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Joe McCarthy stars as Lions hammer Western Force in Perth

Joe McCarthy stars as Lions hammer Western Force in Perth

RTÉ News​a day ago

The British and Irish Lions claimed their first victory on Australian soil by overwhelming Western Force 54-7, but a possible injury crisis is brewing at scrum-half after Tomos Williams was forced off.
Williams was among the Lions' star performers at Optus Stadium but his match was over when he injured his left hamstring during the act of finishing his second try in the 47th minute.
The Wales half-back limped from the pitch to leave the Lions sweating on his fitness given Jamison Gibson-Park has yet to play on tour because of a glute problem, potentially leaving Alex Mitchell as the only available option in the position.
It was the biggest disappointment of a mixed evening for Andy Farrell's men, who bounced back from their 28-24 defeat by Argentina with an eight-try demolition of the weakest of Australia's Super Rugby franchises while exposing areas of concern.
The lack of cohesion in defence continued and the scrum took a step backwards after excelling against the Pumas as part of a shaky overall set-piece performance, but their passes stuck in attack and they created some classy tries.
Ireland lock Joe McCarthy turned in a Man of the Match display, strengtening his claims to Test selection against the Wallabies, while his Leinster teammate James Lowe also impressed on the wing. Northampton's Henry Pollock again caught the eye, while out-half Finn Russell produced an inventive first outing on tour.
Russell's fingerprints were over Dan Sheehan's fourth-minute try with his pinpoint kick to Lowe making the score possible, but the Force hit back with their first attack of the match when Nic White wriggled over.
All the early pressure was coming from the hosts but they were turned over three times when in commanding positions, one of them occurring when man-of-the-match McCarthy pinched lineout ball.
The Force were showing plenty of endeavour but the Lions' extra class was evident in the 16th minute when Pollock combined with Josh van der Flier, raced clear and then passed out of the tackle for Williams to score.
And their accuracy was on display again in the 36th minute when Russell ran a quickly taken free-kick with Pollock and Elliot Daly in support and when he was stopped just short of the line, Daly was able to touch down.
Pollock provocatively celebrated the try close to Force openside Nick Champion de Crespigny, igniting a flashpoint that drew in a large number of players.
The England back row was then sin-binned, although his yellow card was the result of Ben O'Keeffe running out of patience with the number of Lions infringements.
Pollock had yet to rejoin play when the Lions struck again early in the second half with wings Mack Hansen and Lowe involved in a counter attack that ended with Williams diving over in the corner for his fateful finish.
Just 10 minutes after the interval and the Force defence was already tiring, allowing the tourists to force an easy open with Hansen supplying Garry Ringrose with the scoring pass.
Back on the field, Pollock pounced on a loose ball to launch a counter that ended with McCarthy crossing and the gaps continued to appear with Marcus Smith, on for Russell at fly-half, sending Daly over before Alex Mitchell landed the final blow.

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‘It feels like a level up' – Joe McCarthy's all-action display puts him in the Lions Test match box seat
‘It feels like a level up' – Joe McCarthy's all-action display puts him in the Lions Test match box seat

Irish Independent

timean hour ago

  • Irish Independent

‘It feels like a level up' – Joe McCarthy's all-action display puts him in the Lions Test match box seat

The second-row's trademark mullet means he fits right in Down Under and he looked as comfortable as he has done in some time as he thundered around the Optus Stadium, skittling blue jerseys as he went. It was a tour de force from the Blackrock second-row, who made two linebreaks and a total 34m across 15 carries and scored a try off the back of Henry Pollock's brilliant chip and chase. He threw 11 passes including one in the build up that got the Lions moving for Tomos Williams' try that broke the game open in the second half, with two offloads in the mix as well. Up against retiring former Wallaby Sam Carter and current squad member and enforcer Darcy Swain in the Force second-row, he was a nuisance in contact, turning over a Western Force maul at a crucial stage in the first half, making two dominant tackles and 18 in total in a high work-rate outing. He was busy in the lineout, taking five throws and the local broadcast team that included former Wallaby second row Justin Harrison and Michael Hooper raved about his performance, awarding him the man of the match award. On a night when the Lions' discipline was highlighted by their coach, McCarthy coughed up just the one penalty. Afterwards, his bruised face bore the hallmarks of a tough night's work but there was a lightness about the way he spoke that was light years away from his 'everybody loves to hate Leinster' line from a few weeks ago. Between the URC title win and a change of scenery, McCarthy looks unburdened and that is a dangerous prospect for the Australians. 'It's such an exciting team to play with – all the players are awesome so you get such a buzz playing with them,' he said. 'I loved it. Once I came in for the first session, the standard of training was so high and I just thought, 'Jeez, I'm going to get so much better, being in this environment.' I just ripped into it. 'It does feel weird [to call yourself a Lion]. It's very, very cool. ADVERTISEMENT 'The atmosphere was class and it's only going to get better. Maybe not all the Lions fans made it to the first game in Western Australia but there were still a lot of red jerseys out there which was cool and there was a good buzz out there. 'It was fun to get a bit of space and get my hands free as well. That's kind of how the Aussies play so that was a bit of a taster today. They look for offloads and linebreaks. It was good to play in a fast-paced game with a lot of offloads.' McCarthy reckons the Lions is going to bring the best out of him. 'It's hard to put your finger on it, sometimes things just happen for you,' he said. 'But you might prepare super well for a game and things don't happen for you. I don't know. 'Especially here, it feels like a level up. There are people here doing everything for you so you try to lean into that, with the medics and the nutritionists. I try to lean on the support staff we have. 'I was nervous and on edge a bit this week about playing well, but I'm probably at my best when I feel like my back's against the wall a little bit.' It helps that McCarthy and his Ireland teammates know the coach and what he wants. Andy Farrell was visibly animated at half time in the dressing-room and he got the required response from the team after the restart. 'Andy was pretty calm, generally, but he's good at getting the boys up,' McCarthy said. 'We started really fast but then we let them off the hook a bit with a few penalties. They were still in the game at half-time but then we kicked on a bit. He got us going a bit – he's really good with the emotion for getting you up. No matter how many games you play for him, he finds a way to do it and we were better for it in the second half.' 'He wants us to be super physical, on the edge, but he tells us, 'Don't be desperate, don't force things – earn the right to get off the line, make tackles and make turnovers.'' This could be a big couple of weeks for the McCarthy family with Joe's younger brother Paddy in the Ireland squad for their tour of Georgia and Portugal. He'll then travel out with brother Andrew and parents Joe and Paula in time for the Test series where their boy is set to have a big impact. 'I can't wait for that. They're going to come out for the last three weeks, to watch the last four games,' McCarthy said. 'If Paddy's playing my family will travel out to Tbilisi. They'll enjoy that. He was delighted that he made the summer tour and it meant that he could fly to Australia as well. I'm sure he'll bring his boots with him! 'It's huge. I'd love to see him make his Ireland debut – that would be special.' If he keeps going the way he's going, they'll get bang for their buck and in the meantime he's fully invested in getting the most out of this experience. His role away from rugby is to come up with the Lions' 'thought of the day' with Northampton Saints winger Tommy Freeman. Yesterday, they told the squad that 'Today is the oldest you ever have been and the youngest you ever will be'. McCarthy certainly looked like he's taking an approach that will see him seize his day as a Lion.

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The Briton's third victory of the season cut Australian Piastri's Formula One lead from 22 to 15 points after 11 of 24 rounds, with the two McLaren drivers locked in an increasingly private title battle. Charles Leclerc completed the podium for Ferrari with teammate Lewis Hamilton fourth and George Russell, last year's winner in Austria, fifth for Mercedes. Red Bull's four-times world champion Max Verstappen suffered his first retirement of the season, in his team's home race, after a first-lap collision with Mercedes's Italian rookie Kimi Antonelli. The Dutch driver stayed third overall but is now 61 points behind Piastri. "Tricky, hot, tiring," said Norris after stepping out of the car at the finish of the 70-lap race on a sweltering Sunday. "A lot of stress but a lot of fun. A nice battle, so well done to Oscar. "Hopefully it was a nice one for everyone to watch but inside the car it was tough, especially when he was in DRS [drag reduction range]." Piastri, who seized second place from Leclerc after an aborted first start, set the fastest lap of the race. He took the lead momentarily on lap 11 in an intense battle but Norris grabbed it straight back in a duel that risked a repeat of the collision between the pair at the previous race in Canada. Norris caused that one, and came away empty-handed, but this time it was Piastri who had the McLaren bosses shifting uneasily on the pitwall when he locked up with a puff of smoke on lap 20 while seeking to sneak through on the inside. New Zealander Liam Lawson took a career-best finish in sixth for Racing Bulls with Fernando Alonso seventh for Aston Martin -- the Spaniard finishing ahead of the Brazilian rookie he manages, Sauber's Gabriel Bortoleto. The points were Bortoleto's first in F1 and to make it even sweeter Sauber took a double points finish, with Nico Hulkenberg finishing ninth. Hulkenberg was the first Sauber driver since Valtteri Bottas in 2022 to score in three races in a row. Esteban Ocon took the final point for Haas. McLaren are 207 points clear of Ferrari, who moved back up to second in the absence of team boss Fred Vasseur who had to return home for personal reasons, in the constructors' championship.

Lando Norris triumphs in Austria to cut Oscar Piastri's advantage in title race
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Lando Norris triumphs in Austria to cut Oscar Piastri's advantage in title race

Lando Norris won the battle of the McLarens to land a morale-boosting victory in Austria which breathes fresh life into his world championship charge. Norris kept his nerve in a thrilling duel with Oscar Piastri to take his third triumph of the season, reducing the title deficit to his team-mate to 15 points from 22. A fortnight after Norris ran into the back of Piastri in Canada, the two McLaren men came within centimetres of another collision on lap 20 of 70. Piastri momentarily lost control of his car as he attempted a lunge at turn four, before he was warned not to attempt a similar move – a clear sign McLaren had called off the fight. Norris took the chequered flag 2.7 seconds clear of Piastri, with Charles Leclerc finishing third. Lewis Hamilton was fourth with the seven-time world champion's wait for a first podium in Ferrari colours extending to his home race at Silverstone next weekend. Max Verstappen's race lasted three corners after he was taken out by Mercedes teenager Kimi Antonelli. The first-lap retirement leaves him 61 points off the championship pace. George Russell took fifth for Mercedes. Norris departed Montreal with his championship hopes hanging in the balance after a collision with Piastri which the British driver said made him look like a fool. But Norris has been a driver reborn here in the Styrian mountains, securing an emphatic pole position before holding off Piastri with a statement victory. Norris nailed his getaway to keep Leclerc behind on the run 200-metre charge to turn one with Piastri then launching his McLaren around the outside of the Ferrari and into second place, providing him with clear sight of his team-mate. Verstappen had called his car 'undriveable' in qualifying on his way to taking a lowly seventh grid spot. And his torrid weekend was over on the first lap when Antonelli arrived like a torpedo at the third corner to T-bone the four-time world champion. 'I'm out, got hit, like crazy,' Verstappen said. 'F****** idiots.' In the other Red Bull, Yuki Tsunoda was penalised for crunching Franco Colapinto and would finish 16th and last. A desperate weekend for Red Bull at their home event. Back to the front, and the safety car – released following the first-lap drama – came in at the end of lap three. For the next 16 laps, Norris would never be more than a second clear of Piastri. Oscar Piastri congratulates Norris (Darko Bandic/AP) And on the 11th lap, Piastri made the first move when he overtook Norris on the entry to turn three. Norris did not challenge knowing that a clean exit would provide him with a slingshot on the downhill drag to the next corner, and his wily decision worked when he got his man back on the inside of the right-hander. Clean racing from both, and the gap remained at half a second. Norris then ran wide on the exit of the final bend on lap 15 allowing Piastri a chance to close, but the Australian resisted a challenge. It was nip-and-tuck before Piastri attempted a banzai dive at turn four on lap 20. Piastri locked his front-right tyre and came agonisingly close to sliding into Norris' car. Lewis Hamilton's wait for a first podium in Ferrari colours continued (Darko Bandic/AP) McLaren promptly hauled in Norris for his first of two tyre changes. Piastri, perhaps as punishment, was left out on track with a flat-spotted tyre for four additional laps and was losing time – a signal that McLaren had seen enough. By the time Piastri emerged from his stop, Norris was six seconds up the road. 'The feedback from the pit-wall was that the move into turn four was too marginal and we can't do that again,' Piastri was told by his race engineer, Tom Stallard. Norris came in for his second stop with 18 laps remaining with a three-second lead. Piastri would stop the next time around and was then forced to take to the grass as he attempted to lap Colapinto in 14th. Piastri continued his charge and with 10 laps to go was back within two seconds. 'I need some pace,' Norris said. 'Please help.' But Piastri would not get a sniff as Norris took the chequered flag for his seventh career win – a perfect tonic as a pre-cursor to next weekend's British Grand Prix. 'We had a great battle, that's for sure,' Norris said. 'It was a lot of fun, a lot of stress, but a nice battle. It was tricky, hot and tiring, but the perfect result as a team.' Piastri said on the radio: 'Sorry for my move at turn four, that was my bad.' He added: 'I tried my absolute best and I probably could have done a better job when I momentarily got ahead. It was a bit on the edge, and I might have pushed a bit too far, but it was a good race and that is what we are here to do, to race each other and fight for wins.'

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