A rough guide to KZN10 first term cricket fixtures

Here is the rough fixture list for KZN10 Cricket in t

he 1st term of 2019. There are some T20 games not included. Be aware that fixtures may change to what is reflected here. The home team indicates where the 1st team will play on the day.

Day Date Home Team Away Team
Sat 12 Jan M College vs Westville
Thu 17 Jan Hilton vs Scotch College
Sat 19 Jan M College vs Hilton
Westville vs Michaelhouse
DHS vs Kearsney
Clifton vs Northwood
St Charles vs Glenwood
Sat 26 Jan Kearsney vs Clifton
Northwood vs Hilton
Michaelhouse vs DHS
Glenwood vs Westville
St Charles vs M College
Sat 02 Feb M College vs Glenwood
Northwood vs Michaelhouse
Kearsney vs Westville
Clifton vs Hilton
DHS vs St Charles
Sat 09 Feb Northwood vs Westville
Michaelhouse vs M College
Hilton vs Kearsney
Clifton vs St Charles
DHS vs Glenwood
Wed 13 Feb Hilton vs Wellington
Fri 15 Feb Kearsney vs Wellington
Sat 16 Feb Glenwood
Hilton
vs
vs
Northwood
Michaelhouse
Sat 23 Feb Northwood vs DHS
Kearsney vs M College
Westville vs Clifton
Sat 02 Mar Michaelhouse vs Clifton
Kearsney vs St Charles

Kingsmead Mynahs tour trials for KZN grade 11 boys on Sunday

The Kingsmead Mynahs invite all cricketers who are returning to school next year and have not made a representative side to a trial in the indoor facility at Sahara Stadium Kingsmead on Sunday 4th November 2018 starting at 8.30am.

Mynahs are particularly looking for cricketers who made the final trials for KZN Coastal and KZN Inland but missed the cut.

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“We do understand that the boys may be preparing or writing exams so we aim to finish by 11am,” Mynahs coach Philip Lanz told KZN10.com.

“If there are boys playing premier league cricket on Sunday we will try and put them first but can’t guarantee this as it depends on numbers.

“Players are to wear cricket practice kit and must supply their own equipment and cricket ball. If they have stats from the season this will enhance their chances of selection.”

 

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The Kingsmead Mynahs XI will be chosen at this trial and will play cricket at a competitive level.

Mynahs will play on Friday 30th November in the afternoon and then go on a tour to the Midlands on Saturday 1st December to Monday 3rd and then play 2 more games on the 5th and 6th.

“It is important to note for parents and the boys that they must please ensure players are available for these dates before sending them to trials,” says Philip.

 

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“We are looking for boys who have played in their school 1st team, 2nd team or U16A this year and who will more than likely play in the 1st team in 2019.

“We are looking for players who have the potential to play representative cricket at a later stage.

“From the last couple of years a number of players have made the KZN U19 or U17 Coastal and Inland teams after making the Kingsmead Mynahs side the year before.

 

Have a quick eye-check with the friendly experts in their field. Phone 033 342 9673 before you go to trials or Saturday’s match. You need a Super Saturday to round off the year. http://www.hilliarandgray.co.za/services/comprehensive-eye-exams/

“This is a wonderful opportunity for boys to develop their game if they want to aspire to play better cricket.

“We also want to spread the net as far as possible to give opportunity to all who qualify for this team.”

Philip Lanz is the Senior HOD Outreach/Operations and MIC Cricket at Thomas More College in Kloof.

Philip can be contacted at Thomas More College on 031 764 8640 and at planz@thomasmore.co.za

 

Oppenheimer Michaelmas Cricket Week Umpires named

It gives KZN10.com great pleasure to reveal the names of the umpires who will officiate in the 59th edition of the Oppenheimer Michaelmas Cricket Week, so splendidly hosted as always by Maritzburg College.

The four days of cricket, starting Saturday 29 September to Tuesday 2 October sees a remarkable 22 top-tier cricket schools from across the country field their first XI’s in a mammoth 44 matches in and around the KZN capital and further afield at picturesque Eston Country Club and Richmond Country Club.

 

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Featured image: Umpires Craig Macauley and Sibonelo ‘Sibs’ Mashimane will be busy men on Goldstones and elsewhere during the four days of Oppenheimer Michaelmas Cricket Week. Photo Jono Cook

Without these guys, who are more than willing to give of their time and knowledge over four gruelling days of arguably the most intense schoolboy cricket in the country, there simply would be no matches, no cricket week, no nothing.

 

The Pietermaritzburg-based John Carstens is one of the highly regarded umpires who will officiate at the 59th annual Oppenheimer Michaelmas Cricket Week hosted by Maritzburg College.

 

That said, it is remarkable how many of these steadfast cricket men are, to maul a metaphor, “repeat offenders”.

 

Umpire Pius Nkosi is back for his umpteenth Oppenheimer Michaelmas Cricket Week. Photo Jono Cook

 

Indeed many of these good men in the trademark black pants, white shirts and hats hail the Oppenheimer Michaelmas Cricket Week (OMCW) as their cricketing highlight of the year.

Hence the repeat offenders, many of whom have officiated at Oppenheimer Michaelmas Cricket Weeks into double figures now.

 

Kershan Moodley is one of the many Durban-based umpires who relish the annual pilgrimage to Oppenheimer Michaelmas Cricket Week. Photo Jono Cook

 

One of the stalwarts of OMCW is umpires’ co-ordinator Mike Wolstenholme.

 

Umpires gathered last year at the 58th OMCW Dinner in the iconic Victoria Hall, and sponsored once again by caterer supreme Heather Lawson of Granny Macs. Mike Wolstenholme is back row, fourth from the left. Photo Jono Cook

 

Thanks Mike for sharing the Team Umpire list.

OMCW TEAM UMPIRE 2018

Andrew Ngubane
Cameron Boock
Chris Govender
Chris Ndlovu
Craig Macauley
Daryl Govender
Jayden Knipe
John Carstens
Kershan Moodley
Matt Ducasse
Muhammad Jooma
Mike Wolstenholme
Pete Osborn
Pius Nkosi
Saxon Colling
Sibonga Shabangu
Sibonelo Mashimane
Siyabonga Mjojo
Stenly Mpofu
Yameen Godil
Tyler Trenowerth
Vaughan Meyer

 

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Why the KZN10 schools are getting it right

The success to date of Hilton College’s grade 11 triple first XI sportsman Suubi Mugerwa-Sekawabe is a combination; a three-pronged structure – raw talent, parental support and the school coaches’ guidance.

 

A PROUD HISTORY AND TRADITION: First XV front-ranker Henty Beukes enters Graeme Gilfillan Field ahead of the 200th Hilton Michaelhouse match.

Given Suubi’s sports career, I am surmising that raw talent is the base; and more than that, his achievement so far is the consequence of his Hilton College first XI coaches Celo Mbanjwa (football), Devon van der Merwe (hockey) and Dale Benkenstein (cricket) instilling in Suubi the more important values that indicate success is more about preparation than raw talent.

Featured image: SHARING A MOMENT – The St Charles College boys express themselves on Meadows during the first XV rugby match on 28 April 2018.

It is also a consequence of the support given Suubi in preceding years. It is no accident that Suubi has achieved success in all walks of life.

 

BROTHERS FOR LIFE: Clifton College first XV boys standing together, one for the other.

 

National recognition and regional/provincial recognition – be it academic, cultural, sporting – is the culmination of a step-by-step learning process that takes much time, blood, plenty of sweat – and yes, frustration and disappointment when a desired outcome is denied.

And it is not for all to achieve the heights, but it is for all to be the very best they can possibly be, given the talents they have. And here again I feel that my chosen KZN10 schools are on the right path – endeavouring as best they can to make each boy aware that there is an avenue for his “special power”; that his particular gift will be acknowledged, valued and nurtured.

 

More than just winning it, it’s about LIVING IT: Kearsney College 1st’s Dane Mertsch… living and loving every moment.
Photo TRACEY VAN DEN AARDWEG

 

Please note: Suubi and Hilton College is an example. There are numerous other examples amongst all the K10 schools, as evidenced in the links below. There are some schools not included in the links that the same evidence will be painted in the weeks and months to come.

Some random examples: Celimpilo Gumede the DHS first XV captain, SA Schools (2nd year) and SA Sevens rugby forward; Sibusiso Sangweni, Kearsney College rugby captain and SA Schools loose forward; schoolmate Guy Morgan, firsts hockey captain, KZN Coastal A national title-winning captain and SA Hockey Fives team member.

The thing is, first and foremost these fine young men are primarily at school for academics and I have tried my best – until they get a gap – to let them get on with it, rather than infringe on their study time and numerous other commitments.

Please note further: Winning is by no means everything at school level, yet a general rule can be applied – boys and teams that are encouraged to extend themselves in a structured, skill-by-skill progression, will win most matches and individual events.

 

IT’S FAR MORE THAN JUST A JOB: Glenwood first XV head coach Derek Heiberg and peers take the time to understand and counsel each player in their care.

 

And, thank goodness in most respects: No one educational institution or boy is perfect – that’s what makes the process so satisfying in the long term; there is always scope for learning and for the betterment of the here and now.  

So, yes, Suubi had already shown the raw material and the desire at a young age, the sporting goods, to stand out, but as we have seen with many outstanding schoolboy sportsmen – some who have achieved post-school and others not – that in-born, innate ability is not enough.

As a sports journalist of 23 years’ standing who has a long-standing, abiding interest in schoolboy sport and its participants: What I see at Hilton College and other members of my chosen KZN10 schools is much more than just having talented boys; it’s a determination by their coaches and schoolteachers to foster a policy of encouraging, motivating the boys in a continuous search to further develop their innate talent.

 

SEEING BEYOND THE WHITES LINES: Northwood first team coach Shaun Baker and his KZN10 peers know that hockey’s educational value extends much further than the confines of an Astro.

 

The positive side of the coin is this: If the coach doesn’t enable the boy – when the boy has mastered the nuts and bolts of a particular skill set – to keep exploring, in a structured manner, the upper reaches of his talent base, a plateau is reached, a plateau where raw talent alone is not enough. The development – and the process of achievement flatlines.

And, ultimately, what could have been is never fulfilled. Therein lies the reality. The best coaches and schoolteachers tell the truth, improve the boys’ ability to communicate, instil the process that success requires in any field of endeavour.

 

SHARING A TEAM-MATE’S SPECIAL MOMENT: Members of the Westville first XV.

 

The sports field is a metaphor for life in its broadest terms; it is a theatre of the real world and the lessons that simply must be learned if success is to follow – the time to put one’s hand up, to stand alone, the time to suppress self-interest in pursuit of a greater cause, the time to put others first, the learning that there are no short-cuts, the growing appreciation and recognition that everything worthwhile is to be earned, not given.

Coaches who are adept at enabling their team and individual players to embrace and love getting past the comfort zone of current success through a constant, step by step, process by process, exploration of skills development and optimal performance will benefit all parties in the long run – and most important of all – will provide lasting benefit to each boy.

 

THE SHARED EMOTION of success that has at its genesis countless hours’ training when few are even aware you are.

 

* At its core: encouraging a joy for the little things – a the smell freshly cut sports field, the intoxicating aroma of a brand new leather cricket ball, a deep love of the sport itself, not the outcome of a contest, the deep satisfaction of sharing, by unselfish deeds, in the collective that is team.

* I am not predicting anything for Suubi or the young men mentioned here – there are many other variables, such as opting for a study focus post-school in which time constraints preclude the rigours of serious sport – but what I am saying is that Hilton College and my chosen KZN10 schools are doing their utmost to lay the best-possible foundation – a present and future life path that goes way beyond the school boundaries.

And perhaps most important of all – it is the social interaction of boys from all walks of life – the recognition that there is a common bond – if we care enough to find it.

 

WHERE FRIENDS ARE MADE: Every KZN10 Old Boy will tell you that where once there were rivals now there are friends – mutual respect borne of a common interest and a shared battle.

 

The links

 

Luyanda a Prince among KZN10 schoolboy sportsmen

 

 

DHS vs Maritzburg College 1st XV epics… 1987-1989… Ivy’s memories

 

Hilton College’s shooting star Suubi Mugerwa-Sekawabe

 

Trust comes from knowing that Jens is on your team – trust me: 082 576 2406.

 

Glenwood first XV – The process that leads to the performance

 

Michaelhouse’s multifaceted Mubeezi Lubinga

 

 

Master Blaster Matt Lewis the Clifton kingpin

 

Westville Boys’ Head of School Matthew Pollard reflects on the year

 

Communication. The key to understanding. Go beyond the mixed messages. Lucienne (065 301 3095) is waiting to connect your way.

 

Northwood keeper Taine Bird a shot-stopper of note

 

Maritzburg College’s Braderz ticks all the right boxes

 

2018 Kearsney Easter Rugby Festival wrap

 

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Glenwood’s Jaden Hendrikse is a special talent

AS every KZN10 schoolboy rugby fan in the greater Durban area gears up for the much-anticipated 14h20 meeting on Dixons Saturday between the Glenwood first XV and Grey College, let’s spare more than just a thought for one of the most outstanding players of the season, the Green Machine’s SA Schools’ scrumhalf (2017) Jaden Hendrikse.

Delivering near-flawless performances match in and match out, Jaden’s dream season this year came to a jarring halt in the last match of the second term, a torn PCL in the emphatic defeat of Maritzburg College on Dixons.
* “PCL” is a posterior cruciate ligament – one of the four major ligaments of the knee.

Feature image: The deadly boot of Jaden Hendrikse has sunk many an opponent’s dreams of victory.

When KZN10.com contacted Jaden a few weeks ago, the immediate concern was, would this be the end of this fine sportsman in Glenwood colours? Yes and no. Although the injury signalled the end of his rugby season, there is still hope for the cricket season.

Nevertheless, missing out on Craven Week in Paarl – and likely selection once again for SA Schools and representing his country in the upcoming international series – plus missing the last few matches for the Glenwood first XV of 2018 (Waterkloof on Dixons wraps it up next Friday, August 10) is a bitter pill to swallow.

Jaden is tough, resilient – as every scrumhalf worth his salt should be.

Jaden: “I will be out for a few games of cricket (Jaden is the Glenwood first XI captain) and unfortunately I did not play at Craven Week but 3 months out is not so bad. It’s a little bit tough watching everyone else play but it happens, and the only thing left to do is get better.”

That’s the right attitude – KZN10.com wishes Jaden all the best with his recovery. Let’s hope the all-rounder gets into action back on the cricket field this year as soon as possible.

The word “talent” suggests a natural aptitude or skill. Many schoolboys have it – the challenge is to convert it into something meaningful and lasting.

So far in the sports life of Jaden Hendrikse, the Glenwood schoolboy is ticking those boxes.

Border U12, U13, KZN U16 and U18 plus selection for SA Schools in 2017 suggest that Jaden’s rugby career is following a natural progression. On the cricket field, too, the Glenwood lad has caught the eye with inclusion in the Border U13 and KZN U15 teams.

Jaden relishes the responsibility of the key number 9 position on the rugby field: “It gives me the opportunity to influence the pace of a game. I also know the laws well and am a good communicator, which is important as a scrumhalf.

“I enjoy being the team goal-kicker and the challenge of supplying quick ball to the backs and connecting with the forwards. As I have grown in experience at first team level I have learnt to exert pressure as well as play under pressure.”

The Glenwood first team have had an outstanding season. Jayden is enthusiastic about the success.

“We have a good bond as a team and are enjoying ourselves. I think that is very important.”

 

Glenwood’s Jaden Hendriksethe Acethe Joker

One of Jaden’s goals was for Glenwood firsts to beat DHS this year – and they certainly did. “Our match against DHS was one that we were looking forward to, probably due to the disappointment we felt in the defeat last year. This year there was a different story to tell.”

At Glenwood, Jaden says director of rugby and first XV head coach Derek Heiberg has been a guiding force in raising his game. His coach certainly has much regard for the number 9.

 

Glenwood first XV head coach Derek Heiberg has much praise for Jaden Hendrikse the sportsman – and Jaden the person.

 

“Jaden always pushes himself to be better – and that attribute has become infectious to the rest of the team. The thing that not everyone knows about him is his strength of character. Jaden is very resilient and fiercely competitive.”

In terms of pure rugby skills, his coach is no less impressed: “Not only does Jaden have an exceptional pass and an exceptional kicking game; he is strong in defence and an outstanding goalkicker. Jaden’s ability to read a game and identify space is, I feel, his greatest attributes, as these are things you can’t coach and are very rare.”

As necessary as individual skills are concerned, rugby is a team sport that requires intricate combination play and, crucially, a close team spirit, much of which is developed away from the spotlight of Saturday matches… During the unforgiving hard yards of energy-sapping training sessions – in front of the proverbial man and his dog. The intense concentration and application required in working on combination play, when no one but coach and support staff is present.

It is said that under these circumstances you can identify whether a player has a future outside the school arena – or not. So what then of Jaden Hendrikse and his contribution off the field, as well as in – and away from – team training?

Coach Heiberg again: “Jaden plays a big role in our team culture. He is the Joker in the pack – and that lightens the mood in the change-room. At training he works exceptionally hard and is always putting in extra time to work on his positional skills and core-skill fundamentals.”

 

Jaden always sees the sunny side of things.

 

Yet a rugby player does not live in a bubble, isolated from the day-to-day challenges of the world outside the white lines. Coaches, team-mates, supporters and a passion for sport can only take you so far. There are times when a deeper connect outweighs everything.

“Since the first rugby match I ever played, my mom and dad have been my biggest fans, as well as my special auntie, Liezel Hendrikse, my sister Jodie and my younger brother Jordan. I am very grateful for their constant support,” says Jaden.

Let’s go back to the white lines… ONE of Jaden’s most memorable matches this year was? “Definitely Affies. It was a nail-biter, a brilliant game to play in.”

Not surprising, really: the May 5 muscle-up in Pretoria had all the ingredients – just 3 points in it (Glenwood 37 Affies 34) with 5 tries to 4 – and for Jaden 15 points with the boot.

 

The hallmark of an outstanding scrumhalf is great communication skills.

 

So which of the KZN schools does Jaden most admire? “Maritzburg College, because they play as a team and with such passion. With the big crowd support they have, it’s especially difficult beating them at home.”

Well, on Goldstones, March 24, the Glenwood first XV did just that, outplaying the Red, Black and White in all departments with one Jaden Hendrikse instrumental in a memorable victory.

The 37-12 victory was built around a scrumhalf master class: A classic box kick; a deft chip with his left boot into space; precise passing both near and far; the number 9 judiciously pulled the strings that enabled Glenwood to control field position and momentum. And, yes, his goal-kicking was as reliable as ever.

The March 31 match against Dale College won 39-0 by Glenwood during the Standard Bank Kearsney College Easter Rugby Festival was also very, very special: “Being the school I attended before Glenwood, it was an emotional occasion for me. We played superbly in that match too.”

Sentiment aside, spectators were treated to an exhibition of high-class halfback play. The 19-point Hendrikse haul included a try, 4 conversions and a brace of penalty goals.

So, who among his team-mates does Jaden first turn to for advice (if needs be) in the red-hot heat of battle? “(Fellow backline player and 2018 SA Schools’ centre selection) Rynhardt Jonker, because of his depth of knowledge, especially in difficult situations.”

 

Glenwood’s SA Schools’ centre Rynhardt Jonker is the team-mate Jaden turns to for on-field advice.

During the first and fourth terms of the school year, it is also time to don the cricket whites. Let’s hear it from Glenwood director of cricket and first XI head coach Brandon Scullard on Jayden’s contribution:

“As the first XI captain, there is no doubting that Jaden is in charge. We often sit and chat and talk through different situations he might face on the field, and work through ideas of how we want to play the game. Jaden is a teachable sportsman, which I think has to be one of the keys to his success in his chosen sports. He is willing to learn and grow, asking questions and learning from mistakes.

“Jaden is an attacking batsman with a great balance of flair and maturity. He is dynamic between the wickets and a calming presence at the non-striker’s end. He can play 360 degrees and displays a head-on approach in transferring pressure onto the bowling side. As an opening bowler, he has the ability to swing the ball and bowl at good pace, using his variation in length to keep the batsmen honest.

Jaden is our ‘go-to’ death bowler, is great under pressure and is unpredictable, making him very tough to score off in the latter stages of the game. Jaden’s execution of these skills is what sets him apart and makes him one of the best death bowlers in KZN.”

And – if that’s not enough – there are further qualities in the Jaden Hendrikse cricket bag: “Jaden is an incredible athlete, allowing him to be extremely dynamic in the field. This sets the tone for the rest of the team. You’ll usually find him in the slips in the earlier stages of a match, and then as the game progresses he will be in the most active areas of the field, long-on and long-off.”

And what of Jason the person? Mr Scullard answers immediately: “Jaden is highly respected among his team-mates and throughout the school. His achievements set him apart from most schoolboys, excelling in cricket and the achievement of national colours in rugby. However it’s in the way that Jaden carries and presents himself that makes him the role model he is. He is a respectable and upstanding scholar, with huge heart and fight on the sports field. He command’s his troops on the field with precision and authority.

 

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Jaden excels in pressure situations. We see the best in him when the team really needs him. He relishes the tough times on the field, and takes on the responsibility of making a difference with either bat, ball or in the field. When pitted against an opposition batter or bowler, he makes a conscious decision to tackle them head on.”

Well said, Brandon, my all-too-brief number of days watching Jaden the cricketer (and rugby player, for that matter) have never failed to disappoint.

But it always come back to character – the persona presented to the public; and the person off the stage, are they consistent? And once again, the assessment of Mr Scullard is on par with that of his colleague in the Glenwood sports department, rugby’s Mr Heiberg.

“Off the cricket field, Jaden gives a lot of energy in training sessions and has the attention of the boys when speaking in the change-room and practices. His good sense of humour allows him to integrate smoothly back into enjoying a good laugh with the boys, increasing that brotherly bond within the group.”

 

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While Jaden is not too sure as yet what he may pursue in terms of his post-school studies, there is no uncertainty as far as his sports aspirations are concerned.

“I would like to play rugby professionally.”

The indications are that cricket will, unfortunately, have to take a back seat. To be fair, in the modern-day, outstanding all-round sportsmen have to specialise at some point. Nevertheless, the fact that Jaden hasn’t taken the specialist route too early will stand his rugby talent in good stead.

Enough said. The vision is clear. Let’s hope the Jaden Hendrikse rugby journey has only just begun.

 

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To learn more about Glenwood the school, go to  http://www.glenwoodhighschool.co.za/

Glenwood too many options for HTS Middelburg

IT was a productive outing for the Glenwood first XV at HTS Middelburg with 13 tries being run in, the determination of the Green Machine to play an expansive game earning an 83-0 victory.

As a return to action from the long July holiday layoff it stands Glenwood in good stead ahead of their 4 August home fixture with Grey College, as well as the final outing of a memorable season indeed, when Waterkloof visit Dixons on the public holiday, Friday August 10.

Fresh from a successful Coca-Cola Craven Week campaign in Paarl enjoyed by the Glenwood boys and welcoming some of their U19 players back (Craven Week is U18 while schools’ rugby is U19 in the senior age group) the Glenwood outfit had to make some changes to the starting line-up with lock Cade Esterhuizen, eighthman Dean Needham and wing Aaron Larue coming in.

Feature image by Hardus Grundling (Grade 9 – Media Club): Glenwood scrumhalf Joe Jonas finds space.

10 minutes into the first half Glenwood stole the ball from HTS Middelburg’s lineout. Runako Brynard, with a strong run, carried the ball up to the 5-metre line. Joe Jonas spread it wide to JC Conradie who managed to find his way through but was held up on the line. Again, it was scrumhalf Jonas with a quick-ball skip pass to winger Larue, who stretched over to score.

 

Sharks U18 Craven Week flyhalf Dylan Pretorius off the kicking tee. Photo Hardus Grundling

After good runs from Brynard and Jonas, it was Jonas who spotted a gap to score Glenwood’s second try.

Glenwood’s 3rd came after another powerful surge by Brynard. Glenwood played through a couple of phases before prop Thabiso Mdletshe broke through a tackle to score. SA Schools 2018 back Rynhardt Jonker converted for a 17-0 lead.

An exhilarating period of running rugby ensued. Jonas slipped through and passed to Siyanda Cele, who was stopped metres away from the tryline. Putting the Middelburg pack under pressure Glenwood turned the ball over. Dylan Pretorius received the ball, dummied and popped the ball to Jean Roux who scored under the poles. Jonas converted for 24-0 with 15 minutes to play in the first half.

 

A rugby team secure in its defensive systems can spend more time on the fun stuff.

 

A kick-and-chase from Roux resulted in Middelburg carrying the ball over. From the 5-metre scrum, Pretorius passed to Conradie who sidestepped his way past two defenders to score Glenwood’s 5th try. Jonker converted for 31-0.

Another Glenwood 5-metre scrum saw the backline set Conradie up. Jonker was successful with the conversion (38-0).

Middelburg too often undid their good work through handling errors in this match.

The next try came when Larue stepped his way past three defenders (43-0). Glenwood then employed some excellent defence before the half-time whistle blew.

Early in the second half, Glenwood made some player changes with George Luzolo, Conan le Fleur and Carlo Cloete coming on.

 

SA Schools 2018 selection Rynhardt Jonker scored 20 points in the match. Photo Hardus Grundling

 

Jonker crossed over for the first try and Jonas converted (50-0). Then it was Larue who slipped through a gap. He offloaded in the tackle to Roux who almost knocked on but managed to control it for another Glenwood try. The Jonker boot made it 57-0.

Werner Coetzee was substituted by SA Schools 2018 lock forward Lunga Ncube, who immediately made an impact. Jonker scored his 2nd try, diving over in the corner after Ncube carried the ball up to inside Middelburg’s 22. Quick ball from the ruck gave Glenwood that overlap on the left (62-0).

 

Great communication, great outcomes.

 

Then great defence from Conradie turned the ball over in the tackle, Joe Jonas passed to Conan le Fleur who spotted a small gap, managed to get through and – running about 80 metres – scored next to the upright. Conversion by Jonker (69-0).

Only 2 minutes later La Fleur found himself crossing again after a fine team effort, with strong runs from Ruan Olivier, Brynard and Pretorius. La Fleur received the ball from Deon Needham on Middelburg’s 22 and powered his way over to score Glenwood’s 12th try. Jonas converted for 76-0.

 

It was try-time twice for Glenwood winger Aaron Larue at HTS Middelburg. Photo Hardus Grundling

 

Glenwood’s 13th and last try came thus: Awarded a free-kick after an early bind in the scrum, Glenwood opted to tap and go, spreading it wide to replacement winger Cloete who was brought down 10 metres short. Ncube was the first receiver and dived over. The Jonker boot once again – to leave Glenwood with an 83-0 win.

Though the match was a one-sided affair, superb breakdown play, quick passing through the hands and exciting running served Glenwood well.

 

Your range of sight must be spot-on for the perfect skip-pass.

 

SCORES
Glenwood
(43) 83
Tries:
Aaron Larue (2), Joe Jonas, Thabiso Mdletshe, Jean Roux (2), JC Conradie (2), Rynhardt Jonker (2), Conan La Fleur (2), Lunga Ncube
Conversions: Rynhardt Jonker (5), Joe Jonas (3)
HTS Middelburg 0

* Edited extract of a match report by Alex van der Merwe. Further info supplied by Jono Cook.

For more info on Glenwood the school go to http://www.glenwoodhighschool.co.za/

***

ALL THE GLENWOOD SPORTS RESULTS AT HTS MIDDELBURG

http://www.glenwoodhighschool.co.za/wp-content/uploads/19-May-2018-HTS-Middelburg-1.pdf

 

After try-time you need some down-time.

Remember when… The 2007 KZN10 hockey season in review

​WHILST sorting out a desk drawer a review of the 2007 KZN10 schoolboy hockey season caught my eye. Edited excerpts from * Mike Hill‘s season wrap make for interesting reading.
​​

I’ve thrown in a number of bits and pieces from my memories of that year.

Featured image: 2007 Kearsney College captain & SA Schools defender Greg Last who went on to represent SA and play for numerous seasons in KZN Raiders title-winning teams and in Europe for his Belgian club.

 

Maritzburg College were the top-rated KZN team, having played 17 games won 14 lost 3.

The Tony Godding Festival at Selborne College kicked off the Red Army season with 5 wins from 5 matches and a goal tally of 22. Tony is one of the legendary figures in SA schoolboy hockey coaching.
The Red Army’s 3 losses were to the strong Grey College team who were within – with Maritzburg College – arguably the top 2 or 3 rated sides in SA, and, as match favourites, 2 rather surprising defeats in the 3rd term… against PBHS (who MC beat in the 2nd term) and Kearsney College.
The Maritzburg College 3 Grey College 5 on Papes Astro must be ranked one of the most emotion-charged, action-packed schoolboy first team matches I’ve ever seen.
Grey were coached by another SA schoolboy hockey coaching legend, Des Donald.
The 2007 Red Army were coached by the incomparable SA schoolboy hockey first team coach Mike Bechet.

Living Legend: Mike Bechet… an incredible record as a schoolboy hockey coach in SA.

In my opinion Bech’s triumvirate of over 700 Maritzburg College first XI matches and sheer number of SA top-rated schoolboy first teams, plus more SA Schools and SA senior national players during his tenure than any of his peers, will never be matched.
The 2007 Red Army averaged 4,8 goals per game. Striker David Miller (later of senior international cricket fame) netted 20 goals in leading the Pape’s Astro goal fest.

Next up with 15 goals were the penalty corner drag-flick guided missiles of the exceptionally strong 💪 powerfully-built left ⬅ half Tyron Mingard who wasn’t the sort of guy a striker looked forward to playing against.

Matt Hampson (the captain, I think) added 13 successful goalshots – Miller, Mingard and Hampson accounting for 59% of the season aggregate of 81.
A miserly 21 goals were conceded in the 17 matches – an average of 1,24 goals per game.
Rather amusingly, Mike Hill surmised that the end-of-second-term teachers’ strike must have troubled the Red Army defence as 9 of the 21 goals conceded were scored in the last 4 matches. 

Nine Maritzburg College first team players represented KZN Midlands at the Interprovincial Nationals in Port Elizabeth.

Goalkeeper Andrew Thomas, Kyllin Vardhan, Kyle Jackson, Tyron Mingard, Matt Hampson, Wanda Mtshilibe, David Miller, Shaun Simpson and Taine Paton (London 2012 Olympic Games and 2014 Den Hague, The Netherlands Hockey World Cup) who was selected for SA Schools for the second successive year.
Brothers in Arms… Maritzburg College Old Boys Taine Paton and elder sibling Wade represented South Africa at a host of world-level showpieces including here at the 2014 Den Hague Netherlands Hockey World Cup. At back are the blonde Michaelhouse Old Boy midfield superstar Clint Panther and his more hirsute Jeppe Old Boy friend Jethro Eustice, who has since put an enormous amount back into KZN hockey.
xxx
Maritzburg College won 84% of their matches with the two other leading KZN teams Kearsney College and Michaelhouse winning 64% of their games.
xxx
The Kearsney season goal tally was 68 with 33 against, winning 14 of 22 matches.
The most significant Kearsney win was the 4-3 vs Maritzburg College on Papes Astro in their second-last match of the season.
Top goalscorer was Greg Swanson with 15. Greg, together with Greg Last, twins Michael and Graham Krige, and Mike Dawson, were selected for KZN Coastal. 
Greg Last (later in the SA National team at the 2013 Nairobi Africa Cup) made SA Schools. 
xxx
The Michaelhouse season kicked off with a tour to Malaysia and Western Australia where, against a mix of school, youth and adult teams, playing 12 winning 7 and losing 2 and drawing 3.
In SA they played 14 and won 9 with 26 goals for and 18 against. Michaelhouse’s most significant win was the 6-2 against St Stithians. The biggest losing margins were the three-goal deficits vs Maritzburg College and Grey College.
David Zwemke (SA U17 in 2007 and SA Schools captain vs Australia Schoolboys in 2008 – Dave’s combination play with Michaelhouse team-mate and future London 2012 Olympic Games and 2014 Hockey World Cup midfielder Clinton Panther was a constant thorn in the Aussies’ side), Sean Rennie, Glen Dowie and Arniv Badal represented KZN Midlands.
xxx
Of the 2 other predominant KZN Midlands (now KZN Inland hockey province) schools – Hilton College and St Charles College – had mixed results.
It was a big year for Saints in that their first Astro came into being – a Belgotex Greenfields turf.

The Willowton, Pietermaritzburg based Greenfields team are now the biggest players in the synthetic sports turf market with prominent names in the SA hockey fraternity such as the legend that is Tommy Hammond among the staff led by former outstanding player and current international umpire Ayden Shrives. 

JJ Reed was the Hilton player in the KZN Midlands team with St Charles represented by Troy Marais.
xxx
Glenwood, whose hockey went through a lean patch, had a much-improved year.
Northwood had, by their standards at the time, a relatively disappointing season, a 2-1 victory over Kearsney the highlight.
Gowan Jones (current SA goalkeeper), Calvin Price and Tiegan Mulholland (SA Schools) made KZN Coastal.
Westville and DHS each won two matches in the 2007 season.
For DHS, Mario Vilaboa made SA Schools for the second year running. Two more DHS boys were selected for KZN Coastal – Clayton Clothier and Ryan Williams. 

Thomas More College had their first player selected for SA Schools – current Kearsney College first team head coach Sihle Ntuli. 

 

In 2007 the current Kearsney College head coach Sihle Sigz Ntuli became the first (and only) Thomas More College boy to be selected for SA Schools.

 

 

* Astonishing when one looks at it now, Clifton College – one of the top teams in SA this year – were a second-tier hockey school in 2007. Clifton’s rapid hockey progress is one of the most remarkable KZN10 success stories.

 

My recollections, from the numerous matches I watched, is that it was an extremely exciting season with much competitive, attractive KZN10 schoolboy hockey.
* Mike Hill was a KZN schoolboy hockey newspaper correspondent. A senior Maritzburg College 🎓 biology teacher and deputy headmaster of many years’ standing, Mike took up this part-time occupation on retirement.

Shedders’ holiday High Performance cricket camps a game-changer

ANDREW Shedlock has taken the art of cricket coaching to the next level. Two High Performance Shedders Cricket Academy camps, to be held in Durban North from 25 to 28 June and 9 to 12 July could be the turning point in KZN schoolboy cricketers’ lives. Critically, in my opinion, each camp is limited to a maximum 20 boys.

If I was age 13 to 17 again this would have been the catalyst in turning a (so-I’m-still-told) talented top-order batsman with a sound technique (thanks to Digby Rhodes, Vince van der Bijl and others) into a far better batter.

Although I captained the Maritzburg College first XI and made some runs, as a perfectionist I found myself so frustrated with the technical and mental aspects of surely – next to golf – one of the most complex ball sports around.  The frustration at knowing I was not making any progress in taking my game to the next level resulted in (later much-regretted) giving up the game a couple of years post-school.

Enough of that. Coming across the Shedders ad, the first instinct was to have a look, as Andrew Shedlock and I go back 42 years, as opponents and friends. So what has Shedders got on the menu, I thought. Well, it blew me away.

Shedders, a University of Stellenbosch sports science graduate and internationally respected coach and cricket-specific fitness and conditioning consultant with the CV to prove it, has in my opinion nailed down the key to cricket success.

Featured image: Shedders has worked with legends of the game. Here’s Shedders with Sri Lanka cricket legend Kumar Sangakkara, the elegant left-hander and wicketkeeper who scored a total of 28 000 runs for his country across all formats and retired with a Test average of 57.40. Shedders’ direct contact with some of the world’s best cricketers has been of enormous practical benefit to his coaching skill set.

Apart from comprehensive batting and bowling sessions with top-class professional coaches that on its own will establish a solid platform for the upcoming cricket season (starting as early as the third term in KZN), Shedders has also teamed up with Durban North-based optometrist Glen Nugent and sports fitness and talent identification educationist eta College in offering a three-pronged approach to his camps.

I phoned him, wanting to know more.

“Thanks Jono, always good to chat. I’ll never forget that U13A game on Leeches at Maritzburg College when you were College skipper and I was DHS captain. Great memories.”

A deep thinker on the game, Shedders is constantly looking for the edge that turns “good enough” into best. The research and success-in-practice of Shedders’ internationally-acclaimed fellow University of Stellenbosch sports science graduate Dr Sherylle Calder’s EyeGym programme inspired one section of the three-pronged content of the upcoming camps. Dr Calder pinpointed Visual Intelligence training as a key tool in making a better player.

Shedders says, “a batsman’s ability in making the transition from seeing the ball to immediately processing that split-second information into employing the correct cricket stroke can make or break an innings. This is just one aspect of transferring vision into decision.”

Sherylle worked with the 2003 World Cup-winning Australian cricket side, as well as David Miller in enhancing performance and clearly Dave and the Aussies reaped the rewards, as did the England (2003) and Springbok (2007) Rugby World Cup-winning players.”

 

Known for his get-in-the-trenches work ethic, one of the Andrew ‘Shedders’ Shedlock mottoes is:   “Cricket is a verb not a noun so get training!”

 

“I’ve identified the much-talked-about but little understood hand-eye co-ordination aspect as one of the keys to unlocking the mysteries behind why talented KZN high school cricketers struggle to deliver consistent performances. I constantly hear things like ‘you can’t teach it, you’ve either got it or you haven’t’, and ‘he’s naturally gifted’. My response? A cricketer as gifted as David Miller benefited from visual intelligence training, Dave saying that it provided him with the extra edge to perform at a high level. Every cricketer, be it a batsman, bowler, wicketkeeper or fielder, constantly searches for consistency. That’s why I see this aspect as a vital function of the camps.”

To this end, the Shedders cricket camps’ optometrist, Glen Nugent, will conduct an eye and vision assessment for each player and provide the boys with follow-up cricket-specific exercises and drills to work on.

Fitness is another key indicator of success or failure. The ability to concentrate without distraction in turning a quality 50 into a match-winning hundred… or converting a useful 3-fer into a match-deciding fifer can, in my opinion, be best-judged by whether a schoolboy has the mental and physical stamina to maintain best-practice and accuracy whatever the outside influences and circumstances may be.

Shedders says this is where eta (exercise training academy) step into the camp package: “eta will conduct fitness testing services to assess current athletic abilities and to identify physical attributes and areas in need of improvement. Baseline fitness testing allows for the setting of goals and testing at regular intervals. It helps track a cricketer’s progress towards those goals.”

The fitness assessments/tests to be completed will include:
* Functional Movement Screening
* Body Composition Assessments
* Flexibility Assessments
*Agility Assessments
* Power and Speed Assessments
* Balance and Hand/Eye Co-ordination Assessments
* Power and Speed Assessments
* Cardio-respiratory Assessments
* Muscle Strength/Endurance Assessments
*Nutritional/Dietary Assessments

Clearly there is not going to be much idle time for the camps’ young cricketers. No doubt there wasn’t much idle time for a just-out-of-school Hashim Amla when Shedders was head coach of the Dolphins Cricket Academy. Hashim Amla is quoted as saying that Shedders is a coach who had a positive influence on his cricket career.

To sum up: I’ve seen Shedders in action – no “only-observe-from-the-sidelines” coach, he’s not afraid to get in the trenches. Ask Jonty Rhodes and Lance Klusener, to whom Shedders must have each pitched a thousand-plus throw-downs during his time with the Dolphins.

Shedders has the sports science background, world-level sports-playing (he’s also a former Springbok water polo player) and international cricket title-winning experience to appreciate what it takes to succeed.

Shedders is the kind of guy I’d go to war with. He’s a leader who is never afraid to push the boundaries harder and further in every sphere of cricket excellence.

My only regret about Shedders? His June/July cricket camps weren’t around when Jono Cook the aspirant teenage cricketer needed them. After a good first term, I had a shocking fourth term.

I’m convinced it would’ve been different if Shedders’ camps had been around in my time.

Unlike me, today’s KZN high school cricketers have got that opportunity.

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW

LIMITED TO 20 BOYS PER CAMP
Camp 1
Mon 25th to Thurs 28th June
Camp 2
Mon 9th to Thurs 12th July

Ages: 13 to 17
Time: 2pm to 4.30pm daily
Venue: Shedders Cricket Academy Durban North

Contact Shedders at 083 791 7646

or shedders@worldonline.co.za

DHS 10 Shakur La Douce @ Glenwood Old Boys Day… & more

THE delightful flyhalf that is Shakur La Douce on tomorrow’s Big Show vs Glenwood on Dixons:

“Thanks for asking me sir; yes we’ve still got that positive vibe since the 40-35 over the Red Black & White (Maritzburg College last Saturday).

“The atmosphere at Van Heerdens during that KZN derby was great. Playing in front of big crowds is something I have aspired to since I was a rugby-crazy little boy.”

Featured image: DHS playmaker Shakur La Douce – watched closely by School kicking coach Lyle Matthysen – has the complete game to keep Glenwood guessing.

 

They may not be at Van Heerdens Saturday but that won’t stop the DHS boys from getting behind their team!

“This week’s preparation hasn’t been easy. We have done a lot of running and the coaches have also prepared us mentally to make sure… We are ready to take on Glenwood… we know we are.

“We are 100% mentally ready to beat Glenwood. We have the players and the gameplan. Mr Scott Mathie (DHS head coach) has a plan for Glenwood… ”

 

DHS first XV captain & number 8 Mpilo Gumede is on Dixons at Glenwood Saturday.

A final word from a fine young man: “Thanks again sir… It’s going to be a special day for DHS and Glenwood.”

Well said, young man… Whatever the result, the most important thing to remember is that sport is an educational tool… it teaches life skills like no other.

So, what is the philosopher’s stone going to reveal? Yes, it’s the Glenwood/DHS muscle-up on Dixons Saturday? Who among the Glenwood/DHS set will come out on top? Who among these great Durban, KZN and South African schools will stamp their colours on the pages of history?

Green Machine vs Blue & Gold… Kick-off 13h55.  

FNB Classic Clash – tune in at 13h50 on SuperSport 10 or search on YouTube.

*****

OK, okay this is my special indulgence…

Shakur La Douce, Sandile Patrick Valentino Dube, Sanele Someleze Nohamba…  DHS men surely have the names, the monikers, that take the innocent straight to Hip Hop and House, hey Jackal?

“Before the unknowing (not Jackal) discover that the theatres of KZN10 schoolboy rugby are a better bet if one hopes to nail down these colourful characters in the Blue & Gold family.

Fortunately for you, dear KZN10 supporters, I know you would have been miffed if I’d started the story with my *piffery musings. I was going to ask that you please be patient… Like a meticulously planned pre-match warm-up from your favourite conditioning coach, I was going to say, “Have courage, I’m gradually building up to views  a’La Douce…

 

Sandile Patrick Valentino Dube… DHS Über Alles… 2017 DHS captain & SA Schools’ Pepsi Buthulezi.

To continue – The name Valentino is an Italian baby name… well, In Italian the meaning of the name Valentino is: Brave & strong.  Now that’s more like the Sandile Patrick Valentino Dube I know…  one of the most passionate DHS fans and sports coaches you’re ever  likely to discover.

 

DHS first XV, Sharks U18 Craven Week & SA Schools 9 Sanele Nohamba thrilled KZN10 crowds last year.

 

THE 2017 DHS, Sharks U18 & SA Schools scrumhalf & Player of the 2017 Craven Week Sanele Nohamba was instrumental in the Hamba la (the polite translation means to “Go Away”) of many teams last year.

Let’s see if who’s going to deliver a polite Hamba la tomorrow.

Oh ye long-suffering KZN10 readers, the sorely-earned instinct borne of avoiding rabid loose forwards tells me I’d better shut up.

So, will the even more evocative Shakur La Douce do the same for DHS should the Sharks U18 Academy Week flyhalf (selected just yesterday) conjure up the intoxicating potion of skill sets he so vividly demonstrated in School’s more-than-impressive 45-30 win over the Red Black White on Van Heerdens last Saturday?

It’s all for the taking.

# Jackal Ntakuseni Tshikosi is a former Michaelhouse first XV player with a great sense of humour.
* The word (lol) “piffery”… Don’t Google – I made it up. Why? Easy answer, dear reader… ‘cos it sounded good…

Conan Lefleur on Saturday’s 1st XV Durban Derby: Glenwood vs DHS

​GLENWOOD first XV head coach Derek Heiberg describes his 2017 SA Schools outside centre thus:

“Conan Lefleur? Strong work ethic, strong defensively, linebreak ability on attack, member of our leadership group who are an extension of our management team throughout the week and on game day.”

There’s not much more a coach could ask of his player.

Chatting to Conan, his coach’s assessment  comes out in this powerfully built 13’s replies.

“Thank you for taking the time, sir, I really appreciate it.

“I feel very honoured to play on Dixons Saturday because it’s our first home game as a team and we want to make it very special in sharing this day with our proud Old Boys who are traveling from far, as well as the Old Boys closer to home.”

 

‘Playing in front of such a big crowd is just unbelievable…’

 

“It’s one of those games we will remember for the rest of our lives’

It’s a big one for Conan and the unbeaten Green Machine – Yes folks, it’s the age-old Durban Derby with the Blue and Gold of Durban High School… On Dixons. On Glenwood Old Boys Day. It’s a 1.55pm kick-off … It’s Saturday, 26 May 2018.

“I think it’s going to be one of those games that we will remember for the rest of our lives,” says the midfielder.

“It (last year’s Durban derby) was very special indeed. Unfortunately we couldn’t convert pressure into points and that cost us the game.”

Glenwood 17 DHS 20 it was.

Glenwood centre Conan Lefleur… strong on attack and defence…
Photo: TRACEY VAN AARDWEG

Like this year, the 2017 match was also played on Glenwood Old Boys Day – In honour of the DHS 150th anniversary celebrations 2 years ago. What would have been a Glenwood home game was appropriately transferred to School’s beloved Van Heerdens.

Last year’s match was an absolute cracker of a cracker.- as illustrated by DHS kicking coach Lyle Matthysen, an assistant to head coach Scott Mathie: “Anyone who watched the game will tell you it was one of the best, if not the best, game of schoolboy rugby they have ever seen.”

Back to Conan: “Dixons was packed last year… with a massive crowd full of passion for the game. Playing in front of such a big crowd is just unbelievable… It motivates me to keep on going till the last minute. I love it when I’m doing the best I can – and that’s playing inspirational rugby.

“But what happened last year is over and done with. For us as the Green Machine it’s not about getting revenge for last year, it’s about playing as a family, Stick to our game plan and the scoreboard will give the true reflection.”

The 2018 Glenwood first XV have 13 wins from 13 starts. Last week in Krugersdorp, the Green Machine beat Monnas 49-22.

“I think with the expansive gameplan that we play… it’s very difficult for a team to defend it.

“The build-up towards Saturday has not been easy because there is always room for improvement but, as I say, when the going gets tough the tough get going.”

Well said, Conan.

May Saturday’s muscle-up go down in the annals of KZN schoolboy rugby history as yet another Durban Derby to remember.