
The nervous anticipation for the announcement of the 2009 British and Irish Lions tourists was punctuated, bizarrely by an almost tranquil calm, the minute Tour Manager Gerald Davies appeared, stage left at the Sofitel Heathrow. Davies,twice a lion himself, appeared to no great fanfare, light show or highlight reel montage of his exploits as one of Northern Hemisphere rugby's undoubted greats. His history and standing, like that of the British and Irish Lions speaks for itself and was allowed to do so. This set the tone from start to finish; the Lions needs no extra hype, no ramping up of anticipation it is simply the greatest honour a professional rugby player in these four nations can have. It was an enormous relief after the debacle of the previous tour and was the first sign of hope, that a return to true Lions values has been brought about and that is something in which we can all take our first fillet of confidence.
This confidence was not to be unfounded in the squad itself either. True to his word Ian McGeechan picked a more manageable squad of just 37 compared to 45 last time around. This has left genuine test opportunities for all concerned with even the most densely populated positions in the squad being contested by 5 guys for 2 places. The coach also backed up his claims that reputation would count least in his selection process and thus national captains Steve Borthwick, Mike Blair and Ryan Jones will see their passports stamped with summer tours to the Americas and not South Africa. Jones in particular must be starting to wonder what he got up to in a previous life. From leadership front runner and hunting back to back Grand Slams his rugby world seems to have disintegrated around him. A flat EDF semi final performance, demolition at Thomond Park and those narrow defeats to France and Ireland have sadly defined Jones' season. The stand out player of the 2005 tour and nominee for the 2008 IRB world player of the year(as was Blair) must still be losing sleep over whether Gavin Henson should have been thrown that ball with seconds left at the Millennium in March's 6Nations decider. Injuries seem to be as regular part of Lions tradition as the court judge however, so maybe we will get to see what Jones is truly made of. Ospreys collapse in the last 2 months perhaps did similarly for the versatile James Hook who looked to be in prime position for the third fly half spot. His time, like that of another undoubtedly talented youngster Danny Cipriani, may well be in future tours.

An Osprey at the other end of the spectrum must be Adam Jones. The Welsh prop who has played like a member of the "hair bear bunch", not just resembled one, in recent weeks can count himself fortunate that the ever underrated John Hayes has again been bitterly unlucky to miss out on the recognition he deserves. Perhaps pushing Hayes for most unfortunate holiday maker is England and Leicester blind side Tom Croft. Croft seems (perhaps with Delon Armitage) to be the only player to have missed out purely on squad balance and tactics and not form. Looking at the probable shape of the test back row Croft's undoubted skills don't seem to blend with skill sets of the other selections to create a balanced back row. Whilst speed is vital to keep the ball away from the giant spring bock pack the Lions also need to be able to retain it at ruck time and most probably defend their line for long periods. With Martyn Williams the obvious choice as a spoiler and ball player at open side the Lions 6 needs to be physical both in defence and in enabling the quick ball needed to move the Springbok front 5 around. 6 will also most likely need to be a gain line ball carrier off slow ball, particularly if Jamie Heaslip is, as he seems to be right now, first choice at no.8. One big back row carrier is simply not going to be enough and it is not particularly Heaslip's game at any rate. Therefore I predict that Stephen Ferris is the man heading up the queue for the number 6 slot with Andy Powell as an impact carrier from the bench in the last half hour. Croft isn't a big ball carrier and neither is Williams, it is therefore impossible in my opinion for them to be in the same side, this coupled with Crofts relative inexperience in a squad that isn't burgeoning with such a commodity depreciated his value to the mid week side and thus, wily veteran Alan Quinlan snuck in ahead of him. However if Williams were to lose out to Worsley, a ball carrying 7, for the open side slot then leaving Croft seems a huge error.
The squad as a whole is a reassuring blend of battle hardened pros and just enough magic and element of the unknown to keep the Springboks interested. The use of partnerships in the squad such as Tomas O'leary and Ronan O'Gara, Tom Shanklin and Jamie Roberts, Paul O'Connell and Donnacha O'Callaghan seems astute both as a method of quick bonding and understanding, as well as tried and tested combinations to face up to their greatest test yet. With 25 of the squad having won Grand Slams in the last 2 years, and 8 from European rugby's school of winners Munster as well as men such as double World Cup finalist Phil Vickery, the Lions management seem to have gathered men of a like minded, big game winning mentality which will be so vital.
Despite a lot of doom and gloom mungers in the press the squad looks strong. The front row battle ground looks to be an area on which the Lions can build a platform. Gethin Jenkins is in fine form, Vickery whatever his critics argue a powerful scrummager and Euan Murray perhaps the most destructive scrummaging force about at the moment. Murray lest we forget turned in a man of the match performance against the Springboks back in the autumn as he almost single handedly demolished the World Champions scrummage. All Black captain Richie McCaw described England as the greatest physical challenge in World rugby after his sides victory last summer so the presence of Shaw, Worsley, Sherridan, Vickery and Mears in the forwards is perhaps more cause for optimism that it initially seems. In Leigh Halfpenny, Keith Earls and Rikki Flutey there are relative international unknowns with game breaking ability. Brian

O'Driscoll is again showing why many feel he is still the finest player in the world, both goal kickers are reliable and both Kearney and Byrne, the full back options, are excellent under the high ball and kick it miles, perfect for the altitude tests when allied with their searing counter-attacking ability. There seems in all an exciting blend of guys with reputations to create and those who have a point to prove. A Lions series victory would take the O'Gara's, O'Connell's, Williams' to the next level, enhance themselves as true greats of the game, in summation there are a lot of hungry Lions.
Having said that South Africa rightly start as favourites. Their options in most areas of the field are embarrassingly plentiful. Whilst injuries to key Lions would spell disaster if the best Springbok china gets broken they simply wheel out an equally opulent trinket to replace it . Forget the Springbok first team for a second and glance around the reserves and even those outside the squad. Would either Ndungane ride the bench for the Lions? or Kankowski? Juan Smith not even in the squad??!! All the articles of a Springbok persuasion this week have highlighted 2 things; firstly how hungry the South Africans are to avenge 12 years ago, and secondly, for the Lions players the cycle if you miss out is every four years, for these Springbok players they could get 3 or 4 goes at a World Cup but this could be their one and only shot at a Lions series win. The Lions players interviewed this week have spoken of their selection being the pinnacle of their careers, it is merely the start if they want to come away with anything other than defeat.
Before the slide show of squad inclusions had whirred into action there were already omissions to laud the coaching panel for. Gone is the eurovision monstrosity
"power of four" that served, as it happened, as a fittingly cringe worthy prelude to the performances on the field. The army of back room staff has been decimated, Alistair Campbell palmed off to the BBC and single rooms consigned to history in a return to a shared experience. As Ian McGeechan famously told the victorious 1997 Lions, no one else will understand the bond they have, one day many years in the future they would bump into each other and that experience would be expressed with just a smile or a nod, the Lions is about a unique collective not a razmataz travelling troupe. In short those type of Lions have been returned to the circus, the true Lions have been called for.