
Lions set up shot at history as Itoje leads way again – 5 things we learned
By overturning a 23-5 deficit, the Lions produced their greatest comeback of all time, which had previously stood at toppling South Africa when 10 points behind in 1938. A tour that for the most part has been a procession, finally produced its moment of truth for Andy Farrell's men – and they responded by showing they have the character to match their quality with Hugo Keenan rising to the occasion when it mattered most. Winning Lions tours are the exception, not the rule, and 2025 will be rightfully celebrated.
The Lion's not sleeping tonight 🦁🕺#Lions2025 pic.twitter.com/u1E17BC5Md
— British & Irish Lions (@lionsofficial) July 26, 2025
A series whitewash beckons in Sydney and with Australia surely having punched themselves out at the great gladiatorial arena that is the MCG, history is there for the taking. Even the immortals of 1971 and 1974 were unable to produce 100 per cent records, achievements that also eluded the 1997 and 2013 vintages from the professional era. Becoming the greatest Lions team of all time was the aspiration when arriving Down Under and, while the strength of the Wallabies may mitigate against that being a realistic aim, 2025 will at least be in the conversation.
Staring down the barrel of a heavy defeat, Farrell needed one of his Lions to light the way and his captain duly obliged. Maro Itoje was the standard bearer of his team's defiance by dominating the Wallabies with a towering physical display and, after nine successive Tests in the red jersey, the last eight coming as starts, he takes his place in the pantheon alongside the likes of Willie John McBride and Martin Johnson. As skipper, the England second row exudes calm authority but he also brought force when it was needed by squaring off with Will Skelton and interrupting Harry Wilson when the Australia captain attempted to influence a crucial late decision by referee Andrea Piardi.
It hurts but your support means everything 💛💚
We can't wait to play for you again in Sydney.#Wallabies #ACheerAndAHalf #LionsTour2025 pic.twitter.com/QELcTwjwfh
— Wallabies (@wallabies) July 27, 2025
As Australia stormed ahead in Melbourne, the poor preparation that led to their obliteration in the first-half at Suncorp Stadium was shown to be an even greater blunder than initially feared. What would the Wallabies have been like had they been given more than a warm-up against Fiji to sharpen the blade ahead of their biggest match since the 2015 World Cup final? Returning forward Rob Valetini and Will Skelton, both back from calf injuries, were magnificent and lifted everyone around them, but their team was clearly undercooked for the first Test.
Hashtags

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


The Guardian
42 minutes ago
- The Guardian
England's Marlie Packer: ‘This team is No 1 in the world – we're going to be under scrutiny'
'If you asked me at the start of pre-season: 'Am I going to this World Cup?' No. I didn't think I was going,' says the former England captain Marlie Packer. Self-doubt around her selection may surprise a lot of people. A World Cup winner in 2014, the 35-year-old will compete in her fourth successive global showpiece for the Red Roses after being duly confirmed in the 32-player squad for the host nation. But Packer has been through a lot in the past 12 months. She was named world player of the year in 2023 and during the two seasons that she led England, the side won all 20 games. Then, in January, the openside flanker had the captaincy taken away, with the second-row Zoe Aldcroft given the armband. Packer was made a vice-captain for the 2025 Six Nations but was included in only two matchday squads. Defiance and determination have been hallmarks of her 111-cap international career. She has built a resilience and is keen to push the message that whatever is right for the team to put them in the best position to win the World Cup when it gets under way on 22 August is the decision she will always agree with. But she also describes decisions out of her control in 2025 as 'tough'. When asked which hurt more, having the captaincy taken from her or being left out of matchday squads Packer lets out a little laugh, looks away out of the window and is a little emotional before saying: 'That's a question isn't it?' She adds: 'When me and Mitch [the coach John Mitchell] sat down and talked about the captaincy, I am an openside flanker and what he sees and wants from his flanker is to cover six and eight; I don't cover six and eight in the role he wants it to be. 'The game has changed and evolved, that is the way he wants to play. I knew if I wasn't starting that I am more likely not to be in that matchday 23. He has told me that in black and white. I know where I stand and where I sit. 'Anything can happen, injuries happen so I always have to make sure I am ready. But with that, all I can keep doing is when we do extras at the end of training sessions I am showing I am upskilling myself in those areas so if I ever was called upon I know I can do what is asked of me. That's all I can do. 'I'm not going to lie to you and sit here and say that being left out of the matchday 23 wasn't hard but what happened is that even though I wasn't in the matchday 23, I still travelled with the squad, I was still a massive part of it. I felt so much value in that.' Nonetheless, being left out for the France game at Twickenham – when England squeaked to a 43-42 victory to seal their grand slam in April – stung. 'It's always tough not to be selected for the France game,' Packer says. 'Playing at Allianz Stadium is everything. Two years ago when I captained my country to a world-record crowd and my son was mascot, that is one moment I bottle up and it means everything. 'But at the start of the game week [in 2025] Mitch says: 'I want you in the coaching box with us.' The value of learning what it's like to be up there, what he is thinking, what he is seeing, the plans. You're in the know, you're trusted. That does mean a lot. 'He'll say it; it's one man's decision and it's tough. But he genuinely cares and I know he does and I genuinely care about him and this squad as well.' Mitchell was full of praise for Packer at the World Cup squad announcement and it is clear she remains a key aspect of the Red Roses machine. She is also one of the most experienced in the squad with only Emily Scarratt – who is poised to feature in her fifth tournament – having played in more. But still doubt remained in her mind over her own selection. 'Oh yeah,' Packer responds when asked if there were any worries around her selection. '100%, of course. Any athlete would tell you that in any sport. If you get comfortable being where you are then it's going to get taken from underneath you. 'You get swamped down with things but you have to keep pushing yourself to be the best of the best. We ain't got time for people to be complacent in their role and in their job. We need to keep elevating each other and being the best of the best because that is the difference between winning and losing a World Cup. 'I put myself in the best possible step to go to this World Cup. I came into pre-season, I felt fit, strong, and good. Sign up to The Breakdown The latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewed after newsletter promotion 'I am actually really happy … with Mitch's communication with me about where I am going, what his thinking was and what his decisions were looking like over the warm-up games and pool games. For me I know where I'm at, head down, keep going, keep working hard and keep elevating everyone around me.' The warm-ups have not gone completely to plan, though, with Packer being sent off against Spain on 2 August, risking a suspension that would rule her out of the tournament. A disciplinary panel, however, handed her only a one-game ban, putting her out of the warm-up against France, but leaving her free to play at the World Cup. This may be Packer's fourth World Cup but it is her first at home, something she describes as the 'icing on the cake' with the cherry coming if the team win the trophy. The tournament has already broken records, selling the most tickets of any Women's Rugby World Cup with 350,000 sold so far. The final at Twickenham is expected to be sold out which would set a new milestone for the highest-attended women's rugby game. The Red Roses have the opportunity to do something special by winning the trophy at home but they have fallen at the last hurdle in the previous two tournaments, losing both finals to New Zealand. The talk around that will inevitably grow the further England go in the competition but it is apparently not a focus in the Red Roses camp. Packer says: 'That was three years ago and the one before that was eight years ago, there is no point living in the past. This is a whole new group of players. This is a whole new coaching staff apart from Deacs [the forwards coach Louis Deacon]. You have to be in the here and now. 'The media can say and do whatever they want. Some players are going to read into it, some won't but it's what we know within. That's all that matters. 'We know we are going to be under scrutiny, we are the Red Roses. We have been a professional team for a lot longer than a lot of these other nations. We are the team that is ranked No 1 in the world with the highest-ever ranking that has ever been in rugby – not just women's rugby. We are an outfit that can be scrutinised but what we know is we have got to keep living in the moment and enjoying it.' For Packer, past World Cups are chapters already written. Now, with doubts behind her and selection secured, her eyes are on the story England aim to write in this one.


Telegraph
44 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Is Rooney the next Lineker? He was more articulate than I expected on Match of the Day
On the face of it, it should not be a problem. One person leaves Match of the Day and is replaced by another. But when the person leaving is Gary Lineker, it all becomes a bit more difficult. Remember, he has been the man in situ for about a quarter of a century. He won the golden boot at a World Cup and never got booked, despite spending much of his playing career in that jungle of the opposition penalty area. So his footballing experience and knowledge was second to none. All right, he got up his employers' noses a few times recently which has resulted in him leaving the BBC before next summer's World Cup. Who to replace him? Well, with seemingly no one obvious candidate, you hedge your bets and hire three. Mark Chapman, very experienced; Gabby Logan, who covers a wide range of sports in exemplary fashion, and Kelly Cates, who has been presenting at Sky Sports for a number of years. But here comes the complicated bit: which of them does what? Chapman presented Match of the Day on Saturday night but not before the evening's Sky football presentation by Cates. Cates had already made her BBC bow earlier in the week by presenting the Uefa Super Cup highlights between Paris St-Germain and Tottenham Hotspur on Wednesday night. Then it was all change on Sunday, as Logan presented the weekend's second helping of Match of the Day, which has replaced what we used to know as Match of the Day 2. One week in and we already have our first look at each of the three new presenters that will frequent our screens this season. As I understand it, there will be no absolute hierarchy among the three, but each will work across the channels as and when required. This is in marked contrast to when broadcasters were immensely protective of their talent and prevented them from working for other channels. It was a completely different scenario when I left Match of the Day. ITV had taken the Premier League away from the BBC and so there were no Match of the Day highlights to worry about until it regained the broadcast rights for the 2004-05 season. This situation, and the new set-up, is so different from anything the BBC has done before, so watching how it evolves this season will be fascinating. Among several things to note about the first Match of the Day, Wayne Rooney was alongside Alan Shearer on the pundits' bench. Match of the Day may have lost one former England great who scored 48 goals for his country, but it appears to have gained another who not only scored 53 goals himself, but also captained the Three Lions. It would seem that Rooney is being groomed for more appearances and he is surprisingly more articulate than one might expect. Maybe he will move into the presenter's seat like Lineker did, but he will have to shake off the reputation of his unsuccessful period in management.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Ellis Park epic delivers a powerful adrenaline shot to Australian rugby
With their mindblowing comeback victory over the world champion Springboks, Australian rugby has issued a warning shot to the world: the Wallabies are back. That fragile prophecy, oft-imagined yet rarely voiced across two decades of regress, is now being fulfilled thanks to coach Joe Schmidt assembling a team of characters, with incredible character, capable of winning the 2027 Rugby World Cup in Australia. The epic at Ellis Park has delivered a powerful adrenaline shot to rugby's heartland. There had been epic comebacks before, notably the 'greatest Test ever played' in 2001, where the Wallabies leaked three tries to the All Blacks in the first five minutes. 'We haven't had the ball yet, boys,' captain John Eales calmly told his men at 24-0. 'Let's get the ball and we'll use it.' Before a world record 107,874 crowd in Sydney, Australia roared back to 24-all at half-time before going down 39-35 at the death. Then there was Michael Cheika's dressing room spray in 2018. Trailing 31-7 at half-time to Argentina – already the most points ever conceded to Los Pumas – Australia's coach unleashed in the sheds, scruffing players' collars to demand pride in the jersey. The Wallabies responded in style, detonating five tries in 22 minutes to run out 45-34 victors and cementing the biggest international comeback by a tier one nation. But Sunday's game in Johannesburg will live long in the memory. In the first 20 minutes, the Wallabies were the team fans have wept over for so long – spilling kicks, sliding off tackles and squandering their limited opportunities with risky plays executed poorly. Yet the team's steely resolve to trust the game plan despite being blown away early and the ruthlessness to keep attacking after reeling in a 22-point lead was new. All week Schmidt had been pilloried for recalling James O'Connor from a three-year international exile to steer his young Wallabies side as playmaker. After shucking some early rust, O'Connor's ice in the fire galvanised his teammates. 'There was no loss of belief. The Boks were clinical,' the 35-year-old later shrugged. 'That first 20 minutes, when they were going sideline to sideline, they were pulling us apart. Every error we made, they made us pay and showed what they could do.' Will Skelton had given the Wallabies a 2025 credo at half-time in the third Lions Test: 'We take no itshay.' Having weathered a three-try shitstorm, the men in gold did what great sides do: kept calm and set about dishing out some itshay of their own. 'We could see the opportunities, see the space,' O'Connor said. 'We had to stay engaged, stay in the fight, build our way back in. We knew we were capable. There's a strong belief in this group. We just had to play our rugby and take our moments.' An hour of magic moments followed, as the Wallabies delivered a six-try blitz that left home fans stunned. At 22-0, flanker Fraser McReight stopped the bleeding with a crucial steal in the 18th minute. Ten minutes later winger Dylan Pietsch speared onto an O'Connor pass from a Len Ikitau break to get Australia on the board. Desperate defence then defied the Springbok's battering rams until half-time. Sign up to The Breakdown The latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewed after newsletter promotion Australia had gone into this Test not having beaten South Africa at home in 14 years. Yet their force of belief and refusal to buckle to scoreboard pressure rattled the world champions. When captain Harry Wilson scored early in the second half and then Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii, who didn't touch the ball in the first 27 minutes, plucked an intercept and raced 60-metres to score, a Wallabies comeback for the ages was on. 'They beat us in most departments,' Springboks coach Rassie Erasmus said. 'We didn't scrum them, they beat us in the lineouts, they bullied us at the breakdown. They physically dominated us, and the interesting thing is that the longer the game went on they were supposed to struggle, but it shows what Joe Schmidt is building.' From a vanquished enemy, to Wallabies players and fans there is no greater praise. Smashing the British & Irish Lions at home in a dead rubber was sweet. But humiliating rugby's No 1 team at a foreign fortress not conquered since 1962, was Lazarus with a triple bypass stuff. After so many years as the heartbreak kids of Australian sport, the Wallabies showed they can still beat the best in the world. Having hauled themselves out of debt with the windfall from the Lions tour, Rugby Australia now has a financial platform and a famous performance to rebuild the code and galvanise floating sports fans around the triple crown quest: beat the All Blacks to reclaim the Bledisloe Cup for the first time since 2002, snatch a first Rugby Championship title since 2015, then win a World Cup for the first time since 1999. For the Wallabies there is only next week, a return bout in Cape Town, a sterner Test. 'We know what's coming,' said Skelton. 'They're going to punch us in the face.' For O'Connor, it's a challenge he relishes. 'It's the world champs, they're wounded… it'll be brutal. They're going to meet us in the trenches but we want to see where we're at. We'll be going after it. We always go after it. You can't not go after it.'