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Lions' demands over players shot down by Joe Schmidt


Wallabies head coach Joe Schmidt speaks to the media during an Australian Wallabies visit to Stanmore Public School on June 19, 2025 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Matt King/Getty Images for ARU)
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Australia head coach Joe Schmidt has hit back at the British and Irish Lions over their warning he is contractually obliged to release his stars to their Super Rugby franchises throughout the tour.

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Lions chief executive Ben Calveley on Monday called for all Wallabies to be allowed to represent the Western Force, Reds, Waratahs and Brumbies in the build-up to the Test series, stating their involvement is part of the tour agreement.

Head coach Andy Farrell wants his squad to be battle-hardened by the time international hostilities commence on July 19, but Schmidt has said he will ring-fence a core of 25 players for the warm-up game against Fiji on July 6 to ensure they avoid injury.

Only Saturday’s opponents the Western Force are certain to have access to their full contingent of Wallabies, with Schmidt insisting it is unrealistic to expect front-line operators such as Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii and Len Ikitau to double up for their franchise and country.

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“There’s some serious plate-spinning at the moment, trying to get ready,” Schmidt told the Sydney Morning Herald.

“The ambition is there will be some going back to the Reds and some going back to the Waratahs.

“But in reality, the Lions have got their squad. Are they going to play their best team every week? That’s unlikely. So are we going to play all the same players every week?

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“We play Fiji on a Sunday and the Waratahs play on a Saturday night. So it’s not like you can play Saturday and Sunday night against a team like the Lions. It would be counterproductive.

“I’m not sure whether Andy was part of that discussion or whether it was just coming from the CEO, but I’ve read the tour’s agreement and it’s having the best intention to have the highest-quality players available and playing.

“It’s not as specific as saying every Wallaby from a state or a club has to be available to play every game that the Lions come through on.”

Schmidt’s robust response to Calveley comes after he took a swipe at the Lions for the number of overseas-born players in their squad.

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The Kiwi described Bundee Aki and Sione Tuipulotu as a “southern-hemisphere centre partnership” when they were selected to face Argentina on Friday night.

Aki and Tuipulotu were born in New Zealand and Australia respectively, while James Lowe, Jamison Gibson-Park, Duhan van der Merwe, Pierre Schoeman, Finlay Bealham and Mack Hansen were also born outside Britain and Ireland.

Meanwhile, Australia great Kurtley Beale has revealed he has not watched back his fateful missed penalty during the Lions’ last tour Down Under in 2013.

Beale slipped during the run-up to a kick that, if successful, would have given the Wallabies a 1-0 lead in a series they went on to lose 2-1.

“It was a real disappointment in that game one, an embarrassing moment, but there are plenty of learnings. From that day onwards I’ve worn studs!” said Beale, who will start for the Western Force in Perth on Saturday.

“It was a crucial moment in the series, wasn’t it? I was just very thankful to have strong team-mates around me to pick me back up and get my focus into the next game.”

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Olly 1 hour ago
Is defence going out of fashion? 'The trick now is how quickly you stop the bleeding'

IMO, with all the physical changes to the players and the law changes for faster more ball minutes etc…The Def role has changed. All the usual stuff of the def system, line speed structure, communication, pressure etc etc are all critical. For me, game management has become def and the role of the modern def coach. Yes, it has always been important, but I feel it has switched from more attack focus to a def focus. It is very hard to stop teams from coming away with points when they get in range now and we are seeing more and more of just pick-and-goes over actual attack in this red zone. You can tackle your heart out, but the system will fail, and from what I have been seeing in SRP (with the new laws), teams seem to be holding on in def….then suddenly the opposition gets in the right area (mostly a run of penalties), and we have a run of points. Lots of points in bunches at critical points of games which make a tight contest look like a comfortable win.

Not sure if I am getting my point over clearly (at the end of a tiring day so rambling); I guess I just see the game is all about managing where the game is played, which has always been important…But I think it is def more important now then he has been in the past and a critical part of def coaching now. A def team stopping a team from getting points when in the reds zone is celebrated as a miracle now and a complete failure from the attacking team….



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