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Champions Leinster thrashed by Stormers in URC opener

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Leinster were blown apart by the Stormers in the first game of their BKT United Rugby Championship defence, as they fell to a humiliating 35-0 defeat in Cape Town.

It’s the first time in 17 years that the province have been held scoreless in a league game, dating back to their 18-0 loss to Munster in September 2008.

Leo Cullen’s side saw their scrum and lineout obliterated, and with no setpiece to work with they never established any pressure on the home side, who were playing without their Springbok squad members.

On top of that, the Stormers dominated the kicking battle, with Leolin Zas and Seabelo Senatla controlling the aerial contests, which ensured the home side were consistently playing their rugby in Leinster’s half.

It was only 6-0 at half time with the Stormers kicking two penalties from out-half Jurie Matthee, although it could and should have been a wider scoreline.

Paul de Villiers thought he had got in for a Stormers try on 26 minutes, only for it to be chalked off after a TMO review, with Adre Smith penalised for obstruction.

Matthee also missed twice off the tee in that opening half, both long-range efforts that may have been better served kicked into touch.

The 24-year-old tagged another three points onto the lead two minutes into the second half, and they hammered home that advantage shortly after with their opening try.

26 September 2025; Robbie Henshaw of Leinster, centre, and team-mates react after their side's defeat in the United Rugby Championship match between DHL Stormers and Leinster at DHL Stadium in Cape Town, South Africa. Photo by Shaun Roy/Sportsfile
Robbie Henshaw (c) reacts after the final whistle

The score was sparked by some opportunism from the brilliant Senatla, who was first to a bouncing ball after Sam Prendergast’s crossfield kick was deflected by a South African hand. The wing weaved back inside before finding Stefan Ungerer, and the scrum-half held off two Leinster tacklers to reach the tryline, the converted try making it 16-0.

The scrum had been a back and forth contest in the opening half, but the Stormers grew dominant in the third quarter, winning four penalties in succession.

That pressure gave them regular access to the 22, and when Max Deegan was sin-binned for an offside on 62 minutes, the Stormers made them pay as they mauled over for an Evan Roos try.

Worse was to follow six minutes lates when they were were reduced to 13 players temporarily, Tommy O’Brien picking up the yellow card this time for a high tackle, and from the resulting penalty they again mauled their way over, Ruan Ackermann’s try making it 30-0.

And with a clear numbers advantage, they put the finishing touches on their bonus-point hammering when Matthee spotted tighthead prop Andrew Sparrow in midfield on 72 minutes, rounding the debutant to cap off the scoring, and consign Leinster to a miserable night in Cape Town.

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McIlroy wins back-to-back holes in fourballs

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Champions Leinster suffer thumping defeat by Stormers in curtain-raiser

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image

Stormers 35

Leinster 0

Jon Cardinelli reports from DHL Stadium, Cape Town

THE STORMERS DELIVERED a superior set-piece showing to lay the platform for an emphatic victory against Leinster in Cape Town on Friday night.

Leo Cullen’s charges travelled to Cape Town this week without a host of British & Irish Lions players, yet started the match as favourites against a Stormers team missing Springboks Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu, Cobus Reinach and Damian Willemse.

In the end, the visitors failed to claim so much as a point on the scoreboard – and recorded their third-straight defeat at the Cape Town Stadium since the URC’s inception.

Nineteen thousand tickets were sold for this fixture, which played out on a warm spring evening. Given the favourable conditions, running rugby and a feast of tries were expected.

Both teams attempted to lift the tempo early but they were undone time and again by handling errors, poor decision-making and a lack of synergy. Perhaps the latter was to be expected in the first game of the season.

Two Stormers tries were chalked off in the first half, while out-half Jurie Matthee slotted two from four from the tee and sent a drop-goal attempt wide. Several surges into the Leinster 22 culminated in a turnover or a penalty to the opposition.

Meanwhile, Leinster’s scrum leaked penalties, and hooker Gus McCarthy struggled to find his lineout jumpers on a dry and relatively windless evening.

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The scoreboard at half-time told a story, with the Stormers leading 6-0.

The visitors made the worst-possible start to the second stanza, with Sam Prendergast’s kick-off failing to travel 10 metres. The hosts won a breakdown penalty in the same play, and Matthee bisected the uprights to steer his team into an important two-score lead at 9-0.

Yet another mistake from Leinster allowed the Stormers to regain possession thereafter, and a surge up the middle of the park culminated in a try for scrum-half Stefan Ungerer under the posts.

Matthee made no mistake with the conversion, and suddenly the Stormers were out to a 16-point lead.

Leinster’s problems at the set piece persisted, and from the 50th minute, Cullen started to ring the changes to the front and second rows.

But Stormers coach John Dobson went to his own bench, unleashing Springbok utility forward BJ Dixon and Ruan Ackermann, who recently joined from Gloucester.

The home side continued to boss the scrums, and their passes started to stick. The partisan crowd started to cheer every scrum penalty awarded as if was try.

Leinster heads began to drop. When Prendergast was subbed in the 60th minute, the hosts appeared to be on course for a bonus-point win, and the visitors for a substantial and humbling defeat.

Replacement Max Deegan was shown a yellow card in the 62nd minute for a cynical offence deep in opposition territory, and the Stormers proceeded to bulldoze the Leinster pack from short range thereafter, with Evan Roos eventually scoring.

Leinster continued to spiral, with winger Tommy O’Brien receiving 10 minutes in the bin after a high shot on Seabelo Senatla. Once again, the Stormers forwards made the visitors pay. A powerful maul yielded their third try through Ruan Ackermann.

And the hosts weren’t done yet.

Matthee ghosted through a gap in the 72nd minute, and proceeded to race 40-odd metres to score the bonus-point try.

The Stormers out-half finished the game with a personal tally of 20 points. The fact that he left a further 14 on the field through missed goal-kicks serves to show how emphatically Leinster were outplayed.

Stormers scorers:

  • Tries: Stefan Ungerer, Evan Roos, Ruan Ackermann, Jurie Matthee
  • Conversions: Matthee [3 from 4]
  • Penalty: Matthee [3 from 6]

STORMERS: Wandisile Simelane, Seabelo Senatla, Ruhan Nel (captain), Dan du Plessis, Leolin Zas, Jurie Matthee, Stefan Ungerer; Vernon Matongo, André-Hugo Venter, Neethling Fouché, Adré Smith, JD Schickerling, Paul de Villiers, Ben-Jason Dixon, Evan Roos.
Replacements: JJ Kotze, Olly Reid, Zachary Porthen, Ruben van Heerden, Ruan Ackermann, Marcell Theunissen, Dewaldt Duvenage, Clinton Swart

LEINSTER: Jimmy O’Brien, Tommy O’Brien, Robbie Henshaw, Ciaran Frawley, Jordan Larmour, Sam Prendergast, Luke McGrath; Jack Boyle, Gus McCarthy, Rabah Slimani, Diarmund Mangan, Brian Deeny, Ryan Baird, Scott Penny, James Culhane
Replacements: John McKee, Paddy McCarthy, Andrew Sparrow, Max Deegan, Will Connors, Fintan Gunne, Harry Byrne

Referee: Gianluca Gnecchi (Italy)

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Why Scheffler is facing unwanted Woods comparison

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Scottie Scheffler reacts during the 2025 Ryder CupPA Media
  • 1 hour ago

The comparisons have been inescapable.

Scottie Scheffler’s dominance at the top of the men’s game – insurmountable as the world number one, ruthless wins at the majors and cleaning up on the PGA Tour – have seen parallels drawn with Tiger Woods.

At Bethpage, another similarity between the two American superstars started to emerge: struggling in Ryder Cup pairings.

After losing in Friday’s opening foursomes, Scheffler has now been beaten in all three of his matches in the alternate shot format – winning only three of 41 holes he has played.

“His foursome play is just atrocious and there’s really no explanation because you see the guy winning tournament after tournament after tournament,” American writer Alex Miceli told BBC Radio 5 Live.

“There’s no question that he will finally figure it out – but here were are in 2025 after the first matches and he still hasn’t figured it out.”

Scheffler did not play foursomes on his Ryder Cup debut in 2021 but suffered two heavy defeats in 2023.

Scheffler and Sam Burns lost 4&3 to Jon Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton on Friday in Rome, before he and Brooks Koepka suffered a record 9&7 defeat by Viktor Hovland and Ludvig Åberg on Saturday – which left the 29-year-old in tears.

Losing in Bethpage means American world number ones have lost five straight Ryder Cup foursomes matches – Scheffler following Woods in 2010 and Dustin Johnson in 2018.

How world’s best struggle in foursomes

Europe have regularly looked to a talismanic figure – starting with Seve Ballesteros in the 1980s through to Rory McIlroy in the present day – to be a figurehead driving their Ryder Cup bid.

The United States have never been able to find that leader – not even Woods.

The 15-time major champion elevated golf to a new stratosphere in the late 1990s and early 2000s, meaning he still remains the game’s pre-eminent superstar.

But curiously Woods featured on just one victorious Ryder Cup team and won only 35% of his matches.

In foursomes, he won only four of 14 matches and lost nine.

Why? One theory is Woods – and now Scheffler – are unable to transfer their single-mindedness into a format where they are reliant on their playing partner.

Woods was seen as a lone wolf in his pomp. In the singles, he won four and lost two of his six matches.

While Scheffler is seemingly more comfortable in the team setting, the Texan has also performed better when he only has to focus on his own business.

He has not lost in either of his two singles matches so far, beating Rahm as an unheralded rookie in the 2021 win at Whistling Straits before earning a half against the Spaniard in Rome.

“I’d like to think that I’m not difficult to pair with people,” said Scheffler in his pre-tournament news conference.

“I’ve had different partners over the years and have had some success. I would definitely not put myself in that category.”

Another hypothesis behind Woods and Scheffler’s foursomes struggles is their team-mates being unable to cope under the weight of expectation.

Four-time major winner Scheffler, always keen to portray himself as the bloke next door, does not have the same aura.

Since 1999, the top-ranked player in the Ryder Cup field has won just 38% of their matches.

“They put a lot of pressure on themselves and as much as Scheffler says he doesn’t think about it, I think that’s garbage and he thinks about all of it,” added Miceli.

“Tiger didn’t care so much [about that] but Scottie is a different kind of individual.

“He thinks he needs to lead but doesn’t want to be seen leading. It’s a huge conundrum for him, I think, and we see it.”

Scheffler & Henley ‘failed to fire’

Of course, Scheffler is far from solely responsible for the foursomes defeats.

His partner Russell Henley did not cover himself in much glory during Friday’s 4&3 beating by European pair Aberg and Matt Fitzpatrick.

Henley is fourth in a world ranking system skewed by the omission of LIV golfers, but looked shaky on his Ryder Cup debut.

Even Scheffler – whose game is based on consistent driving and metronomic irons – could not dig them out of trouble.

“Scheffler and Henley certainly failed to fire but the European performance was perfect,” said former European Ryder Cup player Oliver Wilson, who is analysing the Bethpage action for BBC Radio 5 Live.

“They made the Americans earn everything and they really couldn’t come up with the goods.

“The Americans put on a little spell at the end there, they had a little bit of life coming but it just wasn’t enough and it was far too late.”

Scheffler was bullish afterwards, saying he felt his pairing did “some good things”.

“We just didn’t hole enough putts early. We had some chances. I think the putts just didn’t fall,” he added.

On Friday afternoon, he aimed to make amends in the fourballs alongside debutant JJ Spaun.

Whether he will get another chance in the Saturday foursomes remains to be seen.

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