Category: February
team AkzoNobel Win Epic Volvo Ocean Race Duel
An epic Leg 6 of the Volvo Ocean Race saw the teams pushed to extremes: from the wet and wild upwind conditions of the start through the stifling heat and calms of the doldrums, leading to an incredibly close finish in Auckland, New Zealand.
The City of Sails has played host to many historically close finishes and this year’s will only add to the legend. With only miles to go the finish line, positions changed as the pressure ratcheted up. Five boats within sight of each other, charging towards the finish line under a bright moon.
After 21 days at sea, as exhaustion set in, team AkzoNobel were able to fend off the challenge from Scallywag to earn their first leg win by less than two minutes with MAPFRE completing the podium. Dongfeng Race Team and Turn the Tide on Plastic finished just minutes later, with Team Brunel completing the arrivals finishing in sixth place 1h 29min 11s after the leader.
It was a tremendous win, and came after an amazing final 24 hours, when a ridge of high pressure off the north east coast of New Zealand stalled the progress of the leading boats, allowing those over 100 miles behind to close what had appeared to be an insurmountable gap.
For team AkzoNobel and Scallywag, the buffer they’d built up over the past week was only just sufficient, and they were able to match race down the coast all the way to the finish line in the Waitematā Harbour, usually sailing within hailing distance of each other.
In the end, the margin at the finish was just two minutes between first and second place.
“It’s been a 6,500 mile match race, it’s unreal,” said Simon Tienpont of AkzoNobel’s first leg win. “I’ve never sailed a race like this in my life. We’ve always been in each other’s sights. They were always there. It’s been neck and neck. Huge respect to Scallywag, they never stopped fighting and we never stopped defending. I’m so proud of our crew. They never flinched.”
“Our team never gives up,” said Scallywag skipper David Witt. “We just didn’t pull it off this time. We had our chances, but AkzoNobel were just a little bit too good this time. But we’ve come a long way since leg one.”
The second place finish in Leg 6, combined with a leg win into their home port of Hong Kong, has elevated Scallywag up to third place on the overall leaderboard.
While the weather pattern of the last 24 hours has made for a heart-stopping finish for race fans, it also led to a heart-breaking result for Dee Caffari’s Turn the Tide on Plastic.
Just 24 hours ago, Caffari and her team appeared poised to claim their first podium of the race, even while challenging for the leg win. MAPFRE and Dongfeng Race Team, first and second on the overall leaderboard, were over 60 miles behind Caffari.
It would have made for a well-earned and popular result for an underdog team. But as the leading trio bumped up against an unavoidable patch of calm winds, MAPFRE and Dongfeng roared in, closing the gap down minute by minute.
As darkness fell on Tuesday night and the wind picked up for the final 60-mile sprint to the finish, the two powerhouse red boats were within striking distance of Caffari and her team, just 2 miles back. And over the next 90 minutes, they were able to grind their way past, pushing Turn the Tide on Plastic back into fifth place with 20 miles to run.
While Caffari and her crew showed incredible fighting spirit, clawing ahead of Dongfeng Race Team once again as the boats raced through the Hauraki Gulf on the final approach, they couldn’t hold on, and would need to settle for fifth place, behind both MAPFRE in third and Dongfeng in fourth.
“It’s been a crazy 20 or 21 days, match racing all the way here,” said MAPFRE skipper Xabi Fernández. “We’ve been fighting with Dongfeng like crazy. We never stopped, we fought so hard, and now we feel very happy of course. We were hoping for opportiunites in the doldrums and they never came, but finally they came today, and we did it.”
“We’re sorry for Turn the Tide on Plastic,” said Dongfeng skipper Charles Caudrelier. “They did a fantastic race and I think they deserved a third place finish, but that’s sailing, they’ve been unlucky today and we managed to come back… It was a good surprise.”
Overlooking the immediate disappointment of the day, this marks the best result of the race to date for Turn the Tide on Plastic and is a sign of progress for a young and improving team.

“We’re gutted, I don’t even know what to say,” said an obviously disappointed Caffari dockside. “We had a good race, and we thought we were going to have a better result. But those pesky red boats always seem to get it their way.”
Team Brunel finished 90 minutes behind their fellow competitors after a bold tactical choice over the weekend backfired and put them behind the rest of the fleet.
Vestas 11th Hour Race did not sail in Leg 6 after being shipped to Auckland for repairs. The team has lost ground on the leaderboard, with both Scallywag and AkzoNobel overhauling them to hold down third and fourth place, with Vestas 11th Hour Racing sliding to fifth. The team is expected to release an update over the coming days.
| 1 | AKZO | Elapsed time: 20d 09:17:26 | |||||||||
| 2 | SHKS | Elapsed time: 20d 09:19:40 | |||||||||
| 3 | MAPF | Elapsed time: 20d 09:39:38 | |||||||||
| 4 | DFRT | Elapsed time: 20d 09:42:36 | |||||||||
| 5 | TTOP | Elapsed time: 20d 09:45:08 | |||||||||
| 6 | TBRU | Elapsed time: 20d 11:14:19 | |||||||||
| 7 | VS11 | DNS | |||||||||
Volvo Ocean Race Leaderboard
MAPFRE – 39 points
Dongfeng Race Team – 34 points
Scallywag – 34 points
team AkzoNobel – 23 points
Vestas 11th Hour Racing – 23 points
Team Brunel – 20 points
Turn the Tide on Plastic – 12 points
Additional reporting and images: Volvo Ocean Race, Ainhoa Sanchez, Jesus Renedo, James Blake,
Rainie Yang Youth Lies Within Tour @ HK Coliseum – 24-25 February, 2018
Rainie Yang enthralled a packed HK Coliseum with her Youth Lies Within Tour on the 24-25 February, 2018.
Click on any photo for the full gallery of images
https://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2018/Rainie-Yang-Youth-Lies-Within-Tour-HK-Coliseum-Feb-2018/i-DzzkWKN
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Japan Host Hong Kong in Second East Asia Cup
In rugby league Japan will host Hong Kong in the second East Asia Cup on 16 June in Tokyo as both teams prepare for this year’s Emerging Nations World Championships.
Hong Kong narrowly lost to Japan in inaugural East Asia Cup last November at King’s Park. The match, which was also Hong Kong’s international rugby league debut, saw Japan build up a solid 24-0 lead before Hong Kong came storming back in the second half, only to fall just short in a 24-22 loss.
The fixture will be another milestone in a busy year for HKRL which kick’s off with the fourth HKRL 9s on 27 May at King’s Park. Followed by the return of HKRL’s domestic club competition the Super League. All roads though lead to Sydney where Hong Kong will participate at the Emerging Nations World Championships.
The ENWC tournament is aimed at boosting the development of the game globally, and will see Tier 2 and 3 rugby league nations compete in a two week tournament. The reach and diversity of those participating reflects of the growth of rugby league around the world with Canada, Greece, Hong Kong, Hungary, Latvia, Malta, Niue, Philippines, Thailand and Vanuatu all confirmed.
Hong Kong Rugby League Nines
Date: 27 May, 2018
Venue: Kings Park
Tickets: Free
More info: http://hongkongrugbyleague.com
Super Rugby Live in Hong Kong
Hong Kong will stage its first Super Rugby match on 19 May 2018 at Mong Kok Stadium when Japan’s Sunwolves host South Africa’s Stormers in Week 14 of the 19-week 2018 regular season.
Although the Sunwolves will be on debut in the city, the side features some familiar faces for local rugby fans with test captain and flanker Michael Leitch, scrumhalf Fumi Tanaka, hooker Shota Horie, backs Yu Tamura, Kenki Fukuoka, Akihito Yamada, Harumichi Tatekawa and sevens star Lomano Lemeki all having represented Japan here before.
“We are very much delighted to hold our first ever Super Rugby home match in Hong Kong against the Stormers on May 19th at Mong Kok Stadium,” said Mr Yuji Watase, Chief Executive Officer of the Japan Super Rugby Association.
“We are excited to engage with the Sunwolves fans in Hong Kong, which is home to one of the most populous rugby communities, and one of the biggest Japanese communities, in Asia,” added Mr Watase.
The Sunwolves enter the season under a new coach who is also familiar to local audiences in former All Black and Japan international Jamie Joseph, who coached the Highlanders in the first ever appearance of a Super Rugby squad in Hong Kong against Racing 92 in 2016, the year after taking the Highlanders to the Super Rugby championship.

The Stormers Hong Kong debut will mark the second visit of a South African Super Rugby franchise to the city in 2018, after Cell C Sharks beat Racing 92 in the Natixis Cup earlier this month.
The Stormers reached the quarter-finals of last season’s competition, bowing out following a 17-11 loss to The Chiefs at the Newlands Stadium in Cape Town.
A host of senior players have signed contract extensions with Western Province Rugby, the provincial union behind the Stormers, including the Springbok trio of captain Siya Kolisi, Damian de Allende and Steven Kitshoff. Springboks Bongi Mbonambi, Frans Malherbe, Eben Etzebeth and Pieter-Steph du Toit are also currently under contract.
The Stormers draw one of the strongest annual attendances in Super Rugby and HongKongers will have their opportunity to see why at the 6,000-seat Mong Kok Stadium.
Stormers Head Coach Robbie Fleck said that his team is looking forward to the experience of playing in front of a Hong Kong crowd. “This is another first for the Stormers and something that all of the players and management are really looking forward to. Our matches against the Sunwolves in Singapore have been tough encounters, so we know that we are in for a real test once again.”
Western Province Rugby Group CEO, Paul Zacks, said that it is particularly exciting to take the Stormers brand to yet another new territory. “In the last two seasons we have taken the Stormers to both Singapore and Argentina for the first time, so we are really looking forward to connecting with our supporters in Hong Kong in 2018.
“The Faithful can be found all over the world and I am sure we will get great support in Hong Kong as well,” said Zacks.
It will be a meeting of familiar rivals, after the two clubs were grouped in last season’s Africa 1 conference, with Stormers finishing top of the conference log. They swept the series beating Sunwolves 44-31 in Tokyo in week 5 and inflicting a heavier loss, 52-15, on the visitors at Newlands in week 16.
After a re-structuring of the competition in the close season, the Stormers are playing in the South African Conference alongside the Bulls, Lions, Sharks and Jaguares, while the Sunwolves are in the Australian Conference with the Brumbies, Rebels, Reds and the Waratahs.
The Sunwolves will open their campaign against the Brumbies in Tokyo on 24 February, while the Stormers got their season off to a winning start with a 28-20 victory over the Jaguares on 17 February.
The match in Hong Kong will shorten the travel distance for the Sunwolves and becomes one of the three Super Rugby host matches they play each year away from Tokyo’s famed Prince Chichibu Memorial Stadium.
“SANZAAR is excited by the staging of the Sunwolves versus Stormers match in Hong Kong in May as it sees Super Rugby enter yet another new territory. The profile of rugby in Asia has been elevated with the introduction of the Sunwolves into Super Rugby with matches already being played in Tokyo and Singapore, and we welcome this opportunity to promote the tournament and the game in China,” said Mr Andy Marinos, Chief Executive Officer of SANZAAR, the body that operates Super Rugby and The Rugby Championship competitions.
AIA Great European Carnival Final Week
It’s your last chance this week to the enjoy The AIA Great European Carnival and The Great Circus of Europe at the Central Harbourfront as both close this weekend before returning new and refreshed in December.
https://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2017/Great-European-Carnival-Central-Harbourfront-21-December/i-6BVq6nK
Only a few more days to demonstrate your skill at the many games and challenges along the midway. Thrill to rides like the Extreme (remix Orbitor), Capriolo and the KMG Booster or enjoy the classics such the carousel, spinning coaster and the wave swing. And of course there’s the sublime dodgems… drive away your frustrations and enjoy the Year of the Dog.
If you haven’t been already you’ve missed out on the unique Circus Big Top experience which includes the hire wire Gerlings, motorcycles in a cage and the space wheel…
https://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2017/Great-European-Carnival-Central-Harbourfront-21-December/i-zsKd3kX
The AIA Great European Carnival + The Great Circus of Europe
Date: 21 December, 2017 – 25 February, 2018
Venue: Central Harbourfront
Tickets: $130, $40
Women’s ASEAN T20 Cup Squad Announced
Thailand will host the 6-nation Women’s ASEAN T20 Cup which runs from the 5-14th March. The tournament will see teams from Hong Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia, Tanzania & Bhutan compete in a round-robin format with the top placed team being crowned champions after all games have been completed.
The Hong Kong selectors have announced the squad led by Captain Mariko Hill to represent Hong Kong at the tournament. The squad, which departs on Monday 5th March, features a balance of youth and experience including several new faces as the team look to build consistency after a disappointing 4th place finish – after a strong start – in the World T20 Qualifiers last year.
Hong Kong’s fixtures:
Tuesday 6th March: Hong Kong v Bhutan (Terdthai Cricket Ground)
Wednesday 7th March: Hong Kong v Indonesia (Terdthai Cricket Ground)
Friday 9th March: Hong Kong v Thailand (Thailand Cricket Ground)
Saturday 10th March: Hong Kong v Malaysia (Terdthai Cricket Ground)
Tuesday 13th March: Hong Kong v Tanzania (Terdthai Cricket Ground)
Hong Kong Women’s Squad for Women’s ASEAN T20 Cup
Mariko Hill – Captain (Hong Kong Cricket Club)
Kary Chan – Vice Captain (Craigengower Cricket Club)
Anum Ahmad (Kowloon Cricket Club)
Maryam Bibi (Little Sai Wan Cricket Club)
Lemon Cheung (Hong Kong Cricket Club)
Tammy Chu (Craigengower Cricket Club)
Yasmin Daswani (Hong Kong Cricket Club)
Rajvir Kaur (Little Sai Wan Cricket Club)
Emma Lai (Hong Kong Cricket Club)
Bella Poon (Kowloon Cricket Club)
Shanzeen Shahzad (Little Sai Wan Cricket Club)
Alison Sui (Hong Kong Cricket Club)
Ruchita Venkatesh (Hong Kong Cricket Club)
Mehreen Yousaf (Little Sai Wan Cricket Club)
Head Coach: Richard Waite
Assistant Coach: James Chan
Team Manager/Media Liaison: Esther Corder
Physio: Mawinee Puanglumyai
Reserves:
Akasha Yousaf (Little Sai Wan Cricket Club)
Venezia Ogden (Hong Kong Cricket Club)
Corn Wong (Craigengower Cricket Club)
T20 Blitz @ Tin Kwong Road Recreation Ground – 11 February, 2018
The T20 Blitz started cool, but by Sunday afternoon as action heated up and the powerful finalists duked it out, even the sun had popped out to take a look at the scintillating batting of Kumar Sangakkara and Nizakat Khan. The legendary Sri Lankan thrilled the crowd with his hitting through the tournament, but it was Hong Kong batsman – denied a hundred when stunning caught on the boundary – who starred in the final.
Click on any photo, or here, for the full gallery of images.
https://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2018/T20-Blitz-Tin-Kwong-Road-Recreation-Ground-11-February-2018/i-BLL6tGq
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https://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2018/T20-Blitz-Tin-Kwong-Road-Recreation-Ground-11-February-2018/i-ZGZMn44


