Match Report: HKCC Ladies 10 – 36 USRC Tigers – 15 October, 2016

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The HKCC Ladies were feeling hot hot HOT as temperatures soared last Saturday. You could practically see the steam curling up from the fizzling astroturf as Happy Valley baked in the afternoon sun. With another loss under their belts and few subs to offer respite from the impending dehydration, the Ladies demonstrated inspiringly strong determination ahead of the first half against USRC Tigers.

A great starting attack saw the ball heading straight towards the Tigers’ try line just after Kick-off, with a penalty leading to the first lineout won by the Ladies. The Asian communicator – Diana Li – made her comeback in full force, scoring the first try for the Ladies 7 minutes in. No conversion.

The rest of the first half saw each side constantly scrabbling and grabbing for the ball, with the Tigers showcasing their impressive mauling and rucking techniques. Despite some great defensive tackling, the heat got to the Ladies as the Tigers broke through the line scoring their first converted try. Half time 5-7.

A short half time water break saw both teams seeking sanctuary in the little shade that is offered at Happy Valley, and a pep talk from Coach Nesbitt gave the Ladies a second wind – despite the complete lack of it in meteorological terms!

The Tigers though seemed to have benefited most from the break, with one of their wings scoring a try almost immediately from the second half kick-off. Discouraged and slightly dehydrated, the Ladies struggled to keep up their defensive line, and a speedy pair of breakthroughs on the wings saw another two tries for the Tigers.

With the heat and glare from the sun becoming even more intense, both teams were certainly experiencing exhaustion and confusion. A couple of moments saw Tigers tackling players who weren’t even carrying the ball, and the Ladies were remineded to keep their tackles low.

A lack of communication in the defensive line opened up the pitch to the Tigers who scored another pair of tries, one converted (5-36), that almost pushed the Ladies to their limits. As usual, the Ladies fought back in a final push and found their second wind – albeit a little too late in the day.

The Ladies managed to steal the ball and formed an impressive maul, allowing Captain Lynda Nazer to place the ball over the line. A great show of teamwork despite the elements and a disheartening score to fight back against.

HKCC Ladies
Forwards:
Nobuko Oda, Wawa Li, Jo Harvey, Katie Rowbottom, Mhairi McLaughlin, Terri Lau, Lauren Petersen, Carolyn Champion, Kikinay Kemp
Backs: Lynda Nazer, Tinley Wong, Diana Li, Josie Jolley, Isobel O’Connor, Allison Mak, Brenda Chan, Elane Lau, Hoiyi Li, Christy Ma, Serene Yee
Tries: Diana Li, Lynda Nazer
Coach: Jeremy Nesbitt

Megabites: Ocean Park Halloween Fest

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This year’s Ocean Park Halloween Fest has a Ghostbusters feel as it looks to make you laugh and scream! The Park will feature Halloween themed attractions where visitors looking for scares and excitement can test their proton run skills as the they run from hordes of ghosts in New York’s subway and streets!

As well as scares there’s creepy food during Halloween Fest and this year Ocean Park will be serving haunted school themed dishes.

At Café Ocean the Mortuary Set Menu features the Ghostly Toilet of Death (Tomato Ox Tail Soup) served in a toilet bowl-shaped container. Opening the toilet bowl lid reveals a skull-shaped piece of toast floating in the blood coloured soup. Amongst the main dish is the Biology Class of the Damned, an assorted platter presented to look like the organs of a human being. A seafood vegetable pâté for the brains, deep-fried chicken breasts with brie cheese for the lungs, a triangular roasted chicken fillet for the liver, a pan-fried beef striploin for the stomach and finally chipolata sausage in tomato sauce for the intestines. For dessert beware the ‘Possessed’ Chalkboard Eraser (Charcoal Helvetic Rolls).

All these Halloween Fest set menus are only available until 31 October.

Halloween Fest
Dates: Until 31 October, 2016
Venue: Ocean Park

Match Report: HKFC Fire 14-10 Tin Shui Wai Ladies @ TSW – 15 October, 2016

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This season the HKFC Fire team has a number of new players joining which makes them a much stronger team. Tracy Tong reports on their second game away against Tin Shui Wai Ladies in the National League 2. In training the Fire looked to adapt their match plan to prepare for the much wider Tin Shui Wai pitch.

On a warm sunny autumn afternoon the two teams started in high spirits with supporters of both teams making for a good atmosphere. HKFC’s Apple Lau scored the first try of the game, successfully converted by Helen Lee 7-0.

In a tough game there wasn’t much between the sides and play was fast and furious with lots of strong tackles flying in. TSW scored their first try minutes after the Fire’s opener but failed to convert. The pace and the heat meant fatigue was a factor as the HKFC Fire struggled in defence against the fierce pressure TSW Ladies put on their try line.

At the break the Fire’s coaches looked to get their players to slow the game’s tempo. The second half though started as the first ended with the match played at full speed. The  TSW Ladies scored a second try forcing their way through the HKFC’s defensive line. The conversion though was missed and this proved crucial as Cynthia Luk answered as she scored the HKFC Fire’s second try of the afternoon. Helen Lee’s second conversion gave the Fire a four point lead which they defended to the final whistle. Final score of 14-10 toHKFC Fire.

A good win for the Fire in a close game.

HKFC Fire
Forwards: Nicole Lai, Amy Kong, Chan-Lok Ting, Louise Hou, Maureen Chen, Karus Leung, Doris Chen, Apple Lau
Backs: Henrietta Wong, Helen Lee, Wong-Hei Hei, Rabbit Leung, Maggie Wong, Sarah Thrower, Emily Chen
Substitutes: Cynthia Luk, Alex Fraser, Tracy Tong, Teresa Lee
Tries: Apple Lau, Cynthia Luk
Coaches: Gloria Cheung, John R Hannon

Wine & Dine Festival 2016

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This year’s Hong Kong Wine & Dine Festival returns to the Central Harbourfront from 27 to 30 October. The venue is 20% larger than last year and the festival features more than 410 wine and food booths in five distinct themed zones.

The ‘Tasting Room’ will host unique Master Chef Dinners ($1,688) prepared by Chef Gaggan Anand of Bangkok restaurant Gaggan in collaboration with three local Michelin-starred restaurants and other Hong Kong establishments.

From wine and whiskey to craft beers and cocktails, there is a wide variety of choices to suit different tastes. The range of gastronomical delights to choose is extensive, including street food and creations from some of the city’s trendiest restaurants and top hotels.

Wine & Dine Festival 2016
Date: 27-30 October, 2016
Venue: Central Harbourfront
Tickets: $30
More info:
27 October – 7:30-11:30pm
28-29 October – 12-11:30pm
30 October – 12-10pm

Sevens Ticket Ballot 2017 Registration

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The annual farce of the Sevens ticket ballot resumes again as registration opens for the public ticket ballot. The registration period runs even longer this year from 14 October to 3 February, 2017 with the ballot taking place on the 8 February, 2017 and winners notified that day by email.

The HKRU has yet to announce the exact numbers but based on last year there are 9,000 individual tickets on-sale. Since regular tickets are sold as 3-day pass. There’s actually only 3,000 tickets available to the public each day in the 40,000 seater HK Stadium. The rest are given to local rugby clubs, allocated to tourist packages or whored out to corporate sponsors paying the big bucks.

If you want a better chance of a sevens ticket, join a local rugby club. You don’t even have to play rugby, join many of the clubs as a social member and as long as you’ve paid the membership fees you can apply to buy a full three day ticket at cost price. You’ll support the local game and you never know you might even enjoy the rugby.

Those who ‘win’ in the ballot will need to pay for their tickets by 22 February 2017. The ticket cost is HK$300 for Friday, HK$750 for Saturday and HK$750 for Sunday. In addition an administration fee of HK$50 will be charge for each ticket.

To register http://hksevens.com/tickets/ballot-registration

Image: HKRU

 

Match Report: HKFC Ice 22-17 Kowloon Ladies @ King’s Park – 15 October, 2016

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HKFC Ice and Kowloon Ladies kicked off at 6PM at King’s Park. Ice gained early possession utilising their forwards with a ton of crash balls and strong running lines to push Kowloon back into their own half. Kowloon gained possession from a turnover ball and chose to kick it down the pitch to get out of their half. After a knock-on, the first scrum was evenly matched – with both teams having a strong forward pack. Ice held their own and worked the ball to their back line, but some poor handling saw the ball again knocked-on. Scrum to Kowloon close to their own try line. Ice won the scrum and fly-half Rose Hopewell-Fong grubber kicked the ball to the corner where a chasing Stephanie SSY Siu picked it up and dotted it down on the line. Rose Hopewell-Fong’s conversion was unsuccessful. 5-0 to HKFC Ice.

Both teams looked to utilise their strong forward packs, putting in big crash runners. The fiercely competitive nature of the game led to numerous handling errors, from both sides, throughout the first half. Ice began to dominate their scrum, which allowed number 8, Bobby Wilson, to get hold of the ball and gain several metres down the pitch. After popping the ball out to the supporting backline, outside centre Jamie Bourk slotted the ball down on the try line. Rose Hopewell-Fong’s conversion was successful! 12-0 to HKFC Ice.

Kowloon made a quick come back by breaking through HKFC Ice’s defensive line making it to the 22, but Rose Hopewell-Fong gave Ice a bit more breathing room putting boot to ball. Kowloon regained themselves, making another quick break with their speedy backline, however an outstanding tackle by Rose Hopewell-Fong forced Kowloon to knock on. The ball changed possession several times, with scrums happening all over the pitch. After 25 minutes of play, a scrum was spun by Kowloon, and their scrum-half, Chloe Mak Ho Yee, picked up the ball, ran down the blind side and scored a try for Kowloon. The conversion was flagged away. HKFC Ice 12 – 5 Kowloon.

Both teams were creating some beautiful running lines courtesy of their backs, and Kowloon kept HKFC Ice on their back foot and under pressure. Another handling error saw a scrum for HKFC Ice, a powerful forward push secured the scrum and scrum-half Sophie Short picked the ball up, went to the blind side and dived over the line, try! The conversion was unsuccessful. HKFC Ice 17 – 5 Kowloon Ladies at half time.

Denise Nga Chi Chan came off to give the infamous Royce Chan a chance to get on the pitch as Ice kicked-off the second half. Kowloon had a chance when one of their speedsters made a line-break, but she was taken down hard by Royce Chan on the half-way line and lost the ball. Kowloon later regained possession and sent the ball flying down the wing again with an 80m sprint but she was tackled out-of-bounds to give Ice a lineout on their own 22. Kowloon exerted tremendous pressure and Ice lost the lineout. Kowloon went straight for a try. The Ice defence held their ground and the ball was held up.

50 minutes in and Nina Pirie came off to give Cheryl Gourley a run out. Later HKFC Ice’s Angelina Cheung was substituted by Zuzanna Osinska. Kowloon fought back hard, broke the line with speed again and managed to score a second try. Conversion unsuccessful. HKFC Ice 17 – 10 Kowloon.

Royce Chan and Jaime Ho had to leave the game after an accidental clash of heads. Doris Chen and Rabbit Leung came on as replacements.

The intense match continued with both teams knowing the next score was crucial with Kowloon having most of the possession. A recurring injury forced Claire Hunter off, Apple Lau came on to replace her. Again a knock-on resulted in a scrum which Kowloon won, their fullback hit the line hard and scored the try. Conversion successful. HKFC Ice 17 – 17 Kowloon.

Tied with only 9 minutes left of the game both teams fought hard and well but it came down to teamwork with HKFC Ice pushing forward together, crash ball after crash ball then out wide to the wingers. Good defence from Kowloon saw HKFC pushed back, which resulted in a lineout. A clean lineout win and the forwards got the ball to the backs, Rose Hopewell-Fong dummied her defender and broke for the score. She was tackled just just short and off-loaded the ball off to #8 Bobby Wilson who barrelled herself towards the line. Ruck formed. Scrum-half Sophie Short secured the ball and down the backline it went to Emma Shields who drew the defenders in and passed a quick pop to Crystal Wray who used her strength and finally got the ball down on the try line in the far corner! Conversion unsuccessful by Rose Hopewell-Fong.

HKFC Ice 22 – 17 Kowloon. The ref blew the whistle to signal the end of the match.

HKFC Ice
Denise Nga Chi Chan, Shonagh Ryan, Megan Richardson, Angelina Cheung, Iris Chan, Claire Hunter, Nina Pirie, Bobby Wilson, Sophie Short, Rose Hopewell-Fong, Stephanie Siu, Jaime Ho, Jamie Bourk, Crystal Wray, Emma Shields.
Substitutes: Cheryl Gourley, Doris Chen, Zuzanna Onsinska, Royce Chan, Apple Lau, Helen Lee, Maggie Wong, Rabbit Leung
Tries: Stephanie Siu, Jamie Bourk, Sophie Short, Crystal Wray
Conversions: Rose Hopewell-Fong x 1

Photo: Phoebe Leung

Match Report: HK Scottish Kukris 5-44 Tai Po Dragons @ KG V – 15 October, 2016

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It was a balmy evening at the KGV ground as HK Scottish Kukris and Tai Po Dragons met for the first time in National League 1, with the Dragons having previously played in the Premiership. The game started evenly matched, with the Kukris putting Dragons under pressure. But just as the Kukris game-plan was about to yield results, the Dragons turned over the ball and counterattacked. The Kukris were slow to respond and the Dragons scored and converted 7-0. Kukris immediately replied with a good team effort, and Fung Yuen-ting went over in the corner. The conversion was unsuccessful 7-5.

The Kukris had a great chance to take the lead. The ball was worked out to Hui Man-ling on the left wing, who kicked it clear of the defence and gave chase. But as she headed for the try line under the posts, she was unable to gather the bouncing ball and knocked-on. The Kukris seemed overly disheartened by the missed oppourtunity. First they gave away a soft try. Then the Dragons scored twice more, by forcing their way through the Kukris’ defence, with two or more tacklers needed to stop each Dragon. Their conversions were unsuccessful, but the halftime score was 22-5 to Dragons.

The second half resumed in similar fashion. The physical Dragons continued to challenge the Kukris defence, and doubled their score; four more tries, with the first converted. However, just as the Dragons appeared to have total control, the Kukris fought back. The ball was won, retained, and then carried forward. Now the Dragons were under pressure, not that the outcome of the game was in doubt. First the Kukris moved into the Dragon’s half, then beyond the 22, and finally had the ball touched down. But the referee called them back for a scrum. And even though it was now the Dragons who were conceding penalties, the Kukris could not manage to score any more points.

Final score 44-5 for Tai Po Dragons. A well deserved win for a very strong Tai Po team, who now go top of the league with maximum points from two games, and impressive figures of 68 Points For, 5 Against.

Next week Tai Po Dragons take on Gai Wu, while Hong Kong Scottish continue at KGV for another 6 PM kick-off against Hong Kong Cricket Club.

HK Scottish Kukris
Neon Chau, Po-Ki Chan, Tung-Hoi Jim, Crystal Lee, Oi-Yan, Emily So, Myron Ng, Nieve Heskin, Kathy Yip, Karis Cheng, Hau-Yi Chung, Yuen-Ting Fung, Andie Ma, Ket Robinson, Man-Ling Hui, Lo-Ho Yau,
Substitutes: Yumi Fan Sau-Yi, Tiffany Tse, Nicola Yau
Tries: Yuen-Ting Fung