
British and Irish Lions fend off the Brumbies 36-24 in a key test series tuneup
The Lions are now 4-0 since a 28-24 loss to Argentina in a warmup in Dublin before the traveling Down Under for a nine-game tour that has kicked off with wins over all of Australia's Super Rugby franchises.
The Brumbies edged the Lions 14-12 in 2013 on their last tour to Australia and were a handful again, but lacked the size and depth to repeat that upset.
Big blindside flanker Ollie Chessum scored the first try for the Lions and had one disallowed after fulltime.
Flyhalf Finn Russell had a successful night with the boot with four conversions and a penalty goal and he combined wll with Jamison Gibson-Park in what will be a likely Lions halves combination in the test series starting July 19.
Again, it was a grafting first half. The Lions had more than two-thirds of field position and 60% of the ball but struggled to get away from the Brumbies until a try to replacement fullback Marcus Smith after the halftime siren gave them a 19-10 lead.
Center Garry Ringrose played a vital role in the first try of the second half, running into a midfield gap and then chasing through to pounce on Smith's downfield kick as it went into the in-goal to extend the Lions' lead.
The Brumbies hit back again with Hudson Creighton charging onto a pass on the shortside after a five-yard scrum to close the gape to 26-17.
After having a try disallowed by the television match official on the hour, Josh van der Flier drove over from a maul in similar circumstances and it was awarded six minutes later, giving the Lions a match-sealing 36-17 lead.
'I thought we played some great stuff at times,' Lions head coach Andy Farrell said. "If you look at the story of the game, probably field position and game understanding, some good dominance there and scoring some nice tries.
'But on the flip side, I thought we got a little bit loose at times and.kept inviting the Brumbies back in the game and they were good enough to take a few scores.'
First-half tussle
The Brumbies tested the Lions' defense and scored both times they got into the attacking quarter in the first 40 minutes.
Brumbies No. 8 Tuaina Taii Tualima scored the opening try in the fourth minute, picking up from the base of the ruck and slamming the ball down on the tryline.
The Lions made early breaks but couldn't convert, with Bundee Aki throwing a pass over the sideline in an attacking miscue. He made amends by playing a key role in the buildup for flanker Chessum's equalizer in the 15th.
Winger James Lowe crossed in the left corner but was somehow held up over the line by Brumbies fullback Andy Muirhead in the 23rd. Lowe made up for it six minutes later when he slid over out wide after the Lions utilized an overlap with hooker Dan Sheehan roving in the backline.
The Brumbies hit back quickly, moving the ball from a lineout and exploiting a penalty advantage when Ben O'Donnell threw a long, floating pass wide for speedster Corey Toole to score untouched.
There was only two points difference until seconds from halftime, when Smith finished off a counter-attacking try from the Brumbies' short, goalline drop out.
Series so far
After wins over Western Force, Queensland Reds, New South Wales Waratahs and now the Brumbies, the Lions will play the combined AUNZ invitational squad Saturday in their final preparation for the test series.
'The Brumbies challenged us throughout the whole game, you know, it was a hotly contested game,' Lions captain Maro Itoje said. "But yeah, another step in the right direction.
'We need to be a bit more accurate in the opposition 22, but I think it's a step forward.'
Injury list
The Lions had another injury setback when fullback Blair Kinghorn left the field with an apparent knee injury int he 25th minute. It leaves Irishman Hugo Keenan as the only fully fit specialist fullback in the squad after Elliot Daly broke his left arm.
___

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Los Angeles Times
16 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
UCLA Unlocked: DeShaun Foster makes a bumble recovery in Las Vegas
DeShaun Foster was hired on a hunch. What other way was there to evaluate someone who had no experience for the role he was being brought in to fill? The hope was that the longtime position coach could quickly grow on the job as UCLA's football boss while leveraging his unrivaled passion for restoring his alma mater to the glory it had last enjoyed during Foster's playing days. Nearly a year and a half later, there are an increasing number of signs indicating that Foster's hire might have been a smart gamble. After the Bruins won four of their last six games to end 2024 with a 5-7 record, Foster didn't simply point to that late-season success as a reason to stay on the same path. Instead, he quickly pivoted to revamp a coaching staff that had been hired on the fly and generated one of college football's most disappointing offenses. Among the newcomers were several dogged recruiters who immediately revived the team's ability to land the sort of elite high school recruits who had usually looked elsewhere under the Chip Kelly regime. UCLA's 2026 recruiting class, which includes a quartet of four-star players and is currently ranked No. 21 in the country by could be the Bruins' best since Jim Mora challenged the likes of Michigan and Ohio State for the nation's top prospects. Another encouraging development revealed itself Thursday inside a Mandalay Bay convention center in Las Vegas. Foster chased away the ghosts of his 2024 Big Ten media days bumble by delivering a 6 1/2-minute opening monologue that presented a coherent message amid a touch of self-deprecating humor, the coach referring to his infamous 'We're in L.A.' line from a year ago as 'the most obvious geography lesson in Big Ten history.' 'You're gonna see growth in my team this year, and you saw growth with me with this press conference,' Foster told a small group of Los Angeles-based reporters afterward. 'But, you know, I was looking forward to this, and like I told you guys before, I've been waiting on this opportunity to come back out here.' Perhaps the biggest difference between Foster's latest public performance and his stumble a year ago was that he actually prepared this time, clutching several sheets of paper instead of riffing off the top of his head to regrettable results. That's not to say that Foster has fully silenced the doubters. As his team prepares to open training camp Wednesday in Costa Mesa, there are unknowns galore about a roster that will feature an almost entirely new defense and a transfer quarterback who has only a month to master the offense after transferring from Tennessee. The baseline for success in Year 2 under Foster should be at least six wins and an accompanying bowl game, which would still fall well short of what the Bruins accomplished with Foster on their roster. Remember, they nearly made the first BCS title game at the end of Foster's freshman season in 1998 (Damn you, lack of instant replay on the alleged Brad Melsby fumble). But a winning season combined with a horde of promising prospects on the way would serve as the biggest signal yet that maybe, just maybe, Foster is the right guy for the job. It would have been easy for UCLA to squirrel away its new 6-foot-6 quarterback until the season started, saving Nico Iamaleava from a fusillade of questions that felt like a Congressional hearing. But there was the transfer from Tennessee on Thursday, facing one of the biggest scrums of reporters near the end of the final Big Ten media day. 'I wanted to bring him here,' Foster said. 'Just, you know, it's time to let you tell your story. A lot of people wrote a book for you and didn't talk to him about it, so I just wanted him to be able to come out here … and, like, really tell his truth.' Iamaleava told a fairly straightforward story about wanting to move closer to his Long Beach home to play in front of family for a team that he considered attending out of high school. More importantly, he never came close to getting frazzled by a series of probing, repetitive questions about the circumstances of his departure from Tennessee. 'He's just somebody that I don't think can really get rattled, you know?' Foster said. 'Personality wise, he's kind of quiet a little bit, but, you know, has confidence. But a quarterback, you've got to be able to function with stuff [happening] around you.' Letting Iamaleava get the media scrutiny out of the way now was a smart move that will let him fully focus on something far more important — preparing for the season opener against Utah on Aug. 30 at the Rose Bowl. For the first time since it slogged through the San Bernardino heat in 2016, UCLA will hold its football training camp off campus. The team will use the Jack Hammett Sports Complex in Costa Mesa, a previous home to the Chargers and Las Vegas Raiders. The site's proximity to coastal breezes could prevent the Bruins from spending as much time soaking in ice baths as they did in San Bernardino, where temperatures routinely reached triple digits. Right tackle Garrett DiGiorgio said the team's hotel was only four minutes away from the practice fields, meaning players won't be stuck on buses for a long commute. The move to train off campus was made in large part because UCLA is installing a new grass practice field outside the Wasserman Center, but it could have additional benefits for a team that's integrating dozens of transfers and high school freshmen. This could be a historic year for UCLA sports. After finishing fifth in the Learfield Directors Cup that measures broad-based success in college athletics, the Bruins could challenge for the top spot in 2025-26 based on an extraordinary combination of returning talent and gifted newcomers. What's perhaps most intriguing is that the football and men's basketball teams could join their Olympic-sport counterparts in winning big upon the arrival of Iamaleava and point guard Donovan Dent. In a wide-ranging interview with The Times, UCLA athletic director Martin Jarmond said he was bullish on the Bruins' chances to follow up a prosperous debut Big Ten season with even greater success. 'A lot of people put in a lot of work to put us in this position, and we're going to keep working, you know?' Jarmond told The Times. 'So I'm really, really proud and I'm really excited about what we're doing and where we're going.' UCLA has produced some legendary football coaches, from Terry Donahue to Red Sanders to Tommy Prothro. Its list of celebrated players is far longer, including numerous inductees into the college and pro football halls of fame. Who are your favorites? If you had to pick four figures to place on a Mount Rushmore of UCLA football (say, along a Bel-Air hilltop overlooking campus), who would they be? Email your responses to uclasurveys@ and we'll post the results next week. Foster has experience coming off a disappointing UCLA season with a tough opener at the Rose Bowl like his team will face late next month when Utah coach Kyle Willingham brings his team to Pasadena. In their 2000 opener, the Bruins faced third-ranked Alabama at the Rose Bowl and it looked like things might get ugly. UCLA lost starting quarterback Cory Paus after the first drive with a sprained shoulder ligament. The Bruins fell behind when the Crimson Tide scored the first touchdown on a punt return. But then backup quarterback Ryan McCann and Foster engineered a stunning 35-24 victory that coach Bob Toledo at the time called the second-greatest of his UCLA career behind only a double-overtime triumph against USC in 1996. Foster tied a school record with 42 carries for what was then a career-high 187 yards and McCann completed 14 of 24 passes for 194 yards, including a 46-yard touchdown to Freddie Mitchell. You can watch that game here. Unranked at the time, UCLA went on to win its first three games en route to a No. 6 ranking before finishing the season with a 6-6 record after a 21-20 loss to Wisconsin in the Sun Bowl. After successful Big Ten debut, UCLA has designs on something even bigger 'It came down to me wanting to be back home': Nico Iamaleava details move to UCLA A year after stumbling at Big Ten media days, UCLA's DeShaun Foster is poised and confident Wide receiver Kaedin Robinson suing NCAA in bid to play for UCLA this season 'It was a real blessing': Ben Howland remains grateful long after leaving UCLA Thank you for reading the first UCLA Unlocked newsletter. Have a comment or something you'd like to see in a future newsletter? Email me at and follow me on X @latbbolch. To get this newsletter in your inbox, click here.


Newsweek
18 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Nico Rosberg Shares Awkward Moment With Jos Verstappen
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Sky Sports F1 commentator Nico Rosberg had an awkward moment with Jos Verstappen after he brought up former Red Bull boss Christian Horner. After more than 20 years at Red Bull, Horner was removed from his leadership position amid the team's struggles over the past year and a half. The British team principal has faced numerous controversies during his time with the team, although the last 18 months have seen Horner accused of inappropriate behaviour with a Red Bull colleague. Nico Rosberg looks on in pitlane ahead of the F1 Grand Prix of Italy at Autodromo Nazionale Monza on September 1, 2024 in Monza, Italy. Nico Rosberg looks on in pitlane ahead of the F1 Grand Prix of Italy at Autodromo Nazionale Monza on September 1, 2024 in Monza, Italy. Photo byWhen the report was released, Verstappen spoke out against Horner's leadership and demanded his removal. As the father of four-time champion Max Verstappen, Jos is a key figure in the Red Bull paddock, and his influence within the team is significant. Before the Belgium GP, Rosberg interviewed with Verstappen, asking him about Horner's firing. "Last year, you said Horner need to go!" Rosberg told Verstappen. "That was one and a half years ago. It's different. I have nothing to say. It's fine," Verstappen replied. "Now you're quiet?" Rosberg retorted. "I'm always quiet," Jos finished by saying. Nico Rosberg is an absolute menace 😭😭 asking Jos about Horner Jos: "I have nothing to say" Nico: "NOW you're quiet??!" — 🎭 z (@rbrzoe) July 27, 2025 Word around the paddock claims that the Verstappen camp played a role in the firing of Horner as they lost faith in his ability to lead. Max was reportedly considering an exit from the team, and many believe the exit of the team's centerpiece scared the higher-ups into axing Horner. Both Max and Jos, however, deny culpability in the matter. As for Rosberg, he was left shocked that Red Bull removed someone who delivered so much glory. "Christian Horner is not here anymore, which is unthinkable. That's completely unreal," he said earlier in the weekend. "It was a big, big shock and surprise to everybody – including a surprise to him. He didn't see it coming at all, nor did anybody in the team. "But of course, it was a long time in the making. It was coming from last year, from all the issues that he'd been having there, so I think this was just a result of that. "But nobody really still knows 100 percent what exactly happened." Horner delivered Max a race-winning car over the past four seasons, along with assembling a staff full of some of the best people in F1. Red Bull has become a powerhouse in the sport, and while the team has recently hit a rough patch, Horner's leadership ability is unquestionable. For more F1 news, head on over to Newsweek Sports.


The Hill
an hour ago
- The Hill
Lionesses' triumph: England to celebrate back-to-back European titles with open-top parade
LONDON (AP) — The Lionesses are heading back home to celebrate. England successfully defended its Women's European Championship title by beating world champion Spain in a shootout in the final in Basel, Switzerland on Sunday. After becoming the first England team to win a major tournament on foreign soil, the squad will celebrate its victory with a trip to Downing Street later on Monday. Celebrations will continue on Tuesday with an open-top bus parade in central London, ending with a ceremony in front of Buckingham Palace. Ahead of the players' arrival, a spokesperson for the country's soccer federation advised fans not to travel to the airport where they will land due to 'limited space,' urging them instead to join the planned homecoming celebrations. Fans erupted with joy across England after Chloe Kelly lashed in her spot kick to give her team a 3-1 win on penalties, after a 1-1 draw following extra time. According to the BBC, a peak live audience of 12.2 million watched the game across its platforms, making it the most watched television moment of 2025 across all TV broadcasters. King Charles III said the team had the royal family's 'warmest appreciation and admiration' following its win. 'The next task is to bring home the World Cup in 2027 if you possibly can,' he added. The reception at Downing Street, where Saint George's flags — also known as the flag of England — were on display, will be hosted by Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner and sports minister Stephanie Peacock. 'The Lionesses have once again captured the hearts of the nation,' British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said. 'Their victory is not only a remarkable sporting achievement, but an inspiration for young people across the country. It stands as a testament to the determination, resilience and unity that define this outstanding team.' It was back-to-back European trophies for England and yet another final that Kelly had a huge impact on, after also coming on as a substitute during the Euro 2022 trophy match and scoring the winner against Germany in extra time to clinch a 2-1 victory.