CHEETAHS FRIGHTEN THE LIONS; Tourists survive after big scare.Byline: ANDREW BALDOCK CHEETAHS 24 BRITISH LIONS 26 s in Bloemfontein THE British and Irish Lions
The British and Irish Lions (until 2001 known as the British Isles Rugby Union Team or more colloquially the British Lions flew to Durban relieved their 100% South Africa South Africa, Afrikaans Suid-Afrika, officially Republic of South Africa, republic (2005 est. pop. 44,344,000), 471,442 sq mi (1,221,037 sq km), S Africa. tour record remains intact. The tourists were given a major fright by Super 14 strugglers the Cheetahs, before escaping from Vodacom Park with a 26-24 success. First-half tries by Stephen Ferris Stephen Ferris is the name of:
"We got ourselves into a good position and didn't develop it as we could have done," admitted Lions head coach Ian McGeechan Ian McGeechan (born on October 30 1946) is a highly successful former rugby union footballer and coach. His nickname is "Geech". Playing career He played for Headingley and made his debut for Scotland in 1972. He won thirty-two caps, playing at fly-half and centre. . "The breakdowns became a bit of a lottery and took a lot of momentum out of the game. "We knew the games were going to get increasingly tougher, and I think it was a good challenge. "You can never under-estimate how important a win is to the squad. "The start was very good, but it became stop-start after that, which disappointed us. I don't think the ball in play time was very high." McGeechan praised the contribution of Wales fly-half James Hook James Hook may refer to:
Aggressive He added: "In all three games our goalkickers have been significant. "I thought the half-backs played well and gave us a chance to play in the right areas." Lions skipper Paul O'Connell was disappointed after his team took their collective foot off the pedal - with the breakdown again a problem area for the tourists. "Maybe we stopped putting as many numbers at the breakdown - you need numbers there, to be low and aggressive, and we didn't do that," he said. "Turning the ball over killed us. They can take momentum out of your team and give the other team belief. "We started off very well. After Wednesday's game (when the Lions beat the Golden Lions 74-10), people perhaps thought it was going to be more of the same, but the Cheetahs went up a gear. "I am disappointed for the guys. We've had a great buzz, and the guys were very enthusiastic, but for nine of the guys it was their first game in a while, so to get away with the win was important. "Decisions will go against you in a rugby game. "We needed to be a bit more clever than we were when Stephen was in the bin." Cheetahs coach, the former London Irish
London Irish (also known as The Exiles) are an English rugby union club who are based in Sunbury, Surrey (16 miles from London) where they train. hooker Naka Drotske, was proud of his team's display. "The games in the Super 14 we did well in this season were the games when we were in the opposition's faces, like against the Sharks and Crusaders," he said. "The way to play against the Lions is to be in their faces and not to allow them momentum. The guys were really up for it. Being down 20-0 I didn't think we could come back, to be honest. "We gave away two soft tries, especially the first one, but we missed three or four penalties as well. "That was our problem in the Super 14. At crucial times, we gave away soft tries. "I thought our three loose forwards were superb. We had a mindset mind·set or mind-set n. 1. A fixed mental attitude or disposition that predetermines a person's responses to and interpretations of situations. 2. An inclination or a habit. of attacking the Lions at the breakdown, and I thought it went well. "The last few minutes was about playing through the phases. It's difficult to comment on the late penalty that went against us - we just couldn't get momentum to move a bit closer." And Cheetahs skipper Hendro Scholtz added: "We wanted to target the breakdown, and not allow them much frontfoot ball." Unlike the Golden Lions in Johannesburg three days earlier, Cheetahs refused to take a mauling. The Lions eased into cruise control during a one-sided opening quarter after tries by Ferris and Earls helped open up a 17-0 lead. Cheetahs, though, struck twice in seven first-half minutes after Ferris was sinbinned by English referee Wayne Barnes Please try to keep recent events in historical perspective. Centre Uys then struck with an 80-metre interception try eight minutes from time that substitute Louis Strydom converted, setting up the prospect of a famous home win. Lions wing Shane Williams This article is about the Welsh rugby player. For the American actress, see Shanésia Davis-Williams. Shane Mark Williams (born 26 February 1977 in Swansea) is a Welsh rugby union footballer who plays as a winger for the Ospreys club and Wales but who can could only look on after Uys collected his intended pass to fly-half James Hook - but there were more scares for the Lions to survive before full-time. Strydom was agonisingly wide with a drop-goal attempt which would have sealed the deal, then the Cheetahs were unable to prosper from an attacking scrum after Lions full-back Lee Byrne uncharacteristically spilled a high ball. Ultimately, the Lions were indebted to Wales star Hook's precision goal-kicking to maintain their unbeaten record. Hook, who looks set to mount a serious challenge for the Test team number 10 shirt, booted four penalties and two conversions - an immaculate return which kept Cheetahs at bay. CHEETAHS: Tries: Dumas, Du Preez, Uys; Cons: Potgieter 2, Strydom; Pen: Potgieter. BRITISH AND IRISH LIONS: Tries: Ferris, Earls; Cons: Hook 2; Pens: Hook 3.. CAPTION(S): GOING DOWN: Lions' Paul O'Connell, left, is tackled by Cheetah's WP Nel PULLING POWER: Kabamba Floors tackles Andy Powell MATCH-WINNER: British and Irish Lions fly-half James Hook kicks a conversion in his 16-point haul at Bloemfontein |
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