Even the incessant rain couldn't spoil a fun week in Sydney
The Lions arrived on Sunday in party mode, rolling over from Saturday night in Melbourne to give it socks in Sydney.
Some of the travelling Irish media took in the All-Ireland football final that night. It was another eye-opening moment as we bore witness to the remarkable number of Donegal and Kerry folk kitted out in their home counties' jerseys. Many of them were squeezed into the famous sports bar Cheers.
Because it's a 24-hour spot, the Kerry people were able to celebrate for as long as they wanted after the Donegal heads moved on in disappointment.
It's amazing how many Irish people are here in Australia. The latest figures say that over 100,000 Irish-born people are living Down Under, while around than 2.5 million Australians have Irish heritage.
No matter where you go, there seems to be someone Irish. That's magnified now with the Lions tour bringing them together, but it's still remarkable. That said, just over four weeks in Australia has underlined exactly why the Irish are all here. It's a brilliant country with good infrastructure, largely gorgeous weather, incredible natural beauty, limitless craic, and world-class food and drink.
You always see the best of any place when you're having fun on a rugby tour. Australia undoubtedly has the same major issues every big country does. But this trip has given a greater understanding than ever of why some of our Irish friends might never move back to Ireland.
Maro Itoje at Shore School in Sydney. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo
The Lions got up and running again on Tuesday at the immaculate Shore School, which is set on the hills in North Sydney. The views from the school grounds down over Sydney Harbour Bridge and the CBD are surreal. Annual fees at the private school range up towards €30,000 a year, and you'd know it walking around the pristine grounds.
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Shore won the Great Public Schools of New South Wales rugby union competition last year. Some of their players have committed to NRL clubs when they graduate from school, while others will remain in union. Their facilities are good enough for the Lions.
Wednesday saw a group of the travelling media venture out on an end-of-tour social to the Southern Highlands, where there are lots of wineries and vineyards. The train ride home involved a big singsong, which continued in a pub in The Rocks area of Sydney.
At one stage, an Irishman sang, followed by a Welshman, then an Englishman. There was no sign of a Scot but it was what Lions tours are all about. Many fans you meet here have happy stories about falling in with a crew from what are otherwise rival nations. This tour seems to have been met with apathy by some back home, but those who made it over here have had the time of their lives. There hasn't been much talk of the Lions not coming back to Australia, aside from bemusement at the suggestion.
Thursday was a hectic one as the Lions and Wallabies named their teams before the two head coaches, Andy Farrell and Joe Schmidt, spoke to the media.
There was a nice touch from Farrell just before the Lions' press conference as he presented jerseys to two long-serving members of the press pack. Dave Rogers, a photographer for Getty, has covered every Lions tour since 1980. Stephen Jones of the Times has been ever-present since 1983. Farrell said a few nice words about them.
Andy Farrell presents Dave Rogers with a jersey. Billy Stickland / INPHO Billy Stickland / INPHO / INPHO
On Thursday evening, the Lions their own jersey presentation ceremony as they welcomed the Hardman family into camp.
The Hardmans hail from the UK and have had to face great adversity in recent years.
Kriss was diagnosed with testicular cancer back in 2020 and then in 2023, Kate was diagnosed with incurable breast cancer while she was pregnant with their youngest daughter.
Kriss and Kate have been chasing the Lions in Australia along with their three young children, determined to keep enjoying life as much as possible.
Kate, who was only 38 when she got her diagnosis, stood in front of the Lions players and staff last night to speak to them about her journey, as well as the experience of supporting them in Australia. She then presented captain Maro Itoje with his jersey.
That must have been a stirring evening for the Lions ahead of their bid to complete a 3-0 series clean sweep.
The Wallabies, meanwhile, have been working to lift their spirits after the sheer dejection of losing the series at the death last weekend in Melbourne.
There were plenty of smiles at today's captain's run in the Accor Stadium, with every player and member of staff donning a fake moustache in tribute to scrum-half Nic White, who will retire from international rugby after starting tomorrow's final Test against the Lions. It turns out that a moustache suits Joe Schmidt.
The Wallabies wearing their moustaches. Tom Maher / INPHO Tom Maher / INPHO / INPHO
Even if they have lifted their morale in recent days, the Wallabies know they will need to find something special tomorrow. With their best player, Rob Valetini, ruled out again due to his badly-timed calf injury, they may struggle to hit last weekend's heights.
And yet, the occasion will surely draw something from them. Even with the series decided, it will be a sold-out crowd of 82,000 at the Accor.
The only thing dampening the build-up for all the Lions fans in town has been the very Irish rain, which has only briefly let up since Wednesday and is forecast to continue tomorrow for the third Test.
Even still, we're all hoping this thoroughly enjoyable Lions tour ends with a bang in Sydney.
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Irish Times
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Jockeys' body says any new watering system for Thurles not anticipated until 2026
The body representing Ireland's jockeys has said it felt a consensus was reached on the need for a watering system at Thurles racecourse, but that any implementation wouldn't be expected until 2026. As reverberations continue from Friday's shock announcement by the Molony family that the country's sole privately owned racecourse was closing with immediate effect, focus has turned to standards and licensing requirements set out in a racecourse manual released in June by the Irish Horseracing Regulatory Board (IHRB) and Horse Racing Ireland (HRI). The 68-page manual outlines standards for tracks, including in relation to stabling, weighing room and medical facilities. It has been suggested that the Thurles closure – Ireland's first racecourse to close in 17 years – may have been due to a multimillion euro investment required to meet those standards. They reportedly include a minimum €300,000 for the installation of a watering system. 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Irish Daily Mirror
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Irish Times
2 hours ago
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Croke Park, a good neighbour and one of the most loaded four-letter words in the English language
Jimmy Noddy Black was buried on Monday morning. A handball man, a Meath man, a good man. My old neighbour. It has been a difficult few weeks for McCullen Park, a small horseshoe-shaped estate in Kells known locally, and defiantly, by its residents as The Kingdom. Jane Smith, a gentle, warm and kindly woman who lived in one of the first houses at the entrance to the estate, died just over two weeks ago. Jimmy's house is further back, but just a couple of hundred metres away. Sad times. On Sunday afternoon, I took my two children to the All-Ireland women's senior football final at Croke Park , Meath v Dublin . The nine-year-old boy and six-year-old girl are born and raised in Dublin to culchie parents - a Meath dad and a Meathish-Cavanish but largely non-committal mother. READ MORE Still, on Clonliffe Road, she bought them blue and navy woollen headbands. On subsequently meeting cousins in the Croke Park Hotel, the sight of said headbands was enough to raise faux outrage and open debate on the possibility of family excommunication. For me, that is, not the children. After all, I was the adult in the room, allowing such horror to visit our fiercely green and gold Royal family. But within moments, all that seemed to matter to the gathering of children was the colour of their MiWadi and the flavour of their crisps. Approaching our seats in the lower Hogan about an hour later, we stopped to chat with Colm McManus – chairman of Meath LGFA and a man who also grew up in McCullen Park. His mam, Moll, brought a tin of her home-made buns topped with slatherings of pink and white icing to our home every Christmas. No pastry has ever eclipsed Moll's buns. That horseshoe-shaped estate wrapped around a humpy hill (imaginatively called The Hill) on which hundreds of World Cups and All-Ireland finals were won and lost, is where my mind automatically goes when I think of home. And yet it is a place my children don't recognise or know. All-Ireland Ladies Senior Football Championship Final, Croke Park, Dublin, on Sunday, where Meath played Dublin. Photograph: Inpho Home to them is Dublin. Meath is where their grandparents and cousins live. But I'm not sure they realise, or care, that it's also where a large part of their dad will forever be. Home can be one of the most loaded and complicated four-letter words in the English language. Either way, the acquisition of free TG4 blue and navy flags (they were available in the colours of all the participating counties) at the turnstiles seemed to rouse the boisterous Dub within my children. And then we found our seats. On which they sat, briefly. With their view of the pre-match parade obstructed, both of them figured the solution was to stand on their seats. I made some faint protest against this reckless move, but they were already in motion and by then, naturally enough, everybody around us knew exactly how this venture was going to play out. Snap! The six-year-old went down first, her right leg moving back to tip the balance of the seat. The chair folded, and her leg was trapped. The nine-year-old, intrigued and thrilled at the predicament in which his sister found herself, couldn't resist the temptation to shift his body weight for a closer gawk. Snap! Down went another little Dub. As the parade turned for the Cusack Stand, I was on my hunkers trying to free both children. Given it was the first time all day they had lacked pomposity, I briefly contemplated leaving them there, but figured they'd probably tell their mother. After eventually dislodging all limbs from seats, I calmly and confidently assured the traumatised children they'd just experienced a rite of passage, they'd learned a life skill: 'It'll not happen to you a second time.' I imagined them, years from now, passing on my sage advice to their children, perhaps in this very stadium. But then my reverie was interrupted by a woman behind us frantically screaming something about Jesus Christ. Beside me, the six-year-old now had both legs trapped in the chair and was bent forward at an unnatural angle, while the nine-year-old had made a sudden, unannounced break for the toilet. Which child to save first? Dublin's Carla Rowe leads her side during the parade before the final. Photograph: Inpho As for the game, it is fair to say it was over as a contest by half-time. Dublin were the better team, but they were also the more cynical side. I told the children this. They didn't seem to care. Instead, they enthusiastically waved their flags in my face and repeatedly roared: 'Up the Dubs!', each trying to outdo their sibling in a who-can-be-louder competition. I resolved that cynicism and boorishness are both Dublin traits. By the time Carla Rowe was lifting the Brendan Martin Cup, the children – not satisfied with a factory load of chocolate and a freezer of ice-cream – were wondering what they would be having for dinner. 'The Meath football team,' I jested. Nobody laughed. We stopped in Fairview and ate fried chicken and vinegar-soaked chips. The nine-year-old, mid-strawberry milkshake, asked if his cousins were in Meath yet. So we called them. Turned out they had made it back just in time for Jimmy's wake. Later that night, the children inquired if they knew the person whose funeral I was going to in Kells on Monday morning. They didn't. And the truth is, they don't know many of the people or places of my youth. I'm aware of this reality probably more often than I should be. But that was our choice in deciding to raise them in Dublin, a wonderful place with equally wonderful people, and a city that gets a bad rap more often than it should. And with all that's happening in the world right now, what a privilege it was on Sunday to be among 48,000 people at a women's sporting event with my children, and the stadium dotted with family, friends and neighbours. The town turned out to give Jimmy a fitting farewell on Monday morning. After the funeral, I told my parents I'd be back down home soon. The Meath green and gold bunting was still flying proudly at the front of the house as I pulled away. Then I drove back home to the children in Dublin, fully expecting to be greeted by a smiling six- and nine-year-old, both waving blue and navy flags while proudly wearing their new matching woollen headbands.