Here are 10 teams that stand out from the thousands I have watched over the years
Team achievements
THROUGH
the mass of matches and competitions I was witness to over the 30 years I was
involved in reporting on school sport there have been a number of performances
that have stood out. My fading memory, I suspect, has led to me omitting some
achievements that should be included in any list and I’m quite sure there were
many others that I never saw. This selection of 10 consists (as is the case
with all the lists I’ve compiled in the book) only of things I actually
witnessed.
1 King
Edward VII School in the Johnny Waite Knockout Tournament.
The Johnny
Waite Knockout is the limited overs tournament contested by the schools in the
Central Gauteng Lions union. It began as a 35 overs a side competition in 1974.
A B section was introduced in 1981, and a C section (now for under-16 teams),
in 2004. The format has been changed to T20 and the A section now doubles up as
the provincial eliminator for the national Schools T20 Challenge tournament.
King
Edward has dominated the competition over the years, winning the A section 20
times in its 45-year history. They have won the B section 14 times and the C
section nine times. The 2010/2011 season is the one that I particularly
remember. KES won all three sections that year, the first school to do so and
the only one since then. They beat St Stithians in all three finals as part of
what has become an ongoing fierce rivalry between the two schools.
South
African captain Quinton de Kock played in that first team final, as did Keaton
Jennings who was to go on to play for England. And I was at that game.
2 Bree
Primary School win the Danone Nations Cup World title
In the
Covid-19 disruption of 2020 it’s easy to forget that in 2009 the world was also
struck by a pandemic – H1N1 (swine flu) and it too disrupted sporting
activities. One event that was called off that year was the under-12 Danone
Nations Cup World Finals tournament that would have been held in Sᾶo Paulo.
The Danone
Nations Cup is an annual event and the 2010 world finals were scheduled to be
hosted by South Africa. It was decided to stage two tournaments – 2009 and 2010
– at the same time and they were played at Tukkies in Pretoria, with the final
day at the Orlando Stadium in Soweto.
Bree
Primary, a small school in Mayfair, Johannesburg, had won the 2009 SA national
title and were supposed to go to Brazil, instead they played in the world
finals tournament at home in 2010 – and they won it.
The
players were members of the Orlando Pirates Youth Academy, based at nearby
Arthur Bloch Park and sent to Bree for their schooling. So, they were a
selected rather that a bona fide school team, but at that age the boys were
still quite green and it took a superb team effort and great coaching to see
them come though three pool games, a quarterfinal, a semi and the final
unbeaten.
I was at
that final and to see the support that those 12 year-olds got from the Soweto
home crowd was something I’ll never forget.
3 Jeppe
High School for Boys Hockey 2018
I’m not a
great fan of the rankings of school rugby teams that are compiled by the school
sport websites, mainly because they are (outside of the top five or six)
evaluating teams that don’t actually play against each other. That’s not the
case with boys hockey where there are tournaments and festivals at different
times of the year to which all the top schools are invited and they generally
do meet up with each other every year.
So, when
the Jeppe 1st hockey team ended the 2018 season ranked number one on all the
sites that had published rankings, they had in fact played against all the
teams in the top 12 of those lists. I still don’t really agree with the concept
of rankings, but Jeppe was undoubtedly the top school in the land that year.
Their
results proved that. They played 31 games in all, winning 22 and drawing nine.
A number of those draws were in festival games that were of short duration and
they would certainly have won some of them if they were the regulation length.
Jeppe won
the Aitken Trophy – the Gauteng schools tournament – for the fourth year in a
row that year (they won it again in 2019). They also won the local under-16 and
under-15 tournaments in 2018.
4
Western Province Youth Rugby
SA Rugby’s
demographic engineering of the teams that play in its youth weeks – the
under-13 and under-18 Craven Weeks, the under-18 Academy Week and the under-16
Grant Khomo Week – definitely benefits those provinces who best unearth and
develop talented players of colour and take advantage of the special talents
that those players possess.
There were
no youth weeks in 2020, but at the 2019 weeks the regulations required that 12
of the 23 players in each squad had to be black and in addition, the
composition of starting lineups, and the numbers on the field at any time were
stipulated.
There is a
long rugby tradition among black people in the Cape and Western Province has
worked hard to use that to its advantage. Its township and rural development
programmes, and the recruitment of talented players into its top rugby schools
has paid dividends to the extent that WP sides are now chosen entirely on
merit, and yet almost always exceed the compulsory quotas. This has led to them
winning the main game at the under-18 Craven Week on four recent occasions.
They have been in the showpiece fixtures of the other three youth weeks
regularly in last few years and have won those games more than any other
province.
In 2017
the Golden Lions won the Craven Week main game and, significantly, the black
players in their ranks, on bursaries at schools like King Edward and Jeppe,
played a major role in their success.
5 King
Edward VII Rugby 2017
The 2017 King
Edward VII School 1st rugby team didn’t have an unbeaten season. They lost to
Monument - I was at that game - and two matches were declared non-contests –
the rained off game against Pretoria Affies, and the away game at Maritzburg
College which didn’t happen because the KES busses were turned around because a
cloud of toxic fumes from a rubbish dump fire had descended on
Pietermaritzburg.
There have
been four unbeaten 1st XV seasons at KES: 1968, 1973, 1974 and 1978. The
2017 team don’t make that list, but few would dispute that it was among the
very best produced by the school. Those unbeaten teams played fewer games,
generally and their fixture lists included matches against Joburg schools
mainly, many of whom no longer play rugby. The class of 2017 had to take on
schools like Wynberg Boys’ High, Rondebosch, Waterkloof, Affies, Monument,
Bishops and Hoërskool Bellville.
They beat
all of those, except for Monument, who beat them 24-19 in a game that the Reds
dominated everywhere except on the scoreboard. KES were up at half time against
Affies and, I thought, in with a pretty good chance of recording their first
win over them, when that game was called off under the lightning safety
protocols. KES won the first leg of their double header against Maritzbug
College, at home, quite comfortably and although it might have been trickier
away from home in the second. It’s unlikely that they would have allowed
themselves to lose the last game of that great season.
In the
end, their record read 14 wins and one loss, with those two undecided games.
But it was also the style of those victories that made me, among many other
neutral schoolboy rugby fans, try to be there every time they played. There was
plenty of flair and adventure, flowing from disciplined ferocity up front.
It was a
team performance for the connoisseurs, and the individual players got their
rewards too. Seven of them made the Golden Lions Craven Week team and a further
10 were in one of the two Academy Week teams that the Lions fielded that year.
Four were selected for SA Schools: Keegan Glade, Yanga Hlalu, Kennedy Mpeku and
Travis Gordon. Gordon captained both the Lions and SA Schools teams.
6 St
Stithians T20 Cricket
In 2012
Cricket South Africa introduced a national T2O competition - the Schools T20
Challenge, sponsored in the beginning by Coca-Cola. Knockout competitions are
played in all the affiliated provinces, with the winners playing off in their
franchises to get to six schools who play at a national finals weekend.
In 2019 St
Stithians College, representing the Lions franchise, became the first team to
win the national title four times when they beat the Dolphins representatives,
St Charles College, at Tukkies in Pretoria. They had previously taken the title
in 2014, 2016 and 2017.
Saints
emerged as a major force in cricket in Joburg under the leadership of director
of Cricket Wim Jansen who has a philosophy that the key is to play as many
matches as possible. In addition to their traditional fixtures against the
other boys schools, they play games just about every day of the week, against
whatever quality opposition that can be lined up. In the run up to the T20
Challenge, many of those are 20-over encounters and the extra experience has
served them well.
There is
good coaching as well, of course, including the services of Yorkshireman Peter
Stringer, one of the few old-style English cricket professionals still working at
a school in South Africa.
Saints
were back at the national Schools T20 Challenge finals in early 2020 – one of
the few big events that was played before the Covid-19 pandemic closed down
sport – but they didn’t make it into the main game.
CSA has
since announced that they are abandoning the franchise system, so the format of
this competition will have to change in the future, but you can bet on St
Stithians being a major factor in whatever the new arrangement might be.
7
Golden Lion Craven Week 2017
The Golden
Lions Craven Week team of 2017 was something special. It won the unofficial
title, beating KwaZulu-Natal 45-18 main game at St Stithians that year, to
become the first Lions team to do so since 2005. Lions teams had made the main
game five times in the 12 years in between, but lost every time.
Western
Province had come to the week as favourites, but they were held to a draw by
the hosts on the opening day which effectively ruled them out of the running
because the fixtures committee will always go for the home province to play in the main game when there
is nothing to choose between them and another team.
The
success of the Golden Lions team, as is always the case at Craven Week these
days, was largely based on the quality of the players of colour in its ranks.
Many of the stars in the excellent King Edward side that year were black, and
they were there, as were, as were a few from Parktown, Jeppe and St Stithians.
That the Lions were able to meet the compulsory demographic requirements
without having to resort to “quota” selections definitely gave them an
edge.
That Lions
team was full of stars. No fewer than nine of them made the SA Schools team and
most of those also went on the play for the national under-20 team. Their
captain, Travis Gordon, captained the SA Schools team and the under-20s and he,
along with several of the others, has played senior provincial rugby since.
8 St
Alban’s Rowing 2015
Rowing at
St Alban’s College is an ongoing success story. The team is small and a
decision was taken to keep it that way, only entering a limited number of races
at regattas and at the SA Championships. Their boats are all set up for sculls
– two oars per rower – so they only enter half of the races at each event. They
usually win them, and are regularly the top sculling club at the Gauteng and SA
School Champs.
The one
occasion on which they do participate in a 1st eight race, which is a sweep oar
event, is at the annual Schools Boat race on the Kowie River at Port Alfred.
They borrow a boat, get a crew of eight together out of their top scullers for
a few practice sessions, and take on the top schools in the country.
In 2015,
in a boat loaned from the University of Pretoria, they actually won the boat
race. It’s a head regatta, which means crews race off head-to-head and the last
two standing meet in the final. So it wasn’t a fluke that they came out on top,
rather a reflection of their superb fitness levels and natural ability over two
days of racing.
There are
those who say that the only way that St Benedict’s 26-year winning streak at
the SA Schools Championships can be broken would be for St Alban’s to increase
their numbers and enter the single oar races as well. They insist that they
have no interest in doing that, but if they did, their proximity to the best
training facilities at Roodeplaat dam, along with the rowing talent that they
attract, might just do it.
9 St
John’s Rugby 2019
It was
impossible not to enjoy watching the 2019 St John’s College rugby team play.
They came
within a whisker of being unbeaten against Joburg opposition – they lost to
Jeppe by a single point early in the season and drew with King Edward and were
comfortably the better side in both those games.
They also
lost to St Andrew’s College and to Kingswood at the Grey High Festival, but
they won all their other games, and that included wins over fierce local rivals
St Stithians, and over St David’s, St Alban’s and St Andrew’s School. They were
also victorious over Michaelhouse in that annual fixture.
More
important than the results of the games, though, was the manner in which they
played them. In an era when the majority of schools are adopting a more
conservative style, turning school matches – especially those against
traditional rivals – into mini Test matches, St John’s played with a spirit of
adventure and abandon that made them a joy to watch.
I watched
them play as often as I could that year and was never disappointed. Of course,
they had the personnel to play that way. They had speedy wingers who were
excellent finishers, skillful centres, a flyhalf with and educated boot and
forwards who were able to win them enough ball to play with.
The main
thing was that coaches Gerrie Visser and Peter Murison allowed the players to
express themselves and adapted their game plan to their abilities. The result
was a breath of fresh air in a season characterised by stolid, subdue and
penetrate rugby.
10 Wits
Varsity Cup 2020
University
rugby doesn’t really belong in a collection of school sport memories, I know,
but so many of the players involved in the Varsity Cup are ones that I saw at
school level and, besides, I’ve never denied being a fan of the Varsity Cup
competition, and of Wits in particular, and what they achieved in 2020, before
the season was brought to a halt by the Covid lockdown, was just so remarkable.
I’ve been
watching Wits play for years. I saw them relegated from the Pirates Grand
Challenge, the local 1st league, I saw the club coming close to closing down, I
watched them regain 1st league status and, in 2019 saw them win the Pirates
Grand Challenge title - the Golden Lions club league - under coach Hugo van As.
That form
carried on into the Varsity Cup of 2020. When the competition was stopped they
had played five games, won four and drew one. They had beaten UCT, UJ, Pukke
and Tukkies and were lying third in the league with three games to go. They
would have had to face Shimlas and Maties still, but the way they were going
they were a shoo-in for the knockout stages of the tournament.
Wits was
excluded from the first Varsity Cup lineup in 2008 and were included in 2011
when the league was enlarged. They never won a game in 2012 and 2013 and were
relegated to the B Section Varsity Shield in 2014. In 2016 they won the Shield
and they were back in the Cup competition in 2017.
The
academic entry requirements at Wits are more stringent than those of some at
the other institutions. They don’t offer short, low intensity diplomas that
rugby players can enrol for. All their bursary recipients have to meet the
entry criteria for degree courses, and they have to pass to keep on playing.
With that in mind, and considering the
state that rugby at Wits was in a few years ago, the Wits 2020 Varsity Cup
campaign certainly makes my top team performances list.