
Stop moaning Australia, your player dived
For the hosts, it was the one sour note in an otherwise highly creditable performance, where they reclaimed their reputation with exceptional spirit and defiance on a night that few present would forget. Tizzano clearly milked the incident, collapsing with a melodrama that could easily have persuaded some officials to chalk off Keenan's try. As Piardi waved off the Australian protests, Andy Farrell could be seen muttering a few choice oaths in relief. It would have been hugely unjust for the series-clinching score to be ruled out on the basis of one player's histrionics. He deserved, as his team did, to celebrate long into the Melbourne night.
Still, this could not quell a sense among some Australians that they had suffered a grave miscarriage of justice. Morgan Turinui, the former Wallabies centre, lamented: 'The end is a penalty to the Wallabies, and the referees were too weak to give it. It doesn't matter – you cannot hit a guy in the back of the neck to save the ball from a guy who is legally jackalling. The referees got it wrong. It has cost the Wallabies survival in the series and the Lions lead 2-0. It was brave of them to come back but it was a terrible decision to decide this match.'
Such a view smacked of misplaced bitterness. The reality was that Morgan's clear-out technique was blameless: he wrapped his arms legally and could not have gone any lower. By contrast, Tizzano's reaction – staggering back, clutching his head as if in mortal agony – was anything but. Eventually, Piardi agreed, awarding the try that brought rapture for the Lions and deep recriminations for their opponents. As the Lions' families spilt out on to the pitch, with Will Stuart and Bundee Aki leading the chants, you saw the beginnings of a party that might still be going strong in a week's time.
Australia earned admiration for the way they turned this into such a compelling contest, even briefly threatening a runaway victory when James Slipper, Jake Gordon and Tom Wright combined for a hat-trick of first-half tries in eight minutes. It was a stirring riposte after the derision they had drawn for their anonymous display in Brisbane, with all in green-and-gold at the MCG marvelling at the ruthlessness with which they exploited their man advantage when Tommy Freeman was sent to the sin bin for his indiscipline.
In that exhilarating interlude, you saw the heights of which the Wallabies were capable, whether in their clever kicking game or in the magical, defence-splitting run that Joseph Suaalii produced to send Wright clean through. It was a night, all told, when the sport in Australia rediscovered its soul. The sadness for these players was that even at their most inspired, they still could not sustain the jeopardy until Sydney. Harry Wilson was a study in desolation at the final whistle, explaining: 'We were written off, but we came out here and put our bodies on the line. To lose it at the very end, it hurts.' The captain reflected that he was 'not in the right emotional space' even to discuss the Tizzano incident.
Not that this stopped Joe Schmidt from trying, with the Australia head coach suggesting that Morgan had flown into the ruck with such force that he collected Tizzano high. 'It was described as arriving at the same time, and we can all see that that's not the case,' he said. 'We can all see clear contact with the back of the neck, which might be a different decision on another night. We led for 79 minutes and I couldn't quite believe that we didn't get a decision at the end to lead for 80. That's the wicked backlash that sport provides.'
HUGO KEENAN WINS IT FOR THE LIONS! 🦁 pic.twitter.com/FX9bX2Jylh
— Sky Sports (@SkySports) July 26, 2025
But the Lions were also remarkably resilient, weathering the surprise bombardment with patience before finally engineering a stunning coup de grace courtesy of Keenan. Somehow, they conjured this from a 23-5 deficit, completing the greatest comeback ever witnessed in a Lions Test. Even if the pedigree of this Wallabies side continues to be debated, with the limitations again in evidence after Will Skelton and Rob Valetini punched themselves out, the scale of the Lions' feat is beyond dispute. They are only the third side to go 2-0 up in a series in 51 years, and a first clean sweep since 1927 is now firmly in their sights.
Such was the euphoric chaos in which this Test ended, they were still faintly giddy in the aftermath. With the MCG long having emptied, they brought plastic chairs out to the centre of the pitch in this vast sporting citadel, sitting in a circle to drink in the grandeur of the setting and the magnitude of their achievement. At one stage, they broke into a refrain of The Bonnie Banks of Loch Lomond, apparently in tribute to Finn Russell and Huw Jones, who had both been outstanding once more. In the corner, Keenan replicated his try in the deserted stadium by diving across the line. The delighted reaction of his team-mates was a reminder of how, once the ructions over the clear-out were stripped away, all that remained was the glory.
Hashtags

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


BBC News
31 minutes ago
- BBC News
Taylor's fighting talk inspires tourists
Jack Conan has revealed that a video message from Irish boxing legend Katie Taylor helped inspire the Lions' memorable comeback in their series-clinching victory over gold medallist and undisputed world super lightweight champion Taylor urged the touring party to dig deep in a good luck message before the second Test in Melbourne. The Lions took heed of Taylor's encouragement after overturning an 18-point deficit to win 29-26."The video was unbelievably poignant and powerful. It spoke about being prepared to win with skill, but also being ready to win by will," said Ireland number eight Conan."That was something that was massively summed up in the game because we were not at our best at all."It's huge because she comes from the town I'm from. I'm incredibly proud of where I come from and I know Katie is as well."She's gone on to achieve incredible feats in the boxing world. To be such a superstar, incredibly humble and driven is something that we leant on as well because we knew that Australia are a hugely proud nation and they showed it in spades."Everyone loved it, even the English and the Scottish boys and the Welsh boy - it resonated with everyone. It was unbelievably poignant, it was class. It really hit home for us."


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Choose how you feel about Luis Diaz's departure
'He did things-no one could do' - how 2005 Ashes 'reinvented' Flintoff. Video'He did things-no one could do' - how 2005 Ashes 'reinvented' Flintoff


Times
an hour ago
- Times
Jac Morgan got it spot on, unlike play-acting Australian — I hate simulation
I 'm a little bemused by the furore about the Jac Morgan clearout of Carlo Tizzano in the lead-up to Hugo Keenan's match-winning try for the British & Irish Lions on Saturday. What a fuss! I understand that there may have been some desperation in the minds of the Australians, as they had led the Test for so long and to be denied at the death, as they were, is always so cruel. Emotions would have been high, and understandably so. I thought I would go back to the start of the match and watch every single ruck. I am not exaggerating when I say that there was some sort of head or neck contact at one in every two rucks. That is rugby, that is the contact area. Just because there is head contact does not mean there is foul play. They are rugby incidents, as was the Morgan one.