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British Lions v The Rest

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(Redirected fromRest of the World XV)

British Lions v The Rest
EventIRFB Centenary
British LionsThe Rest
715
Date16 April 1986
VenueCardiff Arms Park
RefereeR C Francis (New Zealand)
WeatherWet

British Lions v The Rest was a 1986rugby union match that saw theBritish Lions play against 'The Rest' to celebrate the centenary of theInternational Rugby Football Board. The Rest consisted of players from Australia, France, New Zealand and South Africa. At the time, there were only eight unions affiliated to the Board, thus only players from those countries were chosen. The Rest beat the Lions 15–7 in April 1986 in the match played atCardiff Arms Park.

British & Irish Lions selection

[edit]

The Lions team was selected by the Four Home Unions committee which organises Lions tours. The Lions would have toured South Africa in 1986 if the regular schedule had been followed, but in December 1985 theSouth African Rugby Board announced they would not be inviting the Lions side to tour South Africa the following year. Political objections to South Africa'sapartheid policies including a potential boycott of the1986 Commonwealth Games and state of emergency in South Africa at the time lay behind this decision. The Lions squad was managed byClive Rowlands and coached byMick Doyle.[1] The 21 players selected were issued with Lions' blazers and ties and considered to be official British Lions.[2]

The match

[edit]

The match was a midweek game inCardiff. The wet weather marred the game, in marked contrast to theOverseas Unions match three days later played in ideal conditions at Twickenham.[3]

16 April 1986
 British Lions7–15The Rest
Try:Beattie
Pen:Hastings
ReportTry:Farr-Jones
Poidevin
Con:Lynagh (2)
Pen:Lynagh
Cardiff Arms Park,Cardiff
Referee:Bob Francis (New Zealand)
British Lions
The Rest

FB15ScotlandGavin Hastings
RW14IrelandTrevor Ringland
OC13IrelandBrendan Mullin
IC12WalesJohn Devereux
LW11EnglandRory Underwood
FH10ScotlandJohn Rutherforddownward-facing red arrow
SH9WalesRobert Jones
N88ScotlandJohn Beattie
OF7IrelandNigel Carr
BF6ScotlandJohn Jeffrey
RL5IrelandDonal Lenihan
LL4EnglandWade Dooleydownward-facing red arrow
TP3IrelandDes Fitzgerald
HK2ScotlandColin Deans (c)
LP1WalesJeff Whitefoot
Replacements:
CE16IrelandMike Kiernan
SH17EnglandRichard Hill
FH18WalesMalcolm Daceyupward-facing green arrow
PR19ScotlandIain Milne
HK20EnglandSteve Brain
LK21ScotlandIain Paxtonupward-facing green arrow
Coach:
IrelandMick Doyle
FB15FranceSerge Blanco
RW14FrancePatrick Estève
OC13AustraliaAndrew Slack (c)
IC12AustraliaMichael Lynagh
LW11New ZealandJohn Kirwan
FH10New ZealandWayne Smith
SH9AustraliaNick Farr-Jones
N88New ZealandMurray Mexted
BF7AustraliaSimon Poidevin
OF6New ZealandMark Shaw
RL5South AfricaSchalk Burger
LL4AustraliaSteve Cutler
TP3New ZealandGary Knight
HK2AustraliaTom Lawton
LP1AustraliaEnrique Rodriguez
Replacements:
HK16
PR17South AfricaDanie Gerber
PR18South AfricaNaas Botha
LK19New ZealandAndy Dalton
LK20South AfricaFlippie van der Merwe
FL21AustraliaSteve Tuynman
Coach:

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Griffiths, John."The Lions tour that never was, Cecil Afrika's Sevens' career and Shane Williams' try-scoring rate".espnscrum.com. Retrieved26 February 2013.
  2. ^Thomas, Clem (2005).The History of the British and Irish Lions. Edinburgh: Mainstream Publishing. p. 202.ISBN 1845960300.
  3. ^Scrum.com match summary
Players
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By opponent
See also
Tours
Australia
New Zealand
South Africa
Argentina
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History
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