The DHL Stormers are sitting pretty in the United Rugby Championship standings but even the most loyal Cape Town fans might wonder what a total collapse would actually look like.
After a gritty 29-21 victory over the Dragons at DHL Stadium on March 22, 2026, the local side has reached a massive 46 points with only five rounds of the regular season remaining.
In their latest win against the Welsh outfit, the team functioned as a clinical unit rather than relying on individual magic. The forward pack provided a stable platform at the set piece while the defensive line held firm under late pressure, ensuring the Dragons never truly looked like stealing a result in the Mother City.

Sitting in second place overall with 10 wins from 13 matches and a superior +120 points difference, the math suggests it would take a disaster of historic proportions for the inaugural champions to miss the top eight.
“It is crazy, with some of the bad efforts they produced this year, that they still are in the top two of this tournament! Shows you how good this team is!” – Jay | JPS
To realistically drop out of the playoff bracket, the Stormers would likely need to lose at least four of their remaining five fixtures while failing to pick up any bonus points along the way. Even in a scenario where they finish on their current 46 points, historical data from the URC shows that the eighth-place cutoff usually lands between 35 and 42 points.
A total implosion would require the chasers currently sitting between ninth and 12th to go on unprecedented winning streaks to bridge the 10-point gap and superior points difference.
With a home-heavy schedule coming up, starting with a winnable clash against Edinburgh on March 28, the fortress in Green Point remains the biggest hurdle for any team hoping to see a Cape collapse. The real conversation in the Mother City is no longer about qualifying but rather securing a top-two finish to ensure home-ground advantage throughout the knockout stages.
While rugby is known for its unpredictable nature, the Stormers have banked enough points to ensure that even a late-season slump would likely still see them competing for the title in June.
Photos by URC / Gallo Images


































