Don't blame the referees for the Wallabies woes, blame the injuries
Across the first two Tests, the Wallabies have actually won two halves of rugby and lost two halves, effectively sticking two fingers up to the doomsayers (including yours truly), and to do so without four of their most influential players does not point to gap between the Home Unions that is so large that cannot be closed within the next two years before the Rugby World Cup.
With Valetini, Skelton and Alaalatoa on the field, the Wallabies are leading the Lions 23-17 because they are fluent in the language of Test rugby. The sight of multiple Lions defenders being sat on their backsides is simply not one that the Wallabies can achieve without their big men in full fitness.
Injuries have also weaved their way into the story of the Wallabies' campaign in less obvious ways. Take Lukhan Salakaia-Loto for example. The Reds enforcer is the 'obvious' choice to bring some more steel into the Wallabies pack, and he will surely be included in the Rugby Championship squad.
But he played only seven games in Super Rugby Pacific, averaging 50 minutes a game, and none since early May against the Waratahs. He is another player in Australian rugby who can change the course of a game with a brutal carry, but the run of games he enjoyed against the Lions came too late.
When the Wallabies and Rugby Australia review this series, it will surely be imbued with a sense of frustration and regret that they simply couldn't get their big men on the field for long enough against a Lions side that has yet to show it would be in top two in the coming Rugby Championship.
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The flip side of this pain for Australia is that the closeness of the first two Tests have - apart from the first half in Brisbane - killed the most damaging narrative of the tour.
The argument that the Wallabies had become detached from the Home Unions, and were destined to float around No. 8 – No. 10 in the rankings as a sort of West Indies of world rugby, has unsteady legs.
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