Stormers’ bomb squad inspires statement away win over Munster
The Thomond Park jinx on the DHL Stormers is no more following an amazing second-half comeback from the Cape side that earned them a richly deserved 27-21 win over arch-rivals Munster in their top of the log Vodacom United Rugby Championship clash on Saturday night.
The Stormers scored 27 points without reply in a dominant second-half performance to clinch a win that takes them to the top of the log after six games.
They had started the weekend level on points with Munster, but ahead on points difference, and with this win they go three points clear at the top as they continue their impressive momentum.
A classic comeback from Dobbo's boys 👏
— SuperSport Rugby (@SSRugby) November 29, 2025
The DHL Stormers keep Munster scoreless in the second half to stay on top of the table 🔝
That's now six wins in a row ✅#SSRugby | #VURC pic.twitter.com/sAFqlt4hg9
The Stormers were missing several Springboks who were playing in Cardiff so Munster, who had their Ireland internationals back, started as clear favourites, something that made the Stormers’ achievement all the more meritorious, remembering of course that there is some history between the two sides after the Irish side came to South Africa to beat the Stormers in the 2023 final.
The Limerick venue was one of the frontiers the Stormers still had to cross in the competition and at halftime, when they trailed 21-6, it looked like their drought at the venue was to continue for at least another year.
STARTED OFF THE PACE
The Stormers had started a bit off the pace and indiscipline cost them in the first quarter, forcing them to chase the game from an early stage.
The defensive organisation and synchronisation that had been a hallmark of the early part of their campaign appeared to have deserted them, and errors played a role in the three tries that Munster scored.
Lock Conor Evans was yellow carded after three minutes and flank Marcel Coetzee after 20, forcing the Stormers to play 20 minutes of the first half down to 14 men.
They hardly got their hands on the ball in the first quarter, and Munster also dominated the territory.
By halftime the Stormers had been forced to make a significantly greater number of tackles than the home team.
However, by the time the last 10 minutes of the half arrived there was a perceptible shift in momentum, and although the Stormers didn’t score in that period, and still had a lot of catching up to do, it looked like they were starting get the ascendancy in the physical battle.
The Stormers scrum had also been dominant, which is always a warning sign for opposing teams.
But although flyhalf Jurie Matthee had kicked a penalty from inside his own half after six minutes to take the lead briefly, Munster made it look all too easy when they sent their skipper Tadhg Beirne over for their first try shortly after that.
Matthee drew three points back but after a long TMO consultation Munster were awarded a debatable try (when you discuss it that long there’s always doubt) to John Hodnett to put daylight between the teams as Munster went ahead 14-6 in the 20th minute.
Nine minutes later flyhalf Jack Crowley scored his team’s third try and at that point it looked like Munster might power to a convincing win.
SEISMIC SHIFT ONCE MONSTER REPLACEMENT BENCH CAME ON
But the shift in the physical battle and gainline confrontation was the prelude to a seismic shift in the flow once Stormers coach John Dobson called on his monster bomb squad style bench four minutes in the second half.
Among the players coming on were a completely new tight five, with JD Schickerling and Adre Smith a powerful lock pairing behind a front row that included Sazi Sandi, JJ Kotze and the returning Oli Kebble, who cut a powerful presence at loosehead.
With Ruan Ackermann on the side of the scrum and both Paul de Villiers, who won the official man of the match award, and Evan Roos in magnificent form, the Stormers quickly became the dominant team, although it took a while for that to be reflected on the scoreboard.
Eventually though the dam wall had to break and it did in the 57th minute, with Smith driving over after his lock partner Schickerling had been held up on the line.
Matthee’s conversion made it an eight point game and given the dominance the Stormers had at forward it was clear by then that the visiting team had a chance of winning.
That became even more clear when the debutant wing Dylan Maart, on loan from Griquas, ran onto a well placed cross kick from Matthee to score a highly popular try that was converted by Matthee to make it a one point game.
Sazi knocked a ball on to allow Munster a rare entry into the Stormers half after the restart, but that actually set it up for the Stormers as Ruan Nel, who would have been leading the team by then as Salmaan Moerat had been replaced, to intercept and run 60 metres to score the try that put his team six points ahead with eight minutes to go.
Munster went ahead with a try very similar to the one that Maart had scored but it was chalked off, and rightly so, because it was clear even as the attack was unfolding that there had been a knock-on in the winning of the aerial battle that set up the Munster opportunity.
The Stormers controlled the game well after that and were rightly euphoric at the final whistle.
It was one of the finest Stormers wins of the URC era and certainly their best comeback against a top team.
That's got to be one of the best #VURC comebacks over the past five seasons from the DHL Stormers 👏⛈️#SSRugby pic.twitter.com/LLAGeT1LHP
— SuperSport Rugby (@SSRugby) November 29, 2025
Scores
DHL Stormers 27 - Tries: Adre Smith, Dylan Maart and Ruhan Nel; Conversions: Jurie Matthee 3; Penalties: Jurie Matthee 2.
Munster 21 - Tries: Tadhg Beirne, John Hodnett and Jack Crowley; Conversions: Jack Crowley 3.
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