book itsatry

It’s a Try: The History of Rugby in Canada

book itsatryIf you have ever thought that rugby faces challenges in Canada, you should truly see what challenges it has already overcome !!  In fact, if you have ever coached rugby or been involved in it as a player, referee, manager or served in any other capacity, you probably know Doug Sturrock, who has given well over 40 years of service to our game. Doug Sturrock coached at Magee Secondary for decades, was deeply involved with the Meralomas Rugby Club and of course, has given endless service with the BC Secondary Schools Rugby Union…and still continues to.

Incredibly, Doug has been amassing rare photographs, game summaries, Test Match reports, high school, club, provincial and International results all this time and has now just written and self-published an amazing book called “It’s a Try: The History of Rugby in Canada.” At over 1000 pages, it truly is an exceptional labour of one man’s love for our sport. And there is truly nothing else like it in Canada.

Attached is a photo showing just how comprehensive this tome of stories, memories, shared sacrifices and achievements really is. To obtain a copy, please email the author or call him directly and he will gladly autograph it personally for you as well. At $ 65 the price is an incredible value, and the photos alone are so rare that this book is worth more than twice that.

Doug Sturrock can be reached via email at dougsturrock8905@gmail.com; or via his landline at (604) 888-3949. This book is a great tribute to the history of our sport, written by a man who has been an incredible tribute of selfless service to it himself.

Walter van Halst
Lord Tweedsmuir Secondary
Commissioner, BC Secondary Schools Rugby Union

2017 Junior Boys Rugby Provincial Championship Format

(Download Junior Boys Provincial Format – pdf file)

The inaugural 2016 Jr. Boys Rugby Provincial Championship featured a 4 team format. Therefore, for 2017 we are expanding to 8 teams.

Berths for the Jr. Boys Quarter-Finals will be allocated accordingly and played on Saturday May 27th  

Game A     1) Vancouver Island #1 vs  8) Wildcard Selection         @ Vancouver Island #1

Game B     2) Lower Mainland #1   vs  7) Fraser Valley #2            @ Lower Mainland #1

Game C     3) Fraser Valley #1         vs  6) Vancouver Island #2      @ Fraser Valley #1

Game D     4) Lower Mainland #2   vs  5) Okanagan #1               @ Lower Mainland #2

Please Note:
1)    These Quarter-Final matchups were pre-determined to ensure as much cross-zone play and ranking balance as possible.
2)    Only the top 4 teams will advance to the Semi-Finals. There is no loser bracket for 2017.

The Semi-Finals will be played on Wednesday, May 31st at Rotary Stadium, Abbotsford.

Game E     Winner of Game A vs Winner of Game D         KO   TBA

Game F     Winner of Game B vs Winner of Game C         KO   TBA

The BC Jr. Boys Final and Bronze medal match will be played at Rotary Stadium on Friday, June 2nd.  

Game G     Loser of Game E vs Loser of Game F             KO @ 4:30 pm

Game H     Winner of Game E vs Winner of Game F             KO @ 6:30 pm

A KO time of 2:00 pm will be used as the default time for the Quarter-Finals, but is subject to change depending on the needed travel arrangements for each team. The KO time for the Semi-Finals will be determined at the time that the Sr. Boys Provincial Schedule is set for that day.

The Wild Card selection will be made by a Jr. Boys Provincial Championship Committee and be based upon the size and quality of teams in all zones over the course of the season.

Tony Whitham: A True Rugby Gentleman and Great Steward of our Game

Celebration of Life July 6th @ 2pm at the Evergreen Cultural Centre, Coquitlam

A Tribute by Chris Turpin, Gleneagle Secondary School

The rugby community in BC is saddened by the news that a true legend has passed away. Tony Whitham passed away on June 23rd . Tony was born in 1937 in Halifax, England. His early years were shaped by growing up in working class England during and after the war. His father was killed in action in France shortly prior to the Evacuation at Dunkirk in May 1940. Tony was raised by his widowed mother who helped instill a work ethic and values that Tony was famous for. Upon graduating from Manchester University Tony taught for three years at Highlands Technical Grammar School. In 1963, Tony persuaded his wife that winter could not be much colder in Canada. So Tony and his wife, Kathleen, and young daughter, Jo-Ann, moved to Winnipeg, Manitoba. The Whithams stayed for three years in Winnipeg before moving to BC. Tony taught one year at Princess Margaret Secondary in Surrey. Then Tony made the switch to the growing school district of Coquitlam and taught at Centennial Secondary School from 1967-1973. In 1967 the Whithams were blessed with a second child, a son, named Bob.

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Day 1 BC high school rugby! Bateman’s Wolves carry high drama in our look at all 16 matches

Posted on May 25, 2016. 5:42 pm
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ABBOTSFORD — Small in stature, small in numbers, but on the day, Abbotsford’s Robert Bateman Timberwolves showed themselves to be huge in heart as the B.C. boys high school rugby championships opened up a four-day run at their hometown Rotary Stadium complex.

“It’s one of the smallest teams we’ve ever had, but so full of courage and with so much resilience,” coach Stephen Rowell said proudly after No. 8 Matt Calderone stole the ball deep and spun it out wide to fellow senior and outside centre Ethan Kupsch for the winning points in a 22-17 victory over Richmond’s R.A. McMath Wildcats.

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DAY 2 B.C. high school rugby: Elgin, Argyle, LV Rogers, Bateman punch tickets to gold Saturday

Posted on May 26, 2016. 2:14 pm
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Here’s our look at semifinal Thursday at the BC high school rugby championships at the double-, triple- and quad-A level.

QUAD A
The Shawnigan Lake Stags produced a result Thursday in the semifinal of the B.C. high school championships which, based on their recent run of dominance, puts them in perhaps the most unique position in this province’s entire sports history.

Are the Stags, who beat the Fraser Valley champion Earl Marriott Mariners 102-10 to earn a berth in Saturday’s title game, the first team you can honestly say is so good relative to the rest of the field that the thing they need most, is a higher-level of league to play in?

Defending champion Shawnigan, which has won six of the last seven B.C. triple-A titles, will face Vancouver’s St. George’s Saints, 25-10 winners over Victoria’s Oak Bay Barbarians, in Saturday’s final.

St. George’s defeated Shawinigan Lake in the 2014 final, the only title-tilt loss by the Stags over their current run.

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Purdey’s late try carries the day, Stags find a way to hold off Saints in classic 4A boys rugby final

Posted on May 28, 2016. 7:49 pm
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ABBOTSFORD — It was a match many had predicted would be a blow-out win in favour of the defending champion Shawnigan Lake Stags.

Instead, Vancouver’s St. George’s Saints never believed they were underdogs, and in the dying moments, almost had the opportunity to pull an upset of major proportions in the B.C. quad-A boys high school rugby championship final Saturday at Abbotsford’s Rotary Stadium.

Shawnigan Lake went on to win 12-8, but not before Owen Pitblado of St. George’s chipped the ball through the Stags try-zone with 1:13 remaining, and was just shy of pouncing on it for what would could well have been the game’s winning play.

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2016 Junior Boys Provincial Championship

Junior Boys Provincial Results – 2016

Semi Finals
FINAL   Semi Finals
FINAL
Carson Graham
17   Shawnigan Lake
38
South Delta 15   Oak Bay
27
       

Commisioner’s XV

Reese Tudor-Jones – Shawnigan Lake

Luke Woolridge – Carson Graham

Michael Calvert – South Delta 

Lachlan Kratz – Oak Bay

Championship Final FINAL  
Shawnigan Lake 29  
Carson Graham
3  

Junior Provincial Final Game Summary

Jr. Boys Provincial Rugby Championship: Shawnigan Lake captures historic first ever BC crown

On Friday, May 27th, the Shawnigan Lake School Colts squared off against the Carson Graham Eagles from North Vancouver in the first ever Jr. Boys Rugby Provincial Championship match in Abbotsford’s Rotary Stadium. Like any title fight, the two opponents appeared to size each other up and spar in the opening minutes of the contest, carefully probing for attacking opportunities.

Both sides landed blows early, and the score remained 5 to 3 for Shawnigan Lake almost until the half-time interval, when the Colts managed to overcome the more physically powerful Eagles by moving the ball out wide and into space to secure a more comfortable lead of 12 to 3 with a converted try just before the half-time hooter.

Early in the second half, however, Shawnigan’s momentum proved to be too much for Ryan Kerluck’s Carson Graham sqaud, which appeared to tire as the game wore on after defeating a powerful South Delta side on only Tuesday at Klahanie Park. Indeed, the Colts became completely dominant as the contest wore on, with James Macdonald, Kyle McCallum and Reece Tudor-Jones all being threats to score with the ball in hand. Two tries were scored by Macdonald, one by Tudor-Jones, with two additional Shawnigan trys also scored by Jack Shaw and Nolan Young. A pair of conversions then rounded out the Colts 29 points. Carson Graham’s lone 3 points came on a first half penalty goal.

Strong performances for the Colts were turned in by Fernando Gutierrez, Nolan Young and Moaman Elhendawi. Reece Tudor-Jones, who managed to not only score but make punishing tackles while playing with broken fingers the entire contest, gave a gutsy and heroic effort. The Stags’ captain and double-try scorer, James Macdonald, was superb in all facets of the game.

Ultimately, however, both teams can take pride in taking part in this year’s historic first ever Jr. Boys Provincial Championship Final, and Ander Monro’s championship team from Shawnigan Lake School set a bar of sound defensive play and attacking flair for all teams taking part in next year’s expanded 8 team Jr. Boys Provincial Championships to measure up to.

Stormin’ Norman triplets grow to new heights, huge, hungry brothers lead Prince of Wales rugby

April 30, 2016 at 8:51 pm
Posted by: Howard Tsumura (The Province)

VANCOUVER — If Hollywood ever gets around to shooting a re-make of the 1977 hockey classic Slap Shot, the casting call needs to come north to the classrooms, hallways and playing fields of Vancouver’s Prince of Wales Secondary School.

That’s because if you’re looking for three actors to play the roles of the movie’s hockey-playing Hanson brothers, there would be none better-suited than real-life Grade 11 triplets Broden, Kael and Dace Norman.

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Stadium Series puts cross-zone B.C. boys high school rugby tests on higher, more visible stage

April 6, 2016. 5:01 pm
Courtesy of the Province – Howard Tsumara
Link to original article

VANCOUVER — B.C. high school football has its own championship-game television deal, a featured venue for its finals at B.C. Place Stadium, and a key corporate sponsor in Subway.

B.C. boys high school basketball has brought all four tiers of its Telus-sponsored provincial championship tournament to its new home at the Langley Events where its crowds are on the rise.

B.C. high school rugby isn’t blind to the success of its fall- and winter-sport cousins. In fact, the B.C. Secondary Schools Rugby Union isn’t shy to admit that it has some catching up to do in the areas of self-promotion.

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