Sport

Stormers face uncertainty ahead of URC playoffs after Damian Willemse’s red card

RUGBY

Leighton Koopman|Published

Damian Willemse Damian Willemse put in a near-perfect performance for the Stormers against Cardiff until he received a red card. Photo: BackpagePix

Image: BackpagePix

It is a disaster.

That is how John Dobson, the Stormers’ director of rugby, labelled the red card Damian Willemse received in Friday’s victory over Cardiff in the United Rugby Championship (URC) in Cape Town.

While the home side won 34-24 after a try in the final 10 minutes of the duel, they paid a heavy price, with Willemse now on a path to missing the quarter-finals after his head-high tackle in the build-up to a try.

Willemse and winger Leolin Zas tackled a Cardiff player, with the fullback coming in as the secondary defender.

However, he was upright and made contact with the head of the ball-carrier, leaving the referee no choice but to issue a red card.

His fate will now be in the hands of a disciplinary hearing, and a straight red card normally means a couple of weeks on the sidelines and a trip to World Rugby’s tackle school.

It’s the same fate prop Neethling Fouché had a couple of weeks ago, and he missed three games.

That could mean that Willemse’s season might be over if he receives a ban, but the fact that he was a secondary tackler could save his skin.

Dobson said they will now have to wait to hear what his fate will be, but he knows it could be a real setback for the side.

 “We will mount our best defence (for Damian),” Dobson said.

“I haven’t seen enough to comment on what the impact of Zassie’s (Zas) tackle was. I don’t know if it’s enough.

“It was our fault. Gaza (Willemse) was not released by Zas (on defence) on the inside, and he was stuck, then he turned. I don’t think he tried to hit him with the shoulder.

“The implications will be poor for us, I am sure.

“We can’t appeal anything yet until there is a decision. We will decide if we wait for them to give us a ruling, or if we will go straight to a judicial officer.

“If we go straight, we will have more chances for a ‘better’ sanction. It sounds like it’s a grey area. But it’s a disaster for us.”

On the match itself, Dobson said they had more or less the ideal game other than the red card.

The Stormers scored five tries, with the mercurial Manie Libbok at the helm of a few in his return match, and will be happy with how they ended off the round-robin stages.

Wingers Zas and Suleiman Hartzenberg, playing in his 50th match, both scored two tries.

A few fringe players also got some valuable game time ahead of the playoffs, and they greeted some squad members who are leaving the franchise at the end of the season with a good final home victory.

Now the wait is on to see who they will face in the quarters.

A trip to Glasgow or Durban is on the cards to face the Warriors or the Sharks. That picture would only become clear late on Saturday evening.

“We picked up no injuries and that is brilliant. Once we scored the four tries, we were in fifth place (on the log). Cardiff had to win to stay alive and that’s probably why they are not here (at the press conference),” Dobson said.

“To be fair to us and as good as they were, because they fought and were organised and never went away.

“But we never looked like losing, and it was a good performance, given the changes.”

Points-Scorers

Stormers 34 – Tries: Leolin Zas (2), Suleiman Hartzenberg (2), Connor Evans. Conversions: Damian Willemse (2), Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu (1). Penalty: Feinberg-Mngomezulu (1).

Cardiff 24 – Tries: Danny Southworth, Gabe Hamer-Webb, Harri Millard, Daffyd Hughes. Conversions: Callum Sheedy (2).