Musings on my 40 years in schools and newspapers scratching the surfaces of the world of work and the educational role of sport in school
Tuesday 31 December 2019
Which school is really our oldest?
The announcement that Hans Coetzee will be going to Hoërskool Durbanville as a rugby coach (and that’s great news for him and the school) included the line that they are building towards a successful 200th Anniversary year in 2026.
That got some people doing arithmetic and they found it means the school was established in 1827, which puzzled a few associated with Cape Town’s SACS, the school that most people (me included) refer to as our oldest school – established in 1829.
On their website, Durbanville say they are SA’s second-oldest school, without saying who the oldest is, which makes SACS only the 3rd oldest, and that confuses matters even more.
It’s an old can of worms, one that I've researched before and I found then that the origins of most schools are shrouded in the mists of time and often a bit dodgy.
SACS is accepted as the oldest, but its early days were tied to UCT - they even have the same badge - and Paul Roos, similarly, was part of Stellenbosch University.
Jeppe and KES are both Milner Schools (established in 1903), yet Jeppe's Centenary was in 1989 and KES celebrated theirs in 2002, which means they both claim to have been founded prior to Lord Milners’s 1903 proclamation. They, like many of our older schools, trace their ancestry to earlier institutions (some of which can only loosely be called schools) from which they evolved.
Muir College's Website has their establishment date as 1822. But, according to Wikipaedia, Uitenhage’s first Free Government School was opened in 1822. In 1875, the school, then known as the Public Undenominational School moved to Park Avenue and in 1892 the school’s name changed to the Muir Academy. Go figure!
It looks, from the history of the school on their website that Durbanville was once Pampoenkraal and a primary and high school were established there in 1827, so I suspect that they have taken that as the beginning of the current Hoërskool Durbanville.
Someone sent me a list of some 20, mainly primary, schools that were established before SACS, and Durbanville but I couldn't find any of them still operating under the names given. I suppose the test of a school's age should be how many years it existed as the school that is is known as now .
It's not important really, our traditional schools have all stood the test of time.
And Hans Coetzee was, at Monument, the most successful school rugby coach Gauteng has ever seen. Durbanville will be good in 2026, not matter how old the school may or may not be.
Wednesday 25 December 2019
The best of the school cricket fields
Bishops |
Michaelhouse
|
SACS |
St Charles |
I’ve done this exercise before – I listed my 10 most
beautiful schools rugby fields some time last year – and after spending a week
at some pretty picturesque ovals in the KZN Midlands at the Khaya Majola Week
recently, I thought I’d repeat the exercise for the summer game.
I’m going to take some flak, I know. Some didn’t agree with
my rugby choices, so let me admit at the outset that this isn’t a survey. It’s
a subjective listing, only of grounds that I have watched cricket at. I know there must be many others just as lovely, or better, I just haven’t been to them
is all.
And of course there’s much more to it. Old boys, players and
parents will be attached to their particular fields for all sorts of sentimental
and emotional reasons that have nothing to do with the views from them, the
trees around the boundary or the mountains in the background. That’s completely
legitimate.
So, with none of that taken into consideration, here are the
schools grounds, in order, that have made an impression on me:
1 Bridge House Franschoek
2 De Villiers Oval, SACS
3 Meadows, Michaelhouse
4 Frank Reid, Bishops
5 Pollock Oval, Grey High School
6 TC Mitchell Oval, St Alban’s College
7 Hart-Davis Oval, Hilton College
8 The Oval, St Charles College
9 Gathorne Oval, Michaelhouse
10 Rondebosch Boys’ High
Friday 20 December 2019
It's main game day at the Khaya Majola Week
It was decided by someone, somewhere, a few years ago that
the Khaya Majola Week should revert to being a festival, with no
overall winner in the end.
That’s what it was for many years until, in 1995, it became
a limited-overs knockout tournament, in two sections with cross-pool playoffs,
semi-finals and a final, a winner’s trophy, and classification games all the
way down to last position.
All the good reasons why they ran it that way then
apparently disappeared and it was decreed that the week would follow the
philosophy of the rugby Craven Week – that there is no winner and that the two
teams that play the best rugby (cricket, in this case) will meet in the so
called “main game” on the final day of the week.
At the Craven Week, for years now, no-one is buying the
friendly, no winners or losers line, and the victorious team in the main game
is called the champion team.
The same goes at this week, really. Gauteng were called the
defending champions, coming in, and they will be going home from Michaelhouse
without the title after failing to make the final. Before this they played in six out
of seven main games and won five of them.
I’ve always rather liked the Corinthian spirit in sport, but
even I have to confess that times have changed and that, these days, no-one’s
really interested in a competition where there is no winner.
So, why not go all the way and bring back the cup? One
reason, I suppose, is that the Khaya Majola Week features all thee formats of
cricket: declaration games, T20s and 50-a-side limited overs.
That’s to let the players express themselves in different
ways and it would be impossible to arrive at official finalists at the end of a
mixed week like that.
Still, however they got there, and official or not, we have deserving
finalists this year in Eastern Province and Western Province, and no-one who was here would
argue that they don’t richly deserve to be in the big game today.
The
scores from day 4 of the week are:
Western
Province 243/5 (Daniel Smith 87, Lehan Botha 64, Guy Sheena 30*, Thembani
Ngcizela 25*; Jack Lees 3/33); Gauteng
241 (Cameron Rowe 61, Heinrigh Pieterse 57, Nick Halstead-Cleak 39,
Emmanuel Motswiri 32; Siya Plaatjie 4/29). Western Province won by two runs.
Eastern
Province 239/8 (Nicholas Keevy 102*, Jade Smith 51, Tiaan van Vuuren 31;
Merrick Brett 3/28, Zeeshan Ismail 3/48); Northerns 181 (Daniel van der Merwe 44*, Hanu Viljoen 38,
Wasi Mushwana 33; Siphesihle Madlongolwana 3/20, Nicholas Keevy 3/49). Eastern Province won by 58 runs.
North
West 215 (Van Zyl Smit 45, Jannie Claassens 44, Christopher de
Freitas 35; Thulani Chiliza 4/16); KwaZulu-Natal
216/6 (Gareth Beavan 69, Jeremy Martins 57, Francis Moran 26;
Julian Marais 1/16). KwaZulu-Natal
won by four wickets.
KwaZulu-Natal
Inland 146 (Jaques van der Walt 49, Michael Booth 25; Michael Kershaw
2/12, Lerato Nqoyi 2/18, Reeza Alexander 2/27); Free State 147/9 (Marco de Kock 85, Extras 22; Mondli Khumalo
5/35, Michael Booth 2/13). Free
State won by one wicket.
Boland
244/6 (Ruan Terblanche 108*, Andrew Whaits 53, Ruben Senekal 44;
Saahil Khan 2/35, Baadal Parag 2/47); Easterns 166 (Leander Lubbe 54, Neil Bothma 35; Gillad Oved
3/34, Juan Wilson 2/20, Anele Matya 2/39). Boland won by 78 runs.
Mpumalanga
169 (Zuan Swart 45, Lerato Mokoena 28; Heath Richards 4/19,
Mesuli Vuba 3/17, Kevin de Kock 2/41); South Western Districts 131 (Tristan Reid 37; Akhulile Makatu
4/35, Anij Nagar 3/14, Zuan Swart 3/37). Mpumalanga won by 38 runs.
Namibia
138 (JC Balt 28, Extras 27; Tiaan Enslin 5/23, Prince Ngobeni
2/22); Limpopo 139/9 (Nhlamulo
Mboweni 48*, Extras 29; Ettienne Beukes 3/31, Divan la Cock 2/20). Limpopo won by nine wickets.
Border
150 (Nonelela Yikha 68*; Michael Jantjies 3/33, Boitumelo
Melesi 2/20, Orapeleng Mtlhoaring 2/24, Elrich Cloete 2/29); Northern Cape 151/5 (Orapeleng
Mtlhoaring 42; Akhona Ratyana 2/23). Northern Cape won by five wickets.
Thursday 19 December 2019
An unparalleled cricket nursery
The 26th High Schools cricket week since the
unification of South African Cricket in 1994, is being played in the
KwaZulu-Natal Midlands this week, although the tournament has been running, in
various guises, since 1940.
It has never been hosted by the KZN Inland union before, but it
has been in this part of the country before, most recently in 2013 when
Kearsney College was the venue and KZN Coastal the host province. That week
will be remembered as the one at which Kagiso Rabada announced himself and, five
years later he was the number one bowler in the world. South Africa won the
2014 ICC under-19 World Cup, with the majority of the players in their ranks, having
appeared at the Khaya Majola Week the year before. Rabada was the undoubted
star of the week, along with Aiden Markram who, ironically, did not play in the
Khaya Majola Week.
That fact emphasises the importance of the Khaya Majola Week as
a nursery of international cricketers, while making the important point that
missing selection at this level is not the end of the world for a young
cricketer.
That said, the record shows that the majority of Protea players
in the various formats of the game who have been capped since 1994 played at
the week and just about every one of the team currently in action against
England appeared there.
In all 91 graduates of the week have gone on the represent the
country including the most recent crop - Anrich
Nortje, George Linde, Zubayr Hamza, Bjorn Fortuin, Senuran Muthusamy,
Sinethemba Qeshile and Lutho Sipamla.
Whereas the majority of South African Schools players have come
from a relatively small number of schools – the top three are Grey High School
(24), Grey College (16) and King Edward VII School (15) – the picture is changing
as Cricket South Africa’s efforts to transform the sport and provide
opportunities to all players begin to bear fruit.
The talent development pipeline has been widened though the
establishment of Regional Performance Centres (RPCs) and Development Hubs in
rural areas and through the designation of schools where potential has been
identified but who are struggling as CSA Focus Schools who receive assistance
from the association.
Players emerging from those structures are being picked up by
the mainstream cricketing schools and are being offered bursaries, and are
being included in CSA’s talent acceleration programmes.
East London’s Hudson Park High School is a Focus School that is
making an impact. Nine SA Schools players have come from the school since 2014,
putting them 9th on the list of schools producing SA Schools caps. Sinethemba Qeshile, selected for the Proteas T20 team in 2019, is
a product of the school.
There are graduates of the talent acceleration programme in many
of the teams who are in action in the Midlands this year and, no doubt, a few of them are destined for higher honours.
The full list of Proteas players who have come through the Khaya
Majola Week since 1994 is:
1 Neil McKenzie, 2 Zander de Bruyn, 3 Mark
Boucher, 4 Nantie Hayward, 5 Makhaya Ntini, 6 David Terbrugge, 7 Loots Bosman,
8 Victor Mpitsang, 9 Boeta Dippenaar, 10 Johan van der Wath, 11 Jacques
Rudolph, 12 Mfuneko Ngam, 13 Justin Ontong, 14 Robin Peterson, 15 Jon Kent, 16
Albie Morkel, 17 Graeme Smith, 18 Johan Botha, 19 Monde Zondeki, 20 Ashwen
Prince, 21 Thami Tsolekile, 22 Johan Louw, 23 Justin Kemp, 24 Alviro Petersen,
25 Garnett Kruger, 26 Andre Nel, 27 Dewald Pretorius, 28 Friedel De Wet, 29
Dale Steyn, 30 Hashim Amla, 31 JP Duminy, 32 AB de Villiers, 34 Morne Morkel,
35 Ryan McLaren, 36 Rory Kleinveldt, 37 Vernon Philander, 38 Morne Van Wyk, 39
Andrew Puttick, 40 Richard Levi, 41 Faf du Plessis, 42 Colin Ingram, 43 Roelof
Van der Merwe, 44 Vaughn Van Jaarsveld, 45 Imraan Kahn, 46 Wayne Parnell, 47
Rusty Theron, 48 Lonwabo Tsotsobe, 49 David Miller, 50 Dean Elgar, 51 Kyle
Abbott, 52 Quinton de Kock, 53 Henry Davids, 54 Marchant de Lange, 55 Aaron
Phangiso, 56 Farhaan Berhadien, 57 Dewald Pretorius, 58 Stiaan Van Zyl, 59 Dane
Piedt, 60 Bueran Hendricks, 61 Rilee Rossouw, 62 Simon Harmer, 63 David Wiese,
64 Mthokozi Shezi, 65 Reeza Hendricks, 66 Kagiso Rabada, 67 Dane Villas, 68
Temba Bavuma, 69 Eddie Leie, 70 Chris Morris, 71 Tabriaz Shamsi, 72 Andile
Phuhlukwayo, 73 Keshav Maharaj, 74 Dwaune Pretorius, 75 Heino Kuhn, 76 Dane
Paterson, 77 Duanne Olivier, 78 Magasilo Moshele, 79 Jon Jon Smuts, 80 Lungi
Ngidi, 81 Theunis de Bruyn, 82 Wiaan Mulder, 83 Khaya Zondo, 84 Gihahn Cloete,
85 Rassie Van Dussen, 86 Anrich Nortje, 87 George Linde, 88 Zubayr Hamza, 89
Bjorn Fortuin, 90 Senuran Muthusamy, 91 Sinethemba Qeshile, Lutho Sipamla.
Day three of
the Khaya Majola Week sees each team play two T20 matches. The summarised
scorecards of Wednesday’s clashes are:
Morning games
Gauteng 166/5 (Heinrigh
Pieterse 65, Jack Lees 43, Michael Copeland 39*); Easterns 130/8 (Neil Bothma 50, WP Myburgh 36*; Heinrigh
Pieterse 3/24). Gauteng won by 36
runs.
Northerns 184/5 (Simeon
de Bruyn 78, Hanu Viljoen 40; Nathan Wolff 1/18); Border 126/3 (Stuart Els 41, Watson Challen 35, Emihle Mgoqi
22*; Zeeshan Ismail 1/10). Northerns
won by 58 runs.
KwaZulu-Natal 138/9 (Cade
Carmichael 34, Jeremy Martins 24; Tyrese Karelse 3/13, Kevin de Kock
2/21); South Western Districts
140/6 (Heath Richards 48, Tyrese Karelse 36; Jeremy Martins
3/11). South Western Districts won
by four wickets.
Eastern Province 125/6 (Sonwabile
Tshona 40, Aiden Meyer 27, James Mullins 26; Nicol Loftie-Eaton 2/21); Namibia 85/9 (Ramon Wilmot 25,
Dian Neethling 21; Aiden Meyer 4/7, Siphesihle Madlongolwana 3/11). Eastern Province won by 40 runs.
KwaZulu-Natal Inland 152/4 (Andile
Simelane 45, Nicholas Hatten 42, Jaques van der Walt 38*); Northern Cape 112/6 (Foster Lubbe
31, Orapeleng Mtlhoaring 25, Boitumelo Melesi 24; Michael Frost 2/17). KwaZulu-Natal Inland won by 40 runs.
Boland 128/4 (Ruan
Terblanche 53*, Andrew Whaits 30, Ruben Senekal 23; Jannie Claassens
2/15); North West 129/2 (Estiaan
Schonveldt 71*, Phemelo Sepati 34; Achille Cloete 1/11). North West won by eight wickets.
Mpumalanga 92 (Wali
Vayani 32; Ruan Cronjé 3/8, Pheko Moletsane 3/11, Aphiwe Nqwani 3/22);
Free State 96/2 (Reeza Alexander 50*, Corné Viljoen 25; Akhulile Makatu
1/20). Free State won by eight
wickets.
Limpopo 57 (Nhlamulo
Mboweni 30; Raees Carr 4/8); Western
Province 58/1 (Isma-eel Prince 19; Dewald Dumon 1/8). Western Province won by nine wickets.
Afternoon
games
Boland
157/3 (Andrew Whaits 65, Ruben Senekal 46*,
Juan Wilson 29*; Mauritius Ngupita 1/16); Namibia 110/8 (Dian Neethling 32, Divan la Cock 22, Nicol
Loftie-Eaton 20; Anele Matya 3/18, Gillad Oved 2/28). Boland won by 47 runs.
Free State
136/5 (Pheko Moletsane 32*, Aphiwe
Nqwani 28, Marco de Kock 24; Badaal Parag 2/25, Nsizwa Motsogi 2/27); Easterns 88/6 (Leander Lubbe 37;
Brian Thaele 1/11, Michael Kershaw 1/13). Easterns won by four wickets (D/L-method).
Gauteng 138/9 (Cameron Rowe 36, Heinrigh Pieterse 33; Slindile
Radebe 2/19, Zuan Swart 2/22, Jacques Vosloo 2/30); Mpumalanga 72/6 (Wali Vayani 20,
Neil Henning 20; Lucky Nhleko 3/18). Gauteng won by 23 runs (D/L-method).
KwaZulu-Natal Inland
107/8 (Nicholas Hatten 50, Andile Zondi
29; Kevin de Kock 4/23, Heath Richards 3/6); South Western Districts 76/2 (Jhedli van Briesies 31, Lleyton
Avontuur 30; Mondli Khumalo 1/10). KwaZulu-Natal
Inland won by seven runs (D/L-method).
Limpopo 76 (Thomas Mayes 22; Christiaan Oberholzer 5/22,
Kagiso Ngwenya 4/15); Northerns
77/1 (Jordan Hermann 35*, Christiaan Oberholzer 31; Ricardo Booysen
1/13). Northerns won by nine
wickets.
North West
124/7 (Christopher de Freitas 58,
Francois Viviers 21*; Tiaan van Vuuren 2/21); Eastern Province 125/2 (Nicholas Keevy 59*, Luke Beaufort 36;
Odirile Modikoane 1/20). Eastern
Province won by eight wickets.
Border 130/7 (Stuart Els 30, Butsha Mfazwe 29, Emihle Mgoqi
28; Ali Shaik 2/21, Guy Sheena 2/24); Western Province 61/1 (Jonathan Bird 27*; Nathan Wolff
1/18). Western Province won by
nine wickets (D/L-method).
Northern Cape
131/6 (Erlank Barnard 74*, Foster Lubbe
23; Jordan Hendrikse 2/29); KwaZulu-Natal
113/8 (Jeremy Martins 44, Cade Carmichael 23; Boitumelo Melesi 2/8,
Michael Jantjies 2/15). KwaZulu-Natal
won by two wickets (D/L-method).
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