
Dan Sheehan warns Lions will match Western Force's hunger
Lions captain Maro Itoje has been stood down for the opening fixture on Australian soil so Ireland hooker Sheehan takes charge of Andy Farrell's men at Optus Stadium on Saturday.
Henry Pollock makes his first start for the elite of British and Irish rugby after being picked at number eight while Finn Russell, the early favourite to take the playmaking duties against the Wallabies, is given his maiden outing of the tour at fly-half.
Our team for Saturday night's Tour opener in Perth! 🦁#Lions2025
— British & Irish Lions (@lionsofficial) June 26, 2025
The Lions know they are being targeted by Super Rugby teams eager to make history but Sheehan, who skippered Ireland against Wales in the Six Nations, declares they will not have a monopoly on passion.
'It's important to know where the opposition's mindset is and how they approach a game that only comes around every 12 years, like it does for the Western Force,' said the 26-year-old, who is one of nine players in the matchday 23 set to make their Lions debuts.
'I'm sure the Force will be 150 per cent of what they usually are. They will be flying into it and that bit of extra hunger can produce some powerful things.
'They would have been eyeing this game up since they probably first stepped into that Western Force change room. It'll mean an awful lot to them.
'But I don't want them to think that they're going to be hungrier than us. We have to demonstrate back our own mindset because this will be the first time I will be putting on the jersey, along with a few other lads.'
Ready to captain the Lions on his debut in red! 👊🔴#Lions2025 pic.twitter.com/hsZW2gwIGq
— British & Irish Lions (@lionsofficial) June 26, 2025
The Force is the second game of a tour that began with a 28-24 defeat by Argentina in Dublin and while matches will soon come thick and fast, chances to impress Lions boss Andy Farrell will be limited.
Farrell, however, has cautioned over the danger of players wanting a Test place too much.
'That's desperation and that's what we don't want because desperation leads to people being distorted in the way they go about the game,' he said.
There are two survivors from the side that faced the Pumas in Sione Tuipulotu and Tadhg Beirne, although they have been switched to inside centre and blindside flanker respectively.
Three-time Lions tourist Tadhg Furlong is given the chance to improve his match fitness with a start at tighthead prop following a season that has been heavily interrupted by calf injuries.
'There wasn't a big bang moment when you're out for six months and you're trying to scramble back, they were all short-term injuries,' Furlong said.
'It was tough because as the weeks went on we still thought we had a fighting chance for getting back for Leinster at the end of the season, but it just wasn't right. It would have been very risky to chance something.
'As desperate as you are to get on to the pitch, you also have a situation where you can't push.
'In some ways you can live with yourself because you're doing everything you can to get out there. When you can't, you can't.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Powys County Times
39 minutes ago
- Powys County Times
British and Irish Lions hammer Western Force but Tomos Williams suffers injury
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. Up and running in Australia 🦁🇦🇺 #Lions2025 — British & Irish Lions (@lionsofficial) June 28, 2025 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. Henry Pollock, Joe McCarthy and James Lowe all advanced their claims to Test selection against the Wallabies, while fly-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 line-out 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. 😍😍🦁🦁 — Saracens Rugby Club (@Saracens) June 28, 2025 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. 🦁 A second score for Tomos 🔥 — Welsh Rugby Union 🏴 (@WelshRugbyUnion) June 28, 2025 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.


BreakingNews.ie
an hour ago
- BreakingNews.ie
Saturday sport: Lions thrash Western Force, All Ireland Football quarter-finals
Rugby The British and Irish Lions have strolled to a big victory to open their tour of Australia. They stormed to a 54-7 win over Western Force in Perth. Advertisement Dan Sheehan, Garry Ringrose and Joe McCarthy all crossed over for tries for Andy Farrell's team. Scrum-half Tomos Williams went off with what looked like a hamstring injury in the second-half. The three-Test series against Australia begins on the 19th of July with 4 more warm up games to come. MOTM 🍾 That was some performance from Joe McCarthy today ⭐️ Watch every match live on @SkySports . #Lions2025 — British & Irish Lions (@lionsofficial) June 28, 2025 GAA A place in the All Ireland Football championship semi-finals is up for grabs. Advertisement Rivals Donegal and Monaghan face off in the opening game of the day with throw in at Croke Park at 4pm. Then Tyrone and Dublin face off at HQ with throw in at 6:15pm. The final round of group matches takes place in the All-Ireland senior camogie championship this afternoon. At 2pm in Group One, Cork will look to maintain their 100-percent record against Wexford while Tipperary go up against Clare from 3pm. Advertisement The clash between Galway and Waterford is just underway in Group Two while Dublin go up against Derry in an hour's time. Semple Stadium in Thurles is the venue for tonight's All-Ireland minor hurling championship final. Clare play Waterford, with throw-in at 5.15pm. Soccer Lee Carsley's England have the chance to win a second successive European under-21 Championship crown. Advertisement They take on Germany in the final, with kick-off at 8pm in Bratislava. Chelsea are in last 16 action at the Club World Cup tonight. Enzo Maresca's side face Benfica from 9pm Irish time in Charlotte. Golf Leona Maguire and playing partner Jennifer Kupcho hold a one shot lead heading into day 3 of the Dow Championship on the LPGA Tour. Advertisement Yesterday's excellent round of 60 leaves them on 13 under par so far and just ahead of Gemma Dryburgh and Cassie Porter Maguire's team, nicknamed the Irish Goodbyes, will take to the course for their third round in Michigan just before 7pm Irish time. Padraig Harrington is looking to win his second US Senior Open tournament in 3 years this weekend. The Irishman is in a share of the lead after shooting a second consecutive round of 67 to lie on 6 under par after two rounds. He's joined at the top of the leaderboard by Stewart Cink and Mark Hensby. Harrington lifted the title back in 2022. Racing There's racing at the Curragh this afternoon. The first is off at a 1:15pm. Meanwhile, British racing legend Barry Hills has died at the age of 88. The Englishman began training in 1969 and continued to have winners up until his retirement in 2011 with 3,000 victories in all under his belt. His most notable successes were four victories across both Guineas, a St Leger, an Oaks and a Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe. Barry was also father to Classic-winning jockeys Michael and Richard Hills and has been remembered as "a great figure of our sport" by the British Horseracing Authority.


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Farrell pleased with Lions grit after early Force onslaught in Perth
PERTH, June 28 (Reuters) - Coach Andy Farrell was pleased with how the British & Irish Lions stayed in the contest early on against the Western Force on Saturday before running away with a 54-7 victory to kick off their tour of Australia. Lions management had questioned whether the tour matches against Super Rugby teams would be competitive enough to prepare the Lions properly for the test series with so many Wallabies in camp and unavailable to play. The Force, the weakest of Australia's four Super Rugby teams, made a mockery of those fears in the opening quarter of Saturday's match when they held the tourists at 7-7 and had a string of penalties inside the Lions 22-metre line. "The Force played the ball from everywhere and kept the ball in play, that's exactly what we wanted and they tested us fully," Farrell said. "I was happy with how we stayed in the fight because it was a tough old start to the game. At 7-7, everything was locked wasn't it really? So I thought we stayed in the game really well. "We reassessed at halftime and then hit them on the break which was pretty pleasing, and after that I thought our defence was pretty strong." The Lions were beaten 28-24 by Argentina in their first outing in Dublin last week and Farrell said there was still plenty to work on despite the lopsided scoreline in Perth. "There's fantastic learnings for us again," he added. "We had a few things to fix, mainly our discipline, but once we gained a little bit of composure, I thought the second half was a little bit better. "Some nice stuff but obviously, at this stage in the tour, a lot still to do." The Lions play the Queensland Reds, New South Wales Waratahs, ACT Brumbies and an invitational Australia-New Zealand XV over the next three weeks before the first test against the Wallabies in Brisbane on July 19.