ok maybe im a bit harsh in my post - ill grant that as it is important for schools to have a competition to play in .
What irks me is the prestige and "top rugby school in the country" tags that get heaped on schools like Eddies and Auggies (read pappa coached teams) for winning it constantly - I will however concede that at least Auggies play in a tough competition (ISA) . The years eddies won the waratah shield were in a severley weakened ASC competition .
My yearly moan post stems from the contiual decline in quality of opposition entering/forfeiting and generally not giving a shit in what once was a quality *and* prestigious tournament when both public and private schools either a) had a chance or b) gave a shit.
What ever happened to the Wiburd Shield? that was once upon a time the Year 10 equivalent of the Waratah Shield (again when schools cared) .
It's not so much that people don't care, but what we've seen in Sydney over the past 30 years (particularly the past 15) is a demographic change in what might be termed "traditional rugby areas".
What in essence has happened is that the populations in these areas are much more likely to go to a private school than they were in the 1970s or 1980s - particularly boys. Balgowlah Boys High had 1100 boys in the 1980s, now it has less than 600. North Sydney Boys has experienced the same demographic change as Sydney High - very few students are now from rugby backgrounds. Add to this that the average age of a state school teacher is about 58, so most of the rugby stalwarts have either: retired, been promoted away from school level, no longer have enough students to coach or have simply had enough.
There's also no way that a comprehensive state high school can match a private school with a rugby programme, so what gradually began to happen was that the early rounds started to have more and more mismatches. The weaker schools would play each other, but as soon as they came up against a school with a rugby programme, they'd just forfeit. Which gets us to where we are today - less than 20 schools enter and a few of them forfeit as well. You could pretty much pick the semi-finals before a match was played.
I don't like it any more than you do, but it's just the reality.
It just illustrates how ridiculous Nick Farr-Jones was last week when he advocated stronger CHS schools playing GPS schools - the reality on the ground has changed. The time for doing something has probably passed - 15 years ago there was a chance but no-one was interested.
The Waratah Shield winner is simply the Waratah Shield winner, it carries no more prestige than that. It bestows no cross association championship title whatsoever and never will.