To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
Languages
Recent
Show all languages
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand
The logo of the 2005 Lions tour
Date23 May – 9 July
Coach(es)England Clive Woodward
Tour captain(s)Ireland Brian O'Driscoll
Wales Gareth Thomas
Test series winners New Zealand (3–0)
Top test point scorer(s)Wales Stephen Jones (14)
2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand
Summary
P W D L
Total
11 07 00 04
Test match
03 00 00 03
Opponent
P W D L
 New Zealand
3 0 0 3

In 2005, the British & Irish Lions rugby union team toured New Zealand for the first time since 1993, playing seven matches against first and second division teams from the National Provincial Championship, one match against the New Zealand Maori team, and three test matches against New Zealand (the All Blacks). The Lions lost the test series 3-0, the first time in 22 years that they lost every test match on tour.

The team was managed by former England and Lions player Bill Beaumont, coached by former England coach Sir Clive Woodward, and originally captained by Ireland captain Brian O'Driscoll. O'Driscoll suffered a controversial tour-ending injury two minutes into the first test, and Wales captain Gareth Thomas took over as captain for the final four games of the tour.

The poor test results of the 2005 Lions, despite having one of the most experienced playing squads and the largest management team of any Lions tour, led to criticism of Woodward, particularly his selection policy, and prompted commentators to question the future of the Lions.[1]

This tour followed the Lions' 2001 tour to Australia and preceded the 2009 tour to South Africa.

Schedule

The Lions' campaign involved a warm-up match against Argentina (which was retroactively awarded test status by the International Rugby Board in March 2008) before the departure for New Zealand, three tests against the All Blacks, and several tour matches, where the quality of the opposition was expected to be high. This proved to be the case against New Zealand Maori and Auckland, and most of the other tour matches were close for at least the first half. But the match against Manawatu (the Lions' only opponent from the second division of New Zealand's domestic league, the National Provincial Championship) was a one-sided affair, the Lions winning by a score of 109–6.

Date Home team Score Away team Venue
23 May British & Irish Lions 25–25 Argentina Millennium Stadium, Cardiff Match details
4 June Bay of Plenty 20–34 British & Irish Lions Rotorua International Stadium, Rotorua Match details
8 June Taranaki 14–36 British & Irish Lions Yarrow Stadium, New Plymouth Match details
11 June New Zealand Maori 19–13 British & Irish Lions Waikato Stadium, Hamilton Match details
15 June Wellington 6–23 British & Irish Lions Wellington Regional Stadium, Wellington Match details
18 June Otago 19–30 British & Irish Lions Carisbrook, Dunedin Match details
21 June Southland 16–26 British & Irish Lions Rugby Park Stadium, Invercargill Match details
25 June New Zealand 21–3 British & Irish Lions Lancaster Park, Christchurch Match details
28 June Manawatu 6–109 British & Irish Lions Arena Manawatu, Palmerston North Match details
2 July New Zealand 48–18 British & Irish Lions Wellington Regional Stadium, Wellington Match details
5 July Auckland 13–17 British & Irish Lions Eden Park, Auckland Match details
9 July New Zealand 38–19 British & Irish Lions Eden Park, Auckland Match details

Squad

The 44-man tour squad was announced on 11 April 2005, and included 20 players from England, 11 from Ireland, 10 from Wales and three from Scotland. Ireland's Brian O'Driscoll was named as captain. Among the English players selected were two who had retired from international rugby (Neil Back and Lawrence Dallaglio), and one who was returning from a long-term injury (Richard Hill).[2]

Three players did not travel to New Zealand with the bulk of the touring party: Jason Robinson was excused from the first three tour matches to spend time with his pregnant wife; Stephen Jones and Gareth Thomas were forced to delay their departures due to commitments to their French clubs.[3] Jones arrived in New Zealand on 31 May, before the Lions played their first tour match, while Robinson arrived on 7 June. For a time, it was doubtful whether Thomas would be able to contend for a spot in the first test, as he had not been released by his club, Toulouse. However, Toulouse lost in the Top 14 semi-finals, allowing Thomas to leave for New Zealand, also arriving on 7 June. Thomas later replaced O'Driscoll as tour captain after O'Driscoll suffered a dislocated shoulder in the first test. Michael Owen also briefly left the tour two weeks in to attend the birth of his second child.[4]

Player Position Country Club
Gordon Bulloch Hooker Scotland Scotland Glasgow
Shane Byrne Hooker Ireland Ireland Leinster
Steve Thompson Hooker England England Northampton Saints
Andy Titterrell Hooker England England Sale Sharks
John Hayes Prop Ireland Ireland Munster
Gethin Jenkins Prop Wales Wales Cardiff Blues
Graham Rowntree Prop England England Leicester Tigers
Andrew Sheridan Prop England England Sale Sharks
Matt Stevens Prop England England Bath
Julian White Prop England England Leicester Tigers
Danny Grewcock Lock England England Bath
Ben Kay Lock England England Leicester Tigers
Donncha O'Callaghan Lock Ireland Ireland Munster
Paul O'Connell Lock Ireland Ireland Munster
Malcolm O'Kelly Lock Ireland Ireland Leinster
Neil Back Back row England England Leicester Tigers
Martin Corry Back row England England Leicester Tigers
Lawrence Dallaglio Back row England England London Wasps
Richard Hill Back row England England Saracens
Lewis Moody Back row England England Leicester Tigers
Michael Owen Back row Wales Wales Newport Gwent Dragons
Simon Taylor Back row Scotland Scotland Edinburgh
Martyn Williams Back row Wales Wales Cardiff Blues
Gareth Cooper Scrum-half Wales Wales Newport Gwent Dragons
Chris Cusiter Scrum-half Scotland Scotland Border Reivers
Matt Dawson Scrum-half England England London Wasps
Dwayne Peel Scrum-half Wales Wales Llanelli Scarlets
Charlie Hodgson Fly-half England England Sale Sharks
Stephen Jones Fly-half Wales Wales Clermont Auvergne
Ronan O'Gara Fly-half Ireland Ireland Munster
Gordon D'Arcy Centre Ireland Ireland Leinster
Will Greenwood Centre England England Harlequins
Gavin Henson Centre Wales Wales Ospreys
Brian O'Driscoll Centre Ireland Ireland Leinster
Tom Shanklin Centre Wales Wales Cardiff Blues
Ollie Smith Centre England England Leicester Tigers
Shane Horgan Wing Ireland Ireland Leinster
Denis Hickie Wing Ireland Ireland Leinster
Jason Robinson Wing England England Sale Sharks
Shane Williams Wing Wales Wales Ospreys
Iain Balshaw Full-back England England Leeds Tykes
Geordan Murphy Full-back Ireland Ireland Leicester Tigers
Josh Lewsey Full-back England England London Wasps
Gareth Thomas Full-back Wales Wales Toulouse

Additions to the squad

Injured England players Jonny Wilkinson, Phil Vickery and Mike Tindall were pencilled in to be added to the squad, subject to them regaining fitness. Only Wilkinson subsequently did so and was called up on 8 May.

Additional players were called up when players suffered injury (and in one case a ban) during the tour proper:

Management

England coach Clive Woodward was first linked with the Lions' head-coaching job in December 2003, shortly after England's victory in the 2003 Rugby World Cup, when he was approached by Four Home Unions chairman Bill Beaumont.[11] Woodward resigned as England coach on 3 September 2004,[12] and appointed as Lions coach four days later following a meeting of the Lions committee.[13] He named a 25-strong coaching group in October 2004, including his successor as England coach, Andy Robinson, and three-time Lions head coach Ian McGeechan. Some of the coaches on the tour would be responsible for the team playing on weekends, including Robinson, Eddie O'Sullivan and Phil Larder, while others would take charge of the midweek team, including McGeechan, Gareth Jenkins and Mike Ford.[14] Former government communications consultant Alastair Campbell was added to the tour party in December 2004.[15] The Welsh Rugby Union (WRU) initially requested that national team head coach Mike Ruddock be left out of the Lions coaching team to focus on the Wales job; however, in April 2005, Ruddock said he would be open to a position with the Lions if it had a "specific job description".[16] Ruddock was offered an "observational role" on the tour, but ultimately rejected it in favour of joining the Wales under-21s at the 2005 Under 21 Rugby World Championship, and the Lions role was given to his assistant Scott Johnson.[17]

Name Role Home country
Clive Woodward Head coach[18] England England
Bill Beaumont Tour manager[18] England England
Eddie O'Sullivan Assistant coach[18] Ireland Ireland
Ian McGeechan Assistant coach[18] Scotland Scotland
Gareth Jenkins Assistant coach[18] Wales Wales
Andy Robinson Assistant coach[18] England England
Louise Ramsay Team manager[18] England England
Phil Larder Defensive coach[18] England England
Mike Ford Defensive coach[18] England England
Dave Alred Kicking coach[18] England England
Dave Reddin Fitness coach[18] England England
Craig White Fitness coach[18] England England
David McHugh Specialist advisor (referee)[18] Ireland Ireland
Tony Biscombe Video analyst[18] England England
Gavin Scott Video analyst[18] Scotland Scotland
James Robson Head doctor[18] Scotland Scotland
Gary O'Driscoll Doctor[18][19] Ireland Ireland
Phil Pask Physiotherapist[18][20] England England
Stuart Barton Physio/masseur[18][21] Scotland Scotland
Bob Stewart Physio/masseur[18] Scotland Scotland
Richard Wegrzyk Masseur[18] England England
John Feehan Chief executive[18] Ireland Ireland
Richard Smith Legal support[18][22] England England
Louisa Cheetham Media officer[18] United States United States
Alastair Campbell Press relations[18][23] England England
Dave Campbell Chef[18] England England
Dave Tennison Kit technician[18] England England

Matches

The Lions' tour schedule was announced in February 2004, and included 10 matches: three tests and seven tour matches. The tour was scheduled to begin with a match against Bay of Plenty on 4 June 2005, with the test series beginning three weeks later.[24] The tour did not originally include a match against National Provincial Championship winners Auckland, but in September 2004 a match was added between the second and third tests.[25] Another fixture against Argentina was added two weeks later, to be played at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff on 23 May 2005.[26]

Argentina

The Lions played Argentina in a warm-up test match at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff on 23 May. The Pumas were without 25 players who may have made their first-choice team due to club commitments and the Lions rested many of their top players to field a second-string line-up. Tour captain Brian O'Driscoll was rested, so Wales vice-captain Michael Owen took his place.

The Lions looked disjointed, turning the ball over 15 times in open play. Their pack was outplayed; the Pumas shoved them off their own scrum three times. The Lions also conceded five penalties for holding on to the ball while grounded, usually because their support failed to arrive in time. In the meantime, the Pumas played a match that was almost universally called "inspired" by rugby media worldwide. The Pumas led 19–16 at half-time, and could easily have been ahead by more. The main plus for the Lions was the performance of Jonny Wilkinson, making his first appearance against international opposition since the 2003 Rugby World Cup Final; Wilkinson set up the Lions' first try, converted it and kicked six penalties. His last penalty saved the Lions from defeat, salvaging a 25–25 draw in the eighth minute of stoppage time. The match was granted full test status by the IRB in 2006.[27]

FB 15 Ireland Geordan Murphy
RW 14 Ireland Denis Hickie
OC 13 England Ollie Smith
IC 12 Ireland Gordon D'Arcy
LW 11 Wales Shane Williams
FH 10 England Jonny Wilkinson
SH 9 Wales Gareth Cooper
N8 8 Wales Michael Owen (c)
OF 7 England Lewis Moody
BF 6 England Martin Corry
RL 5 England Danny Grewcock
LL 4 Ireland Donncha O'Callaghan
TP 3 Ireland John Hayes
HK 2 Ireland Shane Byrne
LP 1 England Graham Rowntree
Replacements:
HK 16 England Steve Thompson
PR 17 England Julian White
LK 18 England Ben Kay
N8 19 England Lawrence Dallaglio
SH 20 Scotland Chris Cusiter
FH 21 Ireland Ronan O'Gara
WG 22 Ireland Shane Horgan
Coach:
England Sir Clive Woodward
FB 15 Bernardo Stortoni
RW 14 José María Núñez Piossek
OC 13 Lisandro Arbizu
IC 12 Felipe Contepomi (c)
LW 11 Francisco Leonelli
FH 10 Federico Todeschini
SH 9 Nicolás Fernández Miranda
N8 8 Juan Manuel Leguizamón
OF 7 Martín Schusterman
BF 6 Federico Genoud
RL 5 Mariano Sambucetti
LL 4 Pablo Bouza
TP 3 Mauricio Reggiardo
HK 2 Mario Ledesma
LP 1 Federico Méndez
Replacements:
HK 16 Eusebio Guiñazú
PR 17 Lucio de Chazal
LK 18 Manuel Carizza
FL 19 Santiago Sanz
FH 20 Marcelo Bosch
WG 21 Lucas Borges
WG 22 Lucio López Fleming
Coach:
Argentina Marcelo Loffreda

Bay of Plenty Steamers

The first tour match was against the Bay of Plenty Steamers on 4 June in Rotorua. The Lions started the match strongly, with Josh Lewsey scoring a try after two minutes and then a second four minutes later. The Lions were up 17–0 after 11 minutes, but the Steamers recovered for a 17–17 half-time score. The Lions controlled the second half and won 34–20. A significant injury was the fractured ankle suffered by experienced back-rower Lawrence Dallaglio, who had to withdraw from the tour.

Taranaki

Taranaki hosted the Lions at New Plymouth on 8 June. The first half was closely fought in more ways than one, as the Lions' Danny Grewcock and Taranaki's Paul Tito came to blows. The Amber-and-Blacks had a 7–6 lead at half-time, but soon after the break Martin Corry scored a try for the Lions. Shortly afterwards, Taranaki's Andrew Hore was sin-binned for holding the ball, and the Lions took control. Consensus man of the match Charlie Hodgson kicked two penalties during Hore's absence, and the Lions kept their momentum even after Hore returned. Shane Horgan added a try and Geordan Murphy two as the Lions won 36–14.

New Zealand Maori

The Lions forwards are held in a maul by the New Zealand Maori

The match against the New Zealand Maori at Hamilton on 11 June promised to be the most competitive test lead-up, being billed by rugby media as virtually a fourth test. In the first half, the Maori had the better of possession and tackling, but the Lions had the better of the set-pieces, and the half ended 6–6.

Just before the break, Lions prop Andrew Sheridan was sin-binned for punching Maori fly-half Luke McAlister. When the sin-bin period ended, Sheridan was replaced by Gethin Jenkins. A McAlister penalty shortly afterwards, a Leon MacDonald try (converted by McAlister) and then a second McAlister penalty gave the Maori a 19–6 lead. The last 15 minutes were the Lions' best period, rewarded by a Brian O'Driscoll try, which was converted by Stephen Jones. The Lions threatened strongly, but the Maori, inspired by their replacement fly-half Carlos Spencer and stalwart captain Jono Gibbes held on for a 19–13 win – their first ever over the Lions.

Wellington Lions

After the loss to the Maori, the Lions went to Wellington to take on the city's NPC side, the Wellington Lions, on 15 June. The British & Irish Lions team was selected primarily from players in contention for the test team, including Jonny Wilkinson in his first tour match.

The British & Irish Lions had most of the possession and scoring chances, but committed numerous unforced errors when points looked likely. Tries came from Gethin Jenkins and Gareth Thomas, both converted by Wilkinson, who also scored three penalties. The British & Irish Lions' 23–6 win, while seemingly showing their tour was back on track, left almost as many questions as answers. In post-match comments, O'Driscoll said, "The ball was like a bar of soap out there and both sides made a lot of unforced errors." Wellington Lions coach John Plumtree remarked, "The All Blacks would have put 50 or 60 points on us."

Otago

In their first appearance in the South Island, the Lions played Otago on 18 June at Carisbrook in Dunedin. The stadium is known to visiting teams as the "House of Pain", particularly for the Lions, who had lost games to the Otago side on four previous tours.

Otago began strongly and the Lions were penalised four times in the first 11 minutes, Otago converting two. The Lions' stronger scrum play brought them back into the game, and the first half was closely fought, ending 13–13. The Lions clearly had the momentum, as Will Greenwood scored a try, converted by Charlie Hodgson, just before the break.

Otago took a 16–13 lead shortly after half-time, but strong Lions scrum play led to a try from man of the match Ryan Jones, who put himself in contention for a test position. The try and Hodgson's conversion gave the Lions a solid, though far from insurmountable, lead. Otago rallied to 20–19 with a penalty, but the Lions pulled away soon afterwards. A Hodgson penalty and a try from Shane Williams converted by Hodgson took the final margin to 30–19.

Southland Stags

The Southland match at Invercargill on 21 June was the last before the first test. Lions coach Clive Woodward announced that no players in the night's line-up would play in the test.

In the first 15 minutes, the Lions looked formidable as they took an early 10–0 lead over the Stags, keyed by a Gavin Henson try. However, they became disjointed and by half-time had turned over the ball 14 times and were considered lucky to be ahead 10–3 at the break.

The first few minutes of the second half were even worse for the Lions, as Hale T-Pole scored a converted try. Woodward immediately substituted four players to settle down his team. T-Pole made an interception to save a Mark Cueto try, but the Lions kept the pressure on, and Henson scored his second try. The Lions then changed tactics, choosing to kick for territory more often, and were never truly threatened again, winning by 26–16.

21 June 2005
Southland Stags16–26British & Irish Lions
Try: T-Pole
Con: Apanui
Pen: Apanui (3)
ReportTry: Henson (2)
Con: O'Gara (2)
Pen: O'Gara (4)
Rugby Park, Invercargill

First test

Less than two minutes into the first test, the Lions lost their captain Brian O'Driscoll to injury after a joint tackle by New Zealand captain Tana Umaga and hooker Keven Mealamu. At a ruck, they attempted to clear O'Driscoll by each lifting one of his legs before driving him into the ground. O'Driscoll twisted his body as he came down to avoid landing on his head, but that meant most of the force went through his shoulder, which was dislocated, ending his tour.[29] Opinions differed on the incident; the Lions staff and many British and Irish commentators believed that it was an illegal spear tackle, and Lions coach Woodward reported the pair to the IRB's citing commissioner, William Venter. Venter decided, based on the video footage available, not to refer the matter to a disciplinary tribunal. New Zealand commentators largely took the view that the two All Blacks were just clearing out the ruck and had no intention to injure O'Driscoll. Referee Joël Jutge admitted in 2017 that he should have shown at least one red card to Umaga and Mealamu for the tackle.[29]

Eight minutes into the game, Dan Carter opened the scoring for the All Blacks with a penalty. Three minutes later, the Lions suffered a further blow when Paul O'Connell was sin-binned for a professional foul, and Carter kicked the penalty. Already a player short, the Lions then lost Richard Hill to injury. Ali Williams scored the first New Zealand try shortly after O'Connell returned, and the half ended with the Lions down 11–0.

Carter kicked a penalty in the second half, followed by a converted try from Sitiveni Sivivatu to end the All Blacks' scoring, and Jonny Wilkinson kicked a penalty in the 56th minute to provide the Lions with their only points of the night. The 21–3 win was considered by almost every commentator to be even more one-sided than the score indicated. The Lions' sloppy set-piece play included ten losses of their own line-outs.

It was announced after the match that, in addition to O'Driscoll, two more injured Lions were out for the rest of the tour – Hill from the incident during the match, and Tom Shanklin for inflammation from an existing knee injury. Danny Grewcock was also suspended for two months after he was cited for biting All Blacks hooker Keven Mealamu.

FB 15 Leon MacDonald
RW 14 Doug Howlett
OC 13 Tana Umaga (c)
IC 12 Aaron Mauger
LW 11 Sitiveni Sivivatu
FH 10 Dan Carter
SH 9 Justin Marshall
N8 8 Rodney So'oialo
OF 7 Richie McCaw
BF 6 Jerry Collins
RL 5 Ali Williams
LL 4 Chris Jack
TP 3 Carl Hayman
HK 2 Keven Mealamu
LP 1 Tony Woodcock
Replacements:
HK 16 Derren Witcombe
PR 17 Greg Somerville
FL 18 Jono Gibbes
FL 19 Sione Lauaki
SH 20 Byron Kelleher
FB 21 Mils Muliaina
WG 22 Rico Gear
Coach:
New Zealand Graham Henry
FB 15 England Jason Robinson
RW 14 England Josh Lewsey
OC 13 Ireland Brian O'Driscoll (c)
IC 12 England Jonny Wilkinson
LW 11 Wales Gareth Thomas
FH 10 Wales Stephen Jones
SH 9 Wales Dwayne Peel
N8 8 England Martin Corry
OF 7 England Neil Back
BF 6 England Richard Hill
RL 5 England Ben Kay
LL 4 Ireland Paul O'Connell
TP 3 England Julian White
HK 2 Ireland Shane Byrne
LP 1 Wales Gethin Jenkins
Replacements:
HK 16 England Steve Thompson
PR 17 England Graham Rowntree
LK 18 England Danny Grewcock
N8 19 Wales Ryan Jones
SH 20 England Matt Dawson
CE 21 England Will Greenwood
WG 22 Ireland Shane Horgan
Coach:
England Sir Clive Woodward

Manawatu Turbos

The Lions scored their first convincing tour victory in this game at Palmerston North against NPC second division side Manawatu Turbos, winning 109–6. They led 38–6 at half time and scored 71 unanswered points in the second. Welshman Shane Williams scored five tries to help the Lions post their all-time record score in New Zealand, surpassing their 64–5 victory over Marlborough/Nelson 46 years earlier. In addition to Williams' five, the Lions' tries were scored by Ronan O'Gara (2), Mark Cueto (2), Geordan Murphy, Charlie Hodgson, Jason Robinson, Martin Corry, Neil Back, Gareth Cooper, Gordon D'Arcy and Ollie Smith, with Manawatu restricted to two Jonathan Hargreaves penalties. Lock Donncha O'Callaghan and flanker Martyn Williams were substituted at half-time but had impressed enough to secure test selection for the following Saturday. Murphy also impressed at full-back, but it was Shane Williams, with elusive running and awareness, who most thrilled Lions supporters.

Second test

From the high point against Manawatu, the Lions fell to a low in the second test at Wellington Regional Stadium in Wellington on 2 July, losing 48–18 and conceding the highest number of points against a New Zealand team in a test. Woodward selected a radically different test squad from the one that had been embarrassed in Christchurch a week earlier, replacing eleven players. Key to the Lions' hopes of staying in the series was Woodward's decision to add several of the Welsh team that won the Grand Slam in the 2005 Six Nations.

The Lions started strongly, with captain Gareth Thomas scoring a try under the posts and Jonny Wilkinson converting two minutes in. A minute later, Wilkinson hit the post with a penalty attempt, but gathering the rebound the Lions were in a good attacking position when Paul O'Connell was penalised for diving over a ruck. The All Blacks settled down and then scored through two Dan Carter penalties before he set up their first try, racing 50 metres off a turnover before offloading to captain Tana Umaga to score near the posts. Although the rest of the half remained close, the All Blacks went into the break with a 21–13 lead. The second half turned into a showcase for New Zealand in general and Carter in particular. He scored two tries, converted three, kicked two penalties, and constantly kept the Lions on the back foot with his distribution. Flanker Richie McCaw powered his way over for a try after Carter missed a hat trick by a matter of inches. Rugby media were in virtually unanimous agreement that the Lions were greatly improved and that the All Blacks were dominant. Carter's tally of 33 points broke the all-time record for points by an All Black against the Lions.

2 July 2005
19:00 NZST
New Zealand 48–18British & Irish Lions
Try: Carter (2)
McCaw
Sivivatu
Umaga
Con: Carter (4)
Pen: Carter (5)
ReportTry: Easterby
Thomas
Con: Wilkinson
Pen: Wilkinson (2)
Wellington Regional Stadium, Wellington
Attendance: 39,800[31]
Referee: Andrew Cole (Australia)
FB 15 Mils Muliaina
RW 14 Rico Gear
OC 13 Tana Umaga (c)
IC 12 Aaron Mauger
LW 11 Sitiveni Sivivatu
FH 10 Dan Carter
SH 9 Byron Kelleher
N8 8 Rodney So'oialo
OF 7 Richie McCaw
BF 6 Jerry Collins
RL 5 Ali Williams
LL 4 Chris Jack
TP 3 Greg Somerville
HK 2 Keven Mealamu
LP 1 Tony Woodcock
Replacements:
HK 16 Derren Witcombe
PR 17 Campbell Johnstone
FL 18 Jono Gibbes
FL 19 Sione Lauaki
SH 20 Justin Marshall
CE 21 Ma'a Nonu
FB 22 Leon MacDonald
Coach:
New Zealand Graham Henry
FB 15 England Josh Lewsey
RW 14 England Jason Robinson
OC 13 Wales Gareth Thomas (c)
IC 12 Wales Gavin Henson
LW 11 Wales Shane Williams
FH 10 England Jonny Wilkinson
SH 9 Wales Dwayne Peel
N8 8 Wales Ryan Jones
OF 7 England Lewis Moody
BF 6 Ireland Simon Easterby
RL 5 Ireland Donncha O'Callaghan
LL 4 Ireland Paul O'Connell
TP 3 England Julian White
HK 2 England Steve Thompson
LP 1 Wales Gethin Jenkins
Replacements:
HK 16 Ireland Shane Byrne
PR 17 England Graham Rowntree
FL 18 England Martin Corry
FL 19 Wales Martyn Williams
SH 20 England Matt Dawson
FH 21 Wales Stephen Jones
WG 22 Ireland Shane Horgan
Coach:
England Sir Clive Woodward

Auckland

Auckland v Lions

Having lost the test series on the previous Saturday, the midweek Lions came to Eden Park with something to prove. The match was marked by the Lions' inability to find touch and Auckland's willingness to attack. Auckland gave up some guaranteed points from early penalties to take the Lions on in set piece play. Auckland tighthead prop John Afoa was denied a try after a tap and run saw him held up in goal. A series of handling errors throughout the first half let Auckland down and saw the Lions to a 14–3 lead at the half. The second half saw the Lions give away points to a stoic Auckland pack and the scoreline was narrowed to 14–13 Lions lead. A late Ronan O'Gara penalty saw the Lions extend to a four-point winning margin of 17–13. This victory completed a clean sweep of matches for the midweek Lions against host unions throughout New Zealand.

Third test

Following two early penalties by Stephen Jones, the Lions led 6–0 and things looked promising for them. All Black captain Tana Umaga was sin-binned for killing the ball, but even without their captain, the All Blacks managed to score two tries, by Conrad Smith and Ali Williams, both converted by Luke McAlister. The Lions were awarded two more penalties, which Stephen Jones kicked, but just before the break, Umaga scored a try to give the All Blacks a half-time lead of 24–12.

Seven minutes into the second half Umaga scored another try. Soon after, scrum-half Byron Kelleher was replaced by Justin Marshall, who then played his final half-hour of All Black rugby. Another All Black try was thwarted when Jerry Collins was sin-binned for a late tackle. The All Blacks then spent several minutes defending as the Lions pushed towards the line from within ten meters, and after a long struggle Lewis Moody managed to score, making it 31–19. Both sides made errors that cost them tries. Sitiveni Sivivatu had two very close calls but it was Rico Gear who followed his own deep kick to toe the ball over the line and score a fine individual try. McAlister converted, giving him a 100 percent kicking rate, to make the full-time score 38–19.

FB 15 Mils Muliaina
RW 14 Rico Gear
OC 13 Conrad Smith
IC 12 Tana Umaga (c)
LW 11 Sitiveni Sivivatu
FH 10 Luke McAlister
SH 9 Byron Kelleher
N8 8 Sione Lauaki
OF 7 Rodney So'oialo
BF 6 Jerry Collins
RL 5 Ali Williams
LL 4 Chris Jack
TP 3 Greg Somerville
HK 2 Keven Mealamu
LP 1 Tony Woodcock
Replacements:
HK 16 Derren Witcombe
PR 17 Campbell Johnstone
LK 18 James Ryan
FL 19 Marty Holah
SH 20 Justin Marshall
FH 21 Nick Evans
WG 22 Doug Howlett
Coach:
New Zealand Graham Henry
FB 15 Ireland Geordan Murphy
RW 14 England Mark Cueto
OC 13 England Will Greenwood
IC 12 Wales Gareth Thomas (c)
LW 11 England Josh Lewsey
FH 10 Wales Stephen Jones
SH 9 Wales Dwayne Peel
N8 8 Wales Ryan Jones
OF 7 England Lewis Moody
BF 6 Ireland Simon Easterby
RL 5 Ireland Paul O'Connell
LL 4 Ireland Donncha O'Callaghan
TP 3 England Julian White
HK 2 Ireland Shane Byrne
LP 1 Wales Gethin Jenkins
Replacements:
HK 16 Scotland Gordon Bulloch
PR 17 England Graham Rowntree
FL 18 England Martin Corry
FL 19 Wales Martyn Williams
SH 20 England Matt Dawson
FH 21 Ireland Ronan O'Gara
WG 22 Ireland Shane Horgan
Coach:
England Sir Clive Woodward

Lions anthem

Sir Clive Woodward commissioned an anthem, The Power of Four, specially for the 2005 tour. Neil Myers composed the tune, and the piece was performed for the first time in public by Welsh opera singer Katherine Jenkins before the Lions' match against Argentina at the Millennium Stadium in 2005. It was played before all games on the tour, but was not used in the Lions tour to South Africa in 2009.

References

  1. ^ Davies, Sean (20 June 2008). "2005 Lions History". BBC News. Retrieved 18 June 2013.
  2. ^ "Wilkinson left out of Lions squad". BBC Sport. 11 April 2005. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
  3. ^ "Robinson set to miss three games". BBC Sport. 26 May 2005. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
  4. ^ "Owen given Lions paternity leave". BBC Sport. 14 April 2005. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
  5. ^ Kitson, Robert (18 May 2005). "Lions call on Cueto after Balshaw blow". The Guardian. Guardian News & Media. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
  6. ^ Kitson, Robert (3 June 2005). "Shaw flies out after O'Kelly forced home". The Guardian. Guardian News & Media. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
  7. ^ Butler, Eddie (5 June 2005). "Lions rocked by Dallaglio injury". The Guardian. Guardian News & Media. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
  8. ^ Kitson, Robert (11 June 2005). "Jones called in as cover for troubled Taylor". The Guardian. Guardian News & Media. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
  9. ^ "Cockbain replaces banned Grewcock". BBC Sport. 26 June 2005. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
  10. ^ "Scotland's White gets Lions call". BBC Sport. 27 June 2005. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
  11. ^ "Woodward linked with Lions role". BBC Sport. 19 December 2003. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  12. ^ "Woodward quits England". BBC Sport. 3 September 2004. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  13. ^ "Woodward clear for Lions". BBC Sport. 7 September 2004. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  14. ^ "Woodward reveals coaching squad". BBC Sport. 21 October 2004. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  15. ^ "Campbell to be Lions consultant". BBC Sport. 6 December 2004. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  16. ^ "Ruddock opens door for Lions role". BBC Sport. 11 April 2005. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
  17. ^ "Wales coach Johnson set for Lions". BBC Sport. 23 May 2005. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa www.lions-tour.com. "The 2005 British & Irish Lions Management Team". Archived from the original on 7 June 2011. Retrieved 23 March 2009.
  19. ^ "Openshaw family GP who tended to Lions – News – North and East Manchester Advertiser". Archived from the original on 5 September 2012. Retrieved 23 March 2009.
  20. ^ "Witty Pask and Buckingham – Northampton based Physiotherapists for Individuals, World Class Sport and Industry". Archived from the original on 28 February 2009. Retrieved 23 March 2009.
  21. ^ "Stuart Barton Physiotherapy". Archived from the original on 15 July 2010. Retrieved 23 March 2009.
  22. ^ judy. "Microsoft Word – Richard Smith QC – FINAL – July 08 – Formatted" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 March 2009. Retrieved 23 March 2009.
  23. ^ "Alastair Campbell". Archived from the original on 18 April 2009. Retrieved 23 March 2009.
  24. ^ "Lions schedule announced". BBC Sport. 11 February 2004. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  25. ^ "Lions add Auckland game". BBC Sport. 7 September 2004. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  26. ^ "Lions face Pumas in Cardiff". BBC Sport. 23 September 2004. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  27. ^ Jones, Stephen; English, Tom; Cain, Nick; Barnes, David (2013). Behind the Lions: Playing Rugby for the British & Irish Lions (1st ed.). ISBN 9780857905291. Retrieved 3 July 2017.
  28. ^ "The British & Irish Lions : Match centre". Archived from the original on 7 June 2011. Retrieved 28 June 2009.
  29. ^ a b Lovett, Samuel (23 June 2017). "New Zealand pair should have been punished for Brian O'Driscoll spear tackle, admits referee Joel Jutge". The Independent. Archived from the original on 1 May 2022. Retrieved 6 May 2021.
  30. ^ "New Zealand All Blacks Player Profiles, Match Details and Statistics". Stats.allblacks.com. Retrieved 18 June 2013.
  31. ^ "New Zealand All Blacks Player Profiles, Match Details and Statistics". Stats.allblacks.com. Retrieved 18 June 2013.
  32. ^ "New Zealand All Blacks Player Profiles, Match Details and Statistics". Stats.allblacks.com. Retrieved 18 June 2013.

External links

This page was last edited on 31 October 2023, at 16:45
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.