KEARSNEY COLLEGE
Remember when… The 2007 KZN10 hockey season in review
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.
![](https://kzn10.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/MIKE-BECHET-HEAD-AND-SHOULDERS-PIC.jpg)
Living Legend: Mike Bechet… an incredible record as a schoolboy hockey coach in SA.
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.
Nine Maritzburg College first team players represented KZN Midlands at the Interprovincial Nationals in Port Elizabeth.
![](https://kzn10.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/TAINE-WADE-HWC2014-TINYJPG-PIC.jpg)
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.
Thomas More College had their first player selected for SA Schools – current Kearsney College first team head coach Sihle Ntuli.
![](https://kzn10.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/SIHLE-NTULI-KC-HEAD-COACH-PIC-TRACEY-VAN-DEN-AARDWEG-1.jpg)
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.
Our Boys of KZN10 in SA Hockey 5s & Rugby 7s for Youth OG Qualifier
FIVE of the 8 players selected for the SA Fives hockey team to take part in the July 19-28 Africa Youth Games Qualifier tournament for October’s Youth Olympic Games are from KZN10 schools while DHS number 8 and captain Celimpilo Gumede is in the SA Sevens squad. The KZN10 hockey boys are Taine Bird of Northwood (Taine a recent feature article in KZN10.com), Guy Morgan (Kearsney College), Mphumelelo Maphumulo and Jared Campbell (both Maritzburg College) and Matt Lewis of Clifton College (KZN10.com knows how to pick ’em – Matt is another recent feature on your favourite website). And to top it all, Kearsney head coach Sihle Ntuli will be the man in charge.
Feature image: DHS captain and number 8 Celimpilo Gumede in SA 7s squad.
![](https://kzn10.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/TAINE-BIRD-AWESOME-STANDALONE-PIC.jpg)
Northwood and SA 5’s shot-stopper Taine Bird is outstanding on the indoor hockey arena and Astro surfaces… a great base for Hockey Fives best practice.
The Africa Qualifier event is in Algiers, Algeria and the rugby and hockey winners go to The Big Show – the Youth Olympic Games in the City of Super-Friendly Beautiful Girls (trust me on this one, the Argie girls love SA guys) – Buenos Aires, Argentina.
![](https://kzn10.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/GUY-MORGAN-KC-HOC-CAPT.jpg)
Kearsney College captain Guy Morgan is heading to Algiers with his SA Hockey 5s team-mates for their shot at qualifying for The Big Show in Buenos Aires.
Photo Tracey van den Aardweg
Ahem… We gotta qualify first… Yes, dear KZN10.com fans, it’s make or break in Algiers as it is the single opportunity for South Africa to make it to The Big Show in the stunning South American country that is Argentina.
![](https://kzn10.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/MPHUMULELO-MAPHUMULO-MC-HOC-PIC-MATT-MARSHALL.jpg)
Mphumulelo Maphumulo’s laser-sharp target is the Africa Qualifier Hockey 5s gold medal with the SA team in the Algerian capital city of Algiers July 18-29.
Photo Matt Marshall
The Youth Olympics is for players age 14 to 18. The 2014 Africa qualifier was in Gaborone, Botswana which featured over 50 African countries. The inaugural Games were in Morocco in 2010.
![](https://kzn10.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/JARED-CAMPBEL-HOC-PIC-MATT-MARSHALL.jpg)
The pace off a standing start and stick-ball dexterity of Mphumulelo’s Maritzburg College team-mate Jared Campbell will ensure that the Red Army flag flies high in Algeria.
Photo Matt Marshall
TEAMS FOR ALGERIA
RUGBY SEVENS
Christoffel Grobbelaar, Christiaan Pretorius, David Kellerman, Celempilo Gumede (DHS), Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Ross Braude, William Rose, Jacobus Hattingh, Muzilikazi Manyike, Diego Appollis, Ofentse Maubane, Ethinique Adams, Albertus Horn, Juandre de Klerk, Lional April, Remy Engelbrecht, Campbell Willemse
* Squad of 17 to be trimmed to 12 ahead of departure.
Management: Marius Schoeman, Sandile Ngcobo
![](https://kzn10.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/MATT-LEWIS-GOALBOUND-PREPARES-TO-ENTER-THE-STRIKE-ZONE-AFTER-ADVANCING-ACROSS-THE-ATTACKING-THIRD.jpg)
Clifton College match-winner Matt Lewis will be a massive weapon from penalty corner and field play for the SA Youth team in Algiers.
Photo Terry Lewis
HOCKEY FIVES
Taine Bird (Northwood), Guy Morgan (Kearsney College), Cody Postumus, Mustapha Cassiem, Mphumelelo Maphumulo (Maritzburg College), Matt Lewis (Clifton College), Jared Campbell (Maritzburg College), Peter Jarvis, Luke Wynford
Management: Sihle Ntuli (Kearsney College)
![](https://kzn10.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/SIHLE-NTULI-KC-HEAD-COACH-PIC-TRACEY-VAN-DEN-AARDWEG.jpg)
Highly regarded Kearsney College head coach Sihle Ntuli will be the guiding force driving SA Hockey 5s’ trophy quest at the Africa Youth Games next month.
Photo Tracey van den Aardweg
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.”
![](https://kzn10.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/SHEDDERS-PORTRAIT-PIC-SQUARE-SIZE.png)
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
Mucha Match Action ahead in KZN10 Fri Nite Super Saturday Fixtures
MIGHT be Comrades weekend but there’s still much to savour in KZN10 rugga/hockey match action across the golden province & on the Highveld. Prince and the Saints entertain Hilton College on Old Orchards, Maritzburg College are Highway-bound to Westville (Old Boys Day) on Bowdens, Clifton College make the climb to Michaelhouse on Meadows and Kearsney College trek to St Benedicts & Jeppe. It’s a free weekend for Glenwood and DHS while the Knights of Durban North have concluded their rugby and hockey seasons.
TRY-TIME… Maritzburg College’s elusive centre Nkondlo Radebe in full flight on Meadows last Saturday.
Photo Martin Ashworth
SELECTED FIXTURES
@ St Charles (vs Hilton)
Saturday
1sts Hockey – 11h15 (Saints Astro)
1st XV Rugby – 13h45 (Old Orchards)
@ Michaelhouse (vs Clifton)
Saturday
1sts Hockey – 11h45 (Aitkens Astro)
1st XV Rugby – 14h00 (Meadows)
@ Westville (vs Maritzburg College)
1sts Hockey – 11h45 (WBHS Astro)
1st XV Rugby – 14h30 (Bowdens)
@ St Benedicts & Jeppe (vs Kearsney)
Friday
1sts Hockey (vs St Benedicts) – 18h30
Saturday
1sts Hockey (vs Jeppe) – 10h45
1st XV Rugby (vs St Benedicts) – 10h30
Kearsney College 1st XV & the Saints in a 67-point 10-try blockbuster
KEARSNEY College first XV and St Stithians of Johannesburg produced a match chock-full of adventurous running studded with moments of individual brilliance and well-worked tries but punctuated with an uncomfortable number of unforced errors.
The touchdowns on The Stott were shared 5 apiece.
Next up for Kearsney is another home game – when they meet Hilton College this Saturday, 2 June 2018 on The Stott.
Kearsney lit up the scoreboard first in the St Stithians match through a penalty goal by the ever-consistent Taine Muirhead (3-0).
The 3-pointer in the 6th set the tone in the next 10 but errors coupled with wrong options kept the Saints within reach.
Kearsney pressure finally turned into a 7-pointer… a move that reflected much work on the training paddock saw fullback Robbie Koenig break the line before forwards/backs contributed to set up winger Gcina Gumede’s flight over the whitewash out left (10-0).
Featured image: Kearsney College fullback Robbie Koenig races away from his St Stithians pursuer during the 36-31 victory on The Stott Saturday.
Photo Tracey van den Aardweg
Momentum shifted… Saints collected a Kearsney outlet-pressure kick to nail a collective 7 points in dazzling fashion out right (10-7).
The hosts recovered fast. From the kick-off, pressure earned a penalty after a dangerous tackle on winger Gumede.
Kearsney opted for a scrum feed. A precision backline move ensued. A marked degree of player-to-player awareness and cohesion – earned through considerable effort at trainings – resulted in the selfsame Gumede touching down on the other side of the park from where Saints had transgressed.
The Muirhead conversion set Kearsney 17-7 at halftime.
The teams changed ends and St Stithians gave evidence that they were far from done. Somewhat against the flow, the visitors capitalised from a spilled ball, making short work of a disorganised defence (17-12).
A Saints touchdown would tip the balance in the visitors’ favour for the first time. It duly happened when Kearsney let themselves down with another soft error and the 7-pointer saw the scoreboard read Kearsney 17 St Stithians 19.
Not for long. A quickly-taken Kearsney penalty and clever punt was followed up by fullback Koenig. As the 15 readied to catch-and-dive for try-time, a Saints tackler committed too early. The consequent penalty try tilted the balance in Kearsney’s favour once again (24-19).
The Kearsney spark blossomed into full-blown flame when, first, lock forward Jordan Morum benefited following structured play off a scrum launch. Then, a quickly-taken Muirhead/Koenig lineout combo stretched Kearsney’s lead to 36-19 with 14 left.
Once again, the Saints signalled they weren’t done. Sustained pressure earned 5 points (36-24).
With the final whistle looming, further mindful attack by the Saints culminated in Kearsney losing a yellow-carded defender.
A converted try confirmed that Saints made maximum of the opportunity.
Final score – Kearsney 36 (17) St Stithians 31 (7)
Kearsney – 5 tries, 4 conversions, 1 penalty
St Stithians – 5 tries, 3 conversions
Kearsney match summation – Positives: ball-in-hand & field-position. Concerns: missed opportunities & at-times poor discipline.
Next up: Kearsney vs Hilton College on The Stott.
Date & kick-off: Saturday, 2 June 2018 at 3pm.
* Kearsney Founders Weekend.
Kearsney character edges St Stithians by 1 goal in 7
KEARSNEY College first hockey team won a 7-goal thriller against St Stithians College under lights in Botha’s Hill Friday 25 May 2018.
The score was 4-3 after Saints had led 2-0 and then 2-1 at the changeover.
Featured image: Kearsney keeper Jethro Strydom is kept on his toes.
Photo Tracey van den Aardweg
The victory is a tribute to the character in the Kearsney team as they chased for much of the game, trailing 1-0 then 2-0 before 2-1, 2-2, then 3-2 behind before 3-3 and the endgame 4-3 win.
It’s set Kearsney head coach Sihle Ntuli’s side up nicely for the Founders Weekend match vs Hilton College come 11h15 Saturday 2 June.
Both the Kearsney and Saints teams started well, with the hosts controlling possession, but St Stithians seemed to have more energy in the early stages and forced Kearsney into mistakes, which they capitalised on to go 2-0 up against the run of play.
Kearsney captain Guy Morgan pulled one back just before half time, through a penalty corner drag flick to bring the score to 2-1 going into the break.
The second half started much better for Kearsney, who had to chase the game if they were going to get a positive result. Once again, through a penalty corner, Ben Proctor got on the end of a variation to level the scores at 2-2.
Straight after, St Stithians hit back and went 3-2 up, but Kearsney’s Liam Maguire went on a solo run to score a great individual goal and level the game 3-3.
Kearsney were then awarded a penalty corner with three seconds left on the clock, Morgan flicked and the ball was run down but found itself on Steven Conway’s stick. He didn’t hesitate to slam it into the bottom corner and clinch a dramatic 4-3 win for Kearsney.
Kearsney 1sts hockey tick the boxes at Glenwood
THE Kearsney College first hockey team’s halves, midfielders and strikers linked effectively to fashion a 5-0 win over home side Glenwood at the 3-Schools Astro on Friday evening, 20 April 2018.
The success of the 3 lines made for a healthy slice of the possession on offer – and with it came overall control. Kearsney captain Guy Morgan orchestrated proceedings from the back along with Hayden de Kock and Chase Kelly.
The midfield impetus came in the main from Liam Maguire while Kearsney’s player of the match, front man Steven Conway, capitalised with a brace of field goals to go with those of Gavin Shelly and Maguire. Morgan also made an entry on the scoresheet with a drag-flick at penalty corner time.
That the entire Kearsney team stepped up to the mark made for a gratifying performance by coach Sihle Ntuli and Wayne Marsden’s lads.
1 Jethro Strydom
4 Steven Conway
7 Guy Morgan (capt)
11 Luyanda Chiliza
15 Campbell Duckworth
Sihle Ntuli, Wayne Marsden
* Glenwood team not available at the time of writing.
C Kearsney 4-3
Overall: Kearsney won 6 while 4 were drawn.
71-pointer: Kearsney edge Westville
THERE were just 5 points to separate the Kearsney and Westville 1st XV rugby sides in a real crowd-pleaser at Botha’s Hill on Saturday 5 May 2018.
A total of 10 tries were scored in the match – each team bagging 5.
A backline move from out left that did the justice to time spent in training sessions resulted in Kearsney fullback Robbie Koenig getting the first touchdown, which scrumhalf Taine Muirhead duly converted (7-0).
Westville flyhalf Kyle Forsyth eliminated the challenge of two tacklers to get the visitors on the board and the conversion made it all-square at 7-7. Then a Kearsney error when in possession saw Habana Mkwanazi take full advantage for Westville to go in front 12-7.
It was a neat piece of footballing skill by the winger in steering the ball down the line before diving on it a split second ahead of the try-zone running out of real estate.
Kearsney worked their way back into the lead shortly after when hooker Taine Polzi breached the whitewash, Muirhead adding 2 for the 14-12 margin that reflected the half-time score.
Muirhead knocked over a penalty goal to get the scoreboard ticking in the second half before the Botha’s Hill-based side’s favourable field position paid off with interest. Kearsney needed 15 metres’ progress in search of a 5-pointer. Derick Marshall received a switch pass from flyhalf Jacques Odendaal – acceleration and power enabling the inside centre to cross the tryline. At 24-12, Muirhead’s conversion opened up a 12-point gap for Kearsney over their Highway rivals.
Westville cut it down to an encouraging 5 points for their supporters when winger Mkwanazi was again on hand to profit from Kearsney mishaps. Yet once again Kearsney had the facility to respond to a setback in positive fashion – pivot Odendaal making the most from a left-hand scrum to carve a niche through the Westville defence. The consistent Muirhead added the extras and Kearsney were the beneficiaries of a 12-point winning margin for the second time in this pulsating muscle-up.
An effective Westville catch-and-drive lineout culminated in a penalty try being awarded following a Kearsney infringement and the 12-point gap had again been whittled down to 5.
With Kearsney now just an edgy 31-26 ahead, Stott’s Field again bore witness to the home side’s quick response to a setback and it was number 8 and captain Sibu Sangweni who benefited from pressure and physicality to collect a loose-ruck ball that heralded trytime. Muirhead made no mistake with the conversion and at 38-26 Kearsney were 12 points better off for the third time.
Photo @ top of story: The energy engine – Kearsney College number 8 and captain Sibu Sangweni led from the front in the 10-try thriller against Westville.
Photo credit: TRACEY VAN DEN AARDWEG
This entertaining affair came to a close when Westville were awarded another penalty try after a player chasing a chip kick was tackled in the air 10 metres out, leaving the final score in this entertaining match reading Kearsney College 38 and Westville 33.
Kearsney team
15 Robbie Koenig
14 Christo Scheepers
13 Cameron Dudley
12 Derick Marshall
11 Gcina Gumede
10 Jacques Odendaal
9 Taine Muirhead
8 Sibu Sangweni (capt)
7 Dylan Bissett
6 Aidan Bossert
5 Nic Baines
4 Jordan Morum
3 Oliver Carmody
2 Taine Polzi
1 Mpendulo Dlamini
Subs
16 Pernel Ngubo
17 Connor Griffiths
18 Bradley Taylor
19 Dean Burrell
20 Marco Mattioda
21 Mark Pretorius
22 Robert Pringle
23 Rory Bloy
Coach: Barend Steyn
* I hope to get the Westville team soon.
RESULTS
(Kearsney scores first)
1st XV 38-33
2nds 10-11
3rds 27-14
4ths 20-19
5ths 39-7
6ths 39-12
7ths 15-10
16A 17-21
16B 3-22
16C 0-46
16D 18-12
15A 3-3
15B 0-31
15C 5-21
15D 10-26
14A 24-19
14B 12-26
14C 0-52
Overall: Kearsney won 8 and Westville won 9 with 1 drawn.
2018 Kearsney Easter Rugby Festival wrap
A highly successful 11th Standard Bank Kearsney Easter Rugby Festival wrapped up with three teams ending the festival unbeaten and the announcement of four players who each received bursaries to the Sharks Academy for 2019.
Two KZN teams, Durban High School and Glenwood, as well as Hoerskool Framesby from Port Elizabeth, were unbeaten at the festival.
The bursary recipients are HTS Drostdy centre Christie Grobbelaar, Glenwood flank Lindokuthle Luthuli, and two Kearsney players, flank Sibusiso Sangweni and fullback Jacques Odendaal. The bursaries, each valued at over R100 000, include a contract with the Academy next year, accommodation and a tuition bursary with one of its education partners.
![](https://kzn10.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Kearsneys-Sbu-Sangweni-with-ball-against-Pretoria-Boys1-1.jpg)
Photo Tracey van den Aardweg. Kearsney’s Sbu Sangweni against PBHS.
Glenwood was presented the floating trophy for having played the most attractive rugby at the festival.
![](https://kzn10.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Glenwood-try-by-captain-Conan-le-Fleur-in-the-win-against-HTS-Drostdy1.jpg)
Photo Tracey van den Aardweg. Glenwood captain Conan le Fleur scores in the win against HTS Drostdy.
Announcing the awards, Sharks Academy managing director Etienne Fynn said spectators had been treated to some outstanding rugby over the weekend, with many evenly matched teams which made for exciting games.
“The results from DHS were a great surprise, with the team remaining unbeaten against three traditional Eastern Cape powerhouses,” Fynn said.
![](https://kzn10.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/DHS-try-scorer-and-prop-Mthokozisi-Gumede-in-the-game-against-Dale-College1.jpg)
Photo Tracey van den Aardweg. DHS try scorer and prop Mthokozisi Gumede in the game against Dale College.
DHS beat Selborne College from East London 16-13, Queen’s College from Queenstown 24-7 and Dale College 39-0. Glenwood’s victories were against DHS Drostdy (29-26), Dale College (39-0) and Welkom Gimnasium (24-10). The third unbeaten team, Hoerskool Framesby beat Dale College 5-15, Pretoria Boys High 13-10 and Hoerskool Noord-Kaap 30-8.
In a cracker final game of the festival, Kearsney dominated the match against Pretoria Boys High. With a half-time 19-7 score in the hosts’ favour, they won 40-33 after Pretoria scored a converted try after full-time.
Since its inception 11 years ago, many gifted players have been discovered by talent scouts at previous Kearsney rugby festivals and they have now progressed to playing for the Springboks, SA Sevens, Sharks and other provincial teams, becoming household names in South Africa and even internationally.
Fynn said the festival played an important role in exposing the quality of available young talent from around the country.
“The Sharks Academy is proud to be associated with the Kearsney Easter Rugby Festival. The length of our involvement is testament to its on-going high standards and continued focus on the camaraderie and ethos of the game. Only at these festivals is the weekly grind of school derbies removed, and players can be allowed the freedom to play the game without that very obvious pressure,” he said.
Handre Pollard represented Paarl Gimnasium at the 2011 and 2012 festivals, where even then his brilliance entertained spectators. He played against Jan Serfontein (Grey College 2010 and 2011) and Robert du Preez (Kearsney College 2011) at the festival. Others who played at Kearsney festivals are Sbura Sithole (Queen’s College 2008), Fred Zeilinga (Glenwood 2010), Paul Jordaan and Johan Goosen (both Grey College 2010), and SA 7s player Warrick Gelant (Outeniqua 2013).
In 2008 Dale College eighth man Lubabalo ‘Tera’ Mthembu impressed, returning the following year to captain his school’s 1st XV at the festival. He was awarded a bursary to The Sharks Academy which, he says, provided a kick start to his life and career. “It gave me an opportunity to express myself, but also a lifetime opportunity to study and do what I love – which is playing rugby – at the same time.”
FESTIVAL RESULTS
Day 1 – Thursday 29 March
Kearsney College 25 – 26 HTS Middelburg; Queen’s College 10 – 14 Pretoria Boys High; Glenwood 29 – 26 HTS Drostdy; Dale College 5 – 15 Hoërskool Framesby; Selborne 13 – 16 DHS; Welkom Gimnasium 28 – 3 Hoërskool Noord-Kaap
Day 2 – Saturday 31 March
Hoërskool Framesby 13 – 10 Pretoria Boys High; DHS 24 – 7 Queen’s College; Kearsney College 20 – 11 Hoërskool Noord-Kaap; Glenwood 39 – 0 Dale College; HTS Drostdy 22 – 14 Welkom Gimnasium; Selborne 33 – 19 HTS Middelburg
Day 3 – Monday 2 April
Glenwood 24 – 10 Welkom Gimnasium; Hoërskool Noord-Kaap 8 – 30 Hoërskool Framesby; HTS Middelburg 35 – 17 Queen’s College; DHS 39 – 0 Dale College; HTS Drostdy 29 – 26 Selborne; Kearsney College 40 – 33 Pretoria Boys High
Text & images supplied by:
Kearsney’s Sue Miles
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