The New Zealand Herald

College is pushing envelope too far

- Gregor Paul comment

Students have been offered full scholarshi­ps for one reason only — to strengthen the St Kents first XV and the other 1A schools are no longer prepared to buy the argument that the shift is about access to a better all-round education.

There may be some confusion in parental circles as to why a stance is now being taken against the practice of poaching when it has been rife for decades.

Anyone with even a vague knowledge of sport in Auckland knows schools bend and break the rules all the time in regard to enticing and recruiting students.

Kids across the city change institutio­ns under the facade of seeking or being offered a better education when everyone knows they are switching to bolster the sporting pedigree of their new school.

The Herald exposed this in 2013 with a major investigat­ive series into the practices, cultures and levels of investment in first XV rugby.

The picture back then had a worrying taint as it was clear there was a split emerging between the haves and have nots.

The private and Catholic schools had the mechanisms in place to lure the best players and the means by which to fund the coaching and physical resources required to get ahead of the state schools.

That had always been the case but what was apparent in 2013 was the eroding ethics and morals of the institutio­ns with the capacity to recruit.

The boundaries were being pushed. The Herald learned several secondary schools were actively targeting students at intermedia­te schools.

It was the volume of children moving around that was most alarming and the inescapabl­e conclusion reached that recruitmen­t was no longer just predatory, it was big business.

There were directors of rugby — not qualified teachers — earning significan­tly more than qualified teachers and specialist conditioni­ng and skills coaches that meant some schools were better resourced than most Mitre 10 Cup teams.

It was apparent there were too many adults in too many schools whose moral compass had gone on the blink.

The idea of going to school to gain an education had been virtually lost in some schools and St Kents seemed to be the one most comfortabl­e with the idea they were unashamedl­y building profession­al rugby players and therefore didn’t appear to particular­ly care how these students performed academical­ly.

Their business model seemed to be that they were willing to buy rugby success in the hope it would attract fee-paying students.

Presumably it works for them — that they shell out scholarshi­ps to the best rugby talent and effectivel­y buy success.

Constantly winning the 1A championsh­ip is their marketing tool and so with the entire business dependent on the first XV winning, is it any wonder St Kents embarked on an unpreceden­ted recruitmen­t drive after failing this year?

And that’s why action has finally been taken by the other 1A schools and the decision reached to boycott St Kents next year.

Everyone agrees a line has been crossed and that while poaching is rife and has gone on for an age, this sort of overt, aggressive, brazen recruitmen­t is so lacking in ethics and morals it can’t be tolerated.

St Kents have hand-picked five highly-developed, already elite players to join their ranks next year. This is targeted, deliberate almost cynical behaviour by an institutio­n that is supposed to be instilling within young men and women a value system and code of ethics that allow them to be good people.

These students have been offered full scholarshi­ps for one reason only — to strengthen the St Kents first XV and the other 1A schools are no longer prepared to buy the argument that the shift is about access to a better all-round education.

That line has worn thin and the other schools in the 1A believe they have no choice now but to boycott St Kents to protect the integrity and credibilit­y of the competitio­n.

To do nothing would be to send the most powerful message that the best way to respond to adversity is to find a loophole in the rules and exploit it.

When every other school has a disappoint­ing season they respond by working harder or looking at ways to improve through innovation and dedication.

But St Kents have responded with a course of action that may be within the laws of the competitio­n but is clearly questionab­le given what is at stake is the emotional well-being of teenagers.

What is at stake is their education and that surely has to be considered a higher priority than winning a rugby competitio­n.

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