logo
The accidental Lion: how an Irish Queenslander ended up in a red jersey

The accidental Lion: how an Irish Queenslander ended up in a red jersey

Ahead of this year's British and Irish Lions series, players nervously tuned into a live squad announcement at the O2 Arena in London in front of fans who had paid $135 dollars for the privilege.
The last time the Lions visited these shores, 12 years ago, Queenslander Tom Court's call-up to the iconic invitational team was slightly different. The former Ireland prop was on holiday on the Gold Coast, about to tuck into a Thai takeaway, when he got a call that changed his career.
Court had grown up in rural Queensland as an elite shot-putter with dreams of making the Australian Olympic team before he took up rugby at university at 23 years old on the advice of a friend and eventually transformed himself into a seasoned prop for Ulster and Ireland.
Court's late arrival to rugby left him largely unfamiliar with the nuanced history of the game, completely unaware he was about to become only the second Australian to represent the Lions in Australia after Alec Timms in 1899.
After winning the first Test in Brisbane, the Lions were battling injuries, including first-choice loosehead prop, England's Alex Corbisiero, having damaged his calf. As the Lions searched for a solution, coach Warren Gatland found out that Court happened to be on holiday in the same state with his family.
'I never really even thought about the Lions,' Court said. 'I know it sounds trite, but I didn't grow up playing rugby, I always saw it as so far out of reach, it wasn't realistic. I genuinely hadn't thought about it at all. I just wanted to get a good run for Ireland.
'I had a missed call from [British and Irish Lions director of operations] Guy Richardson, but I thought it was some of the Irish boys just taking the piss. I heard the voicemail and I was like, 'Yeah right, OK, nice one', and then just left it.
'About an hour later I had a call from Mick Kearney, who was the team manager for Ireland at the time and I had his number saved so I knew it was him and he called and pretty much said Gats [Warren Gatland] had a couple of injuries and they need you to come down [to Brisbane] and it was just surreal. I remember it was slow motion when he was telling me because it wasn't even excitement, it wasn't fear, I was sort of frozen.'
The Lions had a single midweek fixture to complete against the Melbourne Rebels ahead of the final two Tests and needed to keep their remaining props fresh.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Boulter falls short in bid for Nottingham hat-trick
Boulter falls short in bid for Nottingham hat-trick

Perth Now

time3 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Boulter falls short in bid for Nottingham hat-trick

Katie Boulter's reign as the queen of Nottingham is over after she lost in the quarter-finals to McCartney Kessler. Boulter, fiancee of Australia's top-ranked men's tennis player Alex de Minaur, was gunning for a third successive Nottingham Open crown, having won in 2023 and 2024, but came unstuck against the world No.42 with victory in sight. The British No.2 was leading 4-3 with a break of serve in the final set, but lost the last three games to her American opponent, including her serve twice, to go down 6-3 3-6 6-4. That saw her 12-match winning run on her home court come to an end. "It was a really tight match, it was close,'' Kessler said. "I wanted to stay within myself and keep playing my game, and luckily I came out on top. "We are both aggressive players, so there was a lot of shot-making. "I am trying to get as many titles as I can and put myself in the position to win titles. I am looking forward to the rest of the weekend." She will play Rebecca Sramkova in the semi-finals. Dayana Yastremska will play Magda Linette in the other semi-final. Ukrainian Yastremska beat former US Open finalist Leylah Fernandez 6-3 7-6 (8-6) in the quarter-final. Linette downed top seed Clara Tauson 6-2 7-5 to book her spot in the last four.

Crusaders are Super Rugby champions yet again
Crusaders are Super Rugby champions yet again

The Advertiser

time6 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Crusaders are Super Rugby champions yet again

The Crusaders are again the kings of Super Rugby Pacific after consigning the Chiefs to a third-straight loss in the title decider. Playing in Christchurch, the Crusaders claimed a 32nd successive play-off home match victory over three decades of Super Rugby as they downed the Chiefs 16-12 in Saturday's final. It's the Crusaders' 13th title in a combined competition while the Chiefs, who were minor premiers, become just the second team in history to lose three straight Super finals, joining the Lions from South Africa (2016-2018). The victory was all the more remarkable given they missed the top eight play-offs in 2024, although they have now won three of the last four titles on offer. "Where we were at the end of last year, the start of this year we had a mountain to climb," said Crusaders fullback Will Jordan, who won his seventh Super Rugby title. "Everyone had to dig deep and it hasn't been easy." The victory came in a disappointing week for their Australian veteran playmaker James O'Connor, who missed selection for the Wallabies' squad to face Fiji and likely the British and Irish Lions, seeemingly drawing the curtain on his Test career. Used off the bench for most of the season, O'Connor only came on the field to replace rising star Rivez Reihana with just over a minute remaining, having been a a steady contributor since leaving Queensland to take his chances with the Crusaders in 2025. The Crusaders' All Blacks hooker Codie Taylor scored a brilliant try and Reihana contributed 11 points from the kicking tee, including a crucial second-half penalty while his opposite Damian McKenzie missed a 54th minute penalty and a first-half conversion. Hunting their first title since 2013, the Chiefs scored first-half tries through prop George Dyer and fullback Shaun Stevenson but were unable to register a point after the break as the Crusaders' forward and defensive pressure took its toll. The Crusaders have now won 13 full editions of Super Rugby, including three in the last four years, as well as two New Zealand-only versions played in 2020 and 2021 during the COVID pandemic. The defeat was a bitter blow for the Chiefs. "It was a classic final, two great teams going at it and a small margin," Chiefs captain Luke Jacobson said. "The Crusaders did really well to win the halfway and play at the right end of the field. "I felt we had some good attack when we got into their half, we put some good pressure on them but we just didn't play enough footy down there." The Crusaders are again the kings of Super Rugby Pacific after consigning the Chiefs to a third-straight loss in the title decider. Playing in Christchurch, the Crusaders claimed a 32nd successive play-off home match victory over three decades of Super Rugby as they downed the Chiefs 16-12 in Saturday's final. It's the Crusaders' 13th title in a combined competition while the Chiefs, who were minor premiers, become just the second team in history to lose three straight Super finals, joining the Lions from South Africa (2016-2018). The victory was all the more remarkable given they missed the top eight play-offs in 2024, although they have now won three of the last four titles on offer. "Where we were at the end of last year, the start of this year we had a mountain to climb," said Crusaders fullback Will Jordan, who won his seventh Super Rugby title. "Everyone had to dig deep and it hasn't been easy." The victory came in a disappointing week for their Australian veteran playmaker James O'Connor, who missed selection for the Wallabies' squad to face Fiji and likely the British and Irish Lions, seeemingly drawing the curtain on his Test career. Used off the bench for most of the season, O'Connor only came on the field to replace rising star Rivez Reihana with just over a minute remaining, having been a a steady contributor since leaving Queensland to take his chances with the Crusaders in 2025. The Crusaders' All Blacks hooker Codie Taylor scored a brilliant try and Reihana contributed 11 points from the kicking tee, including a crucial second-half penalty while his opposite Damian McKenzie missed a 54th minute penalty and a first-half conversion. Hunting their first title since 2013, the Chiefs scored first-half tries through prop George Dyer and fullback Shaun Stevenson but were unable to register a point after the break as the Crusaders' forward and defensive pressure took its toll. The Crusaders have now won 13 full editions of Super Rugby, including three in the last four years, as well as two New Zealand-only versions played in 2020 and 2021 during the COVID pandemic. The defeat was a bitter blow for the Chiefs. "It was a classic final, two great teams going at it and a small margin," Chiefs captain Luke Jacobson said. "The Crusaders did really well to win the halfway and play at the right end of the field. "I felt we had some good attack when we got into their half, we put some good pressure on them but we just didn't play enough footy down there." The Crusaders are again the kings of Super Rugby Pacific after consigning the Chiefs to a third-straight loss in the title decider. Playing in Christchurch, the Crusaders claimed a 32nd successive play-off home match victory over three decades of Super Rugby as they downed the Chiefs 16-12 in Saturday's final. It's the Crusaders' 13th title in a combined competition while the Chiefs, who were minor premiers, become just the second team in history to lose three straight Super finals, joining the Lions from South Africa (2016-2018). The victory was all the more remarkable given they missed the top eight play-offs in 2024, although they have now won three of the last four titles on offer. "Where we were at the end of last year, the start of this year we had a mountain to climb," said Crusaders fullback Will Jordan, who won his seventh Super Rugby title. "Everyone had to dig deep and it hasn't been easy." The victory came in a disappointing week for their Australian veteran playmaker James O'Connor, who missed selection for the Wallabies' squad to face Fiji and likely the British and Irish Lions, seeemingly drawing the curtain on his Test career. Used off the bench for most of the season, O'Connor only came on the field to replace rising star Rivez Reihana with just over a minute remaining, having been a a steady contributor since leaving Queensland to take his chances with the Crusaders in 2025. The Crusaders' All Blacks hooker Codie Taylor scored a brilliant try and Reihana contributed 11 points from the kicking tee, including a crucial second-half penalty while his opposite Damian McKenzie missed a 54th minute penalty and a first-half conversion. Hunting their first title since 2013, the Chiefs scored first-half tries through prop George Dyer and fullback Shaun Stevenson but were unable to register a point after the break as the Crusaders' forward and defensive pressure took its toll. The Crusaders have now won 13 full editions of Super Rugby, including three in the last four years, as well as two New Zealand-only versions played in 2020 and 2021 during the COVID pandemic. The defeat was a bitter blow for the Chiefs. "It was a classic final, two great teams going at it and a small margin," Chiefs captain Luke Jacobson said. "The Crusaders did really well to win the halfway and play at the right end of the field. "I felt we had some good attack when we got into their half, we put some good pressure on them but we just didn't play enough footy down there."

Crusaders are Super Rugby champions yet again
Crusaders are Super Rugby champions yet again

Perth Now

time7 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Crusaders are Super Rugby champions yet again

The Crusaders are again the kings of Super Rugby Pacific after consigning the Chiefs to a third-straight loss in the title decider. Playing in Christchurch, the Crusaders claimed a 32nd successive play-off home match victory over three decades of Super Rugby as they downed the Chiefs 16-12 in Saturday's final. It's the Crusaders' 13th title in a combined competition while the Chiefs, who were minor premiers, become just the second team in history to lose three straight Super finals, joining the Lions from South Africa (2016-2018). The victory was all the more remarkable given they missed the top eight play-offs in 2024, although they have now won three of the last four titles on offer. "Where we were at the end of last year, the start of this year we had a mountain to climb," said Crusaders fullback Will Jordan, who won his seventh Super Rugby title. "Everyone had to dig deep and it hasn't been easy." The victory came in a disappointing week for their Australian veteran playmaker James O'Connor, who missed selection for the Wallabies' squad to face Fiji and likely the British and Irish Lions, seeemingly drawing the curtain on his Test career. Used off the bench for most of the season, O'Connor only came on the field to replace rising star Rivez Reihana with just over a minute remaining, having been a a steady contributor since leaving Queensland to take his chances with the Crusaders in 2025. The Crusaders' All Blacks hooker Codie Taylor scored a brilliant try and Reihana contributed 11 points from the kicking tee, including a crucial second-half penalty while his opposite Damian McKenzie missed a 54th minute penalty and a first-half conversion. Hunting their first title since 2013, the Chiefs scored first-half tries through prop George Dyer and fullback Shaun Stevenson but were unable to register a point after the break as the Crusaders' forward and defensive pressure took its toll. The Crusaders have now won 13 full editions of Super Rugby, including three in the last four years, as well as two New Zealand-only versions played in 2020 and 2021 during the COVID pandemic. The defeat was a bitter blow for the Chiefs. "It was a classic final, two great teams going at it and a small margin," Chiefs captain Luke Jacobson said. "The Crusaders did really well to win the halfway and play at the right end of the field. "I felt we had some good attack when we got into their half, we put some good pressure on them but we just didn't play enough footy down there."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store