Blair Kinghorn gets helping hand from mum and wife in race to join Lions

By Ross McLeish

Blair Kinghorn gets helping hand from mum and wife in race to join Lions

Blair Kinghorn has revealed his first act upon arrival into the British and Irish Lions camp in Australia was to wake up captain Maro Itoje. Two days after helping Toulouse clinch a third successive Top 14 title by beating Bordeaux in extra-time at the Stade de France, Kinghorn joined up with his new team-mates for the first time. And the Scotland full-back was given a shock when he entered his bedroom at the Lions鈥 Brisbane hotel on Monday night. 鈥淚 was with Maro. I got in about quarter to 12. I was thinking, 鈥楽urely there won鈥檛 be anyone in the room鈥,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 go in, chuck the bags down and up he pops. I was like, 鈥楿h, sorry!鈥 He鈥檇 been sleeping and I woke him up. It was funny 鈥 he woke up, shook my hand and went straight back to sleep.鈥 Kinghorn played 100 minutes of the Top 14 final and celebrated deep into the night before heading to the airport at midday to catch his flight from Paris to Brisbane. 鈥淢y bag was packed. I had to make sure everything was ready before going up from Toulouse to Paris on the Thursday,鈥 said Kinghorn, who recently returned from eight weeks out with a knee injury. Luckily my mum and my wife were there to help me take everything up because packing for two separate things is a bit stressful. 鈥淚 think I鈥檝e got everything. All you need is your boots and your passport, so that鈥檚 fine. It鈥檚 good to finally be here and it feels a bit more real for me now. I鈥檝e got all the kit and I鈥檓 with the boys.鈥 The Lions鈥 third fixture on tour, against the Queensland Reds in Brisbane on Wednesday, has come too soon for Kinghorn to make his debut, but Saturday鈥檚 New South Wales Waratahs clash is a realistic target. While he is playing catch-up in the race for full-back duties against Australia, having arrived eight days later than the rest of the squad, he is very familiar with the environment he has entered. 鈥淎t Toulouse, the squad is so deep and so talented that you鈥檝e got to be on top of your game. You鈥檝e got to work hard in training every day,鈥 he said. 鈥淐oaches are on your back the whole time, which is great. It鈥檚 high pressure, but it makes you thrive. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the same with the Lions. Everyone鈥檚 here to do their best and to win the Test series and have a successful tour. Every training session is going to be competitive.鈥 A future Lions tour to France became a talking point in the build-up to the expedition Down Under, but Kinghorn believes the Top 14 would provide a significant obstacle to overcome if the rotation of destination countries is to be expanded. 鈥淭here would be no jetlag for starters. It would be pretty cool,鈥 Kinghorn said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know how happy the French clubs would be, though, because the Top 14 season is so gruelling and so long. But the public would love it. It would be awesome.鈥

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