The dominance
of the Cape schools over those from up country at the Monument Centenary
Festival and the Noord-Suid tournament at Affies over the last fortnight led to
degrees of gloating and despair from supporters of the schools involved, and
accusations – one publicly – that the schools from the South have broken the
rules, and that they came into these 1st matches far better prepared
than their counterparts which indicated that they have been playing proper
rugby matches on the sly for some time now.
The sports
director of Garsfontein wrote a letter to the editor of News 24 making the
allegations and the online response to that consisted, predictably, of flat out
denials and accusations of sour grapes and bad losing.
I have no
idea whether the allegations are true or not, and I guess we have to take
educationalists at their word. I have, however, been watching these sorts of
early season games – at the Joburg Easter festivals in particular – for 30-odd
years now, and my observation has been that the teams that go into them without
a few preparation games under their belts almost always come off second best.
Rugby, we
all know, is a team game and coaches will tell you that individual stars don’t mean much
if the team as a whole is disjointed and doesn’t perform the unit skills
effectively. In short, you cannot play your first games of the season against
some of the top schools in the land without a few warmups beforehand. That’s what
it looked to me like they were doing last week, on the one side of the geographical
divide, anyhow. I’ll leave it at that.
The
disparities were stark. Some of the top Joburg and Pretoria schools were
shipping 50-point defeats, and there a few unexpected results. Whether those
shock victories indicate that the winning schools are going to be the
undisputed top dogs at the end of the season, time will tell. I’m pretty sure
the Northern schools will get better as the year progresses and that in the
end, although the schools from down South will be superior as they usually are,
the gap won’t be nearly as big as it seemed to be after those first rounds of
games.
The biggest
surprise result was Paarl Gimnasium’s 18-16 win over Grey College. It was Paarl’s
first win over Grey since 2012 and it brought to an end a winning streak of 40
games for Grey that stretched back to 2017. Paarl Gim won all of their games at
the two Highveld festivals and they looked very much like the side to watch
this year. Grey, dare I say it, looked a bit underprepared in comparison. I know they are
going to get much better.
The other
unexpected losses included Monument going down 34-33 to Stellenberg and Affies
losing 46-21 to Oakdale. In both cases the victors fully deserved to win. Let’s
see how they go as the term goes on.
The strange
timing of the season has thrown up some of the biggest traditional clashes of
the year right up front. This Saturday will, for example. See Grey College travel
to Paarl Boys’ High, while nearby, Paarl Gim host Paul Roos Gimnasium in one of
the big W Cape derbies.
The unofficial
Cape Town Southern Suburbs challenge kicks off with Bishops hosting SACS and
Rondebosch facing Wynberg.
In the
Eastern Cape, Queens host Selborne in one of the biggest Border schools clashes
of the year, while Grey High take on St Andrew’s in the big Eastern Province
decider.
Kearsney
College take on Michaelhouse, DHS host Maritzburg College and Glenwood meet
Westville Boys’ High in three of KZN’s biggest annual clashes.
Up in Gauteng,
the Virseker Beker competition kicks off with Monument facing Waterkloof – the team
that beat them in this competition last year.
There are two
big trans-Jukskei clashes. King Edward travel to Pretoria Affies while across
the railway track, Pretoria Boys High host Jeppe.
St John’s,
fresh from their solid display at the Monument Festival, will also be in Pretoria
on Saturday, they meet St Alban’s.
Sadly St Albans vs St John's for this weekend has been cancelled due to a Covid break out at St John's....
ReplyDeleteBad news. Thanks
Delete