2009 June rugby union tests

The 2009 mid-year rugby union tests (also known as the Summer Internationals in the Northern Hemisphere) refers to the rugby union Internationals played from 23 May to 4 July 2009, mostly in the Southern Hemisphere.

The main event in the series was the Lions tour of South Africa, which involved three test matches, while France and Italy travelled to Oceania.

For Australia, New Zealand and South Africa the Tests also constituted preparation for the 2009 Tri Nations. There was also a short tour for the Barbarians, including their first ever match in Australia. The two main North American sides, Canada and the United States, used the series as preparation for their annual early-summer competition, the Churchill Cup, and for their 2011 Rugby World Cup qualifying tie in July.

South Africa attempted to schedule two warm-ups for the Springboks before the Lions tour; however, only one eventually materialised, and it was not a full Test. Initial plans were that the Boks would play a late May test against neighbours Namibia at Windhoek, to be followed by a match in Soweto with New Zealand Māori. The Windhoek match morphed into a fixture between a South Africa XV and a "Namibian Invitational XV" made up mostly of South Africans, including five Springboks, won 36–7 by the South Africa XV on 29 May. The New Zealand Māori match went from a Springboks match to a South Africa XV match before being scrapped because the South African Rugby Union could not find sponsorship or a venue.

With the Lions tour taking place in South Africa, three of the four individual home unions fielded weakened, experimental sides in their matches, with Scotland not playing in this series. England played home friendlies against the Barbarians and Argentina and then travelled to Argentina for a return match with the Pumas, while Ireland and Wales went to North America. The first England-Argentina matchup was notable because the Argentine Rugby Union moved the game to England in effort to raise cash to help support their fledgling professional setup; the move was also convenient for their large contingent of European-based players.[1] Argentina also played a match with the touring French Barbarians; while it was not an official Test, the Pumas fielded a mostly first-choice side.

Overview

Series

Tour Result Victor
South Africa v British & Irish Lions test series 1–2  South Africa
Argentina v England test series 1–1 Drawn
New Zealand v France test series 1–1 Drawn
Australia v Italy test series 2–0  Australia

Notes:

  • France and New Zealand drew their tour as France won the first test, but New Zealand won the second test, making a tour result of 1–1.

Other tours

Team/Tour Opponents
Barbarians end of season tour  England (won) –  Australia (lost)
Wales tour  Canada (won) –  United States (won)
Ireland tour  Canada (won) –  United States (won)

Fixtures

Week 1

23 May 2009
14:00 PTZ (UTC-07)
Canada  6–25  Ireland
Pen: Pritchard (2/2) 38', 43'
Report[2] Try: Murphy 18' c
Whitten 63' c
Buckley 69' m
Con: Keatley (2/3)
Pen: Keatley (2/3) 57', 61'
Thunderbird Stadium, Vancouver, British Columbia
Attendance: 7,280
Referee: Chris White (England)

Week 2

30 May 2009
14:45 ETZ (UTC-04)
Canada  23–32  Wales
Try: Duke 42' c
Fairhurst 57' c
Con: Pritchard (2/2)
Pen: Pritchard (3) 9', 14', 31'
Report[3] Try: Czekaj 16' c
T. James 48' c
Con: Biggar (2/2)
Pen: Biggar (6) 22', 28', 33', 52', 56', 72'
York Stadium, Toronto, Ontario
Attendance: 8,450
Referee: Matt Goddard (Australia)
30 May 2009
16:15 WEST/GMT+01 (UTC+01)
England  26–33 Barbarians
Try: Foden
Turner-Hall
May
Banahan
Con: Goode (3)
Report[4] Try: Balshaw (2)
Jack
Elsom
D'Arcy
Con: Blair (4)
Twickenham, London
Attendance: 40,121
Referee: Romain Poite (France)
FB15Delon Armitage
RW14Ben Foden
OC13Jamie Noon
IC12Jordan Turner-Hall
LW11Matt Banahan
FH10Andy Goode
SH9Danny Care
N88Lewis Moody
OF7Nick Easter
BF6Chris Robshaw
RL5Louis Deacon
LL4Steve Borthwick (c)
TP3David Wilson
HK2Dylan Hartley
LP1Tim Payne
Substitutions:
HK16Steve Thompson
PR17Nick Wood
LK18Chris Jones
FL19Steffon Armitage
N820James Haskell
SH21Paul Hodgson
CE22Tom May
Team manager:
Martin Johnson
FB15 Ben Blair
RW14 Doug Howlett
OC13 Josh Lewsey
IC12 Gordon D'Arcy
LW11 Iain Balshaw
FH10 Glen Jackson
SH9 Justin Marshall
N88 Rocky Elsom
OF7 Serge Betsen
BF6 Jerry Collins
RL5 Chris Jack
LL4 Martin Corry (c)
TP3 Greg Somerville
HK2 Schalk Brits
LP1 Clarke Dermody
Substitutes:
HK16 Sébastien Bruno
PR17 BJ Botha
LK18 Paul Tito
FL19 Phil Waugh
SH20 Chris Whitaker
CE21 Mike Catt
WG22 Ratu Nasiganiyavi
Coach:
Dai Young
31 May 2009
13:00 PTZ (UTC-07)
United States  10–27  Ireland
Try: Suniula 65' c
Con: Malifa (1/1)
Drop: Malifa (1/1) 63'
Report[5] Try: Casey 13' m
Whitten 40'+2' m
Penalty try 53' c
Best 70' c
Con: Keatley (2/4)
Pen: Keatley (1/2) 24'
Buck Shaw Stadium, Santa Clara, California
Attendance: 10,000
Referee: Chris White (England)

Week 3

6 June 2009
19:30 AEST (UTC+10)
Australia  55–7 Barbarians
Try: Mitchell (2)
Horwill
Giteau
Moore
Alexander
Pocock
O'Connor
Con: Giteau (4)
Mortlock (2)
Report[6] Try: Balshaw
Con: McAlister
Sydney Football Stadium
Attendance: 39,688
Referee: Stuart Dickinson (Australia)
15Adam Ashley-Cooper
14Lachlan Turner
13Stirling Mortlock (c)
12Berrick Barnes
11Drew Mitchell
10Matt Giteau
9Luke Burgess
8Richard Brown
7George Smith
6Matt Hodgson
5Nathan Sharpe
4James Horwill
3Al Baxter
2Stephen Moore
1Benn Robinson
Substitutions:
16Tatafu Polota-Nau
17Ben Alexander
18Dean Mumm
19David Pocock
20Josh Valentine
21Quade Cooper
22James O'Connor
Coach:
Robbie Deans
15 Geordan Murphy
14 Iain Balshaw
13 Sonny Bill Williams
12 Seilala Mapusua
11 Josh Lewsey
10 Luke McAlister
9 Chris Whitaker
8 David Lyons
7 Phil Waugh (c)
6 Jerry Collins
5 Paul Tito
4 Chris Jack
3 BJ Botha
2 Sébastien Bruno
1 Clarke Dermody
Substitutes:
16 Schalk Brits
17 Greg Somerville
18 Martin Corry
19 Serge Betsen
20 Justin Marshall
21 Glen Jackson
22 Ben Blair
Coach:
Dai Young
6 June 2009
16:00 WEST/GMT+01 (UTC+01)
England  37–15  Argentina
Try: Banahan 25' c
D. Armitage (2) 59' c, 79' m
Con: Goode (2/3)
Pen: Goode (4/7) 7', 21', 44', 54'
Drop: Goode (2/3) 17', 36'
Report[7] Pen: Hernández (4/6) 29', 38' 48', 51'
Drop: Hernández (1/1) 1'
Old Trafford, Manchester
Attendance: 40,521[1]
Referee: Christophe Berdos (France)
15Delon Armitage
14Mark Cueto
13Dan Hipkiss
12Tom May
11Matt Banahan
10Andy Goode
9Danny Care
8Nick Easter
7Steffon Armitage
6James Haskell
5Louis Deacon
4Steve Borthwick (c)
3David Wilson
2Dylan Hartley
1Tim Payne
Substitutes:
16Steve Thompson
17Julian White
18Ben Kay
19Jordan Crane
20Paul Hodgson
21Sam Vesty
22Mathew Tait
Team Manager:
Martin Johnson
15Horacio Agulla
14Federico Martín Aramburú
13Gonzalo Tiesi
12Miguel Avramovic
11Gonzalo Camacho
10Juan Martín Hernández
9Nicolás Vergallo
8Juan Martín Fernández Lobbe (c)
7Juan Manuel Leguizamón
6Álvaro Galindo
5Patricio Albacete
4Manuel Carizza
3Juan Pablo Orlandi
2Alberto Vernet Basualdo
1Rodrigo Roncero
Substitutions:
16Eusebio Guiñazu
17Marcos Ayerza
18Esteban Lozada
19Alejandro Abadie
20Alfredo Lalanne
21Santiago Fernández
22Lucas González Amorosino
Coach:
Santiago Phelan
6 June 2009
13:00 CTZ (UTC-05)
United States  15–48  Wales
Try: Tuilevuka 53' c
Gagiano 80' m
Con: DeBartolo (1/2)
Pen: DeBartolo (1/1) 13'
Report[8] Try: M. Jones 15' c
Davies (2) 21' c, 79' c
Penalty try 35' c
T. James 62' c
Cooper 70' c
Con: Robinson (3/3)
T. James (1/1)
Biggar (2/2)
Pen: Robinson (2/2) 9', 11'
Toyota Park, Bridgeview, Illinois
Attendance: 6,264[9]
Referee: Matt Goddard (Australia)

Week 4

13 June 2009
16:10 ART (UTC-03)
Argentina  24–22  England
Try: Leguizamón 2' m
Camacho 42' c
Con: Hernández (1/2)
Pen: Hernández (3) 14', 19', 23'
Drop: Hernández (1) 70'
Report[10] Try: Banahan 77' c
Con: Goode (1/1)
Pen: Goode (5) 7', 46', 50', 56', 69'
Padre Ernesto Martearena, Salta
Attendance: 24,000
Referee: Alan Lewis (Ireland)
15Horacio Agulla
14Francisco Leonelli
13Gonzalo Tiesi
12Santiago Fernández
11Gonzalo Camacho
10Juan Martín Hernández
9Alfredo Lalanne
8Juan Martín Fernández Lobbe (c)
7Juan Manuel Leguizamón
6Genaro Fessia
5Patricio Albacete
4Rimas Álvarez Kairelis
3Marcos Ayerza
2Mario Ledesma
1Rodrigo Roncero
Substitutions:
16Alberto Vernet Basualdo
17Juan Pablo Orlandi
18Esteban Lozada
19Manuel Carizza
20Nicolás Vergallo
21Miguel Avramovic
22Lucas González Amorosino
Coach:
Santiago Phelan
15Delon Armitage
14Mark Cueto
13Dan Hipkiss
12Tom May
11Matt Banahan
10Andy Goode
9Danny Care
8Nick Easter
7Steffon Armitage
6Chris Robshaw
5Louis Deacon
4Steve Borthwick (c)
3Julian White
2Dylan Hartley
1Tim Payne
Substitutes:
16George Chuter
17David Wilson
18Ben Kay
19James Haskell
20Paul Hodgson
21Sam Vesty
22Mathew Tait
Team Manager:
Martin Johnson
13 June 2009
19:30 AEST (UTC+10)
Australia  31–8  Italy
Try: O'Connor (3) 3' m, 28' m, 58' c
Giteau 33' c
Mortlock 47' c
Con: Giteau (3/5)
Report[11] Try: Robertson 42' m
Pen: McLean (1/1) 40'+1'
Canberra Stadium, Canberra
Attendance: 22,468
Referee: Romain Poite (France)
15James O'Connor
14Lachlan Turner
13Stirling Mortlock (c)
12Berrick Barnes
11Drew Mitchell
10Matt Giteau
9Luke Burgess
8Richard Brown
7George Smith
6Dean Mumm
5Nathan Sharpe
4James Horwill
3Al Baxter
2Stephen Moore
1Benn Robinson
Substitutions:
16Tatafu Polota-Nau
17Ben Alexander
18Peter Kimlin
19David Pocock
20Josh Valentine
21Quade Cooper
22Adam Ashley-Cooper
Coach:
Robbie Deans
15Luke McLean
14Kaine Robertson
13Mirco Bergamasco
12Matteo Pratichetti
11Alberto Sgarbi
10Craig Gower
9Pablo Canavosio
8Sergio Parisse (c)
7Mauro Bergamasco
6Alessandro Zanni
5Carlo Del Fava
4Quintin Geldenhuys
3Fabio Staibano
2Leonardo Ghiraldini
1Salvatore Perugini
Substitutes:
16Franco Sbaraglini
17Ignacio Rouyet
18Marco Bortolami
19Paul Derbyshire
20Tito Tebaldi
21Kristopher Burton
22Gonzalo Garcia
Coach:
Nick Mallett
13 June 2009
19:35 NZST (UTC+12)
New Zealand  22–27  France
Try: Messam 40' m
Nonu 75' m
Pen: Donald (4/5) 12', 39', 49', 57'
Report[12] Try: Trinh-Duc 17' c
Servat 27' c
Médard 70' c
Con: Dupuy (3/3)
Pen: Dupuy (2/3) 3', 66'
Carisbrook, Dunedin
Attendance: 32,000[13]
Referee: George Clancy (Ireland)
15Mils Muliaina (c)
14Cory Jane
13Isaia Toeava
12Ma'a Nonu
11Joe Rokocoko
10Stephen Donald
9Jimmy Cowan
8Liam Messam
7Adam Thomson
6Kieran Read
5Isaac Ross
4Brad Thorn
3Neemia Tialata
2Andrew Hore
1Tony Woodcock
Substitutions:
16Keven Mealamu
17John Afoa
18Bryn Evans
19Tanerau Latimer
20Piri Weepu
21Luke McAlister
22Lelia Masaga
Coach:
Graham Henry
15Maxime Médard
14Cédric Heymans
13Mathieu Bastareaud
12Damien Traille
11Vincent Clerc
10François Trinh-Duc
9Julien Dupuy
8Louis Picamoles
7Fulgence Ouedraogo
6Thierry Dusautoir (c)
5Romain Millo-Chluski
4Pascal Pape
3Sylvain Marconnet
2William Servat
1Fabien Barcella
Substitutes:
16Dimitri Szarzewski
17Thomas Domingo
18Sébastien Chabal
19Rémy Martin
20Dimitri Yachvili
21Yannick Jauzion
22Alexis Palisson
Coach:
Marc Lièvremont

Week 5

20 June 2009
16:00 ART (UTC-03)
Argentina  32–18 French Barbarians
Try: Leguizamón 40' m
Fernández 41' m
Camacho 63' c
Con: Hernández (1/3)
Pen: Hernández (5) 6', 16', 19', 23', 28'
Report[14] Try: Tomiki 52' c
Gobelet 80' m
Con: Mélé (1/2)
Pen: Mélé 44'
Drop: Mélé 25'
José Amalfitani Stadium, Buenos Aires
Referee: Federico Cuesta (Argentina)
15Lucas González Amorosino
14Lucas Borges
13Gonzalo Tiesi
12Santiago Fernández
11Gonzalo Camacho
10Juan Martín Hernández
9Alfredo Lalanne
8Juan Martín Fernández Lobbe (c)
7Juan Manuel Leguizamón
6Genaro Fessia
5Patricio Albacete
4Rimas Álvarez Kairelis
3Marcos Ayerza
2Mario Ledesma
1Rodrigo Roncero
Substitutions:
16Alberto Vernet Basualdo
17Eusebio Guiñazu
18Esteban Lozada
19Alvaro Galindo
20Nicolás Vergallo
21Federico Martín Aramburú
22Mauro Comuzzi
Coach:
Santiago Phelan
15Nicolas Brusque
14Jean-Baptiste Gobelet
13Geoffroy Messina
12Brian Liebenberg
11Yves Donguy
10David Mélé
9Nicolas Durand
8Florian Faure
7Yannick Nyanga
6Leiataua Tomiki
5Matthias Rolland
4David Auradou (c)
3David Attoub
2Benoît August
1Arnauld Tchougong
Substitutes:
16Mathieu Blin
17Jean-Baptiste Poux
18Grégory Lamboley
19Marc Giraud
20Sébastien Fauqué
21Jean-Baptiste Peyras
22Julien Saubade
Coach:
Guy Novès
20 June 2009
20:00 AEST (UTC+10)
Australia  34–12  Italy
Try: Polota-Nau 10' m
Cross 25' c
Ashley-Cooper (2) 38' m, 75' c
Turner 69' c
Con: O'Connor (2/4)
Barnes (1/1)
Pen: O'Connor (1/1) 23'
Report[15] Pen: McLean (4/6) 2', 30', 45', 62'
Etihad Stadium, Melbourne
Attendance: 20,280
Referee: Dave Pearson (England)
15James O'Connor
14Lachlan Turner
13Ryan Cross
12Quade Cooper
11Peter Hynes
10Berrick Barnes
9Luke Burgess
8George Smith (c)
7David Pocock
6Peter Kimlin
5Dean Mumm
4James Horwill
3Ben Alexander
2Tatafu Polota-Nau
1Pekahou Cowan
Substitutions:
16Stephen Moore
17Benn Robinson
18Nathan Sharpe
19Phil Waugh
20Josh Valentine
21Matt Giteau
22Adam Ashley-Cooper
Coach:
Robbie Deans
15Luke McLean
14Giulio Rubini
13Gonzalo Canale
12Gonzalo Garcia
11Alberto Sgarbi
10Craig Gower
9Tito Tebaldi
8Sergio Parisse (c)
7Simone Favaro
6Jean-François Montauriol
5Marco Bortolami
4Tommaso Reato
3Fabio Staibano
2Franco Sbaraglini
1Matias Aguero
Substitutes:
16Leonardo Ghiraldini
17Salvatore Perugini
18Quintin Geldenhuys
19Alessandro Zanni
20Giulio Toniolatti
21Kristopher Burton
22Roberto Quartaroli
Coach:
Nick Mallett
20 June 2009
19:35 NZST (UTC+12)
New Zealand  14–10  France
Try: Nonu 25' m
Pen: Donald (2/4) 39', 56'
McAlister (1/1) 65'
Report[16] Try: Heymans 44' c
Con: Dupuy (1/1)
Pen: Yachvili (1/2) 67'
Westpac Stadium, Wellington
Attendance: 29,394
Referee: Marius Jonker (South Africa)
15Mils Muliaina (c)
14Cory Jane
13Conrad Smith
12Ma'a Nonu
11Joe Rokocoko
10Stephen Donald
9Jimmy Cowan
8Kieran Read
7Tanerau Latimer
6Jerome Kaino
5Isaac Ross
4Brad Thorn
3Neemia Tialata
2Keven Mealamu
1Tony Woodcock
Substitutions:
16Aled de Malmanche
17John Afoa
18Bryn Evans
19George Whitelock
20Piri Weepu
21Luke McAlister
22Isaia Toeava
Coach:
Graham Henry
15Maxime Médard
14Cédric Heymans
13Maxime Mermoz
12Damien Traille
11Vincent Clerc
10François Trinh-Duc
9Julien Dupuy
8Louis Picamoles
7Fulgence Ouedraogo
6Thierry Dusautoir (c)
5Romain Millo-Chluski
4Sébastien Chabal
3Nicolas Mas
2William Servat
1Fabien Barcella
Substitutes:
16Dimitri Szarzewski
17Thomas Domingo
18Rémy Martin
19Damien Chouly
20Dimitri Yachvili
21Yannick Jauzion
22Mathieu Bastareaud
Coach:
Marc Lièvremont
20 June 2009
15:00 SAST (UTC+02)
South Africa  26–21 British and Irish Lions
Try: Smit 5' c
Brüssow 46' c
Con: Pienaar (2/2)
Pen: Pienaar (3/4) 9', 31', 34'
F. Steyn (1/2) 19'
Report[17] Try: Croft (2) 23' c, 68' c
Phillips 75' c
Con: S. Jones (3/3)
ABSA Stadium, Durban
Attendance: 47,813
Referee: Bryce Lawrence (New Zealand)
15François Steyn
14JP Pietersen
13Adrian Jacobs
12Jean de Villiers
11Bryan Habana
10Ruan Pienaar
9Fourie du Preez
8Pierre Spies
7Juan Smith
6Heinrich Brüssow
5Victor Matfield
4Bakkies Botha
3John Smit (c)
2Bismarck du Plessis
1Tendai Mtawarira
Substitutions:
16Gurthro Steenkamp
17Deon Carstens
18Andries Bekker
19Danie Rossouw
20Ricky Januarie
21Jaque Fourie
22Morné Steyn
Coach:
Peter de Villiers
15 Lee Byrne
14 Tommy Bowe
13 Brian O'Driscoll
12 Jamie Roberts
11 Ugo Monye
10 Stephen Jones
9 Mike Phillips
8 Jamie Heaslip
7 David Wallace
6 Tom Croft
5 Paul O'Connell (c)
4 Alun Wyn Jones
3 Phil Vickery
2 Lee Mears
1 Gethin Jenkins
Substitutes:
16 Matthew Rees
17 Adam Jones
18 Donncha O'Callaghan
19 Martyn Williams
20 Harry Ellis
21 Ronan O'Gara
22 Rob Kearney
Manager:
Ian McGeechan

Week 6

27 June 2009
20:05 AEST (UTC+10)
Australia  22–6  France
Try: Giteau 17' c
Con: Giteau (1/1)
Pen: Giteau (5/6) 26', 42', 45', 51', 55'
Report[18] Pen: Beauxis (1/2) 20'
Yachvili (1/1) 60'
ANZ Stadium, Sydney
Attendance: 43,588
Referee: Dave Pearson (England)
15Adam Ashley-Cooper
14Lachlan Turner
13Stirling Mortlock (c)
12Berrick Barnes
11Drew Mitchell
10Matt Giteau
9Luke Burgess
8Richard Brown
7George Smith
6Dean Mumm
5Nathan Sharpe
4James Horwill
3Al Baxter
2Stephen Moore
1Benn Robinson
Substitutions:
16Tatafu Polota-Nau
17Ben Alexander
18Phil Waugh
19David Pocock
20Josh Valentine
21Ryan Cross
22James O'Connor
Coach:
Robbie Deans
15Damien Traille
14Maxime Médard
13Florian Fritz
12Maxime Mermoz
11Cédric Heymans
10Lionel Beauxis
9Dimitri Yachvili
8Julien Puricelli
7Fulgence Ouedraogo
6Thierry Dusautoir (c)
5Romain Millo-Chluski
4Pascal Pape
3Sylvain Marconnet
2Dimitri Szarzewski
1Fabien Barcella
Substitutes:
16Guilhem Guirado
17Nicolas Mas
18Rémy Martin
19Damien Chouly
20Julien Dupuy
21Vincent Clerc
22Julien Arias
Coach:
Marc Lièvremont
27 June 2009
19:35 NZST (UTC+12)
New Zealand  27–6  Italy
Try: Rokocoko 23' c
Ross 56' c
Whitelock 68' c
Con: McAlister (3/3)
Pen: McAlister (2/2) 8', 27'
Report[19] Pen: McLean (2/4) 32', 54'
AMI Stadium, Christchurch
Attendance: 19,000
Referee: George Clancy (Ireland)
15Mils Muliaina (c)
14Lelia Masaga
13Isaia Toeava
12Ma'a Nonu
11Joe Rokocoko
10Luke McAlister
9Brendon Leonard
8Kieran Read
7Tanerau Latimer
6Jerome Kaino
5Isaac Ross
4Brad Thorn
3John Afoa
2Keven Mealamu
1Wyatt Crockett
Substitutions:
16Aled de Malmanche
17Tony Woodcock
18Owen Franks
19Bryn Evans
20George Whitelock
21Piri Weepu
22Cory Jane
Coach:
Graham Henry
15Luke McLean
14Kaine Robertson
13Gonzalo Canale
12Gonzalo Garcia
11Mirco Bergamasco
10Craig Gower
9Tito Tebaldi
8Sergio Parisse (c)
7Mauro Bergamasco
6Alessandro Zanni
5Marco Bortolami
4Quintin Geldenhuys
3Ignacio Rouyet
2Leonardo Ghiraldini
1Salvatore Perugini
Substitutes:
16Franco Sbaraglini
17Fabio Staibano
18Carlo Antonio Del Fava
19Simone Favaro
20Giulio Toniolatti
21Kristopher Burton
22Matteo Pratichetti
Coach:
Nick Mallett
27 June 2009
15:00 SAST (UTC+02)
South Africa  28–25 British and Irish Lions
Try: Pietersen 12' m
Habana 63' c
Fourie 74' c
Con: M. Steyn (2/2)
Pen: F. Steyn (1/2) 40'+1'
M. Steyn (2/2) 67', 80'+1'
Report[20] Try: Kearney 7' c
Con: S. Jones (1/1)
Pen: S. Jones (5/5) 2', 15', 59', 65', 76'
Drop: S. Jones (1/1) 35'
Loftus Versfeld, Pretoria
Attendance: 52,000
Referee: Christophe Berdos (France)
FB15François Steyn
RW14JP Pietersen
OC13Adrian Jacobs
IC12Jean de Villiers
LW11Bryan Habana
FH10Ruan Pienaar
SH9Fourie du Preez
N88Pierre Spies
BF7Juan Smith
OF6Schalk Burger
RL5Victor Matfield
LL4Bakkies Botha
TP3John Smit (c)
HK2Bismarck du Plessis
LP1Tendai Mtawarira
Substitutes:
HK16Chiliboy Ralepelle
PR17Deon Carstens
LK18Andries Bekker
N819Danie Rossouw
FL20Heinrich Brüssow
CE21Jaque Fourie
FH22Morné Steyn
Coach:
Peter de Villiers
FB15 Rob Kearney
RW14 Tommy Bowe
OC13 Brian O'Driscoll
IC12 Jamie Roberts
LW11 Luke Fitzgerald
FH10 Stephen Jones
SH9 Mike Phillips
N88 Jamie Heaslip
OF7 David Wallace
BF6 Tom Croft
RL5 Paul O'Connell (c)
LL4 Simon Shaw
TP3 Adam Jones
HK2 Matthew Rees
LP1 Gethin Jenkins
Substitutes:
HK16 Ross Ford
PR17 Andrew Sheridan
LK18 Alun Wyn Jones
FL19 Martyn Williams
SH20 Harry Ellis
FH21 Ronan O'Gara
WG22 Shane Williams
Manager:
Ian McGeechan

Week 7

4 July 2009
15:00 SAST (UTC+02)
South Africa  9–28 British and Irish Lions
Pen: M. Steyn (3/3) 12', 40+1', 68'
Report[21] Try: S. Williams (2) 25' m, 33' c
Monye 54' c
Con: S. Jones (2/3)
Pen: S. Jones (3/4) 9', 72', 73'
Coca-Cola Park, Johannesburg
Attendance: 58,318
Referee: Stuart Dickinson (Australia)
FB15Zane Kirchner
RW14Odwa Ndungane
OC13Jaque Fourie
IC12Wynand Olivier
LW11Jongi Nokwe
FH10Morné Steyn
SH9Fourie du Preez
N88Ryan Kankowski
BF7Juan Smith
OF6Heinrich Brüssow
RL5Victor Matfield
LL4Johann Muller
TP3John Smit (c)
HK2Chiliboy Ralepelle
LP1Tendai Mtawarira
Substitutes:
HK16Bismarck du Plessis
PR17Gurthro Steenkamp
PR18Deon Carstens
LK19Steven Sykes
N820Pierre Spies
FH21Ruan Pienaar
FB22François Steyn
Coach:
Peter de Villiers
FB15 Rob Kearney
RW14 Ugo Monye
OC13 Tommy Bowe
IC12 Riki Flutey
LW11 Shane Williams
FH10 Stephen Jones
SH9 Mike Phillips
N88 Jamie Heaslip
OF7 Martyn Williams
BF6 Joe Worsley
RL5 Paul O'Connell (c)
LL4 Simon Shaw
TP3 Phil Vickery
HK2 Matthew Rees
LP1 Andrew Sheridan
Substitutes:
HK16 Ross Ford
PR17 John Hayes
LK18 Alun Wyn Jones
FL19 David Wallace
FL20 Tom Croft
SH21 Harry Ellis
FH22 James Hook
Manager:
Ian McGeechan
gollark: Yeß?
gollark: And do you want the incident report logs thing or not?
gollark: <@151391317740486657> That is LIES!
gollark: No.
gollark: They're not *terribly* expensive except land/housing.

See also

Notes and references

  1. Wildman, Rob (6 June 2009). "England down Pumas at Old Trafford". Scrum.com. Retrieved 11 June 2009.
  2. "Canada 6-25 Ireland". BBC News. 23 May 2009. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  3. "Canada 23-32 Wales". BBC News. 30 May 2009. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  4. "England 26-33 Barbarians". BBC News. 30 May 2009. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  5. "USA 10-27 Ireland". BBC News. 31 May 2009. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  6. http://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/rugby/international/2479683/
  7. "England 37-15 Argentina". BBC News. 6 June 2009. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  8. "United States 15-48 Wales". BBC News. 6 June 2009. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  9. Helfgot, Mike (7 June 2009). "USA Rugby no match for Wales". Chicago Tribune. Archived from the original on 11 June 2009. Retrieved 11 June 2009.
  10. "Pumas hang on for thrilling win". scrum.com. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  11. "O'Connor stars as Wallabies down Italy". scrum.com. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  12. "France secure historic win in NZ". BBC News. 13 June 2009. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  13. "France claim famous victory". Scrum.com. 13 June 2009. Archived from the original on 16 June 2009. Retrieved 14 June 2009.
  14. "Unión Argentina de Rugby :: U.A.R. _____________________________________________________________________________________". archive.org. 31 May 2011. Archived from the original on 31 May 2011. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  15. "Australia 34-12 Italy". BBC News. 20 June 2009. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  16. "New Zealand 14-10 France". BBC News. 20 June 2009. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  17. "South Africa 26-21 Lions". BBC News. 20 June 2009. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  18. "Australia 22-6 France". BBC News. 27 June 2009. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  19. "New Zealand 27-6 Italy". BBC News. 27 June 2009. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  20. "South Africa 28-25 Lions". BBC News. 27 June 2009. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  21. "South Africa 9-28 Lions". BBC News. 4 July 2009. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
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