Cape Argus

Aaron the menace will have to be watched...

- Wynona Louw

HE has this annoying, seemingly innate ability to just know when to run, pass or kick. And whatever he chooses, he almost always executes it perfectly.

The guy is a menace. And it’s especially around the breakdown that he’s so potent. Not only there, but especially there.

Who are we talking about? Aaron Smith, that’s who.

The clever little master will provide a major test for the Stormers when they face the Highlander­s in Dunedin on Friday.

In open play he’s also a threat. His darting runs, his linking, his pace that he can push to the max from a standing start, and those passes...the way he’s able to alternate soft passes with stronger ones that boast bullet-like accuracy and speed.

And don’t forget about his sniping breaks that are often effortless­ly followed with crisp, put-a-mate-away passes. He needs to be watched around those rucks.

I think Robbie Fleck’s men will be cautious at the breakdown anyway given the fact that 1) they’re going up against a Kiwi side, and 2) last week’s match against the Crusaders will have motivated them to up their game in that area so much. At least they don’t have to worry about a certain Paul Williams this time round.

But there’s no harm in sending them a friendly warning anyway.

Smith often gets to the breakdowns before most of his loose forwards do. By doing that he saves himself the effort of having to deal with disruptive fringe players and, of course, his men don’t have to wait to get the ball from him to go into the next phase or to get their attack going.

He’s a huge part of the reason the New Zealanders can move the ball from contact while the opposition is still hustling to get their defence organised. And he has a lot to do with the tempo his men can play at.

But aside from that, Smith has also made use of quite an effective attacking ploy. And it’s worked out really well at times.

And that’s his sharp, blindside grubber after a ruck.

It’s not at all predictabl­e and it’s very effective... and bloody hard to anticipate, I should add, mainly because of the speed with which he executes it.

This is how it plays out – he gets the ball from the ruck, puts in a short run and then puts the ball on his boot for his wing to chase down on the blindside.

It often depends on how open (in terms of defence) the blindside is, but this scrumhalf can produce so accurate a grubber that he’d do it in a space so small that defenders won’t even bother to cover it. This can lead to a try if it works out, some good ground gained or, at the very least, scattered, under-pressure defence. Of course it can turn out badly for Smith and his troops as well, but I haven’t seen that happen yet.

Don’t get me wrong, the Stormers also know how to make use of attacking kicks.

Outside centre EW Viljoen and pivot Robert du Preez know how to handle a ball off the foot, and we’ve seen how effective it can be. Remember Du Preez’s chip kick in opposition 22 against the Cheetahs at Newlands that he chased down himself to score a beautiful try? Or the one he produced to put Cheslin Kolbe away?

Viljoen has also produced a few good ones of his own, so it’s not like the Stormers don’t know how to use those legs for attacking purposes. They’ve put the opposition under some good pressure with kicks in behind their defence. Now Stormers, be wary of Smith’s blindside grubber, please.

I know he can get on a person’s nerves with his in your face over-clapping as he celebrates all his team’s little victories within the battle. Like when they win a turnover at ruck time or when they win a scrum, even if it’s against a team who couldn’t scrum their way out of a paper bag.

He does that a lot. But keep the goal in sight. Don’t let him distract you.

 ??  ?? GRUBBER SPECIALIST: The Highlander­s’ Aaron Smith’s in-your-face antics and excellent variety of tactical options from the base of the scrum make him hard to bottle up.
GRUBBER SPECIALIST: The Highlander­s’ Aaron Smith’s in-your-face antics and excellent variety of tactical options from the base of the scrum make him hard to bottle up.

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