United Rugby Championship
URC Semifinal: Glasgow Warriors v Bulls preview
Published
1 day agoon
Two of the BKT United Rugby Championship’s most consistent knockout performers go head to head at Scottish Gas Murrayfield on Saturday afternoon, with a place in the Grand Final the prize. Glasgow Warriors, the top seeds and defending champions, face a Vodacom Bulls side riding a six-match winning streak and carrying a perfect record in URC semi-finals – a clash of pedigree and momentum that promises to be one of the ties of the season.
The rivalry between these sides has deepened rapidly. They met in the 2024 URC Grand Final at Loftus Versfeld, where Glasgow stunned the Bulls 21–16 to claim the title in Pretoria. They clashed again in the Investec Champions Cup Round of 16 just weeks ago, with Glasgow edging a tightly contested encounter 25–21 at Scotstoun. And they met earlier in the URC regular season, with the Warriors winning 21–12 on home soil. The overall head-to-head now stands at 4–3 in Glasgow’s favour from seven meetings across all competitions – fine margins between two sides who know each other intimately.
Saturday’s match is freighted with individual milestones too. Bulls captain Marcell Coetzee will earn his 100th franchise cap, 76 of them as skipper, while hooker Johan Grobbelaar is set for his 150th appearance in blue. For Glasgow, Jamie Dobie is set for his first appearance in Warriors colours since January, having recovered from the injury he sustained during Scotland’s Calcutta Cup victory over England, adding to a bench loaded with experience. With so much at stake and so much recent history between these teams, another closely fought encounter appears inevitable.
Glasgow Warriors v Vodacom Bulls
Venue: Scottish Gas Murrayfield, Edinburgh
Kick-off: Saturday, 6 June – 14:30 IRE & UK / 15:30 ITA & SA
Referee: Andrew Brace (IRFU, 117th league game)
Assistant Referees: Eoghan Cross (IRFU), Robbie Jenkinson (IRFU)
TMO: Olly Hodges (IRFU)
Live on: Premier Sports, SuperSport, Flo Rugby & URC.tv
Form
The Bulls are arguably the form team in the tournament. Johan Ackermann’s side have won nine of their last 10 URC games after recovering from a bruising mid-season run of seven consecutive defeats across all competitions – a wobble that now feels a distant memory. Their quarter-final demolition of Munster at Loftus Versfeld, 45–14, was a statement of intent, with 11 Springboks in the starting XV and the backline of Handre Pollard, Embrose Papier, Canan Moodie, Kurt-Lee Arendse and Willie le Roux firing on all cylinders. Papier has been named URC Player of the Season after a campaign in which he finished with 11 tries from scrum-half. The Bulls have reached three URC semi-finals and have never been beaten at this stage, progressing to the final each time – including landmark victories over Leinster in both 2022 and 2024.
Their record on Scottish soil, however, provides a note of caution. The Bulls have visited Scotland eight times in all competitions and won just twice, and their most recent three meetings with Glasgow have all ended in defeat. The loss to Glasgow in the Champions Cup last-16 at Scotstoun was particularly instructive – the Bulls held a narrow 14–11 lead at the break before the Warriors’ composure in the closing stages proved decisive. Ackermann acknowledged as much this week, saying his side had reviewed those defeats and made adjustments.
Glasgow’s path to the semi-finals has been marked by both dominance and vulnerability. The Warriors topped the regular-season standings and dispatched Connacht 33–21 in the quarter-final at Scotstoun, where Kyle Steyn crossed twice and the hosts produced an impressive second-half display. Their home record in the URC is formidable – they have not lost a league game on their own patch since April 2025, when the Bulls beat them 26–19 at Scotstoun. This is Glasgow’s third consecutive URC semi-final appearance, and across 12 semi-final appearances in the competition’s history, they have suffered only two home defeats at this stage.
However, their Champions Cup campaign ended at the quarter-final stage with defeat to Toulon, and their tour to South Africa in the closing weeks of the regular season exposed significant weaknesses – they conceded over 50 points against the Lions at Ellis Park and were beaten 48–12 by the Stormers at DHL Stadium the following week. The move from Scotstoun’s 4G surface to Murrayfield’s grass pitch removes another element of their usual home advantage, though the Warriors are well acquainted with the national stadium through Scotland’s international programme. The Bulls, for their part, will welcome the switch to natural turf – it gives their scrum a stronger platform, quite literally, and removes the variable that has sometimes worked against touring sides at Scotstoun.
Team news
The Bulls have named a formidable matchday 23 built around experience, physicality and Springbok pedigree. The biggest selection talking point is the retention of Francois Klopper at tighthead prop ahead of the now-recovered Wilco Louw, who drops to the bench after missing the quarter-final with bronchitis. Ackermann described the decision as a reward for the young prop’s consistency throughout the campaign. Gerhard Steenekamp and the milestone man Grobbelaar complete the front row.
The lock pairing of Ruan Vermaak and Ruan Nortje – the latter departing for Japan at the end of the season in what could be one of his final Bulls appearances – provides lineout security and physical presence. Captain Coetzee anchors a back row that includes the dynamic Cameron Hanekom at number eight and the powerful Elrigh Louw at openside. At half-back, Papier and double World Cup winner Pollard will look to control tempo and territory, with Pollard’s game management central to navigating what Ackermann expects to be a contest decided by fine margins. Out wide, Moodie, Arendse and le Roux offer a blend of finishing power, pace and tactical intelligence.
The bench has been adjusted following the injury to winger Sergeal Petersen, with an extra loose forward in Nizaam Carr added. Marco van Staden, Jan-Hendrik Wessels, Cobus Wiese and Louw provide formidable forward impact off the bench, while Zak Burger and Stedman Gans cover the backs. It is Louw’s last game in Bulls colours if they do not progress – the veteran Springbok prop is departing for the Stormers next season.
Glasgow head coach Franco Smith has made just one change to his starting XV, with Gregor Hiddleston coming in at hooker. Patrick Schickerling and Zander Fagerson join him in the front row, while the experienced Scott Cummings and Alex Samuel continue in the engine room. Jack Dempsey starts at number eight, flanked by Matt Fagerson and Rory Darge at openside after a commanding defensive display from the pair in the quarter-final.
George Horne starts at scrum-half having recovered from a hand injury sustained last weekend, partnering Dan Lancaster in the half-backs. Sione Tuipulotu and Stafford McDowall combine in midfield – McDowall scored the decisive try in the Champions Cup victory over the Bulls in April – while Kyle Steyn leads from the wing. Kyle Rowe and Josh McKay complete the back three.
The most notable inclusion among the replacements is Jamie Dobie, set for his first appearance in Glasgow colours since January after recovering from the injury he sustained during Scotland’s Calcutta Cup victory. Seb Stephen and Adam Hastings are also named in the matchday 23 for the first time in the playoffs, providing experience and versatility from the bench.
Glasgow Warriors: 15 Josh McKay, 14 Kyle Steyn (CAPT), 13 Stafford McDowall, 12 Sione Tuipulotu, 11 Kyle Rowe, 10 Dan Lancaster, 9 George Horne; 1 Patrick Schickerling, 2 Gregor Hiddleston, 3 Zander Fagerson, 4 Scott Cummings, 5 Alex Samuel, 6 Matt Fagerson, 7 Rory Darge, 8 Jack Dempsey.
Replacements: 16 Seb Stephen, 17 Rory Sutherland, 18 Sam Talakai, 19 Jare Oguntibeju, 20 Euan Ferrie, 21 Sione Vailanu, 22 Jamie Dobie, 23 Adam Hastings.
Vodacom Bulls: 15 Willie le Roux, 14 Kurt-Lee Arendse, 13 Canan Moodie, 12 Harold Vorster, 11 Stravino Jacobs, 10 Handre Pollard, 9 Embrose Papier; 1 Gerhard Steenekamp, 2 Johan Grobbelaar, 3 Francois Klopper, 4 Ruan Vermaak, 5 Ruan Nortje, 6 Marcell Coetzee (CAPT), 7 Elrigh Louw, 8 Cameron Hanekom.
Replacements: 16 Marco van Staden, 17 Jan-Hendrik Wessels, 18 Wilco Louw, 19 Cobus Wiese, 20 Jeandre Rudolph, 21 Zak Burger, 22 Stedman Gans, 23 Nizaam Carr.
What they said
Vodacom Bulls head coach Johan Ackermann said: “It’s a great privilege to be in the BKT URC semi-final. After a long season there are only four clubs left, and we are grateful to be one of those and to play the number one side. It shows the quality of their players, and we have a lot of respect for what they’ve achieved. Added to that is the opportunity to play at an iconic venue like Murrayfield. It will be an amazing day. It’s a good challenge and one we look forward to – a game of small margins, I suspect.”
Ackermann on Klopper’s selection ahead of Louw: “It is on performance. I felt he did his part in the games where we didn’t have access to Wilco. And when Wilco was ill, Kloppies has shown that he can perform well. So we just felt that it’s good to keep that momentum going. He’s match fit and everything is ready to go. And then hopefully Wilco, with the rest of the bench, can be in a position where they can finish the game.”
Ackermann on the semi-final pressure: “Tomorrow is nothing about scoring tries. It’s nothing about bonus points. You just need to win, even with one point. So tactically, I think probably one can consider taking maybe more points instead. I always trust the leaders on the field for that.”
Glasgow Warriors head coach Franco Smith said: “We know how strong of a challenge the Bulls will pose tomorrow afternoon – they are serial contenders at the business end of the season, have one of the deepest squads in the competition, and will bring a highly physical game plan that we will need to be at our best to meet. Both George and Jamie have worked hard with our medical and physio teams this week to put themselves in the best position possible ahead of tomorrow, with both men eager to give their all for this team. We look forward to representing not just Glasgow, but all of Scotland at Scottish Gas Murrayfield tomorrow, and we look forward to hearing the Warrior Nation behind us.”
Where to watch
Premier Sports, SuperSport, Flo Rugby & URC.tv
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United Rugby Championship
Leinster 20–11 DHL Stormers – BKT URC semi-final
Published
8 hours agoon
6th June 2026
Leinster weathered a stubborn DHL Stormers fightback before late Stormers indiscipline proved decisive, as Jamison Gibson-Park’s 70th-minute try sealed a 20–11 victory at the Aviva Stadium and set up a BKT United Rugby Championship Grand Final rematch against the Vodacom Bulls at Croke Park on Friday, 19 June.
Key moments
8 mins – TRY LEINSTER: Patient build-up play from the hosts sees Jimmy O’Brien and Hugo Keenan make inroads centrally before Jamie Osborne releases Rieko Ioane, who powers through the Stormers defence to score left of the posts. Sam Prendergast converts. (Leinster 7–0 DHL Stormers)
18 mins – PENALTY LEINSTER: Jamison Gibson-Park’s lethal kick-and-chase catches the Stormers napping and wins penalty advantage inside the 22. Prendergast slots from a central position after captain Caelan Doris opts for the posts. (Leinster 10–0 DHL Stormers)
22 mins – INJURY: Andrew Porter hobbles off with what appears to be a leg injury. Alex Usanov replaces him, a concern for Leinster’s scrum and for Ireland ahead of the Nations Championship.
23 mins – PENALTY LEINSTER: Adré Smith is penalised for a high tackle on Jimmy O’Brien. Prendergast makes no mistake from in front of the posts to extend the lead. (Leinster 13–0 DHL Stormers)
28 mins – TRY DHL STORMERS: The Stormers win a penalty inside the Leinster 22 and opt for the tap and go. André-Hugo Venter charges for the line before Adré Smith picks from close range and drives over with immense leg drive, fending off Thomas Clarkson to finish. Jurie Matthee’s conversion from wide on the right drifts wide. (Leinster 13–5 DHL Stormers)
35 mins – PENALTY DHL STORMERS: Leinster’s scrum struggles without Porter as Clarkson is penalised. Matthee slots comfortably from in front of the posts. (Leinster 13–8 DHL Stormers)
Half-time: Leinster 13–8 DHL Stormers. A clinical opening quarter from Leinster saw them race to 13–0, with Ioane’s try and Prendergast’s boot doing the damage. But the loss of Andrew Porter to injury disrupted their scrum dominance, and the Stormers capitalised with a Smith try and Matthee penalty to close within five at the break. A tunnel altercation between players from both sides at the interval added further edge to the contest.
47 mins – YELLOW CARD DHL STORMERS: Leolin Zas shown yellow for a deliberate knock-on as Leinster had numbers on the overlap. Prendergast kicks to the corner.
48 mins: Imad Khan intercepts a loose ball inside his own 22 and sprints for the Leinster line, but Hugo Keenan produces a crucial try-saving tackle before Max Deegan wins the ball back. A huge moment.
53 mins – PENALTY DHL STORMERS: Even with 14 men, the Stormers win a scrum penalty through their dominant front row. Matthee slots from a central position to reduce the deficit to just two points. (Leinster 13–11 DHL Stormers)
58 mins: Zas returns from the sin bin. The Stormers won the 10-minute period 3–0.
69 mins – YELLOW CARD DHL STORMERS (upgraded to RED): Ruan Ackermann makes a dangerous shoulder-to-head clearout on Rónan Kelleher at the breakdown. Referee Hollie Davidson initially shows yellow before the off-field review upgrades it to a red card. Stormers down to 14.
70 mins – YELLOW CARD DHL STORMERS: Salmaan Moerat is sin-binned for cynically kicking the ball out of Gibson-Park’s hands at the base of a ruck. Stormers are reduced to 13 men.
70 mins – TRY LEINSTER: Immediately after Moerat’s intervention, Gibson-Park regathers the loose ball and races through to score under the posts. The game’s outstanding player delivers the decisive blow. Harry Byrne converts. (Leinster 20–11 DHL Stormers)
Full-time: Leinster 20–11 DHL Stormers
Full match report to follow.
Teams
Leinster Rugby: 15 Hugo Keenan, 14 Jimmy O’Brien, 13 Rieko Ioane, 12 Jamie Osborne, 11 James Lowe, 10 Sam Prendergast, 9 Jamison Gibson-Park; 1 Andrew Porter, 2 Rónan Kelleher, 3 Thomas Clarkson, 4 Joe McCarthy, 5 James Ryan, 6 Max Deegan, 7 Josh van der Flier, 8 Caelan Doris (CAPT).
Replacements: 16 Gus McCarthy, 17 Alex Usanov, 18 Rabah Slimani, 19 Diarmuid Mangan, 20 Jack Conan, 21 Luke McGrath, 22 Harry Byrne, 23 Garry Ringrose.
DHL Stormers: 15 Damian Willemse, 14 Wandisile Simelane, 13 Ruhan Nel (CAPT), 12 Dan du Plessis, 11 Leolin Zas, 10 Jurie Matthee, 9 Imad Khan; 1 Ntuthuko Mchunu, 2 André-Hugo Venter, 3 Neethling Fouché, 4 Adré Smith, 5 Connor Evans, 6 Paul de Villiers, 7 Ben-Jason Dixon, 8 Evan Roos.
Replacements: 16 JJ Kotzé, 17 Vernon Matongo, 18 Zachary Porthen, 19 Salmaan Moerat, 20 Ruan Ackermann, 21 Marcel Theunissen, 22 Stefan Ungerer, 23 Warrick Gelant.
Match details
Leinster 20 (Tries: Ioane, Gibson-Park; Conversions: Prendergast 1/1, Byrne 1/1; Penalties: Prendergast 2/2)
DHL Stormers 11 (Tries: A. Smith; Conversions: Matthee 0/1; Penalties: Matthee 2/2)
Half-time: 13–8
Venue: Aviva Stadium, Dublin
Referee: Hollie Davidson (Scotland)
Assistant Referees: Sam Grove-White (Scotland), Adam Jones (Wales)
TMO: Mike Adamson (Scotland)
Player of the match: Jamison Gibson-Park (Leinster)
United Rugby Championship
Bulls stun Glasgow Warriors with epic comeback in URC semi-final
Published
9 hours agoon
6th June 2026
The Vodacom Bulls produced one of the most remarkable comebacks in the history of the BKT United Rugby Championship to stun Glasgow Warriors 22–21 at Scottish Gas Murrayfield on Saturday, overturning an 18-point deficit to book their place in the Grand Final on 20 June.
Key moments
6 mins – PENALTY BULLS: Embrose Papier’s kick in behind pins Glasgow deep and Gregor Hiddleston concedes at the breakdown. Handre Pollard slots the penalty from in front of the posts to open the scoring. (Glasgow Warriors 0–3 Vodacom Bulls)
8 mins – YELLOW CARD BULLS: Handre Pollard shown yellow for a deliberate knock-on, swatting down a Sione Tuipulotu pass on the edge of his own 22. Glasgow have 10 minutes with an extra man.
15 mins – TRY GLASGOW WARRIORS: Glasgow make their numerical advantage count with a slick lineout move in the Bulls’ 22. Jamie Dobie’s kick puts the Bulls under pressure and from the attacking lineout, the ball is worked wide right where Kyle Steyn finishes in the corner. Dan Lancaster converts from wide on the right. (Glasgow Warriors 7–3 Vodacom Bulls)
18 mins – TRY GLASGOW WARRIORS: Glasgow tear the Bulls apart again within minutes. Kyle Rowe makes a superb break on the left before the ball is recycled right, with Sione Tuipulotu bursting into the 22 and putting Steyn in for his second. Lancaster converts. (Glasgow Warriors 14–3 Vodacom Bulls)
24 mins – PENALTY TRY GLASGOW WARRIORS: Lancaster’s penalty finds touch within 10 metres of the Bulls’ line. Glasgow form a devastating rolling maul that rumbles towards the line before referee Andrew Brace awards a penalty try. (Glasgow Warriors 21–3 Vodacom Bulls)
24 mins – YELLOW CARD BULLS: Ruan Nortje shown yellow for illegally collapsing the maul. The Bulls are down to 14 men for the second time in the first half.
32 mins – TRY VODACOM BULLS: Despite being a man down, the Bulls batter away at the Glasgow line through repeated carries. After captain Marcell Coetzee is denied by the TMO for a knock-on, Johan Grobbelaar forces his way over from close range on his 150th Bulls appearance. Pollard converts. (Glasgow Warriors 21–10 Vodacom Bulls)
Half-time: Glasgow Warriors 21–10 Vodacom Bulls. A scintillating first half, dominated by Glasgow’s clinical backline play. Kyle Steyn scored twice as the Warriors carved the Bulls’ defence apart during Pollard’s sin-bin period, before a penalty try made it 21–3. But the Bulls, even with 14 men, clawed one back through Grobbelaar to stay within striking distance at the break.
43 mins – YELLOW CARD GLASGOW WARRIORS: Scott Cummings shown yellow for not rolling away at the breakdown, after referee Brace’s repeated warnings about Glasgow’s discipline.
45 mins – TRY VODACOM BULLS: The Bulls capitalise immediately on Cummings’ sin-binning, building phases patiently before Embrose Papier snipes over from close range – his 13th try of the season. Pollard drags the conversion wide. (Glasgow Warriors 21–15 Vodacom Bulls)
54 mins – TRY VODACOM BULLS: The comeback is complete. Cameron Hanekom charges through the Glasgow defence and into the 22 before feeding Willie le Roux. The ball is recycled and Francois Klopper powers over from close range. Pollard converts to put the Bulls ahead by a single point. (Glasgow Warriors 21–22 Vodacom Bulls)
66 mins – MISSED PENALTY BULLS: Pollard attempts a long-range penalty from near the touchline and halfway but slices it well wide.
69 mins – MISSED PENALTY BULLS: Pollard strikes the left upright from a more central position. Back-to-back misses keep Glasgow’s hopes alive.
73 mins – MISSED PENALTY BULLS: Pollard misses a third consecutive penalty, this time dropping it wide of the left post from 45 metres. The Bulls have left 11 points on the tee in the second half.
80 mins: Glasgow desperately seek a score in the dying moments but Tuipulotu is tackled and penalised for holding on near the halfway line. Grobbelaar boots the ball into the stands to seal the Bulls’ victory.
Full-time: Glasgow Warriors 21–22 Vodacom Bulls
Match report
For 25 breathtaking minutes, Glasgow had been untouchable. Kyle Steyn scored twice and a devastating rolling maul produced a penalty try as the hosts raced into a 21–3 lead, carving the Bulls’ defence apart with precision and pace while Johan Ackermann’s side haemorrhaged yellow cards. But a try before half-time from Johan Grobbelaar kept the Bulls in touch, and a ferocious second-half fightback – three tries to nil, 19 unanswered points – completed a heist that will live long in the memory of those who witnessed it.
It was a match of two starkly contrasting halves played in front of almost 18,000 supporters at the home of Scottish rugby, and it ended Glasgow’s season in the cruellest fashion. The Warriors had topped the regular-season standings and beaten the Bulls twice already this campaign, but when it mattered most, the South Africans found the resolve and physicality that Franco Smith’s side could not match after the interval.
The opening exchanges were tense and tactical, both sides testing each other’s aerial game in the Edinburgh drizzle. The Bulls struck first through a Handre Pollard penalty in the sixth minute after Gregor Hiddleston was penalised at the breakdown, but the fly-half’s afternoon took a sharp turn just two minutes later when he was shown yellow for a deliberate knock-on, swatting down a Sione Tuipulotu pass on the edge of his own 22. It was a decision that would prove pivotal – but not in the way many expected.
Glasgow made the extra man count ruthlessly. Jamie Dobie, starting in place of George Horne after the scrum-half failed a late fitness test, kicked intelligently to earn an attacking lineout in the Bulls’ 22. Clean set-piece ball and slick handling worked the ball right, where Steyn hit the line at full speed to finish in the corner. Dan Lancaster’s superb conversion from the touchline made it 7–3 after 15 minutes.
Within three minutes, the Warriors had struck again. Kyle Rowe made a scintillating break down the left before the ball was recycled right, Tuipulotu bursting into the 22 and putting Steyn away for his second. Lancaster converted again, and at 14–3 the Warrior Nation sensed something special was building.
It was. Lancaster’s penalty found touch within 10 metres of the Bulls’ line on 24 minutes, and Glasgow’s rolling maul proved unstoppable. Ruan Nortje was forced to collapse it illegally, with referee Andrew Brace running under the posts to award the penalty try and dispatching the lock to the sin bin. At 21–3, with the Bulls down to 14 men for the second time in the half, the contest appeared over.
But the Bulls are made of stern stuff. Captain Marcell Coetzee, marking his 100th appearance for the franchise, thought he had scored on 31 minutes only for the TMO to spot a knock-on. The visitors were not to be denied, however, and Grobbelaar – on the occasion of his 150th Bulls cap – forced his way over from close range after sustained forward pressure. Pollard converted to make it 21–10 at the break, a scoreline that felt significant rather than comfortable.
What followed was as complete a turnaround as the URC has seen. Ackermann revealed afterwards that his half-time message was deliberately simple. “My challenge to them was, ‘it’s 21-10, boys and we couldn’t play worse so let’s go score one try and see it from then.’ As it happened, we scored one try and then game on,” he said.
Scott Cummings’ yellow card for not rolling away on 43 minutes, after repeated warnings from Brace, handed the Bulls the initiative they needed. Within two minutes, URC Player of the Season Embrose Papier had snipped over from close range – his 13th try of a remarkable campaign – to reduce the deficit to six. Pollard dragged the conversion wide, but the momentum had shifted irreversibly.
The decisive score came on 54 minutes. Cameron Hanekom charged through the Glasgow defence with irresistible power, feeding Willie le Roux in the 22. The ball was recycled and prop Francois Klopper – the man Ackermann had backed ahead of Wilco Louw in the starting XV – powered over from close range. Pollard converted and the Bulls led 22–21. Nineteen unanswered points. The comeback was complete.
What followed was 26 minutes of extraordinary tension. Pollard, usually so reliable from the tee, missed three consecutive penalties – slicing the first wide from distance on 66 minutes, striking the left upright from a central position three minutes later, and then pushing a third wide on 73 minutes. The double World Cup winner left 11 points on the field in the second half alone, keeping Glasgow’s hopes alive by the narrowest of threads.
But those hopes never truly materialised into anything tangible. Glasgow’s composure had deserted them after the break, their passing game losing its zip, their defence giving too many yards. A burst from replacement hooker Seb Stephen offered a flicker of promise, but time and again the Bulls’ defence held firm. In the dying seconds, Tuipulotu was tackled and penalised for holding on near halfway, and Grobbelaar counted down the final moments before booting the ball into the Edinburgh sky.
Ackermann was visibly moved at the final whistle. “This must be right at the top,” he said. “The comeback is special because they were really playing good rugby. This is probably one of the best victories I’ve had, just the character that the guys showed.” He refused to criticise Pollard’s kicking, noting with a smile that “one of the coaches made the comment that it kept Glasgow in their half, even the misses.”
Coetzee, his voice thick with emotion, spoke of collective belief. “I’m lost for words about the character of this team,” the captain said. “We went into the sheds and we knew we weren’t out of it. We just had to do what we do well, it’s in our DNA. With momentum comes belief. When we got the ball, we could play our game.”
For Glasgow, the defeat was a bitter end to a campaign that had promised so much. Smith was measured but clearly wounded. “I’m obviously disappointed with the result. Bulls did very well in the second half,” he said. “We gave too many yards in defence and that’s most disappointing. I know this group, we can deliver a better defensive performance. We worked really hard this season, fought when we’ve had some difficulties regarding international players and injuries. Finishing top of the log was an important milestone for us. To have played here in front of so many fans is remarkable. Yes, we wanted to go one more but I’m really proud of the season and the way the boys have played.”
Flanker Rory Darge, who had been immense in the first half, captured the dressing-room mood. “Pretty gutted,” he told BBC Scotland. “We started so well, and second half you saw the importance of the physical side of the game. It’s a weird feeling because there’s been so much good stuff this season. We’ll look back at the good bits but to not honour it at the business end is frustrating.”
It was also the final appearance in Glasgow colours for several players, with Jack Dempsey, Sione Vailanu and Adam Hastings all departing, alongside the injured Huw Jones. More than half an hour after the final whistle, the Murrayfield crowd remained in the stands to applaud their team off – a fitting tribute to a squad that had topped the URC table and reached a third consecutive semi-final, even if the ending was not the one they had envisioned.
The Bulls, meanwhile, will contest their fourth URC Grand Final in five seasons on 20 June. They have lost the last two – to Glasgow in 2024 and Leinster last year – and this time they will be desperate to finally get their hands on the trophy that has so far eluded them.
Teams
Glasgow Warriors: 15 Josh McKay, 14 Kyle Steyn (CAPT), 13 Stafford McDowall, 12 Sione Tuipulotu, 11 Kyle Rowe, 10 Dan Lancaster, 9 Jamie Dobie; 1 Patrick Schickerling, 2 Gregor Hiddleston, 3 Zander Fagerson, 4 Scott Cummings, 5 Alex Samuel, 6 Matt Fagerson, 7 Rory Darge, 8 Jack Dempsey.
Replacements: 16 Seb Stephen, 17 Rory Sutherland, 18 Sam Talakai, 19 Jare Oguntibeju, 20 Euan Ferrie, 21 Sione Vailanu, 22 Jack Oliver, 23 Adam Hastings.
Vodacom Bulls: 15 Willie le Roux, 14 Kurt-Lee Arendse, 13 Canan Moodie, 12 Harold Vorster, 11 Stravino Jacobs, 10 Handre Pollard, 9 Embrose Papier; 1 Gerhard Steenekamp, 2 Johan Grobbelaar, 3 Francois Klopper, 4 Ruan Vermaak, 5 Ruan Nortje, 6 Marcell Coetzee (CAPT), 7 Elrigh Louw, 8 Cameron Hanekom.
Replacements: 16 Marco van Staden, 17 Jan-Hendrik Wessels, 18 Wilco Louw, 19 Cobus Wiese, 20 Jeandre Rudolph, 21 Zak Burger, 22 Stedman Gans, 23 Nizaam Carr.
Match details
Glasgow Warriors 21 (Tries: Steyn 2, Penalty Try; Conversions: Lancaster 2/2)
Vodacom Bulls 22 (Tries: Grobbelaar, Papier, Klopper; Conversions: Pollard 2/3; Penalties: Pollard 1/1)
Half-time: 21–10
Venue: Scottish Gas Murrayfield, Edinburgh
Attendance: c. 18,000
Referee: Andrew Brace (Ireland)
Assistant Referees: Eoghan Cross (Ireland), Robbie Jenkinson (Ireland)
TMO: Olly Hodges (Ireland)
Player of the match: Embrose Papier (Vodacom Bulls)
United Rugby Championship
URC Semifinal: Leinster v DHL Stormers preview
Published
1 day agoon
5th June 2026
The DHL Stormers face the most daunting assignment in the BKT United Rugby Championship on Saturday evening – a trip to the Aviva Stadium to take on defending champions Leinster, who have not lost a league game at this venue since May 2023 and have won all seven of their previous URC meetings with South African opposition on Lansdowne Road.
John Dobson’s side arrive in Dublin without three players who started last week’s 44–21 quarter-final victory over Cardiff: star Springbok fly-half Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu, pacy winger Seabelo Senatla and experienced lock Ruben van Heerden have all been ruled out through injury. It is a significant blow, removing the league’s leading points scorer, a key source of outside-back pace, and a seasoned lineout operator in one fell swoop. Yet the 2022 champions have shown throughout this campaign that they possess the forward power and collective resilience to trouble anyone – they beat a full-strength Munster at Thomond Park, drew 38–38 with Ulster in Belfast, and thumped Glasgow 48–12 in Cape Town. If the Stormers can bring that level of physicality to Dublin, they could be more competitive than many expect.
For Leinster, the URC represents the last chance of silverware in a season scarred by European disappointment. Their 41–19 defeat to Bordeaux-Bègles in the Investec Champions Cup final in Bilbao just two weeks ago extended an agonising run to five European final defeats in six years. The province responded emphatically in the quarter-finals, dismantling the Lions 59–10 at this same venue, with James Lowe breaking Shane Horgan’s all-time Leinster try-scoring record on the night of his 100th cap. Now Leo Cullen’s side must channel that attacking firepower against opposition of considerably greater pedigree – and exorcise a curious URC record that has seen them lose both previous semi-finals against South African teams.
Leinster Rugby v DHL Stormers
Venue: Aviva Stadium, Dublin
Kick-off: Saturday, 6 June – 17:30 IRE & UK / 18:30 ITA & SA
Referee: Hollie Davidson (SRU, 29th league game)
Assistant Referees: Sam Grove-White (SRU), Adam Jones (WRU)
TMO: Mike Adamson (SRU)
Live on: TG4, Premier Sports, SuperSport, Flo Rugby & URC.tv
Form
The Stormers’ season has been a tale of two halves. They were the competition’s pacesetters through the opening months, unbeaten through early January and establishing themselves as genuine title contenders with a brand of powerful, forward-driven rugby supplemented by the brilliance of Feinberg-Mngomezulu. Their Round 1 victory over Leinster in Cape Town – a stunning 35–0 demolition – announced their credentials in emphatic fashion. But a late-season wobble, most notably a defeat to Cardiff at the Arms Park that cost them a potential top-two finish, saw them slip to third and condemned them to an away semi-final they might have avoided.
Despite that stumble, the Stormers’ underlying quality is not in question. They dispatched Cardiff 44–21 in the quarter-final at DHL Stadium, and their record away from home has been striking – their only overseas defeat this season was to Cardiff on 4G, meaning they remain unbeaten on natural turf outside South Africa. They beat Munster at Thomond Park, drew with Ulster in Belfast, and have consistently shown the forward physicality that can trouble even the best-resourced sides. Number eight Evan Roos leads the URC try-scoring charts with 12, a remarkable return for a back-rower that underlines his ability to influence games at the decisive moments. This is, however, the Stormers’ first URC semi-final away from home, having hosted at DHL Stadium in both 2022 – when they won the inaugural title – and 2023, when they lost the final to Munster.
Leinster’s domestic form has been near-impeccable. They finished second in the regular season, have been ever-present in the URC semi-finals since the modern competition was formed, and their quarter-final annihilation of the Lions – nine tries, 59 points – was a statement of intent, with Sam Prendergast pulling the strings and the pack laying the platform for total dominance. Their Aviva Stadium record in this competition is formidable, with no league defeat since Munster beat them in the 2023 semi-final and all seven previous meetings with South African opposition at the venue ending in home victories.
Yet there are threads for the Stormers to pull at. Leinster’s vulnerability to French physicality in the Champions Cup – not just in the Bordeaux-Bègles final but in periods against Toulon in the quarter-final – suggests they can be unsettled by big, aggressive packs. The Stormers possess exactly that kind of forward unit. And Leinster’s own history against South African sides in the URC knockout rounds is surprisingly unfavourable – they were beaten by the Bulls in the 2022 semi-final, six days after losing an agonising Champions Cup final against La Rochelle, and again by the Bulls in 2024. The context was different on both occasions, but the pattern exists.
Team news
The Stormers have been forced into three injury-enforced changes, each of which reshapes a different area of their team. Jurie Matthee, 25, replaces the irreplaceable Feinberg-Mngomezulu at fly-half – a significant step up but one Matthee has prepared for, having started several games this season and finished the regular season with 86 points. Wandisile Simelane comes in on the wing for the concussed Senatla, though essentially as a centre by trade, which removes a key source of outside-back pace from the Stormers’ armoury. And Connor Evans, 24, steps into the second row for the unavailable van Heerden, effectively thrown in at the deep end as lineout leader in Dublin.
The loss of van Heerden is particularly damaging to the Stormers’ lock stocks. Springbok Salmaan Moerat and Adré Smith are the only two of their four initial first-choice second rows still standing, with JD Schickerling also out for the season. Moerat, who is departing for La Rochelle at the end of the campaign, plays off the bench – having a quality lock bringing impact later in the game is a crucial part of Dobson’s game plan. The utility value of blindside flanker Ben-Jason Dixon gives Dobson room to manoeuvre, with the physical and imposing Ruan Ackermann available from the bench after his return from injury.
Despite the disruption, the Stormers still field a side with genuine quality. Captain Ruhan Nel and his midfield partner Dan du Plessis will become the most-capped Stormers centre pairing as they make their 31st start together, surpassing De Wet Barry and Marius Joubert. Damian Willemse starts at full-back with the versatility to shift to inside centre during the game, while Warrick Gelant – a veteran of the 2022 title-winning campaign – returns to the bench to provide backline cover. Evan Roos, the league’s leading try scorer, will carry enormous responsibility in the back row alongside Paul de Villiers and Dixon, while the front-row unit of Ntuthuko Mchunu, André-Hugo Venter and Neethling Fouché underpins the scrum that remains one of the Stormers’ most potent weapons.
Leinster have made three changes to the starting XV that demolished the Lions, all of them strengthening an already formidable selection. Rónan Kelleher comes in at hooker for the injured Dan Sheehan, joining Andrew Porter and Thomas Clarkson in the front row – Tadhg Furlong remains unavailable with a calf injury. Josh van der Flier returns at openside flanker, with captain Caelan Doris at number eight and Max Deegan completing the back row. Joe McCarthy has been cleared to play alongside James Ryan in the second row.
Jamison Gibson-Park returns to the starting line-up at scrum-half after coming off the bench in the quarter-final, partnering Prendergast in the half-backs. The midfield of Jamie Osborne and All Black Rieko Ioane is unchanged, while Hugo Keenan, Jimmy O’Brien and James Lowe continue in the back three. The bench is laden with international experience: Jack Conan returns among the forward replacements, Luke McGrath – the province’s most-capped player with 255 appearances – provides scrum-half cover, and Garry Ringrose is set for his 150th Leinster appearance if called upon. There is no place for Ciarán Frawley in the matchday 23. The scale of Leinster’s depth is underlined by the fact that no fewer than 10 Ireland internationals in the matchday 23 will be playing their first-ever game against the Stormers in provincial colours.
Leinster Rugby: 15 Hugo Keenan, 14 Jimmy O’Brien, 13 Rieko Ioane, 12 Jamie Osborne, 11 James Lowe, 10 Sam Prendergast, 9 Jamison Gibson-Park; 1 Andrew Porter, 2 Rónan Kelleher, 3 Thomas Clarkson, 4 Joe McCarthy, 5 James Ryan, 6 Max Deegan, 7 Josh van der Flier, 8 Caelan Doris (CAPT).
Replacements: 16 Gus McCarthy, 17 Alex Usanov, 18 Rabah Slimani, 19 Diarmuid Mangan, 20 Jack Conan, 21 Luke McGrath, 22 Harry Byrne, 23 Garry Ringrose.
DHL Stormers: 15 Damian Willemse, 14 Wandisile Simelane, 13 Ruhan Nel (CAPT), 12 Dan du Plessis, 11 Leolin Zas, 10 Jurie Matthee, 9 Imad Khan; 1 Ntuthuko Mchunu, 2 André-Hugo Venter, 3 Neethling Fouché, 4 Adré Smith, 5 Connor Evans, 6 Paul de Villiers, 7 Ben-Jason Dixon, 8 Evan Roos.
Replacements: 16 JJ Kotzé, 17 Vernon Matongo, 18 Zachary Porthen, 19 Salmaan Moerat, 20 Ruan Ackermann, 21 Marcel Theunissen, 22 Stefan Ungerer, 23 Warrick Gelant.
What they said
DHL Stormers director of rugby John Dobson said: “This will be a big challenge for everyone involved against a team with a great pedigree and formidable home record, but these are the occasions we live for, and I have no doubt that our team will put in a worthy performance. We lost a few players last week, but those coming in have all played important roles in this campaign and are ready to give their all on Saturday. We have earned the chance to play for a place in the Grand Final, and it will come down to a big 80 minutes. This team will not leave anything out there as we aim to do our fans proud.”
Leinster senior coach Jacques Nienaber said: “We know they’re a quality side. They have lots of international experience and lots of international-quality players there, so we have to make sure that we get over our detail in our preparation for them.”
Where to watch
TG4, Premier Sports, SuperSport, Flo Rugby & URC.tv
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