Strange that after months of denying any sportsmen at Scots were on any form of assistance, we have heard no comment from the Scots defenders about the 61 bursary holders who are talented sportsmen.
Okay I'll give it a go, this is only my take on it mind you. I'm certainly not privy to which students are on any form of assistance (and it surprises me that so many others claim to be, but that's a separate issue).
Regarding the 61 "who could be described as talented sportsmen". Forgive me if I'm stating the obvious on some points, but here goes:
Firstly, the bursary process is based on a family's financial inability to pay the listed schedule of fees. Assuming at least a quarter of families might find GPS fees a quite considerable burden, they would at least apply (and this requires providing tax and bank statements etc).
If you pass this first hurdle (ie can't afford full freight), you are then put in a pool of 'possibles'.
Now, I'm the school money-man, and I have (out of the 50 applicants) a possible 30 kids who passed the financial requirements, to choose to award bursaries to. But the school can only fund say 10 kids. I'm going to look through the CV's (also required on application for bursary) of each of the 30 kids. What can they offer the school - ie. Are they 'contributors' in a wide range of areas? Have they shown themselves to be willing? Have they shown talent in any areas? Then I'm going to rank them in order of where I feel the school's bursary fund would be best spent.
Then it narrows down to interviews, let's say 20 are granted. Results from this may change the order of the pile slightly - some kids may be negative about the school, or painfully shy, or whatever, which may move them up or down the pile of 'possibles'. The school shuffles their pile, and make offers of bursaries to the top 10, and may or may not offer them to the next few if any are knocked back.
It seems to me just common sense that a school would look through the list of applications, and award bursaries to kids who will contribute (preferably in many ways) to the school. So some bursary kids (roughly a quarter according to the Scots figures) being good at sport is not really a surprise. Add to that, that the kids now access top-notch coaching, and you will almost certainly end up with more 'notable athletes' than you started with.
I feel the only problem is if students/families are approached by the school and are dangled a fee reduction as a carrot to attend, rather than families applying for bursaries or scholarships through the normal channels. THIS is where the line is crossed.