The Chairman’s Match Preview
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Shore vs Newington @ The Bridge.
High Court Hearing No. 2025/R8B
Shore School v Newington College
“All rise. Court is now in session.”
Judges Presiding: Mr. M Ticehurst (SHORE), Mr. B Herring (NEWINGTON)
Welcome, members of the jury, GPS faithful, and silent, agitated supporters in the Hawker Stand.
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(Sidenote how incredible is AI image generation!)
We return to the courtroom for one final blockbuster case.
This is
Shore v. Newington.
This is
The Verdict Match.
And now after weeks of cross-examinations including some shaky testimony, and upsets in chambers… the entire competition awaits this trial with a keen eye.
Exhibit A: The Case File
The last time Shore visited the feared Stanmore Court, they were out-briefed, out-thought, and out-played. The judge barely sat down before the dynamic Newington prosecution of
King (10) and
Anitela-Tsioussis (12) filed an urgent motion for destruction and it was passed without second thought.
Jury vote:
47-5.
Put frankly a landslide conviction.
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But, since then, the prosecution has been out of form. Newington are 0–5 since that fateful match. Their case has unraveled in cross. Witnesses have crumbled under pressure. Even the once-flawless
Grantham (15), long considered the Black-and-White Bar’s lead silk, has been left asking questions of his own counsel, losing his standing as the head of conversions to M.Palmisani of St. Joseph's Firm.
So now we return to the chamber. Not for retrial but for more of a reckoning.
Exhibit B: The Defence Bench
Shore School enter battered but unbeaten in spirit.
A familiar face is missing from the defence's benches.
Baxter (2), the ever-reliable hooker and leader of the scrum committee, is absent as his broken wrist leaving a gaping hole at No. 2 for the Blue and White. In his place, comes
Garner (2) from the 2nd XV Bar. Keen and with something to prove, he may be subject to a baptism of fire, but this is the Firsts. Some can and some cannot.
The courtroom will watch his every throw-in like it’s CCTV footage in a murder trial.
The
Defence Attorney Bassingthwaighte (10) was clinical last week against Scots. He was direct in argument, clever in delivery, and had some flair that Shore's prosecutors have lacked for so long. Alongside him,
Callaghan (15) ran the backfield like the nifty operator he is, with a few argument sidesteps that got him out of trouble keeping his case alive.
Whispers in the chamber suggest that
Clout (8) is managing an ankle injury. But let’s be clear now: this is a man who will play on until the jury delivers its final verdict, not an argument from an external source.
And now, with the stakes at their peak, Shore must answer one big question:
Can they finally win a case?
Exhibit C: The Prosecution Reassembles
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For all their recent stumbles, Newington remains dangerous. In
King (10) they have a legal general. A man who orchestrates field position like a closing barrister destroys witness credibility, and with a bloody lot of flair. In Grantham, they have the points. 82% off the tee, trailing only Palmisani in the GPS stats. If there is a penalty within 45m, the three points will be tabled and approved. He is under question, but numbers are numbers.
The prosecution’s wildcard this week is the
Makasini (13) Positioning Act. A bold midweek legislation which moves their electric Wests Tigers-contracted winger into the 13 jersey. It’s daring. It’s out of the ordinary. A gamble? But if it pays off? Shore may find their midfield flooded with problems including subpoenas.
Let’s not forget the Newington forwards. They were instrumental in the previous blowout. But lately, they’ve faced some big questions. Some have stood up, some have not. Selectors still circling like hawks around them will add a bit of fire as well. Momentum will be everything.
Key Witnesses
Garner (SHORE)
In his long awaited-debut as a courtroom specialist, he must ensure the lineout doesn’t collapse like it has previously. Can he carry the weight of argument at set-piece time?
King (NEW)
His vision last time was second to none. But after five losses, does he still control the narrative? Can he fire up the TARDIS and take us back to that murder at Stanmore?
Clout (SHORE)
Injured and limping but undeterred. Metres are needed, and there is only one man you can go to in order to gain easy carries.
Makasini (NEW)
He’s no longer standing on the wing giving opening remarks. He’s at 13, he is in the hot seat, and expected to drive the attack through the centre of the pitch. A scary figure moves closer to the stand.
Grantham (NEW)
If the trial goes long, it may be his boot that swings the verdict. He doesn’t miss often. This match though will require perfection.
The Jury Deliberates
Shore: Playing for pride, redemption, and that elusive first win.
Newington: Playing to regain a reputation and revive a stalled case.
Can Shore finally break through? Or will the Black-and-White thrive once more.
Chairman’s Verdict
Based on the evidence presented...
If Clout holds, and the new-look midfield rebukes the onslaught of the Makasini cross-examination…
If Bassingthwaighte controls territory and Garner gets easy lineout ball...
And if Callaghan delivers a firey and elusive closing statement from the backfield...
Then I believe
the Defence has a case.
Final Score Prediction:
Shore 43 – Newington 38
Verdict: SHORE wins. Case closed.
This is not a rehearsal anymore. It’s the final hearing.
So win the jury in the rain. Be smart, calculated and play eyes up testimony.
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Court adjourned.
The Chairman rests.