Sunday, 14 December 2025

My Top 10 for 2025


 


Here's my annual thumb-suck exercise. These are the 10 school sport related things that stood out for me in 2025. It's subjective, based on events I attended - or watched on SuperSports Schools. 

Of course there are others worthy of making the list. I stopped at, 10 though.

1 Let’s get the regulars out of the way first. St Benedict’s won the boys teams competition at the SA Schools Rowing Championships for the 31st consecutive year, and the schools boat race for the 8th year in a row. Just who is going to topple them from their throne remains a mystery.

2 Western Province beat SWD in the “main game” at the Craven. It was their 6th consecutive unofficial champions title and it took their winning streak at the week to 18 games. The quality of the top rugby schools in the Western Cape (and some them should really be in the Boland) is such that it’s difficult to see them losing any time soon.

3 The Golden Lions XV beat Western Province in the final of the Academy Week. I know WP has two sides in the Craven Week, so they beat the Province C team, but it was third main game win a row, which is quite an achievement. The Lions Craven Week side has performed poorly in all of those three years. Some might say the Lions have a selection problem, I couldn’t possibly comment, of course.

4 The comeback of the King Edward rugby team after a disastrous start to the season was something to observe. The Reds scraped a narrow win over St John’s to start and then blew a 23-6 lead to lose to Jeppe. They then went to Noord-Suid where they lost 102-0 to Paarl Gim, and went down to SACS. Back home, there was another defeat – to Pretoria Boys High - before they turned a corner at their Easter Festival where they beat Rondebosch and looked likely to beat Northwood when the game was called off due to lightning. They were to cause major upsets later on, beating Noordheuwel and Helpmekaar, and they beat Pretoria in the return fixture. There were to be more losses, but they were in very competitive games against good sides. It was a great example of fighting back when people had written you off.

5 The SACS 1st hockey team was unbeaten, again. They finished the year as the number one ranked team. Rankings are bollocks, I believe, and this case proves that. When SACS were put into 1st place after one game back from an overseas tour, they were always going to stay there. Their only competition, really, was Jeppe, who they don’t play. Who is to say that Jeppe wouldn’t have beaten or drawn with them?

6 The Affies 1st rugby team lost to Paarl Boys High and Grey College and drew with Paarl Gim, which, according to the compilers, ranked them third in the land. There’s no question, though that they are the best rugby school in the country by every other measure. They can field the most teams on match day – 30 or more – and they almost never lose a game. I watched them play Jeppe and while their 1st team had to dig deep to beat a determined Jeppe side, all their other teams won comfortably, including some of their lower open teams playing the 1st teams of smaller schools.

7 Jeppe hockey teams won all three Southern Gauteng knockout cups, the U19 Aitken, U16 Alan Monk and U15 Boden Trophy. The Aitken Cup win was Jeppe’s their 21st, the most by any school. The 1st team was unbeaten in the season – they played 31 games, won 29 and drew two.

8 Two outstanding individual performances. Jason Rowles of St David’s was named the CSA U19 Men's Player of the Year, even though he is still in Grade 11. He made the SA Schools team in 2024 and was Batsman of the Week at the Cubs Week in January. He was co-captain of the SA U19 team during the year. He captained his school to the national playoffs of the inaugural SA Schools T20 competition this year and was named the Central Gauteng Lions U18 Player of the Year.

9 Keegan Cockburn took five wickets off five balls against KES in the 19th over of the Central Gauteng final of the SA20 competition in November. He finished with figures of 5/7 off four overs, but KES won the game by one wicket, getting the winning runs off the final ball.

10 Central Gauteng won the main games – the U19 girls and boys finals – at the Schools Water Polo SA inter provincial tournament at St David’s in December. Western Province took the overall title, based on medals won in all five age group divisions. Central Gauteng did a great job of organising the event, which involved over 2 000 players and several hundred officials. There were 430 matches played over four days and, despite lighting disruptions and venue changes (sometimes mid-game) on every day, the prize-giving at the end of it was just half an hour late.

11 I said I will limit it to 10. Of course I’ve got an 11th, simply because we aren’t likely to see anything like this again any time soon. In January there were four St Stithians old boys – Kagiso Rabada, Wiaan Mulder, Ryan Rickelton and Kwena Mapakha – in the same Proteas team in a Test against Pakistan. And now that 19 year-old Lhuan-dre Pretorius is establishing himself in the national teams in all three formats, it’s quite possible that we might have five Saints old boys in one team soon.

Thursday, 4 December 2025

The 50th SWPSA IPT is going to be huge - it wasn't always that way

 The 50th South African Schools Water Polo tournament takes place next week. It will be played at eight school pools around Johannesburg. And it will be massive - there are 10 sections, involving over 2000 players and several hundred officials.

That’s very different to what it must have been like in 1975 when the 1st tournament was held at Ellis Park. I wasn’t involved back then – my first SA Schools was in 1981, in Bloemfontein - but the provinces and people involved hadn’t changed much by then.

It was an U19 boys tournament at first and the competing provinces were: Transvaal, Northern Transvaal, Eastern Transvaal, Natal, Western Province, Eastern Province, Border and Free State. Natal won it just about every year.

I was sent to the 1981 tournament as manager of the Transvaal B team by Buddy Herd – the headmaster of Athlone Boys’ High, who basically ran things among the Joburg schools back then.

At that tournament I met the men who ran the game. Some of them moved on soon afterwards (Buddy Herd retired the next year) and others went on to make deep inroads in the game at school level.

Dredging my memory, I recall the following pioneers of the SA Schools tournament. Almost all of them have passed on now, leaving me as a rather patchy recorder of those early days.

The chairman of what was called the South African Schools Water Polo Association was Johan Terblanche. He was also the chairman of SA Schools swimming. The ties between swimming and polo were strong back then, but the relationship was not a happy one – not much has changed in that regard in the last 50 years.

His sidekick was Nico Lamprecht of DHS and Natal. He was a water polo man and actually ran things. His involvement was to continue for many years and it’s fair to say that he became a legend. He is still alive although I’m told he is struggling with poor health.

There were a number of other, compared to me, older men in charge. They were all prominent water polo men in their cities. Ken Kuiper from Northern Transvaal wasn’t a teacher, but he was a coach and referee; Karel Elferink From Eastern Province was a leading figure in water polo down there; Chris Waller from Western Province was headmaster of Tableview High School and, I recall, an advocate of girls polo at a time when very few other even knew it was being played; Tess Uren kept the game going for many years at schools level in Eastern Transvaal, a water polo powerhouse that never had a strong interschool structure; the 1981 tournament was organised for Free State by Abrie Pepler and Russell Keet, both of whom moved to East London later, where Russell went on to head a sporting family dynasty; the Border men in Bloemfontein in 1981 were Mike Boy and Charl Wessels, both teachers who went on to serve the game for many more years.

I was thrown into running the association in Joburg when Buddy Herd suddenly retired for medical reasons, and I was involved for the next 16 years. Nico was a constant presence in that time, as was Alan Burt, who ran the refereeing side. Ian Melliar started refereeing soon afterwards and was to become another selfless, long-serving, presence around the game.

There is, of course a long list of men and women who have got this tournament to its 50th year. The 2025 tournament is a very different beast to the 1975 one and the current organisers are brilliant. Those who started it off, and those that nudged it ahead along the way, shouldn’t be forgotten, however. Along with those mentioned above, here are few others who were involved in my time:

The Zimbabweans, some of whom later moved South and carried on their work here: Fred Wilson, Piet van Tonder, Peter Phillips.

Alan Footman was the Western Province coach in the early days, he was a constant presence, and one of the great characters of the game.

Brian Daley coached the Eastern Transvaal team for years, and put his son Simon into the team as a 13 year-old, and watched him grow into one of South Africa’s greats.

Dave Pitcairn, who started off in Joburg with me and then moved to Cape Town where he was instrumental in waking the sleeping giant that is Western Province schools water polo. His work was carried on by the Schoolings, Doug and Norma, who took the province to another level.

Steven la Marque was a player at that 1981 tournament in Bloemfontein. He went on to throw himself into coaching and was to become possibly the most prominent administrator of the game in the recent past.

I’ll be remembering them next to the pools in Joburg next week. Their legacies and spirits will be looming large.