Northern Edition
Select Edition
Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

Lions will be too much for undercooked Springboks - Andy Goode

Warren Gatland /PA

Warren Gatland has sprung a host of surprises in his team selection but the Lions will be too much for an undercooked Springboks.

ADVERTISEMENT

He has mixed and matched personnel with certain players to combat the physicality that we all know is coming together with others who can up the tempo and the plan is clearly to make a fast start.

South Africa have got several players who have just come out of isolation or have barely played at all in the build-up and they have only had one official Test as a team since the 2019 World Cup so there’s every chance they can catch them cold.

Video Spacer

We predict the Lions vs South Africa result for the 1st Test | Fanzone Lions Edition | RugbyPass

Video Spacer

We predict the Lions vs South Africa result for the 1st Test | Fanzone Lions Edition | RugbyPass

The selections of the likes of Ali Price, Elliot Daly and Duhan van der Merwe reflect that. Conor Murray looked like one of the only players nailed on to start when he was named as Alun Wyn Jones’ replacement as skipper but there’s no doubt Price brings far more pace.

Daly has had a great tour thus far and offers more of a threat on the outside than Bundee Aki or Chris Harris and Josh Adams is unlucky but van der Merwe has size on his side.

His battle with Cheslin Kolbe will be key because the Toulouse man has the ability to expose anyone and van der Merwe has been guilty of missing some defensive reads but he’s explosive in attack and will trouble Kolbe in a way that the Lions’ other wingers can’t.

Daly hasn’t started a centre for England since his Test debut against South Africa back in 2016, with Eddie Jones picking him first on the wing and then at full back, but he was clearly selected as a number 13 on this tour and I’ve always said it’s his best position.

ADVERTISEMENT

We know Gatland isn’t afraid to make the big calls, having dropped Brian O’Driscoll for the third Test in 2013, and this line-up is certainly a bold one and one that I don’t think any pundit in Britain got right in terms of their predictions.

In the forwards I think numbers one to five picked themselves really and then he’s married up the game-breaking ability of Jack Conan with the hard-hitting of Courtney Lawes alongside Tom Curry, who brings just about everything and was another automatic selection.

Aside from Lawes and maybe Stuart Hogg, this is also a team that has very definitely been picked on form with players who have excelled on tour being given the opportunity to start the first Test and you have to applaud that.

Lions player ratings
Stuart Hogg /PA
ADVERTISEMENT

By all accounts it almost took the toss of a coin to decide between Hogg and Liam Williams and perhaps the Welshman’s recent concussion was the difference but the Scotland captain deserves his chance to finally feature in a Test on his third British & Irish Lions tour.

The game plan will be to play with a pace and intensity that the Boks just can’t handle because they haven’t played enough top level rugby in the build-up and the bench will be crucial to that.

Both sets of replacement forwards look incredibly strong, with South Africa having arguably their first choice front row in reserve, but the Lions clearly have an edge among the backs replacements.

Murray and Owen Farrell may not look like X-factor players to come on and change a game but they’ll see things from the sidelines and be able to come on and make a difference, whereas I think the Springboks will be in real trouble if Elton Jantjies has to come on and fill in for Handre Pollard too early.

As always, we don’t want to be talking about the refereeing in the aftermath but there’s obviously a huge responsibility on Nic Berry’s shoulders and Gatland has planted the seed when discussing his role.

South Africa’s defence relies massively on line speed and offside is always a question mark with that so flagging it in the build-up to the game is a smart move, as ever, from the Lions head coach.

Berry Gatland Lions referee
(Photo by Christophe Simon/AFP via Getty Images)

Gatland is none too happy about the last-minute appointment of South African Marius Jonker as the TMO for all three Tests and I absolutely agree with him.

If he needed to step in for the first Test because of the pandemic-related travel disruption for Brendon Pickerill, that’s fine, but there’s no need for him to be appointed to all three Tests. There should be a better Plan B in place from World Rugby.

Jonker missed a fair bit when he was TMO for the Lions’ defeat to South Africa A and I’m sure his professionalism won’t be called into question in terms of favouring one side or the other but all eyes will be on him and he’ll need to have his best game as a TMO.

It isn’t just the background of the South Africa A game and the history of what happened in the Tests in South Africa in 2009, he needs to come in and help the referee with a lot of the borderline incidents and stuff happening off the ball rather than trying not to make a decision.

Lions Duhan van der Merwe
Duhan van der Merwe /PA

Hopefully neither Jonker nor Berry will be mentioned post-match and it’ll come down to the fine margins between the two teams. If you look through the Springbok side, you don’t see a lot of weaknesses but I think the key one is that they’re undercooked. Combine that with a drop-off in quality in the halfback replacements and I just see the Lions having the edge.

History tells us how important the first Test is on a Lions tour, maybe more so this year than most, and I may be looking through British & Irish Lions red-tinted spectacles but I’m excited by the team selection and I just think the Lions win this by 10 points.

ADVERTISEMENT
LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

0 Comments
Be the first to comment...

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

t
takata 2 hours ago
Can Les Bleus avoid a Black-wash in New Zealand?

Right: there was officially 7.3 million watching FRA-NZ on TF1 (free to air) at 9 pm last november (w. 8.3 peak). But why did not TF1 spent also those big bucks (about 3 years ago) to get the rights for three consecutive NZ-FRA at 9 am on saturday morning in July 2025?


Broadcasters are certainly not fools and are making plenty of marketing studies to back up their offers; so, tell me please, why no offer in France for such a major event? - (answer: low expected audience = not a major event)


In fine, this series ends up as a gift to the very expensive channel who was already broadcasting Top 14. Canal Plus also scored 920.000 viewers for the Top 14 final on 28 June. In addition to 4.2 million viewers on Antenne 2 (the final is always free to air), those 5.1 million viewers are not bad for the 188th episode of the 2025 series when most missed the last 187 (actually it’s a record for a championship final).


Also, can you tell me what was the audience in New Zeland for last november FRA-NZ game and if it’s possible to compare it with last saturday? I’m pretty sure there would also be a big difference between home and away games, due to different time zone and level of media coverage - ie: this manufactured outrage about the French selection.


Another clue: I can’t find anywhere how many viewers in France watched last saturday game on Canal Plus… nobody published it.


As for SA test next November, I do believe that it would probably score below the AB, we’ll see.

243 Go to comments
TRENDING
TRENDING Record highs and lows as World Rugby Rankings get shaken up Record highs and lows as World Rugby Rankings get shaken up
Search
OSZAR »