
My guide to the Lions Test referees
I was appointed to referee the Lions against the Free State Cheetahs in Bloemfontein – having run touch in three other games – and it was one of the highlights of my career. Not only did I experience the sea of red shirts around the city in the days leading up to the match, but I saw the best players of the home nations take on the world champions in their own backyard. It was epic, and a huge honour to be the first Englishman to referee the Lions.
There will be two other firsts on this Lions tour: Nika Amashukeli will become the first Georgian to referee the Lions and Andrea Piardi the first Italian. The trio will be completed by Ben O'Keeffe, who refereed the second Test in the last Lions series in 2021, a game played only a few days after Rassie Erasmus's 62-minute online rant about what he perceived to be refereeing inconsistencies.
Amashukeli continues to make 'firsts'. Not only was he the first match official from Georgia to referee at a World Cup, but he was also the first to referee a Six Nations hame and a Champions Cup final. Piardi has been the go-to man over the past three seasons in the United Rugby Championship (URC) and refereed the final for the past three years.
O'Keeffe burst on to the scene at the 2019 World Cup when he superbly refereed the final pool match of the tournament in the highly emotional Japan v Scotland game. At the 2023 Rugby World Cup he refereed the quarter-final between France and South Africa and the week afterwards he was in charge when England lost to South Africa in the semi-final in Paris.
It's fair to say that they are a very experienced team, but like every Test match, the coaches will currently be analysing each referee to see if they can gain an advantage, or perhaps an insight, into how the officials may interpret the game. And if I know Joe Schmidt, he will be looking at some of the stats and noting that these three officials have some distinct differences.
Emphasis will be on attack
I have explained on these pages before that nothing sucks the life out of a stadium more than a promising attack being stopped by a referee's whistle for a technical side entry or a holding-on penalty given too quickly. Referees who reward the attack more tend to produce games with more continuity and fewer stoppages.
Over the past two international seasons, O'Keeffe, who will referee the opening Test this weekend in Brisbane, has given almost 60 per cent of his penalties against the defence. This tendency was obvious when he refereed the Lions v Western Force in Perth on June 28. O'Keeffe gave only 16 penalties all match and, amazingly, none were against the attack. This could explain why Farrell opted for disruptors in the back row rather than an out-and-out jackler, putting Tom Curry ahead of Jac Morgan.
Most pleasing for the spectators is that all three of the referees insist on quick ball when teams are attacking, and they all go hard against defending players who are lying on the wrong side. All three also have an average ruck-speed time of less than three seconds, a measurement of how quickly the ball comes away from the breakdown. This would suggest we are in for some attacking rugby.
Lions should target scrum in first Test
Amashukeli is not one for wasting time at the scrum. He resets only one in five scrums, and that is supported by being top of the scoreboard when it comes to having the highest ball in play.
The Lions have used the scrum to devastating effect so far this tour, securing 18 penalties through the series. O'Keeffe averages five penalties at the scrum per game, and having witnessed the Aussies concede a couple against Fiji – a team without the power of Tadhg Furlong and Ellis Genge – I expect it is an area that the Lions will target.
Worrying for the Lions is that Piardi, who will referee the second Test in Melbourne, resets more than one in three scrums. Which is often a sign that the referee does not give penalties to a dominant scrum.
I imagine that John Fogarty, the Lions scrummaging coach, will be whispering into Piardi's ear this weekend as he runs up and down the touchline in front of the technical boxes.
Best to call on TMO sparingly
This week I was asked to join Scotty Stephenson, the Kiwi broadcaster and commentator, on his early-morning breakfast show. He was discussing the use of TMO after three potential New Zealand tries were scrubbed off in the van.
I explained to him that technology improves sport – think Snicko in cricket or Hawk-Eye in tennis – but that it is so important that TMOs don't go looking at every pass or rewind every single breakdown. If they do, we will be waiting until September for this series to finish.
At the end of the Lions' match against the Australia and New Zealand invitational side, I was scratching my head to understand what Shannon Frizell had done wrong for the TMO to come in, but after a lot of searching for the best angle, he was given a yellow card for a dangerous clean-out.
TMOs are there to prevent the big howler – not to scrutinise every clear-out – and Amashukeli buys into that, averaging just over one review per match. Some readers will remember the Champions Cup final, with seven TMO interactions between the Georgian and the South African, Marius Jonker. They will work together again in the third Test, but I am hoping that the European final was just a blip in the figures.
O'Keeffe will kick things off this weekend with his compatriot Richard Kelly in the van, and I'm hoping the number of TMO referrals is around fewer than two, O'Keeffe's average in each of his past nine matches. If it is, it will add to the flow of the game.
My main hope, however, is that this is the last time you read the names Amashukeli, Piardi and O'Keeffe in these columns and they can reminisce on being part of Lions history for all the right reasons.
Hashtags

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


BBC News
30 minutes ago
- BBC News
Second-string shine but familiar problems for Scotland
Two wins, one narrow and one commanding, and a bruising defeat. It's been a mixed bag for Gregor Townsend and his players on their summer sojourn to the southern were clinical against the Maori All Blacks, ill-disciplined against Fiji and dominated both sides of the ball against will focus on the humbling loss in Suva. The Scots were second best in every department, with a match plan that seemed to play to Fiji's remember, this is a squad without at least 10 first-choice players due to a combination the British & Irish Lions tour and although the world rankings may have been harmed, the new World Cup format means Scotland will, most likely, not face another 'pool of death' like they did in not too bruising in the end, then. Plus, there are plenty of positives. Let's look through them. Second-string shines in New Zealand "Those are the two best performances on tour, so we obviously like playing in New Zealand!" Townsend joked after the 41-12 win over Samoa in first and last games of the tour were the matches in which far more game time was given to Scotland's back-up brigade and a fair few excelled."You rise to a challenge and you show your true identity when you've got that challenge of backing up a defeat and the players showed that," added Townsend."The way they came together during the week with just a six-day turnaround and one training session, they were really aligned and focused on delivering a better performance."Andy Onyeama-Christie looked back to his best, with the back-rower returning from a horrific leg break sustained playing for Saracens last Smith was another on the comeback trail and immediately made an impact. Given Scotland's lack of depth in the back-three, his recovery is a Samoa, the midfield partnership of Stafford McDowall and Rory Hutchinson did their best impression of Sione Tuipulotu and Huw Jones, with McDowall equally adept at trucking forward like an angry rhino, or showing the delicate hands of a important relationship that blossomed was in the half-backs, between Jamie Dobie and Fergus they struggled with the game plan against Fiji, the duo look to have cemented themselves as second-choice behind Lions' tourists Ben White and Finn inclusion in the starting XV against Fiji - his first Test start at nine - suggested a reshuffle in the scrum-half pecking order and his all-action performance against Samoa only boosted his fly-half, there have been plenty of contenders for the second violin spot, but with Townsend saying Burke "is up there with the best 10s" it looks like he's going to get his shot in the coming months. Old ghosts continue to haunt The problems in the loss to Fiji will keep Townsend awake at we saw the good stuff that has kept Scotland fans dreaming of a Six Nations triumph; smooth backline running and powerhouse performances in the back-row - there was also all the bad stuff that keeps crashing us back down to ill-discipline was horrendous. Townsend called it "unusual" but the man in the middle was Ben O'Keeffe, a referee who once gave 17 successive penalties against enormous defensive pressure, teams do start to creak but at some stage, players and coaches have to wise up. Why were so many offsides given away? What are we doing that this referee doesn't like? Questions to be set-piece also continued to struggle. Although hooker Ewan Ashman has been called up as cover for the Lions tour, the line-out has been a problem area for Scotland for a long a decent set-piece, Scotland don't have a solid foundation to build upon. It has to be sorted before they can ever be Six Nations was also the shaky restarts, something that predates Townsend's eight years in charge. When spilled, or not gathered at all in some cases, any confidence from scoring at the other end immediately evaporates. They need to get over the nerves. 'Pool of death' unlikely at next World Cup A lot was made of the game against Fiji and the damaging impact on ranking now looks a lot harder for Scotland to be inside the top six when the World Cup pools are drawn in December, something that Townsend admitted was the what does finishing outside the top six actually look like now? It's certainly not the same as 2023, given the expanded 24-team edition of the next top two teams will go through from the six four-team groups, as will the four best third-placed means it's highly likely that Scotland will qualify for the knockouts, regardless of whether they're in the top six or course, if they were one of the best-ranked sides the group would be easier and give them a better path deeper into the tournament. But let's put one foot in front of the other though, it's important to rest. "It's end of the season for a lot of guys, it's been a long season," Townsend said."They put their bodies on the line right to the last play of the game and they deserve a good rest."After some of those bone-juddering, neck-snapping collisions in Suva, they'd be forgiven for sleeping in ice baths until the autumn Tests.


BBC News
30 minutes ago
- BBC News
Easson to leave Scotland after women's World Cup
Bryan Easson will step down as Scotland head coach following this year's women's World is to depart for a new job in England after 25 years working in different roles at Scottish Rugby and described leading the women's team as "the greatest honour of my coaching career".He said: "During my time as head coach, this team has grown immensely, rising from 11th in the world to an all-time high of fifth, and now proudly ranked seventh."We've experienced unforgettable highs: qualifying for two World Cups, winning WXV2 and competing with the best in the world. These moments are etched in our collective memory." Easson was appointed head coach in December 2020 following an interim period in the post."We've also faced real challenges, tough results, setbacks, and times when belief was tested," he added. "None of it, the resilience, the progress, or the success would have been possible without an exceptional group of players and colleagues who showed remarkable strength, unity and character throughout the journey."In 2022, we reached a historic milestone with the introduction of professional contracts for the women's team, a landmark step that speaks to how far the game has come."I'm incredibly proud to have played a part in that progress and in building a foundation for the future. While the achievements belong to the group, I take pride in having led this chapter. I've always believed in leaving the jersey in a better place and I hope that's what I've done."CEO Alex Williamson said Easson leading Scotland at the World Cup was "a fitting swansong to his many achievements as the coach of the national team".


Telegraph
30 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Ben Curry hits out at Lions fans after ‘gobsmacking' criticism of twin's selection
Ben Curry has hit out at critics of brother Tom's British and Irish Lions selection for Saturday's first Test in an impassioned defence of his identical twin. Ben, the older by 90 minutes, is on England duty in Washington, where Steve Borthwick's side face the United States in their final match of the season. But he has followed closely events in Brisbane and, in particular, the fallout on social media from head coach Andy Farrell's decision to prefer Tom to Jac Morgan at openside flanker. So angered has he been by some of the comments that he questions whether those making them are actually Lions supporters at all. 'There's been a lot of outside criticism which I'm really disappointed about,' said the Sale Sharks captain. 'You'd think people would be Lions supporters, but it doesn't seem so from looking at social media. 'Some of it is gobsmacking. Tom can't say anything about it, obviously, but I think it's incredibly disappointing. Are you Lions supporters or not? That's what gets me.' Farrell explained that picking Tom gives the team the balance the Lions require for the series opener but admitted the call over Morgan was 'as close as you could imagine'. It means the Lions head into a Test without a single Welshman in their squad for the first time since 1896, a fact which has only fed the fire online. Curry is seen as a 'Test match animal' but Morgan has played the house down on this tour and is undoubtedly unfortunate to miss out. 'Tom is a proper glue player and a lot of people won't understand that. He's incredibly selfless, a big game player. You don't get that often,' explained Ben Curry. 'In a rugby team when you look around the circle, look people in the eyes, he's number one on the list of those you want next to you. If I was in that side I wouldn't want to play with anyone else.' Tom, the 62-cap England flanker, started all three Tests for the 2021 Lions in South Africa. He has played in a World Cup final, captained his country and been shortlisted for world player of the year. Ben says he is '100 per cent' certain the criticism will bring the best out of his brother on rugby's biggest stage. 'I'm incredibly proud of how Tom has gone about his business, how he has dealt with everyone and everything on the outside,' he added. 'The way he's handled it and the way he's played has been unbelievably professional.'