Farrell seals Lions' victory in bruising battle with Springboks

Farrell seals Lions' victory in bruising battle with Springboks

British and Irish Lions substitute Owen Farrell kicked a late penalty to seal a 22-17 victory over world champions South Africa in Cape Town on Saturday in a tight, bruising first Test.

Boks vs Lions 24 July 2021
Photo: Twitter/Springboks

Trailing 12-3 at half-time, the Lions employed their aerial game to good effect after the break and dominated to go one up in the three-Test series, which continues next Saturday.


Playing only a second Test since winning the Rugby World Cup in November 2019 due to coronavirus complications, South Africa battled after the turnover, made basic errors and conceded many penalties.


They did have second-half tries by full-back Willie le Roux and centre Damian de Allende disallowed, but replays showed that both decisions were correct. 


Fly-half Dan Biggar kicked four penalties for the tourists before being replaced by Farrell, who slotted the crucial penalty with two minutes remaining.


South Africa pressed into Lions' territory at the death, but a knock-on outside the 22 robbed them of a chance to snatch victory. 


The Lions try came from hooker Louis Cowan-Dickie, who atoned for some poor lineout throws by barging over off a maul four minutes into the second half.


Springboks fly-half Handre Pollard kicked four first-half penalties for a 12-3 half-time lead and the only second-half points for the hosts came from a try by scrum-half Faf de Klerk.


Lions captain and lock Alun Wyn Jones struck a cautious note immediately after the match, saying: "We are well aware this is the first game of three.


"There was not much spoken about at half-time. We stayed in the kicking battle a bit longer and that paid dividends.


"Obviously the set piece came into the game, it was much better in the later stages. The longer the exchanges went on we got reward."


Fellow Lions lock and man of the match Maro Itoje said: "We did not start the game with the accuracy we wanted. In the second half we upped the intensity, we upped our control." 


Springboks skipper Siya Kolisi said: "We started well in the first half. We controlled the set pieces and everything. In the second half we missed opportunities, we knocked on the ball.


- 'We made mistakes' -


"There is a lot we need to work on. We could have done better. We made mistakes. We can come back stronger, we have got another game under our belts."


Pollard slotted penalties after 14 and 18 minutes for South Africa as they translated early territory and possession advantages into points on a cool evening in the southwestern city.


Rival playmaker Biggar was successful with his first penalty to leave the tourists trailing 6-3 midway through a first half every bit as physical as had been predicted.


Pollard, who kicked 22 points in the 2019 Rugby World Cup final triumph over England, was in superb form from the tee, banging over two more penalties to push the home team nine points in front.


The Lions lost chances to trim the deficit before half-time as Biggar pulled a penalty, Elliot Daly was short with a long-range shot and fellow centre Robbie Henshaw lost the ball forward when poised to score.


After Biggar converted the Cowan-Dickie score, a scrambled try by De Klerk gave South Africa a 17-10 advantage on 50 minutes. 


But it wast the last time the Springboks scored as the aerial bombardment from the Lions took its toll and Biggar kicked three penalties and Farrell one for a deserved victory.


The first Test took place after a drama-stacked build-up that began from the moment the jet carrying the Lions touched down in Johannesburg on June 28.


They spent several weeks in the economic hub of South Africa, where hundreds of people were dying daily amid a third wave of coronavirus.


When the Lions moved south to Cape Town, looting and arson broke out in Johannesburg and Durban after former president Jacob Zuma was jailed for refusing to attend a graft inquiry.


As they settled in the western Cape came the boost that original skipper Alun Wyn Jones had recovered from a shoulder injury and would join the tour and reclaim the captaincy from Conor Murray.


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