After touring the US and Canada with Ireland, Court needed a break from the physical and mental aspects of rugby and had barely followed the tour.
Now he was in the thick of it. After saying goodbye to his family, he took a taxi to Brisbane to meet up with his new teammates, who were fresh from beating the Wallabies 23โ21. Court had to borrow size-15 boots, leftover kit and visit a pharmacy to buy a boil-up mouthguard ahead of representing arguably one of the worldโs most celebrated rugby teams.
Queenslander Tom Court representing the British and Irish Lions in 2013Credit: Getty Images
โI hadnโt followed it [the tour] too much and realistically with the amount of injuries, I wouldnโt say they were down to slim pickings, but it was pretty much between me and what was a third-choice loose head from England at that point,โ Court said.
โThey had five or six injuries and obviously they didnโt want to risk getting more, so it was obviously fortuitous for me but probably a freak occurrence. You probably will never have that many injuries in a specific position again.โ
Court had established himself in the Ireland squad as a prop who could cover both tighthead and loosehead. He had forged strong relationships with Irish representatives on the tour like Brian OโDriscoll and Paul OโConnell, but still initially struggled with a team room filled with some of the best players in the world who he knew only from facing them in the Six Nations.
โIt was like that Ellen DeGeneres selfie from years ago which had all these Oscar winners and superstars, it just felt a bit like that, like Iโve walked in and all the best players in the northern hemisphere are sitting there looking at you,โ Court said.
โIt probably was only a couple of seconds but it felt like minutes to me with everyone staring at you and it just felt very surreal. Now admittedly straight after that, Iโve never felt more welcomed and the boys just took you straight in.โ
Tom Court celebrating victory over Australia in the 2011 World Cup with teammates Paul OโConnell and Stephen FerrisCredit: Getty Images
Two Tests were remaining for the Lions after the Rebels game, and Gatland did his best to tell Court there was an opportunity if he performed well enough, but the former Irish prop knew his limitations for the Lions. He came on as a replacement in Melbourne, helping the visitors to a comprehensive 35-0 win.
โItโs the greatest moment and the greatest 30 minutes of my career. You still remember your place, you donโt ever get too far ahead of yourself and go I could be playing in the Test…
โRunning out there for the Lions was just very surreal. I still donโt know if it will ever sink in, there were mixed reviews back home [in Ireland] about whether I should have been in or shouldnโt have been in and everything like that.
โBut I always tell people that if itโs so easy, just go and play for the Lions then. Everything just fell into place for me, but it was never a smooth ride to that point.โ
After the second Test with the Wallabies levelling the series, Gatland wanted Court to stay with the squad in the lead-up to the final decisive Test, but the prop didnโt want to outstay his welcome and ruin what had already been the highlight of his career.
โI felt like Iโd lived my dream and Iโd had that week and then taking an extra week just to hang around and train and go out with the mid-week crew, it was probably just taking it a little bit too far for the ego trip,โ Court said.
Loading
โSo I ended up going back home [to the Gold Coast] and then the final week was with my family and then watched the last Test and was overjoyed and loved seeing the boys get up in the end over the Wallabies.โ
Today, Court works for the University of Queensland alongside coaching Brisbane Grammar Schoolโs first XV. Ahead of the arrival of thousands of Lions supporters, he is telling anyone who will listen what the Lions mean to him and everyone who has ever been selected to join the touring team.
โIโve been trying to sort of speak with people, and Iโm saying, โLook, this is everything to a player that gets picked in the Lionsโ.
โLiterally, they could die the following day and theyโd be happy because itโs just everything to them. It means absolutely everything to people and people would sacrifice their whole careers and everything just to get a run in that red jersey.โ
Follow all the action of the British and Irish Lions tour with news and analysis from Australiaโs best rugby writers. Sign up here to receive special Rolling maul editions of our Sport newsletter.