Business Day

White keeps eye on bigger Bulls prize

• Higher log position or not, coach says side must overcome hurdles against ‘yardstick’ team

- Liam Del Carme

Ever the pragmatist Jake White is less bothered about the SA Shield’s destiny than he is about finishing higher than the Stormers on the United Rugby Championsh­ip (URC) points table.

SA rugby’s most enduring rivalry will have another flashpoint on Saturday when the Bulls meet the Stormers, and the stakes, as ever, are high.

White underlined the significan­ce of finishing high on the overall log.

“Who won the Wales conference two years ago?” the Bulls’ director of rugby asked rhetorical­ly. “It doesn’t matter. It is about staying ahead. You need to get a top four, top two if you want to go all the way in this competitio­n.

“It gets tough at the back-end of the competitio­n and you need

to play at home in those big games.” Equally, White said he was not weighed down by the Bulls’ unflatteri­ng record of seven successive t defeats to the Stormers. “I’m not worried about breaking the streak.” But

White does admits though that the Stormers have had the Pretoria team’s number.

“What they do, they do really well. They are a settled team. Their coaching staff have been together for 10, 15 years at Western Province. We are getting better, and I’m happier about where we are now in year three. We need to play our best rugby. We’ve never really played well against them. They don’t allow it. They have a good defence.”

Though his team are five points clear of the Stormers, White admits they have a few hurdles to overcome against the side he uses as a yardstick.

“We played Saracens here and played well, we played Bordeaux here and we played well and we played Leinster here and it doesn’t matter which calibre of Leinster side that was, we played really well against them.

One side we haven’t played well against is the Stormers. We have to find ways of nullifying the things they do well.”

He speaks with envy of the Stormers’ ability to step up in the big moments. In tight matches they tend to turn things in their favour through cool composure and sheer will.

“They have taken their chances. Whether they get a late penalty or bonus point try at the end. That has kept them going.”

White, a keen observer if not devotee of tradition, is enthused by seeing many Springboks going head to head at a packed Loftus Versfeld. There is the prospect of tight heads Wilco Louw and Frans Malherbe leaving their fingerprin­ts on proceeding­s for the Bulls and the Stormers, respective­ly.

“Wilco is ready to go,” White confirmed. Last week, Stormers head coach John Dobson suggested Malherbe might be in action this week having not played since the 2023 Rugby World Cup final.

Assistant coach Rito Hlongwane brought that prospect a little closer to reality when he said earlier this week that Malherbe had a role to play on Saturday. Malherbe’s presence had lifted the players at training.

White said he had a fit squad, but there were a few niggles. “We have rotated guys ... and pushed each other. People don’t just walk in and play.”

On that score, he used the example of Springbok utility back Canan Moodie who was available to play a few weeks ago, but was kept waiting in the wings. “We played another wing. It worked. Now Canan can’t wait to play. He realises there is competitio­n for his jersey.”

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Jake White

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