Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Four ways Stormers can save face

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game. So here are four ways the Stormers can at least salvage something from this tour and fly back home with some dignity intact. How many times did the Stormers make it into the opposition 22 only to have possession cruelly turned over? More times than is acceptable, I’d say. Robbie Fleck’s men looked good for the first 15 minutes or so, but after that, especially in the second half, it looked like the Stormers were severely allergic to the tryline and the way they lost possession painfully close to the whitewash a number of times looked like a very bad reaction. The Stormers only turned their territoria­l advantage into points twice – when No 8 Nizaam Carr crossed the tryline for a beautiful team try, and when replacemen­t scrumhalf Dewaldt Duvenage scored a late five-pointer. But it was the Stormers’ predictabi­lity on attack that was one of their downfalls, and the fact they reverted back to excessive use of one-off runners was a big part of that predictabi­lity. But it wasn’t just that, the visitors also didn’t look after the ball properly as they either lost it on the ground or dropped the ball because of sloppy handling. But back to the one-off runners…come Friday, when the Stormers take on the Hurricanes, one can only hope the Stormers will choose not to return to their pre- historic ways of that kind of play. After all, we saw how it turned out yesterday. I think I’m going to start labelling the Stormers’ rapid rate of decline from a good performanc­e to a woeful one “The 10-minute Syndrome.” Why? Because that’s how it goes. They look good for the first 10 or so minutes and then things start unravellin­g badly… for them, that is. Early in the game against the Highlander­s, the Stormers’defensive line was actually visible and they made their tackles. Fast forward a few minutes and you see players rushing out of position again and slipping tackles like the ball- carriers were sweating massage oil. Firstly, I don’t understand how some players still don’t understand the “mark your man” concept. It’s something you shouldn’t be getting wrong in primary school, never mind at Super Rugby level. Wing Cheslin Kolbe was especially guilty of this, while fullback SP Marais can also consider himself a culprit. Their actions led to two tries being effortless­ly scored, and Kolbe was part of both. They weren’t the only ones, but that’s not the point. It just shouldn’t happen.

Again, this is an area where the Stormers looked competitiv­e early on, and that competitiv­eness faded as the match progressed. They were over- powered by the Highlander­s’ physicalit­y and aggression at the rucks, and the hosts’ speed and intensity on the ground were also a mismatch for the Cape side. Fleck has mixed and matched his loose trio combinatio­ns, and starting Pieter-Steph du Toit at blindside flank as opposed to lock against the Crusaders and the Highlander­s was his way of balancing the back row. Yes, Du Toit did well in Dunedin in terms of tackles made and his ball-carrying was decent, but it’s not exactly as if he got in behind the Highlander­s’ defence any more than Siya Kolisi, Nizaam Carr or Sikhumbuzo Notshe could. Physically Du Toit can definitely add to the loose trio, but he’s not exactly a prime candidate when it comes to getting to the breakdowns first. And although Fleck has brought Du Toit in at blindside flank over the past two weeks and not to compete for the ball, the Stormers still need someone with the pace and agility to counter the breakdown onslaught from opponents, especially New Zealand opponents.

If you look at the stats, the Highlander­s edged the Stormers in terms of territory (5149%), but the Stormers had more possession (46-54%) than the hosts. Another puzzling stat showed that the Stormers made more carries (111-131) than the Highlander­s, which highlights the fact the Stormers don’t, or didn’t, know what to do with ball-in-hand. Again, they managed to score only two tries as opposed to the Highlander­s’ nine, so needless to say the Highlander­s did much more with the possession they had. From handling errors to poor decision-making, the Stormers are going to have to start making the right decisions when they have possession, because at the moment it seems like they can’t think clearly and execute well under pressure.

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