions will be tough to start, getting used to it. To have some real quality experience off the bench will be massive. "It's not a 15 we've picked, it's a genuine 23. We feel it's going to be an 80 minute performance we need. "What I've learned at Cardiff is not to throw all your experience on at once, because between 60 to 80 is where the crucial decision-making comes in." Advertisement While Wainwright and Reffell alone have 84 caps between them, with Wales' entire bench boasting 145 international appearances, Japan's replacements have just 19. They belong to just two players, with six uncapped players on the bench for Saturday's clash. The fact Sherratt has gone for a 6-2 split, giving Wales one extra fresh forward compared to Japan, could be crucial in the Kitakyushu heat and humidity. "We know Japan start very well," added Wales captain Dewi Lake. "The first 20 minutes of the game, they've been beating some of the best teams in the world, or been within three points. "So they start well in each half. We know in the conditions as well, that's when the bench becomes massively important after 60 minutes. Advertisement "We get fresh legs on the field and it's like a second team goes on almost to finish off the game. We've seen in rugby how important those finishers have been to reignite the game and finish it off."

Gill and Jadeja broken by England after 203-run stand at Edgbaston
Gill and Jadeja broken by England after 203-run stand at Edgbaston

Associated Press

time15 hours ago

  • Associated Press

Gill and Jadeja broken by England after 203-run stand at Edgbaston

BIRMINGHAM, England (AP) — India cruised to lunch on 419-6 as Shubman Gill and Ravindra Jadeja collected easy runs against England on the second morning of the second test at Edgbaston on Thursday. The captain and Jadeja ate up ideal batting conditions — a flat pitch under sunny skies — in a partnership of 203 runs. Gill moved from 114 overnight to 168, his maiden 150-plus score. Jadeja advanced from 41 to 89 when he tried to fend off a Josh Tongue short ball that reared up. Jadeja gloved it to the wicketkeeper about 10 minutes before lunch. That wicket finally exposed India's wobbly tail and bowling allrounder Washington Sundar was with Gill on 1 at lunch. India scored 109 runs in the session in a slow 25 overs. Until Tongue's breakthrough, England didn't look like taking a wicket. The only disturbance to the serenity was very early when England complained to the umpires about Jadeja running on the pitch. Jadeja's reply was to cut and drive England captain Ben Stokes for consecutive boundaries. He reached his 50 in 80 balls, his ninth 50-plus score against England. Gill flicked, drove, pulled and punched Brydon Carse for fours, and reverse swept spinner Shoaib Bashir for another. Closer to lunch, both batters hit sixes off Bashir in the same over; Jadeja over long-on to bring up India's 400 total, and Gill a sweep. They were smiling and chuckling in the middle. But the smiles were gone moments later when Jadeja was out after a 173-ball knock including 10 boundaries and a six. Gill has 18 boundaries and the six. ___ AP cricket:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store