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

Premiership Round-up: HKFC Ice beat Kowloon in Dramatic Fashion

hkfc-beat-kowloonKowloon Ladies lost a thriller as they nearly upended the Premiership form-book in round three – falling just short in a 22-17 loss to HKFC Ice. In other Premiership action, Valley Black outclassed City Sparkle 51-0, while USRC Tigers beat CWB Phoenix 32-0 at Kings Park.

HKFC scored twice as Stephanie SSY Siu and Jamie Bourk both crossed the try-line before Kowloon put it’s first points on the board with an unconverted try by Chloe Mak Ho Yee. Ice scored a third try through Sophie Short just before the hooter to take a comfortable 17-5 lead at half time.

Kowloon fought back with two tries in the second half the last coming in the 75th minute to pull level at 17-17. Despite a rash of six injuries in the second half, it was Ice who used the clock best as Crystal Wray scored in the dying seconds to secure the 22-17 win.

“We lost in the last minute because we lacked a bit of control late. We didn’t have to rush things as much as we did, but the performance in the second half was exactly what I was looking for,” said Kowloon coach Jonathan Ho.

“Scoring in the first half gave us some belief and the second half was a huge improvement. Just a tiny bit more and the game could have been ours. We can now look ahead confidently to Tigers next week,” Ho added.

“It was a tough day at the office and we were glad to come through,” said HKFC coach David Wigley. “We expect every game to be tough and today shows why. At half time we thought we were in a comfortable position: our lineouts were going well, and even though our scrums were problematic in places, we felt well ahead. We let them start the second half better and fair play to them, they turned the screw quite well. We had six injuries in the second half so we had to do a lot of adjusting. We were successful in reshaping and that was pleasing to see.”

Valley Black ran out easy winners against City Sparkle, improving their record to 3-0 on the season. Valley led 26-0 at halftime and closely mirrored that strike rate in the second half, a remarkable output considering they spent stretches with 13 on the pitch after having two players sin-binned for repeat infringements.

“It was a good game and a good result. It was quite difficult and feisty in places,” said Valley coach James Elliot. “They were a bit physical and our girls couldn’t get the fast ball that they wanted.”

USRC Tigers beat CWB Phoenix 34-0 but coach Liu Kwok-leung seemed pleased to have come through with any type of win at all:

“It was a very hard game. In the first half we played great and everything was going according to plan. In the second half we got some injuries, and had to bring on some younger players. That was when we lost our concentration. We lost momentum and focus, and made a lot of errors. They put us under pressure, but we worked hard in defence,” said Liu

It was another tough blow for Phoenix, who have faced the stiffest schedule in the early going – meeting last season’s top three in succession to start the year.

“In the end, we were very strong in our attack, but the players were not ready,” said a disappointed Causeway Bay coach Ocean Chow.

“We weren’t mentally ready in the first half. We raised our game and created some opportunities to score in the second, but we failed to follow through. We didn’t play as well as we did last week against Gai Wu. If we had, then the scores would have been closer, or it could have even been a win.”

Additional reporting: HKRU

Women’s Rugby Results – 15 October, 2016

women's rugby 15 october - phoebe leung

Premiership

City Sparkle 0-53 Valley Black
@ Shek Kip Mei, Kick-off: 18:00
Premiership round-up

HKFC Ice 22-17 Kowloon
@ Kings Park, Kick-off: 18:00
Premiership round-up, match report

CWB Phoenix 0-32 USRC Tigers
@ Kings Park, Kick-off: 19:30
Premiership round-up

National League 1

HKCC 10-36 USRC Tigers
@ Happy Valley, Kick-off: 15:00

Tai Po Dragons 44-5 HK Scottish Kukris
@ KGV, Kick-off: 18:00
Match report

Revolution SRC 40-5 Valley Red
@ Kings Park, Kick-off: 18:00

National League 2

Uni-Pirates 0-31 Tai Po Dragons
@ KG V, Kick-off: 16:30

Tin Shui Wai 10-14 HKFC Fire
@ Tin Shui Wai, Kick-off: 16:30

CWB Lammergeier 5-29 Police
@ Police Boundary Street, Kick-off: 18:00

Kowloon 17-7 Gai Wu Hawks
@ Kings Park, Kick-off: 19:30

Photo: Phoebe Leung

ICC Women’s Cricket World Cup Asia Qualifiers Match Report: Hong Kong v Thailand – 15 October, 2016

sornnarin-tippoch

Hong Kong who began the tournament so brightly ended it with four consecutive defeats. The bowling was pretty good throughout the tournament with different players stepping up each game. But too many batswomen were out of form and not even able to rotate the strike – putting extra pressure on the two players who were making runs.

While Hong Kong’s tight bowling caused a lot of run-outs, in general Hong Kong’s fielding was not on a par with the other teams taking part. And with four pretty evenly matched sides, it’s the little things that make the difference.

After losing to Thailand on the final day of the ICC Women’s Cricket World Cup Asia Qualifiers Hong Kong finished bottom of the table at the end of the round robin tournament. Thailand won the championship and booked a place in the global qualifiers for the England 2017 World Cup.

Hong Kong had a shaky start to the match, losing three wickets in the first four overs. Moved to the opener, Keenu Gill scored 11 runs from 14 balls.

Captain Mariko Hill scored 11 off the same number of balls, but her short time in the crease was a major blow for the home team.

Playing for the first time in this tournament, Wing-Ki Lai scored 16, while Yasmin Daswani provided 17 runs coming in at number 7.

Thailand Captain and all-rounder Sornnarin Tippoch (pictured) did most of the damage, with 2/11.

Hong Kong v Thailand – 15 October, 2016

Thailand’s chase was strong from the start despite losing a wicket in the third over. Opener Sirintra Saensakorat smashed a team-high 36 including 4 fours.

Eventual Player of the Tournament Sornnarin Tippoch scored 17 to give Thailand a fifth win out of six games in the tournament.

“I think everyone came off the field saying ‘we’ve tried our best’. We put our hearts out to the very end.” said Hong Kong Captain and Batsman of the Tournament Mariko Hill.

“This was my first tournament in Hong Kong. The support was awesome. It means a lot. I have never gotten Batsman of the Tournament before. Mentally, I was never strong. Getting this award, for my batting especially, really puts confidence to myself,” said Hill.

Hong Kong v Thailand – 15 October, 2016

Match Summary
Hong Kong 83/7 (20 overs)
Thailand 86/3 (18.5 overs)
Thailand won by 7 wickets (with 7 balls remaining)
Scoreboard: www.espncricinfo.com/ci/engine/match/1059680.html

Additional reporting and image: HK Cricket Association

Hong Kong Women Superb on Day 1 in Sri Lanka

Hong Kong’s Women’s Seven topped Pool C at the end of Day 1 of the Columbo Sevens – edging Sri Lanka, 17-12, and blanking Singapore, 26-0, before a superb 19-12 win over China. The women had a slow start against Sri Lanka but did well to claim a win in a match played under the punishing noonday sun.

The result was not as convincing as coach Anna Richards would have liked, particularly with the next match against a Singapore side that has posed problems for Hong Kong in the series. But Hong Kong left no doubt in their second outing as they outmuscled and outran their opponents in a 26-0 whitewash. Hong Kong saved its best for last, producing a peerless performance in a 19-12 win over China to claim the top spot in the pool.

Natasha Olson-Thorne, who continues to stake her claim as one of the top players in Asia of any gender, provided the only scoring in the first half as the gritty centre demolished China’s defence with a huge fend en route to an individual try that put Hong Kong ahead 7-0 after Tjosvold’s conversion.

China drew level late in the half, but Hong Kong resumed service in the second half, taking the ball deep into Chinese territory after China flubbed the second half kick-off. Sensing that China was flagging, Hong Kong upped its intensity further as Adrienne Garvey, Olson-Thorne and Tjosvold put on a master class of support play to peg China on its own try-line. Patience over the ball paid off as Hong Kong mounted wave after wave of attacks sapping the defence.

China eventually regained possession but only momentarily as Nam Ka-man, who was influential throughout the day, levelled the ball carrier. Cindy Yuen Lok-yee collected the loose ball to score from in close. Tjosvold’s conversion gave Hong Kong a 14-7 lead with three minutes remaining. Another Chinese error at the re-start handed the put-in at the scrum to Hong Kong who won ball cleanly. Lindsay Varty immediately raised the stakes with a quick attack, carrying deep before offloading to Ivy Kwong Sau-yan who added Hong Kong’s third try in the 19-7 win.

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The reward for topping the pool for the first time this season was bittersweet however, as Hong Kong will now meet series co-leaders Japan, who were unceremoniously beaten by an inspired Thailand seven, in tomorrow’s cup semi final (15.59 Hong Kong time).

“It’s been an interesting day. We struggled a bit in our first game, but played a lot better in the second. But I was really happy with our performance against China, especially our composure. We handled the pressure very well. We were able to keep calm and control the game a bit more and that was the key,” Richards said.

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Richards was unfazed that the reward for the day’s graft was to face Japan: “That will be a really good test for us. We know what Japan are like. We will need more of what we showed today against China. We need to control what we can control, stay composed and work hard on defence,” said Richards.

Can City Sparkle Against Valley Black?

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Premiership debutants City Sparkle take on a Valley Black team unbeaten for two seasons in the third round of the 2016-17 tournament.

City coach Fung Kei-hang acknowledges that his side’s steep learning curve is about to face an even higher gradient: “It’s going to be a tough game for us but we will focus on our defence and hopefully be able to create some counter opportunities to mount our attack.”

In keeping with this season’s objective of acclimatising to the top flight, Fung views the Valley tie as another crucial learning opportunity for his side. “We have learned a lot from the last two games. We are still struggling to get used to the intensity of play at this level but are working hard on building our own intensity in terms of bringing our pace and quickness into the game.”

Fung is encouraged by some early signs of progress: “We have improved our recycling from the back significantly compared to last season and we managed to score a few points against Football Club last week so we can build from that,” Fung added.

The USRC Tigers will be roaring to go against SCAA CWB Phoenix after a stop-start beginning to the season. They were in action in week one, before joining all of the clubs on a bye for the Women’s Super Series the following weekend and then had a Premiership bye last week – leaving them with only one game over the last three weeks.

Coach Liu Kwok-leung is not concerned that the lengthy lay-off has hampered his team’s preparations. “We’ve done a lot to prepare our mindset for this and to prepare physically. We’re missing three of our sevens players this weekend, but that just creates opportunities for the younger players,” said Liu.

Tigers are bracing for a backlash from Causeway Bay who have yet to record their first win after facing last year’s Grand Finalists Valley and Gai Wu Falcons in the opening weeks. “It will be a hard game and we are ready for that,” said Liu.

“South China are always aggressive, especially early in the match. From playing them over the past few seasons we know we will need to focus on the contact area. It will be a real challenge for us as most of our team don’t have the physical size they have.

“We have been focusing on our defence and have had some hard, physical practice sessions. We know we can win when we play to our game plan so it’s all about our mindset and our discipline. With some experienced players away a lot will rest on the younger players stepping up and I am confident that the they can do it.”

HKFC Ice will look to back up their opening win with another ‘w’ this weekend over Kowloon after a solid start to the season last weekend against City.

“We had a positive start to the season with a tough game against City. Our forwards were key against them, they had an outstanding performance and took the match to them.”

Coach Wigley is pleased with the enthusiastic start but wants to channel his team’s energy better saying, “We need to focus more on improving the structure of our play. We were frenetic in the opener and even though there was a lot of enthusiasm, a lot of our play was disorganised and we wasted a lot of energy.”

Despite the presumed gap between the two sides, with Kowloon finishing near the bottom of the table last season, Wigley remains cautious:

“We go in to every game looking to win – whether by a few or by a lot it doesn’t matter – we take every game as it comes. Even though Kowloon have some losses we don’t consider that. We don’t know what teams have been doing over the break so we don’t take anything for granted.

“Kowloon are strong in the forwards – as are we – so I expect a real battle in the packs. I’m confident in the quality of our forwards and we expect to win the majority of those confrontations,” Wigley added.

Kowloon coach Jonathan Ho is also expecting a tough encounter: “Last season we had two very close matches against Football Club – even though they won both, they were tight affairs. We weren’t too far away from them so we can take some confidence into this match.

“Football Club are very balanced. Rose Fong is a big threat at the back and Claire Forster, who used to be one of our players, is playing well for them up front. But our forwards have also improved and our backline isn’t too far off of Football Club’s pace, so I expect it will be a fast game and we will try to involve our backs to good effect.”

Ho is also confident of a turnaround in his side’s fortunes this year: “The season doesn’t look good in terms of our points on the board, but behind the scenes there has been quite a significant improvement. That isn’t just my view either; I have heard the same from other coaches in the league.

“I think we are most improved in the ruck and I’m pleased that the new players are getting used to being part of this group. Our backs are also more competitive even against the top teams. But we still need to improve our aggression, our tackling and our reaction speed,” Ho concluded.

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Additional reporting and image: HKRU

ICC Women’s Cricket World Cup Asia Qualifiers Match Report: Hong Kong v China – 14 October, 2016

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Hong Kong’s World Cup aspirations ended when they were not able to beat China, as the teams split the two ‘Cross-border Derbies’ at the ICC Women’s Cricket World Cup Asia Qualifiers. China have bounced back from being 0-3 to win two matches in a row. While Hong Kong having won their first two games have lost three in a row.

Aggressive running from China and some missed fielding from the home team contributed to China’s total of 114. On the flip side, the running and occasional miscommunications between batsmen resulted in four run-outs for China.

But the 71-run partnership between Feng-Feng Song (36 off 34) and Zhuo Huang (31 off 34) was killer partnership for Hong Kong.

Two wickets in each of the 12th and 14th overs gave Hong Kong some hope, but Cai-Yun Zhou’s 16 off 9 towards the end made it a strong total for the visitors.

Hong Kong v China – 14 October, 2016

Hong Kong’s chase did not pick up enough pace until Captain Mariko Hill entered at number four. She continued her recent form scoring 38 off 35 balls. But she didn’t have the support needed and they were 18 runs short of the target after 20 overs.

Juan Wu of China was the key limiting Hong Kong’s score with 3/11.

“We had a great first over (bowling), we took one wicket and lost only one run. But after the first over things started to turn around,” said Mariko Hill after the match. “We have got nothing to lose now. There is still an Asia Cup spot left. We are going to fight our heart out.”

Hong Kong v China – 14 October, 2016

Match Summary
China 114 all out (19 overs)
Hong Kong 96/6 (20/20 ov)
China won by 18 runs
Scoreboard: www.espncricinfo.com/ci/engine/match/1059678.html

Additional reporting and image: Hong Kong Cricket Association