
Lions tour player-by-player ratings: How the Irish players rated
From a debilitating 12-day stomach bug which led to a delayed and off-colour Lions debut in game four against the Waratahs, Keenan was more like his old self against the AUNZ XV. Although brilliantly beaten in the air by Max Jorgensen for the latter's try in the first Test, Keenan performed to his usually consistency in the series and, of course, provided the moment of the tour in Melbourne.
(First tour, 5 games, 365 mins, 1 try) Rating: 8
Blair Kinghorn
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Being part of Toulouse's bouclier de brennus win delayed his tour until game four against the Waratahs, and he then suffered a knee injury against the Brumbies. But Kinghorn showed why Andy Farrell was prepared to wait and give him time to recover, with his strong carrying off the bench key in the second Test comeback.
(First tour, 5 games, 284 minutes). Rating: 7
Tommy Freeman
A brave, strong, elusive runner, he looked in prime form against Argentina and like he was going to tear it up when scoring twice against the Reds. But although he started all three Tests he was never quite involved enough nor did he scale the heights expected of him.
(First tour, 6 games, 428 minutes, 2 tries) Rating: 7
Mack Hansen
Hansen did play in four games in his homeland after a cameo against Argentina, and was the star attraction in Canberra when visiting his family and playing against the Brumbies. But after a typically inventive, hard-working display in the 48-0 win over AUNZ XV in Adelaide, a foot injury sidelined him for the series.
(First tour, 5 games, 277 mins) Rating: 7
Jamie Osborne
A late call-up as outside backs cover, the 23-year-old acquitted himself more than adequately against the Pasifika XV when scoring two tries, one from centre and the other on the wing. His versatility ensured he stayed as cover and for training, and the experience can only benefit him and Ireland come next year's trek to Oz and RWC 2027.
(First tour, 1 game, 80 mins, 2 tries) Rating: 6
Huw Jones
The knee injury which plagued his season delayed his try-scoring Lions debut until the third game against the Reds. Backed that up with a well-taken brace against the Waratahs and ultimately started all three Tests, scoring sharply in the second. He gave the Lions some real attacking impetus, while impressive and articulate off the pitch.
(First tour, 7 games, 455 minutes, 4 tries) Rating: 8
Lions' Garry Ringrose (centre) carries the ball forward during the Qatar Airways Lions Tour 2025 match at GIO Stadium Canberra, Australia. Photograph: Robbie Stephenson/PA Wire
Garry Ringrose
Probably the biggest hard luck story of all. Finally named in his first tour, he scored on his debut against the Force, again against the Reds and added a cracker against the Brumbies before self-diagnosing concussion symptoms the day after Pasifika XV. Picked for his Test debut in Melbourne, those symptoms returned after the Thursday training. Gets bonus point for his selfless example.
(First tour, 4 games, 212 minutes. 3 tries. Rating: 8
Bundee Aki
He remains a huge fans favourite and is now a two-time Lion and significant contributor to a series win, who provided the Lions with a rare level of physicality. On foot of
becoming a father for the fifth time earlier that day
, he made a big impact off the bench in the first Test, saving a try, and made a huge break in the build-up to the match-winning try in second Test. His third wasn't the best but he's a true winner, who truly loves winning.
(Second tour, 6 games, 387 mins, 1 try) Rating: 8
Sione Tuipulotu
Scored against the Invitational XV and in the first Test. So it must have disappointed him hugely that his tour involvement ended in his home city of Melbourne when Aki was chosen ahead of him for the second Test and then retained for the third. But Tuipulotu seemed to wear it well and had a good tour.
(First tour, 5 games, 378 minutes, 2 tries) Rating: 7
Owen Farrell
After a late, but merited, call-up for a fourth tour, he looked rejuvenated and like he had a ball too. There were a couple of lovely try assists as captain for the first time against the Pasifika, the left-footed chip for Osborne and the dummy and pass for van der Merwe. Then brought his experience and smashed rucks in the second Test comeback before a 23rd Lions appearance in the finale.
(Fourth tour, 4 games, 172 minutes) Rating: 7
James Lowe
His finishing wasn't at his best, otherwise would have scored more than one try, and Kinghorn deserved call-up for third Test. But Lowe was much better than generally perceived. Good in the air, strong in contact, and still had X-factor. Offloaded 11 times and also had three try assists which should have been four.
(First tour, 4 games, 284 mins, 1 try) Rating: 7
Duhan van der Merwe (Scotland)
Another tour that panned out largely as expected for the South African-born Scot. There was no doubting his finishing ability, even if some of his five tries were walk-ins, and some of his strong, elusive carrying was excellent, but defensive and footballing limitations were exposed.
(Second tour, 5 games, 329 minutes, 5 tries). Rating: 5
Finn Russell kicks the ball under pressure from Nic White. Photograph: David Rogers/Getty
Finn Russell
Like many 10s before him, the gifted Scot has added shrewder kicking and man management to his game, and is playing his best rugby in his 30s. Carried his confidence from guiding Bath to two trophies into his third tour. Was superb in first Test and though his goal-kicking was awry in the second, his calmness was key in engineering that comeback. Tackled too.
(Third tour, 6 games, 419 minutes, 46 points) Rating: 9
Fin Smith
The 23-year-old never threw down the challenge expected of him, his lack of experience showing in comparison to Fin Russell, while the versatility of Marcus Smith and Owen Farrell meant he missed out on the Tests. Still, he should benefit from this tour. Defended well and had three try assists.
(First tour, 5 games, 291 minutes. Points: 21). Rating: 6
Marcus Smith
His ability to play fullback justified his selection but after starting the pre-tour game against Argentina at 15, his subsequent six appearances were all off the bench, including the first Test. Some of his running and passing was good, and there were also two try assists, but at 26 his career seems to be at something of a crossroads.
(Second tour, 7 games, 225 minutes, 1 try, 16 points) Rating: 6
Jamison Gibson‑Park of the British and Irish Lions kicks the ball against Australia. Photograph: Matt King/Getty
Jamison Gibson-Park
Few players drew more admiration from the Ronan O'Gara-Dan Biggar double act than impish, indefatigable Gibson-Park. His capacity to explore the blindside, or spring off the base – invariably picking the right option – remained undimmed and his box kicking was on the money and hung for an age. The heartbeat of the Test team.
(First tour, 5 games, 347 mins) Rating: 9
Alex Mitchell
Nowhere were the demarcation lines clearer than at 9. Mitchell would have played in every game had he not remained on the bench for 80 minutes against the Pasifika XV and in the second Test. Furthermore after starting against Argentina he wore 9 only once in Australia, against the Waratahs.
(First tour, 8 games, 211 minutes) Rating: 7
Ben White
A late call-up for the unfortunate Tomos Williams, who tore his hamstring in the act of scoring his second try against the Force, White went the full in impressive outings against the AUNZ XV, scoring a sharply taken try, and against the Pasifika XV.
(First tour, 3 games, 169 minutes, 1 try). Rating: 6
Andrew Porter
As ever, he put in a typically big shift over the course of the tour, if having to adapt to an unusual impact role in four of his six games. Still, after injury denied him four years ago, Porter deservedly reaped his rewards on this tour, the high point being the starting loosehead in a dominant Lions scrum in the second Test.
(First tour, 6 games, 242 mins, 1 try) Rating: 8
Ellis Genge
Set the tone for his tour with that huge rumble against the Pumas and remained a strong carrying and scrummaging force for the remainder of the tour. A little unlucky to drop to the bench for the second Test, he responded by making a significant impact in that comeback.
(First tour, 7 games, 278 minutes) Rating: 7
Pierre Schoeman
A popular squad man and the Lions poet in residence. The South African-born loosehead started four of the tour wins against the Force, the Waratahs, the AUNZ XV and the Pasifika XV, thus making it a solid dirt-tracker's tour, which was more or less what was expected of him.
(First tour, 5 games, 271 minutes) Rating: 5
Dan Sheehan
Confirmed his world-class status in taking to Lions touring like a duck to water. His lineout throwing was superb until Nick Frost and co worked out the Lions' calling by the third Test, and his tackling, carrying and finishing, whether close-in or on the edges, are of a different level – witness 17 tries in 20 games over a season that started in January!
(First tour, 6 games, 349 mins, 6 tries) Rating: 8
Ronan Kelleher
Must have been a slightly testing tour for Kelleher given all his appearances, bar his strong performance against the Reds, were off the bench. Still, it must have been a hell of a lot better than just being brought along as a training extra for a tour behind closed doors. Defended superbly, as ever, and his yellow card in the third Test was for the sins of the team.
(First tour, 8 games, 207 minutes, 1 try) Rating: 7
Luke Cowan-Dickie
His Test hopes receded after the opening night against Argentina, and he was restricted to just three more tour appearances and two more starts before a head knock before half-time against the AUNZ XV effectively ended his tour.
(Second tour, 4 games, 165 minutes) Rating: 6
Jamie George
Called up the week before the first Test as cover for Cowan-Dickie while touring with England in Argentina, the 34-year-old hooker thus made his third tour to lend his experience to the cause. Played 74 minutes against the Pasifika XV which does again underline the value of at least one midweek game during the series.
(Third tour, 1 game, 74 minutes). Rating: 6
Tadhg Furlong of the Lions runs with the ball during the second Test. Photograph: David Rogers/Getty
Tadhg Furlong
Something about the Lions jersey brings out the best in him. Had little form or game time this season but Andy Farrell appreciates what a Test match animal he is. Knowing this was probably his last Lions tour, Furlong rose to the challenge and, sharpened by four tour outings, delivered in the series with his amalgam of scrum power, physicality and deft handling. A contender for player of the series in his third tour.
(Third tour, 7 games, 328 minutes) Rating: 9
Will Stuart
Ultimately he made a good impact in the second Test off the bench, including one big carry, and scored in the third, and generally he tackled well and worked hard. That said, he made little impression on the ball with just 22 carries and three passes in his seven games in what was a low-key tour.
(First tour, 7 games, 221 minutes, 1 try) Rating: 7
Finlay Bealham
Added to his increasingly impressive, late developing CV when called up as a late replacement for the unlucky Xander Ferguson and more than justified it with solid scrummaging and defending in three starts, notably against Argentina, but had limited impact with the ball and form faded. Still no doubt he remained a positive and good-humoured tourist, which is important as not all in his position have done.
(First tour, 5 games, 222 minutes). Rating: 5
Thomas Clarkson
His call-up capped a breakthrough season for the 25-year-old. Scrummed well in his half-hour off the bench and made eight tackles, missing none. A skilful tighthead, he and Ireland should only benefit next summer and at RWC 2027
(First tour, 1 game, 29 mins) Rating: 6
Maro Itoje
Looked to be struggling before being hauled off against the Pumas, although then played strongly in his try-scoring performance against the Reds. Was part of his pack's dominant first half in the first Test and most impressive of all was responding to an undistinguished first period in the second with perhaps his best half of all in the comeback. His presence was sorely missed when forced off last Saturday. An ever-present in three successive series and a winning Lions captain. End of.
(Third tour, 6 games, 419 minutes, 1 try) Rating: 8
Joe McCarthy
It says much about his Lions debut alongside Maro Itoje against the Force that he looked nailed on from that game to be the captain's first Test starting partner from the battalion of locks. Was good too until his Test series was cut cruelly cut short 45 minutes in. Might have reduced Will Skelton's influence in the second and third Tests. At 24, should have more tours.
(First tour, 4 games, 209 mins) Rating: 7
James Ryan
A slow burner of a tour, Ryan looked like he might be a forgotten man until a strong performance against the Pasifika earned him a call-up to the second Test bench. Put himself about with a big 25-minute shift off the bench on both sides of the ball and earned his start in the third Test until his nasty looking head knock.
(First tour, 6 games, 264 mins) Rating: 7
Ollie Chessum
A solidly consistent performer, the high point of which was his try-scoring display against the Brumbies at blindside, and which also earned him a place in the Test squad, although he struggled against the Will Skelton-Nick Frost combination when starting the second Test.
(First tour, 6 games, 314 minutes, 1 try) Rating: 6
Scott Cummings
Possibly the outside bet of all the locks to make the Tests, his chances suffered a setback with a poor outing in his first start against the Force, but earned the respect of many with much improved displays against the Waratahs and Pasifika XV.
(First tour, 5 games, 239 minutes, 1 try) Rating: 6
Lions' Tadhg Beirne and Jamie George. Photograph: James Crombie/Inpho
Tadhg Beirne
What a rugby player. Had looked a little weary in the warm-ups but, as sure as night followed day, and despite the doubters, he delivered in spades come the Test series, up to and including last Saturday's losing cause. Lineout work, skill on the ball, jackals, finishing, uber efficient tackling, with 83 in total and just eight missed. Hard to dispute player of the series, in which he played every minute.
(Second tour, 7 games, 507 minutes, 2 tries) Rating: 9
Tom Curry
A significant contributor to a series win in his second tour, Curry more than vindicated his selection for the first Test with a huge 57 minutes when his early tackle on James Slipper drew a line in the sand and he backed it up with another try-scoring 55-minute effort in the second. There were other big carries, turnovers, teak tough tackles and a couple of try assists too.
(Second tour, 6 games, 392 minutes, 2 tries) Rating: 7
Jack Conan
Underlined how blessed Irish rugby is at number eight by starting every Test for the second series running. Consistently good and especially good in the first Test, Conan's workrate on both sides of the ball never wavered – witness 90 tackles out of 100 and 60 carries, and the floated pass to Tom Curry was the pick of three try assists. A machine and invaluable one too.
(Second tour, 6 games, 414 minutes) Rating: 8
Ben Earl
Probably needed a huge game against Argentina at number eight given the presence and experience of Conan as a more authentic player in that role, and especially bearing in mind the surfeit of opensides. There were some trademark carries in that game and throughout, notably against the AUNZ XV and in the third Test.
(First tour, 7 games, 305 minutes, tries) Rating: 6
Jac Morgan
Kept the Welsh flag flying for their travelling thousands after the early loss of Tomos Williams and remained consistently good on the ball, over the ball – winning nine turnovers – and opposing the ball, making 72 tackles and missing just four. And, of course, there was that clear out, which also typified his impact when called up for the second Test.
(First tour, 7 games, 312 minutes, 2 tries) Rating: 7
Josh van der Flier
Played plenty of minutes yet will come home disappointed to miss out on the series in what will likely be his one Lions tour. Played well against the Force, and statistically was the best openside leading into the series. Yet signs looked ominous after an undistinguished hour against the Brumbies, and again when Jac Morgan was taken off ahead of him against the Pasifika. More than a little unlucky.
(First tour, 5 games, 267 minutes). Rating: 6
Henry Pollock
Perhaps didn't quite fulfil the promise generated by his blistering end-of-season form although played well off the bench against the Pumas and his best performance of the tour against the Force. Still, it was worth the punt. He's a huge talent and will assuredly tour again more than once if he stay fit and healthy.
(First tour, 5 games, 285 minutes). Rating: 6

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The 42
37 minutes ago
- The 42
Australian World Cup captain retires from rugby after Lions tour
AUSTRALIAN HOOKER DAVE Porecki has retired from professional rugby with immediate effect. The 32-year-old, who travelled an unconventional path to the international stage, captained his country at the 2023 Rugby World Cup following an injury to Will Skelton. The New South Wales Waratah missed the entirety of the 2024 campaign, but battled back to make his first appearance for Joe Schmidt against Fiji last month. A concussion ruled him out of the first test against the Lions, but he returned for the second game in Melbourne for his 21st and final cap. A cut to his heel saw him miss the series finale. Advertisement Porecki made one cameo appearance for the Waratahs, back in 2015, before embarking on a five-year stint in England, playing with Saracens and London Irish. He became a regular on his return to the Sydney-based team and, at the age of 29, Porecki made his Wallaby debut in a memorable victory over England in July 2022. 'To wear the Wallaby gold and Waratahs blue was a dream of mine as a boy growing up in Manly, and to be able to say I did both is something I'm incredibly proud of,' said Porecki in a statement. 'Rugby has given me so much to be thankful for and has been such a massive part of my life for so long, but it feels like the right time for me to turn the page and start a new chapter. 'There's a lot of people who have supported me in my journey, and to them I'll be forever grateful. I'm especially looking forward to spending more time with my wife, Shani, and kids, Luca, Charlie and Billie. 'I look forward to continuing to support the game away from the field in this next stage of my life.' Head coach Schmidt paid tribute, saying: 'Porky is the ultimate professional and quiet achiever. He doesn't say a lot, preferring to get on with the job and to lead by example, and he's done that really well for the time that I've known him. 'On behalf of everyone within the team, we wish him and his family all the best in this next stage of their lives.'


RTÉ News
5 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Australia's 'why' prevented Lions series whitewash
The Lions were outplayed in the final Test match of the series in extremely wet and almost unplayable conditions. Australia were impressive and fully deserved their 22-12 victory, but if you think that they were a controversial penalty away from winning the series, then you don't understand sport. As soon as the Lions overturned the Wallabies in dramatic fashion at the dying moments of the second Test, the whole psychology of the tour changed. Yes, the Lions aimed for a series whitewash and would love to have beaten Joe Schmidt's men with a clean sweep, but the difference between 'wanting to' and 'needing to' are very different in a sporting context. On paper, the British and Irish Lions were superior to Australia when it comes to technical and tactical ability. In the majority of positions across the pitch, you'd have chosen the Lions player over his direct opponent. You could argue for a handful of Australian players to make that Lions team. Will Skelton (below), Harry Wilson, Tom Wright, Nick Frost and flashes of Len Ikitau and Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii were probably the standout performers for the Aussies and not all of those would be a certainty if they were on the other side. It shows that psychology determines the outcome far more than technical or tactical ability. The best team on paper doesn't always win the game. The circumstances surrounding any event will change the dynamics of how the match unfolds. For a start, the Wallabies were talked down for a number of months. The rugby population in Australia was highly insulted by some of the narrative around their nation, and when you consider how the second Test ended for the team, there were highly motivating factors for them to get a final Test win against the Lions. They're going into the biggest contest of their season with the Rugby Championship looming and with the potential embarrassment of a whitewash on the cards they were bound to react. On the other side, the Lions came off the back of winning the series early and by the sounds of it, they celebrated well into Sunday afternoon. No matter who you are, alcohol hinders recovery and makes for a slow start to your week. It can be the difference between a fully prepared team and one that has left a question mark or two within the group. Andy Farrell (above) usually has his teams very well prepared, so I'm sure he would have planned the week precisely, but it's still a factor to consider. The Lions are also at the end of a very long season. It's a privilege to be on the tour and players have spoken so complimentary about how the tour has gone, how well they have bonded and the environment that was built. However, it's still a long season and their holidays were pending. A whitewash in a series is a luxury item. Yes, it would have created history, but it was a nice-to-have and not a must-have. It's very hard to bring a team's focus back if things start to slip slightly. I don't know exactly how they felt, sometimes players think they still want it, but upon reflection they realise that their 'why' wasn't strong enough. Australia had a stronger 'why' on Saturday. Despite the lightning strikes and torrential downpours, they played for their retiring scrum-half Nic White, who put everything on the line for his team-mates. Skelton clearly took something personally because he was involved in every scuffle. The home side not only managed the conditions better but turned up with greater intensity in defence. It wasn't technical, they just turned up for each other and got some vital turnovers. I know the argument will be that these are professionals and they get paid to be on tour, and to care about their careers. I'm sure they cared a lot about the game on Saturday. Yet, the more you get challenged with a confrontational Aussie side and uncontrollable issues like a lightning storm just after half-time, the more that doubt can creep in. Farrell was faced with a choice, to trust the group that had won the series, or to make some changes to freshen things up. For the most part he stuck with the old reliable. In hindsight, a good way of avoiding that complacency may have been to change a few of the 50/50 calls that he was faced with. And in one sense he did. James Lowe was dropped for Blair Kinghorn, James Ryan came in for Ollie Chessum and his centre partnership, Bundee Aki and Huw Jones, wasn't the one he would have chosen with a full deck. Tom Curry had an unbelievable series and Farrell will feel vindicated, he also didn't have a poor game on Saturday. However, that's an example of another position he might have changed. The England man is waiting on wrist surgery at the end of a long season of punishing his body. Considering how close the selection calls were, Farrell could have started Jac Morgan or Josh van rer Flier, with the other on the bench. With the forecasted rain and wet conditions, Owen Farrell should have been considered at inside-centre as well. It would have given the Lions another expert game-manager and an extra kicking option alongside Finn Russell. Owen Farrell played the second half, but the feeling of the game is different at that stage and the Lions were already up against it. If the Lions changed too many players and lacked cohesion, that would have been cited as the reason for losing. They changed a couple of players, but maybe a few more would have been the right balance. Regardless of a few bodies, it still goes back to Australia winning a few marginal moments, and sometimes a team will turn up in those moments because something in the back of their mind makes them want it a half a percent more than their opposite number. Dylan Pietsch had some iconic moments for Australia in defence. He smashed Tommy Freeman leading to a Ikitau jackal penalty. In better conditions, Pietsch wouldn't be able to gamble on Freeman not getting the pass away and maybe the England flyer would have passed or found an offload. Pietsch read it perfectly, setting up a momentum shift, frustrating the Lions. He was involved in a choke tackle on Aki in midfield alongside Fraeser McReight. It was another momentum stopper which lifted Australia. Ikitau forced a knock on from Aki on the Lions line which gave possession back to Australia, leading to the penalty to go 8-0 up. Another individual battle that Australia won. Ikitau showed up for Australia and maybe his 'why' was trying to make up for Hugo Keenan beating him in a 1-1 at the dying moments of the second Test. Frost came into his own, snaffling a handful of Lions lineouts and winning a breakdown penalty because he was there faster than the tourists. Tadhg Beirne was one of the exceptions to the rule. He has played an enormous amount of minutes this season, finishing nearly every game he has started. He was barking at Lions players for not working hard enough and won the Tom Richards medal for player of the series. The Lions obviously cared about each other, the travelling supporters and the history of the jersey. It just seemed that Australia went a step further, and their 'why' was too strong to whitewash them in a fascinating and competitive series.


Irish Times
6 hours ago
- Irish Times
Owen Doyle: Dan Sheehan should have got a red card and a longer ban for dangerous strike
'Feral' was one word a pundit used to describe what we were watching. The dictionary explains its meaning: 'of, or characteristic of, wild animals; ferocious; brutal'. It is, of course, a dreadful descriptor, but hard to think of a more telling word. The third Test was indeed all of those things, and also troubling to observe. Four failed brain injury assessments, including James Ryan being knocked senseless for several very worrying minutes. It was accidental, but it's another concussion for the stalwart secondrow. There was a very intemperate undercurrent throughout. Both teams wanted desperately to win, and at times nasty stuff surfaced. The leading Australian protagonists were Will Skelton, the biggest man on the pitch, and Nic White, perhaps the smallest. Both have made a career out of rattling their opponents' cage. The Lions responded in kind, particularly Tom Curry and Dan Sheehan : never a backward step. There was constant sledging, faux-grinning and taunting from the start. Owen Farrell's incensed verbal outburst aimed at Joseph Sualli was an awful look. READ MORE Is all of this really what rugby wants to be? The match was a travesty of the sport. It failed miserably to uphold the game's stated values. Respect for the opposition was nowhere in sight. How sad that was to see. The Lions' objective was to win all three Tests, but they played as if the party had started a week early. Perhaps it had. Sheehan, inexcusably, had a real go at the prone Tom Lynagh. It was an unworthy and disgraceful cheap shot. In marked contrast to Jac Morgan last week , the Lions' hooker entered the breakdown late, targeting his opponent with a very dangerous strike to the head. It was not picked up, a negative mark against the TMO, South Africa's Marius Jonker. Owen Farrell's tackling during the third Test between the Lions and Australia was at times questionable. Photograph:The TMO also called the referee's attention to a completely innocuous incident, which Nika Amashukeli took but a moment to dismiss. A typical Farrell shoulder hit also went unseen; it's been his trademark calling card for far too long. Jonker needed to be better. Until recently, Sheehan would have received a straight red card. Under the global trial, it should have gone to the bunker for upgrading (or not) to the correct colour. At times like this we often hear the excuse of what else could the offending player have done. Well, if that was the player's only option, he should have done nothing, and waited for play to develop. He would have been more useful elsewhere. I had the good fortune to share a pitch with Michael Lynagh, father of Tom, on several occasions. Enjoyable evenings too. He has always been the epitome of modest excellence. He must be horrified to see his son on the receiving end of some appalling hits, this time failing his brain injury assessment. Given the number of times Lynagh gets thumped illegally – at least twice in these three Tests – it's impossible not to think that the replacement red card is involved. Playing just an extra 10 minutes reduced to 14 players is a small price to pay if it gets rid of a key opponent. Sheehan was correctly cited, although he didn't think it was correct or that he had even committed an act of foul play. That viewpoint is as nonsensical as his dangerous action. His non-acceptance of the charge resulted in a lost week of mitigation, and, subject to him completing a coaching intervention course, he will serve a meagre three-match ban , instead of a paltry two. Imagine the furore if Finn Russell had been forced off in similar circumstances, and the perpetrator denied any wrongdoing. The uproar would have been totally justified; as is Australian anger on this occasion. The suspension is once again too light. How often is it necessary to repeat the words – sub-concussive head knocks, concussion, dementia, chronic traumatic encephalopathy – before those sitting at the high table decide that deterrent-level sentences are necessary. Referee Nika Amashukeli has a word with Australia's Will Skelton after the player clashed with James Ryan of the Lions during the third Test. Photograph:It would be good to hear from World Rugby . So far, chief executive Alan Gilpin has indicated their support for Andrea Piardi in the second Test, but hasn't told us whether Morgan's clear out was judged correctly. It would be ridiculous if World Rugby got involved publicly in every controversial decision, but on this one we could all learn a lot if the silence was broken. On a general point, there is a distinct difference in how breakdown side-entry is refereed on either side of the equator. Down south a sanction is as rare as a hen's tooth, while in this neck of the woods the clear and obvious ones are rightly meant to be sanctioned. We saw it across the three tests: Piardi and Amashukeli actually refereed the area, while New Zealander Ben O'Keeffe's approach was very laissez-faire. World Rugby needs to sort it out, it's an extremely unhealthy divide. Amashukeli was a very good choice for the final match of the tour. He is a strong operator, unflappable too. His calm assuredness was essential when dealing with the various flare-ups, and for giving necessary warnings, which he did even-handedly. In all the prevailing circumstances, including horrendous rain, and the stoppage for lightning, it's unlikely that anyone could have done better. In a match that came with a very high degree of difficulty, he can be quietly pleased with his performance. And what of those who were avidly watching this 'feral' match? There is a very serious, existential debate among parents, sometimes in the same household. The motion: 'Is rugby is a suitable sport for my kids?' This match will have spoken very emphatically for those against the motion. At the same time it will have done nothing for those in favour. Absolutely nothing.