If it
wasn’t for Covid-19 I’d almost certainly be at the Khaya Majola cricket week
today watching and reporting on the cream of our under-19 talent. It turned out
not to be, which means I got to spend the week before Christmas at home, something
I can’t remember doing for a very long time.
That’s one good thing I guess, and another one is that two of the giants of the week, Niels Momberg, CSA’s director of youth cricket, and Morgan Pillay, the permanent organising secretary of the tournament, won’t be working on their birthdays. It was Niels’ birthday on the 17th and it’s Morgan’s today.
Ordinarily, they would have be at the festival this week, as they have been every year, for years. Let’s hope the year off will refresh them both and keep them coming back for more. The Khaya Majola Week is an extraordinary tournament, the jewel in the crown of school sport in this country, and having administrators like these two in charge of it makes it that.
Morgan is by 100 miles the best sports administrator I have come across in my 30 years of involvement in school sport. I told him that when I write my book one day he will be in it. Well, I’m on it, and here’s the bit on Morgan:
I have attended the under-19 Khaya Majola Cricket Week (and
its predecessor, the Nuffield Week) just about every year since 1989. At the
1994 week, hosted at Kearsney College I met a young teacher from
Pietermaritzburg, Morgan Pillay. He was on the local organising committee,
tasked with keeping track of the state of play in the various matches being
played around the area, so he worked quite closely with the media who were
there. It was the beginning of a friendship which has gone on for 30 years now
and in that time I watched Morgan grow into the best sports administrator I
have ever come across and one of the most valuable people in schools cricket in the
country.
He has been the permanent organising secretary of the Khaya Majola Week since 1996. It’s an honorary position – he doesn’t get paid anything more than expenses for doing it – and he has kept his real job as a mathematics teacher all along. The tournament is just a week long, but organising it is an all-year affair, so it’s amazing that he has found the time to do it for so many years.
Morgan’s birthday, December 18th, always falls slap bang in the middle of the week, so he’s never home for it. He says it’s tough being away from home, but then he does get to spend his birthday every year surrounded by great friends and in the service of the youth.
Happy birthday Morgan Pillay – a sports administrator who is in it for the right reasons, as is
Niels Momberg. Oh that there were more of them in cricket!
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