Andy Farrell holds out hope for son Owen after Lions omission

British and Irish Lions head coach Andy Farrell said Owen Farrell could still feature in the upcoming tour of Australia despite leaving his son out of the 38-man squad announced Thursday.
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Owen Farrell, who last played test rugby at the 2023 World Cup, is now barred from representing England after deciding to carry on his club career outside of the country at Paris-based Racing 92.
Farrell junior, a former England captain, has suffered an injury-hit debut season in France and been inconsistent when fit.
But the 33-year-old fly-half, a three-time Lions tourist, is a proven international performer.
He could yet take part in a tour that includes three tests against the Wallabies were any of the selected No 10s – Scotland's Finn Russell and the England duo of Fin Smith and Marcus Smith – to suffer an injury.
Owen Farrell has also played international rugby union as a centre.
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"There's 38 picked which leaves a couple of slots open for us down the track if and when needed," said Andy Farrell after the Lions squad was unveiled at London's O2 Arena.
"Owen would be in that bracket," added Farrell, himself a former England international who has been seconded from his day job as Ireland coach to take charge of the Lions.
'IF YOU'RE GOOD ENOUGH, YOU'RE OLD ENOUGH'
At the other end of the experience scale, Henry Pollock has been selected for Lions duty by Farrell even though the 20-year-old flanker's senior international career currently amounts to just a lone substitute appearance for England – albeit one where he scored two tries in a 68-14 Six Nations rout of Wales in Cardiff in March.
Pollock has since underlined that form, with the back-row starring for Northampton in the English title-holders' thrilling 37-34 Champions Cup semifinal win away to Irish province Leinster in Dublin last Saturday.
He also received the loudest cheer from the audience at the O2 when his name was read out during the squad announcement.
"I've watched him live a couple of times and I like what I see," said Andy Farrell. "As with all top players, he's always trying to make a difference.
"There's an energy and bounce about him. You tend to have big moments in the game because you're searching for them. If you're good enough, you're old enough. That's 100 per cent (true)."
The 10-match Lions tour, with England skipper Maro Itoje appointed captain of the combined side, begins with a fixture against Argentina in Dublin on June 20.
The first test with Australia will be in Brisbane on July 19, with two more internationals against the Wallabies in Melbourne (July 26) and Sydney (August 2).
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