Inside Shoulder
Nathan Sharpe (72)
send it privatelyThe mods got it, shame that.
send it privatelyThe mods got it, shame that.
Someone with influence needs to grab hold of young Kirk Steven Tuiavii. He is headed to mungoland otherwise. This will be an awful loss to our game and to lose such an obvious talent from a rugby bloodline to the "less thoughtful" version of the game.
UPDATE from Scots College.
I have been told by two different sources (One at TSC another on the Northern Beaches) that a number of St Augustines year 10-11 students were offered places at TSC (fee "support" provided again by the TSC rugby support group), in particular a number of 16A rugby players who will join the other St Augustines boys who are there in the basketball program. It is of note that Augustines refused to play TSC in the final of a knock out competition as a pre- Sydney Kings game match. They protested they could not take the court against a starting 5 that had three Augustines boys in the line up. Is anyone able to comment on this developement?
Possibly because they know the kids and see them as (I assume) pretty normal kids.My impression about imports is that parents get more worked up by it than the boys do. My experience is the same as yours Angrydog, the boys (including those who would be under consideration for places in firsts) just accept that it is what it is.
Possibly because they know the kids and see them as (I assume) pretty normal kids.
Its a parent's right, if not duty, to seek to advance the interests of his or her child - particularly when the
potentially harmful process seems to be for the benefit of the Old Boys of the school, who are adults.
exclaim that we are equally good at rugby, rowing and tennis as we are in debating, music and academia.
interesting to note: scholarships for new end up biting their own school's arses. looking at the current 1st XV team, there will only be 1 maybe 2 newington boys in that team that have started in year 7! As an old boy of the school, i should make it clear that this shouldn't be repeated, if new is looking for a stepping-stone approach into being the best, they have to produce and grow their best from the ground (13s up).
Sorry to blow up about my own school, but the 2nds/3rds competition teams for Newington will be the original teams e.g. most of the boys starting in year 7 and not on scholarship, regardless of that fact, the 1st team has a great team and is doing wonders for the school in the short term but will it help in the long term??
UPDATE from Scots College.
I have been told by two different sources (One at TSC another on the Northern Beaches) that a number of St Augustines year 10-11 students were offered places at TSC (fee "support" provided again by the TSC rugby support group), in particular a number of 16A rugby players who will join the other St Augustines boys who are there in the basketball program. It is of note that Augustines refused to play TSC in the final of a knock out competition as a pre- Sydney Kings game match. They protested they could not take the court against a starting 5 that had three Augustines boys in the line up. Is anyone able to comment on this developement?
It will only take 1 more school to fall for the whole competition to become unviable. It used to be called Mutually Assured Destruction during the Cold War. The nature of the competition as being the 15 best from each school playing each other seems to have been lost on some.
The current activities at TSC and NC seem to have followed new Headmaster/Principal appointments at each school in recent times.
On my assessment of it Shore is that school.
It's a quite pointed jab at the schools seen to be flouting the understanding, and a well explained rationale.
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
My experience with imports is that, other than the handful of boys who miss 1st team spots who may dislike scholarships, students love them.
Students like watching winning teams, they like talking about classmates who will be the next big thing, and to some extent many parents do too. The issue lies in the schools which have ridiculous amounts of scholarships. There's one school in Victoria that at one point had half the year 12 level on at minimum a half scholarship, a majority of those for at least partly sporting reasons.
This thread hates scholarships but I think you'd find outside of the old guard and students/parents who miss out on 1st team spots people don't mind them.
Out of all GPS sports, it is rugby and rugby alone in which 2 of the 8 schools have withdrawn because they just can't compete. That to me provides the starkest evidence that things are out of balance.
Sydney High at least are still being flogged at cricket. I'm not sure about other sports. I guess the difference is that getting flogged on a rugby field can not just be physically intimidating, it can be dangerous.
Getting flogged in other sports, whilst embarrassing is far less dangerous.