logo
Today's rugby news as Lions name new team after 'desperately sad' news shocks tourists

Today's rugby news as Lions name new team after 'desperately sad' news shocks tourists

Yahoo6 hours ago

Here are your rugby morning headlines for Monday, June 30.
Morgan picked after 'shocking news'
Jac Morgan will have another chance to lay down a Test marker for the Lions, being named to start against the Queensland Reds on the same morning that it was confirmed he was the only Welsh player left on the 2025 tour of Australia.
Advertisement
Monday morning saw scrum-half Tomos Williams cruelly ruled out of the remainder of the tour, having picked up a hamstring injury during a two-try performance. Scotland scrum-half Ben White has been called up to replace the Gallagher Premiership player of the year. You can read the latest Lions team and injury news here.
READ MORE: Tomos Williams ruled out of Lions tour as replacement called up
READ MORE: Tonight's rugby news as Tomos Williams injury update imminent and star jets out to join Lions
Speaking about Williams' injury, Lions tour manager and former Wales wing Ieuan Evans said: 'This is desperately sad news for Tomos and we wish him all the very best in his recovery.
Advertisement
'Tomos is an exemplary Lion who has had a brilliant season, having joined the tour after being named Premiership Rugby's player-of-the-season. He lit up this Lions tour with his personality and his talent.'
Farrell said: 'It's shocking news for us all. We're not just going to miss an outstanding player – he played unbelievably well and it was some try that he was actually injured by,' Farrell said.
'We're also going to miss the bloke. We have only been together for a few weeks now but his character is everything you want to have in your group on a Lions tour. He's very popular and that makes it a little bit tougher.
'Ben will be devastated for Tomos, like we all are. But at the same time, he's super excited.
Advertisement
'He obviously had ambition to get into the squad – as did many others who didn't get selected – so now he gets his chance.'
Williams' replacement White won't feature against the Reds in Brisbane on Wednesday. Ireland scrum-half Jamison Gibson-Park is in line for his first appearance of the tour following injury, with Alex Mitchell on the bench.
However, it's another start for Morgan on the openside which will draw the eye of Welsh onlookers. Sign up to Inside Welsh rugby on Substack for the exclusive five-week tour diary from Japan and Australia.
Morgan had started the tour opener against Argentina in Dublin, being solid if unspectacular in a understandably disjointed team performance.
Advertisement
However, a marker has been laid down by Ireland's Josh van der Flier in the weekend's victory over the Force - even if the Perth side were Australia's worst-placed Super Rugby franchise.
Morgan will now start alongside Tom Curry and Jack Conan in the back-row as he looks to push his Test credentials.
Since 1899, when Wales were first involved with a tour and the Lions played a Test series, at least one Welshman has been selected to start every Lions Test - meaning they have stood alone in Lions history as the only nation to have provided players for every Test for the last century.
Scotland last failed to provide a starter in 2017, Ireland in 1989 and England in 1950. However, with just one Welshmen left on tour, the chances of Wales keeping up their remarkable record have taken a significant blow.
Advertisement
Lions team to face Reds on Wednesday: Hugo Keenan; Tommy Freeman, Huw Jones, Bundee Aki, Duhan van der Merwe; Finn Russell, Jamison Gibson-Park; Andrew Porter, Ronan Kelleher, Will Stuart, Maro Itoje (captain), Ollie Chessum, Tom Curry, Jac Morgan, Jack Conan.
Replacements: Luke Cowan-Dickie, Ellis Genge, Finlay Bealham, James Ryan, Ben Earl, Alex Mitchell, Fin Smith, Garry Ringrose.
Joe McCarthy enjoying friendship with 'good fella' Henry Pollock
By Duncan Bech, PA Rugby Union Correspondent, Perth
Joe McCarthy has struck up an unexpected friendship with Henry Pollock as the British and Irish Lions rookies step up their hunt for Test selection.
Advertisement
The forwards delivered eye-catching performances in Saturday's 54-7 victory over Western Force in Perth, seizing their chances three weeks out from the series opener against Australia.
McCarthy finished man of the match after embellishing a mighty shift in defence with some impactful attacking moments, while Pollock made up for flashes of indiscipline with the dynamism only he can bring to the back row.
Off the field, Ireland enforcer McCarthy has found himself forming an unlikely bromance with the swaggering England flanker.
'Henry's actually a good fella. He's proper high-energy and he's been very sound,' McCarthy said.
Advertisement
'He can be a bit much at times but he is himself and I've probably got on with him way better than I thought I would. Like we saw against the Force, he's class to have in your team as well.'
McCarthy was part of the Leinster side that were knocked out of the Champions Cup semi-finals by Pollock's Northampton, leading to some awkward initial moments when the rivals first entered Lions camp earlier this month.
'We got there and were thinking 'oh for f***'s sake, it's these fellas again!',' McCarthy said.
'But I've played golf with Alex Mitchell and me and Tommy Freeman are doing 'thought for the day' on the bus, so it's interesting to hear Tommy's thoughts.
Advertisement
'One I liked was 'today is the oldest you ever have been and the youngest you ever will be'.'
England U20 begin title defence with emphatic win over Scotland
England U20 kicked off their World Rugby U20 Championship campaign with a dominant 56–19 victory over Scotland in blistering heat in Verona.
Despite going down to 14 men for the final 25 minutes, Mark Mapletoft's side ran in eight tries to open their Pool B account in emphatic fashion. Flanker George Timmins was shown a straight red card for leading with the elbow in a ruck — just moments after scoring England's sixth try of the afternoon.
Scotland struck first through scrum-half Noah Cowan after a strong start, but England responded swiftly with a penalty try that swung momentum firmly in their favour. They raced to a 42–12 lead by half-time thanks to a ruthless display of attacking rugby.
Advertisement
Winger Jack Bracken crossed twice, while Will Knight and Kane James powered over from close range. Josh Bellamy delivered a standout solo effort before turning provider with a pinpoint grubber kick to set up Ben Redshaw.
Kane James and Tom Burrow made strong carries throughout, and fly-half Ben Coen steered the team expertly with a composed performance. England's replacements also made an impact, with Archie McParland catching the eye in the closing stages.
Scotland grabbed a late consolation through Hector Patterson, but were unable to match England's physicality and tempo as the match wore on. England now face South Africa on Friday in what could be a decisive Pool B showdown.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Wimbledon 2025: Ons Jabeur appears to shed tears before retiring in first round due to injury
Wimbledon 2025: Ons Jabeur appears to shed tears before retiring in first round due to injury

Yahoo

time32 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Wimbledon 2025: Ons Jabeur appears to shed tears before retiring in first round due to injury

Ons Jabeur gets medical assistance during her match against Viktoriya Tomova at Wimbledon. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung) Tunisian tennis player Ons Jabeur has a history of success at Wimbledon. Jabeur reached the finals in consecutive years in 2022 and 2023, though never won the event. While she has yet to win it all, Wimbledon is her strongest Grand Slam. In 2025, however, Jabeur won't make it out of the first round. Advertisement The 30-year-old was forced to retire due to injury during her first-round matchup against Viktoriya Tomova on Monday. Jabeur appeared to shed tears before making the call to retire from the match. Jabeur required medical attention in the first set vs. Tomova. After just 26 minutes of play, Jabeur briefly had to leave the court and buried her head in a towel after returning. After being checked out, Jabeur returned to action, losing the first set 7-5. Jabeur remained on the court to try and play a second set, but fell behind 2-0 before retiring from the contest. This story will be updated.

New faces - and old - present as Swansea pre-season begins
New faces - and old - present as Swansea pre-season begins

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

New faces - and old - present as Swansea pre-season begins

Melker Widell and Zeidane Inoussa were among the players who reported to Swansea City's training base on Monday as Alan Sheehan's squad began preparations for the new Championship season. Swedish duo Widell and Inoussa were joined at Fairwood, Swansea's training ground, by fellow new recruits Ricardo Santos and Bobby Wales. Advertisement But centre-back Cameron Burgess, who joined from Ipswich Town earlier this month, has been given extra time off because he has been in international action with Australia over the summer. Burgess is set to arrive at Swansea at the end of the week alongside Wales trio Ollie Cooper, Liam Cullen and captain Ben Cabango, who are also returning to club duty a little late because of international commitments. As well as the new signings, there are some familiar faces who are back with the Swansea squad after loan spells away last season. Among those is striker Jerry Yates, who spent the last campaign at Derby County, as well as the likes of goalkeeper Andy Fisher and attacking midfielders Cameron Congreve and Joel Cotterill. Advertisement Swansea begin the new second-tier season with a trip to Middlesbrough on Saturday, 3 August. Their first official pre-season friendly will be against League One Stevenage in Spain on Saturday, 19 July.

Wales rekindle rugby love affair with Japan
Wales rekindle rugby love affair with Japan

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Wales rekindle rugby love affair with Japan

Wales and Japan have a history of matches going back to 1973 [BBC Sport] Wales will rekindle its relationship with Japanese rugby as Matt Sherratt prepares his side for the two-Test tour. Wales have won 13 out of 14 matches against Japan whose sole victory came in 2013, with a 23-8 win in Tokyo masterminded by current head coach Eddie Jones. Advertisement Wales are on a record 17-Test losing run and slipped to a lowest position of 12th in the world rugby rankings with Japan only one place below them. As the two sides prepare for a first international between the nations in more than eight years, there will be no room for sentiment. Before the two Test matches on July 5 and 12 in Kitakyushu and Kobe, BBC Sport reflects on the history between the two nations which stretches back to the first game in 1973. The Golden Age Wales' first four games against the Brave Blossoms were all non-cap internationals, and they ran riot in the first three. A 62-14, 11-try home win at Cardiff Arms Park in 1973 was followed by Wales touring Japan in 1975 with two emphatic victories. Advertisement The 10-try 56-12 win in Osaka was followed by a 14-try 82-6 hammering in Tokyo which included a JPR Williams try hat-trick and 34 points for Phil Bennett. With the golden age of the 1970s gone, Wales limped to a 29-24 Arms Park win in 1983, a performance regarded by the Japanese as one of the best in their rugby history. Since then that has been surpassed by Brave Blossoms famously celebrating a World Cup pool win against South Africa in 2015 on their way to the quarter-finals, while the hosts defeated Scotland four years later to also reach the last eight of the global tournament. World Cup meetings Kosuke Endo scores a try for Wales against Japan in 2007 despite Shane Williams' attempted tackle [Huw Evans Agency] There was a time when Wales and Japan were regular World Cup opponents with three group games in four tournaments between 1995 and 2007. Advertisement The first came in the 1995 World Cup in South Africa, as Wales cruised to a 57-10 win in Bloemfontein, their only victory in the tournament as Gareth Thomas scored a hat-trick on debut. Eight days later, the Brave Blossoms were humiliated 145-17 by New Zealand. Wales profited from Japan's woes in their second game of the 1999 tournament, running in nine tries in a 64-15 win at the new Millennium Stadium. The visitors - notably outstanding wing Daisuke Ohata - actually gave the home crowd some early scares, but the game became about Neil Jenkins whose 19 points took him level with Michael Lynagh's world record of 911. The two sides again met in the World Cup in Cardiff in 2007 when Gareth Jenkins' side ran out 72-18 winners with 11 tries. Advertisement Japan did make a game of it and scored a try in each half including a spectacular length-of-the-field effort finished off by Kosuke Endo, regarded as one of the great World Cup tries. Lions occasions Japan celebrate victory against Wales in 2013 [Getty Images] Wales again visit Japan this summer when the British and Irish Lions are in Australia, just as they did in 2001 and 2013. On those two previous trips, there were far more Wales representatives with only Tomos Williams and Jac Morgan selected initially in 2025. In 2001, with Graham Henry leading the Lions, caretaker coach Lynn Howells took a development team on a two-Test trip. The tourists lost their opening game against Japan's premier club side Suntory, but a solid forward platform paved the way for Shane Williams to score four tries in a 64-10 first Test win in Osaka. Advertisement Wales trailed by a point at half-time in the second international in Tokyo, but the visitors rallied after the break for a 53-30 win, Gareth Thomas getting a hat-trick and Tom Shanklin two tries on his debut. Twelve years later, it was Robin McBryde's turn to lead a shadow squad with head coach Warren Gatland and 15 Wales players on the Lions tour and other senior personnel rested. Wales managed to win the first Test 22-18 after a Harry Robinson try and the boot of Dan Biggar and Rhys Patchell on his debut. A week later, Japan claimed their first and so far only win over Wales with a sparkling second-half display to win the second Test 23-8 in Tokyo and draw the series. Advertisement Craig Wing and Michael Broadhurst scored tries, while Ayumu Goramaru kicked 13 points. Wales led briefly in the second half through Tom Prydie's try, but rarely threatened Japan after that. Those two Japan tours were more than just results. Shanklin, Shane Williams, Gareth Thomas, Stephen Jones, Dwayne Peel, Gavin Henson, Mark Jones, Gareth Cooper and Kevin Morgan were part of the 2001 tour party and would become key figures in Welsh rugby's success over the next decade. In 2013, Biggar, Patchell and Liam Williams featured and the trio were to enjoy further success with Grand Slam, Six Nations and Lions tours to follow. Cardiff dates Colin Charvis became the first Wales forward to score four tries in one Test in the 98-0 in against Japan in 2004 [Getty Images] Outside of World Cup contests and Lions tours, Japan have also travelled to Cardiff sporadically over the years. Advertisement The first official Test between the sides came in 1993, and Wales passed 50 points for the first time in their full international history. Ieuan Evans scored after just 45 seconds and Scott Gibbs got his first international score as the home side eased to a 55-5 success. Japan's only try fell to wing Ian Williams, who had already been capped 17 times by Australia. Wales' record victory came in 2004 when they hammered Japan 98-0 win at the Millennium Stadium. Colin Charvis got four tries, Shanklin a hat-trick, and Henson converted all 14 tries for a 100% kicking performance in Wales' last game before their 2005 Grand Slam campaign. Advertisement Twelve years later, it was a very different story as replacement fly-half Sam Davies saved Wales' blushes at the Principality Stadium with an 80th-minute drop-goal. Yu Tamura's conversion of Amanaki Lotoahea's 76th-minute try almost earned Japan an historic draw. Wales had led by 11 points in the second half after tries by Dan Lydiate, Jamie Roberts and Sam Warburton, while wings Akihito Yamada and Kenki Fukuoka were Japan's other try-scorers. Leigh Halfpenny scored 15 points with the boot before Davies' timely intervention, while Japan number eight Amanaki Mafi was named man-of-the-match after a powerful display. Advertisement Almost nine years has passed since that scare for Wales with more memories to be made in Japan in the next two weeks. Head-to-head record Sam Davies (right) has played eight internationals for Wales [Huw Evans Agency] Non-capped Tests Wales 62-14 Japan, Cardiff, 6 October 1973 Japan 12-56 Wales, Osaka, 21 September 1975 Japan 6-82 Wales, Tokyo, 24 September 1975 Wales 29-24 Japan, Cardiff, 22 October 1983. Full Tests Wales 55-5 Japan, Cardiff, 16 October 1993 Wales 57-10 Japan, Bloemfontein, 27 May 1995 Wales 64-15 Japan, Cardiff, 9 October1999 Japan 10-64 Wales, Osaka, 10 June 2001 Japan 30-53 Wales, Tokyo, 17 June 2001 Wales 98-0 Japan, Cardiff, 26 November 2004 Wales 72-18 Japan, Cardiff, 20 September 2007 Advertisement Japan 18-22 Wales, Osaka, 8 June 2013 Japan 23-8 Wales, Tokyo, 15 June 2013 Wales 33-30 Japan, Cardiff, 19 November 2016. Cultural links Kitakyushu was Wales training base during the 2019 World Cup and the tourists were embraced by the local [Huw Evans Agency] There are many rugby links between Welsh and Japan that have not included matches. This dated back to Max Boyce's famous song 'Asso Asso Yogoshi' when Japan's rugby team arrived on these shores for the first time in 1973. Wales stars like Shane Williams, Liam Williams, Rhys Patchell, Hadleigh Parkes and Jake Ball have spent club stints there with the domestic game which is dominated by big-money company teams, whose cash has attracted many stars from the major rugby-playing nations. Advertisement Wales and Japan did not meet in the tournament, but bonds were forged between the two nations. Wales' training base was in Kitakyushu where the city embraced Gatland's side. More than 15,000 turned up for a training sessions and memorable renditions of the Wales national anthem by the enthusiastic hosts after they had learned the words of Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau. The class of 2025 were welcomed back when they arrived last week and there will be more cultural events planned again this time around with a Welsh Rugby Union (WRU) off-the-field team arriving this week. So a friendly relationship remains, but Wales will know they can't afford more woe on the pitch in the next two weeks.

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