James Lowes is set to miss Friday's Super League match at Hull.

The Bradford Bulls hooker, pictured, twisted his left knee during the first half of Friday's Valley Parade victory over Wakefield.

"It just happened while I was being tackled," said the 32-year-old.

"I will probably miss the Hull match, but I should be okay for the match against Castleford the following Friday."

Meanwhile, Lowes - named in the Great Britain shadow squad for the one-off Test in Australia - says that whoever agreed the itinerary should be brought to account.

"Everyone knows it takes a week to get over jet-lag," said Lowes after Britain's record-breaking 64-10 humiliation in Sydney.

"And I don't think Australia would have come over here for a one-off match in the middle of their season - there would be no chance of that."

Former Rugby Football League boss Greg McCallum has added to the controversy over the staging of the Test by claiming he was "dead set" against it.

McCallum, who returned to Australia after losing his job as executive director of rugby at the end of last year in the radical shake-up of the game's administration, claimed in the Sydney Telegraph that neither he nor Great Britain coach David Waite was consulted about the match.

The ex-referee, who used to live in Ilkley, pointed the finger at Leeds chief executive and Super League football director Gary Hetherington, who originally came up with the idea of a whistle-stop trip to Sydney as part of a strategic review.

"I was dead set against playing the match. But it was symptomatic of what was going on over there, where the game is being hijacked by certain clubs and individuals," said McCallum.