The Star Late Edition

Gatland to reveal his Lions squad for ‘Everest’

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LONDON: Warren Gatland will reveal his British and Irish Lions squad for the daunting tour of New Zealand today, when talk in rugby clubs across the region will quickly switch from who will be on the plane to who is likely to be in the Test team.

Gatland, who oversaw the 2-1 series victory over Australia four years ago, is tipped to select Welsh flank Sam Warburton as captain for the second time, an honour previously bestowed only on England’s Martin Johnson. Warburton captained the team in the first two Tests against Australia in 2013 but missed the decisive third through injury, with fellow Welshman Alun Wyn Jones stepping in.

Jones has taken on the captaincy duties for Wales this season while Warburton has played superbly, adding to the conundrum for Gatland, who will return to his day job as Wales coach after the tour.

There will no doubt be the usual surprises – experience­d Six Nations men missing out and the odd young “bolter” being given their chance. Media speculatio­n over the weekend has already suggested that Joe Launchbury, George Ford and Jamie Joseph can start preparing for England’s tour of Argentina instead.

The heart of the squad oozes quality, with flyhalves Johnny Sexton and Owen Farrell, scrumhalf Conor Murray, wing George North and key forwards Billy Vunipola, Peter O’Mahony, Taulupe Faletau and Sean O’Brien on just about every pundit’s short list.

Gatland also looks spoiled for choice at lock and in the back row, where some high class operators will have to miss out.

On the other hand, other areas will have given him sleepless nights, with a group of similarly matched contenders of a good standard but who are unlikely to strike fear into New Zealand coach Steve Hansen. Key among those is probably hooker, where the captains of the best two teams in Europe – England’s Dylan Hartley and Ireland’s Rory Best – will probably travel but with neither in the box seat – and Wales’ impressive Ken Owens in with a shout.

For all those who make the squad, and however well they bed down in their short time together, they face a monumental­ly difficult task. Many observers are describing this year’s tour as the Lions’ toughest, not just because of the supreme quality of the world champion All Blacks, but because of the strength too of the provincial teams and the desperatel­y limited preparatio­n time.

The Lions kick off with the only easy-looking fixture of the 10-match tour, against Provincial Barbarians on 3 June. That is just one week after the English Premiershi­p and Pro-12 finals, and with Gatland having said previously that anyone featuring in those matches will not play in the tour opener, his opening options look squeezed.

Former England flyhalf Stuart Barnes, who toured New Zealand with the Lions in 1993 without playing a Test, described this year’s tour as “attempting to conquer rugby’s Mount Everest without oxygen, with a storm gathering on the horizon.

“To win the series would be the greatest Lions triumph of all. To win more than 50 percent of their games will be a decent effort,” he said, factoring in the tough tour games.

The Lions have won only one series in New Zealand, in 1971, and since they started touring there in 1904 have won six of the 38 tests – with three draws.

They were hammered 3-0 on their last visit 12 years ago, when Dan Carter was in his pomp, but if Lions fans think the retirement of the superstar flyhalf will have weakened the All Blacks, they have not been watching Beauden Barrett, who is operating at arguably even higher levels this season. His, and possibly New Zealand’s only relative weakness is in goal-kicking, where the Lions have real strength in depth, but the tourists are almost certainly going to need to find more than a few penalties to conquer that sporting Everest.

Former All Blacks coach Graham Henry has said the Lions’ “suicidal” itinerary could dash their hopes of being competitiv­e during the New Zealand tour. The Lions face a tough schedule, playing all five of New Zealand’s Super Rugby sides and a match against the Maori All Blacks in addition to the three Tests in Auckland and Wellington. Henry coached the Lions to a 2-1 series loss on their 2001 tour of Australia.

“There is huge pressure on the Lions,” 70-year-old Henry said in comments published on ESPN’s website (espn.com.au). “I know from my own experience­s how much the players respect getting selected for the Lions. It is the pinnacle of their career. It is massive, but they need to do well and I just wonder if the itinerary is suicidal. That is my concern.”

New Zealand’s Super Rugby sides have been dominating the competitio­n and are unlikely to be a pushover for Gatland’s Lions team, as witnessed by the Chiefs’ 40-7 demolition of Wales during their tour last June.

“They are playing New Zealand Maori, they are playing the five franchised teams,” Henry said. – Reuters

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? CALM BEFORE STORM: Warren Gatland announces British Lions squad for tour of New Zealand today.
PICTURE: REUTERS CALM BEFORE STORM: Warren Gatland announces British Lions squad for tour of New Zealand today.

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