The Mail on Sunday

Farrell at heart of Gatland’s BIG decision

Some big beasts will miss out, especially at No 10, but here’s who our former Lions put on the plane...

- By Nik Simon RUGBY WRITER OF THE YEAR

ON Thursday lunchtime, Warren Gatland will take centre stage in an old east London theatre to name his 36-man Lions squad. It is rugby’s most anticipate­d announceme­nt of the year. Big names will miss out and, knowing Gatland, there could be one or two surprises.

The coaching panel have spent recent weeks casting their eye over matches across Europe. Some players have played themselves in. Others have played themselves out.

Covid bubbles mean Gatland will take a smaller squad to South Africa than in previous years, leaving him with a balancing act across positions.

Rugby Correspond­ent Nik Simon spoke to a team of Lions legends, who produced a squad using their specialist insight for each position.

PROPS

ADAM JONES (Wal) LIONS 2009, 2013

SELECTED: Rory Sutherland, Mako Vunipola, Wyn Jones, Tadhg Furlong, Kyle Sinckler, Tomas Francis

THE Springbok scrum has big men and aggression is their big thing, so you’re taking a risk if you try to outmuscle them. You need to be technicall­y superior.

If your tighthead operates incredibly low to the ground and adopts a strong posture then you stand a chance. Tadhg Furlong and Kyle Sinckler are nailed on. For me, Tomas Francis edges out Andrew Porter and Zander Fagerson for the third spot.

Loosehead is more open. Rory Sutherland has been in good form and Mako Vunipola has so much experience, so they are in. Joe Marler is the best scrummager, but he has not been involved with internatio­nal rugby this year, so the third spot is likely to be a shootout between Wyn Jones, Ellis Genge and Cian Healy. I suspect the Welsh link means Jones will get the spot.

HOOKERS

RORY BEST (Ire) LIONS 2013, 2017

SELECTED: Ken Owens, Jamie George, Ronan Kelleher THE key to winning lineout ball against the Boks is being smart and fast. You can’t go toe to toe with them because they’re big athletes. You have to make them second guess. On form, Ken Owens is the first pick. He’s experience­d, dynamic and a big reason behind Wales’ Six Nations success.

By the time we get to the Tests, I think Jamie George will be the starter. England stalled during the Six Nations but George has credit in the bank and he is the best lineout thrower in the world.

For a long time, Luke CowanDicki­e was my third hooker but I had doubts after Ireland beat England. Against the Springboks, you want big physical ball carriers and Ronan Kelleher fits that mould. If he has a big game for Leinster today, I think he could snatch it.

LOCKS

BEN KAY (Eng) LIONS 2005

SELECTED: Alun Wyn Jones, Maro Itoje, James Ryan, Iain Henderson

ALUN WYN JONES and Maro Itoje are the first picks, with James Ryan not far behind. They are all big-game animals. Taking a smaller squad, Warren will want a few guys who can play lock and back row. Itoje ticks that box, alongside Iain Henderson and Tadhg Beirne. They’re guys who add real ballast.

You need guys who will not only make their tackles, but put in dominant shots to upset the South African physicalit­y. Courtney Lawes would have been ideal if he were fit. The only concern is there is no out-and-out brilliant lineout caller l i ke George Kruis. The majority of tries start from a lineout so you need to make sure you’re covered on that front.

BACK ROW

JAMES HASKELL (Eng) LIONS 2017 SELECTED: Tom Curry, Hamish Watson, Justin Tipuric, Tadhg Beirne, Sam Underhill, Toby Faletau, Billy Vunipola

THERE are so many options, so quality players such as Caelen Doris and CJ Stander could miss out. It comes down to the balance of ball carriers, lineout options and breakdown threats.

My starting back-row would be Tom Curry, Justin Tipuric and Toby Faletau. Curry is a powerful allrounder, Tipuric has t he best footballin­g skills of any flanker in the world and Faletau is outstandin­g, with footwork as well as the gritty stuff. I was completely in awe of him on the 2017 tour.

You need guys who can interfere with the ruck, to stop magicians like Cheslin Kolbe getting quick ball.

Hamish Watson has been pretty special for a while. People question his size but technique wins every time.

Tadhg Beirne offers versatilit­y as a lock or flanker and those guys are worth their weight in gold. The setpiece battle is huge and he’s a guy who can really step up with his lineout maul defence. Sam Underhill hasn’t played a lot but he’s a manstopper and he’s developed his carrying game.

Billy Vunipola will be the first person to admit that his form hasn’t been where it should be, but if Gatland gets him back to his best then he could be devastatin­g.

SCRUM-HALF

GREIG LAIDLAW (Sco) LIONS 2017 SELECTED: Conor Murray, Ali Price, Gareth Davies KNOWING Gregor Townsend (attack coach), the Lions will want to instil some real attacking intent. They will want allrounder­s, rather than someone to marshal tight carries and box kicking. You don’t want to take them on at their own game.

Connor Murray would be my first pick as he has a lot of Test match nous. There are endless options with guys l i ke Tomos Williams, Dan Robson and Danny Care. They might look for someone a little bit different. A chaser. For me, the next two in line are Gareth Davies and Ali Price. Davies is strong and he can come off the bench to sniff a try.

FLY-HALF

JAMES HOOK (Wal) LIONS 2009 SELECTED: Dan Biggar, Finn Russell

GATLAND likes an error-free No 10 who sticks to the script. Pulling a squad together in a short space of time, you need someone who gets players on the same page quickly. He will trust Dan Biggar, Johnny Sexton and Owen Farrell to do that, while Finn Russell offers something completely different.

Someone has to miss out, as you’re unlikely to be able to accommodat­e all four. For me, Biggar is the starting No 10. He can kick to compete and manage a backline. Aerially and defensivel­y he’s very strong.

If Farrell is picked as a centre, which I think is his best position, then that could change the dynamic in Russell’s favour. Gatland might see Russell as too much of a risk, but I think he deserves to go. You probably won’t have time to build a team around him, with all his nuances, in a short space of time.

You always get the odd error with someone as creative as Russell, but he’s a guy who can come off the bench to really change a game.

CENTRES

JAMIE ROBERTS (Wal) LIONS 2009, 2013 SELECTED: Robbie Henshaw, Owen Farrell, Jonathan Davies, Garry Ringrose, Chris Harris

YOU need a focal point against the Boks. Someone who can run into heavy traffic and make yards. That’s why George North is a big

loss, because he’s so powerful. England have really missed Manu Tuilagi for similar reasons, but I just don’t think he’s played enough to go. Robbie Henshaw i s the closest form player you’ve got, so he has to go as a No 12 or No 13.

If Farrell i s your 10- 12, and assuming Henshaw goes, then you pick three from Jonathan Davies, Garry Ringrose, Chris Harris, Henry Slade and Huw Jones. Ringrose has become a real leader at Leinster and looks ready for that step up. Davies is still fighting his way back to form, but Gatland will want his experience. Harris is strong defensivel­y, bringing good line speed, and that’s what you need against Damian de Allende and Andre Esterhuize­n. They’re physical and, with North missing, powerful operators like Henshaw, Duhan van der Merwe and even Jack Nowell could become key men.

WINGS

TOMMY BOWE (Ire) LIONS 2009, 2013

SELECTED: Anthony Watson, Duhan van der Merwe, Josh Adams, Louis Rees-Zammit GATLAND likes to have someone to get over the gain line, like North or Jamie Roberts. Van der Merwe is a man mountain who can do that. He has been scoring tries for fun and pops up all over the pitch. Defence isn’t always his biggest strength but he makes up for that with his attacking threat.

Even though he’s picked as a fullback, Liam Williams is a very good defender against someone like Kolbe and he’ll be well equipped under their kicking game.

Anthony Watson could easily get into the starting line-up, while Josh Adams is a super finisher and Louis Re es-Z a mm it could be the youngster who carries around the mascot teddy. There’s a lot of talent and the likes of Jonny May and Keith Earls could be unlucky to miss out.

FULL-BACK

GEORDAN MURPHY (Ire) LIONS 2005 SELECTED: Stuart Hogg, Liam Williams

THE Boks will play exactly like they did against England in the World Cup final — competing hard up front and then putting the ball in the air. You need a full-back who can cover the space in the backfield and deal with those high balls. For me, Stuart Hogg is the standout full-back at the moment. He has the ability to win in the air, and has a huge boot to match.

Liam Williams is a full-back with the ability to play on the wing, while Anthony Watson is a winger with the ability to play full-back. That versatilit­y is important.

If one of the two specialist No 15s went down injured, then Gatland might look at bringing in a more traditiona­l full-back such as Leigh Halfpenny or Mike Brown.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom