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'Explosive' Wales wing belongs in the Test arena says Cardiff teammate

By PA
Owen Lane /Getty

Willis Halaholo says his Wales and Cardiff team-mate Owen Lane “belongs in the Test arena”.

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Lane will make a first international appearance since the 2019 World Cup when Wales tackle Principality Stadium visitors Argentina on Saturday.

It is just Lane’s third cap, but he now has a golden opportunity to impress after hamstring and shoulder injuries sidelined him for most of last year.

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The 23-year-old wing features in an area of intense competition from a Wales perspective, highlighted by a back-three trio of Liam Williams, Josh Adams and Louis Rees-Zammit all gaining British and Irish Lions selection for the current South Africa tour.

This weekend, it is the turn of Lane, Dragons wing Jonah Holmes, who scored two tries against Canada last weekend, and Hallam Amos to step up.

“I am expecting some tries from my mate ‘Laney’, Wales centre Halaholo said.

“He is explosive, he is quick and he belongs in the Test arena. He’s raring to go, he is always bringing energy, so I am looking forward to him ripping it up.

“He has been through quite a few injuries now and probably would have had a few more Tests under his belt, but he has got a big future. He is still quite young.”

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Auckland-born centre Halaholo, who qualifies for Wales on residency, is also in the early stages of his Test career.

But he has made his presence felt, excelling off the bench during Wales’ Guinness Six Nations title-winning campaign earlier this year and now forging a midfield partnership alongside 89-cap skipper Jonathan Davies.

“Playing with someone of that calibre always makes the job easier for me,” 31-year-old Halaholo added.

“Just having that experience inside you, you just feed off that and soak it up.

“I am just trying to put my hand up and show that I can play at this level, soaking up any information and experience I get.

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“Argentina will be a big test, a big step up from last week. We know they are a different beast.

“They get better and better as the game goes on, so we will try to shut that down and see how we go.”

With 10 players absent due to Lions commitments, and the likes of full-back Leigh Halfpenny out through injury, it would be a statement victory if Wales can topple an Argentina side that beat New Zealand last year and drew twice with Australia.

Wales head coach Wayne Pivac said: “Everybody has stood up really well in terms of the workload, and nobody is shying away from the hard work that is being put in front of them.

“There are learnings for everybody, and that is exactly what this series is about, so that we can then settle on a squad going forward with a view to the Rugby World Cup in 2023.

“I have been really impressed with everybody. Whether or not they get to play in a Test match, we are learning a lot just in the training sessions alone.”

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J
JW 1 hour ago
How the four-team format will help the Wallabies defeat the Lions

Have to imagine it was a one off sorta thing were they were there (saying playing against the best private schools) because that is the level they could play at. I think I got carried away and misintrepted what you were saying, or maybe it was just that I thought it was something that should be brought in.


Of course now school is seen as so much more important, and sports as much more important to schooling, that those rural/public gets get these scholarships/free entry to play at private schools.


This might only be relevant in the tradition private rugby schools, so not worth implementing, but the same drain has been seen in NZ to the point where the public schools are not just impacted by the lost of their best talent to private schools, there is a whole flow on effect of losing players to other sports their school can' still compete at the highest levels in, and staff quality etc. So now and of that traditional sort of rivalry is near lost as I understand it.


The idea to force the top level competition into having equal public school participation would be someway to 'force' that neglect into reverse. The problem with such a simple idea is of course that if good rugby talent decides to stay put in order to get easier exposure, they suffer academically on principle. I wonder if a kid who say got selected for a school rep 1st/2nd team before being scouted by a private school, or even just say had two or three years there, could choose to rep their old school for some of their rugby still?


Like say a new Cup style comp throughout the season, kid's playing for the private school in their own local/private school grade comp or whatever, but when its Cup games they switch back? Better represent, areas, get more 2nd players switching back for top level 1st comp at their old school etc? Just even in order to have cool stories where Ella or Barrett brothers all switch back to show their old school is actually the best of the best?

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