I went to a CAS school and when I was in year 12 I'd guess that there were around 5 boys in the first XV who arrived after year 7.
None of them were on a sporting scholarship.
None of them were on a sporting scholarship.
No one in the 1st XV was on any sort of scholarship when I was in it: we were all on last warnings!I went to a CAS school and when I was in year 12 I'd guess that there were around 5 boys in the first XV who arrived after year 7.
None of them were on a sporting scholarship.
No, what I'm saying is that there are 3 schools who are systematically approaching boys based on their rugby ability. i.e. The schools or their agents are initiating the process rather than the boys or their parents. The usual process with bursaries and scholarships is that the school advertises them and then interested parties then apply. In the vast majority of cases this involves boys starting in Year 7 or Year 11.Are you therefore saying that there are 3 schools that satisfy the "over 10 new arrivals out of 15 post Year 7" test?
No, what I'm saying is that there are 3 schools who are systematically approaching boys based on their rugby ability. i.e. The schools or their agents are initiating the process rather than the boys or their parents. The usual process with bursaries and scholarships is that the school advertises them and then interested parties then apply. In the vast majority of cases this involves boys starting in Year 7 or Year 11.
The last sentence was clearly addressing your point about boys starting late who had siblings/fathers/grandfathers previously at the school.
I went to a CAS school and when I was in year 12 I'd guess that there were around 5 boys in the first XV who arrived after year 7.
None of them were on a sporting scholarship.
I don't accept that either Joeys or Riverview have clean hands when it comes to enticing promising rugby players to the schools.
Pre GFC I enquired with a GPS School regarding enrolments.
I was advised that unless you are wait listed in the first 10, it was extremely unlikely that a vacancy would occur in that cohort over the next 6 years.
So for 5 new arrivals to be of 1st XV quality is an unusually high hit rate.
In any event,does anyone credibly argue that Scots and New are not extremely active in the marketplace?
So true.
More red herrings on this thread than on a Scottish trawler.
Some people choose not to apply common sense for whatever reason.
Pre GFC I enquired with a GPS School regarding enrolments.
I was advised that unless you are wait listed in the first 10, it was extremely unlikely that a vacancy would occur in that cohort over the next 6 years.
So for 5 new arrivals to be of 1st XV quality is an unusually high hit rate.
In any event,does anyone credibly argue that Scots and New are not extremely active in the marketplace?
So five of Riverview's 2012 first XV started their rugby careers at the school in Year 10 or later (see #1198) - yet they have clean hands?
Which was a rehash of a previous post, explained by fleshman in post 1036 on page 52.
I think that your proposition only applies in strict terms to Grammar, High and probably Shore. I believe that all other GPS schools, including Riverview and Joeys, recruit rugby players but some just do it more subtly and on a lesser scale than others.
Traditionally Joeys have been the pinnacle school for the Marist brotherhood. As such, underprivileged and/or talented students from the 49 Marist member schools are invited to complete their education at Hunters Hill.
Appearances of scholarships is therefore clouded. Many an Australian Schoolboy has attended Joeys on these 'scholarships' for the needy.
At Riverview, a Jesuit school, they proudly state that there are over 80 bursaries. These are not sporting scholarships but many a disadvantaged student excels as a person when given the opportunity.
Traditionally Joeys have been the pinnacle school for the Marist brotherhood. As such, underprivileged and/or talented students from the 49 Marist member schools are invited to complete their education at Hunters Hill.
Appearances of scholarships is therefore clouded. Many an Australian Schoolboy has attended Joeys on these 'scholarships' for the needy.
At Riverview, a Jesuit school, they proudly state that there are over 80 bursaries. These are not sporting scholarships but many a disadvantaged student excels as a person when given the opportunity.
hey "angrydog" your name suits you!What a load of rubbish. Marist Canberra and Marist Ashgrove are probably the next strongest Marist rugby schools behind Joeys. Name one 'underprivilaged' kid who was invited to Joeys from either of these schools or any other for that matter who has gone on to play 1stXV or rep football ? Given Canberra has produced 30 odd Aussie schools reps (and 4 Wallabies and 4 current super players) and Ashgrove a similar number thats alot of these so called 'underprivilaged' that the pinnacle school let slip through the cracks. I can you tell you as an ex student of Canberra that this is untrue and actually rediculous. Where did you come up with this?
hey "angrydog" your name suits you!
I remember playing with John Maguire in the '70s who then left a leading Catholic school in Canberra to go to Joeys where I believe he played a couple of years in their 1sts at 5/8 alongside the future Wallaby Steve Williams. (not to be confused with another Maguire in the same ACT age teams). Remember, back in those days Woden was just built and Tuggeranong was farmland! Maybe you were not born at this time?
I think you may have mistaken this form of scholarship giving, i.e under the guise of helping the needy, for the practice used by Christian Brothers schools such as Eddies, Nudgee and Augustines. They have perfected the art and assisted many an impoverished Pacific islander to progress to the schools 1stXV and Aussie schools team under a 'Edmund Rice scholarship'.
Marist schools are definately not afflicted by any obsession to win rugby comps by the assistance of scholarship giving, so much so that Joeys and Canberra have in recent years notcieably declined in their standards and success rates as opposed to schools who are highly active in scholarship offerings.