The short, sharp Joburg high schools soccer season is under
way.
Despite having the richest league on the African continent,
the best stadiums and facilities, and the only continent-wide TV broadcaster, our
national team is ranked near the bottom of the pile, it sometimes doesn’t qualify for
the continental championship and often loses (like it did last week) to countries
like Lesotho.
And It’s still, unbelievably, being said by those who are
trying to explain why this is so, that one of the reasons for this debacle is that
the well-resourced schools in the country don’t include soccer as part of their
sporting programme and that some of them forbid the playing of the game by
their boys.
They claim that our so-called top schools – independent and former model C, I presume – are all rugby institutions and they don’t practice the round ball code.
That’s nonsense! Soccer isn’t played at many Afrikaans medium
schools, sure, but how many of the total number do they make up? Let them pay
rugby I say, and you don’t hear many complaints when the products of those
institutions shine for the Springboks in international rugby.
The fact is that soccer is big at most of big traditional rugby-playing schools, and it is of course played at the vast majority of the schools across
the land. So, the problem is not one of access to the game, it’s one of not
optimally using the school system as the major developmental nursery the way
that rugby, does.
This weekend the annual St David’s Challenge Cup tournament
takes place. It isn’t the biggest, or the only, schools tournament taking place
at this time of the year, but there will be 32 school teams in action, under-19
and under-15. That’s close to 600 boys, and 90 officials. There will be 96
games played over three days, on quality fields, each one with qualified
referees assistants and with every player wearing the proper team kit.
It’s the 17th time it’s being staged and they are
close to getting the running of it like clockwork as is possible with an event of
this size. Some teams may get stuck in the Joburg traffic, the weather may
intervene, but I can pretty much guarantee that the grand final will kick off
at 3pm on Sunday, as scheduled, followed by a prize-giving at which the winners
will receive the spoils, and the also-rans will be given their due for the part
they played in making it the tournament that it is.
It’s an elite sporting event, but it’s also an educational
exercise – that’s important.
There are also tournaments at Kloof High School in
KwaZulu-Natal, at Hudson Park in East London, at Grey College in Bloemfontein,
at Joburg’s Waterstone and St Peter’s College’s, among others.
The participating teams will typically play five to six
games over three days, which gives them as much game time in the four week-odd
season as they would get in three months of weekly fixtures.
And there are weekly interschool fixtures as well. The biggest difference between these school and most of the soccer-only ones is that soccer is a mass participation activity and weekly games have to be arranged for multiple teams in all the age groups.
Down in Durban, it’s massive. When, for example, Westville
Boys’ High plays Glenwood (both rugby powerhouses) it’s not unusual at this time of the year to have 25 soccer games on the day. It’s
not something matched by the competitions organised by the SA Schools Football
Association (Sasfa).
There’s something wrong with football in South Africa, that’s
clear. But the problem doesn’t lie with the rugby-playing schools. If you don’t believe me, go down to St David’s Marist Inanda this
weekend.