Saturday Star

Jaguares a different challenge for confident Stormers

- WYNONA LOUW

CAPE TOWN: The Stormers’ season-opening win over the Bulls showed a lot of progress in a number of areas, but the Jaguares will pose a totally different challenge for Robbie Fleck’s team today.

And that’s the attacking factor and how to deal with a team that plays by the same kind of philosophy the Stormers are moving towards.

Against the Bulls, the Stormers impressed with their set-piece dominance, especially at scrum time, and their break- down work and defence was also impressive.

But the most important area where they showed progress was in their attacking mindset.

On attack they were well organised, and their passes were not only better than the Bulls’, but also better than what we’d seen last year.

Stormers skipper Siya Kolisi said that he would handle this game the same way in which he dealt with the Bulls.

“I think it will be the same, because each player knows what he has to do in the game. My focus is still the same – to focus on my game and talk to the ref. So hopefully it won’t be too difficult,” Kolisi said.

Kolisi said he fully understand­s how important scoreboard pressure will be against a team like the Jaguares, because if Raul Perez’s men are allowed to get into the game and onto the scoresheet and gain some confidence, it will be a tough time at Newlands.

“We’re going to have to start well and keep the momentum going. But we’ll be able to fight back as well if it doesn’t work out that way. Because that will happen, it might come tomorrow or it might come at another time, but it will come.”

Meanwhile, Fleck added that although the Argentinia­ns are a completely different side to the Bulls, their focus remained set on their own game in the build-up to the match, and not on what the fiery competitio­n might bring.

“When they’re on song, they’re good. But it’s going to be the same thing as last week. We’ve focused on ourselves and on our processes,” said Fleck.

Against the Kings last week, the Jaguares had an unimpressi­ve start, but managed to score three good tries to get the win.

But that was the Kings, and this is the Stormers, so there’s no telling how the Jaguares will fare today (the only certainty is the kind of game they will play).

One thing’s for certain – they will definitely have been boosted by the retur n of internatio­nal flyhalf Nicolas Sanchez – who missed out on the Kings game due to injury.

And Fleck doesn’t need to be briefed on what the pivot can add to the visitors’ game.

“I felt they missed him at 10. They just look a little bit more solid and efficient when he’s running the show.”

But the Stormers boss was also confident about his own No 10, Jean-Luc du Plessis.

“They’re quite similar (Du Plessis and Sanchez), they’re both X-factor players and sure, Sanchez has got internatio­nal experience and he’s got that experience ahead of JL.”

“They both like to run the ball and enjoy attacking kicks. They look for space all the time and they like to take control of the game, so they’re very similar,” Fleck said.

So, it seems like the Newlands faithful are set for a double treat today – the battle of the flyhalves and, of course, the exciting contest that these sides promise to dish up.

ANOTHER one bites the dust. That comes to mind as, in recent times, so many top sports people have passed on. It is extraordin­ary.

The latest is Simon Hobday. What a golfer. What a character. What a story teller.

Years ago I was asked to play in a mini-golf tournament to honour Hobbers. My father-inlaw was over from Ireland so, generously, he was invited as well. After the golf there was a bit of a session around a large table in the club.

Simon, unexpected­ly given his reputation as a hell-raiser and character of note, sat at one end and talked quietly to the people around him. Then something magical happened. One by one, everyone else at the table realised Hobday was performing and craned to listen in. Effortless­ly he had captured the floor.

What followed was a master class of story-telling. He gave an insight into the days when the European Tour was a party of characters as well as a profession­al circuit, and it was an unforgetta­ble evening.

My father-in-law, a top internatio­nal banker, said that apart from Tony O’Reilly, he had never encountere­d a more entertaini­ng human being. Simon captivated us with a story of how he led the German Open going into the final round. He departed from his normal partying to get an early night and insisted on being dropped at the rather isolated digs in which the SA golfers were staying. It was cold and wet. As the taxi drove away, he shouted that he hadn’t got the key. One of the other players lobbed it out of the window as the taxi roared off. Simon described the glinting keys turning in the light and dropping to the ground in front of him – before disappeari­ng down a drain. He spent the evening huddled and shivering in a hedge waiting for the party-goers to return. He never played it safe again. Hamba kahle, Hobbers. In an age when rugby tactics seem to be becoming homogenous, let’s salute Italy. Most of us expected England to beat them by a hundred last week but only ended up winning 36-15 when it was close at 17-15.

Eddie Jones was less than generous after the game and called the Italian tactics not a part of rugby. The debate has raged since.

So, what do we think? Was it like bowling underarm on the last ball in a cricket match to prevent the opposition hitting a winning six?

On the contrary, let’s applaud Italian coaches Conor O’Shea and Brendan Venter. They were on a hiding to nothing and decided to rather use their brains. They looked at the laws and interpreta­tions and at an England team that is ruthlessly efficient rather than imaginativ­e and creative. They used the law that states there is no offside unless a ruck has formed after a tackle and a ruck must consist of at least one player being in physical contact with an opponent. So the Italians did not contest possession after the tackler rolled away and this enabled their scrumhalf to disrupt England from the English side. The English players were totally confused and at one stage were heard asking the ref to explain the laws. He correctly told them he was a referee, not a coach. The game was almost farcical but neverthele­ss fascinatin­g.

The lesson is about facing a side that is superior. So often in rugby we know who’ll win before the game. The days of the big upset are almost a thing of the past. In fact, it was Jones himself who mastermind­ed the last great upset – Japan’s win against the Springboks in Brighton. There he negated the giant Bok pack by employing a channel-one ball from the scrum. This worked like a charm and gave quick possession to his side.

But the real benefit was not the tactic itself. It was the fact that the coach, and thus the team, had created something on which to hope.

In Brighton and at Twickenham you could see that the Japanese and Italian players were not losers in attitude, and this is the point. That small point of belief affected their whole demeanour and mind set.

When you face incredible odds, the players must have some belief that they can win. A novel tactic or unusual approach or radical use of the laws can provide such a vehicle. I do not believe Jones was really upset with the Italians. Inside, he recognised they had almost done what he did in Brighton – given a glimmer of hope to players who had none.

How will reappointe­d Allister Coetzee achieve belief and a winning culture this year? Maybe it starts with captaincy and Warren Whiteley because the No 8 has walked this road successful­ly with the Lions.

We wait with baited breath.

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