This may be dredging up an old thread. If thats a no no, I apologise. I am a bit of a club rugby noob and about to have boys go into the Brisbane GPS competition.
That GPS Rugby now has momentum and an entrenched position as the bastion of junior rugby development in Qld does not make that situation right or good.
I went to TSS, finished in the late 80's, played Rugby (just for the thirds with occasional games in the seconds through injury or illness), took no notice of the Brisbane GPS Rugby scene other than playing the games on a Saturday, never knew much about club rugby at all because other than school sport, I was a member at Northcliffe SLSC from Nippers. Now I have 2 boys in the BJRU (u8 and u10), private school just around the corner and it's a hell of a learning curve. A few of the eldest boy's Brother's team mates have started at private schools and I have been hearing the stories from a couple of the Dad's (all ex-Brisbane private school boys themselves) and it'd be amusing if it wasn't mildly disturbing. To say that it has become very full-on in the last couple decades could be the understatement of the century.
The 13/4/10 @6.31pm comment of Rugby Whisperer was enlightening for a couple of reasons - it's probably true and it reveals the deeply entrenched nature of the misplaced priority Rugby has achieved in the private school system in SE Queensland. Don't get me wrong, I love Rugby, I played Rugby at School, at Uni for Kings College and in a few "Corporate" teams later, my boys both play and are passionate about it and my eldest is even pretty bloody good, one of the best forwards at Brothers in the u10 competition. But when I assess schools I look at their OP's, their academic programs, their industry links and the quality of the teaching staff and resources, not last years premiership table. I mean, obsessive much? I'm sure very few parents really have that as a big priority but there must be at least the perception of demand from the parents for strong Rugby performance or we wouldn't see the things we are seeing. There is a point at which some well managed merits based scholarships for kids with exceptional ability in sport turns into an American style sports development industry driven by a very questionable and misplaced concept of prestige. What I see and hear is in that horribly grey area and heading in the wrong direction at the behest of some influential Type A parents, school program directors who's resource allocations and personal importance benefit from the attention and school administrators who have been tricked into believing the hype or browbeaten and blackmailed into compliance. It all just has the appearance of being well out of hand at this point and accelerating under it's own mass.
TSS has always had a Rugby/Rowing/Swimmming/Athletics culture. Academics were for the nerds. It was the same in the late 80's and not much has changed. Prefects etc were all sports guys and so were all of the Senior Promotions in the Army Cadet Unit. If you weren't in a First something, you were invisible in a school leadership sense. The Director of Studies had been asleep at the wheel for a decade and was 20 years past the age at which he should have been put out to pasture but when a House is named after you, I guess you're tenured. They never really seem to have managed to turn that around very effectively. The Brisbane private schools seem to be able to recruit like mad for Rugby while churning out enough OP1's however. They are very good at projecting the appearance of being just as focussed on academic achievement as sporting prowess, and maybe they are, but I wonder how the boys feel, particularly those with some rugby ability.
So what's the deal? Which are the Brisbane Schools private schools where they have a decent balance and aren't Rugby/Sports mentallists?