One Cup To Rule Them All

Gai Wu Falcons and Valley Black have contested the past five Premiership Grand Championship Finals. Can Gai Wu add the Cup to their league title or will Valley’s reign as Grand Champions continue…

Kicking off at King’s Park at 4.30pm, this clash has an extra layer of spice with Gai Wu defeating Valley 22-15 last time they met to bring an end to the Black’s three year 51-game winning streak.

Finally I have a full strength squad to select from this week so it will bring me a bit of a headache at selection,” Gai Wu coach “Sailo” Lai Yiu-pang said. “The set piece is going to be a big area, if we can secure the set piece, especially the scrums, and put pressure on them, then we will have more opportunity to create a platform for ourselves. If we fail to secure that platform in defence there will be more challenges.”

Gai Wu breezed past Tai Po 63-0 in the semi-finals while Valley outlasted a gallant Tigers side 17-10 and Lai knows his team will need to be on the ball throughout this weekend.

“The two teams will be throwing everything at it, I expect it to be a close game and a big battle,” he said. “We have to be able to play 80 minutes of rugby, they have some experienced players – Bella [Milo] and Aroha [Savage] can turn every opportunity into points.”

“We can’t let up and we have to defend well. The reason we beat them last time is because we defended really well, we shut them down early so they didn’t have too much front-foot ball and then we put pressure on them and forced them to make turnovers.”

Chong Ka-yan and Lee Ka-shun will be among the key players for the Falcons as they look to end Valley’s run of three consecutive grand championship wins.

For Valley coach Milo, it’s about building on the basics. We’re excited and nervous at the same time,” she said. “We have got to get our set piece right and put a bit of pressure on their key players. Our biggest work this week has been our defence. We didn’t really slow down their breakdown last time we played so they had faster ball and we were just a bit too slow to get out wide.”

“We’ve just focussed on ourselves and how we can get better from last week’s semi-final, we didn’t start too well. We have been talking about how we can control our game, ” added Milo.

Grand Championship Finals 2018

Additional reporting and image: hkru

Women’s Rugby Grand Championship Finals – 10 March, 2018

Valley Black and Gai Wu Falcons Win!

Valley Black had to work hard to overcome a resilient USRC Tigers side in their 17-10 Women’s Premiership Grand Championships Semi-final victory.  While Gai Wu Falcons posted a comfortable 11-try, 63-0 win over Tai Po Dragons. The results set up an intriguing, if familiar, final next weekend as Gai Wu look for a league and cup double.

The Tigers began the match making good use of their possession and Charlotte Myrans stroked them to early three-point lead with a well-taken penalty from the right wing.

USRC kept the pressure on and were rewarded with another penalty which fed into a series of ruck phases followed by some fast hands out to the right wing where Natasha Olson-Thorne  scored in the corner. Another lengthy kick from Myrans added the extras for an early 10-0 Tigers lead.

Valley picked up some momentum in the second quarter with three points from the boot of Zoe Smith. Valley continued to attack and forced a lineout on the Tigers 22. Flanker Aroha Savage gathered the ball and powered her way over the line, Smith’s conversion tied the score 10-10 at the break.

In the second half, Valley held the lion’s share of possession, but were kept out by a solid Tigers defensive line. On 50 minutes, Savage picked the ball from the base of a scrum on the Tigers’ five-metre line and went over for her second try. Smith converted to give Valley a 7 point lead, which they defended until the final whistle

Valley’s player-coach Bella Milo was pleased to get through a tricky match “It was a tough game,” she said. “Tigers defended well and made us work all the way. The first half showed we hadn’t had game time for the last few weeks. Then we found our groove and made the points to get us back in it before the break.”

“In the second half we built on the momentum we made. Our forwards played really well.  They were dominant in our scrum, and in our lineout. We’ll take the win but it was hard one,” she added.

Milo continued We’ve got a short turnaround. Now it’s back to the drawing board to get ready for next week’s match. I’m only hoping that we can go through and keep up what we were doing right today.

Tigers’ coach Fan Shun Kei saw the match as one that got away, but nonetheless declared himself pleased with his side’s accomplishments this season. We made a very positive start and controlled the first part of the first half.  We were getting the ball out wide quickly and that’s why they struggled. Natasha played a very important role, maintaining the momentum. Later our forwards were playing more kick and go, taking easy options instead of going wide.” sais Fan

In the second half, when we had the ball, we were too rushed. Every time we got the ball, we’d make a mistake and gift it back to Valley. Under their pressure we didn’t use the ball efficiently.” Philosophical but quietly determined, Fan believes his side have a lot more to give.

We defended very well all through – it was such a big difference to previous games and exactly the foundation I wanted. I was very pleased, especially with Maelle [Picut] and Lara [Schats],” Fan said. “The game could have been ours if we’d stuck to the plan. Valley kept it alive on our mistakes.

So in the end it was another learning experience.  We lifted our game, and we made them fight for 80 minutes. It was one of our best games this season, and you could say we were unlucky, but our players can take a lot of positives from this game,” he smiledHopefully next year we can come back faster and stronger.

Click here for all the weekend’s women’s rugby results.

Additional reporting and image: hkru

Women’s Rugby Grand Championship Results – 3 March, 2018

Premiership

Gai Wu Falcons 63-0 Tai Po Dragons
@ King’s Park, Kick-off: 16:30

Valley Black 17-10 USRC Tigers
@ Happy Valley, Kick-off: 16:30

National League 1

Gai Wu Fawkes 0-15 HK Scottish Kukris
@ King’s Park, Kick-off: 15:00

Valley Red 5-22 Revolution SRC
@ KG V, Kick-off: 18:00

National League 2

Police Sirens 29-14 HKFC Fire
@ Police Boundary Street, Kick-off: 18:00

CWB Lammergeier 10-0 Kowloon
@ So Kon Po, Kick-off: 18:00

Images: hkru, scaa

It’s Grand Championship Semi-Finals Weekend

Valley Black continue their defence of the Women’s Premiership Grand Championship with a semi-final against USRC Tigers. In the other semi-final, league champions Gai Wu Falcons take on Tai Po Dragons.

Bella Milo, Valley’s player-coach, is keen to see her side playing again, after a long break, but is clearly hopeful that her charges are on track for yet another appearance in the final.

“It’s the most exciting time of the year, the Grand Championships are the big test – the pinnacle of club rugby. We’re all a little bit nervous and excited at the same time. Going into this match with Tigers with so little recent match time is not ideal, but we’ve had a couple of good training sessions that have given us a little bit of confidence,” she said.

“Our last game against Tigers was high quality and high scoring, and we’re expecting something similar this time. That was a fast running game, and likely this will be too, so whoever has the most ball will probably win. We held on to possession well then, and if we repeat that we can make it through to the final,”notes Milo.

Milo and her team have done their homework on Tigers, and pinpointed Lara Schats as a threat they need shut down. Tigers don’t always have great continuity, she says, and is confident if her side hold up their level of play, they will make another final appearance.

With Shan Pong and Stephanie Cuvelier away, Kelsie Bouttle at school in Australia, and Rebecca Thomson out with a fractured cheekbone sustained in training – all in addition to several players missing since Christmas, and  Valley’s second team also in semi-final action this weekend – Milo will have slim bench of only four forwards and one back.

The Tigers go into the match buoyed by last week’s solid quarter-final win over Causeway Bay Phoenix, and while coach Fan Shun Kei is in no doubt that Valley will provide stiffer opposition, he takes confidence from the encounters between the two sides earlier in the season.

“We played them twice this year, and did quite well. Our attack is looking really good this year, we just need to keep on doing in attack what we did in that last game, when we have the ball. We’ll use our speed out wide, and try to force penalties by putting them under pressure,” said Fan.

“It will be a bonus if we can get into the final. Valley are strong and skillful, with special threats in Bella and Aroha Savage. Gai Wu have beaten Valley, so we know they can be undone. So our focus has to be on defence and tackling. I want our players to believe in themselves and go firmly into one-on-one tackles, a bit more aggressive,” he added.

Like Valley, Tigers have to work with some absences from their ideal squad, including veteran Lindsay Varty and captain Jessica Ho. Fan has called on the services of second-team flanker Maylynn Ng, who has featured before but never started, aiming to strengthen ball carrying and defending. Lai Pou Fan will move to No. 9 from her usual full back.

Additional reporting and images: HKRU

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
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TBRU Elapsed time: 20d 11:14:19
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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, 

Women’s Rugby Grand Championship Semi-final Fixtures – 3 March, 2018

Women’s Rugby Grand Championship Results – 24 February, 2018

Premiership

Gai Wu Falcons 84-0 City Sparkle
@ KG V, Kick-off: 16:30

USRC Tigers 66-0 CWB Phoenix
@ King’s Park, Kick-off: 16:30

HKFC Ice 19-25 Tai Po Dragons
@ HK Football Club, Kick-off: 16:30

Valley Black 20-0 Kowloon
@ Happy Valley, Kick-off: 18:00

National League 1

Valley Red 19-14 USRC Tigers
@ Happy Valley, Kick-off: 13:00

 Gai Wu Fawkes 86-0 HKCC
@ KG V, Kick-off: 18:00

HK Scottish Kukris 44-0 Tai Po Dragons
@ Shek Kip Mei, Kick-off: 18:00

​National League 2

Kowloon v Gai Wu Hawks
@ King’s Park, Kick-off: 15:00

Police Sirens 20-0 University
@ Police Boundary Street, Kick-off: 18:00

CWB Lammergeier 20-0 City Twinkles
@ King’s Park, Kick-off: 18:00

HKFC Fire 19-0 Tin Shui Wai
@ HK Football Club, Kick-off: 18:00

Images: Takumi Photography