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Charlie Hodgson turned in a dominant performance in the Lions' victory over
Taranaki today to silence his doubters and send a timely message to Sir Clive
Woodward.
The fly-half debate on this tour has centred around whether Jonny Wilkinson or
Stephen Jones should start in the first Test against the All Blacks on June 25.
Hodgson had effectively been written off as little more than a passenger
behind the leading protagonists but was determined to prove otherwise.
"It's great to get off to a good start for me personally," said Hodgson.
"There's been a lot of talk with Jonny and Steve competing for the number 10
slot and it was good to give Clive Woodward some selection problems."
Hodgson formed an excellent half-back partnership with Chris Cusiter and as
well as directing the Lions offensively, they showed the way in defence by
putting in the most tackles in the side, with 15 apiece.
Hodgson made scything runs, kicked from hand with precision, directed the
defence with authority and orchestrated a second-half run of 30 unanswered
points - with tries from captain Martin Corry, Shane Horgan and two from Geordan
Murphy - that broke the back of a physical Taranaki side.
Hodgson's talent has never been in doubt, but his temperament has often been
called in to question. Critics argue his confidence is fragile.
On Wednesday, though, he was in prime form. From the moment he found touch with a
stunning clearance down the line Hodgson was on top of the game.
And his display earned hearty praise from Corry, who scored the Lions' first
try from a Hodgson pass.
Corry said: "I thought he was tremendous. When things weren't going well for
us he controlled the game, he kept us moving forward, his kicking was
brilliant.
"You need your fly-half to be vocal and an orchestrator and that is what he
did.
"He reads the game so well. That is his great strength he is such a natural
rugby player.
"He has a great rugby brain on him. When things weren't going well his
confidence never suffered. He always has that ability to read the game. The
cream always rises to the top and that is what happened today."
The Lions said after their hard-fought win over Bay of Plenty that their
performance in Rotorua would be the minimum benchmark and for all the first-half
struggles in the forwards today, Corry feels that has now been raised.
"It was always going to be tough but thankfully we kept trying to play the
game fast. We weren't successful in the first half but in the second half we
were and that proved the key.
"The key for us in the early stages of the tour is generating momentum and
improving on the performance before.
"I felt we moved up a notch. It was a very good victory and certainly a set
up and let's hope we can keep momentum going."
The performance of the tight five will be a cause for concern and it was not
until Gethin Jenkins was introduced at tight-head and Taranaki began to run out
of steam that the pack gained the upper hand.
In the first half they were wheeled at the scrum, shunted off their own ball,
struggled in the lineout and were second best at the breakdown.
"The Taranaki pack played well, put us under a lot of pressure in the first
half and I was happy with the way we responded," said Lions coach Ian
McGeechan.
"The pleasing thing for me is that we are not just learning in training but
on the pitch is well. That was a tough game up front.
"I thought our defence was outstanding. The fact there were no penalties in
the second half shows a composure you can build things on. The fact we scored a
try out of defence is very important. It shows we can turn one into the
other."
While Hodgson sent Woodward a reminder of what he can do, so Murphy responded
to the challenge laid down last Saturday by Josh Lewsey's stunning performance.
Murphy ran in two tries from fullback and linked well in an all-Irish back
three with winger Shane Horgan, who crossed for the Lions second try, and Denis
Hickie, who was a menacing threat on the counter-attack.
McGeechan said: "It's what you want, players playing well and challenging so
the next team up knows it has got to perform.
"When every group of players goes on the field and is challenged, that is
what makes a successful Lions group.
"I though the back three had a good game and it came from the control we had
in the halfbacks.
"It will have given them a lot of confidence. Geordan saw the chances well
and that is what you want from back three players."
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