The Borneo Post

Lions captain not guaranteed place in test side – Gatland

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LONDON: Being chosen to captain the British and Irish Lions for their tour of New Zealand will be a great honour, coach Warren has said, but no guarantee of a place in the starting test side.

The Lions embark on a 10-match tour of New Zealand in June with the squad to be named in April and Gatland said there were up to six players in contention for the captaincy.

The New Zealander said that form will be the main factor in determinin­g who plays in the three test matches.

“The captaincy is a great honour, but whoever the captain is, there’ll be no guarantee he plays,” Gatland told the BBC.

“The captain’s form has to be good enough. I think whoever that person is has to rise to that; the message is it’s a great honour to captain the Lions but your form has to be good enough to be selected for the tests.

“When you are looking at a captain, you want to be reasonably confident he is going to be starting in the tests. But it is not a guarantee, it is just part of the criteria.”

Gatland selected his then Welsh national captain Sam Warburton to lead the Lions to Australia in 2013, then chose lock Alun Wynn Jones to lead the side for the third test in Sydney when Warburton was injured. While Warburton was replaced by Wyn Jones as captain of the national team before the Six Nations, Gatland said the loose forward could still be a contender for the Lions leadership role again.

“I think Sam has had a terrific Six Nations, he has played really well and I am really pleased for him. He’s a different captain to some other players. He leads by example. He doesn’t say a lot but he has had that experience,” Gatland added.

“He’s one of the guys potentiall­y in contention, definitely. In my mind there’s probably half a dozen people but we haven’t really narrowed that down yet.

“The most important thing is to pick the squad first and then talk about the captain afterwards.”

Warburton’s biggest issue would be whether he could supplant compatriot Justin Tipuric or Ireland’s Sean O’Brien as the first- choice openside flanker in a test side.

The 28-year- old played in the number six jersey in the Six Nations, though Ireland’s CJ Stander and England’s Maro Itoje are more traditiona­l blindside flankers likely to provide greater physicalit­y to the breakdown and better lineout options.

Other national captains in considerat­ion would be hookers Rory Best of Ireland and England’s Dylan Hartley, while Scotland scrumhalf Greig Laidlaw was ruled out for much of the Six Nations with an ankle injury. — Reuters

 ??  ?? File photo of England’s James Haskell (left) and Jack Nowell in training before a match. — Reuters photo
File photo of England’s James Haskell (left) and Jack Nowell in training before a match. — Reuters photo

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