It’s the rugby lows for Sydney High
By Spiro Zavos, 26 Feb 2009 Spiro Zavos is a Roar Expert
- Tagged:
- GPS rugby, Sydney Boys High School rugby
The Sydney Morning Herald, another Sydney institution facing hard times, on 25 February, 2009 carried the brilliant and sad headline about the fate of rugby at Sydney Boys High, Worst XV: Sydney Boys Drops The Ball After 100 Years Of Rugby.
The story beneath the headline carried the news that Sydney Boys High would no longer be part of the Greater Public Schools First XV rugby. The iconic chocolate and blue striped rugby jersey is now relegated to Second XV and lower grade rugby.
And so an adventure that started in 1906 with Sydney Boys High being the first and only government school in the GPS rugby First XV rugby tournament has ended.
After two seasons of losses, with the ‘best’ result a 43-5 thrashing by Newington in 2006 and 2007, and a final defeat in 2008 at the hands of St Josephs 112-0, it is clearly time to bow to the inevitable and concede that Sydney Boys High will never in the future be able to put on a competitive First XV to play the GPS heavyweights.
For many decades, rugby was carried in a sense by a head master Bob Outterside (a former Wallaby) and a gifted coach, Tony Hannon.
Hannon, particularly, developed a number of backs who went on to have professional rugby and rugby league careers: Jason Jones-Hughes, Duncan McRae, Marc Stcherbina, Chris Whitaker and Craig Wing (the best of all his talented youngsters, Hannon once told me).
In the long history of the school’s involvement in the GPS First XV tournaments, players and coaches like John Brass, Peter Crittle, Bob Dwyer, Alan Gaffney, Peter Johnson, John Thornett (one of the greatest of all Wallabies) and Phil Smith played with distinction for the Sydney Boys High First XV.
But I think, too, of the thousands of boys who got their first taste of rugby playing at MacKay Oval in Centennial Park.
For most of them, the closest they got to making the First XV was lining up to make the tunnel when the team trotted out on to the field. But they got a taste of the great game, something that enhanced the lives of many of them.
These kids went on to become Prime Minister (Sir Earle Page), judges (Lionel Murphy), the NSW Governor-General (Sir Roden Cutler), Rhodes Scholars (ten of them, starting with Ethelbert Southee in 1913), film-makers (George Miller), actors (Russell Crowe, Jack Thompson), authors (John Kingsmill, John Pilger), a Nobel Prize winner (Professor John Cornforth), and conductors (Richard Bonynge, who married Dame Joan Sutherland and shaped her career and her singing).
And this short list gives the clue to the demise of serious rugby at Sydney Boys High. The school has produced more Rhodes Scholars than Wallabies. In 2001, it was ranked as the fifth-ranked school in Australia for entries in The Australian Who’s Who.
This is a story I’ve told before, but I think it sums up the dilemma for Sydney Boys High and the improbabilities of an academically selective high school having enough youngsters of body mass, brawn and speed to create formidable First XVs.
As the school became more and more selective, covering the whole of Sydney rather than the best of the eastern suburbs, this dilemma intensified.
The changing ethnicity of the bright kids from the Anglo-Celtic kids of the working classes around Bondi Junction and the Jewish kids from Bondi to the smaller Asian kids who have started to dominate the HSC top scholar lists in the last two decades meant that football was going to be the sport of choice of most of the boys, not rugby.
I was chatting with Tony Hannon near the Sydney Boys High entrance gate one sunny afternoon when a small Vietnamese boy, dressed to the hilt in his new uniform, came towards us. He was carrying a violin.
“Look at that lad,” Hannon said to me in a sort of mock despair. “I’m supposed to produce strong first fifteens from kids like that.”
He was, and for many years he did.
I remember one memorable year in the 1990s when Sydney Boys High actually defeated a very good Joeys side. The next year, if I remember correctly, Joeys exacted a terrible revenge thrashing SBH 76-0.
The Joeys side, which had Matt Burke in it, played so well I told one of my sons at the end of the match when the Joeys youngsters were racing around the ground in high spirits that “We were lucky to get 0.”
Many rugby people, especially those from the western suburbs, believe that there is too much media attention and interest invested in GPS rugby. And, in recent years, this is probably correct.
The days are now long gone when NSW and the Wallabies were virtually all manned by former GPS old boys, with the occasional player from Newcastle and the western suburbs.
Professional rugby since 1996 has led to youngsters from government schools all over NSW aspiring to careers in rugby where once only rugby league could give them a chance of playing rugby and making money from their skills in the code.
This is a great thing for Australian rugby with players like George Smith becoming rugby legends when in previous years he would surely have been snaffled up by one of the rugby league clubs to become one of that code’s star players.
Some of us, though, will always get a special thrill when we watch a GPS First XV match.
This is a storied tournament that started in 1892. It is probably the longest and most famous school tournament in the rugby world. Until the last couple of decades, most of the great names of Australian rugby started off their playing days in this tournament.
Some of them, such as Nick Farr-Jones and Phil Kearns, famously never made the First XV. But for decades the Wallabies took their character and their style from the GPS tournament.
In the first edition of Jack Pollard’s magisterial Australian Rugby Union: The Game and the Players, on page 694, there is a photograph of Sydney Boys High’s famous premiership side of 1963, with the blond-haired Phil Smith as captain, and on the far right of the front row of players and coaches a determined-looking John Brass.
Pollard’s caption for the photograph reads: “One of the most entertaining of recent Australian Schoolboy sides.”
So that’s how I want to remember the First XV’s of Sydney Boys High: entertaining, tough, often beaten but never defeated in spirit.
As the Sydney Morning Herald quoted Nic Lochner, a recent old boy, saying: “The boys trained and put in their best. No one was afraid to go out there every week and take on the other schools.”
Photo from the High Rugby Friends website
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February 26th 2009 @ 9:49am
Tim said | February 26th 2009 @ 9:49am | Report comment
Dantheman: It depends what you’re looking to develop your students into. The majority of my colleagues have never properly played a sport in their lives, yet they all have secure, high paying jobs and will until the day they decide that they don’t want to work any more. Good grades in high school and University guarantee you that much; being an all-rounder with a balanced education does not. Having had considerable experience with selective schools, I would have to say that the parents of the children there want the guarantee, and not only are happy with one dimensional academics, but would actually be quite adverse to anything else.
A similar attitude prevails in many Asian countries, where good school marks are everything. I don’t really think the ‘school board’ has much to do with it.
February 26th 2009 @ 10:47am
Worlds Biggest said | February 26th 2009 @ 10:47am | Report comment
Great article Spiro, your connection to the School has been documented in some of your previous articles. High have produced so many great players mentioned by other bloggers. I think Chris Hawkins ( ex Waratah Coach ) was also a High old boy. The situation at Sydney High is very similar to Patrician Brothers Fairfield. A once great League nursery that produced Greg Alaxander and Peter Sterling. A mate of mine that went to school there mentioned that Pats Fairfield no longer has a League program. I don’t know if that is the case or not but they certainly don’t field a team in the Commonwealth Bank Cup. Like High, Pats has turned more into an Academic school where Asian students dominate. By and large they have no interested in collision sports like League and Union.
February 26th 2009 @ 10:58am
Old Pig said | February 26th 2009 @ 10:58am | Report comment
First time comment but long time reader.
Agree with the direction Sheek is taking on this matter. I have a son playing in the CAS system (junior school) and for a while now i have wondered why the GPS/CAS/others couldn’t get together to form a more relevant competition. Perhaps 2 divisions (Div 1 & Div 2) with relegation based on performance with a few trial games & even a 7′s comp to add another dimension. First few years would be interesting to watch don’t you think?
This would go some way to providing a greater number of games per season and an opportunity for a more diverse and stronger competition. May even get a broadcaster interested in TV rights etc. From where i sit (relatively new to the current school rugby scene) there are too many fingers in the already shrinking pie for all to benefit in the long term.
While i can appreciate the history (or hysterics as some would believe) of the private school system and the importance placed on rugby and participation i believe its time to look beyond the idealistic notions that seem to prevail in most GPS & CAS institutions and offer up a really dynamic and challenging rugby competition that kids will want to be part of.
Remember, football is having an impact on player number both at school & at local club levels so a push to broaden rugby’s appeal can only be a good thing in my books.
Cheers
February 26th 2009 @ 11:13am
True Tah said | February 26th 2009 @ 11:13am | Report comment
Old Pig,
P & R wouldnt work in schools rugby, however comps based on geography could work, how this would work, Im not 1005 sure, you would have the likes of Joeys playing Hunters Hill High, whilst HHH have beaten Joeys’ 1st XV in the past, it was not recent.
I think futbol’s influence in the private schools will be telling in that ultimately it will force Aust rugby to find an alternative…having said that, I dont think being in the private schools will deliver any massive net gain for futbol overall either.
February 26th 2009 @ 11:23am
onside said | February 26th 2009 @ 11:23am | Report comment
Similar story in Melbourne.For decades past Melbourne High School was an Aussie rules powerhouse.
The team played on Saturday mornings and some midweek contests..Many boys were good enough to
play the then VFL thirds,the main game before the senior AFL game on a Saturday.If they chose AFL
(a clearly superior competition)they could not play for the school.Clear choice ,thats it regardless of
ability.Like Sydney Boys High school the sporting talent that came from MHS was legendary. I was
there in the mid 1950′s.MHS like SBHS was situated in South Yarra an inner sububan area.Outside of
some illustrious streets ,most of the houses in South Yarra and surrounding areas were working class.
Single fronted,no garage,no front yard.In site of a huge Brewery and a malt factory.MHS like SBHS is
a state school that competes in the elite public school sporting competitons.There was an entrance
exam but as my age is now higher than my IQ I can no longer recall how I became a student.As real
estate values increased in inner city areas ,shrewd Asian and Indian migrant families bought properties
in the area because they understood 1.the advantage of inner city living and 2.the incalculable value of
a good education. Subsequently ,or perhaps coincidentally property values excluded ‘old’ Australian
families.Two friends of mine I went to school with,both high up in the judiciary,present an annual award
put together on behalf of a mate who died.Standing on the school podium,looking out at the thirteen
hundred students at assembly my legal mate told me,’It was like being at Hong Kong High.’ Things change.
In the fifties MHS was one of only six high schools in Melbourne were you could matriculate ,ie University
entrance.The face of Australia has changed,infact improved enormously.With it the face of sport in inner
city schools.The once proud MHS old boys team, that played in the highest amature competition,struggles
to cobble together a side and joined forces with I cant remember who ,to compete in relative obscurity.
Likewise tug of war;thats stuffed.But I am proud to say MHS excells at badminton, and table tennis .My
friend recently retired as president of the old boys association.His son just finished year 12,.He tells of
Asian students besotted by study to the extent he got to know very few of them.They were on a mission
would come into class,and dissapear very quickly.Not interested in socialising or sport.In four years he
found it very difficult to befriend these students, such was their comittment to study.I have no doubt in
a different life all us old Aussies would be the same.I was a migrant.A ten quid pom who lived in Nissan
huts in migrant hostels.I was lucky.How would you like to be forced to migrate to say Vietnam where
the alphabet was different. But I digress. SBHS should let rugby go,and focus on things that reflect the
current school culture.Things change. Serious rugby at SBHS was in the same era as,tiled bars in pubs,
poker machines in illegal casinos,smoking in doctors waiting rooms, Now the new Aussies,the Asian
Aussies, seem to run most of them.Doing a good job too.
February 26th 2009 @ 11:24am
sheek said | February 26th 2009 @ 11:24am | Report comment
True Tah,
Another problem is whether the private schools could cope with playing at the local ground of a govt school. It would be a culture shock, to say the least!
On the other hand, the private schools would be terrified of vandalism & looting from govt school louts.
Excuse me, but I suddenly find the whole concept outrageously amusing…………………
February 26th 2009 @ 11:33am
onside said | February 26th 2009 @ 11:33am | Report comment
Sheek,
Maggie Thatcher solved the vandalism problem. She sold what was perceived as excess school playing
fields, for housing estates.Terminal decision. Thats why the Poms are so good at darts and snooker.
February 26th 2009 @ 11:36am
True Tah said | February 26th 2009 @ 11:36am | Report comment
sheek
imagine the shock some private school boys when they leave school and play in subbies, some of the grounds are woeful, Lapstone Oval was a classic with a big pile of dirt and woodchips in the middle and Hills home ground Yattenden Park was another one (where I ripped my ACL).
Maybe instead of focusing on private school rugby, there should be increased focus on junior club rugby.
onside
I agree that Sydney High should give up on rugby, the kids that go to Sydney High do not want to play rugby, I guess sport might not be a priority for them, Spiro will probably have me banned from the Roar from uttering such blasphemy.
February 26th 2009 @ 11:59am
Old Pig said | February 26th 2009 @ 11:59am | Report comment
True Tah,
You say P & R won’t work in the private system and that zones will, but your not 100% sure. Seems like your having an each way bet to me. While i agree its not a perfect solution it would certainly open the cometition up to some very interesting rugby and I’m assuming the likes of Joeys, Riverview etc. won’t always be at the to of the plie. To me its has got to be better that the rather insulated and short term competition being offered up by these schools today.
Sheek,
Funny man………………i think.
February 26th 2009 @ 1:26pm
Worlds Biggest said | February 26th 2009 @ 1:26pm | Report comment
TT – I don’t want to digress too much but I had to laugh about the Private School Boys first taste of Subbies Rugby Grounds. Good old Lapo Oval playing against the big old grizzly Mountain Men. Matraville Oval and Ray Price Field are other crackers.
Following on from Spiro’s article, with the demise of 1st XV Rugby at High I wonder wether this will occur at Schools like Newington and Grammar. Grammar has had it’s issues before however Newington seem to be still competing. Scots has a strong Rugby history so should remain competitve . The other four Schools have greater student numbers therefor dominate the underage groups up to Opens in Rugby. If you go back the last ten years, Riverview, Joeys, Shore & Kings have all won or shared 1st XV premierships on at least a couple of occasions. Scots and Newington may put out a good team every few years while Grammar ( who are more competitive these days ) and in particular High have fought for the wooden spoon.