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The Lions are in a no-lose position against Argentina, provided they don't actually lose

The Lions are in a no-lose position against Argentina, provided they don't actually lose

Irish Times7 hours ago

British & Irish Lions v Argentina, Aviva Stadium, Friday, 8pm – Live on TG4 & Sky Sports Action
A bad dress rehearsal doesn't necessarily begat a bad performance, much less a good one, and the grim
British & Irish Lions
expedition to New Zealand 20 years ago cannot be attributed to the soporific 25-all draw between the Lions and
Argentina
in Cardiff. But it sure as hell proved to be an ominous portent of things to come.
Jonny Wilkinson's sixth penalty of the night in the eighth minute of injury-time salvaged a modicum of pride for the Lions, whose head coach Clive Woodward rested captain Brian O'Driscoll and others, with Lawrence Dallaglio on the bench.
Still, to put that draw in context, Los Pumas were missing 25 players through club commitments and their inexperienced side, captained by current head coach
Felipe Contepomi
, were given little or no hope of causing a famous upset.
Two decades on, the Lions play a match in Ireland for the first time ever in what is, again, primarily a moneymaking venture which is understood to be generating around €4 million for the brand, with the last of the remaining tickets (priced from €148) selling out on Thursday. Ultimately, Friday evening's non-capped international, though historic, will be a footnote in history.
READ MORE
So, once more, the Lions are in something of a no-lose position – well, provided they don't actually lose – for this is again a scratch side missing 15 of its squad due to club commitments and injuries, including 10 from bulk suppliers Leinster.
Even so, the presence of
Maro Itoje
as captain adds to the desire for these Lions to set a stronger benchmark than was the case in 2005, not least as his partnership with
Tadhg Beirne
could be a Test partnership in the making, as well as roommates.
There's plenty of power and ball-carrying ballast in the front and back rows, the Northampton/England halfback pairing of Alex Mitchell and Fin Smith will have fond memories of their last visit here seven weeks ago, and ditto their Saints team-mates Tommy Freeman, who looks a likely Test starter, and Henry Pollock, for whom an impact role could well be a pointer to the Test series.
Lions captain Maro Itoje during Thursday's session at the Aviva Stadium. Photograph:Any backline with
Bundee Aki
and Sione Tuipulotu doubling up in midfield shouldn't be lacking in oomph. The general expectation is that they will ultimately duel for the Test 12 jersey, although if they become a combination you'd wonder who'd fill that role in the midweek games.
Either way, this looks liken being a searching examination for the 23-year-old Pampas centre Justo Piccardo – who made his Test debut at the Aviva Stadium against Ireland last November off the bench – wearing the 12 jersey donned by Contepomi in Cardiff 20 years ago.
Two decades on, one of the greatest overseas players to ever decorate Irish provincial rugby is back in familiar terrain, Contepomi having assembled a makeshift Pumas squad for their first game and first week's training in seven months, whereas this Lions team were training in Portugal last week.
The brilliant Toulouse utility back Juan Cruz Mallia and Bordeaux Bègles lock Guido Petti are among those Pumas involved in the Top 14 playoffs this weekend, while props Thomas Gallo and Francisco Gomez Kodela are also missing.
Contepomi's starting team retains nine of the starting XV which lost 22-19 to Ireland last November and 13 of both that matchday squad and the one against France the following week in their most recent outing. That core were also part of the Rugby Championship sides that secured wins over all three southern hemisphere rivals in the same campaign for the first time ever, helping them rise to fifth in the world rankings.
It's a measure of this game's importance to Los Pumas and Contepomi that he has assembled a relatively experienced side sprinkled with hardened Test match players in the captain and hooker Julian Montoya, La Rochelle tighthead Joel Sclavi, flanker Pablo Matera and fullback Santiago Carreras.
Los Pumas are invariably playing for a cause. Back in 2005, they were seeking entry into the 2005 Tri Nations but generally, as here, playing for Argentina is sufficient motivation, especially as the Lions have only granted them three meetings since their sole tour of the country in 1927.
Tadhg Furlong during Thursday's Captain's Run. Photograph:However, this week also marks the 60th anniversary of a famous 11-6 victory over the Junior Springboks in Ellis Park on June 19th, 1965, a landmark win which effectively gave birth to Los Pumas. Furthermore, one of the heroes of that day, Arturo Rodríguez Jurado, aka El Trompa (The Trumpet) passed away last Sunday at the age of 81. The UAR (Union Argentina de Rugby) described him as one of the country's most outstanding players.
'They're a well-drilled, well organised team that's been playing some fantastic rugby, certainly over the last 18 months,' acknowledged Andy Farrell. 'Fifth in the world and beating everyone in their path shows where they're at. We realise as well just how special this is for them and what a privilege it is to be here at the Aviva with the Lions playing their first game in Ireland. It's a special occasion and it's great they're coming to the party.'
Despite the extortionate ticket pricing and hotel gouging, the plentiful sightings of Lions tops around town on Thursday was a reminder how much the team means to rugby fans and despite the novelty of this fixture, the 'home' support should be significant.
The Pumas also has a relatively callow-looking bench, with 23-year-old loosehead Bautista Bernasconi, hooker Boris Wenger (22) and scrumhalf Simon Benítez Cruz (25) are all wearing the distinctive blue and white hooped Pumas jersey for the first time.
By contrast, as well as being out to make an early statement ahead of the Oz odyssey, Pierre Schoeman, Rónan Kelleher and Tadhg Furlong bring way more international experience, and what Pollock lacks in that he makes up for in his electric energy.
All in all, it will be a surprise and even a slight disappointment if the Lions don't board Saturday's long-haul flight to Perth with something of a statement win under their belts.
LIONS:
Marcus Smith (England); Tommy Freeman (England), Sione Tuipulotu (Scotland), Bundee Aki (Ireland), Duhan van der Merwe (Scotland); Fin Smith (England), Alex Mitchell (England); Ellis Genge (England), Luke Cowan-Dickie (England), Finlay Bealham (Ireland); Maro Itoje (England, capt), Tadhg Beirne (Ireland), Tom Curry (England), Jac Morgan (Wales), Ben Earl (England).
Replacements:
Rónan Kelleher (Ireland), Pierre Schoeman (Scotland), Tadhg Furlong (Ireland), Scott Cummings (Scotland), Henry Pollock (England), Tomos Williams (Wales), Elliot Daly (England), Mack Hansen (Ireland).
ARGENTINA:
Santiago Carreras (Gloucester); Rodrigo Isgró (Harlequins), Lucio Cinti (Saracens), Justo Piccardo (Pampas), Ignacio Mendy (Benetton); Tomás Albornoz (Benetton), Gonzalo García (Zebre Parma); Mayco Vivas (Gloucester), Julian Montoya (Leicester, capt), Joel Sclavi (La Rochelle); Franco Molina (Exeter Chiefs), Pedro Rubiolo (Bristol Bears); Pablo Matera (Honda Heat), Juan Martin Gonzalez (Saracens), Joaquin Oviedo (Perpignan).
Replacements:
Bautista Bernasconi (Benetton), Boris Wenger (Dogos XV), Francisco Coria Marchetti (Brive), Santiago Grondona (Bristol Bears), Joaquin Moro (Pampas), Simón Benitez Cruz (Tarucas), Matias Moroni (Brive), Santiago Cordero (Connacht).
Referee:
James Doleman (NZR).
Assistant referees:
Nika Amashukeli (GRU), Andrea Piardi (FIR)
TMO:
Eric Gauzins (FFR)
Head-to-head: 1910 –
Argentina 3 Lions 28.
1927 –
Argentina 3 Lions 37; Argentina 0 Lions 46; Argentina 3 Lions 34; Argentina 0 Lions 43.
1936 –
Argentina 0 Lions 23.
2005:
Lions 25 Argentina 25.
Betting:
1-10 Lions, 30-1 Draw, 13-2 Argentina.
Handicap odds (Argentina +15pts)
10/11 Lions, 22/1 Draw, 10/11 Argentina.
Forecast:
Lions to win and cover the handicap.

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Young Scotsman Cusiter was sent on to pick the lock, partnering Wilkinson at half-back. Cusiter in action against Los Pumas. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo 'Aw, it all happens in a bit of a blur,' Cusiter says. 'It's almost the same feeling as that first cap for Scotland where everything's so quick and so intense. You're just kind of going on autopilot, really. 'I think the first few passes I threw… went to hand,' Cusiter laughs. 'I was aware in the moment of the occasion, the magnitude of it. For me personally, it was beyond my wildest dreams, I would say, growing up in Aberdeen, to play for the British and Irish Lions. 'And I'm aware of that dream becoming a reality, which in itself is surreal, and with that comes this pressure: you want to show that you belong there. You want to perform. 'We were all-out attack and we actually played pretty well in those last 20 minutes. We put them under pressure.' 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I don't think it was, like, a massive downer just because we didn't win. 'The thing is, you're going to New Zealand and they were amazing. I just don't think that we, as a Lions team, ever got the best out of ourselves on that tour. I do think the talent, the players, were there. But we sort of, for whatever reason, never really got close to maxing out the performance levels we were capable of. 'I do believe part of it was that Wales had won the Grand Slam, probably unexpectedly, which might have changed ideas around selection, but we also probably persevered with a few of the English lads who were just past their peak at the time. 'But I'm not saying that even if we had achieved our full potential, it would have been good enough to win a series against that New Zealand team. I'm just saying that I think we could have performed a bit better than we did.' On the latter point, Cusiter is in full agreement. 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'I think we were up against it regardless of Clive's approach because that New Zealand team were simply that good. 'Once we got beaten by the Maori in Hamilton, it was like, 'This is…' Well, let's just say, 'We're up against it here.' Woodward's 2005 tour didn't go to plan. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo Owen equally pinpoints that 19-13 defeat to New Zealand Maori on 11 June as the game in which he played his way out of the frame for a Test berth despite an otherwise bright start to his own tour. In all three meetings with the All Blacks, the Welsh captain's place in Woodward's 23 went instead to late call-up and international teammate Ryan Jones who, in fairness, was among the Lions' better performers in the Tests. 'That's just the way it goes, isn't it?' Owen says. 'I remember after the tour, I was gutted not to have made the Test team. 'When you're a player, your perception is warped. You either feel like a complete failure or a roaring success. And obviously there have been advancements in things like sports psychology since my playing days which encourage players to be more level, more process-driven. But at the time, having missed out on the Test team, I felt like I'd failed.' Cusiter narrowly missed out on a place in the matchday squad for the second All Blacks game in Wellington. With likely Test starter Dwayne Peel carrying a niggle, the Scotsman was taken off at half-time in a midweek obliteration of Manawatu to ensure his availability. Peel, though, was ultimately ruled fit on the eve of the Test, with English World Cup winner Matt Dawson backing him up from the bench. 'It didn't really matter for me,' Cusiter says. 'I just loved the experience, playing with all of those guys. That was everything for me. 'I think at that time, I was 23, and I thought all being well, I could get on another one or maybe even another two if I continued to play well. But y'know, for me, life didn't work out that way. That was my only tour. 'I never thought I'd get to that level in the first place', says Cusiter, who these days runs an alcohol retail business in California, where he moved shortly after finishing his career with Sale Sharks in 2016. 'I'm extremely proud looking back 20 years later that I had that experience of touring with the Lions, which is a very rare thing. 'I remember seeing a few guys in the years since talking about how disappointed they were in the whole experience. I don't feel like that at all. I have nothing but fond memories.' Time has been a healer for Owen — director of rugby at Hailebury College in Hertfordshire, England, for the last 12 years — who these days views the summer of 2005 through the same lens as his one-time teammate. 'Now, I just think, 'Wow. How amazing is it to have gone on a Lions tour? How amazing is it to have been a part of this thing?'' he says. 'I retired earlier than I wanted to and if you had said to me when I was 18, 'This is what you're going to do in your career,' I would have been like…' Owen pauses for a second, then breaks into a laugh. ''Thank you!'' 'I can still say that I played in six or seven matches for the Lions, which is pretty special. I'll take it.'

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