Key events
24 mins. From the scrum way back in the Aus half, Gibson-Park goes blind to Freeman who attempts a chip and chase into the corner but the winger can only watch as the ball drifts into touch.
22 mins. Nothing is going well for Australia; the latest example being a long kick from Lynagh that is this close to a 50:22 but rolls just the wrong side of the corner flag to go touch in goal.
19 mins. The Lions spring again after stealing an Aussie lineout, all driving direct running and fizzing passes as they move it left to Jones who is bumped and dropped short of the line by Jorgenson before he gets up and dives over to score. The try is awarded initially but the TMO asks Ref O’Keefe to have another look.
ON review they decide, correctly, that it was a double movement by Jones as the tackle was completed when he was short of the line. NO TRY!
18 mins. The Wallabies work up to 18 phases for a net gain of virtually nothing. It was all very laboured, predictable and pedestrian. Eventually the ball is stolen by the Lions and cleared. A very depressing period of play for the home fans
15 mins. A move from the back of the scrum just inside the Lions half switches play from the blindside back to Lynagh for him to caress a cross kick towards the left wing. Keenan covers it but he is forced to dive to field it and spill the ball forward.
Australia have an attacking scrum near the Lions 22.
13 mins. Each Wallaby possession is being stumped either by their own poor precision or forcing the ball. Some early panic is already present and this simply invites more Lions trouble onto them. They are lucky that the latest raid by the visitors into their half ends with Freeman knocking on.
TRY! Australia 0 – 10 Lions (Sione Tuipulotu)
9 mins. Sheehan finds himself in space and running in the 13 channel in the Wallaby half which leads to a couple of hard carries from the forwards before Russell calls for it and nonchalantly floats a miss-two pass to Tuipulotu, who strolls through a gap and in from five metres out.
The conversion is good and this already looks a long way back for Australia.
7 mins. The ball is won by the tourists and fed into the midfield for a couple of phases, but McReight spots that Jones is isolated in the ruck and gets his hands on. The ref’s whistle blasts loud to award the penalty, accompanied by cheers from the Wallaby players and fans.
5 mins. Finn Russell is looking imperious early on and his latest bit of class is a raking diagonal kick that forces Potter to play the ball into touch in the 22 which hands the Lions a good attacking platform.
3 mins. Australia don’t let that early setback put them into their shell and Lynagh finds a small gap in the Lions defence around halfway. He darts through it but his offload to Sualii doesn’t go to hand and the ball is cleared by Gibson-Park.
PENALTY! Australia 0 – 3 Lions (Finn Russell)
1 min. The kick-off is gathered with little fuss by the Wallabies, but the second tackle has Beirne getting hands on the ball and the home side are pinged for holding on.
Itoje points to the posts and Russell does the necessary.
Kick-off!
The crowd count us down and Finn Russell boots the test series under way.
Officials for this match:
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Referee: Ben O’Keeffe (New Zealand)
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Assistant Referees: Nika Amashukeli (Georgia) & Andrea Piardi (Italy)
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Television Match Official (TMO): Richard Kelly (New Zealand)
The teams are out into the Brisbane night, disco lights flashing and dramatic music pumping as we settle in for the Aussie anthem.
“Can’t fix anything now, the detail is done. This is all about emotion and commitment,” says John Barclay on the telly as the teams head down the tunnel to return to the changing room before kick-off. He’s right as well.
The stadium tannoy is belting out Men At Work’s “Down Under” and the crowd are doing the part in the singalong. Sounds belting as well; the atmosphere is building.
Pre-match reading
You lot out there must have an opinion or six about what is about to unfold; and no doubt you’ll have more as the game progresses. Don’t be shy, slap them “>in an email to me.
Team news
Joe Schmidt is without powerful forwards Rob Valetini and Will Skelton, taking away more ballast from the already uneven mismatch up front. There are debuts at openside for Nick Champignon de Crespigny and at stand-off for Tom Lynagh, son of Wallaby legend Michael who lost a Lions series in 1989. Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii has recovered to take his place at outside-centre, where much is expected of him, perhaps unfairly given the torrid time his forwards are expected to encounter.
A combination of injuries and Andy Farrell’s general pig-headedness has given us a Lions selection that could have been predicted in the main from a long way out. There is the small surprise of Tom Curry starting ahead of Josh van der Flier at 7, with the Irish breakaway out of the squad entirely with Ben Earl’s positional flexibility preferred on the bench.
Teams
Line-ups for this first Test:
Australia
Tom Wright, Max Jorgensen, Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii, Len Ikitau, Harry Potter, Tom Lynagh, Jake Gordon; James Slipper, Matt Faessler, Allan Alaalatoa, Nick Frost, Jeremy Williams, Nick Champion de Crespigny, Fraser McReight, Harry Wilson. Replacements: Billy Pollard, Angus Bell, Tom Robertson, Tom Hooper, Carlo Tizzano, Tate McDermott, Ben Donaldson, Andrew Kellaway.
British & Irish Lions
Hugo Keenan, Tommy Freeman, Huw Jones, Sione Tuipulotu, James Lowe, Finn Russell, Jamison Gibson-Park; Ellis Genge, Dan Sheehan, Tadhg Furlong, Maro Itoje, Joe McCarthy, Tadhg Beirne, Tom Curry, Jack Conan. Replacements: Ronan Kelleher, Andrew Porter, Will Stuart, Ollie Chessum, Ben Earl, Alex Mitchell, Marcus Smith, Bundee Aki.
Preamble
Welcome to the beginning of the business end of the Lions tour 2025. All of the performances, incredibly awkward and forced social media content, and speculation about who will be selected for the big one has led to this: Australia vs British & Irish Lions in Brisbane.
All of the talk in the build up has focused more on the margin of the expected Lions victory with the result an apparently foregone conclusion. The Wallabies are currently ranked 6th in the world, and have only climbed from 8th due to losses by Argentina and Scotland in recent weeks, while the visitors are pulling from a fuller stock of four nations.
But as the old saying goes, “if you’re so clever, why are you not rich?” and Andy Farrell knows the expectation and feels the weight this places on his unpadded shoulders. And speaking of clever, Joe Schmidt, a man with a rugby brain the size of the Lions updated tour squad, has a completely pressure free environment to let his synapses run riot with diabolical plans and tactics to derail the tourist’s putative victory caravan.
It’s remains a tall order for the home side and in a few hours we will know the true extent of its height.
Kick-off: 11am BST, 8pm AEST