The DHL Stormers got their 2nd win of the season, a 27 / 16 triumph over the Blues at a sun-bathed Newlands on Saturday.
It is a win that will be both celebrated and loathed.
The celebration will be for the 4 points on the standings. The negative side will be because the Blues were reduced to 14 men for 55 minutes and the home team should have won by a much larger margin.
The game was turned on its head in the 25th minute, when veteran Blues lock Hayden Triggs was spotted punching Stormers captain Duane Vermeulen – not once, but twice – and Red-carded, leaving his team a man down for a large chunk of the match.
It did not end there, as some of the Blues took the word ‘physical’ to a very ugly new low.
The Stormers, unfortunately, at times got sucked in by the Blues’ unconventional approach – with a hoist of errors, both under pressure and unforced, halting their progress.
Scrum and breakdown play infringements marked the early stages of the match and Blues pivot Ihaia West goaled 2 penalties against 1 from his Stormers opposite Demetri Catrakilis – as the visiting New Zealanders opened a 6 / 3 lead after only 7 minutes play.
The Blues’ lead was short-lived, as the Stormers’ pressure in the visitors’ 22-metre area took its toll. After a failed driving maul, which was held up in the Blues’ goal area, Stormers’ scrumhalf Nic Groom streaked through a half-gap for the 1st try in the match.
Catrakilis’ conversion attempt in the strong crossfield breeze was held out by the upright (8 / 6).
In the ensuing stages, the teams managed to secure possession at the set-pieces, but numerous handling mistakes put paid to promising movements.
Midway through the 2st half, the Stormers grabbed the initiative and their efforts were worth much more than the additional 10 points they scored ahead of the halftime break, especially after the Blues were reduced to 14 players following the Red Card infringement by Triggs.
The Blues produced some instances of outstanding defence, but they failed to counter a moment of brilliance by Stormers left wing Dillyn Leyds who plucked a high kick ahead out of the air before stepping his way past the defence for his side’s 2nd try. This time Catrakilis made no mistake with the conversion (15 / 6).
A scrum penalty against the Blues on the stroke of halftime saw Catrakilis add to the visitors’ misery with his 2nd penalty for an 18 / 6 lead at the break.
When play restarted, the flyhalves again featured with a penalty each and the scoreboard moved along from 18 / 6 to 21 / 9 in favour of the Stormers in the 43rd minute.
A score somewhat against the run of play after an excellent inter-play in the Blues backline saw scrumhalf Jimmy Cowan score next to the posts and West goaled the conversion to reduce the deficit to 21 / 16.
Just ahead of 60 minutes, the Stormers showed signs of imposing themselves in the last quarter of the match and Catrakilis succeeded with 1 of 2 close-in penalties which were awarded against the Blues in quick succession (24 / 16).
In the closing stages, the Blues broke the Stormers’ grip on the match and managed several attacking sorties into the Stormers’ half.
However, the Stormers managed to absorb the pressure and once they transferred play to the opposition half, substitute flyhalf Kurt Coleman closed the match out with a well-struck penalty to round off his side’s 2nd consecutive win.
Stormers flank Rynhardt Elstadt suffered a broken fibula in his team’s 27 / 16 Vodacom Super Rugby win over the Blues at Newlands on Saturday.
Elstadt’s leg is already in plaster and he will consult a specialist this week to determine how long he will be out for.
He is, however, expected to be out for some time.
Man of the match: Jerome Kaino stepped up, especially after his team was reduced to 14 men. Charles Piutau was solid and Francis Saili was also a constant presence on attack and defence. Cheslin Kolbe, for most part, did what was expected of him, Demetri Catrakilis was steady, rather than spectacular, Kurt Coleman is beginning to put pressure on the selectors when it comes to the No.10 jersey, Nic Groom had his moments and Nizaam Carr made a strong case to be a regular starter. Our award goes Stormers captain Duane Vermeulen, who was the glue in a team that could so easily have unravelled.
Scorers:
DHL Stormers:
- Tries: Nic Groom (1), Dillyn Leyds (1)
- Conversions: Demetri Catrakilis (1)
- Penalties: Demetri Catrakilis (4), Kurt Coleman (1)
Blues:
- Tries: Jimmy Cowan (1)
- Conversions: Ihaia West (1)
- Penalties: Ihaia West (3)
Red Card: Hayden Triggs (Blues, 25th minute – foul play, punching)
Teams:
DHL Stormers: 15 Cheslin Kolbe, 14 Johnny Kotze, 13 Juan de Jongh, 12 Damian de Allende, 11 Dillyn Leyds, 10 Demetri Catrakilis, 9 Nic Groom, 8 Duane Vermeulen (Captain), 7 Michael Rhodes, 6 Rynhardt Elstadt, 5 Ruan Botha, 4 Jurie van Vuuren, 3 Vincent Koch, 2 Siyabonga Ntubeni, 1 Steven Kitshoff
Replacements: 16 Bongi Mbonambi, 17 Oliver Kebble, 18 Wilco Louw, 19 Siya Kolisi, 20 Nizaam Carr, 21 Louis Schreuder, 22 Kurt Coleman, 23 Huw Jones.
Blues: 15 Charles Piutau, 14 Ben Lam, 13 Hamish Northcott, 12 Francis Saili, 11 Tevita Li, 10 Ihaia West, 9 Jimmy Cowan, 8 Jerome Kaino (Captain), 7 Brendon O’Connor, 6 Steven Luatua, 5 Hayden Triggs, 4 Josh Bekhuis, 3 Angus Ta’avao, 2 James Parsons, 1 Tony Woodcock
Replacements: 16 Matt Moulds, 17 Ofa Tu’ungafasi, 18 Charlie Faumuina, 19 Patrick Tuipulotu, 20 Luke Braid, 21 Jamison Gibson-Park, 22 Dan Bowden, 23 Lolagi Visinia.
Referee: Craig Joubert (South Africa)
Assistant Referees: Marius van der Westhuizen (South Africa), Quinton Immelman (South Africa)
TMO: Shaun Veldsman (South Africa)
rugby365
How far should the Crusaders have beaten the Sharks by last year after Deysel got red? And how did that work out for them?
Sometimes a red card galvanizes the remaining 14 players to such an extent that they play even better than when they were a full compliment.
Often we see a side score while having a player in the bin….then we joke that so-and-so should rather stay off the field because they are doing better with only 14 men.
@ nortie:
Sharks won that game with 13 men, didn’t they!
2 @ Pietman:
Yep Pietman, at one stage they were down to 13, and they were away from home.
I would also have liked to see us get 4 tries, but after the disasterous starts we had the last few years, 2 wins from 2 games will do for me.
A fibula break is not that bad. I’ve broken a fibula before and it healed pretty quick. If I remebered correctly i was back on the field in less than 5 weeks.
Given all the negative press about how young this Stormers team is, with key players missing, and how they are expected to start slow until the more experienced players join the squad, I will take 2 wins from 2 any day of the week.
Bonus points are just that, a bonus (duh).
I think its is in fact the youngsters like Leyds, Botha, Kocj and others that have stood up the most.
With players like De Villiers, Burger, Etsebeth, Malherbe, Kolisi, Senatla, Taute and Pat Howard still due to return one wonders if there is a spot for all or most of them in this team, something that we wouldn’t have thought before the season started.
Users Online
Total 218 users including 0 member, 218 guests, 0 bot online
Most users ever online were 3735, on 31 August 2022 @ 6:23 pm