
Owen Doyle: Let's hope the Lions' penalty try is a sign of things to come
If James Doleman, the New Zealand referee, and his crew had made even a small fraction of the number of errors the
Lions
managed, they would rightly have been run out of town.
Argentina
had not played in more than six months, had players unavailable and had three new caps. Opposite them, on more or less home soil, were
Andy Farrell
's men – the best of the best. Or so we thought. Instead they delivered a disappointing, disjointed performance.
Before the match we were treated to a video of Farrell addressing his troops. He was particularly keen to relate his phone call to
Finlay Bealham
, advising the Irish player of his elevation to the squad. I can only imagine that this is part of a documentary that will be released after the tour. Based on what we saw it won't be in the running for an Oscar, but it might well be an unhelpful distraction.
There was little cutting edge to the Lion's play until Ellis Genge broke free with a mighty run, which finished with Tadgh Beirne crashing over the try line. I thought that would ignite the Lions, but no. They fizzled, while Argentina sparked.
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Doleman did well and he's not in any way responsible for the downfall of this particular pride of Lions. His award of a penalty try for a collapsed maul is a call not made often enough, the visiting prop Mayco Vivas was the culprit. As the tour continues it will be interesting to see whether this is now policy. It should be.
Doleman only gave five penalties against the Lions, whereas Argentina were pinged 12 times. These included four scrum penalties, which I had a couple of question marks about. That doesn't make me right, it simply confirms that there is a hell of a lot of disagreement around scrum calls.
Does anyone really know what to look for when watching a scrum? Photograph:Doctors differ, patients die – the stakes are different for scrum refereeing but these debatable penalties have a massive bearing on the game. For all their law tinkering World Rugby seem content to let this quite ludicrous situation continue. The final of Super Rugby Pacific saw plenty of scrum penalties, with critical field positioning changing frequently as a result.
Specialist World Rugby groups have been formed to study this and that, but nothing on the scrum. It's extraordinary. Perhaps the three wise monkeys are at play – see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil.
World Rugby, however, have been busy revising the disciplinary hearing procedures. Instead of having judicial hearings, red cards and citings will now be studied by a foul play review committee (FPRC). This will be done quickly after the match and the player will then be informed of the outcome, with the right of appeal. The rationale is to speed up the process, undoubtedly a good thing in itself. But will we see tougher, deterrent suspensions? I wouldn't count on it.
There was talk recently of four-week automatic minimum suspensions, which would have been a real step in the right direction. However, on Saturday when England's Immanuel Feyi-Waboso went close to beheading his French opponent, Antoine Hastoy, we saw what the future holds, and it ain't good. The FPRC, on their very first mission, stated that the player's actions 'carried a high degree of danger'. So far, so good. But then the committee seemed to veer completely off-piste by determining that a staggeringly lenient two-week sentence would suffice. It includes a week off for attending tackling school, which, conveniently, has been kept open for business.
Minimal suspensions, allied to the dangerous idea of balancing safety with spectacle, simply do not stack up. Following this judgement we can undoubtedly expect more of the same. It is precisely what the game does not need.
Hollie Davidson's decision not to give Feyi-Waboso a straight red card – it was upgraded on review – also shows us just how much things are changing. Obviously, something truly horrific will be required before that colour is ever to be produced by a referee.
There has also been speculation that it did not merit a straight red because it was a timing and technique failure by Feyi-Waboso. If flagrant, highly dangerous challenges are to be portrayed in that sort of excusatory language, it would be nothing more than a dishonourable pretence, a sham.
France's Antoine Hastoy bears the brunt of a timing and technique failure by Immanuel Feyi-Waboso. Photograph: Bradley Collyer/PA Wire
'They put their heads where you wouldn't put a shovel,' were the words of Jack Conan crediting his players after he had done a really fine job captaining Leinster to URC victory. In one short sentence, no doubt unintentionally, Conan spoke to the dangers of sub-concussive knocks to the head. A game that requires players to put their heads where a shovel shouldn't go might usefully be considered in serious need of urgent remedial attention.
World Rugby and member unions, including coaches, are the custodians of the game. In time, those who are currently involved will move on. They must strive to hand it over to those who come next in a better condition than it is now. There is much to do for that to happen.
Neither should anybody forget the very large elephant in the room. Last month saw the final date for players suffering from brain disease to join UK solicitors Ryland Garth's lawsuit. It involves a long list of well-known former internationals and Lions players.
The number from rugby union involved is about 750. That's the equivalent of more than 30 match day squads. There are also at least two women, former Welsh internationals Nic Evans and Jamie Kift. Early on-set dementia and chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) know no boundaries. It is both frightening and tragic.
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The 42
3 hours ago
- The 42
'It was the Lions or Star Wars' - Van der Flier raring to go in Perth
THEY DIDN'T HAVE all the good channels in Josh van der Flier's house when he was growing up, so he used to have to go elsewhere to watch the Lions. The handy thing was that his grandparents had Sky and only lived across the road in Wicklow. Good memories, although van der Flier recalls one mishap in 2005. 'We had a family video and we taped over it by mistake,' he says. 'So we used to watch that over and over again. 'We didn't have the TV channels at home, it was just cassettes. So it was either that or Star Wars or something. So I ended up watching a lot of that 2005 Lions game.' Van der Flier is hoping this year's Lions have a better time of it in Australia than the '05 crew did in New Zealand. He's now in Perth with Andy Farrell's squad and will almost certainly make his Lions debut on Saturday against the Western Force. Having played in the URC final with Leinster, van der Flier didn't feature in last Friday's defeat to Argentina in Dublin before the Lions left for Australia. So he will be raring to get going this weekend. Advertisement 'It's probably the pinnacle,' says van der Flier of being a Lion. 'It's hard to compare with playing for your country but it is a very hard thing to do, so it's pretty cool.' Van der Flier at Lions training in Hale School, Perth. Billy Stickland / INPHO Billy Stickland / INPHO / INPHO Van der Flier missed out on selection in Warren Gatland's squad four years ago when the Lions went to South Africa. He seemed much more of a sure thing this time around, given his excellent form for Ireland under Farrell for the past four years, but van der Flier says the squad announcement day in May was an anxious one. 'We finished training at like 1.30pm and the announcement was at 2pm,' says van der Flier. 'I didn't even bother showering, I was straight out the door because I didn't want to be there in front of loads of lads if guys didn't get picked or if I didn't. 'So I just went home. My wife actually FaceTimed me, so we watched it together.' With the Lions announcement day involving a lengthy preamble and with the forwards and backs eventually being named alphabetically, van der Flier had a long wait. 'I was sitting there, sweating on the couch. 'You have a good idea of how squads are made up, so you obviously need specialised lineout back rows, maybe one or two sevens. And then there was like four sevens and my name hadn't been called and you think, 'Oh no,' but I made it in the end.' Van der Flier played for Leinster against Zebre just a few days after being named in the Lions squad and admits initially 'you're probably fighting a bit mentally' to stay focused on the job at hand. Yet the URC knock-outs made it impossible to think ahead to the Lions tour as van der Flier and Leinster narrowed in on ending their wait for silverware. Van der Flier in UCD last week. Andrew Conan / INPHO Andrew Conan / INPHO / INPHO The 32-year-old had a brief injury scare when he hurt his hamstring during Leinster's quarter-final win over the Scarlets. 'I had never hurt my hamstring before, but it didn't feel too bad, to be honest,' he says. 'I had no reference point. It ended up being a small little thing, I got a knee in the back of it, I think. But the unknown was still… I was hoping it was alright. Thankfully, it was.' He missed Leinster's semi-final win over Glasgow and then returned to the starting XV for the final victory over the Bulls, scoring a try in a typically effective 80-minute performance. That 'brilliant' success meant he was delayed in getting into Lions camp until last week. Having watched Wales' Jac Morgan get the first shot in the number seven shirt against the Pumas, van der Flier will be keen to get going this Saturday. Tom Curry, Henry Pollock, and Ben Earl are all options at openside too, but van der Flier is a man on a mission.

The 42
4 hours ago
- The 42
Lions show Ireland-like glimpses but sloppy touches blunt attack
IT TOOK LESS than 10 minutes for the Lions to start looking like an Andy Farrell team. Luke Cowan-Dickie nearly scored the opening try of the game from a close-range maul, only to knock on over the line, meaning a goal line drop-out for Argentina. Farrell's Ireland have made clever, detailed set-piece plays from goal line drop-out receipt one of their calling cards in recent years, so this was always going to be an interesting moment. Lo and behold, the Lions unveiled a smart play as they tried to cut the Pumas apart. Number eight Ben Earl fields the Argentinian drop-out and begins working infield. As with Ireland's goal line drop-out plays, the initial carry is towards the middle of the pitch in a bid to split the defensive line. Earl is chopped down on the Argentina 10-metre line and Luke Cowan-Dickie, Maro Itoje, and Ellis Genge arrive to resource the breakdown, as is their role in this play. While that's happening, the rest of the Lions players are getting ready to strike on second phase. Over to scrum-half Alex Mitchell's right, a four-man pod has formed. As we discussed last year in this article, four-man pods have become increasingly common in rugby in recent times, having previously faded away as three-man pods took over. Ireland are among the teams who have been sprinkling four-man pods into their game in instances like the one above, a structured situation they can plan for. What's slightly different about this example is that a centre – Bundee Aki – is inserted into the 4-pod, rather than it being made up exclusively by forwards. Again, this isn't completely new. Premiership champions Bath have been inserting centres into their 4-pods at times this season, while the Highlanders of New Zealand have also done it on a clever play from 22-metre drop-out receipt. This is the first time we've seen a Farrell team putting a back into one of their pods. Mitchell fizzes an excellent pass across the face of Finlay Bealham and Tadhg Beirne – who naturally attract defenders given their positioning – to Aki. Aki then has the option of tipping a short pass outside to flanker Tom Curry [green below] or sweeping the ball out the back to out-half Fin Smith [yellow]. As we see below, Aki goes out the back to Smith, who starts behind Bealham and then accelerates out behind Aki, showing late to receive the ball. Marcus Smith, who starts vertically in line with Aki in the 4-pod, bounces wider out behind Jac Morgan running a hard line off Fin Smith. While lots of forwards are excellent catch-passers and decision-makers, Aki has plenty of experience executing in this kind of scenario, so it makes sense to use him in this role. As it transpires, the Pumas do a good job in defence here as they get plenty of bodies into the line initially. Pablo Matera and Justo Piccardo then do a great job of jockeying out to ensure the Lions don't get a break, with their efforts allowing Igancio Mendy to tackle Sione Tuipulotu after passes from Fin Smith – who sweeps the ball behind Morgan – and Marcus Smith. Even without a linebreak, the Lions' attack has started well as they get Argentina chasing. Farrell's men now switch into their phase-play shape and we get the first look at their framework in this area of the game. Farrell's Ireland have operated with a 1-3-2-2 framework in phase-play attack in the past and the Lions look set to employ something very similar. Advertisement As they now play back to their left, we see the 3-pod [red below] set up with Beirne at the heart of it, something that is familiar to Irish fans. Further out is the 2-pod [green below] made up of Itoje and Genge. Within the 3-pod, Beirne can carry himself, tip-on a pass to Bealham on his outside, or tip-in to Curry on his inside. Instead, he sweeps the ball out the back to out-half Smith. As we can see above, Smith then sweeps the ball out the back of the 2-pod to Aki as the Lions look to play immediately out towards the far edge. Whereas in a 1-3-2-2 shape, we might expect the wide 2-pod of forwards to be connected and close to each other, the difference with this Lions team is that the final two forwards appear to be operating quite independently. As we can see below, Earl [orange] is shifting out towards the 15-metre channel, while Cowan-Dickie [blue] is further infield. This was a repeated trend in this game, with the Lions' widest forward often hugging the touchline to such an extent that the framework was more of a 1-3-2-1-1. We get another example below in the second half after Genge carries wide on the left. Genge, on the ground, is the left-hand side 1 in the framework. Earl, Bealham, and Itoje [red] make up the 3-pod Curry and Beirne [green] form the 2-pod, and replacement hooker Ronán Kelleher [blue] is the first 1 on the right. Out of shot above is the widest Lions forward, Henry Pollock, who is hugging the right-hand touchline. Pollock is highlighted in orange below and the distance between Kelleher and himself is clear. This 1-3-2-1-1 framework means the Lions always have some stretch in their attack even when their wings go roaming, with certain forwards tasked with filling those 1 roles in phase-play attack. The framework also means that the Lions can play from one side of the pitch to the other on back-to-back phases because the defenders have so many possible threats and layers of attack to worry about. It's something worth following in the coming weeks but it was apparent in this game that the Lions wanted their second-widest forward to be further infield, offering a front-door option on the next layer off the 2-pod. Coming back to the first instance, Aki hits Cowan-Dickie running that direct front-door line before the hooker turns to find right wing Tommy Freeman. Freeman has worked hard to get into this position, swinging all the way from the right-hand side. As highlighted below, Freeman starts the passage wide on the right, reads that he's not needed in the breakdown after Tuipulotu's initial carry, so gets swinging across behind the attack, adding another layer. That work-rate is something Farrell demands from his wings, who simply have to roam across the pitch looking to create overloads against the defence. Freeman takes the superb offload from Cowan-Dickie and connects with left wing Duhan van der Merwe, who offloads back to Freeman. The Lions appear to have Argentina's defence on the ropes but the Pumas scramble well, as they did all game. After a strong carry from Genge, the Lions look for the killer blow through Fin Smith's cross-kick to flanker Morgan, who has held the width out on the right. Argentina wing Mendy does a superb job to deny the Lions, fielding skillfully over his head just in front of Morgan. Smith might have liked to get a little less hangtime on his kick, giving Mendy less time to get across, but it's just a wonderful defensive play. It would have been a stunning Lions try bearing two hallmarks of a Farrell team: a slick goal line drop-out play and then the snappy shape and interplay. But the Lions just fail to seal the deal after positive build-up, which was the main theme of this game. Indeed, when they used the same goal line drop-out play in the second half, they failed to convert a glaring try-scoring chance. As we see above, fullback Marcus Smith fields the goal line drop-out this time but immediately pops the ball to Earl for the first carry. All the same players take up the same roles as the 4-pod sets to Mitchell's right and the two Smiths begin bouncing out the back of the pod. This time, the Pumas are in much poorer defensive shape. They're overresourced on the far side of the Earl carry and there is an instant danger as Mitchell fizzes the same face pass across Bealham and Beirne to Aki. The Ireland centre accelerates and draws Matera before playing a short pass to Curry. Out-half Smith gets a little disconnected from Aki here, so the option to pass short to Curry is all the stronger. Unfortunately for the Lions, Curry can't take the ball cleanly and loses control of it as Pumas centre Lucio Cinti turns in to tackle him. Fin Smith, Morgan, Marcus Smith, Freeman, and Sione Tuipulotu are all outside Curry here. If he can hold on and then offload, the Lions almost certainly score, even with the Pumas backfield scrambling. This kind of frustrating handling error prevented Farrell's men from opening up time after time against Argentina. The Lions repeatedly forced offloads and passes to let the Pumas off the hook. Tuipulotu breaks into the Argentinian 22 below but offloads into Pumas' hands. In the instance below, it's Cowan-Dickie who finds a Puma with his offload in the Argentinian 22. There were many other similar examples and the Lions were livid with themselves for this sloppiness. Farrell wants his side to attack with intent, but he's not someone who encourages offloading at will. 'Andy's been hot on, 'You've got to see your pass and know someone is there,'' said Curry post-match on Friday. Having carried out their review of the game, the Lions will surely feel that they had more than enough opportunities to break the Pumas only for their handling and decision-making to let them down at the key moment. There may have been an element of overeagerness to impress in those errors, as would be understandable on opening night for the 2025 Lions. However, Farrell's scathing criticism of his team underlined that he expects much better. He must have enjoyed the scoring passages from his team, with Aki putting the finishing touch to the Lions' first after some slick handling. Cowan-Dickie sweeps the ball back from the 3-pod to Marcus Smith, who does an excellent job of holding his feet as the ball comes to him. Indeed, Smith almost backs off in the face of the blitz from Pumas number Joaquín Oviedo, buying himself time to flick the ball on to Tuipulotu. As Smith is doing so, Beirne's running line is important. Beirne is an option for the short front-door pass from Smith and that lures Pumas centre Piccardo in onto Beirne initially. That in turn means Tuipulotu can get outside Piccardo, drawing Cinti infield before the Lions centre pops a basketball-style pass over Cinti's head to Fin Smith. Related Reads Lions remind Australia that they must release Wallabies stars for warm-up fixtures 'We need to be better' - The Lions land in Australia eager to get rolling Smith then does something similar to get the ball away over Mendy's head. Aki has to turn to gather Smith's pass and considers passing to Freeman in clear space, but with Piccardo working across, instead backs himself to finish. For many players, passing would have been the right decision, but Aki has the power to make his decision right. Farrell and his coaches probably enjoyed the more direct edge to their team's third try, which came soon after their powerful maul earned a penalty try. The Lions struck for their third from a right-hand-side lineout close to the halfway line, with Earl carrying well before they bounced back against the grain in an 11 pattern. Replacement scrum-half Tomos Williams skips the ball across the face of Itoje to find Genge thundering forward on a line back against the grain. Pumas prop Boris Wenger sights Genge late and can't tackle him as the explosive English prop batters his way through, powerfully fending Julián Montoya on his way. The Lions should probably score on the next phase, only for Marcus Smith to opt against passing to van der Merwe in the left corner, but they seal the deal on fourth phase. As highlighted above, Williams has three forwards running to his right in Itoje, Bealham, and Beirne. Williams picks his option wisely as the Pumas bite down on Itoje and Bealham, with the Welsh scrum-half fizzing the face pass wider to Beirne surging into space. It's a superb pass from Williams and a smart line from Beirne, who picks out the blind spot on Pumas prop Francisco Coria Marchetti's outside shoulder. The directness of this try was surely satisfying for the Lions, who will be working hard to deliver balance in their attack. Their 1-3-2-1-1 framework allows them to shift the ball into the wide channels, but the Lions coaches will be stressing the need to be direct and physically confrontational too. And even with directness in tighter parts of the field, clever passes and lines like the ones above can cause havoc. In the instance below, the Lions do damage in the shortside as Freeman runs a smart line off Williams coming back against the grain. Exploring the shortside is another hallmark of Farrell's Ireland side, with Jamison Gibson-Park hugely influential in that regard, and the Lions probably didn't look there enough against Argentina. However, Freeman picks out a blind spot on the outside of Matías Moroni here to make a break. Below, we see something extremely similar from replacement flanker Pollock. Again, the Lions have just made a carry infield when they bounce back into the shortside and Williams hits Pollock on that hard line into the blind spot outside a defender looking in at the ball. It takes bravery to run these lines. If the defence get a good early read, then the likes of Beirne, Freeman, and Pollock could be dealing with very sore ribs. These lines were evidently a strategy from the Lions and something worth keeping an eye on. Farrell's men had plenty of possession in their opening game, giving us lots of chances to see their attack. That said, they probably need to have greater balance to their approach in the future, combining more kicking with their intent to play with ball in hand. Then when they do attack with ball in hand, not throwing it away blindly should go a long way towards making the Lions a better team.


Irish Daily Mirror
5 hours ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
Star Wars of Lions v Australia awaits Josh van der Flier after long wait
It is written in the stars that Josh van der Flier's Lions debut will come against The Force. The Wicklow man's family had a video player instead of TV channels when he was a kid and his watching options largely consisted of watching the Lions or Star Wars. He didn't grow up to become a Jedi but the force is finally with the 32-year-old Leinster and Ireland star after he departed Dublin for Australia on Saturday with Andy Farrell's British and Irish Lions squad. His debut is expected to play against the Western Force on Saturday, a moment that has been a long time coming for the 73-times capped Ireland star. "Gosh, I always wanted to play (for the Lions)," he admitted. "I didn't really know that rugby was a job when I was younger, it probably wouldn't have been something I verbalized. "But I used to watch an Irish game or a game on TV and then go out to the garden and pretend to be someone who played for Ireland or the Lions. It's probably the pinnacle. It's hard to compare with playing for your country but it is a very hard thing to do, so it's pretty cool." When he wanted to watch the Lions when he was a child he popped across the road to his grandparents' house. "I just have a vague memory of it, I would have been quite young," van der Flier recalled. 'I distinctly remember, I think it was 2005, we had a family video and we taped over it by mistake. "It was Lions against New Zealand that year, we used to watch that over and over again. It was either that or Star Wars or something. So I ended up watching a lot of that 2005 Lions game.' When Leinster finished training on the day of the squad announcement, van der Flier made a bee-line for home. "I didn't even bother showering, I was straight out the door because I didn't want to be there in front of loads of lads if guys didn't get picked or if I didn't," he recalled. "So I just went home. My wife actually facetimed me so we watched it together. It was a long wait. Last time I had a vague memory of the announcement just popping up and that was it, this time it was like 30 minutes of TV before it got to it. I was sitting there sweating on the couch." With a surname starting with 'v', the wait was even longer as he watched as back row after back row was named before announcer Ieuan Evans got to his one. 'You have a good idea of how squads are made up so you obviously need specialized lineout back rows, maybe one or two 7s," said van der Flier. "And then there were like four 8s and my name hadn't been called and you think 'oh no', but I made it in the end.' The worry didn't end there, however. Van der Flier missed Leinster's URC semi-final with a hamstring issue, and was a doubt for the final but did start the victory over the Bulls. "I never hurt my hamstring before, thankfully I've been good with muscle things, but it didn't feel too bad to be honest," he said. "I'd no reference point, it ended up being a small little thing - I got a knee in the back of it I think - but the unknown was still...I was hoping it was alright. Thankfully it was. "People were asking me what the story is with tickets, wondering what my plans were and I was literally saying, 'I'm not even thinking about that until I'm finished (with Leinster)'. Winning the URC was brilliant, so the last few days I could go into camp and it was here. It was ignore it until it was there." Van der Flier was then travelling reserve for the opening defeat to Argentina at the Aviva Stadium last Friday night but wasn't required to play. The Lions arrived in Perth around midday Irish time on Sunday. They went straight into a busy schedule yesterday with a visit to Clottesloe and an aboriginal cultural experience in the form of a 'Welcome to Country' in Kings Park. But had some time to take stock of his impressive journey when the Lions trained at the UCD Bowl last week. "It was incredible, we trained here on Tuesday and it was very cool coming out into the changing rooms," said van der Flier. "It's my first time properly here since playing here for UCD." He played for the club in 2014 and '15. "It's very easy when things are going from one thing to the next to get used to where you're at," the flanker reflected. "To be involved in the Lions is incredible and you come to the UCD changing rooms for the first time since a few years ago, it's special."