logo
British and Irish Lions outmuscle Australia to win first Test 27-19

British and Irish Lions outmuscle Australia to win first Test 27-19

eNCA17 hours ago
BRISBANE - A relentless British and Irish Lions were ferocious in attack and solid in defence to edge a dogged Australia and win a bruising first Test 27-19 in Brisbane on Saturday.
The tourists repeatedly laid siege to the Wallabies line for a 17-5 lead at the break before soaking up second-half pressure to bank the win with both sides scoring three tries.
A late Australia try meant the scoreline flattered a poor Wallabies side, with the Lions never looking in trouble after opening up a 24-5 lead shortly after half-time.
Played in front of 52,229 fans at a sold-out Suncorp Stadium, many wearing the Red of the Lions, the tourists proved too strong for a brave, but outgunned Australian outfit.
With Scottish fly-half Finn Russell pulling the strings in the backs and outstanding loose forwards Tom Curry and Tadhg Beirne dominating up front, the Lions showed why they went into the Test as firm favourites.
But despite being behind for all of the match, the Wallabies didn't roll over and fears of a huge defeat never materialised.
The Lions got away to an almost perfect start, Beirne winning a penalty off the kick-off and Russell slotting an easy three points.
The Wallabies barely had the ball in the opening 10 minutes, the Lions dominating attacking possession to give the sea of red jerseys in the crowd plenty to cheer about.
The home side were made to pay when inside centre Sione Tuipulotu ran on to a beautiful long pass from Russell to cross next to the posts and give the Lions a 10-0 lead in as many minutes.
The Lions continued to dominate possession and territory over the opening 30 minutes and it was almost a surprise when the Wallabies hit back.
Wing Max Jorgensen came away with the ball after a Jake Gordon kick inside the Lions 22 and beat Russell's despairing covering tackle to score in the corner.
Tom Lynagh's conversion attempt went wide and the Lions led 10-5 eight minutes before the break.
- Sheehan strikes -
The Lions were straight back on the attack and their intentions were clear when captain Maro Itoje turned down two kickable penalties in a row, opting to go for a try.
They missed out the first time but were rewarded moments later when Curry barged over, giving the Lions a 17-5 lead at half-time.
The Wallabies needed to start the second half well, but instead it was the Lions who struck first, hooker Dan Sheehan finishing off a Hugo Keenan break and crossing in the corner.
Russell's sideline conversion gave the visitors a commanding 24-5 lead.
The Wallabies thought they had struck back after some sustained pressure when Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii barged over next to the posts, but referee Ben O'Keeffe ruled he had not released the ball on the ground and the try was disallowed.
With the match slipping away, replacement Wallaby flanker Carlo Tizzano burrowed over and Ben Donaldson's conversion made it 24-12 with 12 minutes remaining.
A penalty from Lions replacement fly-half Marcus Smith right in front gave the Lions a safety net at 27-12.
Wallabies reserve scrum-half Tate McDermott scored a consolation try just before the siren.
But it was too little too late and the Lions now head to the Melbourne Cricket Ground for next Saturday's second Test 1-0 up in the three-match series.
acd/dh
By Andrew Dent
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kevin Lerena handed heavyweight boxing lesson at Wembley
Kevin Lerena handed heavyweight boxing lesson at Wembley

The South African

time3 hours ago

  • The South African

Kevin Lerena handed heavyweight boxing lesson at Wembley

British boxer Lawrence Okolie passed his most significant test at heavyweight on Saturday night, comfortably outpointing Kevin Lerena over 10 rounds – though it was a performance unlikely to send shockwaves through the division. The former WBO cruiserweight champion extended his record to 22-1 (16 KOs) with a unanimous decision win (100-90 x2, 99-91) in a bout where his physical advantages – height, reach, and weight – did the bulk of the work. But in front of a 60 000-strong crowd at Wembley Stadium, the fight failed to catch fire. Okolie, now campaigning at heavyweight and ranked No 1 by the WBC, looked composed and effective but uninspired. He controlled the range with a stiff jab and peppered Lerena's midsection with long right hands, but rarely stepped into top gear. The South African southpaw, known for dropping Daniel Dubois three times in a previous clash, struggled to close the distance and land anything meaningful. He had a brief moment of success in round six with a left hook, but for most of the night, he was kept on the outside and smothered whenever he got close. Even Okolie seemed aware of the slow tempo. In round nine, he glanced at the big screen during a clinch, checking the clock. Lerena tried to provoke a firefight in the 10th by pointing to the canvas and calling for a toe-to-toe exchange – but Okolie declined, opting for safety over spectacle. Okolie's clean sweep on the scorecards reinforces his position among the next tier of heavyweight contenders under the Queensberry banner, but the lack of aggression or ambition in this performance may leave fans and potential opponents unimpressed. Despite being heavier than during his cruiserweight title run – up by around 60 pounds – Okolie still moved well. However, his punch volume and risk-taking remain issues, particularly if he hopes to challenge elite heavyweights like Oleksandr Usyk, Tyson Fury or Anthony Joshua. The 31-year-old had previously been scheduled to face Richard Riakporhe in April but withdrew due to injury. That fight, now delayed, still looms as a potential domestic blockbuster. Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 021 1 Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp, Facebook, X and Bluesky for the latest news.

Doc Rassie prescribing bitter pills for World Rugby as entertaining Springboks go box office
Doc Rassie prescribing bitter pills for World Rugby as entertaining Springboks go box office

IOL News

time5 hours ago

  • IOL News

Doc Rassie prescribing bitter pills for World Rugby as entertaining Springboks go box office

NOT A HAPPY CHAPPY: Rassie Erasmus NOT A HAPPY CHAPPY: Rassie Erasmus seems to be enjoying getting under World Rugby skin, but all in the name of progressive rugby. | BAckpagePix The suits at World Rugby no doubt watch Springbok games with one hand over an eye as they ask themselves, 'What is Dr Erasmus going to prescribe to his players this time?' Often, Rassie's dose is bitter pills for World Rugby, the rigid runners of the game. Boring old farts (former England captain Will Carling's words, not mine) who cannot shrug their suspicion of anything outside the tried and tested tramlines of the game. The rabbits Rassie pulled out of the hat against Italy in Gqeberha are well-documented, and immediately, there was praise and uproar in equal measure around the rugby globe. Some hailed maverick Rassie for continuing to blaze new trails in the sport, while others branded the Boks cheats and disrespectful. Most of the negative reaction was typically from the Northern Hemisphere, where a stereotype of the Springboks has lingered for over a century. It seems they will forever be Neanderthal brutes who bludgeon the opposition, and if that one-dimensional approach doesn't work, there is no Plan B. To be fair, this old trope was not without merit in the amateur days when the South Africans were bigger than everyone else, but in the professional era, gym programmes have cancelled the size factor out to a significant degree. The Springboks still have naturally big men, but they have had to move beyond 'route one' to stay ahead of the pack, and the likes of Cheslin Kolbe and Kurt-Lee Arendse hardly fit the 'Bok bulldozer' cliché. Still, many in the rugby world struggle to embrace the fact that the Springboks under Rassie Erasmus have morphed into a versatile outfit that can switch between the pressure game that was all they knew in Rassie's first year in charge and exploring the width of the field with exhilarating backline play. Two of their flyhalves, Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu and Manie Libbock, are —along with Scotland's Finn Russell — the most enterprising playmakers in the game. In 2018 and 2019, the Boks indeed laboured under the tiresome tyranny of the box kick, but the coach had to start somewhere after inheriting a shambles from outgoing coach Allister Coetzee. Of course, that basic game plan won the Boks a surprise World Cup title in 2019 and — to give them due praise — they were already flexing their expansive muscle when you consider the quality of the tries scored by wingers Kolbe and Makazole Mapimpi in the final against England. Last October, Erasmus took the Springboks to the Channel Island of Jersey for a camp ahead of their November tour. A host of leading British and Irish journalists were invited to join the Boks for interviews. Rassie wanted to change the rugby world's perception of the Springboks, but the Charm Offensive bore little fruit. Stigmas are hard to shake off. It did not help the Springbok image when the 2021 British and Irish Lions tour was shrouded in controversy, with Erasmus in the middle of some of it. I'm talking about the 62-minute video assassination of referee Nick Berry's performance in the first Test, which culminated in a lengthy ban for the coach. Erasmus, though, does what he does for the best of the team and the video, leaked somewhere between the Bok management and the World Rugby referees' department, had the impact of resolving most of the Boks' issues with the officiating. The second Test was won largely as a consequence. A more current example is the controversial start to the second Test against Italy, where the Boks manipulated a scrum from the kick-off. When the Boks were criticised, Erasmus tweeted a video clip of how the Italians cheated in the set scrums both in Pretoria and Gqeberha. The clip shows the scrumhalf putting the ball around the legs of the openside flank and flicking it straight to the No 8. The ball doesn't even get to the prop, never mind the hooker. The irony of the criticism of Erasmus is that the Boks, for decades, were derided for their dinosaur tactics. The Wallabies and All Blacks did not disguise their pleasure in outwitting the South Africans in the first two decades of the millennium, but now that the Boks have gone to the other extreme, the tune should have changed. Sadly, it hasn't, despite two recent World Cups in the bag, and counting. Maybe that is the problem. Scorn has given way to jealousy, and the Springboks are not getting the respect they deserve in some quarters. A big point that the Springbok detractors are missing is that, ultimately, sport is about entertainment, and in that regard, the Boks are box office.

Johan Ackermann returns home to lead the Vodacom Bulls
Johan Ackermann returns home to lead the Vodacom Bulls

The Citizen

time5 hours ago

  • The Citizen

Johan Ackermann returns home to lead the Vodacom Bulls

Benoni-born Johan Ackermann has been appointed as the new head coach of the Vodacom Bulls—an opportunity he described as a dream come true. The three-time South African coach of the year comes to Loftus Versfeld with elite-level experience, having coached both locally and overseas, most recently with the South African U20s. Ackermann, currently in Italy assisting the Junior Springboks ahead of the World Rugby U20 Championship final, reacted to his appointment in a press statement issued by the Vodacom Blue Bulls. 'The moment I received the call, I got goosebumps! It still feels too good to be true. I'm like a Grade One going to school for the first time. I'm so excited. It's a privilege and an honour.' 'It's a great union with a wonderful tradition and incredible supporters. Eighty percent of my friends are Bulls supporters. The Vodacom Bulls have been successful for many years. I now face that challenge, and I must thank the Board for the opportunity. 'It's a bit different from my previous roles, where I had to help build teams up. The Bulls are already there—now I must help them grow and succeed even more,' said Ackermann. Journey Ackermann's journey through rugby is one of resilience, transformation, and quiet authority. Born in Benoni in 1970, he forged a robust playing career as a lock, earning 13 Test caps for the Springboks between 1996 and 2007. Known for his relentless physicality and grit, he became a formidable presence—and when he made his Test debut at age 37, he became the oldest Springbok debutant in history. After retiring in 2008, Ackermann transitioned seamlessly into coaching, beginning with the Lions in Johannesburg. Initially appointed as forwards coach, he took over as head coach in 2013 and ushered in a bold new era. Under his stewardship, the Lions reached two consecutive Super Rugby finals. His teams played expansive, high-tempo rugby grounded in discipline and player empowerment. He cultivated a culture of respect and trust, transforming overlooked talent into Springboks and rekindling pride in the Lions jersey. Ackermann's tactical acumen and emotional intelligence earned him acclaim and international recognition. He led the SA 'A' side in 2016 and 2017 before joining Gloucester in England, where he guided the club to a Challenge Cup final and a Premiership semi-final. In Japan, he continued to leave his mark with the Red Hurricanes and Urayasu D-Rocks, bringing cohesion and values-based leadership to diverse squads. Ackermann returned to South African rugby earlier this year as a coaching consultant for the SA U20s. Ackermann's influence extends far beyond the field. Steeped in faith and shaped by his time in the police force, he values character and resilience as deeply as tactics. Whether developing young talent or rebuilding team identity, he remains a coach committed to building both champions and men of character. New chapter for Bulls Willem Strauss, president of the Blue Bulls Rugby Union, affirmed, 'He's the right person at the right time.' 'He's a Carlton League legend, he played his first Test at Loftus, and he played for the Bulls. His blood is blue! This was always meant to be. His management of people and ability to drive culture are renowned.' Strauss's view is echoed by Edgar Rathbone, the chief executive of the Blue Bulls Company. 'Johan is not just an outstanding coach; he is a leader who lives and breathes the values of this union. His reputation for forging powerful team cultures, developing players to their full potential, and delivering results at the highest level is well proven. 'The Vodacom Bulls are a club built on legacy and ambition, and with Johan at the helm, we are confident our future will be shaped by excellence, resilience, and unity. This appointment marks an exciting new chapter for Bulls rugby, and we are thrilled to welcome him home.' At Caxton, we employ humans to generate daily fresh news, not AI intervention. Happy reading!

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