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  • Smooth sailing for big guns on day one of Old Petrian’s Water Polo Tournament

    The big guns were in fine form, sweeping their pools, on day one of the 19th edition of the Old Petrian’s Annual Girls U19 Water Polo Tournament, hosted by St. Peter’s College.

    The event got underway on Thursday morning and runs until Sunday afternoon when the creme de la creme will compete for the trophy.

    Two venues, St Peter’s Prep Girls and the Wahoo Aquatic Centre, are hosting the big 27-team event.

    First out of the blocks was Reddam House Constantia. The former champions played the opening game and got off to an absolute flier with a 12-1 drubbing of RustenburgLeading the charge was Hannah Banks.

    In 2023, Banks was one of the top scorers at the Inter-Provincial Tournament, where she helped Western Province reach the final. Her outstanding performances at the IPT earned her a maiden call-up to the South Africa Under-18 side. Against Rustenburg, she showed that class with five goals.

    Banks repeated the feat, netting another five, when Reddam downed Pretoria Girls 18-0.

    Defending champions St. Stithians put out a statement of intent on day one with back-to-back wins over 2022 champions, Crawford College (Lonehill), and Alexander Road.

    In their first match, the defending champions eased their way into the tournament with a 13-4 win in which seven players scored goals. Courtney Calenborne and Gina Sguazzin kicked off their campaigns with hat-tricks.

    Calenborne made it two hat-tricks in a day when she joined Erin Blackburn (5), Cadha Mosehla (4) and Hannah Lloyd (3) on a scoring spree that saw Saints put 23 goals past Alex Road with no reply. Unlike their showing against Crawford, where they made a few fouls and allowed the opposition opportunities on goal, the defending champs were clinical against Alex Road. They committed only one foul compared to Alex Road’s 10. 

    Durban Girls’ College came into the tournament feeling optimistic and buoyant following their title-winning campaign at the National Aquatic Festival, hosted by Maris Stella earlier in the month, and did not disappoint. Coach Peter Lavett’s team had no trouble converting those feelings into a match-winning performance.

    Kayla Andrews, who had a good u16 campaign at the Schools Water Polo South Africa Tournament, last December, led the KwaZulu-Natal team with eight goals across two matches. She netted six and two against St Peter’s and Rustenburg, respectively.

    Herschel shrugged off Rand Park‘s and Hudson Park‘s attempts at competition with emphatic wins. First, they dealt out a 23-0 whipping to Rand Park and then eased past Hudson Park 14-3. The star for Herschel in both matches was Emily van Heerden, who scored a total of seven goals.

    Pool A

    St. Stithians 13-4 Crawford
    Hudson Park 4-8 Kingswood
    Herschel 23-0 Rand Park
    Crawford 5-12 Kingswood
    Alex Road 0-23 St Stithians
    Herschel 14-3 Hudson Park
    Alex Road 7-6 Rand Park

    Pool B

    Kingsmead 1-6 St Mary’s
    Roedean 21-1 Springfield
    Chisipite 4-6 Stirling
    DSG 7-0 Springfield
    Kingsmead 1-8 Roedean
    DSG 7-4 Stirling

    Pool C

    Reddam Constantia 12-1 Rustenburg
    Durban Girls College 13-4 St Peter’s
    Pretoria Girls 0-18 St Dominic’s
    St Peter’s 3-8 Collegiate
    DGC 11-2 Rustenburg
    St Dominic’s 4-3 Collegiate
    Pretoria Girls 0-18 Reddam Constantia

    Pool D

    Reddam Helderfontein 0-13 St Anne’s
    Reddam Bedfordview 13-2 Westerford
    Pearson 10-1 Wynberg
    Clarendon 14-0 Westerford
    Pearson 5-6 St Anne’s
    Clarendon 18-1 Wynberg
    Reddam Bedfordview – Reddam Helderfontein

    Day 2, Friday 23 February 2024

    @ Wahoo Aquatic Centre

    07:00 – (25) Alex Road vs Rand Park; 07:35 – (26) Chisipite vs St Mary’s; 08:10 – (27) St Stithians vs Kingswood; 08:45 – (28) Stirling vs Springfield; 09:20 – (29) Crawford vs Herschel; 09:55 – (30) DSG vs Kingsmead; 10:30 – (31) Kingswood vs Alex Road; 11:05 – (32) Chisipite vs Springfield; 11:40 – (33) Rand Park vs Hudson;  12:15 – (34) St Mary’s vs Roedean; 12:50 – (35) Herschel vs St Stithians; 13:25 – (36) – Stirling vs Kingsmead; 14:00 – (37) Hudson vs Alex Road; 14:35 – (38) Roedean vs Chisipite; 15:10 – (39) Kingswood vs Herschel; 15:45 – (40) Kingsmead vs Springfield; 16:20 – (41) Rand Park vs Crawford; 16:55 – (42) St Mary’s vs DSG; 17:30 – (43) Herschel vs Alex Road; 18:05 – (44) Kingsmead vs Chisipite; 18:40 – (45) Hudson vs Crawford; 19:15 – (46) DSG vs Roedean; 19:50 – (47) Rand Park vs St Stithians

    @ St Peter’s Girls Prep School

    07:00 – (48) St Dominic’s vs Collegiate; 07:35 – (49) St Anne’s vs Wynberg; 08:10 – (50) Durban Girls vs Pretoria Girls; 08:45 – (51) Pearson vs Reddam Bedfordview; 09:20 – (52) Rustenburg vs St Peter’s; 09:55 – (53) Clarendon vs Wynberg; 10:30 – (54) St Dominic’s vs Reddam Constantia; 11:05 – (55) Westerford vs Reddam Helderfontein; 11:40 – (56) Collegiate vs Rustenburg; 12:15 – (57) Clarendon vs St Anne’s; 12:50 – (58) St Peter’s vs Pretoria Girls; 13:25 – (59) Wynberg vs Reddam Bedfordview; 14:00 – (60) Collegiate vs Reddam Constantia; 14:35 – (61) Clarendon vs Reddam Helderfontein; 15:10 – (62) Rustenburg vs Pretoria Girls; 15:45 – (63) Reddam Bedfordview vs St Anne’s; 16:20 – (64) St Dominic’s vs Durban Girls; 16:55 – (65) Pearson vs Westerford; 17:30 – (66) Pretoria Girls vs Collegiate; 18:05 – (67) Clarendon vs Reddam Bedfordview; 18:40 – (68) Reddam Constantia vs Durban Girls; 19:15 – (69) Reddam Helderfontein vs Pearson; 19:50 – (70) St Dominic’s vs St Peter’s

  • Top sides to battle it out for Old Petrian’s water polo title

    The 2024 water polo season reaches a fever pitch on the highveld as one of its most prestigious events splashes into action in Johannesburg this coming weekend.

    From Thursday, 22 February, at 10:00, St Peter’s College opens its doors as they host the Old Petrian’s Annual Girls U19 Water Polo Tournament, which culminates in the final at 15:40 on Sunday afternoon.

    Two venues, the Wahoo Aquatic Centre, in Sunninghill, and St. Peter’s Girls Prep, will host the five-day extravaganza, which brings together 27 of the best teams from around South Africa and one from Zimbabwe.

    Three-time winners, St. Stithians have set their sights on successfully defending the title they won in 2023. From 2019 to 2023, they had an incredible run, winning three trophies in five years, and that included 2021 when their run was interrupted by Covid-19, and 2022, when Crawford College (Lonehill) scooped their maiden title.

    While Coach Etienne Le Roux‘s charges are expected to progress from the group stages, it will not be a cakewalk for them. They are in Pool A, where they go up against three previous winners, Rand Park, Herschel and Crawford.

    Going on recent form, Herschel will be the team to beat. The Cape Town school made it to the final in 2023 and they will, no doubt, be aiming to go one better and earn their second Old Petrian’s title. At the end of January, Herschel, also, won the Brian Baker Water Polo Tournament in Makhanda, also against a high-quality field. They’ve clearly established their title credentials.

    Pool B includes two previous winners, St. Mary’s Waverley and Stirling. The more recent winner of those two was Stirling, who lifted the trophy in 2017. They will be up against Springfield, Roedean, Kingsmead and Zimbabwe’s Chisipite. Of all the pools, this could be the most open one, where all seven teams have a chance of progressing further.

    However, Roedean’s strong showing in the Prestige Cup last weekend suggests they’re a contender for the overall honours.

    The third pool is led by five-time champions, Reddam House Constantia. Coach Nick Tinkler‘s side has won more Petrian titles than any other school, and they will be keen to add a sixth to end an eight-year drought. While their group matches will be challenging, Reddam is expected to conquer the group. Their competitors include the hosts, St Peter’s, who would dearly like to add a second title to the one they claimed in 2012.

    KwaZulu Natal has two representatives at the tournament, St Anne’s and Durban Girls’ College (DGC). While Pool D contestants, St Anne’s, might not be on a short list of potential champions, DGC will bear watching.

    The 2023 semi-finalists and 2016 champions come into the tournament high in confidence after winning the National Aquatics Festival in Durban earlier in the month. They swept the group stages and beat St Mary’s Waverley 11-9 on penalties after a thrilling final had ended 7-7.

    DGC will not be easily shrugged aside. They face Reddam House Constantia, Collegiate, Pretoria High School for Girls, Rustenburg, St Peter’s and St Dominic’s in their group.

    Coach Hannah Muller’s Clarendon is on the hunt for a third title and leads Pool D. To progress, they’ll have to wrestle their way past 2018 champions Pearson, the two Reddams (Bedfordview and Helderfontein), St Anne’s, Westerford and Wynberg.

    Previous winners (last five years)

    St. Stithians – 2023
    Crawford – 2022
    St. Stithians – 2020
    St. Stithians – 2019
    Pearson – 2018

    Thursday

    Centre: 10:00 – Reddam Constantia vs Rustenburg; 10:35 – Reddam Helderfontein vs St Anne’s; 11:10 – Durban Girls vs St Peter’s; 11:45 – Reddam Bedfordview vs Westerford; 12:20 – Pretoria Girls vs St Dominic’s; 12:55 – Pearson vs Wynberg; 13:30 – St Peter’s vs Collegiate; 14:05 – Clarendon vs Westerford.

    St. Peters: 10:00 – Crawford vs St Stithians; 10:35 – Kingsmead vs St Mary’s; 11:10 – Hudson vs Kingswood; 11:45 – Herschel vs Rand Park; 12:20 – Roedean vs Springfield; 12:55 – Crawford vs Kingswood; 13:30 – Chisipite vs Stirling; 14:05 – Alex Road vs St Stithians; 14:40 – DSG (Makhanda) vs Springfield; 15:15 – Herschel vs Hudson; 15:50 – Kingsmead vs Roedean; 16:25 – DSG vs Stirling; 17:00 – Durban Girls vs Rustenburg; 17:35 – Pearson vs St Anne’s; 18:10 – Pretoria Girls vs Reddam Constantia; 18:45 – Reddam Bedfordview vs Reddam Helderfontein.

    Friday

    07:00 – Alex Road vs Rand Park; 07:35 – Chisipite vs St Mary’s; 08:10 – St Stithians vs Kingswood; 08:45 – Stirling vs Springfield; 09:20 – Crawford vs Herschel; 09:55 – DSG vs Kingsmead; 10:30 – Kingswood vs Alex Road; 11:05 – Chisipite vs Springfield; 11:40 – Rand Park vs Hudson; 12:15 – St Mary’s vs Roedean; 12:50 – Herschel vs St Stithians; 13:25 – Stirling vs Kingsmead; 14:00 – Hudson vs Alex Road; 14:35 – Roedean vs Chisipite; 15:10 – Kingswood vs Herschel; 15:45 – Kingsmead vs Springfield; 16:20 – Rand Park vs Crawford; 16:55 – St Mary’s vs DSG; 17:30 – Herschel vs Alex Road; 18:05 – Kingsmead vs Chisipite; 18:40 – Hudson vs Crawford; 19:15 – DSG vs Roedean; 19:50 – Rand Park vs St Stithians

    St Peters Girls Prep Pool

    07:00 – St Dominic’s vs Collegiate; 07:35 – St Anne’s vs Wynberg; 08:10 – Durban Girls vs Pretoria Girls; 08:45 – Pearson vs Reddam Bedfordview; 09:20 – Rustenburg vs St Peter’s; 09:55 – Clarendon vs Wynberg; 10:30 – St Dominic’s vs Reddam Constantia; 11:05 – Westerford vs Reddam Helderfontein; 11:40 – Collegiate vs Rustenburg; 12:15 – Clarendon vs St Anne’s; 12:50 – St Peter’s vs Pretoria Girls; 13:25 – Wynberg vs Reddam Bedfordview; 14:00 – Collegiate vs Reddam Constantia; 14:35 – Clarendon vs Reddam Helderfontein; 15:10 – Rustenburg vs Pretoria Girls; 15:45 – Reddam Bedfordview vs St Anne’s; 16:20 – St Dominic’s vs Durban Girls; 16:55 – Pearson vs Westerford; 17:30 – Pretoria Girls vs Collegiate; 18:05 – Clarendon vs Reddam Bedfordview; 18:40 – Reddam Constantia vs Durban Girls; 19:15 – Reddam Helderfontein vs Pearson; 19:50 – St Dominic’s vs St Peter’s

    Saturday

    07:00 – Westerford vs Wynberg; 07:35 – Reddam Constantia vs St Peter’s; 08:10 – Clarendon vs Pearson; 08:45 – Collegiate vs Durban Girls; 09:20 – Wynberg vs Reddam Helderfontein; 09:55 – Rustenburg vs St Dominic’s; 10:30 – St Anne’s vs Westerford

    11:30 – EXHIBITION MATCH

    12:30 – Play-off; 13:05 – Play-off; 13:40 – Play-off; 14:15 – Play-off; 14:50 – Quarterfinal Bowl; 15:25 – Quarterfinal Bowl; 16:00 – Quarterfinal Bowl; 16:35 – Quarterfinal Bowl; 17:10; Quarterfinal Cup; 17:55 – Quarterfinal Final Cup; 18:40 – Quarterfinal Final Cup; 19:25 – Quarterfinal Final Cup

    St Peters Girls Prep Pool 

    07:00 – Stirling vs St Mary’s; 07:35 – Crawford vs Alex Road; 08:10 – DSG vs Chisipite; 08:45 – Hudson vs St Stithians; 09:20 – Stirling vs Roedean; 09:55 – Kingswood vs Rand Park; 10:30 – Springfield vs St Mary’s; 12:30 – Quarterfinal Final Shield; 13:05 – Quarterfinal Shield; 13:40 – Quarterfinal Shield; 14:15 – Quarterfinal Shield

    Sunday

    07:00 – 25th-28th Play-off; 07:35 – 25th-28th Play-off; 08:10 – 17th-20th Play-off; 08:45 – 17th-20th Play-off; 09:20 – 5th-8th Play-off; 09:55 – 5th-8th Play-off; 10:30 – 27th/28th; 11:05 – 25th/26th; 11:40 – 23rd/24th; 12:15 – 19th/20th; 12:50 – 17th/18th; 13:25 – 15th/16th; 14:00 – 11th/12th; 14:35 – 7th/8th

    @Wahoo Aquatics Centre 

    07:00 – Semifinal Plate; 07:35 – Semifinal Plate; 08:10 – Semifinal Shield; 08:45 – Semifinal Shield; 09:20 – Semifinal Bowl; 09:55 – Semifinal Bowl; 10:30 – Semifinal Cup; 11:20 – Semifinal Cup; 12:10 – Shield Final; 12:50 – Bowl Final; 13:30 – Plate Final; 14:05 – 5th/6th; 14:45 – 3rd/4th; 15:40; Cup Final

  • Unflappable: 2023 SA Schools’ captain Beni Hansen

    Unflappable: 2023 SA Schools’ captain Beni Hansen

    Two memories from Beni Hansen‘s childhood stand out for his father.

    The first was when Beni left his own birthday party to hit some balls. The Hansens and a few friends had just finished eating the cake and were about to open the presents.

    As everyone scrambled to get in place, Beni appeared in the background, mini-bat in one hand and ball in the other, toddling to the backyard to play.

    The second is from a few years later. Shane Hansen walked in to check on his sleeping son and found him cuddling his brand-new Black Widow bat. It was the first real bat the boy owned and there was no better explanation for his love for it. Both moments were preserved for posterity, one in a video and the other in a picture.

    Beni tried his hand and excelled in various sports: rugby, swimming, football, tennis, and hockey. But his primary love was cricket, and his childhood is replete with bat and ball memories. His parents, Shane and Lisa, bought him cars, guns, Legos, and all the other stuff boys normally like. He would look at them but never took an interest in them. 

    “He was always asking me to come outside and throw balls so he could hit and practice catching,” says Shane.                                       

    When Earl Woods realised his son had a special talent, he took matters into his own hands and dedicated his life to developing Tiger into a golf champion. He famously jingled coins in his pocket while Tiger stood over putts, hurled projectiles through his line of sight, and even shouted as he went into his backswing.

    From an early age, cricket captured Benni Hansen's heart.
    From an early age, cricket captured Beni Hansen’s heart.

    Jenner Maponga, Beni’s coach from the time he was four, had a similar but different approach. He often corralled local kids and asked them to scream and shout at Beni during his net sessions.

    He often asked the older boys to sledge him. “He was a natural athlete. The game came easily to him. So, I decided that he needed mental strength training from an early age,” says Maponga.

    In 2009, a group of researchers carried out a study of Dutch footballers to identify psychological predictors for future success. They looked at factors that include goal commitment, problem-focused coping, and seeking social support.

    Seventy-two percent of players who did well in these areas as youngsters became elite athletes as adults. This trend also holds for cricket, a mentally challenging sport.

    The early training paid off for Beni, who spent his early years playing up the age groups. He made his under-10 debut at age seven and scored his maiden hundred two years later to prove that he was not in the team as an extra body in the field.

    A year after the ton, he scored his first 150. If there was a chink in his game, it was his susceptibility to being run out. He was one of the fastest kids at his school and took on the best throwers in the field more often than not.

    From a young age, Benni worked hard, demonstrating an ability to apply himself for long periods of time and the runs flowed.
    From a young age, Beni worked hard, demonstrating an ability to apply himself for long periods of time, and the runs flowed.

    Beni’s development also benefitted from the atmosphere at Sun Valley Primary School. His arrival coincided with the school’s best sporting years. “During Beni’s time there, they had four strong years of cricket. I mean, I can’t even remember the school losing a cricket match. And that was playing against Rondebosch, Bishops, and SACS. They were quite incredible,” says Shane.

    In addition to playing for his school, Beni also played club cricket for the All Rounder Cricket Academy. The Academy competed in various tournaments in and around Cape Town. Some of the tournaments earned top performers slots on overseas touring teams.

    At 11, Beni outperformed older boys and was part of a team that toured India for a fortnight. A year later, he made a squad that toured Sri Lanka. The two tours were organised by Hennie Claassens from Somerset CC.

    Claassens outdid himself on the Sri Lanka tour. Unlike the India tour where the youngsters played at smaller stadiums, mostly club cricket grounds, in Sri Lanka the kids played their matches at Pallekele and Galle cricket grounds. “It was just an unbelievable tour that he managed to organise to get them to play on Test grounds,” says Shane. 

    As a testament to his mental fortitude, in the first match, which was played barely 24 hours after they arrived in Sri Lanka, Beni came in to bat at number seven and scored an unbeaten 94 to guide the touring side to victory. He averaged 50 on the tour.

    In his happy place, with gloves on and bat in hand, 2024 SA Schools' captain Benni Hansen.
    In his happy place, with gloves on and bat in hand, 2024 SA Schools’ captain Beni Hansen.

    Arsene Wenger is renowned for his talent-spotting abilities. In 2011, he sat down to discuss the art with Four Four Two magazine. In the interview, he shared that it normally took him 20 minutes to make his mind up if a player had potential for the future.

    According to the former Arsenal manager, certain youngsters have talent and skills that are so obvious it might take less. “Lionel Messi, at 13 years of age, would have needed about one minute. I have seen tapes of him at 13,” Wenger told the reporter.

    It took Andrew Willey a handful of overs to make his mind up about Beni’s potential. The youngster first caught Willey’s eye when he was 12. “When I first saw him, Sun Valley was playing one of the local schools.

    He looked organised and technically sound,” says Willey, who did not waste time and immediately approached Beni’s parents and offered the boy a place at Jacques Kallis‘ alma mater, Wynberg Boys’ High.

    “It was a difficult two years for us. We had a few offers on the table, but Lisa and I did not want to decide for him. It was Beni’s future and we wanted him to pick the school he liked better. One time he asked me if he could go to Wynberg and still play for Rondebosch. Eventually he picked Wynberg because that’s where his hero, Kallis, went,” says Shane Hansen.

    In his early years, Beni was on the path to being an all-rounder in the mould of Jacques Kallis, bowling and batting. That changed when Jenner Maponga taught the youngster the art of wicketkeeping.

    Benni Hansen turned his talents to wicketkeeping in an effort to enhance his excellence with the bat.
    Beni Hansen turned his talents to wicketkeeping in an effort to enhance his excellence with the bat.

    Maponga’s intention had not been to turn the boy from bowling, it had been to help his batting. “Wicketkeepers read the pitch better than other players. I thought it would help him to play spin better,” says Maponga.

    It was a masterstroke that benefitted Wynberg in later years. “We didn’t have good players of spin and Beni was the one who held many innings together with his ability,” says Willey.

    Beni did for the school what Kallis did for South Africa. He was their middle-order cog. He stabilised the innings or moved the game forward, depending on what the match required. “He played the situation well and, most importantly, he was happy to move up or down the order, if needed. He was very flexible,” says Willey. 

    However, the most impressive thing about Beni Hansen, according to Willey, is his temperament. “One time, we were playing an away match on a tricky pitch. We didn’t score many runs and he was given out LBW to a horrendous delivery.

    He didn’t argue, he just put his bat under his arm and walked off the pitch,” he says.

    Beni is not given to tantrums, his parents actively discouraged toy-throwing and screaming as a method for him to draw attention to himself or his concerns from an early age. 

    “He is one of those youngsters who takes setbacks in his stride. It’s as if he understood from an early age that failure is part of cricket and sometimes decisions will not go your way,” says Wayne Hendricks.

    Hendricks and Beni have known each other since Beni’s days with All Rounder Cricket Academy. Hendricks ran the club and focused on coaching the older kids while Jenner Maponga provided foundational training. 

    The pair reunited when Beni moved into the hostels at Wynberg. Maponga, who had coached him until that point, was unable to make regular trips to the school to help Beni with his training and Shane and Lisa reached out to Hendricks to see if he could step in. Hendricks was more than happy to take over.

    “When Beni was young, he and Jenner would train for hours because he enjoyed training so much. That has not changed, he enjoys training so much we lose track of time,” says Hendricks, who says their sessions do not focus on technique too much. Instead, they focus on processes.

    One of Beni’s lifelong dreams had always been to be selected for the SA Under-19 team and missing out on being part of the 15-member squad taking part in the 2024 Under-19 World Cup was the biggest setback of his young career. “He got in touch with me a day or two after the team announcement. He was hurting and we had a 45-minute chat, and after that he was back to his old self again, smiling. He understood that it wasn’t the end of the world for him, and more chances would come,” says Hendricks.

    The next weekend after the chat, Beni, who had never opened the batting, was asked to open the innings for Claremont Cricket Club. Claremont’s regular opener, Western Province’s Daniel Smith was unavailable. Beni took up the challenge and smashed a brilliant unbeaten 84 that was capped off by a reverse lap off a fast bowler for six.

    A week after that performance against Primrose Cricket Club, Beni scored a masterful 114 against the Titans at the Coca-Cola Khaya Majola Week and finished the tournament as the third-highest run-scorer, scooped the Player of the Tournament award, and was named the SA Schools‘ captain.

    “It’s seldom that people speak of players that bring out the best in the coaches. Most of the time, the conversation revolves around coaches who bring out the best in the players. I have coached for 20 years and not many kids have brought out the best in me like Beni,” says Wayne Hendricks.