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Headfort School
Games - the Main Sports
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For many children, games time
is eagerly awaited every day. They rush to the changing room to prepare
for their game. Senior and junior teams compete against other schools at
rugby, hockey and cricket. Headfort is fortunate to have numerous staff
with expertise in coaching the main games. The teams enjoy their share
of success, although experience of both defeat and victory is implicit
in the idea of competitive sport. Mens sana in corpore sano (“a healthy
mind in a healthy body”) is a worthwhile ideal. However, there are other
ways of achieving it. A few children regard team games as a drudge; we
do ask them to play at least once a week, but a wide range of other
activities is on offer. Some form of exercise is a prerequisite to sound
health.
The School is blessed with abundant space: there are two rugby pitches,
two hockey pitches, a cricket pitch, plus an artificial wicket, and a
small soccer pitch – all for a school of less than a hundred children.
Riding, tennis, cooking and basketball are also practised in the
afternoon.
Rugby is the principal boys’ game in the Autumn Term. More than most
games, rugby can be influenced by the relative sizes of the players, and
also by the belief that the result matters more than the game. The 1st
XV frequently finds itself playing against larger opponents, yet often
emerges victorious from these encounters. The team tours Scotland
biennially.
On any particular day, two games of rugby are played. Lower down the
school, there is less tackling and more emphasis on running and
catching. The main game, Top Game, is more intensively coached. Headfort
strives to produce teams that play attractive running rugby.
Hockey is the principal game for both boys and girls in the Spring Term.
Girls also play hockey in the Autumn Term while the boys are playing
rugby. Hockey is a skilful game that demands deft hands and strong
wrists rather than great physical strength; it is especially well suited
to coeducation at the prep-school age. The School fields a 1st XI
(independent of gender) and also a Girls’ XI that generally acquit
themselves well. The 1st XI contests the Leinster Hockey Union Under-13
Cup each year.
The Parents’ Hockey Match usually provides a stimulating encounter.
Parents often have illustrious hockey careers behind them, and what they
lack in fitness may be compensated for by extreme guile. The matches are
closely fought and the school tends to win. We often also have a staff
match, another tooth-and-nail encounter with fairly loose adherence to
the rules....
“What is human life but a game of cricket?” The Duke of Dorset posed
this rhetorical question in 1777 and, although cricket may be a minority
sport in Ireland, it remains essential summer fare at Headfort. The hum
of bees, the trill of birds, the thwack of leather against willow, the
smell of freshly-cut grass – these all symbolise the bewitching idyll
that is Headfort in summertime. A player may cull daisies and dream...
but the game is also followed studiously here: the (co-ed) 1st XI have
travelled to England and even to South Africa to compete against strong
opposition, and the School has six times reached the final of the
Leinster Under-13 Cup in the last ten years, winning on three occasions.
The nets – both outdoor and indoor – are in constant use during the
summer, as is the artificial wicket. The children are expected to
contribute towards the preparation of the wicket by manning the heavy
roller in the mornings. Their exposure to cricket at Headfort often
leads to a life-long love affair with the game.
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For further
information, please contact the Headmaster, Dermot Dix at
headmaster@eircom.net
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