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Sam Warburton believes Lions squad capable of handling New Zealand tour schedule

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Lions captain Sam Warburton insists he and his team-mates are only thinking about their tactics, not the opposition ahead of their first match

Sam Warburton believes the difficulty of the British and Irish Lions' schedule in New Zealand has been "blown out of proportion".

The Lions captain insisted he has already acclimatised to the time zone and is ready for Saturday's tour opener against the New Zealand Provincial Barbarians in Whangarei, live on Sky Sports 1.

All Blacks boss Steve Hansen has suggested he would not countenance the Lions' quick turnaround of landing on Wednesday than playing on Saturday.

The Lions on Sky Sports
The Lions on Sky Sports

The British & Irish Lions tour of New Zealand starts on 3rd June, exclusively on Sky Sports

But Lions head coach Warren Gatland believes his squad are ready for the 10-match tour, and Warburton agrees.

"I'm fine, I think talk on the schedule has been blown out of proportion a little bit," said Warburton.

"If we had one squad of 23 it would be absolutely brutal, but we've got nearly two squads of players, so guys aren't going to be starting Saturday, starting Wednesday then starting again Saturday.

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Lions Tour Manager John Spencer defends the quick turnaround after criticism from All Blacks coach Steve Hansen saying it's what his coaches wanted.

"So we've got a big squad of top-quality players who can deal with that fixture list. I can see how from the outside it looks bad but I think it's fine really.

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"If guys were going to start six matches before the Test series that would ring alarm bells, but that's not going to happen.

"We've got a big squad, everyone's excited and desperate to start. The guys are fresh, ready to go and in a good place."

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Warburton captained the Lions four years ago in their series win in Australia, but missed the start of the tour due to knee trouble.

This time the Wales star has shaken off another knee injury in time to feature in the first game in New Zealand - and admitted that has helped him settled quickly into the 2017 rhythm.

"Being fit from the start, that's been huge for me," said Warburton.

"It really felt like I was chasing it four years ago, I missed the first two games.

Greig Laidlaw (L) and Stuart Hogg (R) speak to British & Irish Lions kicking coach Neil Jenkins
Image: Greig Laidlaw (L) and Stuart Hogg (R) speak to British & Irish Lions kicking coach Neil Jenkins

"I was the last guy to play a fixture on the whole tour. I was constantly panicking four years ago about when I was going to get a game and when I was going to pull through.

"I was a little bit nervous about that. So it's nice I can go in knowing what's happening.

"Hopefully I can stay fit and get a few fixtures under my belt. I'm going to need a good few games I think before I start to hit my straps.

"But we all know now that any game is a massive audition for the Test matches, so I'm really pleased to be involved in this first one."

Catch all the action from this historic series live only on Sky Sports.

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