But there were teething problems for Andy Farrell’s team as they opened their nine-game Australian itinerary, highlighted by a three-match series against the Wallabies starting on July 19.
The Lions were undisciplined and conceded six penalties in a frenetic first half against a Force team with six internationals in their starting XV.
However, the gulf in talent between the teams was evident as the Lions ran riot in a one-sided second half with five tries.
“I thought we started really well and then pretty quickly we were on the back foot through ill discipline and a few inaccuracies,” said Lions skipper Dan Sheehan, who scored the opening try.
“But I think it’s an improvement (from Argentina), especially on the scoreline side and how we sort of closed out that game towards the end.
“I thought the bench had a good impact when they came on but there’s still plenty of things to work on. I think our discipline was nowhere near good enough.”
Early barrage
The Lions easily beat the Force 69-17 on their last Australian tour and something similar was expected against a team that finished ninth in the 11-team Super Rugby ladder, the lowest of the four Australian franchises.
The Nic White-led Force were without Wallabies Carlo Tizzano, Jeremy Williams and Harry Potter.
It only took two minutes for the Lions to hit the scoreboard after a brilliant flick from wing James Lowe found Ireland hooker Sheehan, who celebrated his captaincy debut in style.
The Force hit back from the early barrage when White barrelled over through heavy traffic before the home side dominated possession.
Wallabies winger Dylan Pietsch proved a handful for a Lions defence under considerable pressure.
Pollock reignited his team with a blistering run to slither through a crack in Force’s defence before a superb offload to Williams.
Both teams started to wilt before the interval amid chaotic play as Finn Russell caught the Force napping and found Elliot Daly.
Tensions boiled over following the try with Pollock in the middle of a fracas.
But he was soon in the sin bin after receiving a yellow card as the Lions’ penalties built up.
The Lions put the foot down after half time with Williams flying over the corner having superbly combined with Lowe.
But Williams pulled up clutching his left hamstring and limped off the field.
The Lions’ superior depth and class was on show in an ominous statement as Daly capped a strong effort with his second try.
“I don’t think that score reflected certainly the first 50 minutes,” said White.
“We probably left a couple of opportunities out there, but we got stuck right into them and it had a real Test match intensity about it. They’re a class side.”
The Lions tour continues against Queensland Reds in Brisbane on Wednesday.