Storm Goretti Adds A New Opponent
South African rugby teams heading north this week expected bruising tackles and hostile crowds. What they may not have fully prepared for is a named winter storm waiting for them on arrival.
As DHL Stormers packed their bags in sun baked Cape Town, news filtered through of Storm Goretti sweeping across the UK and parts of Europe. Snow, freezing temperatures and severe weather warnings are now part of the pre match conversation ahead of their Investec Champions Cup clash with Harlequins at the Twickenham Stoop.
The shift could hardly be more dramatic. From summer heat to near freezing conditions in the space of a flight, Goretti has turned an already demanding tour into a serious test of adaptability.
Stormers Bracing For January Reality
The Stormers arrive in London fresh off a gritty 13 to 8 URC derby win over the Bulls, but assistant coach Rito Hlungwani has already acknowledged that January rugby in Europe is a very different beast.
Earlier northern hemisphere wins came in autumn, not the heart of winter. This time, training sessions will involve frozen fingers, heavy pitches and the kind of weather that drains energy before the opening whistle.
Sharks Face The Same Chill
The same icy reality awaits the Hollywoodbets Sharks, who are already in England preparing to face Sale Sharks. Sale’s director of rugby Alex Sanderson has been open about viewing the Sharks’ switch from humid Durban to a frozen English winter as an advantage his side plans to exploit.
That comment did not go unnoticed back home. South African rugby fans online were quick to note that climate, not just tactics, is increasingly shaping European outcomes.
Cheetahs Caught In The Middle
While the Champions Cup fixtures are set to go ahead, the situation is even more uncertain for the Toyota Cheetahs. Their EPCR Challenge Cup clash against Ulster in Amsterdam is under threat, with icy conditions raising concerns about whether the match will even be playable.
For a team already operating without a permanent home competition, weather disruption adds another layer of instability.
A Growing Champions Cup Debate
Storm Goretti has reignited a debate that has followed South Africa’s inclusion in European competitions. The climate gap between hemispheres is not just uncomfortable, it is competitive.
La Rochelle coach Ronan O’Gara previously criticised the tournament organisers after his side had to adapt to African summer heat in December. Now the challenge has flipped, with South African teams forced into deep winter conditions during their own off season.
Former Bulls coach Jake White has been vocal on this issue before, recalling how his side were overwhelmed not only by Saracens in 2024, but by a named storm that made the contest feel unwinnable before kickoff.
More Than Just Rugby
Storm Goretti may pass, but the broader issue remains. Travel, recovery, and climate extremes are becoming as influential as team selection and tactics. For South African sides chasing European success, winning in Europe increasingly means beating the weather first.
Source: SuperSport
Featured Image Source: DHL Stormers on X
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