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Stormers grind Cardiff out but SFM injury clouds semi-final outlook
The Stormers' set-piece machine dismantled Cardiff's dark-horse run, but wasteful finishing and a Feinberg-Mngomezulu ankle scare are the notes that linger heading into the last four.
Bulls dismantle Munster 45-14: Bok depth the difference, Hanekom emerges as Kwagga cover
The Bulls' 45-14 URC quarter-final win over Munster is dissected across five takeaways — Bok depth as the decisive factor, Hanekom's emergence as Kwagga cover, and a frank assessment of Munster's structural decline and McMillan's precarious position.
Bulls dismantle Munster 45-14: Bok depth tells, Hanekom stakes Bomb Squad claim
A detailed breakdown of the Bulls' dominant 45-14 win, analysing why Bok-laden depth made Munster irrelevant, and why Hanekom is now in the frame to replace Kwagga Smith in the Bomb Squad.
Hanekom and Grobbelaar lead Bulls' destruction of Munster in URC quarter-final
Planet Rugby's quarter-final ratings highlight Cameron Hanekom as the standout performer in the Bulls' 45-14 win over Munster, with the piece arguing his one Test cap is a clear anomaly. Grobbelaar, Papier, and a dominant front row also rated highly, though bench impact in attack is flagged as a concern for the Glasgow semi-final.
Dobson's best problem: too many world-class tightheads
Dobson maps out the Stormers' tighthead selection headache for next season — Louw's return means four Test-level props competing for two spots, and keeping Sazi Sandi engaged while Springboks dominate the rotation is the kind of problem that's genuinely hard to solve.
Kitshoff and Nyakane back Janse van Rensburg's England switch
Kitshoff and Nyakane back Janse van Rensburg's England call-up, drawing parallels with Steyn's Scotland switch and arguing that chasing top-level rugby wherever the opportunity comes is the right call — even as the door quietly closes on a Bok future.
Jake White wants SA Rugby to bring back the overseas selection ban
Jake White is calling for SA Rugby to reinstate overseas selection restrictions, arguing the current policy has enriched the Springboks while leaving franchises structurally unable to compete in the Champions Cup against far wealthier European clubs.
Eight names Erasmus could turn to after Kwagga's knee blow
With Kwagga Smith out for six months, the piece profiles eight Bomb Squad candidates — from Esterhuizen's expanding hybrid role to the Lions contingent of Mahashe, Du Plessis and Horn — assessing who has the tools to fill the void ahead of a Rugby World Cup year.
O'Keeffe breaks silence on the scrum call that broke England's World Cup
O'Keeffe says a knee on the ground gave him a 'clear picture' for the scrum penalty that sent the Boks to the 2023 final — his first detailed public account of the call, set against Genge's still-raw version of events.
England pundits back Itoje rest — and see Springboks test as the perfect squad audit
Three former England players argue Itoje's cumulative captaincy load — Lions, England, Saracens — makes this summer the only viable rest window before the World Cup, while framing the Springboks test at Ellis Park as a valuable squad-depth audit rather than a match England must win.
Why BJvR fills a gap England's other centres can't
Ben Youngs argues BJvR is the only England centre option who combines genuine physicality with the distribution demanded by Test rugby — running through Dingwall, Ojomoh, and Lawrence to show why each falls short on at least one count.
Blitzboks arrive in Valladolid with unfinished business
The Blitzboks arrive in Valladolid with two tournaments left and a World Championship title still to claim — Visser is using the unfinished business as fuel ahead of a tough Pool A draw.
Dobson's early faith in Kolbe, the Stormers' smart recruitment model, and why SA rugby needs the Champions Cup
Rich traces Kolbe's near-exit from rugby to Dobson's 2012 intervention, explains why the Stormers' current recruitment strategy is structurally different from the Sharks' costly mistakes, and argues that French Champions Cup dominance makes SA franchise participation in that competition not optional but essential.
Matfield's theory: Nienaber's system only works with Springbok physicality
Matfield argues Nienaber's defensive system is inseparable from Springbok physicality — without the dominant tackle-and-kill-ball foundation, the structure collapses, as Leinster's final loss to Bordeaux illustrated. Kirwan adds that incomplete squad buy-in compounded the problem.
Snyman: Mental edge will separate the Blitzboks in Valladolid
Snyman says mental discipline, not physical readiness, is the Blitzboks' key challenge in Valladolid as they chase a potential Series and World Championship double.
Dobson's 2012 gamble on Kolbe, and why the Stormers' homecoming recruits aren't a Sharks repeat
Rich reveals Kolbe nearly quit rugby in 2012 before Dobson's intervention, and uses the Stormers' latest homecoming signings to argue why their model is structurally different from — and smarter than — the Sharks' costly Galactico era.
De Villiers warns Stormers risk repeating the Sharks' star-studded trap
De Villiers warns the Stormers risk the Sharks' trap — big Bok signings, brand value, but URC inconsistency when those players are away. He and Burger also take a pointed dig at the Lavanini link given his sin-bin habits.
Steyn backs Smith as SA's best flyhalf — and wants Erasmus to notice
Steyn names Chris Smith the best flyhalf in South Africa and flags his Bok omission as a missed opportunity, while the Lions coaching staff acknowledge they need sharper execution against Leinster's linespeed in their URC quarterfinal.
Matfield's theory: Only Boks have the physicality to run Nienaber's system
Matfield argues Nienaber's defensive system demands Springbok-level physicality to function — Leinster can't slow the ball the way the Boks do, leaving them structurally exposed. Kirwan adds that incomplete player buy-in made things worse.
Coetzee backs Pollard and Le Roux to be Bulls' difference-makers against Munster
Coetzee identifies Pollard and Le Roux as the Bulls' play-off X-factors against Munster, arguing that World Cup-hardened composure — not past final appearances — is what will matter at Loftus on Saturday.