Lions tour in covidia

Started by seafoid, July 08, 2021, 08:44:06 AM

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seafoid

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/rugby-union/2021/07/07/five-members-lions-touring-party-isolating-positive-covid-test/

The British & Irish Lions have insisted the tour will not be derailed by Covid-19 despite nine players being placed in isolation before their victory over the Cell C Sharks on Wednesday night.

Head coach Warren Gatland again expressed confidence that the Test series will go ahead following their 54-7 victory against the Sharks. "Absolutely. I believe we will do it," Gatland said. "We were always going to get a case or two and it is how we deal with it. We are not sure where we picked the cases from - hotel staff or people at matches - I am not sure. We are preparing and really looking forward to a Test series."

After a staff member tested positive in the morning, the entire Lions squad had been forced to isolate in their rooms until 6pm before the Medical Advisory Group provided the green light for the match to go ahead.
"f**k it, just score"- Donaghy   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IbxG2WwVRjU

Tony Baloney

The decision to not move it to Britain looks more and more foolish.

seafoid

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/rugby-union/2021/07/13/british-irish-lions-monitoring-unfolding-civil-strife-across/

British and Irish Lions monitoring unfolding civil strife across South Africa
Provinces due to hold second and third Tests have seen the worst of the violence in which 72 people have died

By
Daniel Schofield,
DEPUTY RUGBY UNION CORRESPONDENT
14 July 2021 • 3:05am

The British & Irish Lions are closely monitoring the worst disturbances South Africa has experienced since apartheid ahead of their 'fourth Test' against South Africa 'A' on Wednesday evening.

More than 70 people have died and 1,234 people arrested in rioting and looting in nearly a week since former president Jacob Zuma was jailed for contempt of court. Current president Cyril Rampathosa has described the unrest as unprecedented in post apartheid South Africa.

The worst violence has been concentrated in the provinces of KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng, which is due to stage the second and third Tests. The administration in Cape Town, which is staging at least the Lions' next three games, is redoubling its security efforts by putting on extra police patrols while some shopping malls have closed. The Lions will receive a police escort from their base in Hermanus to the Cape Town Stadium where they will face a South Africa 'A' side containing 11 World Cup winning Springboks.

Against a backdrop of the country's political unrest and devastating third wave, sport can appear to be a trivial concern. However, according to Springbok assistant coach Mzwandile Stick the unrest actually increases the significance of the Lions series. In an increasingly fractured country, the Springboks were able to unite the Rainbow Nation in winning the 2019 World Cup under black captain Siya Kolisi.

Stick hopes that a successful Lions series can have a similarly inspiring effect. "We are actually living in a sad time currently from what we can see on the news and social media," Stick explained. "One of the main reasons for us as Springboks is to give hope and add smiles to faces. We will never forget when we won the World Cup, people of all colours – pink, black, brown and yellow – we were only speaking one language: rugby. Everyone was happy. That's the kind of hope we want to build.

South Africa's flanker and captain Siya Kolisi warms up ahead of the first rugby union Test match between South Africa and Georgia
South Africa's flanker and captain Siya Kolisi CREDIT: AFP
"If our job is to get an opportunity to unite country then that is what we will aim for. We have an opportunity to play the Lions and show South Africa once we work together and spread positive energy, anything is possible and can achieve what we set our minds to as a nation."

Meanwhile, tensions are rising within the Springbok camp after the Lions categorically rejected Rassie Erasmus' plea to play South Africa A for a second time. 

The Springbok players are understood to be highly frustrated at how their preparations were disrupted by a mass Covid-19 outbreak that resulted in the squad being locked in their hotel rooms for a week. Having played just one game since winning the 2019 World Cup – a 40-9 win against Georgia on July 2 – the players fear that they will enter the Lions series severely undercooked. Hence, the match against South Africa 'A' team, which is supposed to be a developmental team, has effectively become a fourth Test.

With his players keen for a further tune-up, director of rugby Erasmus saying that he would "beg" Gatland to replay Wednesday night's match on Saturday. However, the Lions are determined to keep to the original schedule which will see them play the Stormers on July 17 in their final warm-up match.


"Gats felt that the schedule is the schedule," Neil Jenkins, the assistant coach, said. "We're meant to be playing the Stormers on on Saturday, or we're meant to be anyway – and they deserve the opportunity to play against us. It's once every four years for our boys but it's once every 12 for the countries that we tour. As far as I'm concerned, it's South Africa A tomorrow and the Stormers on Saturday."

Without the Lions' agreement, Erasmus has been left scrambling to find alternative opponents and are set to face the Blues Bulls, who had to cancel their own fixture against the Lions because of a Covid outbreak. There is understood to be considerable disquiet within the Lions' hierarchy at how Erasmus implied they were risking another outbreak by facing the Stormers instead of South Africa A. He also revealed that Lions tour captain Alun Wyn Jones was in line to make a sensational return this week before the Lions had made a decision on his fitness.

There still remain questions over how the Springboks suffered such a large Covid outbreak which resulted in 26 positive tests, including 14 players. On Monday, Erasmus attempted to point the blame on Georgia, insisting their infections only started after that match. However, local reports have suggested that the South Africa players left their biosecure bubble for coffees prior to the match against Georgia, whose head coach Levan Maisashvili remains in hospital in a serious condition.


"f**k it, just score"- Donaghy   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IbxG2WwVRjU

rosnarun

its just another Tour of shame fpr the  british and British oirish lions.
neither disease nor WAR nor revolution nor Apartheid  will stop the alickadoo from having theit Holiday
If you make yourself understood, you're always speaking well. Moliere

Captain Scarlet

I am reading that the cancellation could bankrupt SA Rugby? Surely there are major issues when a Tour could make or break you.
them mysterons are always killing me but im grand after a few days.sickenin aul dose all the same.