Archive July 2, 2025

Morgan shines as Lions score eight tries in win over Reds

Images courtesy of Getty
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Queensland Reds: (12) 12

Flook Con: McLaughlin-Phillips, Toomaga-Allen,

British and Irish Lions (21), 52

In a comprehensive victory over the Queensland Reds in Brisbane, Tommy Freeman scored twice as the British and Irish Lions ran in eight tries.

The Lions opened the scoring with a 21-12 lead at the break, with Jeffery Toomaga-Allen and Josh Flook adding goals for the hosts, who had already started strong.

The Lions dominated the following game, but the Reds won the ball with Toomaga-Allen’s try and then regained it with Flook’s score.

Maro Itoje, the captain, put in a strong performance, and Jac Morgan, who put in the fifth, saw a significant improvement. Huw Jones broke away on his own, and Freeman added six more.

Six of the eight conversions were scored by Finn Russell (44) and his replacement Fin Smith (22) for the Lions, who won two games from two on Australian soil.

Elliot Daly, who suffered an arm injury in the second half, experienced some discomfort.

Hugo Keenan withdrew before kick-off with a medical condition, and Daly, one of the players for the trip, had joined the team.

Maro Itoje dives over the line to score a tryImages courtesy of Getty

Before forming, lions move slowly.

The Lions struggled in the opening fight, while the Reds resurrected them with avengeance, with outstanding centre Hunter Paisami leading the charge.

Before the floodgates opened, The Lions had their issues, but they completely dominated the game from the beginning and were completely dominant from the beginning.

The tourists dropped the ball left, right, and center, wasting their time and letting them find their range.

There were forced passes and hesitant defense, as the saying goes. There was a botched restart reception. It wasn’t very good. In the first forty minutes, they knocked on the Reds eight times, some of which the hosts struggled to hold on to hold them.

The Reds received first blood when Paisami’s bust through the Lions’ midfielder gave them position, while some of his deep carries extended the Lions’ reach even further. Toomaga-Allen lunged and scored as the line arrived.

The Suncorp sounded like Reds on the march as Harry McLaughlin-Phillips banged over the extras.

When Daly turned Freeman over and Russell tied the deal, the Lions did not attempt to take control.

Instead, it served as the catalyst for another Reds try, which Porter had started by performing on the ground. Before Josh Flook’s grubber kick for Kalani Thomas down the left, Paisami was involved once more.

Flook stole the ball after Van der Merwe paused to deal with it, which Reds won 12-7.

The Lions game had plenty of missed opportunities, but eventually they started to make things stick and the desperation was apparent.

Ronan Kelleher, Porter’s Leinster and Ireland front-row pal, tipped him over after a close-range tap penalty. Russell reverted.

With the assistance of Jack Conan and Ollie Chessum, Van der Merwe then completed a fantastic move in the corner. Russell started the conversion from Caxton Street, about an hour away. a pearler

The Lions had a 21-12 lead at the break. Better or worse, perhaps.

Huw Jones scores a breakaway tryImages courtesy of Getty

Second half dominated by Lions, but concern about Daly’s injury

When Jamison Gibson-Park’s smart work drew the heat and then slipped an inside pass for Itoje to crash over, things started to get better in the first half.

Russell, who had his eyes closed, could have kicked them over. Lions won, 28-12. Getting there

At that point, Farrell made significant adjustments, reversing both his half-backs and his front-row.

The Russell-Gibson-Park axis produced more than enough fireworks to get people excited, but not many.

The rest is red in the sea. Morgan ran over from an Alex Mitchell pass, making his strongest statement, which he did. The Reds could not handle the Lions’ intensity at this point.

Morgan and Freeman both had a significant lead at the start of that play, but Jones jumped out after him with a daft chip and ran more than half the pitch to score.

Ringrose scampering over to bring up the half-century in the final breath.

The Lions had a good night’s work, but Daly’s image of him in pain came afterward was troubling.

Jac Morgan with his man-of-the-match medalImages courtesy of Getty

Line-ups

Campbell (capt), Anderson (capt), Flook (capt), Paisami (capt), Ryan (mcLaughlin-Phillips), Thomas (capt), Ross (faessler), Toomaga-Allen (capt), Canham (capt), Salakaia-Loto), Uru (capt), Bryant (capt), and Brial (capt).

Replacements: Henry, Blake, Fa’agase, Smith, Blyth, Vest, and Nasser.

Daly, Freeman, Jones, Aki, Van der Merwe, Russell, Gibson-Park, Porter, Kelleher, Stuart, Itoje (capt), Chessum, Curry, Morgan, Conan, and other Irish Lions.

Officials of matches

Referee: New Zealand Referee James Doleman

Paul Williams (New Zealand) is the assistant referee.

Referee 2 assistant: New Zealand’s Ben O’Keeffe

New Zealand’s Glenn Newman TMO

related subjects

  • Irish Lions and British &
  • Rugby Union

Lions score eight tries in win over Queensland Reds

Images courtesy of Getty
  • 470 Comments

Queensland Reds: (12) 12

Flook Con: McLaughlin-Phillips, Toomaga-Allen,

British and Irish Lions (21), 52

In a comprehensive victory over the Queensland Reds in Brisbane, Tommy Freeman scored twice as the British and Irish Lions ran in eight tries.

The Lions opened the scoring with a 21-12 lead at the break, with Jeffery Toomaga-Allen and Josh Flook adding goals for the hosts, who had already started strong.

The Lions dominated the following game, but the Reds won the ball with Toomaga-Allen’s try and then regained it with Flook’s score.

Maro Itoje, the captain, put in a strong performance, and Jac Morgan, who put in the fifth, saw a significant improvement. Huw Jones broke away on his own, and Freeman added six more.

Six of the eight conversions were scored by Finn Russell (44) and his replacement Fin Smith (22) for the Lions, who won two games from two on Australian soil.

Elliot Daly, who suffered an arm injury in the second half, experienced some discomfort.

Hugo Keenan withdrew before kick-off with a medical condition, and Daly, one of the players for the trip, had joined the team.

Maro Itoje dives over the line to score a tryImages courtesy of Getty

Before forming, lions move slowly.

The Lions struggled in the opening fight, while the Reds resurrected them with avengeance, with outstanding centre Hunter Paisami leading the charge.

Before the floodgates opened, The Lions had their issues, but they completely dominated the game from the beginning and were completely dominant from the beginning.

The tourists dropped the ball left, right, and center, wasting their time and letting them find their range.

There were forced passes and hesitant defense, as the saying goes. There was a botched restart reception. It wasn’t very good. In the first forty minutes, they knocked on the Reds eight times, some of which the hosts struggled to hold on to hold them.

The Reds received first blood when Paisami’s bust through the Lions’ midfielder gave them position, while some of his deep carries extended the Lions’ reach even further. Toomaga-Allen lunged and scored as the line arrived.

The Suncorp sounded like Reds on the march as Harry McLaughlin-Phillips banged over the extras.

When Daly turned Freeman over and Russell tied the deal, the Lions did not attempt to take control.

Instead, it served as the catalyst for another Reds try, which Porter had started by performing on the ground. Before Josh Flook’s grubber kick for Kalani Thomas down the left, Paisami was involved once more.

Flook stole the ball after Van der Merwe paused to deal with it, which Reds won 12-7.

The Lions game had plenty of missed opportunities, but eventually they started to make things stick and the desperation was apparent.

Ronan Kelleher, Porter’s Leinster and Ireland front-row pal, tipped him over after a close-range tap penalty. Russell reverted.

With the assistance of Jack Conan and Ollie Chessum, Van der Merwe then completed a fantastic move in the corner. Russell started the conversion from Caxton Street, about an hour away. a pearler

The Lions had a 21-12 lead at the break. Better or worse, perhaps.

Huw Jones scores a breakaway tryImages courtesy of Getty

Second half dominated by Lions, but concern about Daly’s injury

When Jamison Gibson-Park’s smart work drew the heat and then slipped an inside pass for Itoje to crash over, things started to get better in the first half.

Russell, who had his eyes closed, could have kicked them over. Lions won, 28-12. Getting there

At that point, Farrell made significant adjustments, reversing both his half-backs and his front-row.

The Russell-Gibson-Park axis produced more than enough fireworks to get people excited, but not many.

The rest is red in the sea. Morgan ran over from an Alex Mitchell pass, making his strongest statement, which he did. The Reds could not handle the Lions’ intensity at this point.

Morgan and Freeman both had a significant lead at the start of that play, but Jones jumped out after him with a daft chip and ran more than half the pitch to score.

Ringrose scampering over to bring up the half-century in the final breath.

The Lions had a good night’s work, but Daly’s image of him in pain came afterward was troubling.

Jac Morgan with his man-of-the-match medalImages courtesy of Getty

Line-ups

Campbell (capt), Anderson (capt), Flook (capt), Paisami (capt), Ryan (mcLaughlin-Phillips), Thomas (capt), Ross (faessler), Toomaga-Allen (capt), Canham (capt), Salakaia-Loto), Uru (capt), Bryant (capt), and Brial (capt).

Replacements: Henry, Blake, Fa’agase, Smith, Blyth, Vest, and Nasser.

Daly, Freeman, Jones, Aki, Van der Merwe, Russell, Gibson-Park, Porter, Kelleher, Stuart, Itoje (capt), Chessum, Curry, Morgan, Conan, and other Irish Lions.

Officials of matches

Referee: New Zealand Referee James Doleman

Paul Williams (New Zealand) is the assistant referee.

Referee 2 assistant: New Zealand’s Ben O’Keeffe

New Zealand’s Glenn Newman TMO

related subjects

  • Irish Lions and British &
  • Rugby Union

Burnley sign France U21 winger Tchaouna from Lazio

Burnley FC

Loum Tchaouna, a France Under-21 winger, has been signed by Burnley from Lazio.

The 21-year-old, who competed in the European Under-21 Championship this summer, has signed for a five-year deal for a reportedly estimated £13 million.

Axel Tuanzebe, Quilindschy Hartman, and goalkeeper Max Weiss have already joined Scott Parker’s side since winning the Premier League, making Tchaouna their fourth summer signings.

Tchaouna said, “I spoke with the manager during the Euros this summer, and we had a really good conversation.

Tchaouna made his senior Rennes debut in September 2021, before spending time at Salernitana, Lazio, and Dijon.

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Tottenham sign teenage Japan defender Koga

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Toko Koga, a young Japan defender, has been signed by Tottenham from Feyenoord.

Koga, 19, will wear the 32 shirt until June 2029 and has reached a deal.

She first competed in the Dutch top flight at the age of 18 and has been with Feyenoord since January 2024.

As Japan won the 2025 SheBelieves Cup in February, Koga won her country’s winning goal against the United States under the direction of former Chelsea manager Emma Hayes, who also won the tournament.

Koga is thought to have been identified in a pre-season friendly played at their training facility last year, despite the women’s Super League placing them 11th overall in 2024-25.

Since then, the club has monitored her progress and set her as a transfer target.

Robert Vilahamn, the head coach of Spurs, was fired in June after two years in charge.

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Renaming The Polytechnic Ibadan After Olunloyo Stands — Oyo Commissioner

Dotun Oyelade, the state’s information commissioner, has criticized the state’s decision to rename The Polytechnic Ibadan in honor of Victor Olunloyo, a former governor of the state.

Oyelade made this statement on Wednesday’s episode of The Morning Brief on Channels Television, in response to a protest by polytechnic students on Tuesday against the state government’s decision.

“Don’t forget that this man was the same man who became the institution’s first rector in 1970, when he was 35 years old. We therefore think that the protestation is somewhat lost and misplaced.

We support that choice because it is appropriate for a respectable state’s son, he said.

Read more about the students’ protests against the polytechnic Ibadan’s renaming.

The commissioner argued that despite the state government’s respect for the academic institution’s students, it would continue to make its own determination.

Oyelade added that the students’ opposition was caused by their ignorance of the former governor’s contribution to the state’s development.

We show great respect for our students. We rely on them, and as the deputy governor pointed out yesterday, we’ll do anything to please them.

“But we’ll be tough and fair.” We are sticking to our decision this time, he continued.

To honor the late scholar, Seyi Makinde, the governor of Oyo State, changed the name to Omololu Olunloyo Polytechnic, Ibadan on June 26, 2025.

Olunloyo, who passed away on April 6, 2025, was the polytechnic’s founding principal and also served as state governor between October 1 and December 31, 1983.

Makinde said, “I discussed preserving and digitising his library yesterday in honor of Baba Olunloyo,” at the state interdenominational funeral service held in honor of the late former governor at the Obafemi Awolowo Stadium, Liberty Road, Ibadan.
“Today, we’re going to honor Baba in order to make him immortal.” He was the Polytechnic’s first Principal in Ibadan, which will now go by the name Omololu Olunloyo Polytechnic, Ibadan.

However, on Tuesday, Olunloyo was the institution’s new name, prompting students from the polytechnic to protest the name change at the Oyo State Government Secretariat.

The angry student urged the polytechnic’s founder to reverse his decision and give the school its current name by carrying placards with various inscriptions.

The Ibadan Polytechnic’s students, led by Olamide Oladipupo, president of the Students Union Government (SUG), made an appeal to the governor to protect the institution’s legacy, which is reflected in the name it bears all over the world.

At least three dead after AU helicopter crashes at airport in Somalia

At least three people were killed when an African Union peacekeeping mission’ helicopter crashed at the international airport in Mogadishu, according to authorities.

According to Artan Mohamed, the head of the airport’s immigration office, the incident took place on Wednesday at Aden Adde airport as the helicopter attempted to land.

Eight people were on board the helicopter, which belonged to the Ugandan Air Force but was being operated by the African Union Support and Stabilization Mission in Somalia (AUSSOM), he claimed. It took off from Baledogle Airfield in the Lower Shabelle region.

A Ugandan military spokesman claims that three of the passengers on board managed to survive the incident.

At least three people were also found to have survived the collision, which allegedly occurred at around 7.30 am (04:30GMT) local time.

Without providing further information about their health, the survivors were transported to the AUSSOM hospital, it continued.

Witnesses described the helicopter exploding, igniting a fire, and plummeting to the ground.

Omar Farah, an aviation officer, told The Associated Press that he “saw the helicopter spinning and then it fell very quickly, while Abdirahim Ali, a resident, claimed he witnessed “a huge explosion and smoke everywhere.”

Flights resumed, according to the director-general of the nation’s civil aviation authority, despite the airport’s reported minor delays.

“The situation has been managed,” he declared. According to Ahmed Macalin Hassan, the runway is level and fully operational, and flights can take off and land as usual.

More than 11, 000 Somalia residents, including those from Kenya and Uganda, make up the AUSSOM mission.

They are aiding the Somali military in battling al-Shabab, an al-Qaeda affiliate that wants to overthrow the nation’s ruling class and establish its own rule.

According to state media reports, the Somali army killed a well-known member of the organization this week in the Middle Shabelle.