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England ace withdrawn from training on eve of final Lions' Test


Lions players coming out for their captains run at the Accor Stadium - PA
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The British and Irish Lions are aiming to sign off their Australia tour in style by delivering a series whitewash through their most complete performance of the three Tests.

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Andy Farrell’s team took an unassailable 2-0 lead against the Wallabies after edging a classic encounter in Melbourne last weekend and are heavy favourites to prevail again when the rivals meet for the final time on Saturday.

Victory would see them become the first Lions team since Willie John McBride’s ‘Invincibles’ of 1974 to go unbeaten for the whole tour and the first to win every Test since 1927.

And they want to dispatch Australia for a third consecutive weekend by matching the quality shown in the first half in Brisbane and the second 80 minutes at Melbourne Cricket Ground.

“The job isn’t done in any shape or form. We’ve got a really motivated group that have set their stall out,” forwards coach John Dalziel said.

Team Form

Last 5 Games

1
Wins
4
4
Streak
1
15
Tries Scored
22
-63
Points Difference
54
3/5
First Try
4/5
2/5
First Points
3/5
3/5
Race To 10 Points
3/5

“There’s only one way that we want this to end and that’s to go unbeaten and to try and win 3-0. We don’t want anything to derail it.

“We know it is going to be incredibly hard work and Australia showed that last week. They are a good side and they are going to be good again. They are going to be motivated playing here.

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“We’ve got to find that energy and go again, getting that performance that we all want.

“There is still a performance in us. We’ve had 40 minutes in both of the Tests so we want to give our supporters and everyone watching at home a full 80 minutes and show what the Lions are about.”

Wing Tommy Freeman missed Friday’s eve-of-match training run at Accor Stadium due to his overall workload for the tour, but Dalziel stressed there is no concern over his fitness.

Pulling the strings for the climax to the tour is Finn Russell, the Scotland fly-half who has forged an effective creative alliance alongside Ireland’s Jamison Gibson-Park while also providing the generalship needed by his team.

“Finn’s maturing all the time,” said Dalziel of his fellow Scot, who has developed a more rounded game since his early days as a maverick.

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“A lot of players like him get criticism for not being able to play different styles. But here, where we are pulling four nations together, he has delivered a gameplan while also being himself. That’s why he was picked and why he’s world class.

“There have been the moments when he has been driving the team around the park but also the moments when he has seen and put others into space, which is outstanding.”

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c
cnw 1 hour ago
France has conquered and reconquered Europe. Can it reach its Mount Everest?

It’s mind boggling that the best are not playing the best in July! Though the commercial reality bites here. On the B/C/D I think the issue is one of communicating ideas. You point out that in reality the majority of the players were third or fourth choice or perhaps worse. And the way you explained it as someone who clearly knows the French comp that makes sense. So I accept that it was perhaps a third or fourth choice team overall. I should be clear though I think that the quality of the team exceeded the sum of its parts. And I think a D grade is way too low. Their performance was too good to get such a grade. And I think that reflects that they are very good players who had a good chance to build combinations. Would the first choice players have played better - very likely. But that does not diminish the performance of the boys that played.

Put another way, I understand that the French team that played the Boks had a good number of first choice players in stark contrast to the teams that played in NZ. But they did not perform like an “A” team - clearly they had only got together just before that game. They started well but the lack of match readiness showed in the second half. In contrast the Boks had both their first choice team that was a battle hardened unit - and they played their A game, as they did against the ABs first choice team in Wellington. In contrast the first choice ABs beat the then first choice Boks in Auckland - it was the best performance all year by the ABs - it was an A grade performance (the Bok dominance in the forwards notwithstanding).



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