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Golden Lions 10 - 74 British and Irish Lions: Golden display sees Lions lay down marker

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Lions captain Brian O'Driscoll on his team's performance
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Published Date: 04 June 2009
THE British and Irish Lions put down the marker assistant coach Shaun Edwards demanded to give their South Africa tour lift-off.
The Lions mauled their Super 14 opponents with a display light years ahead of last Saturday's stuttering opening win against the Royal XV in Rustenburg.

Centre Jamie Roberts and wing Tommy Bowe were stars of the show, each claiming try doubles with performances that had Test class stamped all over them. England wing Ugo Monye also crossed twice, while captain Brian O'Driscoll, flanker Tom Croft, fly-half James Hook and flanker Stephen Ferris added to the ten-try rout.

Fly-half Stephen Jones chipped in with 18 points from the boot, while Hook slotted three late conversions. And such was the Lions' overwhelming degree of control that head coach Ian McGeechan was able to use all his replacements just past the second-half midway point.

The match saw three more Scots make their Lions bows following Mike Blair's appearance in Rustenburg. Nathan Hines started the match and performed well throughout before being joined in the pack by replacements Euan Murray and Ross Ford, both of whom could be satisfied with their impacts on the match.

The Golden Lions, whose build-up had been marred by the sacking of their coach and media speculation about player unrest, had no answer up-front to a dominant Lions pack, and with a regular supply of ball, the visiting backs cut loose. It was also the Lions' highest points total in South Africa since they beat South-West Districts 97-3 35 years ago. And it put the visitors in great heart for Saturday's encounter against the Cheetahs in Bloemfontein. More to the point though, McGeechan would have been thrilled with the contributions of players like man-of-the-match Roberts, Bowe and Croft as he begins formulating a Test team.

The Lions, watched by just 12,000 at Rustenburg in their tour opener, were greeted by another disappointing crowd with row after row of empty red seats, especially behind both posts. There was more urgency about the tourists than four days ago, although they suffered a seventh-minute injury scare. Flanker David Wallace was hurt trying to charge down Louis Ludik's clearance, accidentally catching a stray boot into his ribs. Wallace continued after treatment, but Ludik – a candidate for the Springboks No15 shirt this season – was stretchered off nursing a serious knee injury.

The Golden Lions were in disarray, and the visitors immediately punished them through a well-worked try. Croft and Alun-Wyn Jones took the ball up well, before slick passing saw O'Driscoll send his midfield partner Roberts over. Jones slotted the touchline conversion, but worse was to come for the Golden Lions as they fell 14-0 behind after 11 minutes.

The home defence was again exploited, with Bowe stepping in off his wing and sending O'Driscoll across for a well-worked try that Jones improved. The Scarlets No 10 followed up by booting a penalty, continuing an impressive opening quarter as the Lions rattled along at almost a point a minute.

Andre Pretorius opening the Golden Lions' account with a penalty, but it was a rare home highlight. Another Jones penalty made it 20-3, and with the Lions monopolising possession, more points were inevitable.

Roberts was a handful for the home defence, and another midfield surge by the Wales centre found a work-hungry Bowe in support, and his floated pass enabled Monye to sprint over.

It was no surprise when Croft posted try No 4, galloping clear after more incisive running and crisp passing highlighted another sparkling Lions move.

At 32-3, it was game over, suggesting McGeechan had the breathing space to make early second-half substitutions. The Golden Lions though, belatedly replied during a one-sided half when substitute Shandre Frolick scored on an overlap, with Pretorius converting. But Roberts' second try took the Lions close to 40 points, as Jones converted.

Bowe then posted his double, and the entire Lions bench was on by the 65th minute, but the home side could not relax as Monye sprinted over for his second try – and the tourists' eighth. With Jones off, Hook took over the kicking duties, adding the conversion as the Lions reached 60 points. The visitors could even afford to play scrum-half Mike Phillips at centre for the closing 15 minutes, such was their overwhelming sense of control.

Hook then scored an interception try on a richly-rewarding night for the tourists, and there was still time for Ferris to claim a breakaway try, improved by Hook.

Scorers: Golden Lions: Tries: Frolick. Cons: Pretorius; Pen: Pretorius. British and Irish Lions: Tries: Roberts 2, O'Driscoll, Monye 2, Croft, Bowe 2, Hook, Ferris; Cons: S. Jones 6, Hook 3; Pens: S Jones 2.

Golden Lions: Ludik; Killian, Boshoff, La Grange; Noble, Pretorius; Vermaak, Sephaka, Wepener, Muller, Mockford, Stoltz, Grobbelaar, van der Merwe, Alberts. Subs: Reynecke, van Rensburg, Joubert, Cleaver, Venter, Jonck, Frolick

British & Irish Lions: R Kearney; T Bowe, B O'Driscoll, J Roberts, U Monye; S Jones, M Phillips; G Jenkins, L Mears, P Vickery, N Hines, A Jones, T Croft, D Wallace, J Heaslip. Subs used: R Ford, E Murray, S Ferris, A Powell, H Ellis, J Hook, S Williams.

Gatland delighted as tourists turn on style after disappointing opening match

WARREN Gatland believes the British and Irish Lions have sent a firm message to South Africa after running in ten tries in a 74-10 demolition of the Golden Lions in Johannesburg.

Jamie Roberts, Ugo Monye and Tommy Bowe scored two tries each, with Brian O'Driscoll, Tom Croft, James Hook and Stephen Ferris getting the others. Gatland, the Lions' assistant coach, hopes the scoreline earns his team a little more respect as the first Tests approach. "I think it's a big step," he told Sky Sports. "We were pretty disappointed with the opening game but we hadn't been together for a long time.

"We really fronted up today and we're pleased. It gets the tour on track and hopefully earns a bit of respect. That's what tonight's performance is all about."

The Lions looked tame in beating the Royal XV 37-25 on Saturday, and Gatland said there was a desire to set that performance right and prove they can be a test for the South Africans. "We've not been given much of a chance coming here and the boys just wanted to show we're a good team," he said.

Stand-in captain Brian O'Driscoll echoed those thoughts.

"It was a good victory and a good performance," he said. "This is where the Lions want to be at. We wanted to set out a marker and everyone who took to the pitch did that."

O'Driscoll came off after 60 minutes but insisted he could have played longer and that his injured shoulder is now fine.

"My shoulder felt good," he said. "I made a few tackles on that side and felt good."

Meanwhile, Ireland centre Gordon D'Arcy has been called up to the Lions squad.

The Grand Slam winner has been summoned as cover for injuries among the backs, although no-one is being sent home from the ten-match trip.

D'Arcy toured with the Lions to New Zealand four years ago, while he was also a member of Leinster's Heineken Cup final-winning team at Murrayfield 12 days ago.

D'Arcy will remain with the squad for the remainder of the tour, and Lions head coach Ian McGeechan said: "Gordon has been called up due to the fact that we have had a few injury concerns in the backs.

"While the injuries are being treated by the medical team, we felt it prudent that we call up Gordon to provide us with extra cover in midfield.

"Due to the short nature of this tour, we have to be prepared for every eventuality. An extra back at this stage will provide the extra depth to cover the existing injuries, plus any further injuries."

Centres Keith Earls and Riki Flutey both suffered knocks during the Lions' opening tour fixture against the Royal XV.

Earls suffered a shoulder problem, while Flutey hurt his knee and subsequently underwent a scan.

D'Arcy has returned to something approaching his best form following injury troubles that stalled his progress at provincial and international levels.

McGeechan added: "Gordon showed in the European Cup final and the recent Barbarians match against England that he is back to his best.

His partnership with Brian O'Driscoll for Leinster and Ireland is a proven one and can only benefit the Lions squad in South Africa."

D'Arcy will arrive in South Africa today, meeting up with the squad in Johannesburg before they head for Bloemfontein later in the day.

The Lions' third tour game is against the Cheetahs at Vodacom Park on Saturday.

Wales wing Leigh Halfpenny linked up with the squad yesterday, having remained behind in Cardiff for intensive treatment on a thigh injury. He has now been declared fully fit.


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1

Mairangi Murray ,

NZ 04/06/2009 00:16:54
Was worth getting up at 5am to watch it. I have been getting pelters off of the Saffers at the Rugby Club but that will quieten them down a little.
Great effort from the boys and would be good to see the same again on Saturday!

Seems like the spirit in the camp is 1000% better than what I witnessed in 2005. Good effort Geech!
2

Jon Bon Jovi,

Dublin 04/06/2009 04:20:15

if anyone saw the super14 final you would know that the british lions have no chance in winning the series, but it should be highly entertaining matches.....
3

Media at One,

04/06/2009 05:52:55
The Springboks are a step to far for the Lions. South African rugby is so strong, it's traditions, it's school boy competitions, it's varsity rugby, club rugby, provincial systems, the lot.
Here is a nation who live for rugby and cricket and the Springboks are their glory side. Although it must be said they play a mean game of cricket as well.
The Boks will be far to strong and I would go so far as to say that the Lions will not get within 15 in any of the 3 tests.
4

steveenglandandGB,

04/06/2009 06:28:07
This is the same SA who scraped past England in the world cup final and the team who finished bottom of the 2008 Tri Nations?

Everyone is overrating SA. They are a good team and better than any of the four unions individually, but if the Lions play to their potential they'll win.

You heard it here first. 2-1 to the Lions.
5

Cacciatore,

Stockholm 04/06/2009 06:54:19
Attractive display by the Lions against a team described as a disgrace by the SA press. Who supplied the info about a much-quoted sell-out crowd of 60.000 at Coca-Cola Park (née Ellis Park)? Actual figure 22.000. And where are the tens of thousands of Lions fans? A few hundred on view so far at the first two games. Less spin, more serious reporting on the tour please!
6

mybestmatesa,

Johannesburg 04/06/2009 07:52:07
I have been at both games so far and will be at 2 of the 3 tests (Durban & Jhb).

First: in response to #5, the crowds have been disappointing so far, but a few hundred supporters? There are many more than that in the crowds so far. I don't know what your agenda is!

Second: The price of tickets is keeping a lot of local fans away. You could have watched the Super 14 final for around R100, and a test match against New Zealand will cost around R300. They are charging R230 for the warm-up games and in excess of R1200 for the tests. I think it is safe to say most of us who live here are saving for the tests. It is probably also fair to say that six weeks off work is probably not practical for the people from overseas. I expect many more to arrive as the test series approaches.

Third: In terms of the Lions chances, I think SA will win the series, but last night was a wake-up call. The Golden Lions are not the strongest team in SA, but pushed both the Bulls and the Sharks close in the Super 14. They are in a bit of turmoil at the moment so last night is probably no real barometer of how good this Lions team is. However, in anyone's language, 10-1 on tries (at altitude) is no mean feat.
Roll on the test matches.
7

Stoo,

04/06/2009 08:02:16
Media one - stick to dribbling nonsense about wendyball.
8

KD,

04/06/2009 09:07:06
Pleased to see the Scots boys putting it about a bit, although I had my head in my hands when Ross Ford came on and missed his first throw!
9

voltaire's janny,

04/06/2009 09:39:04
This will be the mighty Bokke that just squeezed past Scotland in the autumn? I think the Lions will win the series 2-1 in the order WLW. It's 22 against 22 on the day and Geech knows how to build a team in just the way Woodward had nae clue. By the time of test #3 there'll be steel in them thar souls.
10

mybestmatesa,

Jhb 04/06/2009 12:59:39
#9
I hope your right, but if the Lions need to win in Johannesburg to win the series I wouldn't like to have anything really important depending on it!
11

mybestmatesa,

Jhb 04/06/2009 13:03:33
#9
I hope your right, depends which SA team turns up. They are capable of destroying any team, but equally capable of providing a shambles. Looking at the test squad I think there are still couple of "quota" selections, but if the Lions need to win in Johannesburg to win the series I wouldn't like to have anything really important depending on it!
12

A Jambo come rain or shine,

04/06/2009 13:32:24
#7 Give him his due - at least his comment was thoughtful and considered. I got pelters on a rugby article for my name once and it's naive to think someone can't post on 2 sports. FWIW, i also think we'll get beaten 3-0 but was very pleased by what i saw last night. Great forward play, totally dominating their pack followed up by great attacking back line scoring some good tries. It also means Saturday's team will have to play exceptionally well if they want to oust any of that team as there are a lot of players putting themselves in the test frame on last night's performance.
13

weeneeps,

Edinburgh 04/06/2009 13:51:41
It was good to see the sharpness in the back-play and the resolve to take it on in the forwards to create space and quick ball. The intensity will have to be increased against the better teams, though. However, I think some of the defending will have the springboks rubbing their hands. O'driscoll got way out of position for one of the Golden Lion's tries and some of the forwards tackling could have been better. Saying that, it is hard to stay focused in defence when you're winning by so much.
As for Ford missing his 1st throw....so did Mears. But as usual Stuart Barnes' wayward comments took the focus away from it when he announced just before half time that they hadn't even looked like losing a lineout.
14

Cacciatore,

Stockholm 04/06/2009 15:40:08
Re #6, no special agenda, just a little bit tired of having HSBC and Sky thrust down my throat continuously. The cameras seemed to pan in on the same few small groups of Lions fans repeatedly, I´ll take your word for it that there were lots more Lions supporters than that. You yourself seem to be based in SA. The tour operators I know say that the number of people flying out from the UK is rather modest. Interesting info about ticket prices.
By the way, who is Andrew Baldock? Is there any special reason why he lifts a whole paragraph from the corresponding report by Henry McCall in your Glasgow competitor? Or is it vice-versa? Or are they one and the same person? Times are hard in the newspaper business.
15

Aubrey W,

Fyfe 04/06/2009 21:30:02
The tests will be a teriffic struggle. We could do without any injuries.

I thought that both centres were excellent lastnight, the halfbacks were superb (with the scrumhalf confirming his ability and power) and all the front rowers made their presence felt. Murray will be in test squad I think, and A Wyn Jones was so athletic that he forms the natural partner with O'Connell. G Jenkins is something else. Croft shone too.

However, tours like this wear players down and degrade squads, so we will all he players fighting fit!

 

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