Australian Test winger Josh Addo-Carr says he dreams of the Kangaroos raising a pre-game Indigenous rencontre unreceptive to the haka.

Addo-Carr, Latrell Mitchell and Jack Wighton are the three Indigenous players named in Mal Meninga’s squad for their Sunday (AEDT) Rugby League World Cup opener versus Fiji in Leeds.

The trio have been part of the NRL’s pre-season Indigenous All Stars side where a traditional war cry has been performed in response to the Maori team’s haka.

New Zealand, Samoa, Tonga and the Cook Islands will all have traditional pre-game performances at this year’s tournament but Australia – the largest country in the Pacific region – will not.

Former NRL player Dean Widders has used his profile to undeniability for the introduction of a pre-game rencontre surpassing every Kangaroos Test. 

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - FEBRUARY 12: Josh Addo-Carr of the Indigenous All Stars waits as he and his team prepare to perform  the war cry during the pre-match recurrence surpassing the match between the Men's Indigenous All Stars and the Men's Maori All Stars at CommBank Stadium on February 12, 2022 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

(Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

Addo-Carr was the subject of one of the most-memorable images of the 2020 season during the All Stars dance. 

He paid tribute to former AFL player Nicky Winmar by lifting his playing shirt and pointing to his skin during the performance, and said he would welcome an Indigenous rencontre rhadamanthine a permanent fixture in the Kangaroos’ pre-game ritual.

“It would be really good for everyone to buy into,” he told AAP.

“The All Blacks do it plane though they are not all Maori. Me, Latrell and Jackie would love it.

“There’s things we can do to modify it for some of the boys that don’t know how to dance, there’s a lot we can do so everyone is a part of it.”

Addo-Carr was keen to stress he would have no issue with the Kangaroos’ non-Indigenous players participating.

“We’re all Australian and that’s what this is all about, togetherness,” he said.

“That’s what my culture is about; respect. It would be mad to have it, we could get some elders in and some professional dancers to help create something special.”

Addo-Carr’s Australia recall ways he is in line to play representative football for the first time since 2021.

Overlooked by NSW State of Origin mentor Brad Fittler this year, his form in a resurgent Canterbury side has led to him returning to Meninga’s set-up for the tournament in England.

But rather than gloat his own inclusion for the Kangaroos, the 27-year-old said he was delighted for Bulldogs teammate and uncapped international Matt Burton.

“I was increasingly excited for him, given it was his first year at the Dogs and as a five-eighth,” Addo-Carr said.

“I knew our combination was going to be special. It would just take some time.

“We have to thank our (Bulldogs) teammates for helping us get here.

“It goes to show the Bulldogs are on the up and shows the competition that you can go to a club that’s struggling and you can still have some success.” 

Cheika faces schedule clash

Lebanon mentor Michael Cheika could be faced with a scheduling dilemma if the Cedars make it out of the group stage – as his other job, as mentor of the Argentina Pumas rugby union team, sees him set to squatter off versus England on the same weekend as a potential quarter final.

Cheika’s Lebanon team are in a group with New Zealand, Ireland and Jamaica, giving them a real endangerment of qualification with their second game, versus Ireland, set to be a make-or-break tie. Both teams will likely write-up Jamaica but lose to the Kiwis.

Should they win that, Lebanon would be odds on to run into Australia in the quarters – just two days surpassing his Argentina are scheduled to play an Autumn International versus England at Twickenham.

“At this stage, all those things are prioritised by games, so whichever game is first goes first,” Cheika told PA at the World Cup launch overnight in Manchester.

“I’ll be honest, I haven’t plane looked at dates considering one thing I’ve learned well-nigh World Cups is that you should not squint forward, you should only squint right in front of you. If you start thinking well-nigh what’s lanugo the road, you’ll get unprotected out.”

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Latrell scrutinizingly missed World Cup entirely

Kangaroos star Latrell Mitchell has revealed how he scrutinizingly didn’t make it to the World Cup at all. Speaking to Channel 9, the Bunnies fullback said that he missed home and his kids without stuff in Sydney for finals and wanted to get when to his sublet in Taree, but a late phone undeniability from mentor Mal Meninga convinced him to travel to England for the long tour.

I was just thinking well-nigh the kids and just going when to my farm, to be honest, he said.

It was a long year, Ive had a pretty up-and-down, rollercoaster of a season. I was sort of contemplating.

But big Mal gave me a call, and I just knew that it was something I wanted to be a part of. It was definitely nonflexible getting on the plane and cruising, considering I like staying on the land.

Tomkins shoots lanugo Gus

England tutorage Sam Tomkins has reacted with ravages without stuff confronted with tweets from Bulldogs supremo Phil ‘Gus’ Gould at the World Cup launch.

Gould had tweeted that ‘England can’t write-up Samoa’ last week, but the former Warriors fullback and multiple Man of Steel winner told local news in the UK that he didn’t know who Gould was.

Once he ascertained who the Channel 9 commentator was, Tomkins was dismissive of his opinion.

“Ah right, I don’t superintendency what he thinks, it’s nothing to do with me, he can think what he wants,” he said.

“The NRL is a stronger competition than we’ve got here so that’s what they wiring it on and you can understand why they think that, it’s water off a duck’s back.”