
Matt Williams: Lions' classless act had the hallmark of imperialists touring their convict colony
The Australians are not without hope. During the second half of the
first Test
, and last Tuesday
against the First Nations and Pasifika
, the
Lions
appeared to be a group at the end of a very long tour and an even longer season.
They are tiring. The six changes to their team for this match confirm that.
At the start of the tour, the Lions management were unhappy that there weren't enough Wallabies players being made available to lift the standards in the provincial teams. Yet this week, the same Lions management objected to the selection of the former Bordeaux player Pete Samu for the First Nations and Pasifika.
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Samu has returned to Australia to play with the Waratahs next season. As the former Australian international did not play in the Super Rugby competition this season, he fell outside the guidelines of the pre-tour agreements.
Another way of looking at it would be that the Lions don't want Samu match fit for the third Test. In Australia, this has been seen as the Lions acting with all the vestiges of imperialists touring their convict colony.
It was a classless act. The many Samu masks being worn in the crowd on Tuesday night tells you what the locals thought of the Lions' decision.
Pete Samu of AUNZ Invitational is tackled by Mack Hansen and Hugo Keenan of the British & Irish Lions. Photograph:Once again this week, there has not been a single interview with a Lions player on the nightly news of the host broadcaster for the series. This is despite the Lions having a touring party of over 90 people.
These cultural gaffes are merely adding to the long list of failures from the Lions. They have failed to grasp the importance of giving something back to the game of rugby in Australia.
The Lions management has been quick to drag out the fine print of the tour agreement to get Samu out of this week's game. However, I can assure you that the next tour agreement will contain a clause insisting that Lions players are available to the local media on every day of the tour.
This week, Clive Woodward accurately described the Wallabies as playing with a losing mentality. Woodward understands that in test match rugby, winners physically dominate their opponent - something that the Wallabies failed to do. He understands that playing with physicality is a mindset.
In the opening 25 minutes of the first test, when the Lions grabbed control of the match, the Wallabies were passive, displaying a losing mentality.
The greatest example of the losing mindset was early in the match when Ben Curry illegally and dangerously tackled the Wallaby debutant outhalf Tom Lynagh while he was in the air.
Tom Curry's controversial tackle on Tom Lynagh in the first Test should have drawn a response from Lynagh's Wallabies teammates. Photograph: Patrick Hamilton/AFP via Getty Images
The Wallaby forwards did nothing to Curry, who walked away smiling. He had been given a free ticket to put in a big illegal shot on a nervous young outhalf. While Curry should have been yellow carded, Lynagh's teammates should have made it clear they weren't happy.
Owen Farrell has been selected on the bench this week because he is made of far tougher stuff. On Tuesday night, when the First Nations and Pasifika players smashed Darcy Graham over the sideline, Farrell ran in and confronted the offending opposition players. His body language screamed 'not on my watch'.
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The First Nations and Pasifika team turned their aggression levels up into the red zone. They got in among the red team and bashed them up. It was a pleasure to watch and I hope the Wallabies watching in the stands took note.
While punching and foul play are now rightly outlawed, teams with players who are more influenced by St Francis of Assisi rather than Mike Tyson rarely come away with the chocolates.
In Brisbane, the lack of physical aggression from the Australians was the foundation of their defeat. What smashed the Australians on the scoreboard was that the Lions had completely cracked their opponents' lineout calling code. As the ball left Wallaby hookers' hands, the Lions knew its destination. Put that down to the Lions' brilliant pre-game sleuthing in studying past games and listening to the audio of calls.
The Lions' Owen Farrell clashes with Charlie Gamble of the First Nations & Pasifika during Tuesday's match in Melbourne. Photograph: James Crombie/Inpho
To gain such information in the old days, spies were sent to the opposition training sessions, some disguised as elderly dog walkers with concealed cameras in their handbags. Or there could be video cameras hidden on tripods in vacant corporate boxes at training fields. In modern times, drones have been known to zoom overhead.
A few nights before Scotland played Australia in the quarter-final of the 2003 Rugby World Cup, every piece of paper hanging on the walls of the Scottish team room mysteriously disappeared. They were full of tactical information and game-plan notes. Scotland lost to a Wallabies team who seemed to know a lot of Scottish calls.
Believe me, it's a jungle out there.
The three foundational principles of rugby are fitness, skill and motivation. On Tuesday, we witnessed the First Nations and Pasifika bring forward their deep motivation in representing their people to almost overcome a Lions team with vastly superior skill and fitness levels.
That is Woodward's point. The Wallabies acted like the cuddly marsupial on their emblem and did not unleash their inner dog to fight the Lions with every atom of their being for the full 80 minutes.
By the time the Australians started to play, the game was already lost.
To use an old-fashioned word, the Wallabies must use aggression to 'bustle' the Lions. That means to throw the Lions off kilter, to upset the tempo and rhythm of their game plan.
Australia's Nick Frost and Tadhg Beirne of the Lions compete for a lineout. Photograph: James Crombie/Inpho
The Wallabies must summon up the same ultra-aggressive spirit as the First Nations and Pasifika while also fixing their wobbly lineout. If they can, they have a chance.
With Will Skelton, Rob Valetini and Dave Porecki – the best lineout thrower in the squad – are all starting, making it a far better Wallaby selection than last week.
In selecting a 6-2 bench, head coach Joe Schmidt is telling us the Wallabies smell blood in the water and are going to attack the Lions scrum. That is something I did not predict at the beginning of the tour.
As we say in Australia, this is Sydney or the bush. This second test is all or nothing for the Wallabies.
With a giant injection of 80 minutes worth of old-fashioned aggression, the Australians are capable of an upset.
However, if they do not secure their own lineout possession, trouble awaits.

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Irish Daily Mirror
3 hours ago
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British and Irish Lions in full attention as Katie Taylor delivers message
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RTÉ News
5 hours ago
- RTÉ News
'Why not?' - Dan Sheehan recounts his 'throw and hope' Lions try
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"I can see all the controversy about it, but I did know that you can dive in the air if you score," Sheehan said, when asked about the mechanics of the situation this week. "I feel like I was at full stretch and landed over the line so why not? "I took the first one [penalty] and I got absolutely melted trying to go low. "Usually, it's one lad goes low and someone maybe is high and I just got both shoulders melted low and I didn't really get much out of it. "Then the second one I just thought: 'If I have a dive here...' I didn't know if they had anyone in the back. It was just a throw and hope and I slipped through." It was interesting to note on Sunday how Jack Conan referenced too often coming out on the wrong side of those kind of games, both for Leinster and Ireland, and Sheehan, who was off the pitch at the time, admitted to having similar thoughts as the final minutes played out at the MCG. "I was sitting there beside Tadhg [Furlong] and he looked at me and I looked at him. He was like: 'How many times have we been sitting on this bench in this situation and we've never won a game?' And it was tough. It's almost harder watching it sometimes. "When you're on the pitch you're so focused and you don't let your mind wander but when you're sitting on the bench it's out of your control. "Obviously, the bench were doing a great job, which was nice to see, but it was something that felt like a fan in some ways. You're so engulfed in what you're seeing. "But it's probably almost more enjoyable watching it happen and being able to celebrate." It was a few hours after the final whistle before the team bus eventually made it out of the MCG, as the players did their best to soak up every ounce of their win. An hour after the game, the players even took one last trip back out onto the pitch and sat around the centre circle, something the Australian cricketers would often do after wins at The G. They didn't last long out there, with the ground staff busy preparing the pitch for an AFL game the next day, but it was the highlight of the weekend for Sheehan. "I think the excitement around the group and those few hours with the lads after the game, they're always my favourite sort of moments. "We probably stuck around the MCG for far too long, but it was definitely memories that will last a lifetime and I think everyone's sort of celebrated enough now. Taking it all in... #Lions2025 🦁 — British & Irish Lions (@lionsofficial) July 28, 2025 "I was literally just about to jump in the shower. I had the shorts off and everything, and then Jamo [Jamison Gibson-Park] was like, 'We're out'. "So, we all got out and circled up, and I don't think the MCG were very happy with us on the cricket crease, but we're having scrums on the cricket crease, so we might as well sit down on a chair. "You can see the photos. It's something special. Everyone's singing songs in a group and it's just us, and it's sort of a moment to reflect on the journey. "It's been long enough since we've been out here, when you look back at Perth and that first meet up. So, yeah, it was nice to celebrate it." Being able to enjoy the win with family has been all the more special. Andy Farrell has always placed a big emphasis on having the players' families close by during his time as Ireland coach, and that has been followed through with the Lions. Before the first Test, players were presented with their jerseys by their families in a special ceremony at Brisbane's Botanical Garden, while after last week's Test at the MCG the players had their partners, wives and children with them on the pitch to share the moment. And the 26-year-old has credited his head coach Farrell for how he's stitched the squad together, and maintained a happy camp. 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Irish Examiner
5 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Dan Sheehan intends to get used to 'infectious' winning feeling
A horrible sense of déjà vu engulfed Dan Sheehan and Tadhg Furlong as the British & Irish Lions trailed Australia with the clock ticking ominously down at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. As starting front-rowers, the pair were used to watching the end games of big matches with both Leinster and Ireland but equally, they had grown weary of having their hopes of glory dashed. It is a long list of disappointment in the last two years, taking in the 2023 World Cup quarter-final defeat to New Zealand, two Champions Cup finals, a URC semi-final and just two months ago an agonising European last-four loss at home to Northampton Saints. So while their teammates were still in the fray as they patiently waited for their moment with the game in the balance at 26-24 to the Wallabies, Sheehan recalled very different emotions watching on helplessly from the sidelines. 'I was sitting there beside Tadhg and he looked at me and I looked at him,' the hooker said. 'He was like: 'How many times have we been sitting on this bench in this situation and we've never won a game?' And it was tough. It's almost harder watching it sometimes. 'When you're on the pitch you're so focused and you don't let your mind wander but when you're sitting on the bench it's out of your control. Obviously, the bench were doing a great job, which was nice to see but it was something that felt like a fan in some ways. You're so engulfed in what you're seeing. 'But it's probably almost more enjoyable watching it happen and being able to celebrate.' There were a lot of fellow travellers still on the pitch to see the Lions home, not least Hugo Keenan, the hero of the hour as the Wallabies finally cracked for the full-back to finish in style and deliver not just a Test-match win but a first series victory in a dozen years. And with a win in the back, and the celebrations begun, Sheehan finally laid some ghosts to rest. 'I always look at the games and they could have gone either way in all of those games that I've played over the years, but it does bind a team and it sort of gets that monkey off the back. 'I think for this group, it's huge going into next week, and it would have been a big lift to the Aussies now if they got that Test over the line, and it would have been all on the line this week. 'Hopefully, we do get that sort of winning feeling and we get addicted to it and we can keep finding it. So yeah, it's quite an infectious feeling. I think you can feel it amongst the group, the lift it gives people, and hopefully we can do it for one more week.' Two days of celebrations in Melbourne and then Sydney on Saturday night and into Sunday capped a remarkable weekend for Sheehan, with his father Barry having presented the hooker with his Lions Test jersey last Thursday evening. The dressing-room sing-song had threatened to drown out both Andy Farrell and Maro Itoje's post-match media conference and then Australia head coach Joe Schmidt's turn in front of the cameras. And the tourists would later carry their chairs out of the sheds and onto the hallowed MCG turf for a more private get-together to savour the moment. 'We probably stuck around the MCG for far too long, but it was definitely memories that will last a lifetime.' Sheehan recalled it was: 'Just us and it's a moment to reflect on the journey. It's been long enough, since we've been out here, when you look back at Perth and that first meet up. So, yeah, it was nice to celebrate it.' Those celebrations reached their natural conclusion on Monday as the page was turned to the next objective, winning this Saturday's third Test at Sydney's Accor Stadium out in Homebush to complete an unbeaten record on Australian soil in 2025 with nine wins from nine and record a 3-0 Test series victory over the Wallabies. Training resumed on Tuesday at North Sydney's Shore School, after which Sheehan met the media. 'Straight into it today. We've already trained, which has been good to sort of get across the plan now for next week and we had some good meetings as well, being open and honest about what we're trying to achieve here as a group, and what we said at the start, which was to win 3-0. 'So, I think it would be disappointing if we didn't show up on Saturday... we've always been pretty clear on our goals. At the start of the campaign was to go unbeaten overseas and win the series 3-0. So, we just need to stick to what we said. 'There's a lot of people who've put a lot of effort into travelling out for this game and obviously a lot of our families will be here, so I think there's plenty of motivation on the line and I can only imagine what the Australians are feeling now as well. 'So, we need to make sure that we show up and are aiming to win a third Test.' Sheehan does not want to stop there. The Ireland star has caught the Lions big and already has his sights on a place in the 2029 squad that will head to New Zealand. 'Australia has been unbelievable to us. And you're sitting around here looking at this (view across to the Sydney Harbour Bridge), and all these cities have been unbelievable. And the support along the road has been crazy. 'And yeah, I've just been listening to the lads that have done it before, like Tadhg (Furlong), Jack (Conan), and they just say, this is going to be something else. And it's going to be whatever you think it is. It's going to be on steroids. 'And I think it has definitely lived up to that. And it's been absolutely mental. And I've enjoyed absolutely every second of it. 'It's flown by, like it's flown by. And then you think back to Perth and you're like, jeez, that was weeks ago. But yeah, it'd be hard not to make a squad in the years to come, like when you know how special these sort of moments can be. "So I think, put the head down now for another four years, please. I'm going to try and get back on the plane.'