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Four-try haul for Tambwe as Lions batter Stormers

Madosh Tambwe celebrates for Lions

Madosh Tambwe enjoyed an outing to remember as he scored four tries in the Lions’ 52-31 battering of the Stormers in Johannesburg.

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The young winger had crossed three times inside a devastating opening 15 minutes, before going over early again in the second half as South Africa Conference leaders the Lions made it five wins and three defeats in Super Rugby.

The Lions had lost three of their previous four, but Tambwe scored his first on the counter-attack inside the first minute and had a second after some neat recycling work by the Stormers’ line.

Andries Coetzee’s chip-kick played in Tambwe for his third and, although Wilco Louw put Stormers on the board, Lionel Mapoe and Kwagga Smith dotted down as the Lions led 31-10 at the break.

Franco Mostert stretched the lead early in the second half and Tambwe scored his fourth by collecting Elton Jantjies’ kick and racing to the line.

Damian Willemse and Paul de Wet scored either side of Ruan Combrinck’s touchdown for the Lions and a late penalty try at least brought some respectability for the Stormers, but it did little to dampen a dominant Lions win.

LIONS 52 (Tambwe 4, Mapoe, K. Smith, Mostert, Combrinck tries, Jantjies 6 cons) STORMERS 31 (Louw, Willemse, de Wet tries, penalty try; Marais 2 cons, pen, Willemse con)

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TL 34 minutes ago
'The Wallabies only have themselves to blame': How the Lions sunk Australia in Melbourne

I agree, the comparison to Rassie in 2021 is unfair. Schmidt despite being highly emotional was scrupulous in not making it a personal grudge match, and in the circumstances I think he behaved in a decent way. What Rassie did was unhinged and extreme. Why fudge the two together? It’s much more common for coaches to do what Joe did, and it was unusual for him, he resisted efforts of journo’s to get him talking about the cards that weren’t in Test 1. He’s taken exception in this instance, if he was doing it all the time I’d dismiss it, but he’s got some cred so I take it a little more seriously when he speaks up.


Otherwise Mr Bishop/ Nick you have yet again proven your acumen as a selector and tactician this series, making calls before not after the event, like any good analyst would. Schmidt was cruelled by injuries this series, more than was apparent initially. In both games injuries to Bobby V and Skelton’s fitness hampered the WBs, and Gleeson in Test 1, and Noah before, and JAS leading in. Picking TT would have been a huge risk after SR form, but yes, seems like it would have been worth taking in hindsight and many were suggesting before. We just don’t have the depth for that not to make a big impact. But Joe seems to have put his chips on Williams as long termer and is investing in him, like he did players in Ireland, when Williams is yet to deliver in this series (although the lineout has been solid when he’s on). Perhaps his time will come. JAS defence is perhaps the biggest issue as Nick you’ve pointed out now on multiple occasions. I just get flummoxed myself thinking about it, as any solution creates another problem, perhaps he just needs time and it just had to be this way….At the very least we need an A/B test and see what the experiment uncovers.


As an Australian I stick to the paradoxical blend of unrealistic optimism and fatalism in reflecting on these decisions that has at once been the blessing and cruse of our culture historically.

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