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Exeter Chiefs lure Springbok Joseph Dweba away from Stormers

Joseph Dweba of DHL Stormers before the United Rugby Championship match between Leinster and DHL Stormers at the Aviva Stadium in Dublin. (Photo By Tyler Miller/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Exeter Chiefs have won the race to lure Springbok hooker Joseph Dweba to Sandy Park next season after his contract talks with United Rugby Championship side the Stormers ended without reaching an agreement.

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Dweba, 29, rejected a £300,000 move to Sale Sharks last summer to see out the rest of his Cape Town contract before being linked with moves to Japan and France but has agreed a deal with the Chiefs.

RugbyPass sources in South Africa have revealed that Rob Baxter has snatched Dweba for significantly cheaper than he would have cost his Premiership rivals if they had been successful with their bid to sign him in the summer.

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    Dweba has scored three tries in 10 games for the Stormers, who are tenth in the 16-team URC table this season. He cut his teeth with a 38-game, 14-try stint with the Cheetahs before moving to Bordeaux in France.

    He has been signed to replace Dan Frost, who is set to join Premiership leaders Bath next season, and will be the second big name signing that the Chiefs have made this season after Wallaby back row Tom Hooper.

    The Chiefs also have Jack Innard and club servant and skipper Jack Yeandle in the final six months of their deals, with their futures remaining uncertain.

    Dweba will be the third departure from John Dobson’s side after scrum-half Herschel Jantjies moved to French side Bayonne and winger Ben Loader decided to call time on his Souther Hemisphere career at sign for Gloucester.

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    He will join his former Stormers team-mate Kwenzo Blose in Devon after the loosehead was recruited last summer when the Chiefs lost Nika Abuladze.

    Dweba, who has won six Springboks caps, has been out of favour with Rassie Erasmus since appearing in a World Cup warm-up game against Argentina in August 2022.

    But at the end of last week, he was named in a 56-man squad that is set to attend the first Springbok alignment camp of 2025 in Cape Town next month.

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    Comments

    3 Comments
    T
    TI 67 days ago

    Dweba is such a bruising ball carrier, and a maul beast. If only he could sort out his line-out, he’d be a Springbok again.


    The Chiefs are clearly rolling a dice here, hoping they’d be able to fix what no one else could.


    If they manage, it’s a steal.

    S
    SteveD 67 days ago

    Well all I can hope for Exeter is that he’s finally learnt how to throw in at the lineouts. That's why Rassie dropped him from the Boks he was so kak.

    J
    JW 67 days ago

    Surely as the URC is the superior comp the Stormers discarded him. Prem rugby propaganda.

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    F
    Flankly 12 minutes ago
    How 'misunderstood' Rassie Erasmus is rolling back the clock

    Nick - thanks for another good piece.


    It’s remarkable that Matt Williams gets so upset about Bomb Squad tactics. He’s not just making recommendations, but getting all sweaty about bench splits. But it’s not really about bench splits. He just does not like forwards, and their role in the game.


    I thought this quote was telling:

    What about Kitshoff, what happened to his spine in South Africa? Do we know if that is as a result of the scrummaging they are put through?

    Ouch. So we are really on a program of reducing scrummaging to reduce spinal injuries? That’s the mission? And based on the statistically significant dataset of one case, a case in which he openly admits that he does not have the details. Regardless, if his goal is to reduce spinal injuries for prop forwards then arguing about bench splits seems like an odd place to start.


    It’s not just spinal injuries that he cares about. The risk of paralysis is an important issue, and he raises this too:

    I’m a bit of a lone voice but, because of my club-mate Grant Harper (ex-Western Suburbs prop who was paralysed after a collapsed scrum), I’m not shutting up on it.

    Injuries are horrible, and paralysis is truly awful. We should absolutely take it very seriously, and diligently implement whatever safety protocols and education programs we can to minimize these things. But we don’t ban skydiving or hang gliding, or crossing the road. Though Williams is not looking to ban rugby, he does seem to be intent on reducing the role of forwards in the game, based on entirely anecdotal data.


    It’s hard to tell what it’s all about. He makes this supposed safety case and says that no-one in his echo chamber disagrees with him:

    Every time I go out, old forwards and old props go up to me and they say, ‘you’re right’. I’ve never had anyone, apart from a few South Africans – because it’s good for South Africa – say it’s rubbish.

    It’s weird that “old props” are hanging around his front door and lobbying him, or maybe he just doesn’t “go out” much. Could it be that all of the hand-wringing about bench splits and scrummaging injuries is really a proxy for something else? Is it possible his issue is not about safety at all?


    Well, that is what it seems. For me the truth is in this comment:

    Can Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Australia and Argentina compete against South Africa, New Zealand and France if that’s the way the game goes? The answer to that is no.

    So, this is the real issue for him. The Bomb Squad tactic is a really good one, and you have to be really good to play against it. Or you should try to de-power it by banning it, wailing about injuries that it supposedly causes (it doesn’t) and clutching at anecdotal straws to make your case.


    The above quote is an insult to the five countries named, and it also suggests that no-one is going to be smart enough to come up with a game plan that neutralizes the bomb squad or turns it to a relative weakness. Williams is just a noisy fan looking to change the laws to favor his team and his personal tastes.


    I agree with your conclusions. This Rassie approach is far from being unfair to backs. Not only does it favor fleet-footed and versatile “skills players” in the double-digit positions, but each individual gets more game time in any given match.


    Whenever I go out I get exactly zero “old backs” coming up to me and complaining about the Bomb Squad tactic.


    Bravo, Rassie.

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