Cape Argus

Fleck hopes flu won’t give Stormers the Super-Blues

- WYNONA LOUW

IT MIGHT be a very different Stormers team we see at Newlands tomorrow to the one Robbie Fleck named yesterday… if the flu sticks around.

At the team announceme­nt at Newlands yesterday, Fleck said that six players in his matchday squad for their home game against the Blues haven’t been able to train this week due to a “hectic strain of flu” they picked up while on tour – with Damian de Allende, Kobus van Dyk, Cobus Wiese, Carlu Sadie, JC Janse van Rensburg, and Sikhumbuzo Notshe having to prove their fitness today.

If those players are still struggling today, Fleck will make the necessary changes to his side.

“Tomorrow (today) has to be the final day (to prove their fitness). It’s a pretty hectic strain of flu they’ve got – the management members are not here either…Paul Feeney, Paul Treu, our own doctor, so it is what it is. It’s a unique situation. It’s the first time I’ve been involved in something like this.”

“The medical advice is that if players play with this kind of flu it’s pretty dangerous.”

“Some guys had this flu in Dunedin already and they recovered to play. I’m certainly not concerned, we will play a full 80 minutes – we definitely finished the stronger team in the last two games against New Zealand opposition and I’d like to think we can do the same thing again. Regardless of the flu situation, we’ll put our best foot forward.”

While Fleck seemed confident in the guys who will replace those in the initial matchday squad if needed, another aspect he was confident about is their lineout – something the Stormers boss believes can certainly go better this weekend.

The Stormers lineout has struggled in recent weeks, and it was on tour against the Waratahs, the Crusaders and the Highlander­s that they were cruelly exposed at the set-piece.

Injury to first-choice hooker Bongi Mbonambi before the tour to Australasi­a and lock Pieter-Steph du Toit missing out against the Highlander­s with the flu didn’t help the Stormers’ troubled lineout situation either, although Fleck maintained that their lineout woes weren’t the result of individual errors, but rather “a combinatio­n of factors”.

Fleck added that they were aiming to improve their lineout by “at least 10 or 15 percent” against the Blues: “It hasn’t operated as it should have. I think we’re operating at about 67 or 70 percent, and that’s not good enough for this level and this competitio­n,” Fleck said at Nwlands yesterday.

“If we can improve our lineout by at least 10 or 15 percent this weekend, then we can give ourselves two more attacking opportunit­ies.”

“We’re working hard on it. It’s not one singular person, it’s a combinatio­n of factors. We just need to get that synchronis­ation right. It’s mainly our attacking lineout that we need to get better options on.”

Apart from a number of Stormers balls going skew or over their jumpers, Fleck’s team haven’t capitalise­d on the possession they have managed to secure at the setpiece – often stringing together promising attacking plays, but then failing to cross the final hurdle and go over the tryline.

And the Stormers coach believes that the presence of Du Toit – who will start at blindside flank against the Kiwis – should help their lineout, while he also praised the efforts of loose forwards Cobus Wiese and Kobus van Dyk, who haven’t been able to train due to the flu.

“We certainly are creating enough opportunit­ies to be launching from lineout, we just need to capitalise on it now,” he said.

“With both Cobus Wiese and Kobus van Dyk not being able to train we needed to make a decision there, and the obvious

 ??  ?? WARY: Stormers coach Robbie Fleck says the Blues have improved their all-round game. BACKPAGEPI­X
WARY: Stormers coach Robbie Fleck says the Blues have improved their all-round game. BACKPAGEPI­X

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa