Tuesday, December 23, 2008
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
Equal Time
Highland rugby sets the standard
Deseret News (Salt Lake City), May 22, 2006 by Dirk Facer Deseret Morning News
Highland's rugby teams earn results
Deseret News (Salt Lake City), May 18, 2004 by Jay Hinton Deseret Morning News
Highland Rugby
Utah High School Rugby Powerhouse
by Wes Clark & Larry Gelwix
Their team Goal: "To do our best" in rugby, life
From (LDS) Church News, week ending 5 September 1998
Tuesday, December 2, 2008
The "Good Samaritan" he smoked and drank beer
- One rumor has it that HR players are warned to avoid club play because most of these guys, on club teams, smoke and drink beer. I guess the warped thinking is that, they should not be associating with these "types" of people. This kind of moral hypocrisy is a cancer in our society. It implies that one's outward appearance is a reflection of the inner spirit, heart and soul. Nothing could be further from the truth. Remember the story of the "Good Samaritan". Who walked by with their noses in the air, and who stopped to help. Many non smokers and drinkers only put on the Sunday face on Sunday.
- The Kiwi import players have and continue to handicap the skills and development of local players who might otherwise develop into exceptional rugby players. A program that annually increases it's reliance on import players from 2 to 4 to 6 in 2008, sends a clear message that local talent, collectively is in obvious steady decline. Do the math.
For the love of the game
"Open Membership - Rapid rise of college club teams creates a whole new level of success."
Not about rugby specifically, but the principles apply.
... “Nobody competes for the money or the fame because there are no scholarships and not a lot of attention. The kids have to do all the work to make their club function. They do it because they love their sport, and I’ll tell you what, we don’t have the prima donnas you see at the higher levels of college athletics.”
Saturday, November 29, 2008
No ideal is as good as a fact. - Cabot
Words without actions are the assassins of idealism. - Herbert Hoover
Sunday, November 16, 2008
Reply to comments ...
Mary, sorry it's not refreshingly different. If you take the time to read all of my posts, I have made several creative suggestions to change the dynamics of this conversation.
Why am I the only advocate for your local players, getting more time on the field.
If you really care about building character, integrity and not just winning, then champion my suggested voluntary limit of one import player from NZ on the field at a time for 2009.
Why not put one of the Kiwi boys on six different teams next season. That would be amazing! Think of what that would do for rugby in Utah.
You change the dynamics by making an intelligent choice for fairness and the response will be so refreshing it will make you smile.
You may lose a few more games but your team will be much the better for it in the long run. HR will still have an amazing program that positively impacts the lives of many.
In response to your comment about BYU and other teams doing the Haka. None of these teams have a 20 year history of under the radar and cloaked recruiting of foreign import players.
The Haka is about respect, honor and integrity.
HR's claim of, "we know nothing" turns out to be a gross misrepresentation! Notice how the HR rhetoric has now changed from we know nothing to justification and pointing fingers at others. A HR parent's honest admission about providing room and board for a young man from NZ, as part of a cultural exchange speaks for itself.
Thanks for the mention of the United Rugby program.
They are an example of:
- what can be accomplished in 5 years with no import players from New Zealand.
- how local talent and parents when given the chance can collaborate, blossom and rise to any challenge.
- losing on the field and yet winning off the field.
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
HR - who gave you the approval to use the Haka?
Ra, that coach made a statement that kaumatua went over from NZ to Utah.
So can you tell me who were those so called kaumatua ?
Were they Mormon ?
Were they Ngati Toa ?
This is a fair question.
What is the name of the person who gave you the approval to use the Haka & Kia Kaha in your movie?
Please stop using the Haka and Kia Kaha in your schemes.
HR has little respect for the Maori culture or the young men from New Zealand, other than as means to a very selfish end.
Sunday, November 2, 2008
Collateral Damage - Gut Check
Do you have to see bleeding bodies lying on the side of the road before something clicks in your heart and in your head that something is terribly wrong, and that you should stop to help? When is enough, enough? Open your eyes people and connect the dots?
Like the story of the Good Samaritan, we all to some degree have been like the Levite and the Priest, just walking by, turning our heads, closing our eyes and our mouths and not lifting a finger to help.
Unlike the story of the Good Samaritan some stood and watched as the traveler was beaten and robbed and did nothing. Some have known for a long time that this stretch of road was not safe yet they have pointed travelers in this direction without a second thought.
Now the lone traveler laying on the side of the road is not alone. The road is now littered with young people with Asperger Syndrome and their families. They have been kicked in the head and beaten down by people in pursuit of the almighty WIN!!! It appears that some of their tuition money was used to fuel this train wreck, and now their school has been closed.
Another unseen casualty is Don, a senior, who's father played for the Samoan national team. An exceptionally gifted rugby player who played for West Valley last year an then was recruited to play for Highland in 2008. He was as talented as some of the boys from New Zealand, yet he never stepped on to the field at the National Championship game. Why?
HR didn't want him playing against them, yes he is that good, so they recruited him to play for them. With the six kiwi boys making up most of the back line and the coaches relative playing half back, Don's position, he gets the shaft and sits on the bench the entire game.
To add insult to injury, the coaches relative playing halfback was selected by HR to receive the MVP.
Don and the kiwi boys disappear into the mist of anonymity. Thrown under the bus in the name of integrity, honesty, honor, sportsmanship, saving face and their perverted and twisted interpretation of Kia Kaha.
Such are the tragic results of HR's blind and ego driven attempts at sports engineering.
Past being nice and polite:
- Does it make your stomach turn HR?
- Look in the mirror, it's Gut Check time
- Does your conscience ping, pang, clang just a little?
- Blood on your hands is a good metaphor for what has happened
- Open your eyes, look at your hands and take some responsibility
- There is only one way to wash it off, and that is to do the right thing
- Wall Streets unchecked attempt at financial engineering and vodoo economics has pushed our country into a long and deep recession, and hurt millions.
- HR's unchecked attempt at sports engineering using cloaked recruiting has failed miserably and continues to hurt many, such as our friends who were attending the Woodland Hills School and Don.
Friday, October 31, 2008
As the World Turns
The football & rugby coach at USC was Larry Wilson. Larry Wilson has been for years and still is an assistant coach at HR.
The Kiwi import players were registered as students at the very same school for 2008. Do you think HR knew or was this another amazing coincidence? Could be, considering HR claims to have no foreknowledge of how they get here from New Zealand in the first place.
All of the parents who paid tuition for their children with Asperger Syndrome are wondering why the football coach was being paid a very nice salary, more than the teachers, and why their money was spent on busing the football team around the country and to Canada to play football games. Reportedly over $100,000.00. It all fits, very sad situation but given the players what would you expect. True to form. If I was a parent I would be cracking a few coconuts, so to speak.
Sunday, October 19, 2008
USC Sports Acadamy has folded
Then it's focused was changed to an elite sports academy, sound familiar?
The Kiwi import rugby players were registered at this school for the 2008 season.
Many similarities to the HR program of getting the best football players in the valley and combining them with "elite" import players from other states.
Their efforts to apply this non sustainable philosophy to football, rugby and basketball have crashed and burned. Yes they had a rugby program.
The biggest losers are the youth with Asperger Syndrome and their families.
What is the connection between Bob Jones and Larry Gilwex?
USC sports acadamy and rugby.
USC Sports Acadamy article in the Salt Lake Tribune. Read the comments. Another sad case of the invisible collateral damage from selfish business ventures.
Below are two of the comments from the newspaper article:
"Woodland Hills has changed a lot since I graduated there. It is true Woodland Hills is a school for special needs as well as an alternative school. (When I went there we didn't have sports teams. We'd be lucky enough to have 70 students in the whole school) As opposed to 300+ that were enrolled last year. In my opinion the financial problems began to happen when Mr Bob Jones decided to try and turn this school in to a sports academy. When you pay the football coaches 70,000 a year... there's bound to be money issues. As far as his claims that Woodland Hills was in trouble to begin with. More like they lived within there means. What about all your expensive field trips Mr Jones? Why not mention that out of state football program you had going where you bus the football team around US and Canada"
"Perhaps some of you will remember this school by its more recent incarnation as Utah Southern Community High School - aka the all sports high school. The school that was going to recruit top athletes from all over the world to give them a direct link to college sport scholarships... for a hefty fee. My guess is that the owner and administration (former principal) are responsible for the rapid fall. What the article didn't say is that this WAS Woodland Hills School. It WAS focused on students with Asperger's Disease. Yeah, it was in trouble when Bob bought it, but when they alienated much of the student body by changing the focus to sports it greased the skids. Hate to say it, but I told you it would happen."
Friday, October 17, 2008
Moral Relativity
The truth of the matter is that the movie, "based on a true story", and the real life story are moral contradictions.
Kicking a player off the team because he cheated on a test at school verses recruiting players from New Zealand every year and sneaking them into the public school system.
If the coaches applied the same rules to themselves, that they proudly apply to the players, there would be no coaches on the team.
"We are building young men with integrity, honesty, character, teamwork and a strict honor code".
Then we close the office door to take a call about the 6 import players coming from New Zealand in 2009. You can't have one flavor of integrity for players and another flavor for the coaching staff.
Another interesting happening, if someone can verify this it would be appreciated.
Ten players from Highland and ten players from United tried out for the BYU rugby squad.
Six players from United made the squad including a freshman starting on the A team as a lock.
One player from Highland made the team, and he was one of the boys from New Zealand.
The skills of the local HR players have been capped in a sense, because they sit on the bench when the going gets tough. Like muscles that are rarely used, they will not be as nimble, strong or flexible as those that get regular exercise. Losing is an essential element of moving down the path from good to great.
For the sake of winning and maintaining the big image these young men struggle when they leave Highland and try to move to the collegiate or club level play. Shameful and sad. These young men deserve better. This is the invisible yet real collateral damage that no one likes to talk about. It is the result of this train wreck policy of winning at any cost.
I also heard through the grapevine that the private school in Herraman that the kiwi boys "attended" this year 2008, the USC Sports Academy has closed it doors. If this is true it will be interesting to see which school they show up in next year. Is there a connection between Bob Jones the owner of the now defunct school and Larry Gelwix?
Will HR now change their strategy and recruit players on J1 exchange student visas so they can legally attend the Utah public schools? This means a real one year commitment to school and much higher costs. If money is not an issue and they want to keep up the big scores, the big win stats, and the big image, then this may be their only option. We will see.
Monday, September 29, 2008
The movie is out and now we know!
- Green Bay Packers and leave out the contribution of ....... Brett Farr?
- New England Patriots and forget about ....... Tom Brady?
- Tour de France and not mention ......... Lance Armstrong?
- Modern day golfing legends and forget ..... Tiger Woods?
But we used your haka your culture your Kia Kaha and your national sport to make our movie.
These great young men deserve better, than an untitled picture in the credits at the end of the movie. So much for integrity and character building.
Religion saves the main character in the movie, but where is the religion in leaving out the most important people and contributors to this so called true story.
Gratitude, recognition, appreciation, telling the whole story, and not just the part that is easy to tell, honesty and integrity seemed to be forgotten religious values in respect to the boys from the land of the long white cloud.
If the invisible import players from NZ are legitimate and on the up and up, then why leave them completely out of the movie. It would have helped the script writer and production, nicely tie in the Haka, Kia Kaha and the Maori connection.
The coach would have had to share some of the limelight with the boys from NZ.........can not have that can we!!
To tell the whole story would mean admitting that it was a lot more than just good coaching that created such a dominating team. it really was just as much about winning at any cost.
HR .... please extend your hospitality beyond just providing room & board for these young men from NZ every year.
Take some of the money from the movie, that they helped you earn, and pay for their air fares next season. It's the least you can do, in light of their overwhelming contribution to your many national championships.
What would Jesus do?
Thursday, September 18, 2008
"Forever Strong" & Recruiting
There will be no mention of the of the huuuuge... contribution made by the import players from New Zealand.
No pictures, scenes, interviews, no action shots..........just silence.
Sorry...P4 said there are a few pictures in the credits....I stand corrected
But no mention at all in the script.
No actors playing these unstoppable and amazing athletes.
Half of the movie should be about.........."the amazing kiwi boys, pay their own way to Utah every year to help HR win 15 national championships"
Huge because there would be no movie or story to tell without their annual trek to the USA to play for Highland.
They are the....
- yeast in the bread
- the chocolate chips in the chocolate chip cookies
- the hub in the center of the wheel
- the invisible and forgotten warriors on the front line
- .... save a picture in the credits for (P4) and the rest of the HR crew to ease their consciences.
Thank you Kiwi boys from New Zealand...
Sorry we forgot to include your critical contribution in the movie, but see you next season mate!!
Tuesday, September 9, 2008
Read them both and make up your own mind...
Friday, September 5, 2008
Kiwi import players are over stayers....Ed is correct
........"I leave it to USA Rugby's Eligibility and Competitions Committees to determine the issue, but I strongly recommend that, current/valid immigration status should be required for participation in any level of USA Rugby and, especially at the High School level where some boys may be naive enough to damage their futures by ignoring the United States Immigration Laws."
Respectfully Submitted,
Edward J. Hughes, Jr.
President, METNYRFU
Director, NRU
Director, USARFU
Chairman, USARFU Disciplinary Committee
Tuesday, September 2, 2008
USA Rugby Report 2005...in full
Issues have been raised by various parties regarding the eligibility of certain foreign members of the Highland High School Rugby team. At the request of the the USA Rugby Game Development Officer, the chair of the USA Rugby Disciplinary Committee, in conjunction with the USA Rugby Eligibility Committee, conducted an extensive investigation as to whether Highland had violated any USA Rugby regulations and guidelines or Utah State Law with regard to the recruiting and particpation of foreign players and as to the eligibility of four particular members of the Highlands HS team who are citizens of New Zealand.
The findings of the undersigned are that, while there does appear to be a pattern of behavior that is strongly indicative of recruiting of specific non-resident alien, high school age, players by the Highland High School rugby coach, neither the Highland coach, nor any of the players in question, have, in any way, violated either Utah State Law or the existing Eligibility and Disciplinary Regulations of USA Rugby.
As the undersigned has no education in the laws of the State of Utah, I contacted and was educated, advised and assisted by Carol Lear, Esq., Assistant General Counsel for the Utah State Board of Education. Ms. Lear had previously dealt with similar accusations made against past players of the Highlands HS club. Ms. Lear explained that Utah does, under certain circumstances, permit foreign children to attend Utah State public High Schools. Basically, the rules regarding such participation in public education focus on two issues: 1) The parent or court appointed guardian of any minor must reside in the State of Utah and, 2)The student's tuition must be paid to the State of Utah by either the government or by the individual student.
In the instant case, all of the four young men in question are 18 years old. Therefore, there is no issue with regard to the parent of legal guardian as the boys in question are no longer minors. With regard to the issue of tuition, I telephoned the Granite School District in Utah and confirmed that these boys have all paid their own tuition to the State of Utah and, therefore, Utah is not footing the bill for the public education of a foreign national.
The remaining issues as to eligibility are satisfied by the fact that, as per the Principal of Olympic High School, all four of the boys from New Zealand are only 18 and enrolled as full time students as of this past September in Olympic HS, taking a full course load of 6 classes out of 8 periods. Further Olympic has no team, so these boys/men are free to play for the Highlands club.
While these boys are eligible to play, there are some very serious issues that USA Rugby needs to address in changing the existing rules to avoid the type of recruiting and potential exploitation of young foreign men that can easily occur if things remain status quo. The first issue is that each of these young men is presently in the country illegally. All of these men have overstayed their tourist visas and, upon leaving the United States to return home, if they aren't deported first, these boys/men will not be permitted to return. Neither the Utah school system, nor the USARFU Eligibility Regulations place any restriction based on immigration status. While public policy may prevent Utah from prohibiting illegal aliens from getting a public education, USARFU faces no such public policy dilemma.
The second issue deals with what restrictions should USA Rugby place on recruiting of foreign High School Students. The visa/immigration issues may be all that need to be addressed, but it is a bit unusual that particular HS programs seem to aquire the same number of students from the same countries year in and year out and still they deny that their is any active recruiting going on. While I don't disbelieve the coaches who tell me that they do not actively recruit these gentlemen, I find it an awfully amazing coincidence that not only has this coach managed to have the same number of boys from New Zealand fall in his lap every year, but they all seem to opt to attend Olympic High and, it just so happens that the same coach has had himself empowered with power of attorney for each of these lucky men.
I leave it to USA Rugby's Eligibility and Competitions Committees to determine the issue, but I strongly recommend that, current/valid immigration status should be required for participation in any level of USA Rugby and, especially at the High School level where some boys may be naive enough to damage their futures by ignoring the United States Immigration Laws.
Respectfully Submitted,
Edward J. Hughes, Jr.
President, METNYRFU
Director, NRU
Director, USARFU
Chairman, USARFU Disciplinary Committee
Thursday, August 21, 2008
Our friend from South Africa
- Born in South Africa
- Has lived in the USA for 3 years
- Played for United for 3 years
- Has attended American Fork High School since the 10th grade
- Is a USA citizen
- Rescued by a loving aunt from an orphanage in South Africa
- Will be a great contributor to any college team and has the skills and heart to play for the Eagles
- Keep an eye on this great young man
Comment from Justin Barney....thank you
I undertake to comment on these matters without enthusiasm. Rather than comment indirectly without revealing my name, I feel it is important to state my name along with the facts of which I am aware. Reading the previous blogs has dredged up unpleasant memories of my experiences dealing with rugby eligibility issues in Utah high school rugby. The comments I make today are regarding the 2001 high school rugby season.
In 2001 I was serving as head coach of a high school rugby club. Another local club was trying to get established that year. The coach of this other club contacted me sometime after the beginning of the season to inform me that several foreign players were coming to Salt Lake to play rugby for Highland Rugby. He felt that these players should not be allowed to play for Highland. The eligibility rules in place at the time included the following requirements:
1) Players must be enrolled in high school full time;
2) Players must have been enrolled full time in high school at the beginning of the competitive season; and
3) A player must be enrolled prior to the start of the competitive season.
These rules were part of the eligibility rules for USA Rugby and were not seen as redundant but each emphasized various nuances in the rules.
An investigation revealed the following facts:
1) Highland Rugby played their first match of the season on March 19 against Skyline Rugby.
2) Four foreign players arrived in the USA after that first match on or about March 21.
3) These players enrolled at Highland High School sometime in late March, after the first match and more than two months after the commencement of the school semester.
4) When informed of the circumstances, SLC School District determined that the players did not meet district requirements for enrollment and the players were "unenrolled".
5) The players enrolled at a private school sometime in late April.
6) I spoke with an official of the private school who confirmed that the players were enrolled. When I asked if they attended classes, he responded, "Of course not. The school year is over in a few weeks."
In spite of my appeals and with full knowledge of the situation, USA Rugby allowed these foreign players to participate in the national championships that year. In my opinion, there were clear violations of the eligibility rules in 2001 and it was done with the complicity of USA Rugby. Why have a requirement that players be enrolled full time and wink at enrollment with no intention of attending classes? Why require that the players be enrolled prior to the competitive season and disregard the common meaning of words? Why pretend that rugby players are students when they are not eligible to attend public schools and their enrollment at a private school is mere pretense?
There is a great deal of intense feelings surrounding rugby in Utah. Towards the close of the 2001 season, one of our club players approached me. He asked what I had done to so anger the Highland Rugby Club. He said that a friend of his was student at Cottonwood High School. His friend did not play rugby but knew a Cottonwood High student who was a member of Highland Rugby. The friend said that it was a good thing that our team had already played Highland Rugby that season because otherwise our players were in danger of suffering the repercussions of my actions which had resulted in their teammates being “kicked out of school.”
Highland Rugby has accomplished some amazing things. They raise the level of competition for our local clubs. But their dominance has also stymied the growth of rugby in Utah. Many times I was advised to get in line and follow the example of Highland to build the competitiveness of our club. Unfortunately, when I attempted to do so, I determined that it was impossible to do what Highland was doing while providing full disclosure to our school district and to USA Rugby.
Justin Barney
August 20, 2008 11:56 AM
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Point by point
In the next few posts I will try to be less long winded and focus on one point per post in an effort to summarize what we have learned over the past few months.
The intent of this post is to reaffirm my admiration for the hard work that each young man on the HR squad puts forward at practice and on the field. Especially those who have quietly and without complaining, sat on the bench while watching the kiwi boys on the field.
My issues are not with you, but with the well planned and coordinated annual scheme that has siphoned away countless opportunities over the years for local HR player growth and development. You have a preferential right to be on the field over the boys from New Zealand. This supersedes winning. " Its not whether you win or lose but how you play the game"
"Import players are necessary for the growth and development of local players and skills" HR
If this statement was true, after 18 years there would be fewer kiwi boys on the field and more local boys in the big games such as nationals. This would be the natural and long term organic result of a sound and grounded coaching philosophy.
But exactly the opposite has happened. HR is more dependent on the import players than ever before. In 2008 (SIX) kiwis on the main HR squad. More than in any previous year.
The kiwi boys definitely raise the level of play when they are on the field and they help to get the big WWW's, trophies and the titles. But this has come at a sad and unnecassary price. The statistics clearly reveal that the overall level of combined local HR talent has suffered. Too much leaning on the boys from down under.
With only one or two kiwi boys on the field at a time:
- HR would still be one of the top teams in the country
- but not the dominating 50 -100 point unstoppable machine
- local HR talent would thrive and grow
- Utah would have more high schools teams than any other state in the country.
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
Material list for goal posts
- 40ft of 3" PVC DWV pipe
- 2 -3" Santees
- 2-3" fernco couplings
- 2- 3x1-1/2" fernco couplings
- 20ft of 1-1/2' PVC DWY pipe
- 3" uprights - 9ft 8.5 inches long
- glue the 3 inch santee or fitting on top of this piece
- then cut a 3" x 3ft piece to glue in the top of the santee
- place the 3x1-1/2 rubber fernco coupling on top of this piece
- cut a 10ft piece of 1-1/2 pipe to slide down inside the 3" pipe.
- cut a 6 inch piece of 3" pipe and glue into the side of the fitting
- connect one of the 3" rubber fernco coupling here.
- cross bar is approx 16ft 10 inches long and is attached to the rubber couplings on each 3" upright.
- pound two 6ft steel fence posts into the ground
- stand the goal posts up and set infront of the steel posts
- use two or three long bungee cords to fasten the PVC pipe to the fence posts. Wrap high and low. Bungee cords with plastic hooks.
- wrap with padding to protect players from injury.
- call me if you have any questions 435-817-6555
- find a plumber to help you
- he will know where to get a santee and fernco couplings
Tuesday, August 5, 2008
Never say Never
- "HR has never broken any rules"
- lots of pointing the finger at this and that and beating around the bush
- "other teams have brought in foreign coaches or have a player from South Africa"
- we get no respect...
- "the school district caved in under the pressure"
- But no specific answers to any of the questions
- we shall therefore continue, that these assumptions are accurate
- no response to why having two import players on the field at anyone time is unfair
- the forum is public, open and we invite anyone in the know to respond point by point to the questions in previous posts.
The Utah Board of Education did not cave in under pressure in 2005. It reviewed new information and responded based on principle, the law and what was best for the Utah tax payers. Thus their decision to not allow these young men to attend Utah public schools.
The Board's decision also clarified the mystery around visas and the paying of tuition.
- No tuition was payed for years
- Most of the visas were only visitors visas and not the required J1 exchange student visas.
An independent third party, The Utah Board of Education, looked at this situation and shut the practice down.
Never say Never.
Monday, July 28, 2008
Time to change the rules
Let me say again, that my intent is not to be adversarial. I am interested in bringing the facts to the light of day and providing more opportunities for local HR players to grow and develop. I ask for your support to limit the number of kiwi import players from NZ to two on the field at any one time.
With help from HR comments we have established the following as being facts:
- The annual migration of rugby players from New Zealand to the HR rugby club is well planned and coordinated
- HR families provide room and board for these players
- These young men enter the country on visitors visas and not the required, J1 exchange student visas.
- 98% return home immediately at the end of the season
- They were banned from attending the Utah Public School system in 2005
- They were banned from attending Highland High School prior to 2005 (I had nothing to do with this)
- Little to no tuition was paid to the Utah High Schools that hosted these players prior to the 2005 closing of the "guest pass loophole."
Time to fill in the missing pieces.
The following are assumptions, yet we shall assume them to be facts after two weeks.
This is adequate time for the HR coaching staff to respond. From this time forward, no response shall be considered a confirmation that the assumptions are indeed correct.
For too many years we have all stood on one leg while HR took the 5th. The questions and the medium to respond are open, public and easily accessible. Silence, a religious experience, or "we have know idea how they get here" are now proven to be unacceptable and inaccurate.
Like an iceberg, most of it lies submerged, unseen from the surface. In time integrity will expose that portion to the light of day.
- HR directly or indirectly helps to facilitate the travel arrangements for the import players from NZ.
- HR directly or indirectly pays for some of the travel costs.
- Most of the families in NZ do not have the means to pay the thousands of dollars for travel and tuition.
- More than 50% of the costs to bring these young men to Utah are paid for by people in the USA not NZ.
- No tuition was paid to the Utah private schools who's names appear on the USA Rugby eligibility paperwork in 2006, 2007 and 2008.
- The people in NZ who make all of these arrangements are acting as agents, directly or indirectly for HR.
- The sons of some of the agents in NZ have played for HR.
- The HR coaching staff is aware of all of all of these details.
Wednesday, July 23, 2008
Comment from Mark "eRugby News" July 2008
Stop the rort! Enforce the present eligibilit
Well said Mark!
Thursday, July 17, 2008
HR families provide room and board
"With regards to your 3 month time frame...this particular young man played for Highland last 2 years and has been here in the states on a student visa since last September. He had a dream of playing high school football (american). Unfortunately, you assisted the school districts in making that dream difficult to achieve, to bad for him. However, I am sure that you will gain some satisfaction. Good for you!!"
..................................................................................................
The UHSAA (Utah High School Athletic Association) defines "nothing more than room and board" as being part of a recruiting process, not a cultural experience.
- Are you also paying the $10,000.00 annual school tuition as part of this cultural exchange?
- Please check his visa
- Most likely is a visitors visa, not a (J1) Exchange Student visa.
- An exchange student visa means he is registered and attending a public high school school as part of a certified exchange student program.
- You did not mention the other five boys from New Zealand that have since returned home.
- We will assume that five other HR families provided room and board as well.
- How is all of this planned and coordinated without the knowledge of the HR coaching staff?
- At least we have established the fact that months before each season starts, "someone" is coordinating the partnering of six HR families with six import rugby players from New Zealand.
The ends do not justify the means. Also interesting how this so called cultural experience or annual religious Mecca has been limited exclusively to "rugby players only." No tennis, soccer or baseball players. No young women. How discriminating, yet so convenient or lucky for HR.
- Are HR families also subsidizing the plane tickets?
- Why do the kiwi boys deserve to play more than your own son or son's.
- Your missing the point!
- Cultural and religious experience, give me a break.
- This may help to ease your conscience and sleep at night.
- Lets keep religion out of this completely.
- This is simply about winning rugby games!!
- local boys sitting on the bench most of the time
- being on the other team that was just beaten by 100 points
- a young man from NZ after an incredible season, is quietly sent home, no MVP, no interviews, no pictures or articles in the Deseret News
- nothing...... just used and sent home
- this kind of "influence for good" they do not need
(P4)... by the way, many of your own sons dreamed of playing rugby. You and other HR families have have made this dream very difficult for them to achieve, to bad for them. But you won 18 national championships while many sat on the bench. I'm sure you have much satisfaction about your cultural and religious exchanges each season, good for you!!
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
HR Faithful - "Balance"
- Import soccer players from another country would be sent home
- Import basketball players would be sent home
- Import baseball players would be sent home
- I am not advocating that the kiwi rugby players be sent home!
- Let them stay and play if they are following the rules to be here
- Lets have some balance and error on the side of allowing more opportunities for local players to grow and develop
Saturday, July 12, 2008
Nitty Gritty Please
Thanks to the HR faithful, we have established the fact, that the kiwi boys are sent to play for HR each year and then sent home at the end of the season.
Who Pays?
- Who is the wealthy benefactor that pays for their plane tickets?
- None of their families can afford to do this.
- Who provides room and board while they are in Utah?
- Who pays the tuition at the new private school they are attending?
- I understand it is over $15,000.00.
- With tuition, plane tickets etc, it is costing each boy $20,000.00 for a 3 month rugby experience in Utah.
- Six came over this year @ $20,000.00 each = $120,000.00.
Haka with Respect
Never
No rugby team in New Zealand does this
They know better
Highland
Please stop this practice!
Why?
Make up your own Highland jig and jig at it all game long, but leave the Haka alone.
Highland continues to clearly demonstrate their ignorance to matters of Maori history and the sacred and special place that the Haka has in the Maori culture.
"The United Way"
You can build an awesome team
In a very short period of time
Play Highland in the finals
With no kiwi imports
or any polynesian players
lose and win at the same time
simply the facts
Larry Gilwix to Me .............2004
· For those outside of
Does Highland pay for players airfares or expenses to come here? No. Not even a penny? No, not even a penny. 8) Is it true that all non-U.S. citizen students must pay tuition, which I understand is about $7,000 a year, to attend
If you would like the read the entire communication just email me and I will be happy to send it to you
Wednesday, July 9, 2008
Pretend "Exchange Students"
The import rugby players from New Zealand are not "exchange students" as the USA Rugby rules require.
They enter the country on...
- a 3 month visitors visa's
- not on 12 month exchange student visa's.
You and I and all of the the tax payers in Utah were paying their tuition
Another reason they were kicked out of the public school system in Utah
Monday, July 7, 2008
Kiwi import players removed from Olympus High School - 2005 No longer permitted to attend Utah public schools as pretend students
In 2006 they were denied attending a private school called the Kimber Acadamy in Murray. Since then they have used different "private schools" to meet the USA Rugby paperwork requirement.
This year it was USC at Woodland Hills in the south end of the valley. This school was also denied entrance into the UHSAA, Utah High School Athletic Association.
All of the 2008 kiwi contingent have returned home. A new crew has already been selected in New Zealand for 2009. They will magically drop out of the sky, just prior to next season, on to the doorstep of a totally surprised, just kidding, Highland coaching staff.
The following conversation will ensue:
- How did you guys get here and where did you come from??
- did you say NEW ZEALAND....NO WAY..............!!!!
- all five of you from the same country ended up here in Utah by chance.
- do any of you guys play RUGBY???
- all of you......NO WAAAY.................!!!!
- are you serious!!
- what are the odds, five guys from NZ, end up in Utah and you ALL play rugby...!!
- what a coincidence!!
- how long are you here for....?
- NO WAAAAAY..............that's exactly how long the rugby season lasts!
- what school will you be attending????
- School ?????....USC at Woodland Hills
- stop stop... this is too much... We know the guys at this school too!!
- give me some oxygen!!
- we have a rugby team....do you want to play????
- you do!!
- NO WAAAAAY !!!!
"Thank you tax payers of Utah for unknowingly supporting this rugby exchange between New Zealand and Highland, through 2005. We will now have to look at the private sector and how they can help us"................HR
Sunday, July 6, 2008
How Ironic
- less time on the bench and more playing time for themselves or their sons on the rugby field
- and a restriction on the number of import kiwi boys to one or two on the field at any one time
- Why?
To Highland parents and players
This gives local players more time on the field to grow and develop their talents.
World Hunger
I spend very little time on this blog.
Recently returned from a six week business trip in the Middle East. Watched the game between Highland and United from my hotel room in Dubai at 3 am in the morning. They have some amazing rugby facilities in Dubai.
Door of Faith Orphanage
http://www.dofo.org/
My family and I spent a week working at this amazing orphanage in Baja, Mexico. A life changing experience for our family.
I am also the keeper of the goal posts for the St George Knights High School Rugby Club. We invented some new breakdown goal posts made of 3" PVC pipes, drainage fittings and fernco couplings. Will post some pictures soon.
Don't worry, I'm fine and trying to stay well rounded.
Confirmed and Clarification
Fo and Junior who played for Highland last season, joined the Highland squad in New Zealand for only one game. Pushing the kiwi contingent to 8 players on the USA national championship team for that particular game.
The rest of the games there were only 3 to 6 local boys from Utah sitting on the bench.
Saturday, July 5, 2008
CCNZ beats Highland
Two losses in Tonga as well.
Also a few grumblings from Highland parents who paid $1,000.00 - $1,500.00 for their sons to go to New Zealand. We hear they are not to happy about their boys sitting on the bench. I don't blame them. I would be ticked as well.
Also in a very creative and also unannounced twist, to Highland parents, two of last years kiwi imports, Fo and Junior, were brought onto the Highland squad in New Zealand as starters. We are sure they didn't have to pay the $1,000.00.
With the 6 that came to the USA this year that would make 8 kiwi boys playing on the Highland team.
Anything for the big W (win) and the big E (ego) that spells WE.
And we are sorry for those who once again made the ultimate sacrifice of traveling all the way to New Zealand to end up sitting on the bench. So sad. These hard working boys should be playing and the kiwi boys should be limited to one or two on the field at any one time.
If we can't stop this practice maybe with the help and support of Highland parents we can regulate this from getting out of control.
4,5,6,7,8,9,10 import players from New Zealand each year.... when does it end.........................
I am now an unofficial advocate for the rights of the Highland local boys to play, and for the ever increasing numbers of kiwi boys to sit on the bench. And yes I am from New Zealand.
Please help me spread the word to all Highland parents. Would like some feedback on these ideas.
Wednesday, July 2, 2008
Props to the Highland boys...
The boys in the Highland program do work their guts out training and a very dedicated.
This part of the Highland program is awesome and I give it due credit.
I salute and props to the boys... 100%
I am only taking issue with the regular planned and pre meditated yearly practice of having Kelly Harris in New Zealand send boys to Utah to play for Highland. They have already selected the boys who are coming next year....inside cuzzy source in NZ.
The kiwi boys take the spots of the hard working local Highland boys who should not be sitting on the sidelines.
Ask the parents at Highland if it means more to win a game or have all of the local boys play all of the time and lose once and a while.
I would rather have my sons experience playing even in a losing cause. This way they learn, builds their character and makes them work harder to be better.
Can not do this when you are sitting on the sideline most of the time.
Saturday, May 31, 2008
The Emporer has no clothes!
USA rugby, your slanted gilwixism riddled dribble was all but kissing his rear end. Not one, not one gracious word from the pretend victors coach for the United Warriors. me, me, me, me, me!!!!
I know its embarrassing that you have been unable and unwilling to make this situation right.
I hope you all enjoy holding each others hands, while watching "forever strong". When the lights turn up you will find there is no one else in the theater. No one else cares because this is the worst kept secret in rugby. The other High School teams across the country have no respect for Highland. The movie should be called "Forever the Hypocrite" or "Do as I say not as I do".
Call the Jesuit Club in Sacramento for an independent opinion. They have been beaten by Highland in the finals several times. They were so fed up with the two faced hypocrisy, that last year after being beaten again by the Kiwi contingent, they pressed USA rugby to form a separate single school high school division. Now they don't have to play Highland anymore.
Highland cherry picks the best players from all over the Salt Lake Valley and NEW ZEALAND. Jesuit is very happy, finally being on a level playing field.
United was the moral victor on the field today!! They have provided the standard for how to build a club the right way.
Highland with the 6 Kiwi ringers from New Zealand has once again perpetuated the greatest deception in high school sports. The irony is that it is a deception party with only two attendees, USA Rugby and Highland. The rest of us have clued in a long time ago and chuckle as they stuff themselves with the chocolate cake of self congratulation and gloating pride.
Why doesn't someone ask to interview the boys from New Zealand? They are hidden away from the press for a reason.
If they talk and tell the truth then the Highland Rugby deck of cards will crumble to the ground.
I salute the young men from United, warriors everyone.
I pity the young men from Highland and their parents, who leave the field with the biggest pile of points yet a hollow and self serving victory.
Mr Gilwix you are the king again for one day, until you look yourself in the mirror and wipe the chocolate cake from your face.
Thursday, April 24, 2008
Close but no cigar - hot on their heels 2005
I requested that Highland be disqualified because the boys from New Zealand had been expelled from Olympus High School and therefore had no verification from the school registrars office.
They had also been refused admission to the Kimber Academy a private school in Salt Lake City.
I received a call from a high school official, late Friday afternoon, who said they were unable to validate any of my claims because............................................ someone had broken into the Highland rugby teams van that afternoon and stolen various items including the bag with all of their paperwork for the tournament.
He added that it was to late to call any of the schools so they had to take the word of the coach, that all was in order.
- Fantastic but true
- Check with USA Rugby...their is no paperwork from Highland on file for 2005.
- So so close but no cigar
- Damn that thief
- A stroke of luck for Highland.......
Letter from Carol Lear - Utah State Board of Education
Dan Hickey at the Pacific Coast Region, who has been Larry Gilwix's most strident supporter for many years, and a few others amazingly came to this conclusion without calling the author of the memo, Carol Lear.
They also assumed that I was stupid enough to forge a memo on the State of Utah Board of Education letter head, and risk getting myself thrown in jail for forgery and passing myself off as an attorney for the Board of Education.
Read the memo for yourself and call Carol Lear not Larry Gilwix or Dan Hickey for verification
Link to this memo is to the right under Downloads >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Sunday, April 20, 2008
Highland barely beats the St George Knights in only the 5th game of their inagural season.
These warriors walked on the field and played head to head with the Highland juggernaut and the boys from New Zealand.
First year club against Highland with 18 national championships under their belt.
They kept the score under 100 and under 50. (48 -0 )
48 points is all the points Highland could squeeze out against these new rugby warriors playing in their 5th game ever. This is an amazing story.
You want to talk about guts, determination, team work, athletic talent, fine coaching and the real meaning of Kia Kaha.............................. talk to the St George Knights.
These young men are my heroes!!
Saturday, April 19, 2008
Under the new rugby handicap system - Kearns beats Highland
We need a rugby handicap system to level the playing field. This will allow the teams without import players to play against Highland whose team is stacked with import players.
The team playing Highland receives points based on the following scientific formula:
- 5 points for each import kiwi player on the team
- 1 point for every year that Highland has been a club longer than its opponent.
- 30 points for the 6 kiwi boys
- and 15 points for the difference in the number of years each club has been competing.
- for a total 45 points
- final score was 32-0
- factor in the handicap of 45 points
- Kearns beats Highland 45 - 32
Highland will have a 6 page research paper on why this works for golf and not for rugby.
Friday, April 18, 2008
The thick of thin things "Forever Strong"
It is the amazing story of the grit and determination of the teams that lose to Highland year after year that should be shouted out across the hilltops. These are the true warriors who walk on the battlefield knowing that every odd is stacked against them........( Last year they beat us by 40, 50, 60, 70 points) ...............and yet they stay and give their all.
Highlands merciless pursuit of triple digit scores is simply a self serving dead end. Beyond their shameless self congratulating circle their is no respect.
And though the scoreboard may read 80 - 0 for Highland, its meaning fades when the scoreboard lights are shut off. It's easy being on a team that wins by 50 plus points every game.
The scoreboard that measures determination, toughness, grit and issues of the heart will eternally be burned in favor of the team with zero points, every single time.
How and why do some Utah teams come back year after year. They come back better, stronger and more competitive, whilst Highland has to increase its stable of kiwi imports every year. Two, four, six this year and maybe eight boys from New Zealand next year.
Sadly there are also Utah teams who struggle to get 15 boys to practice each week.
Highland 104 - Davis 0
Great for the ego and a fat head. Thank you Highland for redefining and bringing a whole new meaning to piling it on and running up the score.
I would say that the true heroes of this game are the players and coaches of Davis who stayed on the field to the last whistle, whilst weathering this grotesque, gladiator like display of.................................what........I can even use the word sport.
A new low for sportsmanship and a sad milestone for high school rugby.
No thought of the long term impact that this, gladiator approach to sports, has on other teams, their players, future growth etc. It is easy to be a gladiator for Rome with a 1000 soldiers watching your back.
Let's help grow the sport of rugby and encourage other young players to embrace this amazing sport......................................by smashing and grinding their faces into the dirt without mercy....................50, 60, 70 80, 90, 100 points. Where does it end?
Lets give Highland several trophies for their myopic statistical accomplishments :
- the most points scored in a game
- the most points scored in a season
- the most games scoring 50 or more points
- the most successful team at discouraging others from playing rugby
Highland High School is not associated with the Highland High School Rugby team
So much for character building. I guess the end justifies the means. Win at all cost.
Thursday, April 17, 2008
Challenge Highland to limit the Kiwi imports to only two on the field at a time
They, most likely, will not accept this self imposed limitation because it levels the playing field too much and opens the door for several teams in Utah and around the country to beat them.
Highlands own locally grown talent has been severely handicapped by the annual reliance on the boys from New Zealand. When the Kiwi boys are on the field, the local boys sit on the sideline and watch.
They do not have the local talent to compete head to head with the other Utah teams.
If you disagree Highland then show us your home grown stuff. Play United at the end of the season with only two kiwi boys. Have some faith and confidence in your local boys. Rotate your six kiwi players in and out, two at a time.
There are several teams in Utah that would have a sporting chance of beating Highland, with only two kiwi boys on the field at a time. Highland is afraid because it would burst their bubble, and be somewhat embarrassing with the all the movie hype and such.
SIX players from New Zealand on this years Highland team
To smash other teams by 104 points. To WIN and WIN BIG.
Highland 2008 scores
v St George | W | 48-0 |
v Mesa, AZ | W | 69-0 |
v Murray | W | 70-0 |
V Back Bay | W | 53-0 |
v LA Cougars | W | 72-0 |
v UT County | W | Forfeit |
v Kearns | W | 32-0 |
v Bingham | W | 65-5 |
v Skyline | W | 60-14 |
v Davis | W | 104-0 |
These scores are void of sportsmanship. Highland would be a so so average team without the players from New Zealand.
I wonder why some of these clubs struggle to get 15 boys to come to practice while Highland brags about there 110 players. Do you want your sons playing on these other teams. Not I.
I suggest that Utah teams simply refuse to play Highland unless they limit the import players to two on the field at a time. Very reasonable don't you think?
Highland has enough players to form their own league and run the scores up to 266 - 0 on each other. They can all pat themselves on the back and have a grand time barbecuing chicken wings for each other after the game while gloating over the 3 digit scores.
Utah public high schools were used to meet eligibility requirements
After I sent this letter to the granite School Board in 2005, the boys from New Zealand were removed from Olympus High School.
A portion of the letter........................... The three import rugby players or ringers from
Granite School Board Letter
Would-be school kept from UHSAA
Thursday, the Utah High School Activities Association's Board of Trustees dealt Jones' dream a serious blow. The 22-member panel voted unanimously - with one abstention - to deny USC's request for admission into the UHSAA. That means the UHSAA's 130 or so member schools are forbidden to compete against USC, which was hailed by at least one of its coaches as a super sports academy-type school but in recent months billed itself as just another large private school with an academic emphasis.
Timpview principal George Bayless abstained from voting because his son has interviewed for a position with the school. But after hearing USC officials present their case for membership for the third time since November and a short discussion following a motion to deny by Teresa Theurer of the State Board of Education, the other trustees present all voted against USC.
"For me, I have a concern that they say, 'We have this, and we have this,' at every meeting they come [to]. Then, [they give] another reason why they don't have this and this," said board member Terry Bawden of the Granite School District. "For me, that was a major factor. If you say you are going to do something, do it."
USC failed to produce the two things that the trustees wanted to see the most, Theurer said: A strong plan for the use of other athletic facilities while theirs are being built and the blessing of Herriman City.
Upon tabling the matter at their Jan. 24 meeting, the trustees told USC officials that they wanted to see certain construction contracts and blueprints, as well as contracts for the use of other facilities in case the campus is not finished by the end of August. Also, they wanted a letter from Herriman City stating that it was on board with the 4,000- acre project expected to cost more than $85 million when completed.
USC delivered on most of those requests, but could not produce the Herriman City letter because Jones said it was waiting on legal opinions and other small details.
Also, trustees were wary of some of the contracts to use off-campus facilities owned by other municipalities or community colleges because they were "based on availability, mostly," Bawden said.
drew@sltrib.com
......................................................................
This is the private school that the boys from New Zealand are attending this year to meet the schooling eligibility requirement for USA Rugby.
In 2005 Highland was informed by an attorney from the Utah State Board of Education that the import players from New Zealand, here on temporary visitors visas, could not attend any public high school in Utah.
Over the years they have slipped players into Highland, Olympus and Cottonwood high schools.