
Lions handed wake-up call as Argentina hang on to edge thrilling win in Dublin
The 2025 British and Irish Lions tour is up and running but here was a reminder that not everything can be minutely choreographed. This was anything but a comfortable evening for the coaches and players who were given a serious work-out prior to climbing on board the plane to Perth this weekend and embarking on their eagerly awaited Australian tour.
Should they win the Test series 3-0, of course, this pre-departure wake-up call will rate as only a minor footnote in the great scheme of things. The Wallabies, nevertheless, will have taken due note of the positive manner with which Argentina approached the contest. The Pumas, despite the absence of some first-choice players, led by 11 points at half-time and battled heroically right to the end.
Maybe, one day, the Lions will find it in their hearts – and wallets – to agree to a full tour of South America which, on this evidence, would be a guaranteed crowd pleaser. As for the Lions, playing in Ireland for the first time, it is too early to draw hard and fast individual conclusions but Tadhg Beirne and Sione Tuipulotu both had influential games and the two starting props Ellis Genge and Finlay Bealham initially gave their opposite numbers a notably tough time in the set scrums.
It was also a more than decent occasion which further underlined the power of one of rugby's most evocative brands. Even Munster fans would have been impressed by the sea of red jerseys all around the Aviva Stadium and, despite some punchy ticket prices, the attendance was a 51,700 sellout.
Everyone had been keenly aware all week that pre-departure games can be a mixed blessing. Four years ago, Alun Wyn Jones was ruled out of the early stages of the tour after damaging a shoulder against Japan at Murrayfield and the unsettling possibility of being sidelined before the plane south has left the runway inevitably hung in the humid evening air.
Admittedly it was nowhere near as sultry as it was in Hong Kong in 2013 when Warren Gatland's Lions were greeted by almost unplayable conditions, with temperatures of 31C and humidity nudging 90%. The other big difference was the calibre of the opposition. The Pumas were not absolutely at full strength but whenever Pablo Matera, Juan Martín González and Julián Montoya take the field they are never less than fully committed.
It required the Lions to be 'on it' from the outset because the pace of the game was nothing like a gentle friendly. Luke Cowan-Dickie came close to an opening try only to lose control of the ball in the act of scoring and, after Tomas Albornoz and Fin Smith had swapped penalties apiece, it was the Pumas who seized the initiative thanks to a nicely taken 11th-minute try by their speedy left wing Ignacio Mendy.
The Lions also had a second potential score by Tuipulotu correctly ruled out for a prior knock-on by Alex Mitchell but their cohesion was steadily improving, helped by the established England half-back pairing of Mitchell and Fin Smith. Both were involved along with Marcus Smith in keeping a promising move alive before the physical Bundee Aki took the most direct available route to the try-line.
Also noticeable was the collective sense of purpose; no Lions team can afford to be a team full of look-at-me individuals. These are clearly early days but Tuipulotu looks to be the kind of player any centre would love to play alongside and the calmly assured Fin Smith also looked at ease in the same red jersey worn by his grandfather, Tom Elliot, on the 1955 tour to South Africa.
The scrum was also a positive area, in contrast to an initially misfiring lineout. There was also no doubting the heft of some of the Lions' defensive tackling, an area in which this squad have the potential to excel, but the odd little error was undermining their prospects. On the stroke of half-time Duhan van der Merwe, desperate to impress, lost the ball 15 metres from the line and the Pumas took gleeful advantage, Santiago Carreras releasing Albornoz for a swallow dive score at the other end.
Sign up to The Breakdown
The latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewed
after newsletter promotion
The 21-10 interval scoreline demanded a swift response, which duly materialised within five minutes of the restart. The Lions opted to trust their driving maul with the line in sight and a concerted surge gave the opposing pack little option but to drag it down, costing them a penalty try and 10 minutes in the sin bin for Mayco Vivas.
The raft of Lions subs also brought fresh energy and, soon enough, they were back ahead. Genge came charging through the middle in proper rhino fashion and, eventually, Beirne added the finishing gloss.
The Pumas, though, also found a second wind and another daring counterattack from deep in their own half yielded their third try of the night courtesy of the pacy Santiago Cordero.
If the Australian leg of the tour is equally full of thrills and spills, the next few weeks will be excellent viewing.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
'Nearly a dream', Argentina's Contepomi basks in unique Lions win
DUBLIN, June 20 (Reuters) - Argentina coach Felipe Contepomi knew just how special and potentially unique Friday's victory over the British and Irish Lions was, having gone agonisingly close as a player two decades ago. Contepomi was captain when the sides last met before the Lions' 2005 tour of New Zealand, when the Pumas were a Johnny Wilkinson stoppage time penalty away from a first ever victory in the fixture. That game ended in a 25-25 draw, and Friday's contest was just Argentina's second shot at the Lions in almost a century. Their first six meetings were played during tours of Argentina when the Lions did not limit their itinerary to New Zealand, South Africa and Australia. Contepomi said they could not be sure when they would get the opportunity again. "It's kind of a one-off. It's an invitation game and the last time, it was 20 years ago, and we were just there and we couldn't beat them," Contepomi told a press conference. "Coming here 20 years later I think it's incredible. We don't know if we'll ever again be invited or not to play and definitely for everyone who's been involved this week it will be memorable." "It is special. I know how special it is for an Irish, a Scottish, a Welsh or an English player to be a Lion, and for us to play against the best of the best in these islands, it's nearly a dream." The former Argentina flyhalf, who knows British and Irish rugby well, having spent six seasons with Leinster and worked as a doctor during his time in Ireland, said he expected Australia to face a far more ferocious set of Lions next month. "We took a bit of an opportunity because I know they'll be much better in one month's time when they play Australia. They'll be an awesome team, because they have so much quality in there," he said.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
'Gutted' West Coast Eagles stalwart Jeremy McGovern gets shocking news that has left fans reeling
A 'gutted' Jeremy McGovern will leave the AFL as a West Coast great after being forced into premature retirement through concussion. McGovern announced his 197-game career was over on Friday, with the decision made for the key defender by the AFL's concussion panel. The 2018 premiership player suffered a head knock in the Eagles' round-eight fixture against Melbourne and was referred to the panel after failing to recover following the mandatory 12-day period. Lauded as the intercept king, the 33-year-old etched himself into West Coast history with his famous mark in their 2018 grand final win. Overcoming internal bleeding in the lead-up to the eventual five-point victory, McGovern's quality shone through when he ditched his man - Collingwood star Jordan De Goey - to intercept Adam Treloar's kick inside-50. The move kickstarted the chain that ended in Dom Sheed's match-winning goal. The Eagles star helped lead the side to the 2018 grand final and AFL premiership before the club hit dark days He finished that season with 77 intercept marks, the most in 2018. 'It's been an absolute honour to pull on the West Coast jumper for the past 15 years and it's something that I will forever be grateful for,' McGovern said in a club statement. 'As much as this isn't the way I would have liked to go out, I respect the decision. 'I'm gutted I don't get to pull the jumper on and run out one more time, but sometimes this is the way the game goes.' McGovern arrived at the Eagles from North Albany with pick No.44 in the 2010 rookie draft. But it wasn't until mid-way through the 2014 season, at age 22, that McGovern earned his AFL debut under former coach Adam Simpson. The lynchpin of the Eagles defence, McGovern established himself in 2015 and earned four-straight All-Australian nods from 2016 to 2019. He ends his career as the club's reigning John Worsfold medallist and as a five-time All-Australian, having collected another blazer in 2024. McGovern and former coach Adam Simpson share a moment in the club's match against Collingwood in 2022 'To the club, I can't explain how much you have given me over my time here, and I can't thank you enough for drafting a fat kid from Albany and giving him a crack,' McGovern said. 'I've always loved the game and winning a premiership is every kid's dream, but the lifelong friendships and relationships you build through footy mean more to me than anything. 'I will forever be indebted to West Coast, and I will always bleed blue and gold.' McGovern's exit follows that of former West Coast teammate Luke Edwards, who stepped away from the game last October to focus on his recovery from multiple concussions. Collingwood duo Nathan Murphy and Josh Carmichael, Melbourne premiership player Angus Brayshaw and Western Bulldogs draftee Aiden O'Driscoll also had their careers cut short in 2024 because of concussion.


Reuters
2 hours ago
- Reuters
'No excuses' says Lions coach Farrell after Argentina loss
DUBLIN, June 20 (Reuters) - Coach Andy Farrell had hoped for a tough game against Argentina before the British and Irish Lions boarded their flight for Australia and said his still gelling squad had no excuses after getting more than they bargained for in a 28-24 defeat. "We made it a tough game," a forthright Farrell said when asked if he got the kind of stern test he wanted and that the group's limited time together was no kind of mitigating factor. "I wouldn't give that excuse. We need to be better than that. They're Lions players." While Farrell said he was pleased with the Lions' aggressive scrummaging, the list of areas to improve was long: a "clunky" attack, breakdown, misfiring lineout, kicking game, throwing balls blindly away and battles in the air and on the ground. "It's too much, it's too much when it all comes together... The whole story of the game is that we compounded too many errors and in the end we weren't able to put the pace on the game that we wanted to because of that," Farrell said. "We need to be honest because if we're not honest, how do we gain trust with each other so we have to say it as it is. There were certain things that we said we were going to do and we need to own that." "Losing hurts, especially in this jersey so we need to find the solutions pretty quickly." Farrell had said he expected the Lions to have a fully fit squad in the next week with Jamison Gibson-Park, Hugo Keenan and Huw Jones working their way back to fitness, and at least appeared to come away unscathed on Friday. "Health wise we seem to have come away okay," he said. Centre Bundee Aki, one of the Lions' try scorers who said he was disappointed in his own performance and not connecting better with new centre partner Sione Tuipulotu, said Farrell had been just as forthright in the changing room. "He gives it to us straight, there's no mucking around and we're old enough to take it on the chin. Faz (Farrell) set out a challenge for us to win every game and we've just got to learn quickly," the Irish number 12 said. "You can feel the frustration of the boys in the changing room. (But) that's the great thing about rugby, there's always another couple of days to be able to rectify what was wrong so I'm sure we'll bounce back quickly as a group."