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Bigger than Winning a World Cup!

Bigger than Winning a World Cup!

The Age04-06-2025
Owen Finegan holds his 2001 Lions series victory above winning the William Webb Ellis trophy in 1999
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AFL Round 20 Saturday live updates: Suns vs Lions, Dockers vs Eagles, Kangaroos vs Cats, Crows vs Power blog, scores and stats
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AFL Round 20 Saturday live updates: Suns vs Lions, Dockers vs Eagles, Kangaroos vs Cats, Crows vs Power blog, scores and stats

It's Rivalry Saturday in the AFL, starting with the Suns hosting the Lions in a crucial Q-Clash at Carrara. Next up will be the Dockers hosting the Eagles at Perth Stadium in the Western Derby, as Fremantle attempts to consolidate their place ahead of September. Then tonight, the Crows and the Power meet at Adelaide Oval, as Port Adelaide coach Ken Hinkley leads his team for one last Showdown. Docklands is the venue for the other game today, with the Kangaroos hosting Geelong. Follow the live blog below, keep up to date with all the latest stats in our ScoreCentre, and tune in to our live radio coverage.

Wallabies vs British and Irish Lions: Second test scores, latest talking points from the MCG
Wallabies vs British and Irish Lions: Second test scores, latest talking points from the MCG

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Wallabies vs British and Irish Lions: Second test scores, latest talking points from the MCG

For a city that has always been lukewarm about its on-again, off-again relationship with rugby, Melbourne has turned on the charm offensive for Saturday's latest fling between Australia and the British & Irish Lions. Revelling in its reputation as Australia's sporting capital, Melbourne has embraced the so-called game they play in heaven like never before, breaking with convention by granting the Lions permission to play on Victoria's most hallowed turf. Comprising the best players from England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland, the Lions have already featured at some of the most iconic stadiums on the planet since they began touring the world in the late 1880s, but there's something extra about getting invited to play on the Melbourne Cricket Ground for the first time. 'When you spend time in Melbourne and speak to the locals and all Australians, they hold the MCG in a real special regard,' the Lions' captain Maro Itoje said. 'It's a privilege for us to play there in what will be an amazing stadium and an amazing crowd. If it reaches full capacity, it will definitely be the biggest stadium that I've played in, so it's something that we're looking to relish.' Melbourne knows how to throw a party and for the visiting fans, the festivities are already in full swing. An estimated 40,000 Lions' supporters have made the long trip from Europe to watch the match live from the G and have transformed the Victorian state capital into a sea of red jerseys and hoodies against the backtrack of 'Swing Low, Sweet Chariot', 'Flower of Scotland', 'Land of my Fathers' and 'Ireland's call.' From the CBD to St Kilda Beach and Lygon Streets, Melbourne's pubs and restaurants are doing a roaring trade, with Lions' and Wallabies fans side-by-side. Because Lions tours to Australia only take place every 12 years, for Wallabies' long-suffering supporters, it's a rare time they can wear the team's gold jersey with pride. After the disaster of the last World Cup, being spotted in public wearing a Wallabies jersey was almost as awkward as being caught on kiss cam at a Coldplay concert, but not this week in bustling Melbourne. While the final attendance will depend on how many members show up, Rugby Australia expects it will surpass the all-time record crowd for any Lions match of 84,188, at Sydney in 2001. 'In 10, 15 years' time will I look back on this game?' Absolutely,' Australia fullback Tom Wright said. 'I'm probably never going to play in front of 100,000 people again,' For both teams, the occasion has taken on even greater importance because the stakes could not be higher. The tourists won the opening Test 27-19 in Brisbane last weekend and will clinch the series with a game to spare if they win again at the MCG. The Wallabies are desperate to level the series and ensure the last match in Sydney is not a dead rubber and Melbourne's fickle weather has potentially come to their rescue. In theory, the forecast of rain on Saturday night should help the Wallabies, who have assembled a massive forward pack after Rob Valetini, Will Skelton and Dave Porecki were all passed fit after missing the series opener. The Australians were outplayed in the first Test but finished strongly to close the final margin to eight points after trailing by 19 early in the second half. The Wallabies' coach Joe Schmidt is banking on his big men holding the Lions at bay long enough for his replacements to run over the top of them, but also knows things don't always go to plan so he doesn't care how they get the result, as long as they do. 'We just want to win,' he said. The Lions know the ambush the Wallabies are planning for them. In 2001 and 2013, the visitors won the opening Test in Brisbane only to lose game two in Melbourne. They have made changes to their team too, with head coach Andy Farrell stacking his starting XV with nine Irishmen for what he hopes will be their crowning glory. 'We're the privileged ones that get the opportunity to do something special and hopefully create a bit of history,' Farrell said. 'There's a determined Australian side that's in our way that's going to try and stop us from doing that, so it's a hell of a Test.'

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But still, Schmidt's messaging in this series so far has hit the wrong note. Even before the first Test there was a reference to the 'short runway' the Wallabies had, and the statement that accompanied the team announcement for the Melbourne Test included a line on how 'the week's preparation here in Melbourne has allowed us a bit more time together'. Whatever the ins and outs of the Wallabies' preparations – and Schmidt's statements hint at his unhappiness – this is not a message that can be sold to the Australian rugby public, which has for more than a decade been asked to accept deferred gratification as one great plan or another unfolds, only for none to come to fruition. It's a line that goes way back, to even before the 2011 Rugby World Cup when Robbie Deans was granted a contract extension before the tournament and indicated afterwards the performance of younger players at that event pointed to a brighter future. The points made here would be much more muted had it not been for the performance of the First Nations and Pasifika team on Tuesday, and also the Waratahs in their tour game against the Lions. Loading Had those games been walkovers, as expected, we could have fallen into the comfortable old excuse about Australia 'not having the cattle', which is so much easier to process than the awkward business of posing hard questions. But the fact is the First Nations and Pasifika side and the Waratahs rattled the Lions, and the tourists' response on Tuesday was telling: after being punched on the nose by Kefu's troops, they tried to go around them, not through them as needed. They lost the fight, even if their superior class won the evening in the end. Schmidt poked a hole in their approach by highlighting the number of line breaks they conceded, but it was as clear as day that the Lions were upset by the First Nations and Pasifika's line speed: they were stressed and started looking for the easier options with ball in hand, a concession to Lukhan Salakaia-Loto and Charlie Gamble in particular.

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