Thanks GSP, no the comment didn't get much humming - my bad - but it did draw your response. (1) You can have knowledge about schools rugby by being associated with schools but this does not necessarily mean one is a teacher. I did like "sagacious". Compared to some of the peurile stuff here, we might need a bit more "sagacious".
(2) You obviously forget the days of the BBC South African scholarship imports in the mid 90's so please spare me the stuff about how lily white BBC are when it comes to scholarship offerings and get your facts right. My mail is that they got quite a few promising fellows on Tom Barker's watch and most didn't fit or didn't last or returned to wherever they came from. BBC promised a lot in 2012 and were cruelled by injury to their best players. Recruitment is about player talent but the boy needs to be a chance to fit the school and get value from it beyond the playing field or the whole thing is wasted. (3) Oh please!! spare me the drivel about BBC and their results. Everyone knows that the students who drag the OP average down at BBC are channelled out of the OP program so that it only reflects the performance of "academic" boys. I think BGS may have something to say about OP performance given that in 2012 around 50% of their senior cohort ( that's everyone, not just the smart ones while the window lickers are kept out of sight eating crayons) got OP1-3 including about 51 OP1's.
If you want to use this forum to spruik BBC academic credentials, maybe you are in the wrong place. This is to discuss GPS rugby.
Thanks Monday expert.
You are correct – this is a rugby forum and I regret being the only one to respond to your post which is the only post that I can find of any person that was critical of a school, its culture( and made defamatory comments about not only the school, but anAustralian school boy rugby player). Incidentally, when you were at school over 40 years ago, defamation was called libel.
Your post had nothing at all to do with rugby: but, rather, was a farrago of facts about school boy footballers, some of whom haven’t been at school for 35 years- in an attempt to show your erudite knowledge of the game. Whilst I am only too pleased to talk about rugby, I do not want to let your iconoclastic comments pass without response::
1. I agree you have more knowledge about 55 year old former schoolboy footballers than anyone else in this thread. Maybe it is time to remember that your ephemeral days of being a schoolboy footballer or of your kids of being schoolboy footballers are over and perhaps get back to your “Better Fishing” magazines.
2. I have asked around :and there were no South African scholarships. There is a difference between exchange students and scholarships. In exchange students, boys simply swap schools for no fee. Scholarships are normally associated with a reduction in school fees of some nature. But, again, I admit you know your stuff – BBC have more representative players in 2012 than any other school in Queensland, including 5 in GPS representative teams and 2 Australian schoolboys. Two of them(including the captain) didn’t play a single match and all of them were out for at least half a season( ie-no depth).
3. I don’t need to respond to your comments about OP scores because it is axiomatic that your comments about the pressures that some schools place on academics vis-a-viz rugby has nothing at all to do with rugby but is another piss- poor criticism that is not welcome on this thread.
4. The only comment in your thread that makes any sense is the final one: if you want to criticise the culture of schools, the alledged putative actions of boys that lead them to leaving schools and/or which schools place more academic pressure on their rugby players than others, then piss off and talk to the head master that you are now reporting to.
Otherwise, keep your comments about rugby.
Best wishes