Quick Hands
David Wilson (68)
I'm fairly certain that those clubs still exist OB, but how many teams they run, I'm not so sure. I suspect not as many as when you played in the 90s.
Your last paragraph is a scenario which plays itself out on a regular basis across the juniors. The players getting flogged 100-0 by the super team give it away and then when they get to 16 the private school super team stop playing juniors to concentrate on school rugby. The result being that there's hardly anyone left playing junior club rugby and competitions have started to become unviable. This means that boys at non-rugby playing schools can either: play league, play colts against 20 year olds or play something else with their mates.
The rot started in about 2000 when Northern Zone introduced Sunday rugby to allow private school players to remain in junior rugby, while still playing school rugby. The motive was well-meaning, but long-term it's been a disaster for Sydney junior rugby at club level.
Your last paragraph is a scenario which plays itself out on a regular basis across the juniors. The players getting flogged 100-0 by the super team give it away and then when they get to 16 the private school super team stop playing juniors to concentrate on school rugby. The result being that there's hardly anyone left playing junior club rugby and competitions have started to become unviable. This means that boys at non-rugby playing schools can either: play league, play colts against 20 year olds or play something else with their mates.
The rot started in about 2000 when Northern Zone introduced Sunday rugby to allow private school players to remain in junior rugby, while still playing school rugby. The motive was well-meaning, but long-term it's been a disaster for Sydney junior rugby at club level.