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Huw Jones might not be heading to the Stormers after all

Huw Jones and Jamie Roberts

Reports of a possible ‘influx’ of international stars to the Stormers has been greatly exaggerated – report Rugby 365.

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Weekend media reports suggested that Scottish centre Huw Jones would like to seal a ‘short-term’ move back to the Stormers.

The report, by Netwerk24, follows last week’s media briefing when new Stormers coach John Dobson said midfield is one of two ‘flash points’ for the Cape Town-based franchise.

The 25-year-old Jones, who played a combined 50-odd matches for the Stormers and Western Province, has reportedly had a fall-out with Glasgow Warriors’ Australia-bound coach Dave Rennie and wants to move to the English Premiership.

In the interim, he reportedly wanted to return to the Stormers and play Super Rugby next year.

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However, Jones’ agent Dane Galley denied the report.

“Huw is not coming back to South Africa,” Galley told Rugby 365’s Jan de Konig, when asked for comment. “Whoever wrote that article jumped the gun.”

He also poured cold water on the suggestion that Jones is leaving the Scottish franchise.

“He is contracted to Glasgow for this season and next,” Galley added.

Jones, who surprisingly failed to make Scotland’s World Cup squad, was born in Leith, Edinburgh, and schooled at Millfield in Somerset.

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After school he moved to Cape Town for a ‘gap year’ and played club rugby for False Bay in 2013. He followed the False Bay coach Kevin Musikanth to the University of Cape Town the next year and played for the Ikey Tigers Varsity Cup side and was a member of the team that famously came from behind to beat NWU Pukke in sensational fashion in the Final in Potchefstroom.

He made his Western Province debut in 2014 and was included in the Stormers squad in 2015.

Jones was called up by Scotland in 2016 and moved to Glasgow in 2017 – making 17 appearances for the Test team, before this year’s shock axing.

The Warriors star is not the only midfielder linked to a move to Cape Town – with Netwerk24 also suggesting that British & Irish Lions centre Jamie Roberts has also expressed interest in a move to Newlands for the 2020 Super Rugby season.

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The 33-year-old is believed to want to stay in top fitness to stand a chance of being a part of the 2021 Lions tour to South Africa.

However, given the dire financial situation at Newlands, it is unlikely the move – if rumours are true – would ever materialise.

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Flankly 1 hour ago
'Absolute madness': Clive Woodward rips into Borthwick in wake of NZ loss

Borthwick is supposed to be the archetypical conservative coach, the guy that might not deliver a sparkling, high-risk attacking style, but whose teams execute the basics flawlessly. And that's OK, because it can be really hard to beat teams that are rock solid and consistent in the rugby equivalent of "blocking and tackling".


But this is why the performance against NZ is hard to defend. You can forgive a conservative, back-to-basics team for failing to score tons of tries, because teams like that make up for it with reliability in the simple things. They can defend well, apply territorial pressure, win the set piece battles, and take their scoring chances with metronomic goal kicking, maul tries and pick-and-go goal line attacks.


The reason why the English rugby administrators should be on high alert is not that the English team looked unable to score tries, but that they were repeatedly unable to close out a game by executing basic, coachable skills. Regardless of how they got to the point of being in control of their destiny, they did get to that point. All that was needed was to be world class at things that require more training than talent. But that training was apparently missing, and the finger has to point at the coach.


Borthwick has been in the job for nearly two years, a period that includes two 6N programs and an RWC campaign. So where are the solid foundations that he has been building?

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