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Lions survive ferocious test to edge First Nations and Pasifika XV
An inconsistent British and Irish Lions survived a ferocious battle to stretch their unbeaten streak to seven Tuesday with a nervy 24-19 takedown of an aggressive First Nations and Pasifika XV.
Led by a composed Owen Farrell, the tourists edged the home side four tries to three under a closed roof at Melbourne's Docklands Stadium with what was effectively a B team.
But they often lacked dynamism against a fired-up team with limited preparation but expertly marshalled by veteran Wallaby Kurtley Beale.
The Lions controlled the contest early with two tries in the opening 10 minutes, but the hosts refused to go away with plenty of niggle and brutal tackling.
They struck back to reach the break all square at 14-14 before the Lions lifted in the second half, then survived a late Pasifika fightback.
None of the starting side from their 27-19 first Test win in Brisbane were involved and many of the 23 picked are outsiders for a place in the 23 for Saturday's second Test at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.
But head coach Andy Farrell had stressed there was still an opportunity for players to state their case.
Scot Blair Kinghorn returned from a knee injury at fullback with heavy strapping but he was patchy in his bid to oust Hugo Keenan, who had been hit-and-miss in Brisbane.
Ireland centre Garry Ringrose, fit again after a concussion, came on in the first half and was impressive as he also looks to force his way into Test contention, potentially at the expense of Huw Jones or Sione Tuipulotu.
Former England skipper Farrell led from the front to put his hand up also to be a bench contender.
The odds were always against Beale's side, and they were fortunate not to go behind early when Scotland's Darcy Graham had a try ruled out after stepping on the sideline.
In front of a packed house, the hosts were reduced to 14 minutes later with wing Triston Reilly sent to the sin-bin for a shoulder to the head, and it proved costly.
A rampant Lions bagged two well-executed converted tries while he was off the field.
Irish centre Jamie Osborne dotted down after collecting a clever chip by Farrell, then Graham finished a sweeping move in the corner with Farrell again the linchpin.
Graham then departed in tears after treatment on his ankle, with Ringrose replacing him.
Reilly returned and made amends, intercepting a looping pass from Kinghorn to sprint unopposed to the posts and get his side on the board.
It sparked life into the First Nations and Pasifika team, who crossed again when Seru Uru used brute strength to flop over and with Beale converting both times it was 14-14 after 23 minutes.
The Lions needed a second-half response and it came quickly from Osborne, who got his second try after a huge pass out wide from Kinghorn.
Irish flanker Josh van der Flier then crossed after a classy dummy from Farrell before Rob Leota pulled a try back for the hosts to set up a tense finale.
T.Ziegler--VB