Friday, 26 September 2025

No rest for the wicked - or for the teachers at the serious sporting schools

 


They say there’s no rest for the wicked. That may be true, but in my experience, there are some very good men and women who happily give up their precious periods of rest, year after year, for the benefit of other people’s children.

I’m talking about the teachers at the best of our schools, of course, and although they may or may not receive some sort of travel and sustenance allowance for the days that they are away from home; and their efforts are borne in mind, I hope, when annual bonuses are allocated, they do it for no financial reward.

I spend some time at two of Joburg’s boys schools these days and their upcoming short October holiday period - which was, I guess, originally intended to give everyone a breather ahead of the push towards the final exams – is jammed with tours and tournaments in all of the summer sports codes that have only just began their 2025/6 seasons.

Two of the big 1st team ones. The Michaelmas Cricket Festival at Maritzburg College, and the SACS Waterpolo Tournament, have been going for many years. Now they have been joined by competitions in the other age groups and, of course, by the Basketball tournaments and festivals that have been started up in response to the phenomenal growth of that game at schools.

While the opportunities created for so many children to do what they love and to learn the lessons that going on tours teach (along with the sacrifices made by those teachers and coaches) are a positive thing, there is also another side to it all.

It’s all calendar-driven. There’s room for just two rounds of interschool sports fixtures in the fourth term, before exams begin, and there is so much rugby and hockey on the cards the next year that the 1st term dates available for the summer sports have been curtailed over the years.

So, it’s beginning to look like the summer codes are being organised according to tournaments and festivals, rather than featuring a game a week against traditional local rivals, like we used to have back when I was involved. Hockey and rugby are also going that way, it seems.

Since then, a number of the schools that were involved in weekly fixtures against the schools where I work have dropped out. They are no longer competitive and no longer field enough teams to make it worthwhile for the bigger schools.

That’s a tragedy, and there are many reasons why that has happened, one of the main ones being that they find themselves on the other side of the professionalisation of school sport coin. Their talent has been stripped through recruitment and, admittedly, they no longer put in the effort that they used to (for their own reasons).

So, at schools where mass participation is a value that is striven for – alongside elite high performance – you have to go the festival route to get enough games for your teams.

That’s why, over the next two weeks, the schools I mentioned, along with the others of their ilk across the land, will be in action in the Midlands, in Gqeberha, at Grey College, in Pretoria, and Paarl and Durban.

I’ll be keeping an eye on as much of it as I can, thanks to the magic of SuperSport Schools. And thanking the Lord for that horde of teachers who have forgone their well-deserved rest to make it all happen.

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