Great Britain boss Brian Noble today selected his Great Britain squad for the forthcoming Tri-Nations tournament in Australia and New Zealand and, quite frankly, there are few suprises.
With one or two exceptions, Noble has once again gone with the players that have tried and failed miserably against the Roos in the past two tournaments as well as others who's incluson can only be described as baffling.
Ignored are the likes of Andy Coley, And Lynch, Malcolm Alker, Mark Calderwood, Lee Briers, and Paul Cooke, all of whom will have to wait for a call in the reserve squad whilst the 'tired' and tested Sean Long, Lee Gilmour, Lyon Pryce, Paul Johnson and Shaun O'Loughlin will once again get the chance to show how incapable they are of competing with the Australians.
Not only that but Noble has made calls of which I have yet to decide if they fall into the 'brave' or 'stupid' column.
Huddersfield winger Martin Aspinwall gets his call ahead of Wigan flyer Mark Calderwood and Salford's David Hodgson. St Helens hooker/half-back James Roby finds himself on the plane instead of either Micky Higham or, arguably Super League's most consistent hooker, Malcolm Alker and the fact that Gareth Hock has even been considered after spending what seems like forever on the sidelines with injury brings the selection into serious question.
Many have criticised Noble for not giving young players a chance at test level but perhaps what people haven't suggested is that those players need to be upto the task at hand.
The most disappointing omissions are those of Paul Cooke, although his November court case had probably already determined his availability, Bradford player-of-the-year Andy Lynch, arguably one of the seasons most inform forwards and Warrington's Lee Briers who will once again have to watch on whilst Sean Long inevitably fails to produce once again for the Lions.
All three of those players are deserving of a Great Britain cap and all have shown that they are amongst the best in their respective classes, yet for whatever reason they are being left at home along with the injured trio of Paul Sculthorpe, Kevin Sinfield and Jamie Langley.
There are bright spots however, Saints prop James Graham has been included and deservedly so after his performances for St Helens and for Great Britain in the mid-season test against New Zealand.
After two years of failure to break the Aussie's domination, Great Britain need a team capable of winning the Tri Nations. As wrong as I hope to be, this selection differs little from the squads of the past that have shown on several occasions that they are clearly not up to the task at hand. People within the camp will point to poor preparation as the reason for inept performances in the past but GB must learn to play with the cards they are dealt. They have shown they are capable of beating Australia on several occaisions in one-off encounters, now is the time to turn that ability into a consistent run of results. Noblle's omissions have shown that there is strength in depth but some selections also show that the GB set-up hasn't learnt from previous mistakes.
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