KEO News Wire
United Rugby Championship – Round 18 Review
The regular season came to a close over the weekend with Round 18, with all eight of the Quarter-Finalists now confirmed.
Now it’s on to the Play-Offs.
The Race to the Eight went right down to the wire with five teams in the hunt for the last three spots going into the final round of matches.
In the end, it was Munster Rugby, Edinburgh Rugby and the Scarlets who booked their passage to the knockout stages.
With the top eight locked in and finishing positions decided, we now know the quarter-final line-up.
It looks like this:

The weekend’s action began on Friday night with Cardiff Rugby knowing a victory over the Stormers in Cape Town would guarantee them a place in the Play-Offs.
Despite having prop Danny Southworth red carded after 30 minutes, they refused to lie down and stayed in the contest by scoring four tries, with the numbers being evened up around the hour mark when Damian Willemse was sent off.
Going into the last few minutes, the Welsh visitors were a converted try away from a draw which would have earned them three points and, the way things turned out, a top eight finish.
But, in the end, they were left with just the one as Sacha Feinburg-Mngomezulu landed a penalty with the last kick of the game to make it 34-24 to the fifth-finishing Stormers.
That point took Cardiff into the top eight for the time being, but left them extremely vulnerable to results elsewhere on the night.
To make the play-offs, they now needed Edinburgh to lose at home to Ulster and the Scots were not about to fluff their lines as they secured a 47-17 bonus point victory.
That meant Cardiff were out of the equation and all eyes now turned to the winner-takes-all clash between Munster and Benetton Rugby in Cork.
It proved to be a titanic tussle with Munster finally sealing the deal in the closing stages to win 30-21.
That, in turn, saw the Scarlets qualify for the play-offs with a game to spare.
So, by the end of play on Friday, we knew the top eight.
But what still needed to be sorted out was the finishing positions which would, in turn, decide the play-off line-up.
First up on Saturday were the Bulls who ran in nine tries as they thumped Dragons RFC 55-15 in Pretoria to seal second place and home advantage through to the semi-finals.
Then came the clash between the Sharks and the Scarlets in Durban. It proved to be a hard-fought, tryless affair.
Going into the dying minutes, the Welsh visitors were in possession of a losing bonus point which would have taken them up to seventh and seen them travel to the Bulls in the quarter-finals.
But, in the last play of the game, they conceded a penalty and Aphelele Fassi slotted his third successful kick to make the final score 12-3.
That saw the Scarlets drop down to eighth which means they will travel to Dublin’s Aviva Stadium to face table-topping Leinster in the play-offs at the end of this month.
There was just one more game to come and one more positional issue to be resolved.
That saw Leinster record their 16th win from 18 regular season matches as they beat Glasgow 13-5.
So, having spent much of the campaign in second spot, champions Glasgow have ended up in fourth, with the Sharks jumping above them into third on the final weekend.
It all means the Scotstoun side will host the Stormers in the last eight, with the Sharks entertaining Munster, while Edinburgh will travel to Pretoria’s Loftus Versfeld to take on the Bulls.
As for the two games that didn’t have a bearing on the play-offs, the Emirates Lions scored a last minute try to beat the Ospreys 29-28 in Johannesburg, while Connacht Rugby defeated Zebre Parma 22-12 out in Italy.
Magician Graham performs hat trick
Darcy Graham has been hailed “a magician” after delivering the perfect response to being left out of the British & Irish Lions tour of Australia.
The Scotland winger scored a scintillating hat-trick of tries to help Edinburgh claim the 47-17 bonus point victory over Ulster which booked them a spot in the play-offs.
Commenting on Graham’s “disappointing” omission from the trip Down Under, his coach Sean Everett said: “Selections are tough, especially the Lions tour when it only comes around once every four years.
“Darcy has been in good form for Edinburgh and he was in good form for Scotland as well.
“I know he didn’t play all the Six Nations games, but every time he puts on a rugby jersey he tends to turn something out of nothing.
“He’s a real magician out there with his footwork and the work rate that he does. So it is disappointing for him, but he is still young enough to make the next one.
“You’ve just got to keep on fighting because the nature of the sport is there could be injuries and he’s the next one in.”
Reflecting on Edinburgh’s successful push for the Play-Offs, Everett said: “It’s been nine weeks of pressure, to be quite honest.
“It’s been so tough for a long period of time, with the European games as well.
“I am just proud that the boys pulled it through with the performance they put in, especially in the second half. That’s how we want to play the game. There were some brilliant tries scored, so I’m happy for the boys.
“Sometimes in rugby, it can be a domino effect. You just need a couple of wins and you turn the corner. You get momentum when you are playing well and that’s definitely what’s happened with us.”
The Player of the Match award went to skipper Magnus Bradbury who crossed twice from No 8 in what Everett described as an “outstanding” performance.
Giving his own thoughts on the win, Bradbury commented: “It’s a fantastic feeling. We had a job to do and everyone delivered on their jobs.
“As a collective, it was brilliant. The team is just growing from strength to strength. We are demanding more of each other, we are demanding higher standards.”
It was an emotional night for Bradbury’s back row colleague Jamie Ritchie as he bid farewell to the Hive Stadium.
The Scotland flanker is moving on at the end of the season to join Perpignan after more than a decade with Edinburgh.
He received a big ovation from a packed crowd when he came off the bench early in the second half and played his part as his seven-try team pulled away.
Reflecting on his final home appearance, the 28-year-old Ritchie said: “It’s hard to put into words.
“I have been here since I finished school, since I was 17 years old.
“Through my whole adult life, this place has been my family, my mates, so it’s pretty emotional.
“I’m glad we got the win and I can enjoy it with all my best mates. We knew we needed to get five points, so job done.”
Match of the Weekend
Munster Rugby 30, Benetton Rugby 21
This winner-takes-all clash had all the makings of being a Cork classic and so it proved.
With a place in the play-offs on the line, both teams gave it everything and the outcome was in the balance going into the final ten minutes with Munster holding a narrow four point lead.
But a bonus point try from their replacement prop Josh Wycherley sealed the victory and a place in the top eight to the delight of the home fans.
The Player of the Match award went to scrum-half Craig Casey who marked his 100th appearance for Munster in style.
Giving his assessment of the contest, he said: “Benetton had it all to play for like ourselves, so we knew it was going to be like a Test match.
“With the amount of Italian internationals they had, we knew it was going to be a tough one and so it was.
“The first half was a bit helter skelter. They put their game on us and we didn’t really play to our potential, but we came out in the second half and rectified a few things. It was a lovely night.”
On reaching his century, Casey added: “It’s the club I grew up absolutely loving and it means an awful lot to myself, my family and my friends.”
Munster skipper Tadhg Beirne revealed that flanker Peter O’Mahony – who was making his final home appearance for the province before retiring – had some key words to say at the break with his team trailing 14-10.
“Pete spoke at half-time along with the coaching staff,” said second row Beirne.
“Bringing up our physicality was the first thing. I think Benetton had shocked us a little bit.
“We just didn’t do ourselves justice in the first half and we knew we had to up it massively. They were fighting for a play-off spot too. So we had to work harder than them, keep grinding them down, hoping our fitness would come into it and we came out and did that.
“Credit to the boys, we stood up when we needed to and we got the job done.”
Player of the weekend
Suleiman Hartzenberg (DHL Stormers)
The versatile Hartzenberg made his 50th appearance for the Stormers on the weekend, which is pretty remarkable given he is still only 21.
He marked his half century in eye-catching fashion with a two-try Player of the Match display in the 34-24 victory over Cardiff.
Lining up on the right wing, he showed his finishing prowess for his first score as he spotted a gap and scorched through it before stepping inside the last man, while he completed his double by pocketing a cross kick from Manie Libbok.
He was also the game’s top carrier with 16, demonstrating his work-rate and his willingness to go looking for the ball.
Commenting on his progress, the young man from Cape Town said: “In my first year, it was more about finding my feet, getting used to the system and understanding what they wanted from me.
“As the years have gone on, I think I have found myself a bit more and understood what’s expected from me by the coaches and the team.
“It’s just about performing at my best wherever I play. The players around me make my job easier. We are all on the same page.”
Quote of the weekend
Cardiff captain Josh McNally after his team lost 34-24 to the Stormers in Cape Town to finish just one place and one point outside the play-offs.
“We fought really hard. I couldn’t have asked any more of the boys. We didn’t leave anything out there,” said the second row.
“I’m just extremely proud of the group. No-one would have put us in this position, fighting to get into the play-offs in the last game of the season. We’ve been underdogs all year. No-one has given us a chance.
“But all year we have fought for everything, fought for every match, fought for every win. This group is going somewhere special and I can’t wait for next season. I’m really excited to see what comes in the next few years.”
What’s coming next?
Everyone can take a breath next weekend with attention turning to the finals of the Investec Champions Cups and Challenge Cup in Cardiff, with no BKT URC teams involved in those showpiece games.
Then, a week later, we are into the real business end of the league season as the Play-Offs get underway with four mouth-watering Quarter-Final clashes in Glasgow, Pretoria, Dublin and Durban.
Champions Cup
Grobbelaar is the STECO Hybrid Power Tool Hero
Bulls hooker Johan Grobbelaar produced the most complete performance in the Investec Champions Cup against Glasgow to be the latest STECO Hybrid Power Tool Hero.
Every week, on the Keo & Zels Show, a winner is picked from the most hybrid performance of the weekend’s action.
I loved the performances of Bordeaux’s flying French winger Louis Bielle-Biarrey and Bordeaux’s Tongan prop ‘Big Ben’ Tameifuna in the Investec Champions Cup last 16 win against Leicester, but there is always a South African first policy and it came down to the Stormers or Bulls.
Here’s how the discussion went.
26:40 – Keo
Alright, you give me yours and I’ll give you mine, then we’ve got to make a choice.
26:45 – Zels
Mate, I thought the one Sacha created for Imaad Khan the Bishops duo, under the sticks just the way they cut the game open. It was so tight, they weren’t making metres anywhere, and then he just pulled something incredible out of nowhere.
For me, that was the moment, but I’m very happy to defer to your option.
27:06 – Keo
Look mate, I knew you were going to go with that, and I was going to go with that too. But people are going to say: you guys live in Cape Town, you support the Stormers, they’ve got the nicer jersey, nicest team, nicest stadium, nicest weather, Zels was on a boat catching tuna, you were in Arniston Paradise at the Arniston Hotel why do you always go Stormers?
So I looked at another game and looked at Johan Grobbelaar’s try for the Bulls the day before. Offload, Johan Grobbelaar on the wing in those incredibly tough conditions, sliding in and scoring.
Then I went to the EPCR homepage 24 hours later and looked at his match stats. He played 80 minutes. Twenty-five tackles. Four dominant tackles.
As much as I want to give it to the Bishops one-two, I just want to give it to Grobbies and show that I’m not biased and I do watch rugby independently.
But it’s up to you.
28:32 – Zels
No mate, I like that. I think that’s a great shout. Let’s go with Grobbies.
He and Marco van Staden started in those kilts, driving them crazy, and that seemed to bring out the best in them. He had a great game. Spectacular try and a great effort for the Bulls in that match.
And I believe it’s that 48-hour build-up where they can ham it up in those kilts and loosen up it gets them going.
An incredible performance from Grobbies.
We know Malcolm Marx, without comparison, is number one for the Boks and one of the best in the world. Dan Sheehan is pushing him. Peato Mauvaka is right there too.
But in South Africa, Grobbelaar has certainly entrenched himself as number two. Probably Andre-Hugo Venter behind him as number three at the moment.
But jeez, he was good.
29:02 – Keo
And thanks to Zels, he is our Ryobi Steco Power Tool hero of the week.
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Champions Cup
How Johann van Graan rebuilt broken Bath
Johann van Graan’s Bath rebuild has taken the club from Premiership bottom in 2022 to English champions and Investec Champions Cup contenders in just three seasons.
Johann van Graan took over the worst Bath side of the professional era and, in three seasons, rebuilt them and turned them into the best team in England and contenders for the ultimate club prize of the Investec Champions Cup.
Johann van Graan and Bath
Bath host Northampton Saints in the Investec Champions Cup quarter-final on Friday night.
Van Graan’s Bath, winners of last season’s EPCR Challenge Cup, are chasing the club’s second European star. They were the first British team to win the biggest rugby club title in Europe, beating French club Brive 19–18 in the final in Bordeaux with Jon Callard scoring all the points for Bath.
Despite winning two EPCR Challenge Cup titles, it has been a long wait in between drinks for the second star and the crown of rugby’s Kings of Europe.
Van Graan, in 2022, inherited a mess at Bath.
The former Springboks assistant coach and Munster head coach arrived in Bath as a system coach, a rugby man and a detail obsessive shaped under former Bulls and Springboks coach Heyneke Meyer, where the philosophy is on team, family and winning.
His five seasons as head coach at Ireland’s Munster, where he succeeded Rassie Erasmus and Jacques Nienaber, were influential in shaping his mentality and maturity for the challenge of fixing Bath.
At Bath, he stripped everything back.
He fixed conditioning.
He fixed defensive alignment.
He fixed clarity of role.
And most importantly, he fixed belief.
The result is a team that now knows exactly who it is.
From bottom to champions: the Bath rebuild
The scale of the rebuild is best understood in hard numbers.
| Season | Position | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| 2021/22 | 13th (last) | Worst season in club history |
| 2022/23 | 8th | Champions Cup qualification secured |
| 2023/24 | 2nd | Premiership finalists |
| 2024/25 | 1st | Premiership champions |
Year one was about credibility. Year two was about contention. They went to Twickenham and lost a final, but Van Graan insisted they would be back 12 months later to win the title.
Year three was about winning and Van Graan was true to his word. They topped the table, controlled the knockouts and won the final.
The 2025/26 shift: Bath the European force
This season has confirmed that Bath are England’s best and also a European threat.
They topped their Investec Champions Cup pool.
| Metric | Detail |
|---|---|
| Pool Finish | 1st (Pool 2) |
| Points | 16 |
| Points Difference | +91 |
| Seeding | 4th overall |
Last 16
| Match | Result |
|---|---|
| Bath vs Saracens | Won 31–22 |
What Van Graan has actually changed
He has won trophies, but the real shift is deeper because Bath are now respected as a team that is:
- Physically dominant
- Structurally sound
- Game-aware
- Emotionally controlled
They have a magician at flyhalf in Scotland’s Finn Russell, a talisman in Springboks prop Thomas du Toit and a group of players and coaches that refuse to settle for second best.
Why this quarter-final matters
Van Graan has taken Bath from broken to the bosses of English rugby, but the legacy in Europe is defined by winning the Investec Champions Cup.
Coaching Career
| Years | Team |
|---|---|
| 2003–2007 | Blue Bulls (Technical Advisor) |
| 2005–2007 | Bulls (Technical Advisor) |
| 2007–2011 | Blue Bulls (Assistant Coach) |
| 2007–2011 | Bulls (Forwards Coach) |
| 2012–2017 | Springboks (Forwards Coach) |
| 2017–2022 | Munster (Head Coach) |
| 2022– | Bath (Head Coach) |
Champions Cup
David Ribbans is a perfect fit for the Boks
South African-born Toulon lock David Ribbans could strengthen the Springboks lock stocks at the 2027 Rugby World Cup in Australia.
David Ribbans would comfortably slot into Rassie Erasmus’s Springboks squad.
At the Stade Mayol, starring for Toulon against the Stormers in the Investec Champions Cup last 16, Ribbans delivered a statement performance.
David Ribbans is a Bok in waiting – if he wants it
Ribbans was named Investec Champions Cup Player of the Match in Toulon’s dramatic 28-27 win. They travel to Glasgow for this weekend’s quarter-final.
Ribbans, born in Somerset West in the Western Cape, started his professional career at Western Province and the Stormers, but relocated to England, where he qualified to play for England through ancestry.
He played in the 2023 World Cup for England, but moved to Toulon after the World Cup. England’s selection policy excludes any players outside of the English Premiership, Prem Rugby, and Ribbans would have served a three year stand down period, given that his last Test for England was at the 2023 World Cup.
World Rugby’s amended eligibility rules allow for a player to represent two different countries, if a three-year stand down period has been served, and if that player qualifies through birth, citizenship or ancestry.

EPCR
Munster’s Jean Kleyn left the Stormers several years ago and qualified on residency for Ireland. He played in the 2019 World Cup under Joe Schmidt, but when Andy Farrell took over as Ireland coach he never selected lock forward Kleyn.
Erasmus picked Kleyn in 2023 for the Springboks, took him to the World Cup in France, and Kleyn is now a World Cup winner.
Ribbans, among the best second rowers in the Top 14 and Investec Champions Cup this season, has previously been asked about making himself available for the Springboks. He was not certain he would do so, in media interviews saying he felt that he had drawn a line in the sand with England, and owed it to England not to play for his country of birth should there be such an opportunity.
That interview was done at the beginning of 2025, and by the end of 2026 he may have had a change of heart, especially with England’s selection policy unlikely to change.
The 30 year-old Ribbans, who was in doubt for last Saturday’s against his old mates, which included WP under 20 locking partner JD Schiekerling, was colossal in his play and leadership. When subbed in the 76th minute, he was named the Player of the Match.
Ribbans’ career at a glance
| Team | P | W-D-L | Starts |
|---|
| Toulon | 69 | 43-1-25 | 62 |
| Northampton | 121 | 51-0-69 | 104 |
| Barbarians | 2 | 1-0-1 | 2 |
| England | 11 | 3-1-7 | 5 |
Ribbons’ early career with Western Province & Stormers
In 2014, with Western Province U19, he went from bench to starter in a week and didn’t move. There was a decisive try in a 21–20 win against Eastern Province, nine wins from twelve in the league, and then the beating of Free State in the semi-final and the Bulls 33–26 in Cape Town in the final.
2015 was the step up, with a Stormers pre-season run, a first-class debut for Western Province in the Vodacom Cup, and then back to the U21 competition. He played ten matches, scored a try in the semi-final against the Lions, and another in the final as Province put 52–17 on Free State in Johannesburg for back-to-back titles.
In 2016, he was in the Stormers squad but didn’t play. He played for WP under 21s and WP’s senior side.
*With the Stormers and Bulls eliminated in intense Last 16 Play-off matches, there is no South African club representation in this weekend’s Last Eight play-offs. But there are several South Africans still involved, as players and coaches.
Ribbans is one of them and Bath’s Springboks prop Thomas du Toit is another. Du Toit was outstanding in Bath’s win against Saracens and was named Player of the Match.
Du Toit is returning to the Sharks in South Africa at the completion of this season’s English Prem Rugby competition.

As many as 12 South African-born players and four South African-born coaches will be in action this weekend as the Investec Champions Cup gets narrowed to just four teams.
Investec Champions Cup quarter-finals (SA times)
Friday, 10 April
Bath vs Northampton Saints (9pm)
Saturday, 11 April
Glasgow Warriors vs Toulon (4pm)
Leinster vs Sale Sharks (6:30pm)
Sunday, 12 April
Bordeaux Bègles vs Toulouse (4pm)
Champions Cup
Investec Champions Cup play-offs point to SA heartbreak
South Africa’s Investec Champions Cup challenge ended in the last 16, but both the Stormers and Bulls made a point that they belong in Europe’s toughest club competition.
The Stormers lost by a point in Toulon and the Bulls trailed by a point when the final hooter went in Glasgow to end South Africa’s participation in the 2025/26 Investec Champions Cup play-offs. It was heartbreak for both visiting teams.
These were last 16 play-off matches I felt the Stormers and Bulls could win and both will feel there were enough opportunities to turn the pre-match hope and hype into historic wins and a first ever Investec Champions Cup quarter-final in South Africa.
The Stormers were desperately unfortunate not to win in Toulon.
The match officiating unfortunately dominated the post-match reaction with the Stormers understandably aggrieved at the on-field and TMO decisions they felt should have resulted in a penalty try in the closing stages and a match-winning try-scoring effort after the final whistle.
The on-field decisions favoured the hosts, as did the TMO call to end the match with a ‘held up’ decision, with Toulon 28-27 victors.
The Stormers will feel this was missed chance at a famous win at the Stade Mayol, and they wouldn’t be wrong.
But as much as they can question the officiating, they must also question their on-field decision-making in the final minutes, when the visitors opted for repeated pick and go drives to score the match winning try, when the option of a drop goal or exploiting a two player advantage among the backs could have provided a definitive match-winning score.
Toulon have struggled in the Top 14, with just nine wins in 20, and despite their one-point last 16 Investec Champions Cup win, look unlikely to go further than the visit to Glasgow next weekend in the last eight.
Glasgow, leading the Bulls 22-21, with two minutes to go, punished a poor Bulls kick-off exit in the final 100 seconds of the match, to force a series of penalties close to the Bulls try-line before counting down the clock until after the hooter, to guarantee the win with a successful penalty kick.
Glasgow, who trailed 14-12 at the break, outscored the Bulls four tries to two, to win 25-22.
The Stormers and Bulls were heroic in attitude, spirit and refusal to be beaten until the final whistle, but both South African teams were guilty of not maximising strong attacking positions and falling short in play-off game management.
I’d so the Stormers, more so than the Bulls.
The Stormers were opened up too easily in the first half, with Toulon exposing a passive and tight Stormers defence, with effective use of the width of the field and accurate long passing.
The Stormers were stronger at the scrum and more dangerous in transition play, but again the kicking game was not consistent with a winning performance.
The Bulls kicking game, with a strong wind in the first 40 minutes in Glasgow, was also lacking in accuracy and conviction.
Conditions in Toulon were ideal, so execution is the issue, whereas in Glasgow it was a lottery kicking with the wind and into the wind, with the hosts much more adapt and familiar with conditions.
Individually, there are big plays from Springboks contenders in Toulon and in Glasgow, but ironically the only South African in the Toulon side, former Western Province and Stormers lock David Ribbans, was named Player of the Match.
Ribbans, who played for England in the 2023 Rugby World Cup, is ineligible for England selection because he plays his club rugby in France. If England does not select him before the 2027 Rugby World Cup in Australia, he is eligible for Springboks selection, as was the case with Munster lock Jean Kleyn, who played for Ireland in the 2019 World Cup and won gold with the Springboks at the 2023 Rugby World Cup.
In Glasgow there were also South African winners in the Glasgow captain Kyle Steyn and coach Franco Smith, although Steyn is very much an adopted son of Scotland and Smith is already viewed as an honoury Scot.

There will be obvious disappointment from the Stormers and Bulls that they are out of Europe’s toughest and biggest club rugby competition, but the positive is the nature of their respective performances and the character they showed, if viewed in the context of the final two months of the United Rugby Championship.
The Stormers, currently second in the league to Glasgow, and the Bulls, in eighth but a win away from the top four, will believe they have the pedigree to win the title.
Champions Cup
When it gets tight, Pollard still rises above the noise
Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu may be the future and Manie Libbok remains a factor, but Handre Pollard still owns the biggest moments.
The timing in form and fortune from Handre Pollard is perfect for the Bulls and Boks. Pollard is the key to the Bulls beating Glasgow in the last 16 of the Investec Champions Cup.
Handre Pollard perfect for Bulls and Boks
Handre Pollard, a back to back World Cup winner, and the holder of the most points in World Cup final history, 34, will be critical to the Boks chase for an unprecedented third successive World Cup in Australia in 2027.
Pollard scored 22 points in the Boks 32-12 World Cup final win against England in Japan in 2019 and four years later he kicked all 12 points in the Boks 12-11 win against the All Blacks in France.
Right now, on the basis of the 2025 Test season, the Stormers No 10 Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu, is the Bok incumbent, and Japanese-based Manie Libbok is also in the Boks squad.
But Pollard, used sparingly in the 2025 season, remains the big match, big moment clutch player.
When the pressure rises and the room gets tight, Pollard owns the space.
He will have to do so in Glasgow, when the high-flying Scots host the Bulls in the Investec Champions Cup last 16
This is not a debate about the value and worth of the brilliant Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu. Go quote Stormers coach John Dobson, Sacha is ‘a national rugby treasure’, nor is it a dismissal of Libbok.
This is about Pollard, too easily dismissed by those with recency bias and short-term memory.
The Bulls No 10 remains the best in closing a game, as was evident with his two long range penalties against Munster a week ago. The two clutch strikes ensured the Bulls played the frantic final few minutes with a single score lead.
Boks coach Rassie Erasmus never has to be reminded of the qualities of Pollard. It was Erasmus, who last year, kept on introducing Pollard’s name when the South African public was quick to forget there were three world-class No 10s in the Boks squad and not just Libbok and Feinberg-Mngomezulu.
The phrase “big players step up in big moments” is overused, but with Pollard it is accurate.
Play-off rugby is about territory, percentages, game management, accuracy and goalkicking.
Pollard delivers in every facet, as we witnessed in 2019 and 2023 on Rugby’s biggest international nights.
Keo, Zels and Bok legend Bryan Habana talk Investec Champions Cup last 16
The Stormers are second in the URC, have won 11 of 14 matches, and won three from four in the Pool stages of the Investec Champions Cup.
For them to win against Toulon at the Stade Mayol in Toulon, France, in the Investec Champions Cup last 16, it will require the combination of Feinberg-Mngomezulu and specialist No 10 Julie Matthee to produce the near perfect combined match performances.
It will also need the Stormers pack to at least match the hosts.
The Stormers scrum and line out is good enough to dominate any opponent.
Discipline will be non-negotiable but to continue the narrative of the week, both the Bulls and Stormers have the cattle to bring South Africa reward this weekend.
KEO News Wire
SA school rugby’s Easter takeover: festivals that define the next generation
Easter is schoolboy rugby’s biggest shop window in South Africa. Here’s every major 2026 festival, the schools, dates and the platforms driving the coverage.
Easter weekend is schoolboy rugby’s biggest stage in South Africa, where reputations are made, bragging rights are reinforced and many of the country’s future Springboks will be on display. Mostly it is the biggest school rugby carnival of the year because it is South Africa school rugby Easter festivals 2026
The beauty of the festivals is that schools brings squads and mix and match to play two matches in three days.
It also gives the best of each province a chance to experience other provincial schools, with the Festivals also inviting schools from overseas.
South Africa School Rugby Easter Festivals 2026:
In 2026, the Schools Rugby landscape is bigger and more diluted than ever, with traditional festivals at Kearsney, St John’s, St Stithians and King Edward VII running alongside an expanded calendar that now includes a major Pretoria Boys High 125-year celebration festival.
The Festivals are more than getting a ‘W’, and it is more about a celebration of the South African Schools rugby landscape, through exposure, opposition strength and platform reach.
THE PLATFORMS DRIVING SA SCHOOLBOY RUGBY
1. SchoolboyRugby.co.za (PRIMARY HUB)
- Daily fixtures, results, festival previews
- Most consistent festival coverage (KES, St John’s, St Stithians, Kearsney)
- Provincial segmentation (WP, KZN, Noordvaal, EP)
- Breaking team news and squad tracking
The closest thing to a central database of SA school rugby
2. SuperSport Schools
- Video-first platform
- Festival livestreams and highlights
- Multi-sport integration (rugby + hockey + athletics)
- Covers major festivals like Saints Festival
Best for visibility and broadcast reach
3. Rugby365 (Schools Section)
- Big-picture calendar
- Tournament previews and context
- Connects schools rugby to pro pathway
4. Ruggas.co.za
5. SARugbymag (Schools section)
6. SA School Sports
- Rankings-driven ecosystem
- Cross-sport credibility
H2: 2026 EASTER FESTIVALS
1. KEARSNEY EASTER RUGBY FESTIVAL (KZN) 2, 4, 6 April 2026
Key Schools:
- Kearsney
- Glenwood
- Durban HS
- Westville
- Framesby
- Rustenburg
- Dr EG Jansen
- International: Peterhouse (Zimbabwe), Irish schools
Format:
- 12 top schools
- 3 match days
- Includes primary schools + girls fixtures
2. ST JOHN’S COLLEGE EASTER FESTIVAL (JHB)
2, 4, 6 April 2026
Key Schools (confirmed returning powerhouses):
- Grey College
- Monument
- Bishops
Traditionally the most balanced fixture list, with elite vs elite match-ups.
3. KES EASTER RUGBY FESTIVAL (JHB)
4–6 April 2026 (fixtures released)
Notable Match-ups:
- KES vs St Andrew’s
- Dale vs Worcester Gim
- Northwood vs Marlow
4. ST STITHIANS EASTER FESTIVAL
5. PRETORIA BOYS HIGH 125TH FESTIVAL (NEW POWER PLAYER)
3–6 April 2026
Early Confirmed Schools:
- Affies
- Grey High
- Jeppe
- Maritzburg College
- Michaelhouse
- Rondebosch
- SACS
- Selborne
A festival strong enough to split the traditional Easter talent pool.
ALL THE FESTIVAL MATCHES
KEARSNEY
Thursday, 2nd April
Helpmekaar 24 Glenwood 5
Transvalia 26 Peterhouse 5
Westville 83 Framesby 0
Kearsney 43 Rustenburg 14
EG Jansen 27 Milnerton 20
Durban HS 31 Zwartkop 14
Saturday, 4th April
Kearsney College 33 Transvalia 13
Framesby 15 Glenwood 14
DHS 38 Hoërskool Rustenburg 7
Peterhouse 29 Milnerton 23
Zwartkop 41 EG Jansen 32
Monday, 6th April
Framesby 10 Transvalia 7
Glenwood 14 EG Jansen 12
Rustenburg 26 Peterhouse 17
Westville 41 Milnerton 3
Durban HS 39 Helpmekaar 27
Kearsney 22 Zwartkop 19
SCHOOLS WRAP: Jade Brigade shock Grey College
KES
Saturday
Hudson Park 37 Worcester Gim 10
Pearson 56 Eldoraigne 14
Northwood 47 Marlow 7
Cranbrook (Australia) 29 Dale 24
Queen’s 13 Noordheuwel 7
KES 45 St Andrew’s 12
Monday
Hudson Park 17 Eldoraigne 10
Dale 15 Worcester Gim 7
Noordheuwel 29 Marlow 5
Pearson 26 Cranbrook (Australia) 14
Northwood 52 St Andrew’s 21
KES 33 Queen’s 13
St John’s Day 1 results:
Grey College Cherries 38 Noordheuwel 2nd XV 14
Golden Lions XV 38 Welkom Gim 36
St Albans 11 St Josephs Nudgee 2nd XV 24
St Benedict’s 5 Graeme College 57
Kingswood 40 St David’s 5
Monument 56 Westlake 35
Grey College 26 St Josephs Nudgee 29
Hilton 68 Nelspruit 14
St John’s 7 Bishops 26
Saturday
St David’s 28 Randburg 26
Nudgee 2nd XV 48 St Benedict’s 7
Nelspruit 24 St Alban’s 21
Monument 43 Kingswood 27
St John’s 24 Golden Lions XV 19
Graeme College 39 Bishops 26
Westlake Boys’ High 36 Welkom Gim 26
Hilton College 17 Nudgee 12
Monday
Westlake 42 Randburg 8
ST STITHIANS
Thursday
Hartpury 2nd XV 14 Windhoek HS 25
St Stithians 21 St John’s (Harare) 24
Mali XV 34 Clifton 21
St Charles 7 Northcliff 18
Kempton Park 27 Pietersburg 15
Hartpury 14 Middelburg 21
Wynberg 84 Garsfontein Inv XV 0
Saturday
Hartpury College 47 Garsfontein Invitational XV 18
Northcliff 40 Windhoek 35
St John’s College (Harare) 22 Clifton College 18
St Charles 24 Kempton Park 17
Hartpury 2nd XV 55 Mzwandile Mali XV 33
Hoërskool Pietersburg 27 Hoërskool Middelburg 14
Wynberg Boys’ High 28 St Stithians 12
Monday
Windhoek HS 47 Mali XV 35
Hartpury 54 Northcliff 20
Kempton Park 47 Garsfontein Inv XV 18
Pietersburg 38 St John’s (Harare) 18
PRETORIA BOYS’
Saturday
Maritzburg College 35 Jeppe 12
Michaelhouse 29 Affies 26
Rondebosch 57 Selborne 17
Grey High 40 Parktown Boys’ 18
Pretoria Boys’ High 35 SACS 34
Monday
Selborne 26 Parktown 5
Maritzburg College 24 SACS 7
Affies 59 Grey High 19
Michaelhouse 40 Jeppe 36
Pretoria Boys High 20 Rondebosch 43
Champions Cup
South Africa’s Investec Champions Cup dream is alive
South Africa’s Investec Champions Cup dream is alive. The Bulls and the Stormers are 80 minutes away from giving South African rugby one of its biggest club moments in Europe.
South Africa’s Investec Champions Cup dream is alive. The Bulls and Stormers are 80 minutes away from giving South African rugby one of its biggest club moments in Europe.
It is there for them.
The equation is simple enough. The Stormers must beat Toulon at Stade Mayol. The Bulls must beat Glasgow in Glasgow. Do that, and South Africa gets an Investec Champions Cup quarter-final in Cape Town.
The opportunity is real because both teams travel with form, belief and ambition. The Stormers are second in the URC after 11 wins from 14. The Bulls are eighth, but close enough to the top five to underline how competitive they remain despite their uneven start. More importantly, both coaching groups have made it clear that Europe matters and that they are going north to win.
It will not be easy. Winning in France is never easy. Winning in Glasgow against Franco Smith’s well-drilled Warriors is one of the hardest assignments in club rugby at the moment. But South African rugby should not shrink from that challenge.
The Stormers do not have to beat the ghost of Toulon’s golden age. This is not the side of Wilkinson, Habana, Bakkies, Juan Smith and Joe van Niekerk. It is a good team, but not that team. Likewise, the Bulls know they are up against quality in Glasgow, but not invincibility.
Why Toulon are dangerous, but beatable
The biggest mistake the Stormers can make this week is to play Toulon’s history instead of Toulon’s present.
That jersey still carries weight and the Stade Mayol carries noise and intimidation. And for South Africans of a certain rugby generation, Toulon still triggers images of a Galactico side stacked with giants of the game.
But this is not that Toulon.
That team was rugby’s heavyweight collection of killers. This one is not.
That does not mean Toulon are soft. They still have quality, but this is not a team that should paralyse the Stormers with its reputation.
In fact, it is a game the Stormers should believe they can win.
There is also a psychological layer to Toulon’s season. If their Top 14 campaign is drifting, then Europe becomes the rescue act. French sides often make a call early. If the league matters more, they manage Europe accordingly. But when the domestic route tightens, the Investec Champions Cup becomes everything. That makes Toulon desperate, but it also makes them exposed.
The Stormers’ job is to strip the occasion of mythology and play the team in front of them.
If the Stormers get their set piece right, manage territory properly and convert pressure into points, this tie is there for them. The challenge is real, but so is the opportunity. Respect must not be confused with fear.
Bulls have the game to ambush Glasgow
The Bulls have enough to make this a very dangerous early evening for the hosts.
What has become clearer in recent weeks is that, aligned to the obvious power of the Bulls, they also have pace and control, and the combination is what gives them a puncher’s chance of doing real damage in Scotland.
World Cup winning flyhalf Handré Pollard brings composure and knockout temperament. World Cup winner Willie le Roux brings vision, tempo control and the sort of rugby intelligence that settles a team in pressure moments. Embrose Papier is thriving behind a forward pack that gives him front-foot ball, and when he sees space around the fringes he is still one of the quickest nines in the country.
Then there is the finishing speed. Cheswill Jooste’s recent score was a reminder that the Bulls are not just built to grind.
The other factor is momentum. The Bulls have recovered impressively from a poor start to the season. They have found more balance, more shape and more clarity under Johan Ackermann.
Glasgow should be favourites. They are at home, they are settled and they know how to win big games. But the Bulls have enough class, enough experience and enough edge to flip this tie.
Keo & Zels unpacked it on this week’s show, and the message was clear: this is real.
It starts with the Stormers in Toulon.
Keo touched on it, and Zels backed it the Stormers don’t need more magic. They need more control.
South Africans flood the Investec Champions Cup play-offs
KEO News Wire
Cheswill Jooste is the STECO Hybrid Power Tool Hero of the Week
Cheswill Jooste is the STECO Hybrid Power Tool Hero of the Week, beating off some vintage performances from players in every South African United Rugby Championship Team.
Cheswill Jooste is the STECO Hybrid Power Tool Hero of the Week, beating off some vintage performances from players in every South African United Rugby Championship Team.
Zels, on the Keo & Zels Show, nominated his contenders.
ZELS:
Right. For the Lions, Nico Steyn had a big game, and I thought Quan Horn was outstanding too. Very hybrid player, involved in everything.
For the Sharks, not a vintage attacking performance, but Jurenzo Julius had good moments and there were some quality touches.
For the Bulls, that is probably where my winner comes from. Cheswill Jooste for that try. Just pure speed. Absolute exhibition stuff.
And for the Stormers, there were a couple. Ntuthuko Mchunu showed great pace for his try, and then I loved the one off the opposition scrum with Deon Fourie diving on the ball at the death.
Those are my main nominations.
KEO:
You have to look at the individual brilliance of some of those moments, but for me it has to come from the Bulls game.
There had to be something very special to beat what Nizaam Carr did last week, and there had to be something spectacular to top Handré Pollard winning a turnover in the sixth minute to deny Munster a try-scoring opportunity, and then banging over two clutch long-range penalties in the final quarter of the 34-31 win.
But what beats it? Pure gas. Jooste. That is athletics. Jake White used to say it all the time. Winners need pace. And when you watch Jooste score, it is like watching a guy run the bend in the 200 metres.
That was just out-and-out speed. Special player.
ZELS:
And the beautiful thing is that because of guys like Bryan Habana, Gio Aplon, Cheslin Kolbe and Kurt-Lee Arendse, we are not guessing anymore about whether that kind of pace translates at top level. We know it does.
And when you make 29 other professional players on the field look slow, you have got something serious.
KEO:
So there we have it. This week’s Ryobi Steco Hybrid Power Tool Hero on the show is Cheswill Jooste of the Bulls, and maybe soon of the Springboks too.
The Bulls beat Munster 34-31 in the Vodacom United Rugby Championship.
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Champions Cup
Investec Champions Cup last 16: Prem power, French flair & URC’s surge
Seven English Prem clubs headline the Investec Champions Cup last 16, but the URC’s rise, led by the Stormers and Glasgow Warriors, is redefining the race for Europe’s biggest club rugby prize.
The English Prem does it carry the global romance of France’s Top 14, but when it comes to substance, resilience, week-in, week-out brutality, it remains one of the toughest proving grounds in club rugby. And seven Prem clubs in the Investec Champions Cup last 16 makes the statement even stronger.
Prem depth, URC momentum and French power define Investec Champions Cup knockouts
The Top 14 has four clubs left in the play-offs and the United Rugby Championship has five, including South Africa’s Stormers and Bulls.
The Prem gets a lot of stick, especially in South Africa, but it is a power league and the English club challenge in the Investec Champions Cup is always strong.
The narrative has long been that the French Top 14 is the sport’s financial and cultural powerhouse, a league of global appeal, stacked with internationals from every corner of the rugby world. It is true because nearly half the league is made up of foreign talent but what the Prem lacks in glamour, it makes up with performance in Europe.
The Premier produces teams conditioned for knockout rugby. And this season, that edge has translated into European relevance, with seven clubs carrying England’s flag into the last 16.
The URC’s initial Champions Cup challenge was in Ireland’s Leinster, but this season Glasgow’s Warriors and the Stormers have made an even bigger statement than four-time champions Leinster.
Five URC teams in the knockout stages tells its own story of evolution, of South African influence, and of a competition that has hardened dramatically in the last three seasons.
At the centre of this are the Cape Town-based Stormers.
They have won three of four in the Champions Cup pool stages and 11 of 14 in the URC. Only the Glasgow Warriors have been better in the URC, and even that gap feels fragile given the Stormers’ balance between power and invention.
Glasgow’s URC and Champions Cup returns are the benchmark in the 2025/26 season, and they have matured from pretenders of in Europe to genuine title contenders, with their win at home against Toulouse in the pool stages one of the great nights of Champions Cup history.
France arrive at this weekend’s knockouts with fewer numbers but familiar menace.
Toulouse and Bordeaux are proper title contenders, and the bracket has guaranteed that one will reach the semi-finals. If both win at home in the last 16, as they should, then defending champions Bordeaux will host Toulouse in the last eight.
Bordeaux, brilliant in an unbeaten the Investec Champions Cup pool campaign, are the contradiction that defines French rugby.
Just 12 wins from 20 in the Top 14 suggests inconsistency, and vulnerability in depth, but in the Champions Cup, with their internationals available, they have been the most potent attacking force in the competition, with a set piece to match their terrific transition play.
Home advantage is massive in the Champions Cup. Historically, away play-off wins have been rare, but there has been enough evidence this season that what always seemed improbable, like travelling and winning in the last 16, is not to be dismissed on the evidence of history.
I sense a different history being written this weekend, one that favours form.
KEO News Wire
Stunning Stellenberg schools Grey College in historic win
Stellenberg’s class of 2026 are history makers. They have stunned South Africa’s schools rugby giants Paarl Gim and Grey College in the past fortnight.
Stellenberg’s class of 2026 are history makers. They have stunned South Africa’s schools rugby giants Paarl Gim and Grey College in the past fortnight in the most dramatic two victories.
Stunning Stellenberg on top of the world
The win against Paarl Gim came at home in the northern suburbs of Western Province, but it was at the traditional home of Bulls schools rugby, Affies, that the boys from Stellenberg got the prized head of Grey College, South Africa’s most consistent performing rugby school for the past 25 years.
Stellenberg, giant slayers a year ago, are now the giants.
In 2025 they beat all four traditional Western Province southern suburbs schools – Wynberg, Bishops, Rondebosch and SACS – and pushed Outeniqua to the brink. This year, it all came to fruition, first in the 20-19 win against Paarl Gim and then Grey College.

Photo by Ashley Vlotman/Gallo Images
The transformation, as outlined in reporting by Rugby365, didn’t happen overnight. Head coach Hein Molnar traces it back to around 2017, when the school shifted its ambition from being the best in the northern suburbs to competing with, and beating, the Western Cape’s traditional heavyweights.
SA Schools Rugby is prospering.
The strategy was clear: build depth, not just a first XV.
Stellenberg invested heavily in their pipeline, prioritising development from U14 level through to U19. Instead of chasing talent with bursaries, they focused on retaining local players and offering a comparable rugby experience to the big-name schools. Crucially, they strengthened coaching structures across all teams, appointing specialist forwards and backline coaches throughout the system.
The result? A programme that now fields 21 teams and produces players conditioned to compete at the highest level.
Equally important has been continuity. Key coaching figures have remained in place for years, creating consistency in philosophy and standards. That stability, combined with long-term planning, has driven a steady upward curve.
Garsfontein, who edged Stellenberg by a point a few days earlier, shocked Paarl Boys High 31-28 to complete a Western Cape double
North-South Day 1 results
Paul Roos Gimnasium 21 Monument 17
Paarl Boys’ 37 Jeppe 10
Garsfontein 21 Stellenberg 20
Outeniqua 30 KES 16
HTS Drostdy 43 EG Jansen 24
Waterkloof 45 Diamantveld 7
North-South Day 3 results
Transvalia 21 Hugenote 23
Oos-Moot 33 Strand 18
KES 2nd XV 50 Mali XV 8
EG Jansen 31 Framesby 37
Nelspruit 42 Voortrekker 22
Outeniqua 24 Waterkloof 24
Jeppe 34 Diamantveled 28
Monument 75 Drostdy 43
Paul Roos 45 Pretoria Boys’ 14
Stellenberg 26 Grey College 21
Garsfontein 31 Paarl Boys’ 28
KEO News Wire
South Africans flood the Investec Champions Cup play-offs
South African players and coaches are spread across the 2026 Investec Champions Cup last 16, influencing the knockout stage from Leinster to Bordeaux, Bath and Glasgow.
South Africans flood the Investec Champions Cup last 16 – and their presence is not limited to the Bulls and Stormers. They are everywhere.
From Dublin to Bordeaux, Bath to Edinburgh, the Springbok influence runs deep in Europe’s premier club competition. World Cup winners, SA-born internationals and a growing coaching footprint have embedded South African rugby DNA across the knockout stage.
The Bulls and Stormers fly the South African URC flag, but beyond them, this is a tournament shaped by so many South African players and coaches.
This is a breakdown South African players and coaches in this weekend’s 2025/26 Investec Champions Cup Round of 16.
Investec Champions Cup Last 16 Fixtures (April 2, 3rd & 4th, 2026)
-
Northampton Saints vs Castres
-
Bath vs Saracens
-
Toulon vs Stormers
-
Glasgow Warriors vs Bulls
-
Toulouse vs Bristol Bears
-
Harlequins vs Sale Sharks
-
Bordeaux-Bègles vs Leicester Tigers
-
Leinster vs Edinburgh
South Africans in the Investec Champions Cup Last 16
Bath Rugby
Johann van Graan leads one of the most South African-influenced squads in Europe, with Thomas du Toit, Jaco Coetzee, Francois van Wyk, Bernard van der Linde, Neil le Roux and Quinn Roux forming a significant core, alongside defence coach JP Ferreira.
Saracens
Ivan van Zyl provides the South African presence at scrumhalf.
RC Toulon
David Ribbans, South African-born and now a leader in the squad, captains Toulon.
Glasgow Warriors
Franco Smith has built one of the most complete teams in the competition, with Kyle Steyn captaining the side and providing a strong South African leadership presence.
Bristol Bears
Benhard Janse van Rensburg anchors the midfield as one of the Bears’ key attacking threats.
Harlequins
Tyrone Green is a starting fullback and one of the most dangerous broken-field runners in the tournament, with Jordan Els adding depth in the pack.
Sale Sharks
Sale remain stacked with South African influence: Dan du Preez, Rob du Preez, Marius Louw, Ernst van Rhyn and Jacques Vermeulen.
Union Bordeaux-Bègles
Bordeaux are a standout South African hub in France. Carlu Sadie and Jean-Luc du Preez feature in the squad, with former Springboks Shaun Sowerby and Heini Adams on the coaching staff.
Leicester Tigers
Hanro Liebenberg is the South African presence in the pack.
Leinster Rugby
RG Snyman misses out because of recent injury, while Springboks 2023 World Cup-winning coach Jacques Nienaber is part of Leinster’s coaching hierachy.
Edinburgh Rugby
Sean Everitt leads a strong South African contingent including Pierre Schoeman, Duhan van der Merwe, Boan Venter, Wes Goosen (SA-born Kiwi) and Dylan Richardson.
Northampton Saints
JJ van der Mescht adds South African steel to the engine room.
*14 of the 16 Last 16 teams have a South African presence
KEO News Wire
Handre Pollard makes powerful Bulls & Boks statement
Handre Pollard converted the big moment penalty kicks to ensure the Bulls remain a United Rugby Championship play-off contender.
Handre Pollard converted the big moment penalty kicks to ensure the Bulls remain a United Rugby Championship play-off contender. Pollard made a powerful statement that he is integral to the Bulls title challenge and the Springboks 2027 World Cup defence.
Handre Pollard puts the boot into Munster
Pollard kicked two long range penalties in the final quarter that proved decisive in the Bulls 34-31 win against Munster at Loftus in Pretoria.
South Africa’s 2023 World Cup goal kicking hero, the scorer of all 12 points in the one point win against the All Blacks in the final, was used sparingly in the 2025 Springboks season. But be sure that Pollard remains massive to the Springboks and even bigger to the Bulls in their search for a first URC title after three losing finals in the league’s first four seasons.
The Bulls are eighth, well positioned to challenge for a top four finish when the URC resumes in the third week of April.
The Investec Champions Cup last 16 and last eight will be the focus in the first two weeks of April and Pollard will be pivotal to the last 16 match against Glasgow in Glasgow.
Keo’s Bulls Takeways
Potency in the scrum.
Ruan Nortje, the best lock in South Africa.
Embrose Papier, influential and brilliant at No 9.
Cheswill Jooste, the SA under 20 winger who will play for the Springboks this season.
Pollard, the master off the kicking tee, and all-round general.
Keo’s Lions Takeaways
The scrum
The composure
The defensive desire
The maturity in game management, courtesy of No 10 Chris Smith.
Quan Hỏrn, the most under appreciated fullback in South Africa.
Ruan Venter, he is the going to have a breakthrough international season.
The Bulls beat the Dragons 42-26, to be the first team to pass 400 points in the league this season.
The top five position is the best return after 14 rounds for the Lions in the history of the league.
Keo’s Stormers Takeaways
Evan Roos is the most consistent and best performing No 8 among the SA URC quartet.
Damian Willemse is good enough to play anywhere in the backline.
Scrum potency.
Paul de Villiers and Deon Fourie represent two generations, in age difference, among specialist flankers who play to the ball. In tandem, they could be the equal, in effectiveness, of George Smith and Phil Waugh for the Wallabies, when the Australians were world champions.
Individual brilliance and lethal transition play makes them a machine that can misfire for 65 minutes, only to turn a deficit into a 19 point win, as illustrated in the 33-14 win against Edinburgh in Cape Town.
The Stormers, with their 11th win of the league season, are second to Glasgow.
Keo’s Sharks Takeaways
JP Pietersen’s impact as head coach.
Andre Esterhuizen’s growth as captain and presence in the midfield.
Ox Nche and Vincent Koch’s power in the scrums.
The Sharks, thanks to Pietersen’s philosophy and approach, finally appreciating there is as much honour in making a tackle as there is glory in scoring a try.
Great mental resolves to beat Cardiff 21-15 and continue their league climb from 14th to 10th.
United Rugby Championship Table
| Pos | Team | PTS | PL | W | D | L | BP | PF | PA | DIFF |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Glasgow Warriors | 55 | 14 | 11 | 0 | 3 | 11 | 389 | 197 | 192 |
| 2 | DHL Stormers | 51 | 14 | 11 | 0 | 3 | 7 | 378 | 239 | 139 |
| 3 | Ulster | 47 | 14 | 9 | 0 | 5 | 11 | 399 | 286 | 113 |
| 4 | Leinster | 46 | 14 | 9 | 0 | 5 | 10 | 361 | 299 | 62 |
| 5 | Fidelity SecureDrive Lions | 43 | 14 | 8 | 1 | 5 | 9 | 421 | 385 | 36 |
| 6 | Cardiff Rugby | 41 | 14 | 8 | 0 | 6 | 9 | 262 | 271 | -9 |
| 7 | Munster | 41 | 14 | 8 | 0 | 6 | 9 | 279 | 304 | -25 |
| 8 | Vodacom Bulls | 40 | 14 | 8 | 0 | 6 | 8 | 397 | 340 | 57 |
| 9 | Connacht | 39 | 14 | 7 | 0 | 7 | 11 | 336 | 326 | 10 |
| 10 | Hollywoodbets Sharks | 33 | 14 | 6 | 1 | 7 | 7 | 322 | 348 | -26 |
| 11 | Ospreys | 30 | 14 | 5 | 2 | 7 | 6 | 293 | 325 | -32 |
| 12 | Benetton | 28 | 14 | 5 | 2 | 7 | 4 | 257 | 331 | -74 |
| 13 | Edinburgh | 23 | 14 | 4 | 0 | 10 | 7 | 269 | 340 | -71 |
| 14 | Scarlets | 21 | 14 | 4 | 1 | 9 | 3 | 261 | 347 | -86 |
| 15 | Dragons RFC | 21 | 14 | 2 | 3 | 9 | 7 | 274 | 357 | -83 |
| 16 | Zebre Parma | 12 | 14 | 2 | 0 | 12 | 4 | 226 | 429 | -203 |
KEO News Wire
The Stormers have made Cape Town South Africa’s rugby capital
Stormers crowd attendance at DHL Stadium tells the real story. Cape Town is South Africa’s rugby capital and the numbers back it.
Cape Town is South Africa’s rugby capital – and the Stormers crowd attendance proves it. The numbers are bigger than any other club, and it goes beyond nostalgia and history. Newlands had 131 years to build its legacy and the DHL Stadium, in just five years, is producing bigger moments, bigger crowds and a stronger connection with the public.
Stormers crowd attendance: DHL Stadium, Cape Town numbers don’t lie
The Stormers moved homes from Newlands to Green Point in 2021, but significantly they have moved the market that speaks to an occasion more than it does a rugby match.
The Stormers have done it, post Covid, and in a competition that includes previously unfamiliar northern hemisphere club teams and playing some of their biggest derbies in late December and early January, a summer season peak that is incomparable in its challenge to anything experienced, season-wise, in Super Rugby’s history from 1996 to 2019.
Newlands & DHL Stadium
Newlands averages (1996–2019)
| Category | Matches | Average attendance |
|---|---|---|
| Stormers Super Rugby | 157 | 33,189 |
| WP Currie Cup | 146 | 18,959 |
| Springboks Tests | 24 | 43,586 |
DHL Stadium – Stormers era
URC average attendance (last four seasons + 2021/22 play-offs*)
| Season | Matches | Average attendance |
|---|---|---|
| 2021/22 home play-offs* | 3 | 27,100 |
| 2022/23 | 10 | 27,216 |
| 2023/24 | 7 | 28,531 |
| 2024/25 | 8 | 26,686 |
| 2025/26 | 6 | 29,375 |
| Total (incl. play-offs) | 34 | 27,733 |
* Covid-restricted capacity, but effectively full houses within permitted limits.
Investec Champions Cup average (last four seasons)
| Season | Matches | Average attendance |
|---|---|---|
| 2022/23 | 3 | 19,814 |
| 2023/24 | 3 | 21,725 |
| 2024/25 | 1 | 23,682 |
| 2025/26 | 1 | 24,893 |
| 4-season average | 8 | 21,649 |
Springboks at DHL Stadium
| Season | Opposition | Crowd |
|---|---|---|
| 2023/24 | Wales | 51,347 |
| 2024/25 | New Zealand | 58,417 |
| 2025/26 | Australia | 56,350 |
| Category | Tests | Average attendance |
|---|---|---|
| Springboks Tests at DHL Stadium | 3 | 55,371 |
Stormers crowd attendance Cape Town the biggest days
DHL Stadium Top 10 Stormers crowds
| Rank | Crowd | Opposition | Season | Competition | Stage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 56,334 | Munster | 2022/23 | URC | Final |
| 2 | 53,682 | Bulls | 2025/26 | URC | League |
| 3 | 52,087 | Sharks | 2025/26 | URC | League |
| 4 | 47,261 | Connacht | 2022/23 | URC | Semi-final |
| 5 | 47,171 | Bulls | 2024/25 | URC | League |
| 6 | 46,002 | Sharks | 2024/25 | URC | League |
| 7 | 44,109 | Bulls | 2022/23 | URC | Quarter-final |
| 8 | 39,925 | Bulls | 2023/24 | URC | League |
| 9 | 37,246 | Sharks | 2023/24 | URC | League |
| 10 | 35,202 | Lions | 2023/24 | URC | League |
Newlands Top 10 Stormers Super Rugby crowds
| Rank | Crowd | Opposition | Season | Competition | Stage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 50,000 | Highlanders | 1999 | Super Rugby | Semi-final |
| 2 | 49,725 | Cats | 1999 | Super Rugby | League |
| 3 | 49,170 | Chiefs | 1999 | Super Rugby | League |
| 4 | 49,000 | Blues | 1999 | Super Rugby | League |
| 5 | 48,739 | Bulls | 2010 | Super Rugby | League |
| 6 | 48,700 | Brumbies | 2002 | Super Rugby | League |
| 7 | 48,492 | Crusaders | 2011 | Super Rugby | League |
| 8 | 48,211 | Bulls | 2011 | Super Rugby | League |
| 9 | 48,184 | Crusaders | 2010 | Super Rugby | League |
| 10 | 48,026 | Sharks | 2012 | Super Rugby | Semi-final |
URC dominance Stormers lead South Africa
URC all-time league table (85 matches)
| Rank | Team | Log Points |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Leinster | 328 |
| 2 | Stormers | 289 |
| 3 | Glasgow | 287 |
| 4 | Bulls | 280 |
| 5 | Munster | 269 |
| 6 | Ulster | 261 |
| 7 | Sharks | 221 |
| 8 | Lions | 214 |
| 9 | Edinburgh | 213 |
| 10 | Connacht | 210 |
| 11 | Benetton | 204 |
| 12 | Ospreys | 200 |
| 13 | Cardiff | 195 |
| 14 | Scarlets | 175 |
| 15 | Dragons | 88 |
| 16 | Zebre | 76 |
In the history of the URC, across 85 league matches, the Stormers are the most successful South African side and second only to Leinster overall. They are also the competition’s most successful finals team, with one title and two home finals. The Bulls have reached three finals – two away and one at home – and have yet to win the title.
Different season, bigger Stormers crowd attendance Cape Town
Super Rugby’s February start meant Capetonians were never asked to show up at a stadium to support the Stormers in December and January, in the heart of summer, holiday and cricket season, but those months are integral to the URC league season, especially South Africa’s derby matches.
This is a significant difference between the old world of Newlands and the new order at the DHL Stadium in 2026.
Newlands delivered its biggest crowds in traditional rugby windows, and the Stormers of the past five years have had to do it in peak holiday summer seasons, which shows the enormous shift in audience behaviour.
The people of Cape Town care about the Stormers and the Stormers care about the people of Cape Town.
No other team in South Africa and no team in the URC, the Irish giants of Leinster and Munster included, can claim such consistently high stadium numbers over such a lengthy period of time.
And only Leinster, in the brief history of the URC as a league, have earned more points from wins, draws and losing bonus points than the Stormers.
Cape Town is also a banker whenever the Springboks play, be it at Newlands, pre-2019 or in the three Tests played, in front of crowds, in the past four years.
KEO News Wire
Bulls Finish. Stormers Create. Glasgow Lead
Bulls finish, Stormers create, and Glasgow lead the URC through balance and consistency.
The Bulls know the way to the try line, the Stormers know how to get close to the try line and Glasgow’s Warriors are the most complete and balanced team in the 2025/26 URC team stats.
URC Team Stats: Bulls, Stormers, Lions and Sharks Compared
The Warriors are the league leaders after 13 rounds, with 10 wins from 13 and a total of 50 points. The Stormers are second with 10 wins and 46 points, while the Bulls, despite scoring the most tries this season, are eighth with seven wins and 34 points.
The URC official Team Stats emphasise the potency of Franco Smith’s Warriors, who have also shown quality in squad depth to produce winning results in matches when stripped of their Six Nations internationals.
Smith, the former Springboks utility back and Cheetahs and Italian coach, has been a revelation at Glasgow. He, in partnership with South African-born winger and club captain Kyle Steyn, have been at the forefront of Glasgow’s growth into one of the best teams in Europe.
Glasgow, in the 2023/24 season, beat the Bulls at Loftus in Pretoria to win the third edition of the URC.
This season’s league showcases the Bulls try-scoring ability, exposes their charitable early season defensive form, and illustrates just how dominant the Stormers are in getting close to the opposition try line, but equally how impotent they are in converting those opportunities once in the 22 metres attack red zone.
The Stormers have had no issue in applying pressure, given they are second for entries into the opposition 22 (150), but it is their failure to convert this earned advantage into tries.
The Lions have gone big on volume and the Sharks, the lowest of the South Africa teams with an 11th place league ranking, are chasing consistency and a winning habit since JP Pietersen replaced John Plumtree as the Sharks coach.
The Glasgow Warriors lead the table and the key performance metrics, combining territory, possession and execution better than any side in the competition.
The Bulls know how to cross the try line, the Stormers are battling to find their way to the try line and the Warriors have married pressure and points scored to top the league.
URC 2026 Team Stats – South African Rankings
Total Tries Scored
| Team | Rank | Total |
|---|---|---|
| Vodacom Bulls | 1 | 54 |
| Fidelity SecureDrive Lions | 4 | 51 |
| Hollywoodbets Sharks | 6 | 45 |
| DHL Stormers | 8 | 43 |
Total Points Scored
| Team | Rank | Total |
|---|---|---|
| Fidelity SecureDrive Lions | 1 | 379 |
| Vodacom Bulls | 3 | 363 |
| DHL Stormers | 5 | 345 |
| Hollywoodbets Sharks | 8 | 301 |
Total Metres Gained
| Team | Rank | Total |
|---|---|---|
| Vodacom Bulls | 2 | 5611 |
| Fidelity SecureDrive Lions | 6 | 5009 |
| DHL Stormers | 11 | 4112 |
| Hollywoodbets Sharks | 13 | 3955 |
Total Entries into Opposition 22
| Team | Rank | Total |
|---|---|---|
| DHL Stormers | 2 | 150 |
| Vodacom Bulls | 5 | 137 |
| Fidelity SecureDrive Lions | 6 | 134 |
| Hollywoodbets Sharks | 11 | 125 |
Total Turnovers Won / Defensive Impact
| Team | Rank | Total |
|---|---|---|
| Fidelity SecureDrive Lions | 4 | 316 |
| Vodacom Bulls | 7 | 275 |
| Hollywoodbets Sharks | 10 | 249 |
| DHL Stormers | 12 | 245 |
Keo’s 10 Takeaways
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The Bulls are the best finishers in the URC – first for tries scored (54).
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The Bulls’ attack is built on momentum – second for metres gained (5611).
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The Stormers are excellent at creating try-scoring pressure points – second for 22 entries (150).
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The Stormers don’t always convert that pressure into points.
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The Lions are the competition’s top scorers, with some big scores at home – first for total points (379).
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The Lions’ game is built on tempo and attacking volume, Ellis Park’s fast pace surface, attitude & altitude.
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The Sharks are outside the top tier across the key metrics, which is a reinforcement of their awful start to the season.
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No South African team dominates the defensive categories because their attack has been stronger and they have won more than they have lost.
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Glasgow lead the competition for metres gained (5873) and overall control metrics.
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Glasgow and the Stormers are strong in very different areas, for example the Stormers kick volume and effectiveness compared to Glasgow’s. Equally Glasgow’s ball in hand game, but the reality is that both have 10 wins from 13 and the points differential is less three points on average a game.
KEO News Wire
Magical Mapimpi is the STECO Hybrid Power Tool Hero
Makazole Mapimpi needed a magical moment to beat Nizaam Carr’s outrageous kick assist for the Bulls in Round 13 of the URC to be named the STECO Hybrid Power Tool Hero of the Week.
Makazole Mapimpi needed a magical moment to beat Nizaam Carr’s outrageous kick assist for the Bulls in Round 13 of the URC to be named the STECO Hybrid Power Tool Hero of the Week.
Makazole Mapimpi Magic
Mapimpi, the Sharks winger, celebrated his 100th match in style, although it took him 78 minutes to produce the most sensational individual two minutes, with his reward being two tries of varying degrees of brilliance.
Mapimpi, the first Springbok to score a try in a World Cup final, bagged a double in the final stages of the Sharks 45-0 thumping of Ireland’s Munster.
The win was the Sharks’ third in their last four URC matches. The Sharks play Cardiff in Durban on Friday evening in Round 14.
On the Keo & Zels Rugby Show, Zels and I discussed the nominations and why Mapimpi got our nod.
ZELS:
That Stormers scrum absolutely obliterated the Dragons tight five, and Evan Roos was on hand to pick up and dive over. Sensational try. That’s a proper team try for me, with everyone involved. That’s the hybrid element, right? Power, but skill within it.
KEO:
You talk about hybrid. It is more like one tool doing many things. That Stormers pack did everything. From loosehead to tighthead, hooker, both locks, six, seven, eight. This was the full unit.
Then you look at the Bulls.
Nizaam Carr, Bishops old boy and former Stormers, has been outstanding. That kick-assist was sensational. That’s a footballer’s touch. Like a corner kick dropping onto the head of a striker. Perfect weight, perfect execution. Five points.
ZELS:
So you’re going with Carr?
KEO:
I was because I did not think anything or anyone would match it over the weekend because it takes something special to beat that for the STECO Hybrid Power Tool Hero of the Week.
And then, Sharks v Munster, 79 minutes played and enter Makazole Mapimpi.
He scores a try and everyone celebrates, “finally got one.” But look deeper. He didn’t see much ball. Worked relentlessly. It’s his 100th. He’s 35, looks 19. The physique, the engine…
He leaps high from he kick-off, takes it clean, lands, beats two, goes again; inside, outside and then those final five metres. Munster’s 10 comes across, makes the tackle attempt… Mapimpi finishes.
That’s the moment. That’s the one.
And the irony? He’s wearing 11. Andre Esterhuizen – the STECO ambassador – is at 12. And Mike Sharman from Retroviral, who work with STECO Ryobi, they’ve told Mapimpi’s story it’s on YouTube.
Go watch it.
Then I get a message from Richard Stevens, Marketing Head, Stevens & Co, saying how fitting it is: 11 and 12, powered by them STECO/RYOBI doing the business for the Sharks … and Mapimpi delivers that.
Richard, there should be something in the post for Mapimpi, via courier.
ZELS:
I agree. Something powerful to keep powering him.
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ANDRE ESTERHUIZEN IS THE ULTIMATE STECO HYBRID POWER TOOL, ON AND OFF THE FIELD

Photo: Anton Geyser/Gallo Images


KEO News Wire
Sacha’s stats statement slays Dragons
Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu slayed the Dragons in Cape Town and his match statistics emphasised his influence in the Stormers bonus-point win against Newport’s Dragons.
Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu slayed the Dragons in Cape Town and his match statistics emphasised his influence in the Stormers bonus-point win against Newport’s Dragons.
Stormers v Dragons – United Rugby Championship
The Stormers 29-21 win was their 10th in 13 league starts and ensured they finished Round 13 in second place, four points off league leaders Glasgow, whom they play in Cape Town in April.
Stormers No 10 Feinberg-Mngomezulu scored the match’s opening two tries, which he converted for 14 points, but as memorable were a try-saving tackle late in the first half and second half defensive moment of mastery to deny the Dragons a further try. His points totalled 19, with three conversions and a penalty added to his two five-pointers, but the 14 points he saved, tells the story of his significance against the Dragons.
Feinberg-Mngomezulu made 13 kicks and 13 passes, claimed a line out win statistically from a quick throw and won a ruck turnover, one of just four for the Stormers in 80 minutes. He made seven tackles to complete a busy and big defensive afternoon.
On attack, he made the most metres in the match, with 78, beat three defenders, which was the second most of the match, carried the ball nine times and his three line breaks were the most in the match.
His 19 points took his league season tally to 81 points in his eighth match of the league. His URC career total is 17 tries, four drop goals, 30 penalties and 47 conversions, for 281 points. He has started 27 of 44 URC matches.
He has played four Investec Champions Cup matches and his overall Stormers record is 31 starts in 48 matches for 308 points, with 17 tries, four drop goals, 33 penalties and 56 conversions. He is 24 years-old.
Feinberg-Mngomezulu was named the 2024/25 South African Vodacom United Rugby Championship Player of the Year beating off Bulls prop Wilco Louw and Bulls loose-forward Cameron Hanekom for the prize.
The counter to those match-winning statistical returns against the Dragons, was a speculator pass to Damian Willemse that was not a good option and twice missing penalty kicks to touch. His four from six off the kicking tee has matched his league accuracy this season, which is 10 percent down on his 75 percent-plus career average as a goal kicker.
URC 2026 League Table (After Round 13)
| Pos | Team | P | W | D | L | BP | PF | PA | Diff | Pts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Glasgow Warriors | 13 | 10 | 0 | 3 | 10 | 358 | 187 | +171 | 50 |
| 2 | DHL Stormers | 13 | 10 | 0 | 3 | 6 | 345 | 225 | +120 | 46 |
| 3 | Ulster Rugby | 13 | 8 | 0 | 5 | 10 | 371 | 274 | +97 | 42 |
| 4 | Leinster Rugby | 13 | 8 | 0 | 5 | 9 | 325 | 280 | +45 | 41 |
| 5 | Cardiff Rugby | 13 | 8 | 0 | 5 | 8 | 247 | 250 | -3 | 40 |
| 6 | Munster Rugby | 13 | 8 | 0 | 5 | 7 | 248 | 270 | -22 | 39 |
| 7 | Fidelity SecureDrive Lions | 13 | 7 | 1 | 5 | 8 | 379 | 359 | +20 | 38 |
| 8 | Vodacom Bulls | 13 | 7 | 0 | 6 | 7 | 363 | 309 | +54 | 35 |
| 9 | Connacht Rugby | 13 | 6 | 0 | 7 | 11 | 315 | 312 | +3 | 35 |
| 10 | Ospreys | 13 | 5 | 2 | 6 | 5 | 279 | 304 | -25 | 29 |
| 11 | Hollywoodbets Sharks | 13 | 5 | 1 | 7 | 7 | 301 | 333 | -32 | 29 |
| 12 | Benetton Rugby | 13 | 5 | 2 | 6 | 4 | 247 | 300 | -53 | 28 |
| 13 | Edinburgh Rugby | 13 | 4 | 0 | 9 | 7 | 255 | 307 | -52 | 23 |
| 14 | Scarlets | 13 | 4 | 1 | 8 | 3 | 242 | 311 | -69 | 21 |
| 15 | Dragons RFC | 13 | 2 | 3 | 8 | 6 | 248 | 315 | -67 | 20 |
| 16 | Zebre Parma | 13 | 2 | 0 | 11 | 4 | 214 | 401 | -187 | 12 |
Stormers No 8 Evan Roos also enjoy a busy afternoon. He scored a try to take his league season tally to seven, but it was the balance in his attack and defence that was most telling. Roos carried 14 times, the most in the match, and made 11 tackles, which was the most from a Stormers player.
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