Asian Games: Rugby 7s – Japan edge Hong Kong for Gold

Hong Kong Silver Medal Asian Games 2014

Japan won the men’s gold medal at the Asian Games rugby sevens competition defeating arch-rivals Hong Kong 24-12 in a gripping final on Thursday.

It was the second successive time the two rivals had met in the Asian Games final and the result was the same with Japan running out victors although Hong Kong pushed them to the limit once again.

“This win means a lot to us. Only one team from Asia will be going to the Rio Olympics, and we have put down a marker,” said Japan’s 15s captain Michael Leitch who was called up for duty to retain the sevens title.

Hong Kong entered the Asian Games having won both opening legs at the ARFU Asian Sevens Series but couldn’t quite find the winning formula against a Japanese outfit beefed up with Top League players including Leitch who scored one of the four tries for Japan in the final.

Hong Kong veteran Rowan Varty had given first blood to his team when he cut through the defence to score the first try of the match after both teams had spent the first five minutes going hammer and tongs at each other.

Japan equalized through Leitch who bulldozed his way over from close range, but he was sin-binned seconds later for a dangerous tackle. Hong Kong failed to take advantage, however, as a superb Japanese defence kept them out.

With the hooter having gone for halftime, Hong Kong opted to keep the ball alive with a quick tap and they paid for it when the ball was turned over and Japan punted it downfield.

In the chase for the ball, Hong Kong winger Tom McQueen was penalized for obstruction and a penalty try was awarded to Japan.

Hong Kong came back after the break when sub Salom Yiu Kam-shing scored soon after coming on but tries from Lomano Lemeki and Kazushi Hano saw Japan finish strongly.

“A silver medal is a great achievement but it is still a disappointment as we had come here to win the gold,” said Hong Kong skipper Jamie Hood.

Hong Kong had to fight hard to enter the final needing to get past South Korea in the semi-finals and winning a closely fought contest 15-7.

Korea led 7-5 at the break with a try from winger Jeong Yeon-sik cancelling out Hong Kong’s opening try of the match, which came in the fifth minute by winger Varty who rounded his opposite number to score.

But with the skies opening up over the impressive Namdong rugby stadium, the orders were clear from Hong Kong coach Gareth Baber – keep play inside the opponent’s 22 – and Hong Kong carried it out perfectly as they encamped inside Korean territory and kept play tight. The pressure paid dividends with tries to Tom McQueen and skipper Jamie Hood.

Japan had it easier in the other semi-final as they breezed to a 40-0 win over Sri Lanka with star player Lomano Lemeki grabbing a hat-trick.

Once winger Kazushi Hano had touched down for the first try, it seemed Sri Lanka had set their minds on the bronze medal match as Japan had it all their own way running in five more tries to book their berth in the final.

South Korea went on to win the bronze medal defeating a spirited Sri Lanka 17-14 in a tense game.

Additional reporting HKRFU, photo: Power Sport Images for HKRFU

Umbrella Movement Images – China National Day, 1 October 2014

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The Umbrella movement’s peaceful protests across Hong Kong appear in many photos and video coverage as a pulsing, vibrant sea of humanity. It is that, but within are the many individual stories, the new friendships created, the selflessness of the volunteers who hand out water and food free. The first-aiders who stand ready to help those in need. The recyclers who collect all the rubbish. The artists who take some of that lap sam and re-purpose it. The people who cook meals and bring them down to distribute as a way to show their support.

It is a truly amazing sea of humanity and such a positive re-affirmation of what a great a place Hong Kong is and the spirit and selflessness of her people.

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China National Day: Flag Raising Ceremony – 1 October, 2014

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Occupy Hong Kong Images – 30 September 2014

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Umbrella Art

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The umbrella has become an unlikely symbol of the Hong Kong student protests – here’s some we’ve seen.

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Ai Weiwei
Ai Weiwei

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If you have any good umbrella art photos please send them to [email protected]

Pre-season: HKCC 20-5 Valley Black @ Happy Valley – 27 September, 2014

HKCC 20-5 Valley Black @ Happy Valley – 27 September, 2014

For proof that rugby is a hooligan’s game played by ladies of grace and style, flash forward a mere seven hours after Saturday’s face-off between Leighton Asia HKCC Ladies and Valley Black Ladies when the two sides met again, this time in the refined atmosphere of Lan Kwai Fong. Sworn enemies on the field danced up a storm off it, with much silky footwork on display.

In the game itself, Valley started brightly and with serious attacking intent, pinning HKCC Babes back in their own 22, and a try only averted thanks to brilliant last-ditch defending from Brenda Chan at full back. Fast line speed in defense and a couple of offside errors at the breakdown gave the Babes a chance to calm the pace and clear, and this visibly lifted confidence. Consequently, HKCC were soon two tries to the good, the account opened by number 13 Tinley Wong in a delightful break down the left, followed up almost instantly by a barnstorming 40-yard run from player-of-the-game flanker Emily Tuck. In perhaps a first for HK rugby, the two teams agreed not to kick for conversions, given the high risk of a ball being lost in the Happy Valley building works!

Valley stemmed the tide, but found it difficult to recycle their own ball, and had possession stifled by the HKCC pack, who dominated the scrum, finally bringing technique and teamwork together to capitalise on individual skills. Eva Rona in particular, at loose-head, dominated her opposite number, bringing huge pressure to bear on every Valley put-in. Credit here goes to the referee too, who took his time ensuring that both packs, relatively new and with some very inexperienced players, scrimmaged safely and effectively, and that the natural flow of the game was disrupted as little as possible. HKCC hooker, builder Cheryl Gourley, took advantage of one such ‘advantage’ play, diving over from close range towards the end of the first half.

With ten minutes gone in the second half, and the sun mercifully retreating, Valley hit back, good work from their two locks in particular being rewarded with a try in the left corner. But it wasn’t enough to break HKCC’s control of possession, and the game was settled when Serene Yee found a sublime line cutting back inside the park after unselfish and beautifully weighted passes along the whole back line to the right winger.

For HKCC Babes, this game marked the perfect prelude to the season, with parts of their game now visibly coming together, and the error count dramatically reduced on even a few weeks ago. Captain Anna Holmes said, “We’re confident in our plans, now we just have to execute them during the season as we did today. I’m very proud of the progress the whole team has made in stepping up from 10s to 15s this summer”. The first league game is 4th October versus Scottish; kick off 1800 at Kings Park.

www.hkcc.org

Democracy Protest Images – 29 September 2014

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“Let’s Hurt a Few and Hope They Go Home”

Lets Hurt a Few and Hope They Go Home

Clouds of tear gas drifted across Hong Kong as the police with no obvious plan used violence and an apparent tactic of ‘lets hurt a few and hope they go home’ to try and quell the peaceful protests looking to get open elections for the Chief Executive in 2017.

Whether the protestors succeed in their aims, the biggest loser today is the police – their needless use of excessive force has drawn more people to the protest and achieved nothing. If they’d followed up the first tear gas volley to push out from their barriers and looked to re-open Connaught Road Central to traffic, perhaps the gas use ‘might’ have been justified.

But no, the ‘lets hurt a few and hope they go home’ tactic was pure police intimidation. Whoever gave that order should be charged with harming the injured protestors.

One thing the police must know is that Hongkongers are peaceful protestors, we’ve had hundreds of marches since the last use of tear gas in 2005, involving many groups and a total lack of violence. Even the very emotive 4 June march is trouble free.

The arrival of the military green clad Police Tactical Unit, wearing riot gear, gas masks and wielding and pointing shotguns at un-armed citizens surely marks a new low. What did the PTU achieve? Hurt a few more people, raise the tension several levels bring more people appalled at the police violence onto the streets.

The plan from on-high does seem to be… get the military looking PTU on the street, use violence and the threat of increased violence to intimidate and suppress. Maybe that works on the mainland and in the past without social media and live streaming video. But all its achieved today is to escalate the tensions and hurt innocent people. It is easy after all, if your wearing military grade riot gear and wielding batons to beat up on people throwing up from the effect of tear gas and pepper spray!

At the end of the day, you have to feel for many of the rank and file blue uniformed police obeying the clueless orders from above… talking to many of them, bc found they’d been on duty for as long as 31 hours without sleep and with no relief or rest in-sight.