The Stormers will be relying heavily on their impeccable lineout and rolling maul in the second-last URC league match against Ulster on Friday.
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The Stormers head into Friday night’s United Rugby Championship (URC) clash knowing history is not exactly on their side.
While the Cape side holds a narrow 3-2 advantage over Ulster in overall URC meetings, they are still searching for a first-ever victory on Irish soil against the Belfast outfit. After falling painfully short during the 2025 campaign, this latest trip to the Affidea Stadium presents a massive opportunity.
Ulster are battling injuries to several influential players, and the Stormers will sense this could finally be the moment to break their hoodoo.
We look at four key battles they simply have to own.
Scrum dominance
Few teams build momentum quite like the Stormers when their scrum is firing. It is more than just a set-piece weapon — it becomes a weapon that lifts the entire side, especially when they are under pressure.
Against an Ulster pack missing some experienced bodies, the visitors have a chance to apply relentless pressure through the front row. A dominant scrum can generate penalties, territorial gains and scoreboard pressure, while also forcing Ulster to play with uncertainty in their own half.
The Stormers’ powerful tight five has often laid the platform for their best attacking rugby. If they can establish superiority early, it could silence the Belfast crowd and allow their dangerous backs to attack off front-foot ball all evening.
Lineouts and mauls
The lineout battle could ultimately decide the match. The Stormers have become very efficient with their maul execution this season, turning attacking lineouts into one of their most reliable scoring weapons.
Ulster, meanwhile, have occasionally struggled to contain powerful driving mauls when put under constant pressure. Expect the visitors to kick aggressively for territory and challenge Ulster repeatedly inside the 22.
Winning clean lineout ball will be critical, but so too will be disrupting Ulster’s throw and denying them quick and clean lineout possession. A dominant maul not only creates tries — it drains energy from defenders and slows down defensive organisation.
Winning the aerial duel
Irish teams traditionally thrive in aerial contests, and Ulster will almost certainly test the Stormers under the high ball throughout the night.
That means the visitors’ back three must be sharp, composed and brave. Handling the kicking game effectively will be critical in avoiding giving up territory cheaply. If the Cape side can field cleanly and launch counter-attacks from deep, they can expose an Ulster side that has looked vulnerable in transition defence at times this season.
Winning the aerial exchanges also allows the Stormers to dictate tempo, instead of constantly playing from inside their own half.
Double defensive tackles
Ulster are missing a couple of their strong runners, including midfielder Stuart McCloskey and winger Jacob Stockdale. But their absence does not mean the Stormers can afford soft one-on-one missed tackles.
They are up against a side that loves quick phase play and offloads around contact. Expect the visitors to prioritise dominant double tackles to shut down Ulster’s momentum before it starts. Two-man hits will be crucial in slowing and disrupting attacking rhythm and forcing handling errors from their opponents.
If the Stormers can combine defensive accuracy with physical intensity, they may finally turn years of frustration in Belfast into a breakthrough and crucial victory to stay top of the log.
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