British and Irish Lions face anxious wait over fitness of Tomos Williams
The British and Irish Lions face an anxious wait over the fitness of Tomos Williams after the Wales scrum-half limped off in their 54-7 rout of Western Force.
Williams sustained an injury to his left hamstring during the act of scoring the second of his two tries early in the second half at Optus Stadium, ending another impressive performance for the Lions that was propelling him into Test contention.
While the extent of the damage is not yet known, it creates pressure on the touristsโ half-back stocks with Jamison Gibson-Park yet to make his first appearance on tour due to a glute problem.
Gibson-Park is expected to make his comeback against the Reds in Brisbane on Wednesday but with Williams struggling and Alex Mitchell facing the prospect of playing in a third consecutive game, head coach Andy Farrell may be forced to call up a reinforcement.
โTomos has come off holding his hamstring. There was plenty of cramp last week, letโs hope it is one of those,โ Farrell said.
โJamison is fit and ready to go and has been training fully for the best part of a week so weโre happy with that but you donโt know until you know and we will only know in the morning.
โYou have to let these things settle down and see what the outcome is and give it a little bit of space.
โTomos was playing well and Iโm sure there is a bit of concern there, but you can only deal with the here and now so fingers crossed.โ
Ben White is currently on tour in New Zealand with Scotland and would be an obvious solution should Williams be ruled out for any length of time.
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When asked about White, Farrell said: โWe need to talk about that and make the right call for the group.โ
Joe McCarthy was named man of the match but the eight-try demolition in the first outing on Australian soil also saw eye-catching displays from Mack Hansen, James Lowe, Elliot Daly, Finn Russell and Henry Pollock.
All sides of Pollock were on show as the Lionsโ youngest tourist at 20-years-old used his athleticism and awareness to set up Williamsโ first try and almost scored one himself, while also providing the spark for a confrontation between the sides and being sent to the sin-bin for a ruck infringement.
โHenry got a yellow card because of repeated infringements โ which was fair enough โ but you also saw his point of difference, thatโs for sure,โ Farrell said.
Pollock received strong praise from Dan Sheehan, the Ireland hooker who was captaining the Lions on his debut for the tourists, but there was also a reminder that the team comes first.
โHenry was brilliant. He does his own thing and plays his own way, which is different to a lot of the forwards,โ Sheehan said.
โI enjoy that kind of rugby โ off the cuff, see whatโs in front of you and make it happen. With his skillset and speed he can certainly make it happen.
โItโs just about trying to make sure heโs doing the right thing for the team all the time.โ
