New Straits Times

SELECTION HEADACHE

Improving squad give Lions plenty to ponder

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DECISION day has arrived for the British and Irish Lions with coaches locked away in what many had considered to be a predictabl­e selection meeting for the first test against the All Blacks on Saturday.

Assistant Graham Rowntree admitted the process was far from straightfo­rward, however, saying the discussion­s would be among the hardest they had faced so far after the entire squad were displaying signs of reaching their peak on the 10match tour.

“Picking the squad every week has been tough,” he told reporters in Auckland yesterday, a day after the supposed secondstri­ng side produced a clinical effort to dismiss the Waikato Chiefs 34-6.

“It is going to be even tougher. A few guys put their hands up last night. That will not be ignored, it will be taken under considerat­ion,” the former England prop added.

“We have got a real challenge, it was always going to be a big debate because the quality of the squad is such, last night quite a few of them put their hands up.”

Until Tuesday’s match, the opening test side had been expected to have been drawn principall­y from the players who first beat the seven-time Super Rugby champion Canterbury Crusaders 12-3 then the Maori All Blacks 3210 on Saturday.

None were selected for the Chiefs game in Hamilton.

Head coach Warren Gatland, however, has repeated the mantra that those who missed out on the first test at Eden Park, could still press for inclusion later in the series due to injury, a drop in form or combinatio­ns not working as well as envisaged.

Liam Williams and Ireland loose forward CJ Stander both stood out on Tuesday with the Wales fullback producing the kind of attacking flair that had been missing in the Lions’ previous five games. Both could earn a spot on the bench. Reuters

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