Report: Bok bolter Cheslin Kolbe on the cusp of Stormers return
A report claims that double World Cup winner Cheslin Kolbe is set to sign a deal that will bring him back to the Stormers from Japanese club Suntory Sungoliath.

The 31-year-old has become one of the best front-rowers in the world over the past couple of years and is now a key part of the Springbok squad.
Du Toit is an excellent scrummager and was part of a Test unit which dominated their opponents during the 2025 campaign.
However, he cannot do it alone and on The Good, The Bad and The Rugby, he was asked what support he would have.
The tighthead did not speak about the other side of the scrum but instead listed the players he would like behind and alongside him.
Du Toit firstly started with hooker and lock, and both were easy calls for the prop.
"Malcolm Marx straight away," he said. "Malcolm's obviously an unbelievable player but he's a very good scrummager. Take a look at his boots, he wears 8-stud, he's full on into it.
"Eben [Etzebeth] definitely [for lock] because Eben's got this perfect combination between not being the heaviest guy on the field but also being very explosive, so he's in that middle range, which is exactly what you need from a scrum perspective of being able to hit but also keeping the pressure on. He's very fast into that space."
Du Toit then moved onto flanker, where he mentioned a couple of Englishmen, including Ted Hill, who he described as a "freak".
"At flanker I really enjoy Ted Hill and Guy Pepper. They are fully committed to the scrum but we always gee them up to be more involved in the scrums, so they enjoy it," he said.
The tighthead couldn't finish without discussing the scrummaging skills of the legendary Springboks captain.
"I know it's very biased but Siya is an unbelievable scrummager. If you look at the scrum in its entirety until the ball gets out, he's probably the guy that stays in there the longest from the back row," Du Toit said.
It rather shows how seriously scrummaging is taken in South Africa, so much so that he took that attitude back to Bath after representing the Springboks.
"When Guy Pepper and Ross Molony first arrived at Bath, they had played one game and in this one specific scrum they were slipping. It was my first day back from the Springboks and I go, ‘listen boys we really need to check our equipment and make sure when we go into battle, we've got the right stuff'," he said.
"They were just like, ‘on his first day in here…'"