The Herald (Zimbabwe)

120 schools for inaugural Mwana Group rugby festival

- Fungai Muderere Sports Reporter

ABOUT 120 primary and high school institutio­ns converge at Harare’s Price Edward High School for the week-long Mwana Group Internatio­nal Rugby Festival at the end of April.

The rugby meet will feature top teams from Zimbabwe, internatio­nal teams, and primary school tournament­s for both boys and girls.

It is a competitio­n that is held in high esteem like the famous Cottco and Dairibord Rugby Festivals, which were previously held in the country on an annual basis.

“The tournament will see about 120 schools participat­ing between April 28 and May 4 at Prince Edward School, Harare. These schools will include both primary schools and high schools. The participan­ts will range from Under-13, 16, and 19 girls and boy’s teams.

“Currently, we have five confirmed teams from Malawi, Zambia, and Botswana. These teams have both female and male teams as well as U16 and U19 teams,” said Sikhumbuzo Muchenje who is part of the festival’s secretaria­t. She said the Mwana Group Internatio­nal Schools Rugby Festival comes in as an effort to resuscitat­e the traditiona­l schools’ rugby tournament­s that have traditiona­lly been held since 1986. “The festival has gone through various evolutions with the name of the festival being changed to fit the various head-line sponsors over the years. These names include the United Bottle Company Festival which was from 19861987, David Whitehead Rugby Festival between 1988 to 1997, Cottco Rugby Festival between 1998 to 2013, and The Dairibord Rugby Festival between 2014 to 2019.

“The tournament was halted by the Covid pandemic between 2020 and 2022 and faced some organisati­onal challenges for the 2023 edition.

Mwana Group therefore steps in for the 2024 to 2028 editions. This will be the first edition of the Mwana Group Internatio­nal Schools Rugby Festival, and we look forward to a successful tournament,” she said. Muchenje also mentioned that the contest will kick off with a primary school tournament on April 28.

“This tournament will be a knock-out tournament and will have a trophy prize and medals for the winning team. For the Under 16 and 19 teams the tournament will be in a fixture format thus there won’t be an ultimate trophy to be won,” she said.

Asked on what is the idea of having the tournament, Muchenje said it is all to brick schools rugby and in the process engross the youths on issues to do with substance abuse and teenage pregnancie­s.

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