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AAP
Sport
Ian Chadband

Yeo back but no Ashes changes as Roos go for jugular

Isaah Yeo is back to lead an otherwise unchanged Kangaroos team in the last Ashes Test in Leeds. (Jono Searle/AAP PHOTOS)

Kangaroos coach Kevin Walters has resisted the temptation to blood his unused squad members as he's trusted in his big guns and brought back skipper Isaah Yeo to complete a clean sweep over England in the Ashes series.

After Australia had opened up their unassailable 2-0 lead with the 14-4 win at Everton last weekend, Walters had mused aloud about the prospect of giving a "reward" to fringe members of the squad by throwing them into the final Test at Headingley on Saturday (Sunday AEDT).

Instead, despite plenty of calls for him to use the 'dead rubber' as a chance to field new Kangaroos with an eye on next year's World Cup, he's put out what he considers Australia's best 17 to go and finish the job ruthlessly in the northern rugby league stronghold of Leeds.

Williams and Yeo
England skipper George Williams and Aussie counterpart Isaah Yeo will do battle in the final Test. (PR IMAGE PHOTO)

"We've had to work exceptionally hard in challenging conditions to win the opening two Tests, and while we'd like to reward the extended squad for their outstanding efforts on tour, we just feel that the players who have got the job done deserve to play in Leeds," Walters said.

"The playing group has had a few days off to freshen up and now it's back to work – we've trained well today and we've still got the captain's run to get our ourselves where we need to be for what is a very important Test match for both sides."

So Panthers lock Yeo is the only change to the second-Test team that had to slog hard to overcome England in Everton. 

The inspirational 30-year-old got just a few minutes of action in the first-Test 26-6 win at Wembley before a head-knock with Dom Young sidelined him.

But Yeo's been welcomed back to lead the side after undergoing all the necessary NRL concussion protocols, with second-Test stand-in Harry Grant handing back the armband.

Yeo comes in for his clubmate Lindsay Smith, who'll now move back to the extended squad for the final Test. 

Walters' choice may not have gone down too well with those pundits who felt this would have been the perfect chance to experiment with the Ashes wrapped up for the 14th consecutive time.

Instead, the tour stands to be completed without six of the 24-strong touring squad seeing a minute's action - Bradman, Ethan Strange, Blayke Brailey and Jacob Preston, who remain uncapped, as well as the more experienced Dylan Edwards and Mitch Moses.

Gehamat Shibasaki, who had not had the most impactful series, had seemed vulnerable to being replaced by Best, but the Newcastle centre remains as 18th man.

Another inaugural accolade to be settled on Saturday will be the player-of-the-series award, which is to be named the Fulton-Reilly award, after two Ashes icons, the Kangaroos' Bob Fulton and England's Malcolm Reilly.

Favourites for the honour include Reece Walsh and Cameron Munster, who won the man-of-the-match awards in the first two Tests, as well as the exceptional Angus Crichton and Harry Grant.

Australia team for 3rd Test:

1. Reece Walsh, 2. Mark Nawaqanitawase, 3. Kotoni Staggs, 4. Gehamat Shibasaki, 5. Josh Addo-Carr, 6. Cameron Munster, 7. Nathan Cleary, 8. Patrick Carrigan, 9. Harry Grant, 10. Tino Fa'asuamaleaui, 11. Angus Crichton, 12. Hudson Young, 13. Isaah Yeo (capt). 

14. Tom Dearden, 15. Lindsay Collins, 16. Reuben Cotter, 17. Keaon Koloamatangi. 18. Bradman Best.

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