It began in the 80s, with the running talents of centres
such as Clive Woodward, John Devereux, Brendan Mullin and, of course, Jeremy
Guscott showing how modern centres could run like wingers and tackle like
flankers. As the game went professional,
the centre became more and more central to the way teams would play. These days, they are expected to do everything
– pass, run, tackle, kick, ruck, maul, speak at least 4 different languages and
be able to sing “Ke Sera Sera” backwards...all at the same time.
With that in mind, let’s take a look at which talented all-rounders
are going to be making up the Lions midfield in 6 months time...
I don’t normally buy into the view
that your 12 has to be a second
receiver/ball player. The key is balance
between your centres and your 15 – one of them has to be able to step in and
help the 10. I wouldn’t classify Ma’a
Nonu or Jamie Roberts as terrible passers of the ball, but nor would I class
them as fly-half fairies. Certainly not to their face anyway. In fact, against the Australians, I would
prefer a physical unit at 12 not just for the fact that the Lions can send him
down the 10 channel where Quade Cooper will hopefully be cowering, but also
because it gives the Lions a chance to take David Pocock out of the game for
the second phase, where he is at his most dangerous. If he is too busy trying to take down a
monster of a centre crashing over his fly half, then it forces him to be
tied up at the bottom of a ruck for the next phase, or two, of play.
In fact, during the Autumn series he made more metres, beat more defenders and made more offloads than any other England player. Defensively, he suffered from the ‘Samoan Syndrome’ early on where he would rush out of the line whilst looking for the big hit, but he has worked hard at this over the last 18 months to ensure that he remains disciplined without losing the ultra-physical edge that makes him such a nightmare to run at. In fact, the only person in the world tougher than Manu Tuilagi is Mrs Tuilagi. Manu has 6 brothers, and he’s the smallest – think about that. Wow. Respect to you Mrs Tuilagi, put your feet up and have a cigar.
The other standout candidate for
the 12 shirt of course is the last Lions tour man of the series, big Welshman JAMIE ROBERTS. World class centre, doctor and thoroughly
nice guy, it is a constant irritation that I can’t find a single reason to
dislike him. Last Lions tour he broke
the South African line time and time again, smashing through tackles with ease
and offloading with aplomb to his teammates. He has struggled to replicate that
spectacular form since then, despite playing an impressive part in Wales Grand
Slam last year, but if he puts in a series of big performances like we all know
he is capable of then he could make that starting shirt his own. A certain
tourist either way.
Some dark horses, but long shots
for the 12 shirt will be Irish veteran Gordon D’Arcy, who will be relishing the
chance to travel with his old mucker Brian O’Driscoll once more, as well as South
African born Saracens centre Brad Barritt.
Defensively one of the best centres about, but questions still remain
over his skill as an attacker – unless Conrad Smith waves through a gap the
size of Watford again. A potential
bolter is Billy Twelvetrees though: the Gloucester man has been in great form
for his club and he seems to have all the attributes to be a superb 12 – great hands,
good speed, big boot, a strong carry and a surname that sounds like it’s been
taken from a Roald Dahl book – so it will be interesting to see how he fares.
Outside Centre – with the wrecking ball that is Manu Tuilagi
at 12, who do we have on his outside with a touch more finesse? To be fair, if Manu is in his most destructive
mood, an angry buffalo with tourette’s might have more subtlety, but you get my
gist. There are 2 obvious contenders
here – both are players who will be able to take advantage of the space created by
Tuilagi’s trucking runs, hitting gaps and providing chances to others – and I
am going to give in to temptation and hand the 13 shirt to BRIAN O'DRISCOLL for one last hurrah.
Although he has a habit of winding
me up with his smug, squishy face when his side defeats the one I support
(which happens with a fair degree of regularity), his phenomenal handling
skills, leadership qualities and experience hand him a starting role.
He is pushed all the way though by
the ever-impressive Welsh centre JONATHAN DAVIES. With a low centre of gravity,
Davies is powerful enough to give thrust to an attack but he has a wonderfully
subtle sleight of hand developed from his formative years when he played at fly
half, and his scoring rate of 8 tries in 28 starts for Wales shows that he
knows how to sniff out try scoring opportunities. If he can recreate his Grand Slam form this
time around, there is every chance he will snatch the starting jersey of the
legendary O’Driscoll. This Jonathan Davies
is, of course, not to be confused with his highly irritating name sake who
commentates on the BBC. Someone get that
man’s balls to drop.
Behind these two outstanding 13s
there are a couple of bolters who could yet make a splash when it comes to
selection. Scott Williams struggles to
break into the Welsh side because of Roberts and Davies, but further impressive
cameos will ensure that he keeps the pressure up, whilst London Irish flyer
Jonathan Joseph has shown his sublime talent in flashes – but he needs to
develop consistency. Elsewhere, Scottish
centre...er...nope, sorry. A tragic
weakness for the Scots at international level is the lack of a first rate
centre – although they are defensively solid, I think a returning Scott
Hastings would have more chance of getting game time on the tour.
I’ve picked the four standout
candidates, and although there will be arguments about who starts and where, I
sense that these four are fairly settled on at the moment. That said, it’s a Lions year and calls made
with certainty at this stage often end up in embarrassment at best, and
financial ruin (if you’re an excessive gambler) at worst. I think the starting centres I have picked
have a perfect mix of subtlety and power, similar to that of the Roberts/O’Driscoll
partnership on the last tour, and has the potential to cause more panic to the
Australians than a national shortage of barbeque coals.
Starters: Tuilagi, O’Driscoll
Sub: DaviesDirt Tracker: Roberts
Who would make up your Lions midfield?