Australian Rugby Union today unveiled the official logo, ticket prices and the on-sale dates for next year’s long-awaited Tour by the British & Irish Lions.
The Lions will take on the Emirates Western Force at Paterson’s Stadium in Perth on Wednesday, 5 June 2013 in their first match of the nine game tour.
Tickets for the tour will go on general public sale in February – four months before the tour – while members of Australia’s Super Rugby clubs will have pre-purchase opportunities to matches against their team from next month.
Test tickets will be priced from $95 for adults while the remaining six tour matches will have adult entry prices positioned from $15 to $30.
Gwyn Dolphin, Executive Director of Eventscorp, the Western Australian Government's events agency, said it was an honour for Perth to be the first Australian city to host the legendary British & Irish Lions during their 2013 tour.
"Eventscorp is proud to support the Emirates Western Force versus the British & Irish Lions match as part of our three year deal with Australian Rugby Union,” Ms Dolphin said.
“The deal also delivers Perth the Wallabies Test against the Springboks on September 8, 2012 and then again in 2014.
“The Wallabies will also play Argentina in Perth next year under the deal.”
Making just their third visit to Australia in 24 years, and their first since 2001, the Lions will take on the Wallabies in three Tests, the five Australian Super Rugby franchises and a combined NSW-Queensland Country team during the visit next June-July.
Drawn from the best players in England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales, the Lions are one of sport’s most celebrated international teams and are expected to have the support of up to 40,000 travelling British and Irish Rugby fans.
As ARU unveiled the Tour logo – a stylised head of a Lion in the shape of Australia – the man who captained the last Wallabies team in a series against the finest from England, Ireland, Wales and Scotland said the magnitude of next year’s series could not be under estimated.
Test legend John Eales said the tour – 12 Years in the Making – was the biggest event to hit Australian shores since the 2003 Rugby World Cup.
“The importance of a Lions Tour, number one, is because of its scarcity,” said Eales.
“A lot of players go through their long careers and play a lot of Test matches and they don’t have the opportunity to play against the British & Irish Lions.
“Two years before I started in Test Rugby there was a series in 1989. In my last season of Test Rugby the British & Irish Lions were back in Australia.
“I felt very fortunate to have had the chance to play them.
“It was motivation at the start for me and at the end, but for very different reasons.”
The most capped Test player in Rugby history, former Wallabies captain George Gregan, echoed Eales’ sentiments about the magnitude of the British & Irish Lions Tour.
“You get players knocking lumps out of each other from England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales and then all of a sudden in a short period they come together and play as one,” Gregan said.
“The thing which binds them and brings them together is that Lions jersey. It’s got a rich history and they get together really quickly and they work really hard for each other.
“The thing that unites them is that Red jumper, they play for it and history shows that.
“The calibre of this team which is going to come out here next year is going to be fantastic and it’s going to set up an epic series.”
Former Wallabies fullback Matt Burke, who also played in the 2001 Wallabies side alongside Eales and Gregan, said it was the epitome of a Northern Hemisphere player’s career to win a Lions cap.
“It just means so much to those guys if they can get chosen on a Lions Tour, there’s just plenty for those guys to play for,” Burke said.
“If they can represent the Lions it just puts them on another level, especially when you look back at history and the names who have played in the Red jumper.
“I guess the closest we would get would be if you were to combine an Australian, New Zealand and South African team. That would be the next pinnacle for Southern Hemisphere Rugby players.”
Australia won the 2001 series two Tests to one, after dropping the first game in Brisbane.
Twelve years earlier, the Lions triumphed two Tests to one. Ironically, they also lost the first of the three Tests.
Never playing at home, and only assembling for overseas visits, the Lions travel to Australia, New Zealand and South Africa on a rotational basis every four years and take with them a passionate supporter base.
ARU Managing Director and CEO, John O’Neill AO, said the Tour would be a massive occasion for Australian Rugby and provide a significant economic impact to the national economy due to the influx of international supporters.
“The British & Irish Lions are steeped in history and when they come to Australia next year they will do so keen to reverse the result of their last outing in 2001,” Mr O’Neill said.
“Lions Tours are synonymous for creating history and the 2001 series was certainly filled with ‘where were you when it happened’ moments.
“The Lions have had 12-years to ponder ‘what if’ and next year they will come to these shores ready to make amends.
“The stage is certainly set for the biggest sporting contests to be played out in Australia next year.”
Test ticket prices have been set at the same levels for all three showdowns between the Qantas Wallabies and the Lions in Brisbane, Melbourne and Sydney.
Adults’ prices start at $95 for a Bronze category ticket, moving to $175 for Silver, $235 for Gold and $295 for Platinum.
By comparison:
• 2011 Rugby World Cup quarter final tickets in New Zealand ranged from $150 to $380;
• 2013 AFL grand final tickets will be priced from $176.50 to $390;
• 2003 Rugby World Cup quarter final tickets in Australia were priced from $95 to $295; and
• 2005 Lions Tour Test tickets in New Zealand were priced from $80 for some matches and up to $300 for the three Tests between the All Blacks and the Lions.
Meantime, the non-Test tour matches in 2013 will start at just $15 for a Bronze category ticket to the Combined Country game against the Lions in Newcastle.
Best seats in the house will range from $40 for the Combined Country match to $70 for the Emirates Western Force’s clash with the Lions in Perth.
Mr O’Neill said Test ticket prices reflected the magnitude of the once in 12 years series while the other tour matches carried price options consistent with what fans were used to paying to see their favourite Super Rugby teams in action.
“The Test ticket prices we are announcing reflect not just the scarcity of the tour but also its magnitude,” Mr O’Neill said.
“They are comparable to the prices we set 10 years ago for the 2003 Rugby World Cup Quarter Finals in Australia.
“We believe these Tests are certainly deserving of equal status. This will be the biggest Rugby event on Australian soil since that Rugby World Cup.
“At the same time there is some wonderful value around the prices for the non-Test tour matches.”
A full breakdown of ticket prices and where they can be purchased for the Emirates Western Force v British and Irish Lions is below.
|
EMIRATES WESTERN FORCE
|
|
v
|
|
THE BRITISH & IRISH LIONS
|
|
Patersons Stadium, Perth, WA
|
|
Wednesday, 5 June, 2013
|
|
Platinum
|
$70.00
|
|
Gold
|
$60.00
|
|
Silver – Adult
|
$50.00
|
|
Silver - Concession
|
$33.00
|
|
Silver - Child
|
$25.00
|
|
Silver – Family*
|
$100.00
|
|
Bronze – Adult
|
$30.00
|
|
Bronze - Concession
|
$20.00
|
|
Bronze – Child
|
$15.00
|
|
Bronze – Family*
|
$60.00
|
*Family ticket is 2 adults & 2 children OR 1 adult, 3 children (total of 4 people)
Child must be 4 - 16 years inclusive. 3 years and under are free if they sit on your knee
2013 British & Irish Lions Tour Schedule
|
DATE
|
MATCH
|
VENUE
|
|
Wednesday, 5 June 2013
|
Lions v Western Force
|
Patersons Stadium, Perth
|
|
Saturday, 8 June 2013
|
Lions v Queensland Reds
|
Suncorp Satadium, Brisbane
|
|
Wednesday, 12 June 2013
|
Lions v Combined NSW-Qld Country
|
Hunter Stadium, Newcastle
|
|
Saturday, 15 June 2013
|
Lions v NSW Waratahs
|
Allianz Stadium, Sydney
|
|
Tuesday, 18 June 2013
|
Lions v Brumbies
|
Canberra Stadium, Canberra
|
|
Saturday, 22 June 2013
|
Lions v Qantas Wallabies
|
Suncorp Stadium, Brisbane
|
|
Tuesday, 25 June 2013
|
Lions v Melbourne Rebels
|
AAMI Stadium, Melbourne
|
|
Saturday, 29 June 2013
|
Lions v Qantas Wallabies
|
Etihad Stadium, Melbourne
|
|
Saturday, 6 July 2013
|
Lions v Qantas Wallabies
|
ANZ Stadium, Sydney
|