logo
Andy Farrell says Lions ‘won't sugar-coat' defeat to Argentina

Andy Farrell says Lions ‘won't sugar-coat' defeat to Argentina

Yahoo10 hours ago

Andy Farrell demanded an improvement from his British and Irish Lions when they arrive in Australia after they slipped to a 28-24 defeat by Argentina in Dublin.
The Lions lost their opening tour match for the first time since 1971 after their second-half fightback was overturned when Santiago Cordero finished the match-winning try in the 59th minute.
Advertisement
On Saturday they head Down Under before facing the Western Force a week later and Farrell is seeking an immediate response to the error-strewn display seen at a sold-out Aviva Stadium.
'We made it a tough game. Congratulations to Argentina, they thoroughly deserved to win the match. I'm sure that's a big moment in Argentinean rugby history,' Farrell said.
'We had plenty of opportunities and we should have done better to convert them, but the whole story of the game is that we compounded too many errors.
'I wouldn't give familiarity as an excuse. We need to be better than that. The Lions are good players coming together.
Advertisement
'We won't sugar-coat this. We need to be honest because if we're not honest, how do we gain trust with each other?
'Losing hurts, especially in this jersey. We need to find the solutions pretty quickly and be honest with ourselves because some good has to come from this.
'Of course we asked a lot of the players and maybe we put too much pressure on the side because it looked like we were a little disconnected at times.
'We'll review what we said we were going to do as a team. We need to make sure we get something positive from this because it's all about how we move forward.
'Some players will be happy and some players won't and will be dying to get another chance out there. We've got to learn a lot of lessons from that.
Advertisement
'We want to see a better all round performance. There wasn't just one thing, it was the compounding of quite a few bits.
'The amount of balls that we threw blindly either on to the floor or to the opposition was a standout.
'The scraps on the floor always seemed to go to Argentina, so there was a bit more fight and hunger from them that we can't accept.'
Maro Itoje's first game as captain ended in defeat (Brian Lawless/PA)
Maro Itoje criticised the Lions' accuracy as his first outing as captain ended in the tourists' first defeat to Argentina in eight matches..
'It was a spectacular occasion. The fans gave us a glimpse of what to expect in Australia,' Itoje said.
'We gave ourselves numerous opportunities but we weren't accurate enough at times and weren't consistent enough in piling pressure on to Argentina.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

SA Rugby chief Oberholzer pours cold water on White's Bok complaints
SA Rugby chief Oberholzer pours cold water on White's Bok complaints

News24

timean hour ago

  • News24

SA Rugby chief Oberholzer pours cold water on White's Bok complaints

SA Rugby chief executive officer Rian Oberholzer scoffed at Bulls director of rugby Jake White's season-long suggestion of having more overseas-based Springboks playing in South Africa, saying it wasn't financially feasible. In the aftermath of last week's 32-7 United Rugby Championship final loss to Leinster in Dublin, White said he needed what the Irish super province has. Oberholzer pointed out that the Bulls fielded 12 Springboks in their game against Leinster while also having a key player, Elrigh Louw, out injured. For more, please visit News24 Sport's dedicated rugby section. SA Rugby chief executive officer Rian Oberholzer poured cold water on Bulls director of rugby Jake White's season-long bleating about wanting the Springboks' overseas contingent to ply their trade in South Africa, saying the policy of having players overseas won't change. After last week's 32-7 United Rugby Championship (URC) final loss that the Bulls suffered against Leinster to lose a third showpiece game, White said he needed what Leinster had from a quality depth-in-strength perspective. The well-resourced Leinster provides the spine of the Irish men's national rugby team. Several players were on the British and Irish Lions team that played Argentina in Dublin on Friday, from where they'll be headed to Australia. White's messaging regarding the players that are not in the country has been consistent throughout the season despite the Bulls being the best South African team in the URC in the past two seasons. 'I need what Leinster have,' White said after the final. 'I need to be able to fight fire with fire. 'Leinster, Toulouse, La Rochelle... what do you need to win those games? Academy players or seasoned internationals? 'I'd like to sit in the coaches' box, be 19-nil up and be able to call up RG Snyman so he can menace the defence like he did today. 'You're in a dream world if you think that a club team that's made up of... I counted; we had eight players who weren't internationals finishing off the game. 'How do you expect eight non-internationals playing provincial rugby to beat 'Ireland'?' Oberholzer pointed out that the Bulls had 12 Springboks in their match-day line-up and that having players overseas helps significantly with their wage bill across the four URC franchises. READ | Stormers stalwart Dixon to stay in the Cape as arbitration saga draws to a close South Africa is one of the few rugby nations that consistently picks players who don't play in South Africa. This lessens the wage bill, as players also benefit from a weak rand and bigger overseas purses. 'One of our strengths is that we, as South Africa, allow our players who are internationals to play overseas,' Oberholzer told News24 at the Boktown launch at the AB Inbev offices in Bryanston on Friday. 'You need to look at the salary saving that we have with our players who are playing in Japan, France and England. 'We still have the total talent pool available for us, and we will not change that because it's a huge strength of ours that we can pick players who don't play here. READ | Eben on Jake's calls for star Boks to return to SA: 'Would be great, but a bit impractical' 'We often talk about the Boks playing in our national teams, and we tend to forget [that] the Bulls team that played last week had 12 Springboks. 'One must be careful of falling into the trap of saying we don't have the players in South Africa, because we do have them. 'This was our [fourth] URC season and SA has played in all of them. We're doing well with what we've got here.' Bulls utility forward Ruan Nortje, who started at flank in last week's final and has been capped as a Bok through his consistent efforts, chose to sidestep the matter with some diplomacy. 'I'm not going latch onto, or make a comment regarding what Jake said,' Nortje said. 'What we need to do is to be better.' His Bulls teammate Elrigh Louw, who is recovering from a knee injury he sustained in January against the Lions that'll keep him out for the rest of the year and some change of early next year, was firmer in his response. 'I'm not going to comment on what Jake said,' Louw said SA Rugby recently declared a R93 million loss, which is far better than some of the losses incurred by the other rugby nations. Their financial outlook is set to improve for this financial year when SA Rugby becomes a shareholder in the URC and the European Professional Club Rugby setups. SA Rugby has been paying for its participation in the URC and the two EPCR competitions, which has set back its finances but was also necessary. This may lead to conversations about salary caps for the South African teams so that they can compete with their European rivals. Rob Houwing | Bok season start: STILL a shortage of spring chickens at scrumhalf The South African salary cap currently stands at R127 million per team for the year, something Oberholzer hopes will remain the same in the next financial year. 'It's a participation saving because if you look at the net investment we had to make in 2024, [it] was R124 million,' Oberholzer said. 'We invested in playing in the URC, and we don't have to do that anymore, and I wouldn't like to see the salary caps increase. 'That's a challenge if we start to pay salaries that are too high because the unions and the teams would be under more pressure. 'Hopefully, the salary cap won't be upped, but we also need the competition to be ensured in the URC,' Oberholzer added.

No Origin stars, no worries; Panthers in boilover win
No Origin stars, no worries; Panthers in boilover win

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

No Origin stars, no worries; Panthers in boilover win

An undermanned Penrith have secured a critical 28-18 victory over the high-flying Warriors despite missing their swag of State of Origin stars. The Panthers arrived in Auckland without five stars including Nathan Cleary and Isaah Yeo due to the travel factor from Origin II in Perth to New Zealand. But the rookie outfit shocked the third-ranked hosts in their Saturday clash to bank a third straight win and continue their climb up the NRL ladder. Depending on results the defending premiers could finish inside the top eight at the end of the round for the first time since Las Vegas in the opening round. Winning seven of their past eight matches, the Warriors were expected to outclass Penrith but the Panthers' young halves Blaize Talagi and Brad Schneider stood up to steer the visitors home. Talagi won't be stopped 🔥 #NRLWarriorsPanthers Telstra Moment of the Match. — NRL (@NRL) June 21, 2025 With Moses Leota leading the way up front with 147 run metres, second rower Scott Sorensen also stood tall, scoring two of their five tries. The Warriors weren't helped by losing Marata Niukore to a head knock 10 minutes into the match and then winger Dallin Watene-Zelezniak, who appeared to suffer a serious ankle injury. Sorensen went on report for the tackle that ended Watene-Zelezniak's night. Trailing 6-8 at halftime, the Warriors' hopes of a big finish were also hobbled as halfback Luke Metcalf struggled with a quad injury. The Panthers started with a bang with Sorensen held up over the line early but they made no mistake in the 16th minute when centre Casey McLean found winger Tom Jenkins, who bagged a hat-trick last week. In a pulsating contest the Warriors soon levelled with a ball bouncing up for Jackson Ford after Leka Halasima skittled Penrith players leaping for a Metcalf bomb. Sorensen again put his team ahead, scoring his first try with three minutes remaining in the half. The Warriors edged ahead soon after the break through Jacob Laban but the full house at Go Media Stadium had little to cheer about until a 78th minute consolation try by Moala Graham-Taufa. In the meantime, the Panthers piled on a further three tries, with Talagi and winger Paul Alamoti getting in on the action, to seal the win.

Feeney dominates Darwin to hit four straight race wins
Feeney dominates Darwin to hit four straight race wins

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Feeney dominates Darwin to hit four straight race wins

Broc Feeney has continued his dominance at Hidden Valley Raceway, winning back-to-back races from pole in Darwin to extend his lead at the top of the Supercars standings. The Triple Eight speedster seems unstoppable at the moment. With his third and fourth consecutive race wins on Saturday, his championship gap over teammate Will Brown has opened up to 143 points. In a controlled performance in the day's second race, Feeney held onto the lead from the jump, setting a new Darwin lap record of one minute 7.523 seconds in the process. After pitting last, the 22-year-old used his fresh supersoft tyres to speed away from Anton De Pasquale in the final laps and hold onto a one second lead. De Pasquale's second-place finish was his first podium of the season and Grove Racing rookie Kai Allen picked up his first career podium in third. But Grove could be in for a team penalty after one of his crew members dropped a tyre in pit lane, sparking a post-race investigation from the stewards. De Pasquale and Allen both slipped behind Brodie Kostecki and Matt Payne after pitting later, but jumped back into the top three with fresher tyres. Cam Waters, who started in third, lacked pace and slipped back through the pack before an off on turn one with two laps to go sent him back to 10th. Brown recovered 10 places to finish in seventh after starting in 17th. Feeney's two wins continued his love affair with Hidden Valley, including winning both races in 2024 and another the year earlier. He earlier held off Tickford's Waters to win race 17 as carnage unfolded behind. It took just one turn for the first big shunt of the race to bring out the safety car. Wheel contact from James Golding fired Jaxon Evans into the barrier at the exit of turn one at high speed, dislodging his front wheel and ruling his car out of the rest of the day's action. RACING IN THE TOP END WITH EARLY DRAMA!!!Follow along this weekend from our NEW Live Insights here 👉 #Supercars — Supercars (@supercars) June 21, 2025 There was more drama straight off the restart, with Jack Le Brocq shunting hard into the wall amid cramped conditions on pit straight and parting ways with his front tyre. Seconds later, a tangle between Nick Percat and Richie Stanaway left the PremiAir Racing man with heavy damage, while Ryan Wood's Ford Mustang suffered engine failure and was left immobile. Brown also had a disappointing race race 17, finishing in eighth Feeney leads the race for the Darwin Triple Crown trophy on 160 points, with another 140 points up for grabs in Sunday's 200km race. Unlike previous seasons where the Crown was only awarded to a driver who won a clean sweep, whoever amasses the most points over the course of the weekend will claim the prize. RACE 17 RESULTS: 1. Broc Feeney (Triple Eight Race Engineering) 2. Cam Waters (Tickford Racing) 3. Matt Payne (Grove Racing) 4. Bryce Fullwood (Brad Jones Racing) 5. James Courtney (Blanchard Racing Team) RACE 18 RESULTS: 1. Broc Feeney (Triple Eight Race Engineering) 2. Anton De Pasquale (Team 18) 3. Kai Allen (Grove Racing) 4. Andre Heimgartner (Brad Jones Racing) 5. Brodie Kostecki (Dick Johnson Racing) CHAMPIONSHIP STANDINGS: 1. Broc Feeney (Triple Eight Race Engineering) 2. Will Brown (Triple Eight Race Engineering) 3. Matt Payne (Grove Racing) 4. Cam Waters (Tickford Racing) 5. Chaz Mostert (Walkinshaw Andretti United)

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