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Shane Williams insisted he is taking nothing for granted after a
memorable five-try exhibition thrust him into Lions Test team contention.
Welsh wizard Williams cast his spell on second division minnows Manawatu as
the Lions posted a record score in New Zealand, emphatically surpassing their
64-5 victory over Marlborough/Nelson 46 years ago.
The Lions also came within touching distance of an all-time biggest tour win -
116-10 against Western Australia four years ago - after racking up 17 tries and
71 unanswered second-half points.
Williams too, was on the Lions record trail, but finished one score short of
equalling the six touchdowns scored by David Duckham against 1971 New Zealand
tour opponents West Coast-Buller and JJ Williams' effort against South African
side South West Districts three years later.
While Williams and company effectively found themselves involved in little
more than a training exercise, there were still definite second Test pointers
for head coach Sir Clive Woodward.
Lock Donncha O'Callaghan and flanker Martyn Williams, who both went off at
half-time, surely did enough to secure Test 22 places in Wellington on Saturday,
and Geordan Murphy also impressed from full-back.
Wing Williams stole the show though, with his elusive running and brilliant
awareness thrilling Lions supporters who had been starved of entertaining rugby
until today's romp.
And Woodward should now not hesitate in handing him an opportunity opposite
All Blacks speed merchant Rico Gear as the Lions face a make-or-break encounter
following their abject first Test display last weekend.
"I tried hard, and I came off the pitch feeling pretty happy," said
Williams, who has scored 24 tries in 29 games for reigning Six Nations champions
Wales.
"It is not up to me now. Hopefully, I will be involved (in the second Test),
but if I am not, then I am not.
"We wanted to go out and put a marker down that we are a lot better than last
weekend. A lot of the boys had a point to prove."
Williams narrowly missed out on the Test 22 four days ago, and he remains
cautious ahead of Woodward's planned team announcement tomorrow.
"Maybe, I hadn't done enough for last weekend - maybe, I still haven't done
enough," he said.
Lions fans were uniformly disgruntled with Woodward's poor first Test
selection.
They will be furious if Williams does not start at Westpac Stadium alongside
the likes of Gavin Henson and Josh Lewsey in a back division which must be
reshaped anyway with captain Brian O'Driscoll sidelined through injury.
"There is no doubt that Shane was outstanding today," said Lions coach Ian
McGeechan. "He is a good finisher with good running lines."
The game - which heralded the Lions' first visit to Palmerston North since
1977 - was billed a mis-match, and so it proved.
Once lock Simon Shaw won the first lineout - to ironic cheers, given the
embarrassing Lions effort in that department last Saturday - Williams and
company played exclusive front-foot rugby.
There were six tries in the first half, but a further 11 after the break as
Manawatu's amateur cast predictably wilted amid unrelenting pressure from a
Lions side who scored more tries in one game than during all seven previous tour
matches together.
Fly-half Ronan O'Gara, who did not even appear until the 50th minute,
collected 20 points, while the man he replaced - England's Charlie Hodgson -
contributed 19.
Touchdowns were shared by Williams (5), O'Gara (2), Mark Cueto (2), Murphy,
Hodgson, Jason Robinson, Martin Corry, Neil Back, Gareth Cooper, Gordon D'Arcy
and Ollie Smith, with Manawatu restricted to a couple of Jonathan Hargreaves
penalties.
"They were too big, too strong and too fast in all facets of play," conceded
Manawatu coach Charlie McAlister.
"I would imagine it will be a good result for the Lions' morale, but we are
just extremely grateful to have had the opportunity to put our guys up against
such awesome athletes.
"This was bigger than big for our region - it has given us a massive profile
with the Lions coming to play us."
It was an old-fashioned rugby occasion at the Arena Manawatu, when a touring
institution came, saw and plundered, but left having provided so many memories
for local fans, coaches and young players.
Sadly, if future Lions tours are allowed to become nothing more than fly-in,
fly-out Test match missions with an emphasis on business and money, then teams
like Manawatu will disappear off the map.
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