The British and Irish Lions notched their first win in eight Tests on Saturday, beating South Africa convincingly 28-9 in Johannesburg.
The tourists had been widely-tipped to fall flat on their faces in the third match, a dead rubber at the end of a long tour. Not a bit of it. All the energy and pride associated with the proud red jersey was on display for the full eighty minutes, while the Boks floundered under the weight of changes and occasional lack of experience at key moments.
But South Africa will not garner any sympathy. They took to the fields with white armbands emblazoned with 'Justice 4', a puerile protest at the two-week ban handed out to the Bakkies Botha. It was an absolutely ludicrous idea, which smacked of Peter de Villiers' nonsensical thinking and deserves full censure from the IRB, who must surely examine this brazen flouting of their authority and take some form of action.
The stats also tell a little tale. The Lions have outscored their hosts by seven tries to five, and by 74 points to 63 over the three games. The key stat is obviously the 2-1 series defeat, but small wonder that the tourists did a lap of honour at the end. The Lions brand is alive and strong and whatever the result, credit has to be lavished upon the touring party for the way they have gone about their business.
The Lions set their stall out to up the pace of the game early on, eschewing kicks for touch for measured up and unders or the mesmerising counter-attack talents of Rob Kearney. It worked a charm. Riki Flutey and Shane Williams got ball in the danger zones as a result and rather than the blunt hammer of the first two Tests, the Lions wielded a honed sword in attack. Martyn Williams in particular, was pure class, aided by his team-mates' deft handling skills.
They were in fine fettle in the set-pieces too. At the first scrum both Phil Vickery and Andy Sheridan annihilated their opposite numbers, forcing a penalty. Stephen Jones missed with his first, but succeeded minutes later after a penalty conceded for not releasing the tackled player - the Boks' fourth penalty to zero from the Lions.
Those points were donated back at the restart, with Shane Williams slicing the clearance kick and the Boks forcing a penalty from the resulting line-out and subsequent phases.
In defence, the tourists tightened up significantly, not so much in technique but with some indomitable spirit. Flutey put in a monstrous hit on Wynand Olivier, while Joe Worsley's backtrack to grad Odwa Ndungane by the ankles was near-miraculous.
The Boks looked like a team with ten changes at times, especially in defence. Heinrich Brüssow, mentioned by Ieuan Evans before the game as a possible player of the series, was nowhere to be seen. Martyn Williams was everywhere - at times the gulf in positioning ability and game-reading was that of tutor and tutee. Brüssow lashed out at Williams after 63 minutes as his frustration boiled over; he was not the only Bok to have a go as they faced an ignominious defeat in a pugnacious final twenty minutes.
There was not the same accuracy at the rucks and mauls from the men in green, especially with the ball in hand. As a result, the Lions forced all sorts of turnovers, two of which yielded tries.
The first one was imbued with a whiff of controversy, with South Africa justly complaining that Simon Shaw had run in front of Jamie Heaslip as the Irish number eight broke the line on the blindside.
Neither Stuart Dickinson nor Vinny Munro picked it up though, and Heaslip drew Zane Kirchner masterfully before popping inside to Shane Williams for the opening score under the posts.
A bizarre missed conversion followed, as the ball fell off the tee during Jones' run-up and he was unable to pick it up and drop goal it in time - and was there just a sniff of a lash-out from Brüssow's boot as he smothered Jones?
8-3 seemed precarious, but the Lions quickly put that to rights with the try of the series. Flutey's chip bounced kindly, but his catch and flip over his head to Williams was as instinctive as it was scintillating. Williams again had the simplest of run-ins to the posts and this time there was no intervening gust of wind.
In between the two there could have been a third try had anyone chased up Williams' infield kick but it was perhaps the one criticism of the Lions at times.
The Boks got themselves a toe back in the door at the end of the half, controlling the ball better and tempting Simon Shaw to incur the wrath of the crowd with a knee to the upper back of Fourie du Preez. Shaw got ten minutes, but Du Preez did not re-appear after half-time - given the atmosphere around the tams with regard to foul play, a citing will surely follow.
Two more penalties followed the line-out, the second of which Morné Steyn knocked over on half-time to make it 15-6, a deserved lead for the tourists.
The game followed a similar pattern in the second half, although Francois Steyn's introduction sparked a bit of life into the South African attack.
Tommy Bowe made a terrific cover tackle on Ndungane, knocking the ball out of the winger's hands as he neared the corner.
The decisive moment came on 55 minutes. As the Boks searched for the try out wide that would get them back into it, Ugo Monye came in off his wing. It's a defensive move that has cost the Lions four or five tries during this series but this time the Harlequins flyer picked off the floated pass and hared away for an 80m try under the posts.
That sealed the game. The Boks fought briefly and secured three further points from the boot of Steyn, but discipline crumbled under pressure, enabling Jones to put the game out of reach with two quick penalties.
Man of the match: Another magnificent performance from Martyn Williams in his last showing in a Lions jersey.
Moment of the match: Ugo Monye's intercept - with a little juggle and against a three-man overlap to put hearts in mouths - killed it all off.
Villain of the match: Quite a few nasty moments. Simon Shaw will no doubt be censured for his knee to Fourie du Preez's back, while Francois Steyn was fortunate not to catch Mike Phillips with a vicious backhand swing. One apiece there... so a joint award.
The scorers:
For South Africa:
Pens: Steyn 3
For the British & Irish Lions:
Tries: S.Williams 2, Monye
Cons: Jones 2
Pens: Jones 3
Yellow card: Shaw (Lions, 38, knee)
South Africa: 15 Zane Kirchner, 14 Odwa Ndungane, 13 Jaque Fourie, 12 Wynand Olivier, 11 Jongi Nokwe, 10 Morné Steyn, 9 Fourie du Preez, 8 Ryan Kankowski, 7 Juan Smith, 6 Heinrich Brussow, 5 Victor Matfield, 4 Johann Muller, 3 John Smit, 2 Chiliboy Ralepelle, 1 Tendai Mtawarira.
Replacements: 16 Bismarck du Plessis, 17 Guthro Steenkamp, 18 Dean Carstens, 19 Steven Sykes, 20 Pierre Spies, 21 Ruan Pienaar, 22 Frans Steyn.
British & Irish Lions: 15 Rob Kearney, 14 Ugo Monye, 13 Tommy Bowe, 12 Riki Flutey, 11 Shane Williams, 10 Stephen Jones, 9 Mike Phillips, 8 Jamie Heaslip, 7 Martyn Williams, 6 Joe Worsley, 5 Paul O'Connell, 4 Simon Shaw, 3 Phil Vickery, 2 Matthew Rees, 1 Andrew Sheridan.
Replacements: 16 Ross Ford, 17 John Hayes, 18 Alun-Wyn Jones, 19 David Wallace, 20 Tom Croft, 21 Harry Ellis, 22 James Hook.
Referee: Stuart Dickinson (Australia)
Assistant referee: Christophe Berdos (France), Vinny Munro (New Zealand)
Television match official: Bryce Lawrence (New Zealand)
Assessor: Tappe Henning
By Danny Stephens in Johannesburg







Comments
gavin444 says...
was Danny Stephens watching the same game as everyone else??
Brussow was everywhere, there were 2 lucky bounces and an intercept, and I would hardly say the Lions were the angels they appear to be in the article.
It was a magnificent test series, the boks won deservedly, and the Lions can go home with heads held high!
Posted 10:27 05th July 2009
RiverBoyBlues says...
Brilliant victory for the Lions, and telling series statistics. I'm a South African and was appalled by the absence of skill in our backline, boorish posturing by our thick skulled loose forwards, and the fact that brutishness and luck won out over one of the most skilled Lions sides in history. Funny how all the proud bok supporters have squirmed back into the woodwork. If the Boks were now to tour the UK and played three away games against the Lions in Murrayfield, Cardiff and Dublin, I doubt the results would work in their favour.
Posted 23:32 04th July 2009
lawrie says...
thoroughly enjojable test series . great talent on display from both sides . the tour should be remembered for the huge commitment given from the players , especially the lions squad . unfortunately this wonderful tournament is likely to be remembered more for de villiers moronic comments and his teams pathetic childish ' justice ' demonstration . is this what we want rugby to be like ? the tour seems to be treat more as a matter of life or death than a celebration of rugby and what it can bring to the country's regions . yes ,de villiers ,rugby is tough , but should always be fair . the lions can depart with great credit , the springboks need to take a good look at themselves .
Posted 21:07 04th July 2009
lawrie says...
at last rugby wins over mindless thuggery thanks for showing us what you are like south africa from your brainless coach to your childish armband protest just grow up !
Posted 19:31 04th July 2009
rich says...
If Sheridan can get away with punching Bekker in the balls but Botha gets banned - by the admission of the Lions coaches - for no reason, I'm not convinced Shaw will be cited. Of course if Bakkies had done that it would be a different story. We'll wait and see if the IRB will show some degree of professionalism and apply the law equally
Posted 19:27 04th July 2009
SpringbokPete says...
A well deserved victory...A good lesson for the Springboks. The Lions have showed up enough weaknesses for us to be pretty concerned with the Tri-Nations coming up.
Regardless of the changes SA made today, we should have been more competitive than this. Scrums were a shambles as it has been throughout the series.( bar the first half of the series ). The back line was ponderous and never really jelled in all three Tests. For me the most alarming part of the series was the lack of possession, the kicking away of good possession when we did get it and the number of turnovers conceded at ruck/maul time. We always seemed to be playing without the ball and defending most of the time. There were bright moments but they were all to brief ..No sustained pressure was applied and we struggled to keep possession through multiple phases.
Still we somehow won this series thanks to incredible character shown by the players and a large dollop of LUCK !!.
It could so easily have been 2-1 , 1-1 or even 3-0 to the Lions. Such fine lines defined this Series
I thought the Lions loose forwards were amazing today ....The teams defense as a whole was awesome. For me Rob Kearney,Riki Flutey and Shane Williams had blinders .. and Mr Vickery and his fellow front rowers had a day to remember.. You can't help but admire the man's character. He became the " The Beast " today.
What a wonderful series !!. Long live the Lions !! It's the ultimate challenge and always a treasured memory !!
Posted 18:21 04th July 2009
rich says...
Funny. Gloating at winning against the Boks reserves. And since even the Lions coaches said the ban on Botha was ludicrous and he did nothing wrong, if the Lions had any respect they would also have joined the protest
Posted 18:06 04th July 2009
abrad says...
Message from a South African. Congratulations Lions of a spectacular win today. Our boks and coaching staff will have quite a bit of thinking to do before Tri Nations. But is good to see some hard rugby - special congrats to Shane Williams and Ugo Moneye who have done very well in the face of considerable recent criticism. I think this kind of spirit of taking second chances and proving critics wrong is the kind of thing parents can point to their kids as what can be done in life with proper determination and I think is a role model for anyone.
I am very proud also of the Boks. They have done very well, and I refute anyone who criticises Div for his selections for this game. They are brilliant players and I support them whole heartedly, but fair dues to the Lions. On the day, their will-power and determination was stronger and a deserved win. Lets keep the Lions tradition to Tri Nations alive!
Posted 18:01 04th July 2009
Beninuk says...
A deliberate kneeing in the back of a number 9 is by far the worst!
Posted 17:48 04th July 2009
ryan says...
Well played Lions. They deserved to win. The British media needs to learn to be more neutral in defeat, whenever they lose they are quick to point the finger. They just cannot accept that the Boks won the series. Danny Stephens is saying that Heindrich Brussow was nowhere to be seen today! Was he watching the same game? Brussow should not have been penalized late in the game, where Mike Phillips was clearly guilty of not letting Frans Steyn clear the ball. South Africa has won a World Cup, Super 14 and a Sevens title, and at the moment are best rugby team in the world. Danny Stephens also mentions that it was a ludicrous idea for the Boks to wear armbands. If you look at the tape Bakkies Botha was not guilty. He came from behind the scrum and was clearing the man away, unfortunatley Jones had his arm in the ruck and got injured. Straight after this happened Rees did the same thing to Botha, so why the ban! I would like to ask Danny Stephen's if he can now see why the Boks were trying to make a statement? John Smit had the backing of rugby officials, Lions officials, referee's to this injustice. Do you remember BOD's tackle offside tackle on Danie Rossouw, why was there no penalty for this! At the end of the day, the media likes to look at the stats, well here is a stat for you, 2-1 to the Boks and maybe we should leave it at that, maybe PDV should not make 10 changes to the team, just because he wants everyone to play against the Lions. Well played Lions, wish the British media could get there facts right and not have sour grapes. We lost today to a better team. Well done Lions. Great series!
Posted 17:39 04th July 2009
stanjadema says...
Well done to the Lions! Great way to finish a tightly contested tour! Amazing resilience and some great players too. Shame that the Boks didn't turn up, but grateful the English media have something positive to report on now.......unless of course they want to talk about Shaw's knee to the back of Dupreez???? Lets see how much coverage this gets..... or just maybe, eye gouging and ruck clearing are not in the same league as knees in the back, or armless headbutt tackles? This aside, well done boys, and the Lions players (NO ENGLISH MEDIA THANKS!) would be welcome back anytime.
Posted 17:34 04th July 2009
mcgoo says...
Oh my god you really have out done yourself Danny, just when I didn't think your reporting could get any worse you have proved me wrong.
Posted 17:33 04th July 2009
Greencor says...
What a peace of absolute nonsense. As a reporter you are not very far fron De Villiers in the way you send agrivating signals. Shaw.....ag OK not so bad, but ban the whole South Africa, its rugby players from now on untill doomsday for wearing armbands because they feel done in by the so call justice system. And in the same breath you tell us how Flutey nearly killed a Springbok, O how nice, our toenails even curl up. In stead of congrats the Lions team on their good performance as was my intentions before reading your peace of disgrading noncense, I feel angry at everybody that wears a red jersey for your bias lookout on everything and everybody that is not RED. Now I know why everybody in the world enjoy the fact that South Africa won the series, and see the British people as sore loosers. Because of small minded one eyed little fellas like you, hiding behind your pen.
I still wish to congartulate the Lions on a gutsy performance, You were the best team on the day and deserve to won. I believe that only a small minority in Your country is called Stephens....Thank the Lord
Posted 17:32 04th July 2009
leslie42 says...
The South African coach must be fired. An international match is NOT a warm up trial game in order to give players a chance or figure out your combinations. The South African pack in the 1st half was totaly underpowered and disjointed. No front row. No driving locks and 3 backrowers who play totally different and non complimentary styles of rugby. The SA wings also had no finish. The Lions played very well make no mistake but evryone was terrified at the breakdown of the cleanout law that no one including the law makers have a clue about. You cant play rugby terrified and it showed. Anyway the Lions really and easily deserved their win but the BOKS were very poor oppostion indeed.
Posted 16:36 04th July 2009
kooper says...
Game well played by the Lions, deserved win by the better team on the day.
Posted 16:17 04th July 2009
rugger1234 says...
What a joke, "the stats tell a little tale"
smacking of bias, bar room chat, not objective journalism. So swinging your arm through the air is the same as deliberate knee to a grounded player.
Posted 16:14 04th July 2009