Asia Rugby Sevens Series: Hong Kong – Day One

Hong Kong’s men’s sevens team picked up where they left off as the Asian Games champions went undefeated on day one of the Asia Rugby Sevens Series in Hong Kong. The women did one better than their last outing in Jakarta, with an early and important 22-7 win over Thailand, who had ushered Hong Kong out of the medals at the Asian Games earlier this month.

Captain Natasha Olson-Thorne paced Hong Kong with a brace of tries in the first half against Thailand with forward Nam Ka-man adding a score in the opening salvo as Hong Kong led 17-0 at the break after a conversion from Stephanie Chan. Aggie Poon Pak-yan added a try to extend the lead to 22-0 before Thailand scored and converted at the final whistle.

The challenge mounted for Hong Kong in its final pool match of the day against top seeds and Asian Games champions Japan.

Hong Kong had a solid opening half, and while primarily playing behind the ball, managed to keep its defensive structures intact to limit Japan to a 7-0 lead after five minutes. Japan turned on the jets in the waning minutes of the half, and aided by a yellow card against Chan Tsz-ching in the sixth minute, added two more scores before the whistle as they took a 19-0 lead into the break.

Japan added a try to start the second half to push their lead to 24-0 before Hong Kong returned to full strength after the sin-bin. Poon clawed a try back for Hong Kong in the 13th minute with a great individual effort, creating space with an impressive fend, before sprinting 60-metres for the score. Poon’s conversion cut the deficit to 24-7 but a try at the hooter brought the final total to 31-7.

Hong Kong coach Kevin West said that unforced errors were ultimately the difference against Japan:

“They were small errors, but small things can turn games. We had two tackles against Japan where we reached with arms. If we had executed those with chop tackles like we did against Thailand earlier, the game would have been on a knife’s edge and could have gone either way.

“Those small things are hugely important and it comes down to a matter of consistency for us, and being consistent in our processes regardless of the opposition. But it’s a tournament and not one match. There’s still another game for us tomorrow in the pool and our goal is to beat Korea.

“We are after three quality performances together tomorrow; performances where we execute our processes every single time. If we can do that then the results will follow,” he added.

West was pleased to have had a chance to integrate returning campaigners Sham Wai-sum and Colleen Tjosvold into the squad after both missed out on the Asian Games. Their return, and the debut of Maggie Au Yeung Sin-yi, gives West a deep bench for tomorrow’s run.

“We were able to get everyone a run and they all added something today. Everyone is on the same page and has a clear idea of what we need to do and what we are trying to execute.

“Maggie looked very relaxed and is dealing with the occasion well. Every game she learns more and it’s so important for us to be building that depth. She’s one of three newer players along with Stephanie and Vivian [Chan], all of whom are performing, which is great for us,” said West.

The men cleared their opening hurdle against Malaysia with room to spare, running out 54-0 winners before coming up against a South Korean side absent of most of the names from its Asian Games squad and as such the result was never in question as Hong Kong ran out easy 61-0 winners.

At the end of the opening day, Hong Kong is atop the pool with a final match against the Philippines tomorrow to round out the preliminaries. But after an easier than expected first day, coach Paul John is wary of a potential banana skin match tomorrow.

“We knew when we saw the sides that turned up that they are different teams compared to the Asian Games. Korea is certainly different from that semi-final in Jakarta.”

“So we knew it would be a bit different this weekend, but tomorrow we play the Philippines and they look quite physical as they normally are. Sri Lanka look like they normally do and we could end up crossing over against them in the semi finals, while Japan have also brought a good side.”

John was pleased with the way his side maintained its form throughout the day despite the big margins.

“Sometimes you can try and force it against teams like that when there is no need, but I was pleased with the way the boys played. We didn’t take anyone lightly and scored over 100 points, but we haven’t been tested as much I would have liked, which is always a bit of a concern. This competition you go straight into knockout so you have to be ready, but we know what we need to do tomorrow,” John added.

The women’s last pool match is against South Korea at 11.06 on the 15 September, while the men will play the Philippines at 12.12.

Asia Rugby Sevens Series
Date:
 14-15 September, 2018
Venue: HK Football Club
Tickets: tbc

Additional reporting and images: HK rugby

Hong Kong Hosts Men’s East Asia Cup

Hosts Hong Kong will be joined by China, Japan and Korea in the 4 team East Asia Cup with matches scheduled at Hong Kong Cricket Club, Kowloon Cricket Club and The Tin Kwong Road Recreation Ground. A full list of fixtures are shown below. All matches will be free entry.
Date  Time Team  Location 
Thursday 13th September 2018 9:30am China vs Korea Tin Kwong Road Recreation Ground (Mission Road)
Thursday 13th September 2018 13:30pm Japan v Hong Kong Dragons Tin Kwong Road Recreation Ground (Mission Road)
Friday 14th September 2018 9:30am Korea v Japan Hong Kong Cricket Club
Friday 14th September 2018 13:30pm Hong Kong Dragons v China Hong Kong Cricket Club
Saturday 15th September 2018 9:30am Japan v China Tin Kwong Road Recreation Ground (Mission Road)
Saturday 15th September 2018 13:30pm Hong Kong Dragons v Korea Tin Kwong Road Recreation Ground (Mission Road)
Sunday 16th September 2018 9:30am 3rd/4th place play-off Kowloon Cricket Club
Sunday 16th September 2018 13:30pm Final Kowloon Cricket Club

Men’s East Asia Cup
Date: 13-16 September, 2018
Venue: Tin Kwong Road Recreation Ground, Hong Kong Cricket Club, Kowloon Cricket Club
Tickets: Free

Additional reporting and images: Cricket Hong Kong

HK Beat UAE to Qualify for Asia Cup

In a rain-affected final of the Asia Cup Qualifier 2018 in Kuala Lumpur, Hong Kong beat the United Arab Emirates by two wickets (DLS method) to book their place in the Asia Cup.

A fine five-for from Aizaz Khan first helped Hong Kong restrict UAE to 176/9 in 24 overs, the innings affected by a long rain break, before Hong Kong found enough contributors right through their chase to get to their revised target of 179 with three balls left.

Hong Kong captain Anshuman Rath won the toss and elected to bowl first in the cloudy and humid conditions. A bigly game for both teams with the winners guaranteed a place in the Asia Cup – in the group with Pakistan and India.

The UAE innings – a two-part affair, of 15.2 overs first and then 8.4 overs, broken by a long interruption because of rain and a wet outfield – started well with the opening pair of Ashfaq and Suri negating the early movement making their way past 50 in the first 12 overs.

Tanwir Afzal made the initial breakthrough with an excellent delivery hitting the top of off stump to dismiss Suri leaving UAE 52-1. Aizaz Khan was bought into the attack and had made an immediate impression dismissing the UAE captain Mustafa for an 8 ball duck and Shahzad for 2 before play was halted for almost 4 hours with UAE on 65-3 off 15.2 overs.

The rain delay saw the match reduced to 24 overs per side. After the restart Ashfaq and Anwar attacked the Hong Kong bowlers with a number of boundaries struck with Ehsan Khan being targeted on a flat Kinrara wicket. Nadeem Ahmed made the breakthrough dismissing Anwar for 22 and Ashfaq who top scored with 79. A flurry of wickets and boundaries saw UAE through to 176-9 off their allotted 24 overs. Aizaz Khan was magnificent in taking 5-28 to lead the seam attack on a flat batting wicket.

Hong Kong, with the benefit of knowing their target and the number of overs at their disposal, started well with Nizakat Khan and Anshuman Rath, two of their most pedigreed batsmen. The two added 64 runs in just six overs to put Hong Kong in front before Rohan Mustafa had Nizakat’s number, sending him back for a 20-ball 38.

Then followed a good phase for UAE as Babar Hayat and Kinchit Shah followed Nizakat to the pavilion to leave the scoreboard reading 68/3, which became 82/4 in the 10th over when Ahmed Raza bowled Rath for 28.

The UAE were in front at that stage, but Christopher Carter (33 in 32 balls) and Ehsan Khan (29 in 24) made sure the game was back on an even keel with a 53-run stand for the fifth wicket. A dramatic game took another turn when Carter was run out and Mohammad Naveed struck twice in one over to leave Hong Kong at a precarious 147/7.

The closer the Hong Kong team got to the target the more the drama unfolded. Ehsan Khan and Aizaz Khan departed with 33 still needed and. The experienced duo of Tanwir Afzal and Scott McKechnie came together and played with a great deal of courage and experience to continue to whittle away at the target. The danger man for UAE (Naveed) returned to bowl his final over with the game in the balance. A full blooded pull for 6 by Afzal was followed by an audacious scoop over fine leg by McKechnie to leave 12 runs required with 12 balls remaining.

The dismissal of Afzal off the last ball of the 23rd over left Hong Kong needing 3 to win off the final 6 balls with 2 wickets remaining. The first ball offered the chance of a run out at the non-strikers end which was missed…… 2 off 5 needed. McKechnie looking to finish with glory missed his pull shot but scampered a single to 3rd Man…… 1 off 4 needed. The winning run saw the batsman scamper through for a bye after the keeper fumbled the ball standing back… Hong Kong win by 2 wickets with 3 balls remaining and qualify for the Asia Cup!

Hong Kong will now prepare for their Asia Cup opener against Pakistan, to be played in Dubai on 16 September, followed by the fixture against India, also in Dubai, on 18 September.

Hong Kong captain Anshuman Rath, acknowledged UAE’s efforts “The UAE batsmen batted tremendously well after the rain delay. To get that many runs in 10 overs is no joke on any ground. The momentum was with them, but we knew it was a good wicket. Games like that can go either way, so credit to UAE for playing such an awesome game. We knew we had the batting firepower to chase it down, and luckily that happened.”

UAE’s coach, Dougie Brown, was understandably very disappointed at the result. He said: “Gutted doesn’t even come close to describing the feeling right now. I think the guys deserve a hell of a lot of credit for the way they fought. We didn’t get everything right. We maybe didn’t bowl as well as we can do. We maybe didn’t field quite as well as we know we can, but to get into the position we did, to get into the position where we had the total to defend we ended up with, was a phenomenal effort. Credit to Hong Kong, they won some critical moments in a game of very fine margins.”

Additional reporting and images: HK Cricket, ICC

Hong Kong Dragon’s Squad for East Asia Cup

The Hong Kong Dragons squad for the East Asia Cup being held in Hong Kong between 13-16 September has been announced. Li Kai Ming will captain the 14 man squad which includes batsman Ken Tsang and all-rounder David Fang two recent call-ups to the training squad.

After finishing a disappointing third in the last East Asia Cup Dragons Head Coach Chris Pickett is looking forward to the tournament and commented that the squad has worked hard to improve all aspects of their game. “Since the last East Asia Cup in Japan two years ago the squad have lost some faces, through work commitments overseas but also gained some new faces.”

CHK Dragons Squad for the East Asia Cup 2018
Li Kai Ming (CHK Pioneers) (Captain), Arthur Chiu (CCC Hung See), Bobby Chan (CCC Hung See), Damien Yee (CHK Pioneers), Danny Lee (CHK Pioneers), David Fang (CHK Pioneers), Henry Siu (CCC Hung See), James Chan (CHK Pioneers, Jason Lui, Ka U Lynn (CCC Hung See), Ken Tsang (CHK Pioneers), Nigel Sun (CCC Hung See), Rob Lee (CCC Hung See), Siegfried Wai.

Reserve Players
Bosco Szeto (CHK Pioneers), Horace Leung (CHK Pioneers), Howard Kwan (CHK Pioneers), Michael Tsing (CHK Pioneers), Thomas Tsang (CHK Pioneers), Vans Chan (CHK Pioneers)

Officials
Head Coach: Chris Pickett
Assistant Coach: Richard Waite
Team Manager: Phil Daniels
Physio: Max Yeung

Men’s East Asia Cup
Date: 13-16 September, 2018
Venue: Tin Kwong Road Recreation Ground, Hong Kong Cricket Club, Kowloon Cricket Club
Tickets: Free

e-Sports & Music Festival @ HKCEC – 24-26 August, 2018

The largest ever local e-sports event, the e-Sports & Music Festival Hong Kong, took place from 24-26 August at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre – here are some photos from the festival.
Click on any photo for the full gallery.

https://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2018/E-Sports-Music-Festival-HKCEC-24-26-August-2018/i-4tgknWm

https://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2018/E-Sports-Music-Festival-HKCEC-24-26-August-2018/i-Lvh74HP

https://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2018/E-Sports-Music-Festival-HKCEC-24-26-August-2018/i-NgMV5jm

https://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2018/E-Sports-Music-Festival-HKCEC-24-26-August-2018/i-TcBCC5H

https://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2018/E-Sports-Music-Festival-HKCEC-24-26-August-2018/i-6mx2dQ7

photos: HK Tourist Board, bc magazine

Women’s 7s Olympic Final Will Be Played On Iconic ‘Super Saturday’!

The Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games are just two years away and the dates for the Olympic 7s tournament have been confirmed by World Rugby.

Sevens made an impressive Olympic Games debut at Rio 2016 with Australia’s women claiming the first rugby gold medal since the 1924 Games and Fiji’s men claiming their nation’s first-ever Olympic medal, with an historic gold.

The International Olympic Committee has approved the competition schedule for all 33 sports at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games and rugby sevens will again feature in the first week of competition with matches being played across six days of two sessions per day from 27 July to 1 August, 2020.

In a reverse of the Rio 2016 format, the men’s competition will be played over the first three days, while the women’s competition will take place over the final three days, with the medals day being played on the iconic ‘Super Saturday’.

World Rugby Chairman Bill Beaumont said: “This is the moment that the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games comes alive for our players and fans around the world. With two years to go, the competition dates are set, excitement is building, and I am anticipating an outstanding sevens and Games.

“By alternating the schedule, the world’s top women’s teams have the opportunity to shine on ‘Super Saturday’, the biggest moment of the Games, which is extremely exciting for the advancement and popularity of women’s sevens.”

Additional reporting and images: World Rugby

Hong Kong Lose World Cup 7s Opener

Hong Kong lost its opening match of the 2018 Rugby World Cup Sevens, losing 21-7 to Russia.

Debutant Liam Herbert scored in the dying minutes to put Hong Kong on the board late in the game, but the damage had been done in the first half after Russia ran out to a 21-0 lead before halftime after an early brace from Sergei Ianiushkin and a third try late in the half from German Davydov.

Hong Kong put in a much-improved performance in the second half but it was too little too late, and captain Ben Rimene rued his side’s slow start and lack of execution after the match.

“It was a slow start for us. They were up 21-0 at halftime and we had hardly touched the ball in the first half. When we did get the ball we gave it up too easily. With teams like Russia that play at this level all of the time, if you give them the ball they are going to score points and they did,” Rimene added.

The tournament’s knock out format means that Hong Kong will now be contesting the Bowl in San Francisco and will face off against Jamaica who were beaten 50-0 by France in their opening match.

“We are in the bottom half of the tournament now and we have to focus on Jamaica. Our objective now is to get into the top part of the draw come Sunday,” said Rimene.

Tonga will play Chile in the first Bowl quarter final, followed by an all-African affair between Zimbabwe and Uganda, while Papua New Guinea and Uruguay will contest the last Bowl quarter final.

“We need to tighten up our structures for tomorrow,” Rimene added. “We knew what we need to do out there, it was our execution more than anything else that was off.”

Despite being one of six players in the squad that competed in the Rugby World Cup 2019 qualification match against Cook Islands two weeks ago, Rimene didn’t chalk up his sides’ slow start to any off-season rustiness.

“We are professionals and we know what we need to do. It’s not the easiest thing in the world to go from fifteens to sevens, but it’s part of the job and we have to do it.”

Coach Paul John stressed that his team’s ultimate objectives from San Francisco were still valid; possibly even more so, given that Hong Kong may be competing against most of their fellow Bowl competitors in next seasons’ HSBC World Rugby Sevens Series qualifier tournament in Hong Kong.

“Our objective now is to win a few games and try to reach the higher end of the competition.

“We cross over with Jamaica now and they have a lot of good athletes, so we are still playing countries that we want to test ourselves against. Sevens is getting more and more difficult, so it is good to test ourselves against as many teams as possible, especially those we may meet in the World Series qualification tournament in Hong Kong next year,” John said.

Additional reporting and images: HKRU