Key events
29 mins. A simple short lineout from the Waratahs inches forward a few feet before Gamble breaks off and charges to the left corner and over the line to score! The stadium erupts but it shortly changes to a chuntering grumble as the TMO intervenes to point out that Lee-Warner has obstructed the Lions defenders in the setup of the maul at the lineout.
It’s the right call, but the theme of the home side getting at the Lions to easily in possession continues. If they could just stopped dropping the ball they could be causing quite a bit of bother to the tourist.
28 mins. More phases for the home side close to the Lions line and as the carries some hard and regular Cowan-Dickie charges offside as the defending becomes increasingly desperate. The penalty is tapped and three phases later another infringement, this time from Ryan, has Ref Paul Williams warning Tadhg Beirne that another one in this area will be card.
25 mins. A lineout is won by the Waratahs on the Lions 22 after the visitors are penalised for not releasing in the tackle. There’s a good carry from Gamble and discipline fails the Lions once more, this time Earl off his feet at the breakdown.
“Morning Lee. Another chance for Lions to test combinations and get new players into the fold.” suggests Guy Hornsby, “And another scrappy opening, which seems to be the vibe of this tour as the Australian sides exert the most pressure in the first 20 and Lions search for cohesion.
“Crucial for Kinghorn and Keenan to get into the groove this next week, as 15 is very much up for grabs. It’ll certainly be calmer than 2001, not that it could be less so! I was in Australia that glorious summer, and snagged a ticket to the Gabba. A day for the ages, if hazy in recollection 24 years later.”
23 mins. Waratahs work the ball clear from a scrum they finally manage to hold up, but the clearance kick is a poor one and the Lions have a lineout on the 22.
Drinks break is taken.
20 mins. Numerous phases in the five metre area from the Lions batter the Waratahs line as the home side aggressively repel the attacks. There are repeated short carries, probably a few too many, as the Lions lose shape and momentum and there’s another knock-on due to forcing it. Fin Smith should have done more there to call the ball to himself and get the backs to form up into something more organised.
17 mins. Another strong run from Earl, who is clearly benefitting from a gameplan to get him on the ball in the open more, get the Lions going forward again. There’s more imprecision in handling, but this is mattering less for the Lions as their scrum is now regularly marmalising the Waratahs pack to win back possession via penalties.
14 mins. The perennial issue for the Lions of not securing restarts raises its head again, with a lazy defender penalised for obstructing the Waratahs’ chasers. The home side work a short lineout and drive up to the line before spilling the ball under pressure from the red defence which allows Mitchell to clear it upfield with his boot.
TRY! Waratahs 0 – 7 Lions (Huw Jones)
11 mins. Earl drives forward but is stopped by the scrambling blue defence who strike for he ball but knock it on. The scrum gives a penalty to the Lions and from the resulting lineout it’s a very simple catch-drive-release drill to find Tuipulotu who drives to the defensive line and feeds Jones to score.
9 mins. There is some phased possession from the home side, with the passes busy enough, but their territory is repeatedly driven backwards by a Lions defence that finally appears to be co-ordinated in their press forward. There’s an inevitable turnover under pressure and the Lions fire the ball rightwards through hands to Earl out on the wing.
6 mins. We’ve had a scrum, from which not much happened other than some more handling errors that lead us to another scrum, this one for the Waratahs just inside their own half.
Hannah Sumby has a query: “Van der Merwe covering forwards position from the bench seems a bit odd?”
It’s a 5-3 bench now, so he’s not covering forwards. It appears he was just chucked Cummings’s shirt to put on as the changes were so late.
3 mins. The first period of possession is for the Lions after they win a lineout on halfway. Lots of busy recycling and short passing look to be building some momentum before the ball goes to the deck and Walton is first to it to race 30 metres into the Lions half. He offloads to Lancaster, but a brilliant cover tackle from Cummings drops him and dislodges the ball.
Kick-Off!
Fin Smith clips the ball up and away into the smoky sky to get us underway
There’s a decent crowd in and they ramp up the volume as the obligatory pre kick-off dimming of the lights signals the start of the pumping music and pitch-side flame throwers. The teams and the match are imminent.
In rugby news from the lower reaches of the international tiers, Hong Kong have beaten South Korea 70-22 in Incheon to win the Asia Rugby Championship and qualify for the World Cup for the first time. The Hong Kong side has got to the last stage of qualifying for the last two World Cups only to fall short but will now take their place at the expanded 24-team showpiece tournament in Australia in 2027. What a moment for the nation.
On a related but clearly irrelevant note, I was made in Hong Kong. True story.
On the late Pollock injury Andy Farrell, speaking to Sky Sports:
“Yes, he’s got a slight problem with his calf – nothing too serious. Knowing what we know, we thought it wasn’t right to risk him so we reshuffle.”
Have a read while you wait
He might not be playing for the Waratahs today, but Joseph Suaalii is likely to play for the Wallabies. Read more about it here
Your views are always welcome and today is no exception so send them to me on the Email. I may even tolerate Owen Faz chat, but don’t bank on it.
Teams
Rotation once more as the fixtures pile up quickly for Andy Farrell and the Lions, made more tricky by Henry Pollock withdrawing with a tight calf late on. Apparently it’s ‘precautionary’. Tadhg Beirne will have the honour of captaining from six, Scott Cummings now starts in the second row and Duhan van der Merwe comes onto the bench. Hugo Keenan has his first start of the tour at fullback along with Blair Kinghorn on the wing, while Fin Smith returns at stand-off.
The Waratahs have a few internationals in their lineup in Taniela Tupou, Andrew Kellaway, Rob Leota, Lalakai Foketi, and Darby Lancaster. Number 8, Hugh Sinclair, is awarded the captaincy in this his last ever game of professional rugby so expect some emotional scenes.
British & Irish Lions:
15 Hugo Keenan, 14 Mack Hansen, 13 Huw Jones, 12 Sione Tuipulotu, 11 Blair Kinghorn, 10 Fin Smith, 9 Alex Mitchell; 1 Pierre Schoeman, 2 Luke Cowan-Dickie, 3 Finlay Bealham, 4 Scott Cummings, 5 James Ryan, 6 Tadhg Beirne (captain), 7 Josh van der Flier, 8 Ben Earl.
Replacements: Dan Sheehan, Ellis Genge, Tadhg Furlong, Joe McCarthy, Jac Morgan, Ben White, Marcus Smith, Duhan van der Merwe.
NSW Waratahs:
15 Lawson Creighton, 14 Andrew Kellaway, 13 Lalakai Foketi, 12 Joey Walton, 11 Darby Lancaster, 10 Jack Bowen, 9 Teddy Wilson; 1 Tom Lambert, 2 Ethan Dobbins, 3 Taniela Tupou, 4 Fergus Lee-Warner, 5 Miles Amatosero, 6 Rob Leota, 7 Charlie Gamble, 8 Hugh Sinclair (captain).
Replacements: Mahe Vailanu, Jack Barrett, Daniel Botha, Matt Philip, Jamie Adamson, Jack Grant, Tane Edmed, Henry O’Donnell
Preamble
Welcome to Sydney, where a game of rugby is in danger of breaking out in the midst of the Owen Farrell’s Worth Tour 2025. You would be forgiven if this match involving 23 British & Irish people – none of whom are Owen Farrell – has taken you by surprise at the end of this week of quite remarkable discourse.
But there is a match for the Lions to play against the Waratahs, a team that has had a fiercely mediocre season in their domestic competition and this isn’t even their first choice selection.
At this stage Farrell Snr’s men should be putting together more complete performances that address the issues so far. So look out for more energy in defence, a consistent lineout and a better kicking game out of hand that has been witnessed so far.
The Wallabies are waiting in a fortnight and Joe Schmidt will be watching with his notebook. I wonder what he would write about Owen Farrell.