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  • Big sponsorship boost for u20 Women’s Rugby

    JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA – JULY 02: Players battle it out during day 2 of the SA Rugby U16 and U18 Girls Weeks match between the Sharks and the Griquas at Jeppe High School for Boys on July 03, 2024 in Johannesburg, South Africa. (Photo by Sydney Seshibedi/Gallo Images)

    SA Rugby and R10 confirmed an exciting new sponsorship and competition structure involving the Junior Springbok Women that will boost the exposure of the game at junior level across the African continent.

    The Junior Springbok Women will pit themselves play against Tunisia, Uganda and the San Clemente Rhinos in three matches in the international R10 African u20 Women’s Series at Paul Roos Gymnasium’s Markötter Stadium, starting on Monday.

    The 28-player Junior Springbok Women’s squad was also confirmed on Thursday. They will be coached by Flash Malinga, with Mandisa Williams, Eddie Myners and Zenay Jordaan assisting him.

    The squad was finalised after the completion of the u20 Women’s Week played in Johannesburg. Western Province, who finished as one of two unbeaten teams at the week, are best represented with nine players.

    Rian Oberholzer, CEO of SA Rugby, hailed the announcement of the sponsorship and the announcement of the SA u20 squad as an exciting new chapter in the history of women’s rugby in South Africa.

    “Our Junior Springbok Women have only ever played in once-off matches, and for them to be competing in a series with three other teams is really special,” said Oberholzer.

    “We know the value of having a healthy player development pipeline and this will definitely be a big positive to our women’s programme.

    “I’d also like to thank R10 for their sponsorship of the R10 African U20 Women’s Series, which will also feature Uganda, Tunisia and the San Clemente Rhinos.

    “It was clear at the U20 Women’s Week in Johannesburg that there was something bigger to play for and the quality of the rugby went up a notch or two.

    “Without investment from sponsors, our game will struggle and in this regard we’re very grateful to R10 for getting involved in South African rugby.”

    Andreea Trufasu, CEO of Rugby Tens (R10), said: “At R10, we pride ourselves as an organization that meaningfully contributes to equality in sport.

    “We are thankful for the collaboration with SA Rugby to make this international event possible for the u20 ladies, which is a demographic often under-resourced yet critical to the development of national teams.”

    The opening round of fixtures of the R10 African U20 Women’s Series on Monday 30 September will feature San Clemente Rhinos taking on Tunisia at 10h00, and South Africa will face Uganda at 12h00.

    On Friday 4 October, the San Clemente Rhinos will play Uganda in the first match, followed by the Junior Bok Women against Tunisia.

    The final round takes place on Tuesday 8 October, when Uganda take on Tunisia, before the Junior Bok Women and the San Clemente Rhinos will contest the final match of the tournament.

    Junior Springbok Women squad:

    Backs: Donëy Filies, Leigh Fortuin (Western Province), Kwanga Majebe, Tiarisha Maritz, Naima Hlatshwayo (Blue Bulls), Robyn Strydom (Free State), Lidene Kruger (Griquas), Jane Mulder (Golden Lions), Sisonke Hewu, Charlize Jacobs (Eastern Province), Melissa Younie (Sharks), Sindisiwe Mbonja, Lilitha Vakalisa (Border).

    Forwards: Anuschka Ekron, Anushka Groenewald, Sarah Krone, Arzydia Komar, Bronishia Hess, Kelly Mckenna, Sesona Mbengo (Western Province), Sinathi Mzamo, Emihle Mayitshe (Border), Dembe Mbengeni, Sinoxolo Soga (Eastern Province), Dineo Ndhlovu, Abigail Smit (Blue Bulls), Micky Kapa, Sinothile Bhengu (Sharks).

    Issued by SA Rugby Communications

  • Keulder klink Jansies se doppie, Slabbert en Janse van Rensburg boelie Trekkers

    Keulder klink Jansies se doppie, Slabbert en Janse van Rensburg boelie Trekkers

    Cricket bat and helmet on field during sunny dayAfrikaanse Hoër Seunskool se Hanro Keulder het gemaai onder Hoërskool Dr. EG Jansen se kolwers om Affies se tweede span tot ‘n 26-lopie-sege op die derde dag van die Izintaba Gimmies-Krieketfees te lei.

    Herleef al die aksie op SuperSport Schools(www.supersportschools.com)

    Dit was spoedig duidelik, nadat Keulder die nuwe bal geneem het, dat hy die Jansies heelwat hoofbrekens sou besorg. Die aanvangsbouler het vyf paaltjies laat spat, terwyl hy slegs 34 lopies in sy toegelate 10 beurte afgestaan het.

    Hy het met slegs 16 van sy totale 60 balle lopies afgestaan en 44 leë aflewerings afgevuur.

    Die Jansies se Jaco Engelbrecht, wat eers op nege gekolf het, het weer uitgeblink om 54 lopies in te ryg. Juan Ungerer het ook sy staal gewys met ‘n blitsige 52 lopies, terwyl die Jansies se kaptein, Adrian Ristow, teen ‘n lopie per bal gekolf het vir sy 46. Ristow het ook met die bal bygedra en drie paaltjies geëis.

    Die Affie-kolwers was egter nét ‘n rapsie beter en Iwan van der Lith en SF Vermeulen het die beurt netjies afgeskop met ‘n vennootskap van 106. Van der Linth was ook die Pretorianers se voorste kolwer met 63 lopies, terwyl Vermeulen sy deel bygedra het met 33.

    Blake Curtain het weer hand opgsteek met ‘n waardevolle 45 lopies, met Dylan Koegelenberg (44) kort op sy hakke. Dit was ook danksy hierdie bydraes dat Affies uiteindelik koning gekraai het.

    Hoërskool Klerksdorp se Danre Slabbert en Stephan Janse van Rensburg het Hoërskool Voortrekker van Bethlehem ‘n behoorlike krieketles geleer.

    Slabbert het nie op hom laat wag met die nuwe bal nie en sonder veel moeite die hart uit Voortrekker se kolflys geruk met syfers van 5/30. Sy vennoot, Brendan Matthyse, het verdere sout in die wonde gesmeer met twee paaltjies om die span van Bethlehem tot slegs 111, die sogenaamde Nelson, te beperk.

    Daarna was dit Janse van Rensburg se beurt om die kollig te steel en die aanvangskolwer het die jaagtog bykans manalleen afgehandel. Hy het ‘n blitsige 96 nie uit nie, van slegs 35, gemoker, Sy beurt, wat agt viere en sewe sesse ingesluit het, het die Klerksdorpers in staat gestel om die teiken, sonder die verlies van ‘n paaltjie, in die agtste beurt te kon bereik en met 10 paaltjies te wen.

    Wian Munnik se beurt van 80 lopies het vir Paarl Gimnasium tot nóg ‘n puik oorwinning van 38 lopies gehelp, dié keer oor Hoërskool Kempton Park. Adriaan Louw (33) het goeie ondersteuning gebied om die span van die Paarl tot ‘n totaal van 205 te neem. Die Kempies se Kaden Posthumus was die grootste gevaar met die bal en het twee paaltjies vir slegs 18 lopies laat kantel.

    Die Kempies se kolwers kon nie heeltemal kers vashou by dié van Gimnasium nie. JJ Havenga het goed gevaar om 34 aan te teken maar was kort daarna een van Charles King se drie slagoffers.

    Matt Dippenaar het die meeste skade aangerig met sy vyf paaltjies wat die Kempies se kolflys in duie laat stort het. Wat sy vertoning des te meer indrukwekkend gemaak het is dat hy slegs nege lopies afgestaan het in die 5.4 beurte wat hy afgestuur het.

    Beknopte telkaarte: 

    Affies 2de XI 263/9 (Iwan van der Lith 63, Blake Curtain 45, Dylan Koegelenberg 44, SF Vermeulen 33; Jayden Barnes 3/35, Adrian Ristow 3/50, Andre Pretorius 2/27); Dr. EG Jansen 238 (Jaco Engelbrecht 54, Juan Ungerer 52, Adrian Ristow 46, Egan Pretorius 36; Hanro Keulder 5/34). Affies 2de XI wen met 26 lopies.

    Voortrekker 111 (Henry Janse van Rensburg 44, Joel Coetzee 21; Danre Slabbert 5/30, Brendan Matthyse 2/15); Hoërskool Klerksdorp 115/0 (Stephan Janse van Rensburg 96*). Hoërskool Klerskdorp wen met tien paaltjies.

    Paarl Gimnasium 205 (Wian Munnik 80, Adriaan Louw 33; Kaeden Posthumus 2/18, Warren Pretorius 2/33, Martin Williams 2/49); Hoërskool Kempton Park 167 (JJ Havenga 34, Marko Richter 25, Wian Pieters 23, Floors Mynhardt 20, Sheldon Kruger 20; Matt Dippenaar 5/9, Charles King 3/39). Paarl Gimnasium wen met 38 lopies.

  • Stellies slaan terug, Hashim en Montanus blink uit vir MV

    Stellies slaan terug, Hashim en Montanus blink uit vir MV

    FOTO: Verskaf deur Hoërskool Marais Viljoen

    Nadat Hoërskool Stellenberg se kolwers effens gesukkel het oor die eerste twee dae van die Izintaba Gimmies-Krieketfees, het die manne van die Wes-Kaap uiteindelik die nodige ritme gevind om ‘n wenvertoning aanmekaar te slaan.

    Herleef al die aksie op SuperSport Schools(www.supersportschools.com)

    Die Kapenaars se algehele kolfvertoning het verseker dat hulle vir Hoërskool Monument met ‘n gerieflike 109 lopies kon troef.

    Aanvangskolwer, Mortie Viljoen, het die kolfbeurt gelei en ‘n stewige grondslag vir die res van die kolwers daargestel met 59 lopies. Sy volwasse beurt het van 72 aflewerings gekom en 10 viere en ‘n ses ingesluit.

    Jan Jak Alberts het daarop voortgebou om sy span se posisie verder te versterk met 46 lopies, terwyl Wilhelm Smet ook die 40-kerf kon verbysteek vir 41. Danksy ‘n paar ander waardevolle bydraes deur die res van die toporde kon Stellies ‘n uiters verdedigbare 304/9 in hul toegelate 50 beurte op die bord plaas.

    Monument se Rieghardt Prinsloo het uitgeblink met die bal. Hy het koelkop gebly onder taamlike druk om drie Stellenberg-kolwers pawiljoen toe te stuur. Tshepo Mlambo (2/26) en Joshua McCoy, wat homself weer onder die paaltjies bevind het met syfers van 2/52, het goeie ondersteuning gebied.

    Hul stewige kolfvertoning het nuwe wind in die Stellies se seile geblaas en dit was verál Lohann Pretorius wat uitgeblink het met die bal. Pretorius, wat die boulbeurt oopgemaak het, het na 10 beurte gespog met puik syfers van 4/62, terwyl Kyle van Stanten drie paaltjies vir 46 lopies in sy agt beurte laat kantel het.

    Werner Durrheim, Monnas se uitstaande kolwer die afgelope paar dae, het weer die verantwoordelikheid op sy skouers geneem en nog ‘n vyftigtal bygedra, voordat hy vir ‘n waardevolle 58 teruggekeer het kleedkamer toe.

    Ongelukkig kon slegs Rieghardt Prinsloo verder ‘n noemenswaardige bydrae lewer. Prinsloo het hard gewerk vir 24 lopies, maar die Stellies se boulwerk was eenvoudig té skerp en het die span van Krugersdorp tot 195 almal uit beperk.

    Rieshaeel Hashim en Ryan Montanus was Hoërskool Marais Viljoen se helde in hul sege oor die gasheerskool, Potchefstroom Gimnasium. Hashim, wat eers op sewe vir die span van Alberton kom kolf het, het nie op hom laat wag nie en slegs 54 aflewerings benodig vir sy 74 lopies. Verdere bydraes deur kaptein, Jaden Govender (33), en Jordann Lategan (31) het verseker dat Marais Viljoen 244 kon bereik.

    Caden Seleka se pragbeurt van 65 lopies en Juandre Barends se 44 het Marais Viljoen se harte vir ‘n oomblik in hul keel laat klop.

    Dit was egter totdat Ryan Montanus sy ritme gevind het om vier paaltjies plat te trek. Dit het die vuur onder Abdullah Tadwala aangesteek, wat op sy beurt ‘n web om die Gimmie kolwers gedraai en uiteindelik met syfers van 3/45 kon spog vir sy span om met 13 lopies te seëvier.

    Xavier Coetzee het sy skitterende spelpeil voortgesit om nóg 95 lopies op sy kerfstok vir die week te plaas en te verseker dat die Moories met 23 lopies oor Boland Landbou koning kraai. Aiden Shaw het goeie bystand gebied met 50 lopies. Die Bolanders se Rease Human het die meeste skade met die bal aangerig en met syfers van 4/32 gespog.

    Matthew Geldenhuys het bestendig gekolf vir sy 60 lopies om die span van die Wes-Kaap byna oor die wenstreep te kry. Dit was egter nóg ‘n Shaw, Kenan Shaw, wat die krane toegedraai het. Shaw het die Moories se boulaanval gelei met vier paaltjies om te verseker dat Boland Landbou slegs 229 kon aanteken.

    Beknopte telkaarte: 

    Stellenberg 304/9 (Mortie Viljoen 59, Jan Jak Albert 46, Wilhelm Smet 41, Ethan Vermeulen 33, Liam Jacobs 28, JJ Rothman 20; Rieghardt Prinsloo 3/65, Tshepo Mlambo 2/26, Joshua McCoy 2/52); Monument 195 (Werner Durrheim 58, Rieghardt Prinsloo 24, Antonie van Niekerk 22; Lohann Pretorius 4/62, Kyle van Santen 3/46, Jan Jak Alberts 2/21). Stellenberg wen met 109 lopies.

    Marais Viljoen 244 (Rieshaeel Hashim 74, Jaden Govender 33, Jordann Lategan 31, Jordan Baijnath 26; Henre Cronje 2/30, Margeo Joubert 2/36, Tommie Botha 2/39, Thlone Thabata 2/46); Potchefstroom Gimnasium 231 (Caden Seleka 65, Juandre Barends 44, Divan Val Eldik 22, Benjamin van Wyk 22; Ryan Montanus 4/39, Abdullah Tadwala 3/45). Marais Viljoen wen met 13 lopies.

    Hans Moore 252 (Xavier Coetzee 95, Aiden Shaw 50, Kenan Shaw 29, Kearan Weyers 27; Rease Human 4/32, Markus Groenewald 2/43); Boland Landbou 229 (Matthew Geldenhuys 60, Lohann Louw 32, Marius du Plessis 29, Kobus Conradie 28; Kenan Shaw 4/46, Henre Everleigh 2/33, Brenton Francis 2/55). Hans Moore wen met 23 lopies.

  • Player Profile: Joe MacRobert (St John’s College)

    Joe MacRobert had watched from behind the stumps as Armaan Manack and Matthew West scythed through his bowlers. It was a blood bath. The St John’s College captain deployed eight bowlers to try and stem the flow of runs, but all looked impotent against the duo. They scored a combined 265 as they catapulted St David’s Marist Inanda to 346 in their 50-over-a-side match.

    “They are about 30 runs short,” Bongani Ntini, the St John’s coach, told MacRobert during the innings break.

    In 2006, Jacques Kallis walked into a dispirited South Africa dressing room after Australia had scored a mammoth 434/4 in the fifth one-day international at The Wanderers and remarked that the visitors were about 20 runs below par. Everyone agreed that the pitch was good for batting, but Kallis’s comment solidified the belief that 434 was not an impossible total to chase. South Africa scored 438 to win with a ball to spare and make history.

    Ntini’s comment had a similar effect on MacRobert. It assured him that the task before him was not unattainable. With his mind freed from the fear of failure, he walked out to bat with one thing on his mind, “Go and have fun”.

    That’s what his father, Gus, always told him before matches or tours. “What we have always said to him is go and have fun. Especially on tours, we tell him to go and enjoy the time with friends and meet new friends,” Gus shared.

    MacRobert had fun, smashing an unbeaten 183 from 101 balls to lead his team to a six-wicket victory with a mind-boggling 10.4 overs to spare. St John’s had scored 350/4 in 39.2 overs.

    *********************************************************************************************

    Gus MacRobert has an ESPNcricinfo footprint, and that is not by accident. After completing his studies at the University of Cape Town, where he played first XI cricket, Gus enrolled at Oxford University. He also represented the famous university in cricket. His batting was serviceable and his medium pacers troubled batters enough for him to be picked for the Combined Universities team that competed in the Benson and Hedges Cup during the 1995 county cricket season.

    His wife, Georgie, played SA Schools hockey and senior women’s provincial hockey. Their first two children, Roxy and William, were upgrades of their talents. Roxy played first-team hockey at St Mary’s School, Waverley, and was Victrix Ludorum in athletics, while William was an all-rounder during his time at St John’s College.

    Joe, three years William’s junior, is an amalgamation of everyone’s talents at home, in part, because of the genes. It’s also because of the sporting environment in which he has been raised. Roxy’s and William’s sports equipment were his first toys. His older siblings were also his first opponents.

    “We tried to make our backyard contests as tough and interesting as possible. We would set difficult fields and targets for each other. William would always try to assert dominance over me,” Joe MacRobert shared.

    To be competitive against older siblings, younger siblings have to work a little harder than when they play against their peers. In childhood, a three-year gap is a long time. The disparity of strength, speed, and skill is immense.

    “Essentially, the challenge of playing up – playing with older siblings who tend to be bigger and stronger and so on – accelerates their skill acquisition,” says Tim Wigmore, co-author of “The Best: How Elite Athletes are Made”.

    “His hand and eye coordination and contact points were excellent. Joe was always a step ahead of other kids in his age group,” Vincent Jordaan, who coached MacRobert from u9 at St David’s Prep recalled.

    It is a distinction Jeff Levin, the current St David’s Marist Inanda head coach, also noticed when he first came into contact with MacRobert at St David’s Prep. “I coached Joe with three of his school friends from grade 0 for a few years. They were a very talented group and I had them playing with a hard ball within a couple of sessions. While they were all very talented, Joe stood out as a natural, whether he batted, bowled, or even kept wicket.”

    Both coaches said MacRobert made playing cricket look easy. He had no trouble understanding and executing what they asked him to try. When they asked him to bowl spin, he landed the ball accurately and spun it. When he kept wicket, he was light on his feet and consistently cleanly pouched the ball. With the bat, “his balance and positions were excellent and his ball striking was phenomenal,” as Levin described it.

    Neither coach was surprised when MacRobert scored his maiden century for St David’s Prep at u9 level.

    *********************************************************************************

    “I lost interest in cricket when I was in Grades 8 and 9. Covid-19 happened and then when we came back a lot of my friends had dropped cricket,” MacRobert revealed.

    It also didn’t help matters that he returned a few low scores. Suddenly, without friendly voices encouraging him to keep going, the crease and the changing room felt lonely.

    Richard Williams, the father of tennis legends, Venus and Serena Williams, has a public image that resembles that of Earl Woods, Tiger Woods‘ father. Both men are portrayed as hard-driving taskmasters who made their offspring into megastars by dictating their development. However, there is a rarely spoken about side of both parents. They let their children lead.

    There is a scene in the movie “King Richard”. A famous coach tells Richard that if Venus, then 11 years old, doesn’t play more matches, “you’re going to ruin her”. Richard responds by pulling Venus and Serena out of the junior tennis circuit completely.

    “They don’t need all that pressure,” Richard told the coach. “They need to just be kids.”

    For the next three years, Venus didn’t play an official match. While Richard Williams saw that his daughters were exceptionally talented, he refused to drive them onto the tennis court. He wanted them to pursue the sport because they loved it. That is the mindset Gus MacRobert adopted with Joe.

    While he knew of his son’s abilities, he resisted the urge to send him for private coaching. Instead of playing in winter leagues, MacRobert played other sports in the cricket offseason. In the summer, he didn’t just focus on cricket, he also played tennis and golf.

    “We’ve never really had any deep chats about Joe’s cricket. We never analyse his games, innings, or what he could have done better. That’s not to say we don’t pay attention to his performances. No. We go to every match, support him all the way, and chat about some stand-out performances,” Gus said.

    Gus and Georgie’s message to Joe has always been, “Go and have fun”. They urge him to enjoy the time with his friends and to meet new friends. So, when MacRobert fell out of love with the game, they were not taken aback. He went for six months without picking up a bat and no one batted an eyelid. When he picked it up towards the end of Grade 10, MacRobert scored big.

    “I scored two centuries in a week, one was a 150 in a T20 match against St Benedict’s, and the other an unbeaten 100 at the Gauteng trials. That felt good and I started finding joy in the game again,” MacRobert shared.

    **************************************************************************************

    He has always looked up to two players, Quinton de Kock and Kumar Sangakkara. He emulated Sangakkara’s elegant cover drives, but has a technique similar to De Kock’s. In fact, his favourite bat as a youngster was an old GM he picked up because De Kock used one like it. He was in Grade 5.

    Like the two international stars, he is a left-handed batsman who keeps wicket. “I only started keeping wicket in 2023, when coach Bongani Ntini asked me,” MacRobert said.

    He hasn’t wanted to put down the gloves since then. Wicketkeeping isn’t the only skill Ntini has helped MacRobert add to his bag of tricks. The St John’s College coach has also helped the 18-year-old develop a more attacking game.

    “Joe’s technique didn’t need any tweaking when I started working with him in 2023. Our training was focused on him to be more aggressive,” Ntini explained. “The dominating nature has always been there, but it was more on the shot selection side of things, when to switch on and when to switch off.”

    Coach and student spent a lot of time practicing range-hitting, upskilling him on picking off a good length over midwicket, bringing in slog sweeps and switch hits, not only to spin bowlers but also against medium pacers.

    The results have been outstanding. During the 2023 season, MacRobert scored 1 258 runs in 33 innings at a strike rate of 109.97. He was a lot quicker in the 2024 season, with 1 077 runs in 28 outings at a strike rate of 137.9.

    “I enjoy taking on bowlers and pushing the game ahead. I will do it as long as it helps the team,” MacRobert said.

    His commitment to the team’s effort is probably why his favourite match out of the 100 innings he has batted in for St John’s was the 42 runs he scored against St Stithians to help his team win the Johnny Waite title on 2 March 2024.

    “That’s Joe MacRobert, a team player through and through. He always does what is needed by the team,” Ntini said.

  • Ebhayi FC, Kaizer Chiefs drawn in same Engen Champ of Champs group

    David Mathebula, Kaizer Chiefs coach during the 2024 Engen Champ of Champs Draw at Sturrock Park in Johannesburg on 25 September 2024 ©Nokwanda Zondi/BackpagePix

    The battle lines have officially been drawn after Engen, in partnership with the Johannesburg Football Association, conducted the official draw for the 2024 Engen Champ of Champs on Wednesday.

    The Marks Park Sports Complex in Johannesburg will once again host the much-anticipated finals, which will be played  from 27-30 September

    New winners are guaranteed because the defending champions, Mamelodi Sundowns (Boys u18) and the University of Johannesburg (Girls u20) were eliminated during the Engen Knockout Challenge in July.

    Exciting competition is expected with teams showing great improvement during the provincial knockouts, which were attended by Engen Knockout Challenge ambassadors, Brighton Mhlongo, Thabo Senong, and Akhona Makalima.

    Wednesday’s draw for the three-day event threw up some mouth-watering ties, with Kaizer Chiefs headlining an interesting Group A, which also includes Ebhayi FC, who swept all the age group titles in the Eastern Cape League finals this past weekend.

    In the girls’ section, Mamelodi Sundowns, drawn in Group A, stand out as one of the favourites and they’ll be the pick of many to go all the way. 

    Sharing his thoughts on the draw, Kaizer Chiefs’ Youth Coach and former player, David Mathebula said: “The team is looking forward to the tournament. This is a title we once lifted and, with home-ground advantage and a strong-willed team, we are confident of putting up a good showing that will hopefully produce the desired results.”

    Also present at the draw was Mamelodi Sundowns Ladies’ coach, Andisiwe Mgcoyi who said, “Winning this tournament has given our players great confidence. The team knows the importance of winning such a tournament but we know that it will not be easy.

    “We are competing against quality teams from across the country, so we cannot take anything for granted,” Mgcoyi warned.

    Phil Mogodi, SAFA JHB President, Andisiwe Mgcoyi, Mamelodi Sundowns Ladies Coach, David Mathebula Kaizer Chiefs coach, Jacques Durand and Thabo Senong during the 2024 Engen Champ of Champs Draw at Sturrock Park in Johannesburg on 25 September 2024 ©Nokwanda Zondi/BackpagePix

    Engen Champ of Champs Draw

    Boys

    GROUP A: Virginia Sports Academy, Ebhayi FC,  Thlolhokwe FC, Kaizer Chiefs FC, Shayamoya FC

    GROUP B: Ebenezer FC, Stellenbosch FC, Sasol Juventus, Galeshewe Stars FC

    Girls

    GROUP A: Storm Ladies FC, Sisters FC, Ixias Ladies FC, Mamelodi Sundowns Ladies FC, Diamond FC.

    GROUP B: Nav Galaxy FC, Thames Ladies FC, Durban Ladies, Cape Town Roses.

     

  • Jansies se Jones Brakkies se baas, Klerksdorp se Matthyse laat vyf spat

    Jansies se Jones Brakkies se baas, Klerksdorp se Matthyse laat vyf spat

    Cricket player holding a leather ball

    Hoërskool Dr. EG Jansen het ‘n ware lopiefees geniet op die tweede dag van die Izintaba Gimmies-Krieketfees.

    Herleef al die aksie op SuperSport Schools(www.supersportschools.com)

    Die Jansies se Jazz Jones was grotendeels verantwoordelik vir die Jansies se jolyt na ‘n reuse oorwinning van 275 lopies oor Hoërskool Brackenfell.

    Die voorslagkolwer was in ‘n omgekrapte bui en het die Brackenfell-boulers van meet af kwaai gekasty. Sy 113 lopies van slegs 62 aflewerings het 20 viere en ‘n ses, teen ‘n gesonde treftempo van 182.26, ingesluit. Dus het hy 86 van sy lopies met grenshoue aangeteken.

    Jaco Engelbrecht het ook gelyk of hy haastig êrens heen op pad was vir sy 61 lopies van slegs 44 balle, terwyl Jayden Barnes (47) en Jayden Marcus (32) verder bygedra het tot die Jansies se allemintige totaal van 344, almal uit, in slegs 39 beurte.

    Die lopie-neerslag is uiteindelik danksy ‘n merkwaardige boulvertoning deur Brackenfell se aanvangsbouler, Jean Oosthuizen, gestuit. Hoewel Oosthuizen ietwat aan die duur kant was, het hy, onder taamlike druk, steeds daarin geslaag om vyf paaltjies te laat kantel.

    Jansies se Adrian Ristow het sy vyf paaltjies van die vorige dag opgevolg met ‘n verdere vier paaltjies, vir slegs vyf lopies, in sy ses beurte. Tesame met Jayden Marcus se 3/10, het dit die span van die Wes-Kaap tot ‘n teleurstellende 69 lopies beperk.

    Hoërskool Klerksdorp se Brendan Matthyse kan uiters tevrede voel met sy boulvertoning. Matthyse het, met die nuwe bal, korte mette gemaak met Hoërskool Trio se kolflys om te verseker dat sy span op ‘n drafstap met 112 lopies seëvier. Die aanvangsbouler het vyf Trio-kolwers teruggestuur pawiljoen toe.

    Klerksdorp se voorslagkolwer, Tiaan Koen (66*) en Stephan Janse van Rensburg (62) het daarna met die kolf bygedra tot hul span se totaal van 222 .

    Trio se Bokany Mohasa en Gabriel Mokoabe het nietemin goed gevaar met die bal deur elkeen drie paaltjies plat te trek en gesamentlik slegs 34 lopies af te staan.

    Beknopte telkaarte: 

    Dr. EG Jansen 344 (Jazz Jones 113, Jaco Engelbrecht 61, Jayden Barns 47, Jayden Marcus 32; Jean Oosthuizen 5/70); Brackenfell 69 (Jean Oosthuizen 38; Adrian Ristow 4/5, Jayden Marcus 3/10). EG Jansen wen met 275 lopies.

    Hoërskool Klerksdorp 222 (Tiaan Koen 66*, Stephan Janse van Rensburg 62, Raykie van Rooyen 22; Bokany Mohasa 3/15, Gabriel Mokoabe 3/19, Danie Fourie 2/10); Hoërskool Trio 110 (Bokany Mohasa 33*, Danie Fourie 23; Brendan Matthyse 5/17). Klerksdorp wen met 112 lopies. 

  • Hockly, Van Schalkwyk decimate Zim bowlers to secure win for SA u19

    Affies, SA Schools and SA u19 Emerging batsman, Jorich van Schalkwyk.
    Affies, SA Schools and SA u19 Emerging batsman, Jorich van Schalkwyk.

    Ben Hockly and Jorich van Schalkwyk both scored unbeaten half-centuries to shepherd South Africa u19 Emerging to a one-sided 10-wicket win over Zimbabwe u19 Emerging in their 50-over match at Queen’s Sports Club, Bulawayo, on Wednesday.

    With Wednesday’s victory, their third from three matches in the five-match series, South Africa secured a series win by taking an unbeatable 3-0 lead.

    The tourists, who were asked to bowl first, blew away the Zimbabwe batting lineup, dismissing them for 180 in 48.5 overs.

    Muhammed Bulbulia and his team needed less than half the time the Zimbabweans used up to chase down that total. They romped to 183 without loss in only 22.3 overs.

    In their first two games, South Africa had Bulbulia and Adnaan Lagadien opening the batting. On Wednesday, they changed personnel and went with Hockly and Van Schalkwyk. What did not change was the top-order dominance that has become a feature of the series.

    Hockly smashed 10 fours and two sixes on his way to an unbeaten 84 off 72 deliveries, while Van Schalkwyk stroked 10 fours and a six for his unbeaten 79 off 64 balls.

    Throughout their big unbroken opening stand, they never looked in trouble and neither offered a chance. At the same time, their run rate was always over 100, with Hockly reaching his half-century in 41 balls, and Van Schalkwyk bringing his up off of 47.

    The assured work of the batsmen was the cherry on the top following an outstanding bowling performance by the South African attack. Zimbabwe began well, getting off to a fast start, with the first wicket producing 25 runs from only 24 balls. Opener Nathaniel Hlabangana top-scored with 54, while his partner Leeroy Chiwaula was the first man to fall, out for eight.

    After that rollicking start, the hosts retreated into their shell and accumulated 63 runs off 106 deliveries as they attempted to steady their ship through Hlabangana and Kupakwashe Muradzi, who contributed 25.

    Jason Rowles broke their partnership in the 22nd over, which led to a downhill slide for the Zimbabweans. Their batsmen struggled to contend with South Africa’s bowlers. Only three of them – Hlabangana, Muradzi, and Tatenda Banda (25) – made it beyond the teens. Two others, Brandon Senzere (11) and Ryan Moyo (11), reached double figures, while the rest were restricted to single-digit scores.

    Paul James was the pick of the bowlers, knocking over three for nine in 5.5 overs. Ntando Soni also bagged three scalps from 10 overs, which cost him 34 runs.

    Rowles, who took the prized wickets of Hlabangana and Muradzi, finished with two wickets for 24 runs in eight overs, while Bayanda Majola took a single wicket for 36 runs in 10.

    Summarised Scorecard

    Zimbabwe u19 Emerging 180/10 (Nathaniel Hlabangana 54, Kupakwashe Muradzi 25; Paul James 3/9, Ntando Soni 3/34, Jason Rowles 2/24) South Africa u19 Emerging 183/0 (Ben Hockly 84*, Jorich van Schalkwyk 79*) South Africa u19 Emerging won by 10 wickets.

  • Gimmies glip by agterdeur in, Kempies kook

    FOTO: Verskaf deur Potchefstroom Gimnasium se Facebook-blad.

    In ‘n week waar die kolf die oorhand oor die bal geniet, is daar steeds ruimte vir naelbytstryde soos dié tussen die gasheer, Potchefstroom Gimnasium, en Westville Boys’ High se Stayers-span op die tweede dag van die Izintaba Gimmies-Krieketfees.

    Herleef al die aksie op SuperSport Schools(www.supersporschools.com)

    ‘n Uitstaande boulvertoning, gelei deur die Gimmies se Henré Cronje, het verseker dat die gasheer met slegs vyf lopies by die agterdeur kon inglip. Cronje se syfers van 3/20, ondersteun deur Jahndré Coetzee (2/18) en Bennet Keet (2/33), het die Durbaniete vir 151 uitgeboender.

    Dit nadat die Gimmies hard moes spook om hul weg tot 156 almal uit te vind. Dit was grotendeels te danke aan ‘n waardevolle beurt van 37 lopies deur James Wood. Coetzee was ook met die kolf ‘n uitblinker en het vir Wood ondersteun met ‘n bydrae van 24 lopies.

    Westville se aanvangsbouler, Lwandle Bulose, het die meeste skade aangerig, deur drie paaltjies vir 38 lopies te laat kantel. Declan Boyton het homself ook goed van sy taak gekwyt met syfers van 2/32 in die vyf beurte wat hy afgestuur het.

    Ronay Pillay was die beste kolwer op die dag met 64 lopies van 82 aflewerings wat so hittete die Gimmies se ondergang beteken het. Jahndré Coetzee het egter tot sy span se redding gekom deur vir Pillay pawiljoen toe te stuur

    Hoërskool Kempton Park se kolwers was weer op hul stukke, met hul toporde wat ligte werk gemaak van die teiken van 203 wat Hoërskool Marais Viljoen vir hulle gestel het. Sheldon Kruger was die Kempies se uitblinker en het slegs 79 balle nodig gehad om sy bydrae van 91 lopies, nie uit nie, te bereik.

    Floors Mynhardt was kort op sy hakke met ‘n goed gebalanseerde en onoorwonne beurt van 83. Hy en Kruger het indrukwekkend gekombineer vir ‘n vennootskap van 169 lopies.

    Marais Viljoen se Jamie Northcott het ook die lopies ingeryg. Die aanvangskolwer het teen ‘n stewige tempo vir sy 76 lopies gekolf, terwyl Abdullah Tadwala ook sy waarde in die middelorde tentoongestel het deur ‘n verdere 41 lopies op sy kerfstok te plaas.

    Paarl Gimnasium se toporde het, nes die Kempie-kolwers, hul tyd in die middel teen Hoërskool Rustenburg optimaal benut. Die besoekers van die Paarl se Charles King en Koch van Eyssen was uitstaande deur albei die 100-kerf verby te steek en te verseker dat Gimmies ‘n reusetelling van 328/6 in die toegelate 50 beurte kon opstel.

    King was hul voorste kolwer met ‘n onoorwonne 107 lopies van 96 aflewerings. Van Eyssen het ook die skote laat klap met die kolf en, al het hy op sewe gekolf, steeds genoeg tyd gehad om 101 lopies aan te teken. Hy het slegs 49 balle nodig gehad en sy beurt het agt viere en sewe sesse ingesluit.

    Die Rusties se Nathan Rossouw (47*) en Zandré Diedericks (41) het hard probeer om die kastaiings uit die vuur te krap, maar Gimmies se vertoning met die bal, gelei deur die draaier, Zaid Abrahams (3/19), was net té goed. Die Rustenburgers moes uiteindelik tevrede wees met ‘n telling van 231/9.

    Beknopte telkaarte:

    Potchefstroom Gimnasium 156 (James Wood 37, Ekstras 32, Jahndré Coetzee 24; Evan du Toit 3/23, Lwandle Bulose 3/39, Declan Boynton 2/32); Westville Stayers 151 (Ronav Pillay 64; Henré Cronje 3/20, Jahndré Coetzee 2/18, Bennet Keet 2/33). Potchefstroom Gimnasium wen met ses lopies.

    Marais Viljoen 202 (Jamie Northcott 76, Abdullah Tadwala 41, Rieshaeel Hashim 26; Keaden Posthumus 3/38, Warren Pretorius 3/39, Wian Pieters 2/22); Hoërskool Kempton Park 203/1 (Sheldon Kruger 91*, Floors Mynhardt 83*, Wian Pieters 20; Jordan Baijnath 1/51). Kempton Park wen met nege paaltjies.

    Paarl Gimnasium 328/6 (Charles King 107*, Koch van Eyssen 101*, Adriaan Louw 50, Wian Munnick 25; Thian Labuschagne 3/58); Hoërskool Rustenburg 231/9 (Nathan Rossouw 47*, Zandré Diedericks 41, Callie Fryer 28, Thian Labuschagne 26, Tristan van der Linde 24; Zaid Abrahams 3/19, Waldus de Jager 2/38, Charles King 2/53). Paarl Gimnasium wen met 97 lopies.

  • Moories moker 462, Monnas wen met ses lopies

    Moories moker 462, Monnas wen met ses lopies

    FOTO: Verskaf deur Hoërskool Hans Moore se Facebook-blad.

    Hoërskool Hans Moore se kolwers het weer gewys wat in hulle steek met ‘n uitstaande en afgeronde vertoning om Hoërskool Durbanville met 199 lopies te laat les opsê.

    Herleef al die aksie op SuperSport Schools(www.supersportschools.com)

    Hans Moore se aanvangskolwer, Aiden Shaw, het opgemaak vir sy nulletjie die dag vantevore en sy kolfvernuf uitgestal met sy span se hoogste individuele telling van 98 lopies, twee kort van wat ‘n welverdiende honderdtal sou gewees het.

    Staatmaker, Warren Minnaar, het sy tweede agtereenvolgende 50-tal aangeteken om teen die einde van sy beurt met 76 lopies te spog.

    Zander Swart (65) en Adrian Watson (61) het ook beïndruk, terwyl ‘n verdere bydrae van51 deur Xavier Coetzee en 42 lopies deur Kenan Shaw die Moories se kolfdiepte beklemtoon en verseker het dat die span van Benoni ‘n reusetelling van 462/8 in die toegelate 50 beurte kon behaal.

    Durbanville kon self met drie vyftigtalle in sy toporde spog. Tobie Roelofse het die jaagtog gelei met ‘n onoorwonne 73 lopies. Jan Kriel was kort op sy hakke met ‘n bydrae van 67, terwyl Henry Venter ook in die sestigs gaan draai het met 62 lopies.

    In ‘n aanskoulike wedstryd waarin 725 lopies gesamentlik tussen die twee spanne aangeteken is, was Roelofse en Kie se pogings helaas nie genoeg om dié teiken te bereik nie.

    Hoërskool Monument kon danksy ‘n puik boulvertoning deur Joshua McCoy verby Boland Landbou glip om naelskraaps met ses lopies te wen. McCoy was in ‘n verwoestende bui, iets wat die Monumentare broodnodig gehad het aangesien hulle slegs 186 lopies moes verdedig. Dit was egter genoeg aangesien McCoy vier paaltjies vir net 39 lopies platgetrek het.

    Rieghardt Prinsloo en Antonie van Niekerk het hom bygestaan met twee paaltjies elk. Monnas se Waldo Greyling en die Bolanders se Lohann Louw was die uitblinkers met die kolf. Greyling het met ‘n beslissende 50 lopies gespog, terwyl Louw se 54, die hoogste individuele telling in die wedstryd, so hittete genoeg was om die Krugersdorpers te troef.

    Helpmekaar Kollege het sy stempel verder afgedruk met ‘n uiters gemaklike sege van nege paaltjies oor Hoërskool Stellenberg. Heinrich Minnaar se syfers van 3/13 en Xander Jackson se bydrae van drie paaltjies vir 17 lopies het vir die Kapenaars tot slegs 106 almal uit beperk.

    Zander Neethling se goeie 41* en Kyle Swanepoel se onoorwonne 37 was genoeg vir die Johannesburgers om die telling reeds in die 16de boulbeurt verby te steek.

    Luan Vermeulen se onoorwonne honderdtal was die hoogtepunt van Hoërskool Wesvalia se agt-paaltjie-oorwinning oor Afrikaanse Hoër Seunskool (Affies) se tweede span. Vermeulen se 103 nie uit nie het beteken dat die Wessies Affies se telling gemaklik in die 36ste beurt kon verbysteek.

    Blake Curtain het die Affie-kolfbeurt met 32 lopies gelei. Hy sou egter ‘n raps langer wou kolf om sy span die kans te gun om ‘n verdedigbare telling op die bord te sit.

    Beknopte telkaarte:

    Hans Moore 462/8 (Aiden Shaw 98, Warren Minnaar 76, Zander Swart 65, Adrian Watson 61, Xavier Coetzee 51, Kenan Shaw 42, Stephan Vermaak 22; Albertyn du Bois 2/61, Calla du Toit 2/81); Durbanville 263/9 (Tobie Roelofse 73*, Jan Kriel 67, Henry Venter 62, Jeandré Janse van Rensburg 20; Stephan Vermaak 2/30, Henré Everleigh 2/34, Kenan Shaw 2/42). Hans Moore wen met 199 lopies.

    Monument 187 (Waldo Greyling 50, Ibrahim Haffejee 37, Werner Durrheim 33, Antonie van Niekerk 23; Tiaan Ryke 3/47, Stefan Conradie 2/7, Kobus Conradie 2/18); Boland Landbou 181 (Lohann Louw 54, Rynhard van der Schyff 33; Joshua McCoy 4/39, Rieghardt Prinsloo 2/39, Antonie van Niekerk 2/44). Monument wen met ses lopies.

    Stellenberg 106 (Ryan Jones 40*; Heinrich Minnaar 3/13, Xander Jackson 3/17, Henno Steyn 2/5); Helpmekaar Kollege 108/1 (Zander Neethling 41*, Kyle Swanepoel 37*; Kyle van Staten 1/30). Helpmekaar wen met nege paaltjies.

    Affies 2de XI 194 (Blake Curtain 32, SF Vermeulen 28, Iwan van der Lith 26; Q Fourie 3/38, Eduard Dreyer 2/21, Ethan Walker 2/22); Wesvalia 196/2 (Luan Vermeulen 103*, J Prinsloo 38, Marneau Dreyer 29*; Janro de Bruin 1/15). Wesvalia wen met agt paaltjies.

  • It’s tough to call as SACS defends Clifton Water Polo Tournament title

    Oliver Ditz helped Clifton to third place in the 2023 Clifton Water Polo Tournament. Now, the captain of the 2024 Clifton side, he and goalkeeper Ross Strauss represent South Africa at the World Aquatics Men's u18 Water Polo Championships in Buenos Aires, Argentina, in July.
    Oliver Ditz helped Clifton to third place in the 2023 Clifton Water Polo Tournament. Now, the captain of the 2024 Clifton side, he and goalkeeper Ross Strauss represented South Africa at the World Aquatics Men’s u18 Water Polo Championships in Buenos Aires, Argentina, in July.

    Clifton College‘s picturesque Clifton Aquatics Centre to set to be lit up by some of the country’s top teams when the Durban school hosts the Clifton Water Polo Tournament from Thursday, 26 September, to Sunday, 29 September.

    Catch the action LIVE on SuperSport Schools

    It’s early days in the season, but Northwood, Hilton College, SACS, Grey College, Paul Roos, Selborne, St John’s College, and the hosts, Clifton, all head into the tournament with plenty of games under their belts from the past weekend’s SACS Water Polo Tournament, where St John’s fell in the final to Bishops.

    Those schools are joined by Affies, Michaelhouse, Kearsney College, Maritzburg College, Westville Boys’ High, King Edward VII School (KES), Reddam House Constantia, and Durban High School (DHS) in a high-quality line-up.

    Based on their form at SACS, St John’s, who won eight of their nine pool games to finish top of their group, before progressing to the final, should be considered the favourites, but is far from an open and shut case.

    While the SACS tournament has accelerated the process of teams gelling, it also placed serious demands on the players over four days of top-level competition. Fatigue could become a factor during the Clifton Water Polo Tournament.

    Back at home, coach Paul Martin and his Clifton side are a tough out for any opposition. They don’t boast the consistent excellence of their very experienced 2023 team, but if they click they have the quality to go all the way.

    Much like Clifton, the defending champions, SACS, are not as consistently outstanding as they were in a memorable 2023 season. Still, they won the SAC Shield in January. And, if we’re talking about tournament victories, we should mention Clifton winning the Vides Water Polo Tournament.

    Taking a further look into the results at the recent SACS Tournament, Hilton College was the best of the KZN teams, reaching the quarterfinals where they were edged out by St John’s, who recorded a 4-3 win. They also beat Clifton 5-2 in a Pool B clash.

    Paul Roos, last year’s runners-up in the Clifton Water Polo Tournament, also bowed out in the quarters, going down 5-6 to Rondebosch, who had finished top of Pool B.

    Selborne and Clifton just missed out on the last eight. It was Selborne that Clifton beat in the final of the Vides Water Polo Tournament, but Selborne tasted success when they won the Grey College ITEC Water Polo Tournament in February for a second year in succession.

    Northwood, meanwhile, came out on the wrong end of a number of one-goal games in Cape Town, which suggests, with a slight improvement and a touch of luck, they could make some noise in Durban.

    Another team to keep an eye on is Kearsney College. It has been a very good year for the Botha’s Hill boys, highlighted by them winning the Reef Cup in March.

    Affies, the beaten finalists at the ITEC Tournament, is another team that could spring a surprise or two, while KES, who finished only 12th in the Clifton event last year, finished above Westville Boys’ High, Selborne, Clifton and Northwood at the Standard Bank King Edward VII Water Polo Tournament in March. Beware the bear!

    The aforementioned Westville has produced some outstanding players in recent years, but they haven’t quite put it together as a team. Is this the year they do?

    Don’t count out any of the other sides. They might not make it all the way, but there will surely be an upset or two in them.

    POOLS 

    Pool A – Northwood, Hilton, SACS, Grey College
    Pool B – Affies, Michaelhouse, Kearsney, Paul Roos
    Pool C – Selborne, Maritzburg College, Westville, St John’s
    Pool D – KES, Clifton, Reddam House Constantia, DHS

    FiXTURES

    Thursday, 26 September

    1 – 08:00 – Michaelhouse vs Kearsney (B)
    2 – 08:45 – Maritzburg College vs St John’s (C)
    3 – 09:30 – Clifton vs DHS (D)
    4 – 10:15 – Northwood vs Hilton (A)
    5 – 11:00 – Paul Roos vs Michaelhouse (B)
    6 – 11:45 – KES vs Reddam (D)
    7 – 12:30 – Westville vs Maritzburg College (C)
    8 – 13:15 – SACS vs Grey College (A)
    9 – 14:00 – Selborne vs St John’s (C)
    10 – 14:45 – Affies vs Kearsney (B)
    11 – 15:30 – Reddam vs DHS (D)
    12 – 16:15 – Hilton vs Grey College (A)
    13 – 17:00 – Selborne vs Westville (C)
    14 – 17:45 – Clifton vs KES (D)
    15 – 18:30 – SACS vs Northwood (A)
    16 – 19:15 – Affies vs Paul Roos (B)

    Friday, 27 September

    17 – 08:00 – KES vs DHS (D)
    18 – 08:45 – Kearsney vs Paul Roos (B)
    19 – 09:30 – Northwood vs Grey College (A)
    20 – 10:15 – Clifton vs Reddam (D)
    21 – 11:00 – Selborne vs Maritzburg College (C)
    22 – 11:45 – Affies vs Michaelhouse (B)
    23 – 12:30 – Hilton vs SACS (A)
    24 – 13:15 – Westville vs St John’s (C)

    25 – 14:45 – 2nd Pool A vs 3rd Pool C
    26 – 15:30 – 2nd Pool B vs 3rd Pool D
    27 – 16:15 – 3rd Pool A vs 2nd Pool C
    28 – 17:00 – 3rd Pool B vs 2nd Pool D
    29 – 17:45 – Loser 25 vs 4th Pool D
    30 – 18:30 – Loser 26 vs 4th Pool A

    Saturday, 28 September

    31 – 08:00 – Loser 27 vs 4th Pool B
    32 – 08:45 – Loser 28 vs 4th Pool C
    33 – 09:30 – 1st Pool A vs Winner 26 (QF 1)
    34 – 10:30 – 1st Pool B vs Winner 25 (QF 2)
    35 – 11:30 – 1st Pool C vs Winner 28 (QF 3)
    36 – 12:30 – 1st Pool D vs Winner 27 (QF 4)
    37 – 13:30 – Winner 29 vs Winner 30
    38 – 14:15 – Winner 31 vs Winner 32
    39 – 15:00 – Loser 29 vs Loser 30
    40 – 15:45 – Loser 31 vs Loser 32
    41 – 16:30 – Loser 33 vs Loser 35 (PL SF 1)
    42 – 17:15 – Loser 34 vs Loser 36 (PL SF 2)
    43 – 18:00 – Winner 33 vs Winner 35 (SF 1)
    44 – 19:00 – Winner 34 vs Winner 36 (SF 2)

    Sunday, 29 September

    45 – 07:00 – Loser 40 vs Loser 39 (15th/16th)
    46 – 07:45 – Winner 40 vs Winner 39 (13th/14th)
    47 – 08:30 – Loser 37 vs Loser 38 (11th/12th)
    48 – 09:15 – Winner 37 vs Winner 38 (9th/10th)
    49 – 10:00 – Loser 41 vs Loser 42 (7th/8th)
    50 – 10:45 – Winner 41 vs Winner 42 (5th/6th)
    51 – 11:30 – Loser 44 vs Loser 43 (3rd/4th)
    52 – 12:30 – Winner 44 vs Winner 43 (1st/2nd)