By Lee Hwee Cheng
Highlights in Episode 14 of RedSportsTV.
Clash of the titans, literally. (Photo 1 © Les Tan/Red Sports)
Home Team Academy, Wednesday, May 23, 2007 – In a rather secluded corner off Old Chua Chu Kang Road, on a pitch set against a picturesque bright blue sky and a nice cool breeze, moods around the new Home Team Academy stadium were at an all-time high as the usual Raffles and Anglo-Chinese camps fought it out yet again – both on the pitch and at the gallery.
But it was the Rafflesians who culminated the highly-anticipated affair with a prideful rendition of their school song, when the boys in green-black-white pipped Anglo-Chinese School (Independent) for the crown 13-10 with a penalty kick in sudden-death extra time.
It was all defense, scrummages and penalties in the game and any attempt by the backs at a breakaway from the defense line would quickly be foiled by a tackle. In fact, it was ACS(I) who scored the first points of the game when they were awarded a penalty kick early in the first half.
The score remained for most of the half at 0-3 as both sides struggled to keep ball possession and launch any possible attack. A bad violation from the RJC camp resulted in another penalty awarded to the boys in yellow-blue stripes, but this time, the kick failed to clear the posts.
ACS(I) had a close stab at a try when they won the ball in a line-out near the try line and charged ahead. But the Raffles defense put out all the stops and held their line. The try attempt was foiled, and in a matter of minutes, the attack had quickly swung the other way.
In the final minutes of the first half, RJC’s Shaun Yam (no.11) received a pass in the midfield, faked a pass and then with a quick change of direction, sprung forward instead and broke through the ACS(I) line. He skipped a few defenders before he was taken down – but not before passing the ball to Stuart Ho (no.13) who finished the play with a try. The conversion was not made, however, and at the end of the first half, RJC were leading 5-3.
Barely two minutes into the second half, ACS(I) twisted the situation around when they overpowered RJC’s scrum to score a try. They went on to complete the conversion and the ACS(I) camp at the gallery broke into a frenzy of cheers as ACS(I) now led by five points at 10-5.
From then on, it was all RJC on the offense. They missed another penalty kick and almost got through when a breakaway was foiled just before the try line. With adrenaline all pumped up, it was only a matter of time that RJC finally scored their next try. Missing the conversion kick again, RJC managed to level the game 10-10.
In the last few minutes of the game, both sides were awarded yet another penalty each, both of which failed to clear the posts. And at full-time, the score remained level at 10-10.
With10 minutes of sudden-death extra time, it was RJC who dominated right from the start and it was not long before another penalty was awarded to the Rafflesians. Third-time lucky, the Rafflesians finally scored on a penalty as Ong Zhe Han (no.12) sent the ball flying between the posts.
It was at this moment that the Rafflesians broke out into a frenzy, and the pitch became a sea of greens, blacks and whites as RJC ended the final with a 13-10 win.
Ian Gan of ACS(I) tries to break free from the defense but RJC’s Kevin Neo pulls him back. (Photo 2 © Les Tan/Red Sports)
"You’re not getting past me, dude," says ACS(I)’s Khairulanwar (14) to RJC’s Shaun Yam (11). (Photo 3 © Les Tan/Red Sports)
Shane Gan of ACS(I) makes a pass to a teammate before he gets tackled. (Photo 4 © Les Tan/Red Sports)
"What nice arms you have, dude." RJC player gets the ball in a line-out. (Photo 5 © Les Tan/Red Sports)
An ACS(I) player shouts with joy at going over for a try against RJC. (Photo 6 © Liu Yongjia)
An ACS(I) player grabs the ball and runs while RJC players try to chase him down. (Photo 7 © Wee Ban Bee)
An ACS(I) player gets taken down by RJC defenders. (Photo 8 © Wee Ban Bee)
Shane Gan of ACS(I) kicks the ball forward to move the attack into the RJC half. Looking on is teammate Timothy Gay. (Photo 9 © Wee Ban Bee)
Ian Gan of ACS(I) tries to break free. (Photo 9 © Wee Ban Bee)
ACS(I) player attempts a forward punt. (Photo 10 © Wee Ban Bee)
"It’s a try!" ACS(I) supporters cheer as their team makes a successful try. (Photo 11 © Wee Ban Bee)
Martin Eddie Butler of ACS(I) player makes a run with the ball but an RJC player attempts to bring him down from behind. (Photo 12 © Wee Ban Bee)
These were the boys who sweated it out on the pitch this afternoon. Good job, everyone.
Anglo-Chinese School (Independent)
1 – Eric Ong
2 – Daryl Thio
3 – Liu Yi
4 – John Yeo
5 – Leo Yi Shyen
6 – Martin Butler
7 – Timothy Gay
8 – David Cheong
9 – Shane Gan
10 – Ian Gan
11 – Tang Hon Wei
12 – Justin Boey
13 – Blandon Tan (Captain)
14 – Md Khairulanwar
15 – Shannon Tan
John Wisnioski of RJC goes on a searing run against ACS(I). (Photo 13 © Joshua Tan)
Raffles Junior College
1 – Aaron Teo
3 – Jed Chua
5 – Kevin Neo
6 – Foo Ming Qing
7 – Thaddeus Cheng
8 – Law Yi Meng
9 – Wong Kah Wei
10 – Lee Chee Meng (Captain)
11 – Shaun Yam
12 – Ong Zhe Han
13 – Stuart Ho
14 – John Wisnioski
15 – Nazirul
18 – Iwan Kurniawan
24 – Kenny Ng
"Shhh … don’t tell them I got the ball." Everyone seems engrossed in something else as an RJC player gets ready to run with the ball. (Photo 14 © Joshua Tan)
Editor’s note: Right, we’ve gotten all the names, but we realize we don’t quite recognize the faces and the jersey numbers don’t appear on the pictures. So, if you recognize yourselves or any of your friends in these pictures, drop us a note in the "Comments" section, and we’ll update the captions accordingly. For more action shots, visit the picture gallery. Thanks! I must say though, ACS should consider changing the colours of their numbers so that they can be seen. We were pitch side and still couldn’t see the numbers properly. Small red numbers on a blue and yellow background are impossible to see. Just a suggestion to facilitate better reporting. Thanks.
hmmm this article is rather passe but i realise no credit has been given to the scorer of rjc’s second try so for anyone who actually looks at this, the scorer was #1-Aaron Teo, just fyi. shame on the people at red sports for not establishing this. =(
AC Rugger in pic2 is Ian Gan
AC Rugger passing the ball in pic4 is Shane Gan
AC Rugger kicking in pic9 is Shane Gan, beside him is Timothy Gay
AC Rugger Ian Gan has the ball in pic10
AC Rugger in pic13 is Martin Eddie Butler
[…] you don’t believe me, check out the rugby story on the 2007 National ‘A’ Division Championship Final between Raffles Junior College and Anglo-Chinese School (Independent). It holds the record for the […]
Couldnt agree with you any better ! 🙂
Dave, Dave, Dave,
I hope Leslie does not take up on your suggestion to put a egoistic moron as his sports commentator.
That will be the biggest mistake he would make.
[…] Hope your June holidays are going fine. I finally managed to finish this episode containing highlights and interviews from the National ‘A’ Division Rugby Championship Final between Raffles Junior College and Anglo-Chinese School (Independent). If you don’t know who won, I won’t spoil the surprise. You can read more about the game and the controversy in the comments section in an earlier post. […]
hehe.. I got respect for Raffles chaps (but I am an SA boy)… but I think this discussion about your son has gone for too long.
I mean, who really bothers ? I find it hard to believe that you would spend all that time typing out long paragraphs about your son and Singapore rugby…
Leslie should sign you up as a sports commentator…
Ciao dudes !
ourhero you’re not answering any of the questions posed at your conflicting information but instead you’re just giving stupid comebacks.
also, nobody cares AT ALL about your son. from what i’ve seen the only thing he posseses is speed. he cannot field kicks, isn’t good in defense and worse, he has no vision.
so please, spare us all this pathetic ego-boosting.
Warrior:
You are the fool. Tom Browne messaged me last week saying that he was sending the practice schedule for the SEA Games 7s team. I just received it this afternoon from him, Tues at 7pm in Yio Chu Kang, Thurs pm a gym session.
Why is he messaging me about the SEA Games 7s ??
You are the pathetic person because the only other Raffles person I know associated with the SRU shouldn’t be so dumb. It makes their job even more remote to become successful.
Living in my own world ? From what I’ve seen of you, you are in your own world. You don’t know the whole rugby circle here or speak for it and nobody cares about you or your the local rugby circle. The local rugby circle needs to change because it doesn’t amount to anything esp. after the JC level.
You are the sad one writing to me with such a scrambled message. Who do you represent ? Tell us.
Every time I receive non-sense from someone like you, I just break them down, reduce them in size and drop kick them out the door, down the steps, out into the street where they land on their faces, just like you.
Don’t tell me about my son because he’d just laugh and ignore you.
Naming the national 7s coach correctly and naming someone else is not pathetic. The pathetic person is actually you who’s being so judgemental on everything and thinking you’re right all time. Yes this is a forum but the rugby circle here is so small, you’re already made a big fool of yourself. You seem to be living in your own world and it’s kinda pathetic that you’ve come down this.
I don’t want to play this flamming game with you because i do not want to go down to your very sad level. If you really feel so much about the sport and want to make a difference, do something about it in a postive way like join a rugby club or get into real coaching. I’m done with all this and I won’t be bothered with replying to you anymore.
Your son’s a good kid and I wish him all the best in his studies and his rugby career.
Warrior:
This comment of yours is pathetic, unintelligent, mixed up and ridiculous. I won’t pay any attention to you or your nutty suggestions here.
If you comment to me then you comment logically and clearly.
And someone who admits that he’s from Raffles and writes so badly, can’t follow the bouncing ball very well, etc. won’t be recognized by me.
Don’t be afraid, I’m never afraid.
Very poor guess again…Jason Hewlett is the national 7s coach and i’m not Ridzal Saat.
Warrior:
Of all the blogs or commments I’ve received here over the past several weeks yours above is the most pathetic.
* Don’t tell me how to relate to my son
* Further in your paragraph one, don’t tell me what to put here.
* In the next paragraph about the SRU, USA Rugby, etc. don’t be silly. Furthermore, I can comment all that I want.
The rest of paragraph, I don’t know what you are talking about ? Messaging yourself, just nonsense.
* Paragraph three here, you are mixing up Herokiller’s original message to me
* Tom Browne is coaching the SEA games 7s, he messages more about it, he coached the Sing Lions team in November at the S.C.C. 7s
* The issue of past S’pore or current ruggers is not an issue for me.
* My ‘guess’ is that you are Ridzal Saat in the SRU. If I’m correct, that the mixed up blog above is you, etc. then there is nothing to say because I know first hand how laughable you are.
* Please don’t tell me not to reply.
Herokiller:
Thanks for your message about my son and the SEA games. I hope he makes it there and that S’pore wins a Gold Medal.
Ourhero: Please stop using ‘we’ or ‘us’ when you refer to John’s future. He’s already 18 this year and he’ll be matured enough to know what he wants to, be it stay in Singapore or move to US. Not to mention a decision to play rugby for whoever or even leave the sport altogether. He’s a bright kid with a good schoolboy career, but however I think you should never ever use this website to ramble on about John’s achievements and even use it as basis of an argument with our fellow users. I admire your enthusiasm but it’s gone to a point where it’s become rather irrelevant. This report itself is about Raffles winning the A Division final and not your son missing out on a chance on the US Under 19 team or his future in Berkeley, NS, citizenship, whatever. There are user friendly websites like Blogger or myspace where you can continue this on so that everyone can see and interact with you.
But what really disturbs be that you seem to put yourself above the powers to be of Singapore Rugby, US Rugby, ACS, etc. Have you really been entrenched in the system itself? Don’t talk about yourself following your son to this training, matches and trips, meeting this person and that etc. That’s admirable for a parent to do so but all you’ve done is pure observation and mingled with the coaching staff. But put yourself in the coaches’ shoes, do you think your ‘input’ or ‘opinions’ would be beneficial at all? Everything is subjective outside the field (You’re a supporter and not a match analyst) and too bad if the coaches insist of doing things their way even though you think you think your suggestions are right or helpful. It’s their right to do that or else they won’t have the job in the first place. End of the day if the results don’t go his way, it’s up to the powers to be to decide his fate…not you. Are you on the field training like a dog? Playing your guts out? Planning coaching sessions or even be involved in the administration/operations of how things are run? The answer is NO. Everything is just your own observation and purely face to face conversation. John ultimately is the master of his own destiny and you can’t change that.
The way you’ve put it seems like you’re a person who’s very knowledgeable of this sport here. But I already have doubts considering you haven’t even heard of Terrence Khoo (He last played for Singapore in 2000 by the way not the 80s) and the past few players that have proudly represented our country and gone onto greater things in life. Yes results haven’t gone our way but considering the resources….Singapore Rugby is doing the best it can to move forward. Tom Browne by the way isn’t even the national 7s coach and neither is Phil Greening.
But honestly, do you think you’ve done any justice to what he is a player and most importantly, a person? Remember this, he’s just John, 18, a great kid, studies hard in RJC, plays exceptional schoolboy rugby, hangs around with his mates and lives his own life. Yes I am from the same alma mater (if you really want to know) as John, but honestly you’re making life difficult for him on and off the field. Imagine him getting a cheap shot at the bottom of the ruck because everyone wants a piece of him? It’s just a worst case scenario but it may not be pretty at all. I’m honestly very concerned about that.
Let’s close this issue, it’s already up to 167 comments (plus this one). Round 1 of the C Division is about done and let’s focus our energies on that. A reply is not needed to this as it’s really time to move on….
ourhero
Thanks for clarifying that your son has not made it to the senior representative level of the Singapore team.
Anyway, hope your son does well in the SEA games if he makes the team.
Herokiller,
Thanks for your message.
This one is more intelligently composed than your previous one.
* Yes, my son has a mind of his own but he just turned 18yrs old and we have a lot of conflicting ideas that we need to work out, a confused situation with him born and raised in S’pore yet a US citizen, etc.
I think his choice will be whether to play S’pore Rugby or nothing.
After he finishes NS, he’s almost 21 yrs of age. I don’t know how the IRB calculates age but if the U20 Championship is in June, John’s birthday is in June so he may be overage.
* Our experience is with S’pore and USA Rugby.
USA Rugby works something as follows:
There are regional selection try-out camps where regional players are invited after being spotted, etc.
At a national ‘High Performance’ Selection Camp like the one John attended after invitation, right after the ARFU U19s in December (above here), those 167 invited players are eliminated daily during the 6 day Camp. The selection is brutal. When I saw it, I thought of tryouts for the USA NFL, American football league.
That’s at the U19 level.
The higher, now must be post U20 level, the same happens with probably more players. So if you want to play National Rugby in the USA, you have to be good enough to be invited to the regional selection Camps, then the National selection camps, then train with the team over 3-6 months as the team builds up for the Championship ahead, ex. U20 or World Rugby Championships like the one coming later in 2007.
So to make it to a national level you have to be training constantly, playing high level rugby to maintain fitness, etc., etc.
Rugby has to be a very high priority for you.
When John and I were in England in April at one game two USA senior team national players came to watch. They were in the UK playing with very senior English teams to maintain their rugby skills, both were Berkeley graduates, by the way. These players are paid in the UK so they are professional players.
I don’t think my son would ever go this far.
As I mentioned above here, good for you to read my earlier comments although I had some erased in late May, John played for S’pore’s National Development A team, Singa Lions 7s team, a national development 7s team and the U19s.
S’pore’s interpretation and what we wanted now since we have decisions to make, is that the A team involvement is better since it is not full international status and allows John the ability to still represent the USA.
I referred to an England U19 coach in my earlier commnt who thought John was a very good player, etc. He told us that in England playing on an ‘A Team or Development Team’ is national representation so we have an issue here to clarify.
Tom Browne is trying to clarify John’s nationality status now so that John can play with S’pore’s SEA Games 7s team in December in Thailand. If that works out then I think that John’s lot has been finally cast with Singapore. I have no problems with this one.
Herokiller, your final two lines above are absurd. I’m always very direct and factual. That’s why when I receive emotional blogs like yours, it is no problem to answer them.
As I said earlier, he is what he is, done what he has done.
* Two days ago, I exchanged messages with the father of the current USA U19/U20 #11. The family lives in the San Francisco area of the USA.
I think his son was the only Wing in that USA Camp in December who was better than my son. John was the starting #14 and the other boy was the #11.
His son is amending, curtailing his USA Rugby career to enter the U of Oregon to play high level US College football, American football.
Can’t go to USA Rugby Camps as above and play US collegiate football.
Lots of issues here but for most USA U19 players, at this age level, the decision is wheter to go on with rugby or concentrate on the studies.
I spoke to almost all the USA U18 players in April and their responses were very interesting and ‘all over the map, etc.’ on this issue.
* I have to run now but you should know that with the USA Rugby crowd that I know, I’m always defending S’pore Rugby, the coaches, players, etc., etc. so much so that I’m generating lots of emotional non-sense something like your earlier comment that I later slam and put down so I have friends like you on the USA Rugby side as well.
* I offered earlier to send by email my long message after John’s recent USA U18 tour, above here.
If you send me an email address, I’ll forward it. If you are a rugby fan, you may find this one very interesting.
We can continue later, must go, lots to do.
To ourhero
I think you are the one that is confused here. Why do you have a problem of helping your son choose whether to play for Singapore or USA after his army?
First of all, I think your son has a mind of his own and I’m sure he can make the decision without much help from you.
And secondly, like you said, he has already represented Singapore at a national senior level, he would not be able to represent any other country. So there would not be a problem of him selecting which country to play for because he is only eligible to play for Singapore.
Unless you have been lying to us about him representing Singapore at the senior level at the age of 17. And if my limited knowledge serves me right, a player would need to be above 18 years of age before he can represent the country at the senior level unless he is given special dispensation by the International Governing body.
So is there any truths in what you have been writing all these while or are you just building castles in the sky?