NewsBite

Advertisement

Wallabies outmuscled as Lions claim 27-19 win in first Test

Key posts

Pinned post from

Match report: Lions take early series lead with 27-19 victory in Brisbane

By Iain Payten

A late fightback wasn’t enough to save the Wallabies in the opening Test after the Lions blew them off the park in the first half at Suncorp Stadium.

The Lions proved too strong for the Wallabies in a 27-19 victory on Saturday night, which kept alive their unbeaten record in Brisbane in 126 years of games and gave them a one-nil lead heading into the second Test in Melbourne.

The Lions led 24-5 after a dominant opening half, and appeared to have the game well in hand before a late fightback by the Wallabies pegged back the score to 27-19.

Sorely missing injured forward Rob Valetini, the Wallabies were unable to match the Lions’ physicality in the opening 40 minutes. Cheered on by a red army of fans, the visitors held a 17-5 lead at the break. When the Lions scored again straight after half-time, the contest appeared over.

But after a positive impact from the Wallabies bench, that will give Joe Schmidt much to think about for the MCG, the Wallabies rallied and scored twice through Carlo Tizzano and Tate McDermott in the last 12 minutes.

It ended up at three tries all – with goal-kicking proving crucial – but it was ultimately too little too late for the hosts, after an opening hour in which the Wallabies often struggled to win the physical collisions, and also hold onto the ball for long enough to build pressure.

Ellis Genge of the British and Irish Lions.

Ellis Genge of the British and Irish Lions. Credit: Getty Images

“It’s obviously disappointing,” Wallabies skipper Harry Wilson said on Stan Sport. “We came here to win. I feel as if we probably didn’t get our game going there like we would have liked but the Lions were good and credit to them. They won a few big moments.”

The Wallabies desperately need some more punch to their game, with and without the ball, for the second Test after the Lions forwards mostly bossed them in the contact zones. Tom Curry was immense for the Lions on the openside.

The bright lights of the night for the Wallabies were winger Max Jorgensen, who scored their first try, and young No.10 Tom Lynagh, who performed well on starting debut and looks assured at Test level.

The Lions led 17-5 at half-time after a first half dominated by the visitors, with precious few attacking raids by the Wallabies.

The fans had only just sat down when the Lions grabbed their first points via a penalty after 23 seconds, which Finn Russell banged over for a three-pointer.

Lions fans in the stands at Suncorp Stadium.

Lions fans in the stands at Suncorp Stadium. Credit: Getty Images

Both sides weren’t interested in playing in their own half, and sent plenty of contestable kicks.

The Lions began to display more power with their carries, and in defence, and after a Fraser McReight loose pass gave them access to the Wallabies’ quarter, they rolled towards their first try.

With the Wallabies’ defence not making dominant tackles, and thus scrambling, the Lions eventually found a gap and former Junior Wallaby Sione Tuipulotu took a long pass from Russell and strolled in to the right of the posts in the ninth minute.

The Wallabies were struggling to punch through the line with the ball, and soon found themselves under pressure again. A James Lowe run on the left wing found Huw Jones in support, and he crossed the line in the left corner. But the TMO determined Jones had been tackled before the line, and got back up without releasing the ball first.

Sione Tuipulotu takes a carry with Joseph Aukuso-Suaalii in defence.

Sione Tuipulotu takes a carry with Joseph Aukuso-Suaalii in defence. Credit: Getty Images

The Wallabies’ kicking strategy mostly wasn’t getting any pay, until Jorgensen pulled off a moment of magic. He regathered a high ball from the arms of Lions fullback Hugo Keenan, and raced 20 metres to score in the corner.

Missed tackles and lost lineouts continued to hurt the Wallabies, though, and deny them any pressure on the Lions. That led to the Lions rallying downtown on the back of several penalties, and Curry got a second try in the 36th minute when the Lions tapped and used brute force near the line.

The second half began disastrously when a long throw by the Wallabies at a lineout was picked off by Tom Curry, and the Lions surged downfield and scored again within a minute, this time to hooker Dan Sheehan.

At 24-5, the previously electric atmosphere quickly dulled, with the game becoming a non-contest.
The Wallabies simply could not manage to sustain possession, and get back in the game. Repeated mistakes in attack turned over the ball in the Lions half, and allowed them free escapes.

After a quiet game, Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii finally made an impact with a charging run over the line, and referee Ben O’Keefe awarded a try.

But it was overturned after review, with the TMO ruling Suaalii should have released the ball. Instead of being 24-12, it ended the hopes of the Wallabies making a comeback.

Loading

Lions coach Andy Farrell said he expected a major response from the Wallabies in next Saturday’s second Test.

“To get off to a winning start is huge,” Farrell said. “Obviously, that puts the pressure on for next week. Absolutely delighted. Big occasion, big game. We know what coming to Suncorp means to Australia, so they would have been targeting this. Delighted to come away with victory.

“We know full well what happened in 2013 when an Australian team becomes desperate. It is difficult to handle. We expect a different game next week. I thought we let them back into the game. That shouldn’t happen.”

Latest posts

That’s a wrap

By Tom Decent

Thanks for following along tonight folks.

A big assignment ahead for the Wallabies after a Test they just couldn’t assert their dominance on.

Plenty of selection debate no doubt and potentially a few players returning from injury.

Make sure you check out all the latest news and analysis on our mastheads from the crew here at Suncorp.

Until next week. Cheers.

Lions coach expecting fierce comeback from Wallabies in Melbourne

A few of the best quotes from Lions coach Andy Farrell at his post-match press conference.

“To get off to a winning start is huge,” Farrell said. “Obviously, that puts the pressure on for next week. Absolutely delighted. Big occasion, big game. We know what coming to Suncorp means to Australia, so they would have been targeting this. Delighted to come away with victory.

“We know full well what happened in 2013 when an Australian team becomes desperate. It is difficult to handle. We expect a different game next week. I thought we let them back in to the game. That shouldn’t happen.”

Lions head coach Andy Farrell.

Lions head coach Andy Farrell.Credit: Getty Images

Can the Wallabies bounce back in Melbourne?

Series on the line next week in Melbourne. Scoreline tonight probably flatters the Wallabies. Could have been much uglier.

Australia lost the first Test in Brisbane of the 2001 series but rebounded to take out the series.

Advertisement

Lynagh’s emotional embrace with his father

Michael Lynagh played for the Wallabies against the British and Irish Lions in 1989.

His young bloke Tom just had his first run-on start for the Wallabies.

“You wouldn’t want to be anywhere else,” Lynagh said on Stan Sport. “It’s the stuff you live for. I’ve always dreamed of being in this position and tonight it happened. I’m happy I got the opportunity but very disappointed about the result. I don’t think we had anything to lose going into this game. We had to throw everything at it and it and we tried to. I have just got to stay composed. A tough game. They gave it to us.”

Wallabies player ratings: How the men in gold fared against the Lions

By Jonathan Drennan

The Wallabies have lost the first Test of the series 27-19 in Brisbane after facing a ruthless British and Irish Lions side.

Australia were outmuscled, but fought back bravely in the second half at a sold-out Suncorp Stadium and the Test series is still there to win. Here’s how we rated the Wallabies:

1. James Slipper - 5.5

Did exactly what he was meant to do for his 49 minutes, which was hold up a Wallabies’ scrum under huge pressure from the start. On the negative side of the ledger, the veteran missed four tackles.

6. Nick Champion de Crespigny - 7

Had the biggest jersey to fill with the absence of Rob Valetini, but did himself proud in his Test debut. Led the Wallabies with 19 tackles alongside Fraser McReight.

10. Tom Lynagh - 6.5

Moved to fullback on defence to protect the young five-eighth who was thrown into the Lions’ den. Targeted relentlessly by English breakaway Tom Curry and escaped injury after being cynically taken out in the air. Nobody could fault his bravery under incredible pressure. Will only get better after this outing and did not disappoint anyone.

READ THE FULL PLAYER RATINGS HERE

Harry Wilson takes a carry for the Wallabies.

Harry Wilson takes a carry for the Wallabies. Credit: Getty Images

The three Lions players who topped the metres tally tonight

Advertisement

Should Suaalii have been awarded a try?

Full-time in photos

Tadhg Beirne is named man of the match.

Tadhg Beirne is named man of the match. Credit: Getty Images

Wallabies skipper Harry Wilson.

Wallabies skipper Harry Wilson. Credit: Getty Images

Andy Farrell congratulates Tom Curry.

Andy Farrell congratulates Tom Curry. Credit: Getty Images

Maro Itoje had a big game for the Lions.

Maro Itoje had a big game for the Lions. Credit: Getty Images

Wilson reacts to Wallabies’ eight-point loss

Most Viewed in Sport

Loading

Original URL: https://www.watoday.com.au/link/follow-20170101-p5mg5v