Rugby Australia expecting huge draw as tickets for Lions tour go on sale

Rugby Australia are banking on pent-up demand from British and Irish Lions supporters as well as a Wallabies revival to sell out next year's tour in Australia.
Tickets to all nine matches, including three Tests, went on sale on Monday, including for the MCG, which will host the second Wallabies clash on July 26.
Brisbane's Suncorp Stadium hosts the opening Test and Allianz Stadium in Sydney the third in the historic tour series, first played in 1888.
Despite the Wallabies' dire performance at last year's World Cup and drop in the world rankings to a historic low of No.10, RA boss Phil Waugh was confident of selling out the iconic Melbourne venue after positive sales to last year's Test there against the All Blacks.
Australia have enjoyed success in previous Lions Tests played in Melbourne, with both at the smaller Docklands stadium, now known as Marvel.
"It's exciting to launch the public ticket sales - we've played two Lions Tests in Melbourne, in 2001 and 2013, and won both of those Tests," Waugh said.
"They've been the second Tests in those series and in both instances turned the series so really looking forward to bringing the second Test to the MCG."
The British and Irish Lions - made up of players from England, Ireland, Scotland, and Wales - played behind closed doors on their last tour to South Africa due to COVID-19.
Waugh felt this would contribute to the high demand for tickets.
"We're expecting 40,000 visitors from the UK to support the Lions for the tour so it's really exciting," he said.
"Their supporters missed 2021 in South Africa because of COVID and the supporter base in Australia for the Wallabies is massive, particularly for a Lions series."
Results in the Six Nations have seen Italy leap-frog Australia in the world rankings but Waugh was upbeat about Wallabies winning back disgruntled fans.
"We're conscious we've got a lot of work to do and where we are right now in March in terms of our world ranking but it's a long, long time in sport between now and the start of the British and Irish Lions," he said.
"It's a positive start to Super Rugby, and not just the performances of the Australian teams but the way the game's been played as well ... the players are stepping up."
The Melbourne Rebels are slated to face the Lions on July 22 at Marvel Stadium despite their future being in major doubt, with the club in voluntary administration with huge debts.
Waugh said a match would go ahead even if the Lions faced a different opponent.
"While we are working through the Rebels situation, there will be still be a fixture in Melbourne on that date," Waugh told AAP.
"We've talked about a Pasifika game or potentially Australia A or the equivalent so there's different options but at the moment the plan is to have a Rebels team."
The Melbourne players and staff are sweating on a RA decision on their future in the Super Rugby Pacific competition.
Waugh admitted the process was taking longer than he would have liked.
"The sooner we can get to an outcome for 2025 and beyond the better for everyone so we're working through that," he said.
"Are we closer? Yes. Are we moving at the speed that we'd like to? Probably not so we need to accelerate that and not just for the fans and those engaged in the sport in Melbourne but for the players and the staff."
Latest Comments
Hi all. Thanks for commenting. JD is right: the headline is not mine. My headline was what ended up as the first sentence: “Why is Super Rugby Pacific so exciting this season?”. I am certainly not claiming that teams from one competition are better than the teams from another. This type of discussion is entirely subjective (as the teams do not play each other, and even with the players face each other in their national teams, it is in different systems, conditions, etc.). The season being exciting has nothing to do how well the Wallabies will do against the Lions, or against New Zealand.
My sole purpose here was to try explore quantitatively a ‘qualitative’ impression (that the season is exciting).
On Graham’s point about extreme results skewing the results, and Ed’s comment on removing outliers, this is precisely why I report the median values as well as the averages. The median is not skewed by outliers. If the margins of 5 games are 3, 4, 5, 8 and 10 points, the median margin is 5. If there was one blowout and the margins were 3, 4, 5, 8 and 57 points, the median margin is still 5.
Go to commentsPrice, venue, Hosting only done by 1 country, Profits going mostly to one country. Done in Perth…Furtherest away from NZ. Nothing works for NZR there Spew. NZR could host a Nth v Sth and make more money.
Go to comments