Lions boss hails McCarthy, Hansen



Henry Pollock might have hogged the limelight in the British & Irish Lions’ Australian tour opener, but coach Andy Farrell was equally impressed with Joe McCarthy and Mack Hansen.

Hulking English loose forward Pollock lived up to the hype in Perth, helping the tourists to an emphatic 54-7 win over the Western Force on Saturday.

While the 20-year-old put himself in the shop window for a Test call-up, playing a part in two of the Lions’ eight tries, it was McCarthy who claimed Man of the Match honours.

The tireless Irish lock’s fingerprints were all over the game, making key defensive plays and powering over for a well-earned five-pointer.

It put him in pole position to claim a contested tight five slot in the first Test against the Wallabies in Brisbane on 19 July.

RECAP: Pollock impresses as Lions maul Force

“He just stays in the game the whole time,” Farrell said of McCarthy. “He’s a lot more composed in what he does but at the same time he’s never wavered in the intent within his game.

“In the set piece, you saw him come away through the maul, stealing the ball, running down the wing and cutting back inside, looking for offloads and going through rucks and being the force that he is.

“He’s developing his all-round game and he’ll only grow from here on in.”

Farrell also had high praise for Ireland’s Australian-born winger Hansen, who had an ordinary first half but came alive in the second.

“I mean there were some fantastic tries, but the play of the day by a country mile was Mack Hansen,” he said. “Back and forward, full length of the field, fighting for his team on his own, that’s what a Lion should 100% do for his team.”

ALSO: Lions sweat on injured scrumhalf

While noting some flashes of individual brilliance in the first game of their nine-match tour, Farrell also pinpointed teething problems to fix before their next match against the Queensland Reds in Brisbane on Wednesday.

He highlighted ill-discipline, with six penalties conceded in the first half before they got in their groove after the break.

“Happy with the scoreline and happy with how we actually got to that point because it wasn’t all going our own way,” said Farrell.

“We gathered ourselves well and sorted a few things out on the run and played some nice rugby in the end.

“We had more composure [in the second half], we were less desperate,” he added. “We gave a good few penalties away through a lack of discipline certainly … once we stopped giving them the field position and territory they wanted, I felt we defended really well and we were composed enough to score some nice tries.”

© Agence France-Presse

Photo: David Rogers/Getty Images



Source link

Leave comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked with *.