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  • Monument holds on against Milnerton, Glenwood overturns Dale

    Monument holds on against Milnerton, Glenwood overturns Dale

    In a physical battle, Monument staved off a furious Milnerton comeback attempt to claim a narrow victory. Photo: Brad Morgan.
    In a physical battle, Monument staved off a furious Milnerton comeback attempt to claim a narrow victory. Photo: Brad Morgan.

    Monument vs Milnerton

    A physical onslaught on both sides of the ball from Hoërskool Monument was enough to earn them a 26-21 win over a spirited Milnerton High School in the first game of the final day of the Standard Bank Kearsney College Easter Rugby Festival.

    Monnas shared a 26-26 draw with Glenwood on day one, which was followed by a 17-32 defeat to Durban High School (DHS) on Saturday, while the Western Cape side downed Peterhouse 34-18 in their opener before coming unstuck against Glenwood, losing 34-37 after the Durban school landed a last-gasp penalty.

    The last time Monument left the Kearsney Easter Rugby Festival winless was in 2012, and it was clear from the outset that the Krugersdorp school wasn’t keen on ending their successful streak on Monday.

    Much like they did against Glenwood, Milnerton staged another rousing comeback to lead 21-19 at one stage, but ultimately they
    fell just short.

    Juandré Ehlers set the scoreboard in motion when he barged over early on for the team in white, with Morgan Lodewyk, who was otherwise his side’s best player, missing a rather straightforward penalty attempt for Milnerton minutes later.

    Monument went on to take control of proceedings from there, while Milnerton struggled to gain any kind of foothold in the contest.

    A clever tap-and-go from Wit Bulle tighthead Juandré Marais, from five metres out, led to their second try, before a third through blindside flank, Ryno van der Westhuizen, made it 19-0 at the break.

    The introduction off the bench of the Sellidon twins, Chadlin and Chadwin, resulted in a huge upturn in Milnerton’s fortunes, with the diminutive duo pulling three excellent tries back between them in the third quarter, to edge their side into an unlikely two-point lead.

    However, Cornelius Mostert set up Ewan van der Walt to go over for five and Monument edged in front once more. This time, Milnerton was all out of answers.

    Glenwood vs Dale College

    They didn't win, but Dale College mustered two tries against Glenwood, including this score from Kungawo Jaca. Photo: Brad Morgan.
    They didn’t win, but Dale College mustered two tries against Glenwood, including this score from Kungawo Jaca. Photo: Brad Morgan.

    Glenwood High School overcame a valiant Dale College defensive effort to claim a 33-12 victory in the day’s second game.

    That victory ensured the KZN outfit leaves Botha’s Hill unbeaten after a draw with Hoërskool Monument and a narrow win over Milnerton High School in their first two matches.

    Dale, meanwhile, made huge improvements in their third outing, following earlier defeats to Hoërskool Durbanville and the hosts, Kearsney College. They’ll take heart from a determined and proud performance against their more-fancied opponents.

    For all of Glenwood’s territorial dominance throughout the game, they struggled to break down Dale, with the boys from the Eastern Cape defending manfully and living off scraps.

    Lesedi Khumalo scored first up for Glenwood before Milani Madide finished off a spectacular 80m try for the Daleians, which began on the left-hand touchline and ended in the right-hand corner.

    Inga Mafanga had a penalty opportunity to put Dale ahead with just over three minutes of the first half-hour remaining, but he pulled it wide. Just before the break, lock Tylo Madaat crossed for a try for the Green Machine, who led 12-7 at the break.

    A Kungawo Jaca smash-and-grab five-pointer brought Dale to within two points early in the second half, but further tries for Glenwood tries through Lizwe Mtetwa and Lian Lochner, who touched down twice, all but sealed the deal.

    SCORERS

    Hoërskool Monument 26 (19) – Tries: Juandré  Ehlers, Juandré Marais, Ryno van der Westhuizen, Ewan van der Walt. Conversions: Jaydon Viljoen (3); Milnerton 21 (0) – Tries: Chadlin Sellidon (2), Chadwin Sellidon. Conversions: Chadwin Sellidon (3).

    Glenwood 33 (14) – Tries: Lian Lochner (2), Nkululeko Khumalo, Tylo Madaat, Lizwe Mtetwa. Conversions: Joshua Kopp (4); Dale College 12 (5) – Tries:  Milani Madide, Kungawo Jaca. Conversions: Inga Mafanga.

  • Results – Standard Bank King Edward VII  Easter Festival 2025 – Day 2

    Results – Standard Bank King Edward VII Easter Festival 2025 – Day 2

    Scorers: 

    Northwood 12 (12) – Tries: Trevor van Vollenstee, Ayavuya Makula. Conversion: Savio Stevens. King Edward VII 7 (0) – Try: Joshua Wilkinson. Conversion: Indi Mboniswa.

    Noordheuwel 21 (14) – Tries: Clinton Agu, Jayden Steyn, Kean Lourens. Conversions: Jeandré Uithaler. Jeppe High School for Boys 20 (17) – Tries: Joshua Hamman, Phano Letsie. Conversions: Nehemia Hollenbach (2). Penalties: Hollenbach (2).

    Parktown Boys High 25 (10) – Tries: Siphesihle Mpofu, Siya Masinga, Lethabo Sikhudo. Conversions: Enrico van Coller (2). Penalties: Van Coller (2). Hudson Park 15 (15) – Tries: Sibalbwe Mtshini, Masibulele Kwakini. Conversion: Landile Gidi. Penalty: Gidi.

    Affies 57 (38) – Tries: Martin van Niekerk (2), Estian Marx (2), Hannes Nagel, Joshua Gouws, Charl Els, Luhan Potgieter, Elwin Jansen van Vuuren. Conversions: Ruben Groenewald (4), Lamond Baaidjies (2). Selborne College 19 (5) – Tries: Oliver Schmidt, Aaron James, Uviwe Jikwana. Conversions: Khazimla Qavile (2).

    Rondebosch Boys’ High 33 (7) – Tries: Andrea Parrello, Daniel Arendse, Randall-John Davids, Bulela Mbala, Ethon Williams. Conversions: Sebastian Boshoff (3), Harry Soboil. Queen’s College 0.

    Pearson 21 (8) – Tries: Denio Jordaan, Keano Beling. Conversion: Sibu Mkhontwana. Penalties: Mkontwana. Eldoraigne 12 (0) – Tries: Kevin Earle, Justin Meintjies. Conversion: Damian Elferink.

  • Results – Standard Bank Kearsney College Easter Festival 2025 – Day 3

    Results – Standard Bank Kearsney College Easter Festival 2025 – Day 3

    Scorers: 

    Hoërskool Monument 26 (19) – Tries: Juandré  Ehlers, Juandré Marais, Ryno van der Westhuizen, Ewan van der Walt. Conversions: Jaydon Viljoen (3); Milnerton 21 (0) – Tries: Chadlin Sellidon (2), Chadwin Sellidon. Conversions: Chadwin Sellidon (3).

    Glenwood 33 (12) – Tries: Lian Lochner (2), Nkululeko Khumalo, Tylo Madaat, Lizwe Mtetwa. Conversions: Joshua Kopp (4); Dale College 12 (7) – Tries:  Milani Madide, Kungawo Jaca. Conversions: Inga Mafanga.

    Dr EG Jansen 22 (17) – Tries: Marco Ventura (2), Jordan van der Westhuizen, Deshean Pietersen. Conversion: Juan van Aswegan; Framesby 20 (13)  – Tries: Jaco George. Conversions: Miles Feltham (2). Penalties: Feltham (2).

    Durban High School 33 (14) – Tries: Nathan Aneke (3), Zingce Simka (2). Conversions: Jordan van Wyk (4); Hoërskool Durbanville 5 (5) – Tries: Valrhinio Olckers.

    Westville Boys’ High 24 (17) – Tries: Lwandle Makhanya, Avumila Lisa, Ross Calvert, Lux Sononkonkono. Conversions: Jade-Will Koopman. Hoërskool Rustenburg 17 (7) Tries: Tristan Myburgh, Thian Labuschagne. Conversions: Ayden Willemse (2). Penalty: Willemse.

    Kearsney College 48 (24) – Jayden Jonsson (2), Lwandle Mkhize (2), Valentino Lenge, Keanu Williamson, Lwazi Mbebe, Simo Mnqokoyi; Peterhouse 8 (3) – Try: Michael Marimo, Drop goal: Andrew Maringa.

  • St Stithians and Reddam House the standouts at Saints Easter Fest

    St Stithians and Reddam House the standouts at Saints Easter Fest

    St Stithians Boys' College ended the Saints Easter Hockey Festival unbeaten. Photo: Irwin Hackner (Visual Photography)
    St Stithians Boys’ College ended the Saints Easter Hockey Festival unbeaten. Photo: Irwin Hackner (Visual Photography)

    The final day of the Standard Bank St Stithians Hockey Festival, in Johannesburg, on Saturday, produced a whopping 33 goals across 10 matches as the teams wrapped up the action after three days of intense hockey.

    Of those 33, Reddam House Constantia scored 11, while the hosts netted three to finish their campaign on a high.

    It was a challenging festival for sides like Hilton College, Clifton College, Die Hoërskool Menlopark, and St David’s Marist Inanda.

    While they struggled to get over the line, Reddam and Saints went about their business quietly and efficiently and racked up victories.

    After a sizzling performance on Wednesday, which brought them a thrilling victory over Hilton College, the hosts defeated Clifton College 3-1 on Thursday and ended the festival with a 3-2 win over St Andrew’ College, another in-form team.

    Aidan Blatch has been the name on everybody’s lips, and he duly delivered again against the Makhanda school. Lanky, unpredictable, and dangerous, he scored a brace before Jason Joiner netted to secure a hard-fought 3-2 win.

    Joining Saints on the winning trail was Reddam, who recorded two emphatic victories. Coach Alex Gitlin’s side defeated St Benedict’s College 4-1 before overrunning the St Stithians College Festival Team 7-0.

    Against Bennies, Charlie Naylor was on fire and bagged a pair before Kyle Jones and Chris Stewart got in on the scoring action.

    Captain Joe Gitlin, Naylor, and Jones were on the scoreboard again in the match against the Saints Festival team, while Reese Hayes and Mitchell Welch completed the drubbing.

    It was another superb showing from the Cape Town outfit, who picked up from where they left off at the Independent Schools Hockey Festival earlier this month.

    St Andrew’s College was probably the third-best team at the festival and suffered only that one loss against the hosts.

    Coach Dean Ferreira’s troops played exciting hockey throughout the weekend and on Saturday picked up a 3-0 win over St David’s Marist Inanda.

    Reddam House Constantia continued thier impressive start to the 2025 season at the Saints Festival.
    1st Team Boys Hockey match between Pretoria Boys High and Reddam House Constantia at St Stithians Easter festival. Photo: Irwin Hackner (Visual Photography)

    Connor McNamara struck twice before Jean de Villiers sealed the win for his side.

    While St Andrew’s College impressed, Hilton College was frustrated.

    In their five matches, coach Damian Kimfley‘s boys mustered one win, three draws, and a loss, which came against the hosts on day one.

    They were held to draws by the Pretoria trio of Menlopark, Affies, and Pretoria Boys High for the second time this season after the sides played out a thrilling 2-2 draw at the Nomads Hockey Festival last month.

    Clifton College, meanwhile, ended their festival on a high with a 4-1 win over Menlopark, while Affies failed to find the back of the net, including against Clifton, as both of their matches on Saturday ended in goalless draws.

    RESULTS

    Affies 0-0 Clifton
    Hilton 2-2 Pretoria Boys High
    Reddam Constantia 4-1 St Benedict’s
    St Andrew’s College 3-0 St David’s Marist Inanda
    Clifton 4-1 Menlopark
    Affies 0-0 Hilton College
    Reddam House Constantia 7-0 St Stithians Festival Team
    Pretoria Boys High 1-1 St David’s Marist Inanda
    St Benedict’s 2-1 Menlopark
    St Stithians 3-2 St Andrew’s College

    CLICK HERE FOR DAY 1 RESULTS
    CLICK HERE FOR DAY 2 RESULTS

  • Local teams and Maritzburg College on song at KES Easter Festival

    Local teams and Maritzburg College on song at KES Easter Festival

    Maritzburg College won both of their games on Saturday, beating Selborne College 3-0 and Queen's College 4-1. Photo: TeamPhoto SA.
    Maritzburg College won both of their games on Saturday, beating Selborne College 3-0 and Queen’s College 4-1. Photo: TeamPhoto SA.

    Parktown Boys’ High School continued their impressive run at the King Edward VII School (KES) Hockey Festival, clinching a second consecutive win with a commanding performance on Saturday afternoon.

    The team built on the momentum of a 3-1 win over St Charles College on Thursday and put together a well-structured performance, which was highlighted by sharp passing.

    They added a second 3-1 victory, this time over Hoërskool Eldoraigne, thanks to goals from Khanyisa Kraai, Elethu Bam, and Abiye Bamson.

    Coach David Grace praised his players after the match, expressing his satisfaction with the team’s progress.

    “They were very good,” he said. “The team is going from strength to strength.

    “I feel very good about the two wins, and I am looking forward to our day three fixtures. It is going to be tough against Selborne and Maritzburg College.”

    Meanwhile, the hosts, KES, continued their strong form, racking up successive wins over opposition from KwaZulu-Natal, beating St Charles College 3-0 and Kearsney College 2-0.

    It was a day of double celebration for KES as Ben Simon and Reece Small both earned their 50th hockey caps for the school.

    In other games, after a tough 2-6 defeat to KES in their opener on Thursday, Glenwood showed character and resilience in a 5-2 win over Helpmekaar Kollege.

    The Durban school looked like a completely different outfit from the one that struggled against the home side. They fell behind in the opening chukka against Helpies but soon equalised, thanks to their hard work pressing high and their swift ball movement.

    Helpmekaar responded well to again edge ahead in the second chukka and they took that 2-1 lead into half-time. Glenwood, though. kept up their intensity, and a minute before the end of their third chukka it was all-square.

    In the last chukka, their pressure delivered dividends as they slotted three times to break open a tight contest and won by three goals.

    Jeppe High School for Boys has made an impressive start to the season and they kept rolling with two convincing wins, handing Kearsney a 4-1 defeat in the morning before outplaying Hoërskool Waterkloof 5-1.            

    RESULTS

    Jeppe 4-1 Kearsney
    Maritzburg College 4-1 Queen’s
    KES 3-0 St Charles
    Waterkloof 2-0 Pearson
    Glenwood 5-2 Helpmekaar
    Parktown 3-1 Eldoraigne
    Maritzburg College 3-0 Selborne
    Queen’s 3-2 St Charles
    Pearson 1–1 Glenwood
    KES 2–0 Kearsney
    Jeppe 5-1 Waterkloof
    Selborne 1-2 Northwood

    Sunday, 20 April

    King Edward VII Weinberg Astro           

    7:30 – Glenwood vs Eldoraigne
    8:50 – Selborne vs Parktown
    10:10 – Waterkloof vs Queen’s College
    11:30 – Jeppe vs St Charles
    12:50 – Northwood vs Helpmekaar
    14:10 – Maritzburg College vs Parktown
    15:30 – KES vs Queen’s College
    16:50 – Pearson vs Helpmekaar
    18:10 – Selborne vs Kearsney

    St John’s College Astro                         

    07:30 – Pearson High School vs Northwood
    08:50 – Hoërskool Eldoraigne vs Kearsney

    Monday, 21 April

    King Edward VII Weinberg Astro

    07:30 – Jeppe vs Queen’s College
    08:50 – Selborne College vs Glenwood
    10:10 – Pearson vs Kearsney
    11:30 – Maritzburg College vs Eldoraigne
    12:50 – KES vs Northwood
    14:10 – St Charles vs Waterkloof
    15:30 – Helpmekaar vs Parktown

  • Kearsney dumps Dale, DHS handles Monument

    Kearsney dumps Dale, DHS handles Monument

    Doan Nel powers over for one of Kearsney's five tries in their win over Dale College. Photo: Brad Morgan.
    Doan Nel powers over for one of Kearsney’s five tries in their win over Dale College. Photo: Brad Morgan.

    Kearsney College vs Dale College

    In ideal weather for rugby – sunny but slightly cool – Kearsney College saw off Dale College 34-13 to win the fifth game on day two of the Kearsney Easter Rugby Festival, in front of the large and vociferous crowd surrounding Stott Field.

    The hosts were beaten 29-24 by Hoërskool Dr EG Jansen on Thursday, while the Eastern Cape side came into Saturday’s showdown off the back of a 22-66 loss to Hoërskool Durbanville, but it was Kearsney who returned to winning ways, thanks to some clinical finishing.

    Coach Grant Bashford‘s boys scored their opening two tries through the clever use of cross-kicks, with the first finished off by Lwandle Mkhize on the left-hand touchline, while midfielder Keanu Williamson scored the second out wide on the right.

    Less than a minute before halftime, Doan Nel crashed over to take the score out to 24-3, with Inga Mafanga having pulled three points back for the visitors, courtesy of a successful penalty attempt.

    Nhlanhla Ndlovu scored Kearsney’s first five-pointer of the second half, before Valentino Lenge added another to all but end the match as a contest.

    Dale showed their fighting spirit by crossing for their first try through loosehead Phawu Ludwaba, who rumbled his way over, and they struck again moments later through second-rower Ebenezer Sarpong. By then, though, they were too far behind to be able to mount a serious comeback.

    Durban High School vs Hoërskool Monument

    Powerhouse DHS centre Zingce Simka crashes over the try line for the Horseflies' opening try against Monument. Photo: Top Light Edits.
    Powerhouse DHS centre Zingce Simka crashes over the try line for the Horseflies’ opening try against Monument. Photo: Top Light Edits.

    In Saturday’s last game, Durban High School (DHS) outplayed Hoërskool Monument 32-17, with Monnas scoring on the final whistle to add seven points, which left the Horseflies the winners by 15.

    The victory also kept alive School‘s hopes of going undefeated for a second year in succession at the Kearsney Easter Rugby Festival.

    DHS had put Hoërskool Rustenburg away 41-7 on the first day, while Monument played out an exciting 26-26 draw with Glenwood, which meant the Wit Bulle were searching for their first win of the Easter weekend.

    Monnas‘ flyhalf Anthony Viljoen pulled an early penalty attempt wide before a powerful DHS driving maul teed up bowling ball centre Zingce Simka, who powered over for his team’s first points of the encounter.

    Sparked to life, Monument shifted gears and levelled matters through the hard-running midfielder Juandré Ehlers. Then, a successful Viljoen penalty cancelled out an earlier three-pointer landed by his opposite number Jordan van Wyk. However, a Duhan du Plessis try, on the stroke of halftime, put the KZN side 15-10 ahead.

    After the break, Viljoen missed another kickable penalty attempt and DHS, who had made a mess of a couple of excellent scoring opportunities, found their finishing as hooker Okuhle Mbanjwa, substitute Marcwin Nero, and number 13 Nathan Aneke all crossed for five-pointers to open up a 22-point lead.

    With time up on the clock, eighthman Vincent Roberts pulled a try back for coach Jannie du Plessis‘s boys, but by then the damage had already been done.

    SCORERS

    Kearsney 34 (24) – Tries: Lwandle Mkhize, Keanu Williamson, Doan Nel, Nhlanhla Ndlovu, Valentino Lenge. Conversions: Lwazi Mbebe (3). Penalty: Mbebe; Dale 13 (3) -Tries: Phawu Ludwaba, Ebenezer Sarpong. Penalty: Inga Mafanga.

    Durban High School 32 (15) – Tries: Zingce Simka, Duhan du Plessis, Okuhle Mbanjwa, Marcwin Nero, Nathan Aneke. Conversions: Jordan van Wyk (2). Penalty: Van Wyk; Monument 17 (10) – Tries: JuandréEhlers, Vincent Roberts. Conversions: Anthony Viljoen, Cameron Kourie. Penalty: Viljoen.

  • Goals galore on final day of Saints Fest

    Goals galore on final day of Saints Fest

    Waterkloof’s first XI was all smiles after their dominant run at the St Stithians Easter Festival. Photo: Waterkloof.

    Hoërskool Waterkloof finished their Standard Bank St Stithians Easter Hockey Festival campaign with a bang.

    The Pretoria school was one of four teams to end the event on a high after scoring 10 unanswered goals in their last two games.

    DSG Makhanda also ended the festival in style with back-to-back wins over Beaulieu College and Hoërskool Menlopark. Garsfontein also racked up two victories on Saturday, defeating Springfield Convent School and the hosts, St Stithians.

    Bethlehem Voortrekker edged Beaulieu 1-0 to sign off with a victory, while Springfield, beaten by Garsfontein in the afternoon, claimed a 4-0 win over the St Stithians’ Festival XI in their morning contest.

    “I’m really happy with how our team performed. We worked on various strategies and stuck to our processes, resulting in four wins in five matches and only one loss. We scored 15 goals and conceded just two,” Omari Pienaar-Geyer, the Waterkloof head coach, told SuperSport Schools Plus.

    Compared to the way they brought down the curtain, Waterkloof made a slow start to their campaign. They beat Springfield 2-0, lost 0-1 to DSG Makhanda in their second match, and then overcame Beaulieu 3-1.

    After a rest on Good Friday, Pienaar-Geyer’s side returned to the turf rejuvenated and on fire. Lenique Vogel scored a brace, while Nadia Opperman, Abigail Grobler, and ⁠Renske Smit also netted as Klofies romped to a 5-0 victory over Voortrekker.

    They were just as ruthless when they tackled the St Stithians Festival XI, once again running away to a 5-0 win. This time, it was Renske Smit with a double, while Abigail Grobler, Mila Rodenburg, and Mia Perold also made it onto the score sheet. The Elzaan Wessels-captained side almost made it 6-0, but Chené Oosthuyzen‘s shot on target came a second after the final hooter sounded.

    “The girls did a fantastic job in both matches today,” Pienaar-Geyer enthused. “We successfully scored several team goals, and some from penalty corners, which was great to see. We’re working really hard on those.

    “Our focus was on the basics, moving the ball effectively, and our pressing strategies, and when we did that well and together as a unit it paid off.”

    DSG Makhanda, led by Abigail Holderness, cruised to a 4-1 win over Beaulieu College on Saturday morning before ending their Saints Festival experience with a tight 1-0 victory over Die Hoërskool Menlopark.

    Beaulieu’s goal was the only one conceded by DSG at St Stithians. At the opposite end of the field, they averaged two goals a match, tallying 10 from their five outings.

    “We brought an electric attack this weekend at Saints. The interchanging and the ability to put the opposition defence under pressure is a key element that this team brings,” Geowynne Gamiet, the DSG Makhanda head coach, told Supersport Schools Plus on Saturday evening. “Not only are they sharp in attack, but they are also dogged in defence.”

    After breezing to a 3-0 win over Voortrekker in their last match on Thursday, coach Charlene Jonsson‘s Garsfontein girls enjoyed a good rest on Friday before seamlessly picking up from where they had left off on Saturday morning. Garsies cantered to a 3-1 win over Springfield and then completed their campaign with a solid 2-0 win over St Stithians.

    RESULTS

    Menlopark 2-0 Epworth School
    Waterkloof 5-0 Voortrekker
    Springfield 4-0 St Stithians’ Festival XI
    St Stithians 1-0 Epworth School
    DSG Makhanda 4-1 Beaulieu
    Waterkloof 5-0 St Stithians’ Festival XI
    Garsfontein 3-1 Springfield
    DSG Makhanda 1-0 Menlopark
    Voortrekker (Bethlehem) 1-0 Beaulieu

  • Nelspruit does the double with a gritty win over Maritzburg College

    Nelspruit does the double with a gritty win over Maritzburg College

    Hoërskool Nelspruit vs Maritzburg College
    Photo: Frans Lombard/Actionpix.

    Hoërskool Nelspruit vs Marizburg College

    Hoërskool Nelspruit scored a second consecutive victory at the 28th Standard Bank St John’s College Easter Festival with a thrilling 22–13 triumph over Maritzburg College in the final fixture on Burger Field, on Saturday, in Johannesburg.

    Relive all the action on SuperSport Schools(www.supersportschools.com)

    The Rhinos, who edged out Welkom Gimnasium 34–31 in a dramatic opener on Thursday, return to Mbombela undefeated after an outstanding, hard-fought win.

    In a physical battle, both sides committed fully, with neither holding back in the trenches.

    Driven by the relentless carries of eighthman, Vaughn van Zyl, and lock, André Smit, Nelspruit seized control. Their rampaging runs left plenty of bruises in the College camp and laid the foundation for another standout performance from scrumhalf Liam Pringle, who was named the Man of the Match.

    Pringle’s crisp distribution and pinpoint tactical kicking from the base of the ruck kept the College boys pinned deep in their half.

    For College, right-wing Adam Cahill impressed with one of the day’s best performances from the tee. He calmly slotted two long-range penalties and converted his team’s only try, scored by inside centre, Olwethu Kosani.

    Hilton College vs Kingswood College

    The curtain-raiser, a much-anticipated clash between KwaZulu-Natal’s Hilton College and the Eastern Cape’s Kingswood College, lived up to its billing. The sides were evenly matched in an intense first half and went into half-time deadlocked at 13–13.

    After the break, Hilton took charge. Flyhalf, Liyema Nela, slotted a coolly taken drop goal to edge his team ahead, which ignited a dominant second-half display from coach Brad Mcleod-Henderson‘s charges. Nela led the charge, adding three more conversions and three penalties to contribute 18 points to his team’s victory.

    Hilton owed a lot to their loose trio, too, who dictated terms, both on both attack and defence. Eighthman, Zander Muller, bulldozed his way over the gain-line repeatedly, while blindside flank, André Boshoff, reaped the rewards of his tireless work when he went over for a well-earned try.

    Kingswood’s towering right-wing James Mackenzie gave the Hilton defence plenty to think about with a blistering attacking display, which included one of the best tries of the day. However, that wasn’t enough to derail the momentum of the high-flying side from KwaZulu-Natal.

    SCORERS

    Hoërskool Nelspruit 22 (12) – Tries: André Smit, Liam Pringle, D’Angelo Roberts. Conversions: Liam Pringle, John Duncan. Penalty: Pringle. Maritzburg College 13 (7) – Try: Olwethu Kosani. Conversion: Adam Cahill. Penalties: Cahill (2).

    Hilton College 33 (13) – Tries: Zander Vorster, André Boshoff, Zander Muller. Conversions: Liyema Nela (3). Penalties: Nela (3). Drop goal: Nela. Kingswood College 16 (13) – Try: James Mackenzie. Conversion: Praise Matsila. Penalties: Matsila (3).

  • Glenwood snatches win from Milnerton, Westville overpowers EG Jansen

    Glenwood snatches win from Milnerton, Westville overpowers EG Jansen

    With a smile on his face after intercepting a pass, Glenwood captain Lizwe Mtetwa charges away from Milnerton's defenders, on his way to a try for the Green Machine. Photo: Brad Morgan.
    With a smile on his face after intercepting a pass, Glenwood captain Lizwe Mtetwa charges away from Milnerton’s defenders, on his way to a try for the Green Machine. Photo: Brad Morgan.

    Glenwood vs Milnerton

    Joshua Kopp kicked a penalty after the final hooter to lift Glenwood High School to a 37-34 victory over Milnerton High School, who had staged a terrific fightback from 0-29 down halfway through the first half of their clash, on Saturday, at the Kearsney Easter Rugby Festival, in Botha’s Hill.

    Kopp opened the Green Machine’s account with a three-pointer before a Sthabiso Dube swan dive and Lian Lochner‘s blindside snipe put the KZN outfit firmly in the driver’s seat early on.

    When No 12 Lizwe Mtetwa then ran in an interception, matters looked ominous, and it went from bad to worse for the Western Cape boys when wing Litha Tasana saw yellow at the resulting kick-off for a reckless challenge in the air.

    Glenwood scored another try through their industrious flank Joshua Edwards to make it 29-0, but Milnerton, whose never-say-die spirit is a feature of their play, dramatically swung the momentum their way.

    The boys in sky blue hit back hard with quickfire tries by the Sellidon twinsChadwin and Chadlin – and Divine Ambrose, while a further penalty by Chadwin brought Milnerton right back into the contest at 24-29 at halftime.

    Glenwood set up camp deep inside Milnerton’s territory after the resumption and the pressure told when Chadlin Sellidon copped his side’s second yellow for a deliberate knock-on in the red zone. After a prolonged period of attack, the Durban school, at last, opened their second-half account through Mvelo Ndwalane.

    Milnerton was far from done, though, and Chadwin Sellidon snapped a superb drop goal minutes later – the first of the festival – before going on to score his second try, which he duly converted to make it 34-34. Very little time remained in the match.

    Glenwood was able to mount a late attack, however, and, on the last play of the contest, they won a penalty, which Kopp slotted to seal an absolute doozy.

    Westville Boys’ High vs Dr EG Jansen

    Westville Boys’ High‘s superior tactical awareness powered them to a 36-5 win over Hoërskool Dr EG Jansen in the fourth game of day two.

    Jansies had narrowly knocked over the hosts, Kearsney College 29-24, on Thursday, while the Griffin cantered to a 31-0 opening win over Hoërskool Framesby.

    Some thought it might be a hard-fought affair, but the Boksburg team struggled to play in the right areas and were often pinned back in their half by the astute tactical kicking of the local side.

    Westville started like a house on fire, scoring within 30 seconds after fullback Zekhethelo Siyaya tore away down the right flank. An impressive lineout drive saw Brandon Eke go over to extend their lead, but EG Jansen retaliated through Craig Lightfoot.

    Left-wing Avumile Lisa makes the dive for five in the left-hand corner for Westville. Photo: Brad Morgan.
    Left-wing Avumile Lisa makes the dive for five in the left-hand corner for Westville. Photo: Brad Morgan.

    Possession traded hands before Westville finished off another opportunity out wide through their speedy left-wing, Avumile Lisa.

    Unlike that of their counterparts, Westville’s tactical kicking kept them playing the game in the right parts of the field, with Siyaya executing two immaculate 50/22s in the first half alone to heap the pressure on EG Jansen.

    Jade-Will Koopman was on hand to add two more tries to the Westville tally before the break, showcasing exceptional acrobatics to complete his brace in the right-hand corner from a cross-kick in one of the tries of the festival.

    The scoring slowed up after the break, with EG Jansen unable to convert any of their chances, while Phumula Xulu went over for Westville to seal a comfortable win for coach Zander Erasmus‘s boys.

    SCORERS

    Glenwood 37 (29) – Sthabiso Dube, Lian Lochner, Lizwe Mtetwa, Joshua Edwards, Mvelo Ndwalane. Conversions: Joshua Kopp (3). Penalties: Kopp (2); Milnerton 34 (24) – Tries: Chadwin Sellidon (2), Ambrose, Chadlin Sellidon. Conversions: Chadwin Sellidon (4). Penalty: Chadwin Sellidon. Drop goal: Chadwin Sellidon.

    Westville 36 (29) – Tries: Jade-Will Koopman, Zekhethelo Siyaya, Brandon Eke, Phumula Xulu. Conversions: Koopman (3). Dr EG Jansen 5 (5) – Try: Craig Lightfoot.

  • St John’s digs deep in win, Graeme impresses against Pretoria Boys High

    St John’s digs deep in win, Graeme impresses against Pretoria Boys High

    Greame College vs Pretoria Boys High
    Photo: Frans Lombard

    Two matches marked by thunderous collisions and silky handling thrilled the sizeable crowd gathered for Saturday’s smorgasbord of action at the 28th Standard Bank St John’s College Easter Festival, in Johannesburg.

    Relive all the action on SuperSport Schools(www.supersportschools.com)

    The hosts, St John’s College, had to dig deep to overcome a spirited performance from Hoërskool Randburg, but two tries from openside flank Tumelo Bopape helped the hosts secure victory.

    As expected, the home side came out firing, buoyed by a passionate crowd singing their support.

    Lock, Allan Njanfang Patu, ignited the St John’s engine room. Though not the tallest second-rower, his relentless work rate and powerful ball carries consistently put the hosts on the front foot.

    At fly-half, Gerald van Wyk led with composure and creativity. He’s in a rich vein of form and orchestrated play with authority.

    For Randburg, their right-wing Bradley Butcher was a standout performer. The speedster twice carved open the St John’s defence to cross for long-range tries, which injected life into his team’s comeback hopes while firing up the crowd.

    In the following fixture, Graeme College played with precision and intensity and delivered a clinical performance to secure a 25–10 win over Pretoria Boys High School.

    Fullback Lucritia Magau was a constant threat. His strong runs from deep put the Eastern Cape side onto the front foot time after time.

    Blindside flank Ayola Mali was in devastating form with the ball in hand. His crowning moment came when, from inside his half, he sliced through the host’s defensive line, exhibiting sharp acceleration and strength, with a powerful hand-off, to score one of the best tries of the festival.

    The Candies‘ eighthman, Queenton Mncube, stood tall in defeat. He made his presence felt with his powerful carries and committed defensive work, and was rewarded with his side’s only try.

    SCORERS

    St John’s College 33 (19) – Tries: Tumelo Bopape (2), Luke Scott, Simon Musset, Lwandile Khupe. Comversions: Gerald van Wyk (4). Hoërskool Randburg 24 (5) – Tries: Bradley Buther (2), Kian Kritzinger, Jayden Oosthuizen. Conversions: Josh Wigget (2).

    Graeme College 25 (5) – Tries: Ayola Mali, Erin Nelson, Lucritia Magau. Conversions: Ethan Bokbaard (2). Penalties: Aiden Walters, Bokbaard. Pretoria Boys High 10 (7) – Try: Queenton Mncube. Conversion: Blake Mager. Penalty: Mager.