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The Breakdown

Who will Andy Farrell take on 2025 Lions tour of Australia?

There are plenty of probables but the domestic fixture list, especially for French sides, will have a massive influence

Andy Farrell with a toy lion
Andy Farrell’s job in picking a team for 2025 is complicated by doubts over Leinster and players based in France. Photograph: Billy Stickland/Inpho/Shutterstock

Just imagine, for a second, you are Andy Farrell, head coach of the 2025 British & Irish Lions. There is not limitless scope for leisurely reflection, given Ireland’s Test series in South Africa and with his son Owen about to make an emotional farewell to Saracens. But last Saturday’s thunderous Champions Cup final is still fresh in the imagination and now is an obvious time to ponder the best available squad to face Australia next year.

The first priority, as ever, is to dig out next year’s domestic fixture list. The Lions’ first game is scheduled to take place on 20 June in Dublin against Argentina, before the squads depart for Western Australia. The Premiership and United Rugby Championship finals are the previous weekend, a welcome improvement from 2021 when the former clashed with the Lions’ game versus Japan at Murrayfield.

Among the most critical pieces of the whole jigsaw, however, is the date of the 2025 French Top 14 final, scheduled for 28 June. By then, the Lions will have been in Australia for almost a week. At least three of the 10 tour games will have been played by the time any Top 14 final representatives have sobered up, flown halfway around the world, done some meaningful training and are ready to play competitive rugby with some unfamiliar teammates.

If Toulouse, say, end up reaching a final against Racing 92 it puts a significant asterisk against the names of Jack Willis, Blair Kinghorn, Owen Farrell, Will Rowlands and Henry Arundell, all tour contenders. Alternatively, Farrell Sr could consider that quintet as high-end replacements, ready to travel should a vacancy materialise. But what if Hugo Keenan goes down in a heap towards the end of Leinster’s season? With Kinghorn committed elsewhere, what then?

And so on and so on. Selecting a Lions squad is as easy as nailing a multi-coloured jelly to a moving wall. In some ways, deciding whether Farrell should select his own son will be the simple part – the pair have never allowed sentiment to cloud their day jobs. Rather harder will be gauging whether the growing number of narrow big-game defeats for Leinster’s top players is merely a blip or a flashing amber warning. Or how different the squad he would select today will be from the one he eventually names?

Let’s see if the Breakdown can help. There would appear to be 23 or 24 probables at this early stage, fitness permitting, with Leinster heavily represented. Caelan Doris, Joe McCarthy, Ryan Baird, Dan Sheehan, Tadhg Furlong, Andrew Porter, Jamison Gibson-Park, James Lowe and Keenan are all pretty much nailed on and either Garry Ringrose or Robbie Henshaw will probably join them. Add Connacht’s Bundee Aki, Mack Hansen and Finlay Bealham and the Irish contingent is bound to be healthy.

Others in this rarefied category? Maro Itoje, Ben Earl and the fast-emerging Immanuel Feyi-Waboso from England, plus Tom Curry if he can return fit and firing from injury. Scotland, as a bare minimum, will send Finn Russell, Sione Tuipulotu, Duhan van der Merwe, Zander Fagerson and Kinghorn, with Wales set to be represented, at the very least, by Dafydd Jenkins and Jac Morgan.

At this point, though, things become trickier. Take the back-row. Doris – a possible tour captain – Baird, Earl, Morgan and, potentially, Curry are great options but what about Willis, unavailable for England but colossal against Leinster? Or Courtney Lawes, who has declared he would tour with the Lions “in a heartbeat” if asked? Or England’s coming men, Chandler Cunningham-South and Alfie Barbeary? Not forgetting Peter O’Mahony, Jack Conan, Josh van der Flier and Will Connors. Or Wales’s Tommy Reffell. Or Scotland’s Rory Darge, Andy Christie and Jack Dempsey. Only seven specialist back-rowers, will probably travel.

One or two other positions remain wide open. Hooker, for example. Dewi Lake and Jamie George will fancy it but try telling Ronan Kelleher, Luke Cowan-Dickie, Theo Dan, Rob Herring and George Turner that selection is already a done deal. Similarly, among the half-backs, will Farrell Sr really choose Marcus or Fin Smith – or both – over his own flesh and blood? And which of Tomos Williams, Alex Mitchell, Harry Randall and Ben White best complement Gibson-Park and the eventual choices at 10?

Outside bets? Looking at the gaps still to be filled, the two young Englishmen Tommy Freeman and the uncapped Quins loosehead Fin Baxter are worth a modest wager, in addition to Cunningham-South. Some genuinely exciting Red Rose talents are emerging and this tour may just come at the right moment for them.

But everything ultimately boils down to how long Farrell Sr can risk waiting for his best French-based talent. On Saturday’s evidence, Willis and Kinghorn would be among the first names on anyone’s squad list. Farrell jnr, as he hopes to underline in his final days with Saracens, remains a supreme competitor while Arundell could be prime X-factor, wildcard material. As Farrell snr strokes his chin and contemplates his 2025 options, some pivotal decisions await.

On the up

It has been a significant season in Japan’s League One that concluded at the weekend with a thrilling 24-20 win for Toshiba Brave Lupus Tokyo, guided by the ex-Crusaders and Bath coach, Todd Blackadder, against Saitama Panasonic Wild Knights. The crowd of 57,000 was 14,000 up on last season’s final and aggregate tournament attendances rose from 750,000 last year to more than 1.1 million. It sets the scene nicely for England’s tour to Japan, with the final’s star man, the Toshiba winger Jone Naikabula, a certain starter against England. The Fijian-born Naikabula scored two tries and set up Toshiba’s third, with the All Black fly-half Richie Mo’unga also on the winning side.

Jone Naikabula (left) runs with the ball during the League One final in Tokyo.
Jone Naikabula (left) runs with the ball during the League One final in Tokyo. Photograph: Philip Fong/AFP/Getty Images

From another planet

It is hard to recall a more influential all-round player than Antoine Dupont, and the man his teammates call “The Martian” – they reckon his ability is on a different planet to everybody else – is about to underline the point. This weekend, Toulouse’s Champions Cup captain will don his other cloak and represent France in the Madrid Sevens before his participation in the Olympics in Paris. There is an ongoing debate about whether Dupont is already the best player, male or female, ever to grace a rugby field. If he propels his country to a gold medal and performs even half as brilliantly as he did at Tottenham last Saturday, he will surely merit that exalted status.

Memory lane

4 July 1975: Brothers Glen (left), Gary (centre) and Mark Ella pose for a picture after being selected to represent Sydney in an under-16s union competition. They all went on to play for Australia.

Brothers Glen Ella, Gary Ella and Mark Ella

Still want more?

Leinster and Toulouse delivered an exhilarating Champions Cup final that more than lived up to its billing as a battle for the ages, reckons Michael Aylwin.

Meanwhile, Robert Kitson reasons that the defeat against Toulouse ought to make Leinster obsess slightly less on defence.

Robert was also at the Challenge Cup final to report on Sale Sharks’ Bongi ­Mbonambi-inspired victory over Gloucester.

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