logo
Lions desperate for fast start in Test that will set the tone for Australia series

Lions desperate for fast start in Test that will set the tone for Australia series

The Guardian2 days ago
Whatever unfolds over the next three Saturdays this British & Irish Lions series will resonate more than its predecessor. Simply to see visiting fans in red jerseys wandering down Queen Street in central Brisbane is to be thankful the whole enterprise has a beating heart once again, in contrast to South Africa four years ago when a Covid-disrupted, spectator-free experience sapped everyone's spirits.
Because a Lions tour is nothing without a human element, enticed back every four years by the fabled steepness of the challenge. 'This is our Everest, boys,' growled Jim Telfer back in 1997 and, as usual, the master coach was right. On only three occasions in the past 50 years has a Lions squad returned home triumphant and, for now, a series win remains the holy grail for the professional egg chasers of England, Ireland, Scotland and, if selected, Wales.
As expectancy levels rise again, though, there is one nagging caveat which grows increasingly hard to sidestep. The Wallabies are currently languishing down at sixth in the World Rugby rankings and, consequently, nobody can recall a Lions squad being shorter-odds favourites anywhere, anytime. Beating Australia right now, some argue, would be less a case of scaling Everest than taking a leisurely amble along Bondi Beach.
Even the Lions have been talking aloud about gunning for a 3-0 clean sweep and, in the process, creating a chunky slice of history. All their three series wins from their past 12 attempts have been by a margin of 2-1; it is necessary to scroll right back to 1974 to find a properly rampant Lions side who, in a four-Test series against South Africa, won three Tests and drew the last.
All of which makes Saturday's first Test particularly significant. If the Lions romp to a 30-point victory, it will inevitably stoke the debate about whether they should look at touring elsewhere in 12 years' time. If, on the other hand, the Wallabies replicate their Twickenham boilover at England's expense in November, fresh existential questions may start to be asked about the Lions themselves: are they now an overblown vanity project whose raison d'être, in the fast-changing modern world, is fraying?
So, no pressure. If a Lions series really is the pinnacle of the sport then, bluntly, the quality of the on-field action needs to justify the billing. The Lions may have shrugged off their pre-departure defeat to Argentina in Dublin but that result has been thrown into sharp relief by England's recent 2-0 away series win over the Pumas. Similarly, the Wallabies were on the brink of going down to Fiji earlier this month.
Assessing the Lions' tour games in Australia so far has been equally tricky: five wins from five outings, 32 tries scored, nine against, top-drawer opposition conspicuously absent. There have been flashes of excellence but not quite enough to guarantee a happy ending once the real stuff kicks off at the atmospheric Suncorp Stadium.
It leaves both teams holding out for a hero. And if there is one showman equipped to dominate the stage it is surely Finn Russell, the Bath and Scotland fly-half now auditioning to be the Lions wizard in Oz. Some great 10s have worn the red jersey down the years and Russell has his chance to join the fly-half pantheon.
Sign up to The Breakdown
The latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewed
after newsletter promotion
Four years ago he was a late addition in South Africa, featuring only as a replacement in the final Test. Since then he has become a catalyst who regularly shapes games to his personal will. Operating flat to the gainline, seeing space no one else can, fizzing out wide passes, dinking on the money cross-kicks to his wingers … the 32-year-old has become the complete package. To the point where if he was wearing gold this weekend the bookies' odds would be much less definitive.
And if that heaps still more pressure on the shoulders of the 22-year-old Tom Lynagh, making his first start for the land of his distinguished father, that is the harsh reality of elite Test rugby. Give Russell some quick ball, with his Scotland teammates Sione Tuipulotu and Huw Jones at his elbow, and the Lions really could ask some penetrating questions, with Tommy Freeman and James Lowe both ready to apply the finishing gloss.
The Wallabies' biggest challenge, then, will be to cut the supply lines to both Russell and Jamison Gibson-Park, his equally sharp partner in crime at half-back. And the longer they can do so, the more they will fancy their chances. It is no point pretending the loss of the injured Rob Valetini, Will Skelton et al is not a blow but Joe Schmidt is invariably a man with a plan and the presence on the bench of some potentially lively impact replacements is no coincidence.
The Lions' selection has been slightly more conservative, with the emphasis placed squarely on a forceful, physical start. History would suggest they need one; on their past three tours the widest margin either way in a Lions first Test has been five points. You also have to go back to 2001 and Jason Robinson sensationally skinning Chris Latham on the outside in this very city inside the opening three minutes for an example of a Lions team cutting loose from the outset.
This one could be another slow burner unless, say, Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii can jump high to steal an early restart and set the tone for a more frenetic kind of contest. The Lions defence has been well organised so far but Suaalii's aerial ability is in another dimension.
The Wallabies have also picked Jake Gordon at scrum-half for his tactical acumen while the new cap Nick Champion de Crespigny will be bursting to impress on the flank. If he goes well and Australia get over the line, brace yourself for the 'Champion the Wonder Horse' headlines.
It all lends this first Test a distinctly series-shaping feel. In South Africa the Lions won the opener only to surrender the remaining two, a pattern that feels unlikely this time around. The onus, accordingly, is on Australia to channel the power and the passion of Midnight Oil at their finest and make one or two Lions eat their confident words. In that event all those bullish pre-series predictions will be blown away like so many discarded pie wrappers. Farewell to Bondi and welcome back to Everest the hard way.
More likely is a tense initial tussle, at least for the first hour. But what if Farrell's team have been holding back their best? Or if the Wallabies cannot lay a glove on the artful Russell? Win the first Test well and, at the very least, the travelling sea of red will be up and roaring. At which point the idea of a 3-0 series outcome will morph from banter into a serious possibility.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lions one win from ending wait – 5 things we learned from first Test
Lions one win from ending wait – 5 things we learned from first Test

Leader Live

timean hour ago

  • Leader Live

Lions one win from ending wait – 5 things we learned from first Test

Here, the PA news agency examines five things learned from the first Test. The sense of anticlimax at the final whistle contrasted starkly with the pre-match buzz around Suncorp Stadium. A gulf in class between the rivals had been exposed during the 42 minutes it took the Lions to canter out of sight and now anything other than an emphatic series whitewash will be seen as failure. Andy Farrell's men were able to butcher a host of chances and take their foot off the gas after Dan Sheehan crossed early in the second half, yet still be streets ahead. A long couple of weeks awaits the Wallabies. The term coined by Sir Ian McGeechan to describe a special breed of player who rises to the occasion on the biggest stage was typified by Tom Curry, the full-throttle England flanker who terrorised Australia in contact and at the breakdown. Described as a 'machine' by Andy Farrell, Curry shrugged off his indifferent form in previous tour matches to set the physical tone from the moment he pulverised James Slipper in the opening seconds. Just a fraction behind him were Tadhg Beirne and Tadhg Furlong, who also fully justified why they were picked on reputation. For periods of the first half, Finn Russell cast a spell on the home defence. His range of passing released team-mates, created openings and set-up tries to leave former Lions fly-halves Dan Biggar and Ronan O'Gara purring in the commentary box. If Australia had a plan to take him out of the game, it clearly did not work as the Scotland ringmaster cut loose behind a dominant pack. Fresh from steering Bath to the treble, Russell is operating at the peak of his powers and, on current form, is the best 10 in the game. Apart from the failure to crush the Wallabies, thereby breaking their spirits heading into the second Test, Farrell will be most concerned about his wings. James Lowe continued the dismal form he has shown all tour while Tommy Freeman made too many wrong decisions game and both would be fretting over keeping their places if there were strong alternatives. However, Mack Hansen is struggling with a foot injury and Duhan van Merwe's defensive shortcomings have been exposed repeatedly ever since the curtain raiser against Argentina. Blair Kinghorn was seen as the first-choice full-back but with Hugo Keenan proving solid enough in the first Test, the Scot could be picked on the wing if he recovers from his knee injury. The return of powerful forwards Will Skelton and Rob Valetini cannot come soon enough for Australia. Having missed the first Test with calf injuries, they have been given the all-clear for the attempt to level the series at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. Skelton's sheer physical presence will prevent the Wallabies from being bullied in quite the same way, while Valetini provides a destructive carrying option. It is upon their availability and the fight shown in the final 30 minutes at Suncorp Stadium that Australia's hopes rest.

The 'calm' navy officer chosen to steer Wales at Rugby World Cup
The 'calm' navy officer chosen to steer Wales at Rugby World Cup

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

The 'calm' navy officer chosen to steer Wales at Rugby World Cup

Wales' course to the Rugby World Cup has hardly been plain sailing.A wooden spoon, a contracts row, a change of coach and then a Six Nations whitewash have made for pretty choppy when you're trying to steady the ship, making an ex-navy officer your captain makes perfect Williams wasn't an obvious choice for many when coach Sean Lynn opted to stand centre Hannah Jones down as skipper ahead of next month's tournament in having been named alongside bubbly backrower Alex Callender to lead the side as co-captains, it was soon easy to see why the former Gloucester-Hartpury coach nodded to a player he oversaw for two years at the PWR champions."Al Cal brings a real energy and excitement to the squad, while Kate brings a selflessness and a quiet calm authority to everything she does," said Lynn. "I've been really impressed with Kate; the mannerisms and the calm strategic approach she has." Which figures given three years ago she was stood on the bridge of HMNZS Wellington on patrol in the Williams served in the New Zealand navy as a warfare officer, taking the route planned by a navigator and making sure the vessel stuck to course."I think my experience from that is something I've really been able to draw on," says the 25-year-old. "I had a lot of leadership skills and stuff from that, which I'm finding now is kind of crossing over into how I am with the team."Williams spent five years with the navy before changing only took a year's secondment initially when she decided to give herself the chance of fulfilling her rugby dreams with still calls the navy her Plan B, but two PWR titles at the Circus - including a player of the season last term and a try in this year's final win over Saracens - as well as a new contract suggests she might not need it."I think the decision's been justified now," Williams laughs after her elevation to co-captain that will begin with a two-test tour of Australia where Wales will warm up for the World Cup with games against the in Swansea but brought up in New Zealand from the age of four, Williams says 'she grew up Welsh' and was playing rugby from the very start, following in the footsteps of both her mum and were games for North Harbour in the NPC, for Auckland's Blues in their first ever fixture, and for the Defence Ferns, before Wales were made aware of her ambitions and her eligibility.A phone-call in the barracks from then coach Ioan Cunningham was followed by an invitation to training and then an injury cover call-up for the last World Cup."I didn't think I'd be at the next World Cup when I first came over, let alone having the trust put in me to lead the team with Alex," she says, having won her first cap in the 2023 Six Nations. "I've enjoyed every single second of it. Playing for Wales is a massive honour and was a dream of mine."I gave myself a year and then it turned into two, but it's just really taken off. To get the contract was Wales was massive. It meant I could do the one thing I love."And made the sacrifices worth it, leaving behind friends and family, even partner, behind to follow her Wales course. They'll be following her progress from afar when Wales kick-off their tournament against Scotland in Salford on 23 August, having often sent messages from far flung corners of the ocean when Williams has been in with fitness having been an area Lynn was keen to work on during a long, hot summer pre-tournament camp, Williams admits she's already been sharing messages with her fellow former officers to compare notes"A few weeks back we were with the Royal Welsh Regiment and, being in the mess at lunchtime, it all felt a case of 'I've been here before!'," she says."I was telling my mates, imagine if you had to go back to basic training and do it all over again!"It was tough and – when you're not doing training in a game environment – you never know when it's going to end so you just had to hold on for some of it, keeping looking at the task ahead, getting through it, digging deep inside you."Williams admits the sand dunes of Merthyr Mawr were particularly tough – pointing to her red hair for extra sympathy in the sun – mauling up and down hills over and again."It was quite funny being in that environment and we took a lot from it as a team," she adds. "It'll benefit us because when we're in some dark moments in a game, you can look to your left, look to your right, and see people who have been through it with you."Being able to transfer skills and experiences is something that Williams has been able to do, with Wales now looking to do the same when they face Australia next Saturday (05.00BST) and onto the World hopefully put the choppy waters behind them.

Lightning disrupts England's electric display over USA
Lightning disrupts England's electric display over USA

The Independent

time2 hours ago

  • The Independent

Lightning disrupts England's electric display over USA

England secured a comprehensive 40-5 victory over the United States in Washington DC, concluding their summer tour unbeaten. The match at Audi Field experienced two lengthy delays due to lightning, causing an hour-long initial delay and a 40-minute mid-game stoppage. England scored six tries through Curtis Langdon, Luke Northmore, Cadan Murley, Jack van Poortvliet, Harry Randall, and Gabriel Oghre. George Ford contributed four conversions, with debutant Charlie Atkinson adding one, in a dominant display. The United States scored a consolation try in the final seconds through Shilo Klein, but have never beaten England in eight attempts.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store