The north-south clash in Cape Town this past weekend lived up to its billing as the biggest franchise derby since the arrival of the pandemic, but could pale in significance with what is yet to come in the Vodacom United Rugby Championship.
Leinster, the multiple and reigning champions in the competition’s previous iteration as the PRO14 and also four-time European champions, are due in South Africa after the Easter long weekend. While they are almost assured now of top spot on the overall URC log, the makeup of their squad will be interesting as their two opponents are locked in a titanic battle – also featuring the Vodacom Bulls – for Shield (conference) honours.
The Shield winner will not only have the local bragging rights Bulls coach Jake White referred to in the immediate aftermath of his team’s agonising 19-17 defeat by the Stormers in a tense battle – described by some of the international players as matching a Test in intensity and physicality. They will also automatically qualify for next year’s Champions Cup.
As it stands, qualification for Europe, which is what all the South African teams see as their top priority in addition to nailing URC silverware, should not just depend on winning the Shield. There’s been a seismic shift in the local fortunes in the Championship since the battle arena switched to South African soil.
If Edinburgh drop out of the top eight, three SA teams will make it into Europe. If Edinburgh finish eighth, then the Stormers, Sharks and Bulls can reach their objectives by finishing in the top seven, which is more than possible at this stage.
But Leinster stands in the way of the two coastal teams, the Sharks and Stormers, with Irish giants due to visit Durban on 23 April before going to Cape Town a week later. If the Stormers beat the Glasgow Warriors in their next game, the clash at Cape Town Stadium could be akin to a final for them as victory will assure them of qualification and, quite possibly, the Shield too.
Leinster, as their record suggests, are formidable opponents. They are the European equivalent of the Christchurch-based Crusaders that South African teams dreamed of beating, but seldom did, during the Super Rugby era.
However, here’s an interesting question – what team will Leinster field in those two games? They are regarded to be a squad of such depth that they can field two teams of almost equal strength, and whether we get to see Ireland flyhalf Johnny Sexton, who is back playing for Leinster after the Six Nations, could depend on their selection approach for the second leg of their round-of-16 clash with fellow Irish team Connacht in Dublin on Friday night.
Leinster, with a full-strength team, got through the first game in Galway last Friday, but by their standards it was only just. They won 26-21 at The Sportsground, which means they take just a five-point lead into the second game. It might force their coach, Leo Cullen, to select another full-strength team, which might well mean they rest players for the following week’s game at Kings Park.
The South African Shield leaders, the Stormers, can probably anticipate facing a near full-strength team the week after that, as there will just be two URC league games left at that point, with Leinster’s last match being their return derby clash with arch-rivals Munster at their home ground of the RDS Arena.
Remember, it is not just the URC playoffs that Leinster face after that, but also probably a sequence of Champions Cup playoff games. Cullen, in the past, has shown a liking for creating momentum at the business end of the season by settling his team and combinations.
Whatever the case, though, the Bulls should be putting patriotism aside by supporting Leinster in the two matches against their two local rivals as Leinster wins will make their own quest for the Shield so much easier. That’s how Leinster can be kingmakers. Of the three SA teams in contention for top eight and the Shield, it is the Bulls who have arguably the easier run-in to the end of the regular season, with Benetton (home), Glasgow Warriors (home) and Ospreys (away) being their remaining opponents.
The Stormers host Glasgow and Leinster and then go to Llanelli to play a Scarlets team that, since returning from SA, has run into impressive form and cemented their position at the top of the Welsh Shield with a one-sided away win over Cardiff last weekend. The Sharks host Connacht in addition to Leinster and then have the onerous task of going to Belfast to play Ulster.
There’s so much at stake for all those opponents bar perhaps Leinster, who will be driven by the need to take momentum into the playoffs rather than fighting for a place in those playoffs, and it promises to be an exciting end to the first season of URC. The Stormers are now just three points behind second-placed Ulster, so even a place in the top two is now not beyond the realms of possibility.
Photo: Getty Images