THE HARROVIAN Vol. CXXVI No. 1 www.harrowschool.org.uk/theharrovian September 15, 2012 ASL Andrew Lee retires this summer after 37 years on the Hill. He is currently best known as the Senior Master, a role he has filled under various titles since 2001, but through the years since 1975 he has inevitably carried out a huge number of jobs, most notably House Master of West Acre from 1989 till 2001. As Senior Master, Andrew was in effect the third in command at Harrow. As he used to explain to new boys in their induction sessions which he organised, “If the Head is swept off the bridge of the good ship Harrow during a storm, the Deputy takes over. If the Deputy is then swept away, I am in charge.” In reality, his position meant that he was responsible for a large number of vital yet unglamorous aspects of running a large and complex institution such as Harrow, especially those essential to meeting the statutory requirements imposed by successive governments over recent years: safeguarding, health and safety, child protection and so on. In carrying out these roles, he has been noted for his carefully considered, completely objective, common-sense advice on the most sensitive issues. He has been a fundamental part of the Pastoral Support Committee since its inception, being the vital link with the Medical Centre and local Children and Families’ Services. He has been totally up to date with the relevant legislation on child protection and health and safety and has seemed to have an instinctive feel for the interpretation of legislation as it may affect the school. His judgement about whether a developing issue was serious and required immediate intervention or if, in fact, it was much more straightforward and simple than that, was always sound and those around him felt solidly confident in his assessments. Colleagues always felt re-assured, too, by his ability to articulate his interpretation of the evidence and the conclusions he had drawn from it – even if involved a significant number of technical terms. A large part of his Senior Master role was in developing the non-sporting activities of the school. His wide experience of Harrow helped him in this work, as he had oversight of Wednesday afternoon activities: HRC, Community Service, D of E, Conservation and so on. The recently-introduced Remove Service and Skills programme for Wednesday afternoons has been another of his developments. In addition, he has been responsible for links with the Shepherd Churchill Hall, encouraging the Food Committee to become an effective voice for boys. He has worked tirelessly to improve the general atmosphere of the dining hall over some years and members of the CDH staff have commented that boys are much more respectful of them than might have been the case in the past. The fact that Harrow earned an “Outstanding” grading in all six of Ofsted’s categories for inspecting schools in their recent visit bears testament to the quality of ASL’s work. There has been a transformation for the better in Harrow’s pastoral care over the last forty years, and this would not have happened without Andrew’s determination, resourcefulness and political skill. He would no doubt be most pleased, of every achievement in his professional life, to be credited with this advance, as his inherent decency and determination for the good of the boys has been directed to this aim. It is through these qualities that he has rightly gained everyone’s respect by being a man of quiet integrity and dedication to the cause of Harrow. Andrew’s earlier experiences at Harrow prepared him for this vital role in a number of ways. He was involved in Community Service from its inception in anything like its current form in 1979, only stepping down from this role when he went into West Acre in 1989. There was more time and opportunity to carry out a range of activities than is the case today, and ASL enjoyed being involved with them himself and encouraging Harrovians to look outside the four walls of the school to see what they might be able to do for those around us, especially the younger and the elderly who might be less privileged than ourselves. In addition, of course, his House Mastership of West Acre brought him a wealth of experiences of the ways of Harrovians. It is recorded that he did not have an easy introduction to the House, with a number of coincidental troubles in his first few years – nevertheless, he overcame these problems with a determination to do the right thing. Through these strengths, he very quickly became greatly admired, respected and appreciated by boys and parents alike. One of his distinctive approaches as a House Master was to debate and discuss problems with The Harrovian is published weekly during term time by Harrow School as both an organ of record and a forum for comment, debate and the expression of individual opinion within the School. Articles are submitted anonymously and any views expressed do not necessarily reflect official School policy. T H E September 15, 2012 troublesome boys. He never suggested any hint of surrender to them, but sought to see that common sense and decency won out at the end of the day. He challenged adolescents with a patience many teachers find it hard to keep and was unparalleled in making recalcitrant boys reflect upon the consequences of their actions. ASL’s own schooling was at the Nobel Grammar School, Stevenage and then Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, where he read History and then completed a PGCE. He has always enjoyed teaching History and had the ability to inspire boys to find, analyse and assess sources. Industry, scrutiny, reading and critical analysis were the pillars upon which historical enquiry with ASL were based – and which helped many boys to acquire the skills they needed for university. His ability to see many sides of an argument and his willingness to join in an intellectual joust have made him a natural to add Government and Politics to his portfolio in recent years. He also made time to fit into his schedule in more recent years a post-grad Diploma in Management Studies at Westminster University. Before taking on West Acre, Andrew tutored in The Head Master’s and The Park, and since then he has worked in Newlands. He has coached Rugby, soccer, athletics and rowing – playing a typically full role in running a 24 hour a day school. We gather that Andrew was a more than useful Rugby player and in the days when Beaks v Boys Harrow Football was outside the Health and Safety remit, he was frequently a defender too many for aspiring 1st XI players. In recent years, he has proved a gritty distance runner, completing a number of Marathons for the Eating Disorders Association in memory of his daughter, Helen. Throughout his career, Andrew’s wife Gill has been a constant support and encouragement, notwithstanding her own full time and very demanding role as Director of Midwifery at Northwick Park Hospital – a job which has brought her into contact with generations of Harrow mothers, who have benefited from her kindness and professionalism. She and Andrew are now retiring to their home in north Norfolk, where he has a range of activities planned from continuing to work for the Independent Schools Inspectorate to driving steam engines on the North Norfolk Railway and getting involved in looking after their first grandchild, Thomas. KMW Rendalls House Master, and former Head of Geography, Karl Wilding leaves Harrow this summer to take up the post of Deputy Headmaster at Uppingham School. This is an excellent career move for him and it is no surprise that such an energetic and successful schoolmaster should be recruited for this demanding role – though it is a sad loss to Harrow to wave him and Jennie goodbye. Karl came to Harrow as Head of Geography in 2000. His previous post had been at Woldingham, and his experience of working in a girls’ school was clearly another part of his appeal to the co-educational Uppingham. He arrived at Harrow to take over a department full of senior beaks, who would clearly need careful handling, as well as another new boy – AKM – for whose induction to teaching, and the life of the boarding house in Rendalls, Karl was responsible. It was Karl’s administrative ability as well as his talent for getting the most out of every individual that made him the ideal person to take on these duties. He was always looking for ways to build upon the department’s strengths so that it could move forward in its achievements. He has been a highly committed form room master throughout his time here and has always maintained great enthusiasm for his subject. Year after year, boys have enjoyed the passion with which he teaches and the sound preparation of his lessons 2 H A R R O V I A N which ensures that his pupils get good grades in public exams. However, he also manages to inculcate academic skills which will benefit the boys for years to come after leaving Harrow. They have always been delighted to find that they are up to KMW for Geography. Karl took on Rendalls in 2004 at relatively short notice when MLM became Deputy Head here. The fact that the two men have similar approaches to the job in some ways made the transition easier, and MLM remembers spending a lot of time with Karl comparing clipboards in the run-up to that September. Indeed the clipboard lived on in Rendalls as a vital guide to planning the complexities of each day right through to the final Call Over of last Summer Term. Taking on a boarding house must be a daunting prospect for anyone, but KMW has been an outstanding House Master who has maintained high standards in all areas. This has been achieved through a number of personal qualities and professional policies which have been employed through the last eight years. Firstly, Karl has a great eye for detail and excellent organisational ability. These qualities have ensured that problems have been anticipated and everything has worked in an efficient manner, greatly to the benefit of boys, parents and masters. His notices planning ends of terms, or grand occasions such as Churchill Songs or Lord’s, have been like works of art in their own right, and Rendallians have responded to the careful attention given to their organisation by trying to live up to the expectations of their House Master. Also, Karl has always had high expectations of the boys in the house. He has nurtured excellence in all areas of house life and many boys have benefited from his drive to succeed. He has consistently fed the boys messages about the importance of scholarship and therefore maintained solid academic momentum through the years. It is striking that this has been possible whilst fostering caring relationships between the boys, and teaching them the value of good interpersonal skills. His emphasis on the significance of living in a community and doing all one can to foster positive relationships in all areas has allowed the boys to show, or in some cases to learn, the consideration and empathy that will stand them in good stead for the rest of their lives. Further, he has known the boys in the house well and been able to encourage the more diffident, while challenging any boy who appeared to be diverging from the straight and narrow. Boys and their parent both know that KMW actually cares about them and is always willing to go the extra mile on their behalf. Boys have appreciated the respectful and considerate manner T H E H A R R O V I A N in which he deals with them and have had the feeling that he is there to support them through their Harrow School days so that they can be as fulfilling as possible. Parents have always known that their sons have been in safe hands with Karl and that the house has a warm and happy environment, while its members are nonetheless pushed to achieve their potential in a wide variety of areas. KMW has also taken trouble to build his team – of beaks as well as boys. Whether coming to him with a question to ask, a problem to discuss or just a joke to share, everyone has been assured of his attention and interest, no matter how busy he must have sometimes been. All kinds of people have felt valued and lucky to be working with him, and learning from him. It is noteworthy that Rendalls has been an unofficial training ground for future house masters, with not just AKM going on to take on a house, but also ERS and, from next year, MGJW, too. Karl and Jennie have been indefatigable hosts and great friends to many members of the Harrow community over the years and will be much missed on the Hill. We are sure, though, that his welcoming smile, with his organised, professional approach and great attention to detail, will make him a success at Uppingham. We wish him all the luck in the world in this new endeavour. CPB Chris Bates is one of the masters who has been attracted by the possibilities suggested by going to Hong Kong to help start up the new Harrow International School. He has been a hardworking and successful Biology beak here and an outstanding Assistant House Master, and now goes on to become a founding House Master working for MLM. September 15, 2012 He quickly earned a reputation of being very hard-working on behalf of his boys and an organiser of appropriate house trips for each age group in the house – ranging from paintballing to big curry nights. He encouraged boys to aim for the best they could achieve across the range of their interests, as that was his approach in everything he did. His experiences here should, therefore, be a valuable stepping stone to running his own show in Hong Kong. In the wider school context, he has been typically busy, taking a hand in rugby, Harrow Football and cricket coaching, as well as, apparently, soccer, where his great size and supertanker turning circle did not make him a natural. By contrast, his fitness led him to be a very successful head of the Royal Marines Section of the HRC, a role spreading well beyond the few hours of each Wednesday afternoon parade. He earned Harrow-wide fame in leading the recent expedition to the Mount Everest Base Camp – one of the most adventurous, yet also highly successful, trips of recent years. Other tours he has been involved in include the Outcasts Rugby tours, Harrow Football tours, Science Department outings and climbing Mount Kilimanjaro – an impressive list which speaks volumes for Chris’s enthusiasm and involvement with the wider educational aims of the school. Chris’s work in the Biology Schools has also been impressive. He has been an efficient and organised beak, who has enthused many Harrovians with a love of life sciences. He has a light touch in his teaching, but encourages all his students to take their work seriously and to do as well as they can in public exams. We hope not to lose touch with him as he remains within the wider Harrow family for this next exciting stage of his career. DLH We are very sorry to have to say goodbye this summer to Dan Llywelyn Hall, a valued and widely experienced member of the Art Department. Dan began at Harrow in 2005, with a year out from 2007 to 2009, and has brought huge skill and exhibition experience to his students here. CPB has been on the Hill for five years, coming from work in life sciences, focusing on biotechnology and contract-based research. He had taken a degree in Biology and Education at York University, so inevitably seemed destined for the teaching profession in which he seems such a natural practitioner. He has always cut a dapper figure here and his taste for hand-made suits should be well catered for in Hong Kong, though he has had to leave his big, black Range Rover in the care of fellow biologist, MJMR, for fear of adding to the already considerable pollution in Hong Kong. More than that, though, he has always been a popular figure, both with boys and beaks, who responded well to his open, positive, cheerful and fun-loving nature. These qualities made him a good choice to be poached from Elmfield, where he was the Assistant House Master for two years, to become the first Assistant at Lyon’s. Although he keeps in close touch with his Welsh roots, he first came to this part of the world to take a degree in Illustration at the University of Westminster. Since then he has also done some teaching at Salvatorian College and been closely involved 3 T H E September 15, 2012 with the Scout movement in Harrow Borough. As an artist, he first made a splash when he was selected as the Singer and Friedlander/Sunday Times Young Artist of the Year in 2003. His work was then seen widely over London when his picture of The Last Tommy, Harry Patch, was chosen as the poster image for the 2009 BP Portrait Award, in which he was a finalist. This picture now hangs in the Victoria Gallery in Bath, Harry Patch’s home town. Dan’s work is also to be found in the Royal Collection, the Imperial War Museum and the National Museum of Wales, among many other public galleries and private collections. As a teacher, Dan is specially good at opening the eyes of his pupils to different possibilities. His own work, as one critic describes it, “blurs definitions between abstract and figurative art” and he actively seeks to avoid directing students to work in the style of any other artists, but to explore their own ideas and ways of doing things. His own exhibition experiences – especially his work on the Hill, where he has staged an impressive show with SNP in the Pasmore Gallery, and “Juxtapositions”, his personal responses to some of the watercolours in the Old Speech Room Gallery – have encouraged Harrovians to see what dedicated work can achieve, and to rise to the challenge themselves – whether in paint or in printing (another of his particular interests.) Dan is leaving now to focus on his own work in his South Harrow studio and to prepare work for forthcoming exhibitions. We thank him for his efforts here and are sure we shall hear more of his endeavours in the future. TRC Tom Cobb, who was no stranger to Harrow having worked here as a gapper a few years ago, has completed a two-year stint this summer as a post-graduate assistant in a number of departments, while completing a teacher training programme. He came back to Harrow directly from Loughborough University and has played a key role in the sporting programme, especially coaching rugby, but also taking soccer and cricket teams as well as looking after swimming this season during RDB’s sabbatical. As a tutor in The Park this year, Tom’s work with the Shell year was much appreciated as he had the ability to talk to the boys in a way that got straight to the issue. He was noted for a terrific no-nonsense style accompanied by an unmistakable twinkle in his eye – qualities which made him popular with all ages in the school. He also had the energy and enthusiasm to take on evening duties undaunted, even after a full day teaching 4 H A R R O V I A N girl’s PE at Harrow High School, where he carried out some teaching practice. He was always interested to learn more about the school and about education generally and adds that he has thoroughly enjoyed his time back at Harrow. The experiences he has had here have solidified his desire to work in teaching. His next post is to be Head of Rugby at Cumnor House School. GJR and JW During the Summer Term we were very lucky to have been able to call upon two vastly experienced beaks to cover a term’s teaching here. Graham Ryder took on RDB’s teaching in the Biology Schools while he was on sabbatical, while Dr John Wheaton covered SJA’s maternity leave in the History Department. GJR retired from John Lyon School in 2008 as Director of Studies and Head of Biology. He comments that he has really enjoyed getting back to his roots in teaching his subject and avoiding all the admin that previously came his way. His divisions GJR have reported enjoying his clear but challenging lessons. He adds that he has been much impressed by the way that Harrow is such a well-oiled machine in which everyone seems to know what is expected of them and gets involved with such commitment. He is looking forward to returning to an active life of travel with his wife and keeping himself busy with his professional photography business. JW also worked, among other places, at John Lyon, where he was Head of History for six years. Since he retired from that post, he has done two periods at Harrow International, Bangkok, and two previous spells of cover here in 1995 covering for JRB’s sabbatical JW after he came out of Elmfield, and between 1998 and 1999 for CJT, who was working on his great histories of the Crusades and of Harrow School. John comments that he has appreciated how welcoming his four divisions have been to a new, if not young, teacher. John will remain in touch with Harrow as a great supporter of talks here for the Alexander, Palmerston and Trevelyan Societies, as well as being a regular figure on the golf course and an increasingly busy Harrow School tour guide. We owe both these gentlemen a debt of gratitude for coming to help out with such generosity and skill. Exituaries of other leaving beaks will appear in future editions. T H E H A R R O V I A N Gwen Nunn We are sad to have to report the passing, on 24 July, at the age of 92, of Gwen Nunn. Mrs Nunn, who worked for over thirty years with her husband Gordon, the Manager of the Harrow School Bookshop, will be remembered by generations of Harrovians. Mrs Nunn's two sons, Colin and Malcolm, attended the John Lyon School and Colin was President of the Old Lyonian Association from 1999 to 2003. Here & There We offer congratulations to two couples from the Masters’ Room who have been married during the summer: SDF and Camilla Morrow who married on 21 July in Hungerford, and JLR and Rachel Meadows who were married in Cambridgeshire on 4 August. Deputy Head Groundsman Lee Mashalsay was also married to Samantha in Chapel. We also record with pleasure the following births to members of the Masters’ Room during the summer: Alfred (Freddie) Harvey to RJH and Lauren born on 11 July in St Mary’s, Paddington; Thea Hanson to JAH and Jenny, born on 27 July at Northwick Park; Theodore Thomas to JOT and Katherine, born on 23 July, also in Northwick Park. Aristo Sham, Moretons, is currently taking part in the Leeds Piano Competition. He has also been appointed a ‘Young Steinway Artist’. This means that he can visit any Steinway dealership in the world and ask for a room and piano to use for practise. Also, if he is performing and Steinway deem the venue/event suitable, they will provide the piano. In addition to the current exhibition of photos by Sir Cecil Beaton in the OSRG, the Imperial War Museum London is currently staging a show called Cecil Beaton: Theatre of War which concentrates upon his wartime work for the Ministry of Information, though there are photos Beaton took throughout his life. Both shows display the beauty and variety of his work. Chamber Music Concert for Spirewatch St Mary’s Church 7.30pm 22 June There were two Russian works in this concert on the evening before Lord’s in St Mary’s. The opening work was the mighty Piano Trio No 2 in A minor, Op 50 by Tchaikovsky of which we heard both movements Pezzo elegiaco and Tema con variazioni played by Victor Sun, West Acre, violin, and recent OH James Lo, cello, and Aristo Sham, Moretons, piano. This huge work is not so often performed because of its monumental size. Here, however, was a wholly convincing performance which captured all the piece’s many expansive moods. The second work was the String Sextet in D minor, “Souvenir de Florence”, Op 70 by Tchaikovsky. This consists of four movements Allegro con spirito, Adagio cantabile e con moto, Allegretto moderato and Allegro vivace. The players were DNB and, Richard Chen, OH, violins, Victor Sun, and Theodore Mould, Bradbys, viola, together with James Lo and another recent OH, Rafi Colman, cellos. Their playing was lively and September 15, 2012 cheerful throughout, bringing out the tuneful, singing nature of the music which captures Tchaikovsky in a rare happy mood. This was a free concert but with a retiring collection for Spirewatch, the charity dedicated to St Mary’s Church run by The Friends of St Mary’s. The audience was small, but very appreciative of the hugely talented players we heard. New Directions Twentieth Century Music Speech Room 29 June This series of concerts is created to present twentieth century music to Harrow’s concert-going classes and broaden their education. On this occasion, we were also offered the wonderful opportunity to hear Aristo Sham, Moretons, perform the Third Piano Concerto of Prokofiev. Three curtain-raisers to this main event presented music by two giants of twentieth century music: Alban Berg and Arvo Pärt. The String Orchestra, directed by DNB and conducted by DNW, gave the first and last movements of the Lyric Suite by Berg, remarkably rich, complex and in the conductor’s word “dirty”. Bracketing this, we hear Pärt’s Fratres and Cantus in Memory of Benjamin Britten. There are always those who are won over by the idea of this numinous and spiritual music, just as there are always those who just find it a bit dull and aimlessly repetitive. As if these were not wonderful enough offerings in their own right, and would be massively impressive alone in almost any other setting, clearly the most substantial and anticipated piece was the Prokofiev. The full orchestra of some sixty players, on this occasion and at this time of year inevitably considerably stiffened by friends, beaks and professional players, made a fabulously luscious sound to accompany one of the most naturally gifted and hard-working pianists of his generation. It is only necessary to reflect how astonishingly privileged we are to be here to witness such amazing music played in Speech Room by a Harrovian. The range and power of the musical experience was just wonderful. Cross-Curricular Lecture Series 9 OSRG 5 September 9.10pm SLM Too Many Cooks? Collaboration in 21st Century Theatre ADT introduced the ninth series of Cross-Curricular lectures which will be on the theme of collaboration. He commented that he was very happy to arrange another series, and was pleased to note that as well as beaks and outside speakers, there were some boys giving lectures this term. The objective of the lectures remains the same, though – to take a theme and look at it from as many perspectives as possible. SLM, newly-elevated Head of Drama, was lucky enough to lead off this series with a review of collaborative elements in modern theatre. She opened her review by explaining that collaboration had long been an essential of the theatre, citing such famous examples as the work shared between Chekov and Stanislavsky, Brecht and Weil, Lloyd-Webber and Rice, and Mendes and RussellBeale. Indeed, she added, many here have experienced such collaborative efforts in the Ryan Theatre. 5 September 15, 2012 However, in the main part of the lecture, SLM considered four main examples of collaborative effort in recent times. Firstly, Rupert Goold’s brilliant if flawed Decade, a complex work exploring reactions to the destruction of the Twin Towers in New York; secondly the hugely successful War Horse, an unlikely hit in some ways which came out of the work of National Theatre Studios; thirdly the very influential company Frantic Assembly, whose work such as the boxing-inspired Beautiful Burnout with the National Theatre of Scotland brought new audiences; and lastly the Opening Ceremony of the recent Olympic Games in which Danny Boyle brought so many elements together in his stunning and critically acclaimed work. Each was assessed for the success it achieved, the withering critical reception of Decade contrasting with the world-wide success of War Horse, for instance. There were a number of interesting and thought-provoking questions at the end of the lecture before ADT explained his “loyalty card” scheme, by which those Harrovians who attended the whole series of lectures might be rewarded at the end of term. Reflections of a “Games Maker” JAH offers a few Olympic reflections London has changed. This summer may have been a damp squib weather wise, but the biggest show on earth has come to town, had a rest, then started up again. Even the die-hard friends of mine who swore blind that they would have nothing to do with the Games had gone quiet very quickly after the opening ceremony. Those who managed to lose out in the massively over-subscribed ticket ballots mostly found tickets for something one way or another before the Games started, and those who got nothing for the Olympics have been hoovering up Paralympics tickets, just to be in the park, to see our superheroes in action and be a part of it. It was a real treat to see many colleagues and locals out supporting the Olympic torch as it came through our high street in late July, with the flotilla of loud entertainment surrounding it. For many people, seeing the torch in their locality (and wading three or four people deep to get a glimpse of it) was the moment the Games came alive for them. For children, the slightly perplexing looking mascots, Wenlock (named after the first Wenlock Olympic games held in 1860, some 36 years before the first of the modern era Olympic Games in Athens), and Mandeville (named after Stoke Mandeville – the birthplace of the Paralympics) proved to be mostly a hit (yet a terror to some who hated the Cyclops look). My 3-year old daughter especially loved them, and London even embraced them through the Mayor of London’s discovery trails, where 82 of these mascot statues have been placed on coloured trails showing off particularly interesting parts of the city. We managed two 6 T H E H A R R O V I A N of the 3 mile trails, but I know families who have got close to visiting all of them, such is their appeal. The doom-mongers had protested about it, claiming what a waste of money £9 billion would be, how the weather would ruin everything, London’s transport would implode, people wouldn’t want to come, and there would be mistakes galore. Nothing could have been more wrong. Yes, we may well have to wait to see how London and the UK really benefit economically from future investment and final sales of assets, but the net cost to tax-payers will be much lower than the £9 billion, and may ultimately end up being a net winner. The Athletics stadium legacy is still undecided, but it will go to a good home, and I for one liked the original Spurs plan to turn it to a football stadium and develop Crystal Palace to be the world class athletics venue it once craved to be. What really excited me was not just how much the national press got behind the British success stories and near misses, but how we had two weeks of constant positive news, not the usual sniping, attacking, and doom and gloom that has descended on us for too long. If the Jubilee taught us anything at all, it is that Britain can throw great street parties, embrace celebration and loves a good news story. Long may we live in a land where headlines are positive, and we can bottle this feel-good factor that started back in June and has carried us through the bleak mid-summer. People up and down the country have been there (some 6 million of us), or watching the TV (umpteen million of us), becoming armchair experts on canoe slalom, parallel bars, 10m platform dives, double sculls rowing and whatever floated our boats when it involved British success stories. How many of us have even bought Olympic gold medal winners’ stamps, or visited a golden post-box? How many of us have done the Mobot? If Beijing was amazing for our medal haul, it was certainly good at keeping secrets too. How many outside the real sports fans had clocked Bradley Wiggins for how good he was before this year? While Chris Hoy and Becky Adlington stole the limelight after Beijing, Brad had clocked up 5 medals already at Olympics, 3 of them gold, yet took till this year’s Tour de France and Olympic gold to really hit the big time. If there was an odds-on favourite for the BBC’s SPOTY award, it must be him. I recently asked my friends to name their top 5 moments from the Games this year, and I ask readers the same questions. Here are mine: 5) Ben Ainslie: "He shouldn't have made me angry" 4) Bradley Wiggins win - surely the SPOTY favourite 3) Mobot and U-Bolt doing each other's signatures 2) Katherine Grainger finally winning gold (after 3 consecutive silvers) and her tears on the podium 1) Gemma Gibbons: "I love you mum", as she won a judo medal, having recently lost her mum. For some, the excitement of the Games started on July 27th when the party began (even if we all wished Sir Paul McCartney hadn’t been invited). For others, the journey began months, years or Olympiads ago. In 1986, the Commonwealth Games came to Edinburgh, and a very excited 9 year old was taken to the Games pool to watch an afternoon of swimming. The day was made even more special when, half-way through proceedings, Charles and Diana came into the section and sat two rows behind our family. There began my fascination for the Olympics, as I couldn’t wait to see the next Games in Seoul in 1988. Fast forward a few Olympiads, to 2000 when I took two weeks off work just to watch the entirety of the games in Sydney. At that moment, I knew I had to go and see it live. So, come 2004, I found myself on a midnight budget airlines flight to Athens. Arriving with no sleep at 04:00 was not a problem, as the adrenalin of getting to the rowing lake to watch British medals being won, awarded and then paraded made me feel so proud to be British. I also managed to join T H E H A R R O V I A N the Dean Macey (GB Decathlete) fan club during his stirring effort that narrowly missed out on a medal, and sat in the upper reaches of the stadium (not far from BJL) to watch Dame Kelly Holmes strike gold and then see our 4 x 100m relay team beat the Americans by 0.01 seconds to the gold medal. Standing up in a huge stadium belting out one’s own national anthem is a moment to treasure, just like standing up to sing it in the Royal Albert Hall – a feeling of being truly proudly British. So, it was no surprise that I (being a self-confessed kit junkie) bought the London 2012 bid jacket and proudly strolled out to Trafalgar Square on July 6th 2005. A day when the whole square stopped at lunchtime and Steve Cram, Kelly Holmes and a host of other stars stood in front of a big screen pointing to Singapore and our expectant bid team awaiting their fate. Silence descended on the square as Jacques Rogge opened the envelope and uttered those immortal words “The Games of the 30th Olympiad, have been awarded to the city of ………….”, and what seemed like a minute’s pause before “LONDON” was delivered and the crowd around me erupted into carnival atmosphere of delirium. I was there, and couldn’t have believed we managed it (at least for the unbelievable budget set at the time). Like all those in and around the country, time stood still the day afterwards, when I sat glued to the tv watching the events of the 7/7 bombing unfold, scarcely believing that I had ridden that underground route 24 hours earlier. Even today, seeing one of the survivors of those atrocious attacks compete for GB in volleyball at the Paralympics brings much hope to many who suffered and still suffer to this day from similar barbaric attacks and a story of amazing courage that quite rightly has been trumpeted through the media. From then on, it was always on my mind that I wanted to be involved in the Games in whatever small way I could. I am never going to be an athlete, but I was determined to work to support the Games as well as see as much of it as possible. The door finally opened two years ago, and I duly spent the three hours filling in all the online questionnaires that made up the London 2012 volunteer application form. From then on, it was a waiting game – those of us called to Games Maker interviews would be told several months after that, and maybe more than a year further on, so we were encouraged to sit tight and watch this space. For those waiting on AS or GCSE results, for university offers and decisions, I can tell you a year or more is a long time to wait. But, finally the interview offer came through in July 2011, and I booked a slot straight after term ended. Then the waiting began again – only this time we knew it would take only 6 months before we received a go / no-go for launch. Christmas came early for me, and December 2011 provided me with news that I had been accepted to be a Driver – one of nearly 5000 selected to drive the BMW 3 and 5 series round London, chauffeuring Games family members. Yes, for much of the Olympic party, I was dressed in red and purple, sat in my brand new BMW annoying taxi-drivers in the central London Games Lanes, transporting the good and the great from one venue to another. In reality, the role wasn’t anything like as glamorous as it could be made out to be, as we got to know the M4, A12 and London Heathrow car parks pretty well such was the organising committee’s massively over-zealous desire to provide transport opportunities everywhere and all day and night in case someone in the family wanted a ride. While the appreciation for Games Makers throughout and especially at the end of the Games was really good to see, the super-humans are those who volunteer week in, week out around the country – those for whom their work goes unnoticed, unrewarded and often taken for granted. We had it easy, got noticed, got our rewards and had a really amazing time of it. But the real story of the Games should be how we look out for long-term volunteering opportunities and seek to acknowledge, respect and cherish those who do this out of sheer love and devotion to others and their causes. Most of them don’t want September 15, 2012 rewards, don’t want the limelight, they just want to keep doing what they love. They are the real heroes. The C3L6 Chemistry Competition The C3L6 competition, run by Cambridge University Chemistry Department, took place at the end of the Summer Term. The competition is designed to challenge L6th chemists after their AS papers. The top award is called the Roentgenium Award (element under gold on the Periodic Table….). Last year, Takehiro Fujita, The Knoll, was one of three candidates nationally to score full marks. He is going to Clare College to read Natural Sciences. The results from this year have recently been announced. There were 4296 students entered. The highest scoring candidate, with a score of 57/60, was Adam Butterworth, Lyon's. He, and two other Harrovians (Richard Oh, The Head Master’s, and Philip Leung, The Park, were in the top 0.9% of the candidates, and were each given a Roentgenium Award. All three have been invited this summer to St Catharine’s College and the University Chemical Laboratory for a residential course, 31 August to 3 Sept. In total, Harrovians were awarded 3 Roentgenium (top 0.9%), 2 Gold (next 6.7%), 7 Silver (next 14.5%) and 20 Copper awards (next 38%). The Rattigan Society The Rattigan Society had its first theatre trip of the term on 6 September as a group of 15 eager boys accompanied SLM and WJCG to the Old Vic to see Hedda Gabler by Henrik Ibsen. The play was in early previews but seemed remarkably slick and extremely well directed. The recognisable faces of Sheridan Smith and Adrian Scarborough, both known to many of the boys from television appearances, gave outstanding, effecting performances in a beautifully designed production of the complex piece. Played out swiftly over 24 hours, Ibsen’s startlingly resonant play is a thrilling portrayal of the free-spirited Hedda Gabler (Sheridan Smith). Railing against a life of crippling convention, Hedda Gabler cuts through the lives of everyone in her orbit. The shocking final scene made everyone jump out of their seats as blood splattered all over the glass walls of the set. All agreed it had been a very enjoyable first trip of the term. The next Rattigan Society trip will be to see Chariots of Fire and boys should look out for the sign-up sheet in the SCR as places will go quickly for this popular adaptation. Pre Season Rugby 2012 The sight of the Hill after a summer away was a more pleasant experience for those of us who had gone above and beyond ourselves in leaving the sun bed for the gym. For the rest it seemed to promise little in the way of enjoyment. Having been welcomed into the sports hall by JJC and having proceeded to pick up some new kit, we nervously awaited news as to our first commitment of the camp. True to form, we were swiftly informed that the rather daunting prospect of an “England” fitness test beckoned. Visions of sweat and vomit immediately seized the mind. And so, the rather reluctant trudge down to Ducker 1 commenced. Nonetheless there was already an underlying sense of camaraderie in the face of such a momentous task, and it was nice to see boys of all year groups 7 T H E September 15, 2012 spurring each other on throughout. One didn’t have to look far for further inspiration, rubbing shoulders with international players and coaches alike. Once this formality finished, we headed off for lunch, pleased to have sometime to exchange memories of the summer and our respective conquests. The afternoon consisted of a brief skills session, with all involved conscious to pick up a rugby ball before launching into the encounter with KCS Wimbledon the following day. Despite the rather arduous trek up Football Lane or across the Head Master’s garden if you were bold enough to risk the wrath of SAH, I think it’s fair to say that Druries served to provide a welcome sight at the end of a long day in the blistering heat. The morning of the second day consisted of preparing for the aforementioned match. Indeed KCS proved to be worthy opponents and it was hardly surprising to learn that they had already had the best part of a week’s training to rival our solitary beasting. Nonetheless all involved put up a formidable effort and, although it doubtless took sometime to shake off the cobwebs, the result was a resounding success. Having said that, the euphoria was swiftly exchanged with a myriad of aches and pains that made any seated position in bill room nigh on unbearable. With this in mind everyone welcomed the chance to go for a paddle and listen to the rather feminine shrieks of those on the receiving end of JJC’s hose down. With little time for some R and R beyond the basic eight hours sleep, we set about preparing for the presence of Norwich School (colloquially know as JBH’s old place) and the Zimbabwe international side, the next day. With everyone feeling suitably battered and bruised, we were glad to here that the match would consist of four quarters, with one half against each school, and an intermediate period in which Norwich and St Johns would have a chance to play each other. In some regards this essentially played into our favour in that St Johns probably had one too many gallops into the extremities of the Sunley. Once again the strength of the squad was highlighted in the performance, effortlessly exchanging one entire fifteen for another and coming out victorious. With three victories, some serious graft and a substantial barbeque behind us we were afforded the next morning for some team building before we crawled back to our respective caves in the tranquil countryside. Needless to say paintballing was an interesting concept and proved to be of a certain comedy value. As one can imagine the chance to “hunt” Mr Jones and Mr Walsh or Harry Glover in his weirdly appropriate tutu didn’t go amiss. Indeed even if fatigue set in early, one relished the opportunity to shoot fellow member of the year from behind before sniggering profusely in the safety of one’s barricade. All in all pre season proved to be a necessary reminder of the positive prospects the season holds and the job that, as of yet, remains unfinished. Our thanks to all who made it possible. Athletics Three Harrovians were selected to compete at the English Schools’ Athletic Association Championships at the end of last term and travelled up to Gateshead to represent Middlesex at this prestigious competition. They achieved the following results: KC Bassey, West Acre (current ranking: 24) U15 discus 10th place Daniel Hubble, Lyon’s (current ranking: 4) U15 Pole Vault 9th place Joel Harvey, West Acre (current ranking: 5) U17 200m 3rd place 8 H A R R O V I A N Cricket 1st XI Report 2012 The 1st XI are judged by most, unjustly, on one game at Lord’s. This is an inescapable fact. More than ever before, 2012 will be remembered for the incredible spectacle served up at the home of cricket, and as a result, the XI will go down in legend as a great team. But what does the real record actually say about this Harrow team in a summer term that will also go down as the wettest in living memory? Well, they were good, but not great. They finished second in the Cowdrey Cup, beating Wellington, Charterhouse and Eton, but losing in disappointing fashion to Radley and Tonbridge. A record of nine wins and six defeats could easily have been better, but with the team ravaged by injuries, especially after half term, and with the emergence of an even stronger school circuit as schools like Malvern and Whitgift become county academies, it represents a pretty good effort. There is a sneaking suspicion that an 11-4 win/lose record would have more accurately reflected the talent within the side. For the first time since pre-season training was invented, Harrow did not go abroad to Malta or Spain. Global warming seduced them into staying at Harrow, and the wind and rain swept in from the west, and at the time of writing (early July), had still not abated. Three early matches were completely lost to the weather and others were played in drizzle and on boggy outfields. Nevertheless, Harrow made a promising start by beating Wellington, Charterhouse and MCC. Viresh Patel, new into the lower sixth, looked a class act with ball and bat, but made the fatal error of running the 100m sprint in house athletics. The resulting pulled hamstring stayed with him all term, and although he managed 11 crucial overs at Lord’s when no more than 60% fit, his absence was a big factor in Harrow’s inconsistency. The run-in to half term was a struggle. At Tonbridge the batting disappeared, while at Dulwich the bowling ran into the batting whirlwind that is A. Alleyne, and he made 145. A poor performance on Speech Day led to a half term record of four wins and three defeats, and the jury still out. But in truth it had been a strange half; the weather had meant it had all been very disjointed, and there had been no chance to practice in the middle and get into a rhythm. The bowlers could not hit a line and length and build up any sort of pressure on batsmen. The seam attack of Lalit Bose, Hamish Macintyre, Arthur Boyd and Andrew Turner, all had their moments, but would still bowl one or two really bad balls an over. Dhiren De Silva and Max Fosh bowled the spin in Patel’s absence and amid the carnage at Dulwich, Fosh managed 11 overs of left arm spin for just 33 runs, and even Alleyne treated him with respect. He continued to bowl well through to half term. The batting was also stuttering. Nick Castleman promised much early season, and Boyd made a fluent 80 at Dulwich, but only Mikey Cousens and Robbie White put more than one big score together. On occasions, like MCC, Tonbridge and Harrow Wanderers, there was collective failure. As so often, the Radley game, on the Saturday before Lord’s, seemed pivotal to the season. The Cowdrey Cup was in the balance with three teams at the top level on points. If Harrow could defeat Radley and Eton, they would almost certainly win it. But with Bose, Cousens and Patel absent, the batting again struggled, with only Tom Morgan, on debut, and Turner, showing any resistance. In fact, so well did Morgan bat, bowl and catch, Lord’s selection now became very difficult. The I Zingari game two days before Lord’s is always important for practice before Lord’s, but this time it became a crucial fitness test for Patel, Cousens and White, the keeper, who had a cracked bone in his thumb. Harrow were fortunate in having T H E H A R R O V I A N a top class deputy, James Lawson Baker, who had kept against Radley and now would share the keeping duties against I Zingari. In what turned out to be a superb game of declaration cricket, all came through unscathed, but the bowling, especially the spin of Patel, Fosh and Morgan, looked ordinary. For the record, Boyd made his first ever hundred in Harrow’s 298 for 7, Bose opened the batting as he had done for the first time on Speech Day, and I Zingari made 293 for 8 in return! The miracle that was Lord’s happened. It was not a dream. The bowling just about hung on to restrict Eton to a score that though huge, looked like being even more formidable. Castleman was immense as captain, the walking wounded, Patel and White, got through impressively, and then Bose displayed the early judgement of length and quick eye that set up an improbable win. Hector Whitrow had taken bowlers apart before, on Speech Day last season and in Cape Town in 2010, but this Lord’s innings was not a hitter getting lucky – it was carried out with the precise calmness of a top surgeon. But what would happen now? There were six more games against tough opposition, games that would define Harrow as good, ordinary or just a poor side who happened to win at Lord’s. Injuries really kicked in now. Patel’s school season was over. White was still in pain behind the stumps. Boyd cracked a bone in his foot and Turner dislocated a shoulder. Whitrow had played with a fatigue syndrome and was now spent. Bose’s stiff back meant that he could not bowl. Without Castleman’s drive and leadership Harrow could have disappeared without trace but he was helped by two huge efforts from Bose and Macintyre. Bose simply carried on where he had left off at Lord’s. He followed that 118 up with 114 v Malvern, 72 v Whitgift, 41 v Somerset College, and 94 v Winchester. He was just ruthless on anything short. Macintyre was the last seamer left standing, and he rose magnificently to the challenge of being the leader of the attack. In five games he took 14 wickets for 120 runs in 47 overs, scored big lower order runs and took a miracle catch on the boundary to effectively end the Winchester hopes of a victory. He took an amazing 6 for 7 at Hampton in a master class of left arm swing bowling. It all meant that Harrow won 4 and lost 2 of the games post-Lord’s. A very good Malvern side were beaten along with Hampton, Somerset College, and Winchester, but Bedford and Whitgift proved too strong for the injury-ravaged school team. But there were silver linings. Morgan Ward, after holding the fielding together single-handedly at times, finally contributed significantly with the ball after losing his radar early season, and youngsters like Cameron Mahon, Guyan Ratnavel, Shailen Assani and Fred Ruffell all impressed when stepping in to help in the last two weeks. With only three players leaving, the future looks good for next year. Bose bowled with real fire at times and should be the leader of a useful attack. Turner’s bustling in swing often showed real penetration while Boyd’s away swing was often the pick of the attack. Macintyre came strong late season, when Ward also started to pitch his gentle in swing from round the wicket. But all the seamers suffered from inconsistency at times, and will have to be more accurate if Harrow are to build pressure and flourish next season. Patel’s off spin looked classy and he will be the man to build pressure in the middle of an innings. Fosh did well to meet most of his challenges and usually produced economical figures, but there is still a lot of work for him to do to get more control and get batsmen driving. Morgan took 4 for 22 on a sunny last day of the season with his left arm darts, and that is the style and consistency he must take into next year rather than the slow lobs he was sometimes prone to bowl. De Silva’s leg spin is promising but needs more tempo and drive to really threaten. These spinners will all be pushed hard by Guyan Ratnavel. September 15, 2012 The batting was boosted by Bose when he was promoted to open. White and Cousens are technically good and are highly rated, but they did not score the runs that they are capable of. There were glimpses of excellence, especially early season when Cousens made 111 not out and White 86 against Charterhouse, but both need to show a bit more patience and be prepared to graft, especially for that first 50. Boyd opened before Bose came up and was more fluent and confident than previously. He improved so much against spin that he looked just as good in the middle order. Apart from Whitrow’s knock at Lord’s, the lower order did not score enough runs. Turner and Ward should score significant runs but it has not happened yet. Turner showed his potential with a careful 29 v Radley. Macintyre only came good late season. Like the batting and bowling, the fielding had great potential but wavered mid-season when catches went down too regularly. At his best, White was excellent behind the stumps, as at Lord’s, but too often he seemed to lack energy and motivation in other games. Lawson Baker has great hands and bounce, and now needs to work on his footwork standing back. Ward was the stand out fielder, controlling extra cover with easy grace and secure hands, and this helped him retain his place in the side. Macintyre and Turner were swift boundary fielders while Cousens remained well above average in the slips. In an age of rampant egos and self promotion, Nick Castleman was a breath of fresh air. His selfless devotion to the team and their welfare shone like a beacon throughout a tough season. His one driving motivation was for Harrow to win games of cricket, and his integrity stood firm despite his own struggles with form. He is a model for future captains to follow. AVERAGES BATTING L Bose ME Cousens RG White AW Boyd HWD Whitrow VM Patel HDL Macintyre NMT Castleman ARG Turner MP Ward Inn N.O 13 0 16 3 16 2 12 0 12 4 6 1 11 5 16 1 11 4 12 2 Runs 595 593 474 384 243 102 100 245 102 102 Aver. Strike Rate 45.8 96.4 45.6 86.4 33.9 56.5 32.0 57.8 30.4 91.7 20.4 58.0 16.7 73.0 16.3 55.3 14.6 68.0 10.2 61.5 (Also Batted – TCR Morgan 5-0-46-9.2, DJ De Silva 6-2-22-5.5, MA Fosh 6-2-8-2.0, JD Lawson Baker 4-1-20-6.7, GD Ratnavel 1-0-5-5.0, FWA Ruffell 1-1-15-0, CM Mahon 1-0-5-5.0, SJS Assani 1-0-2-2.0) BOWLING VM Patel L Bose HDL Macintyre TCR Morgan ARG Turner AW Boyd MP Ward DJ De Silva MA Fosh O 47 91.3 131 51 92.5 75.4 70.4 39.4 95.1 M 2 11 17 2 8 9 8 2 9 R 170 332 451 229 391 306 309 208 341 W 10 17 20 10 17 13 12 5 6 Econ. 3.6 3.6 3.4 4.5 4.2 4.1 4.4 5.3 3.6 Aver 17.0 19.5 22.5 22.9 23.0 23.5 25.7 41.6 56.8 (Also Bowled – CM Mahon 15-3-49-2, GD Ratnavel 20-277-3, SJS Assani 14-0-92-2, NMT Castleman 5-0-31-0, ME Cousens 4-0-27-1) 9 T H E September 15, 2012 The School v Malvern College (55 overs) 26 June Harrow won by 48 runs Harrow RG White, c Cadmore b Jones ... L Bose, c Jones b Shah ... ... ME Cousens, c Lacey b Wright ... NMT Castleman, b Shah ... ... AW Boyd, b Martin ... ... ... HWD Whitrow, c Cadmore b Martin TCR Morgan, c Smith b Jones ... ARG Turner, run out... ... ... MP Ward, run out ... ... ... HDL Macintyre, run out ... ... DJ De Silva, not out... ... ... Extras ... ... ... ... ... Total ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 21 ...114 ... 29 ... 12 ... 38 ... 12 ... 17 ... 24 ... 0 ... 9 ... 0 ... 32 ...308 Malvern T Cadmore, c Morgan b Ward ... F Martin, lbw Turner... ... ... M Jefferson, c White b Macintyre ... M Drury, c and b De Silva ... ... A Milton, c Boyd b Ward ... ... C Lacey, c Boyd b Turner ... ... C Harwood, c Castleman b Turner... L Smith, c Morgan b Macintyre ... A Jones, b Macintyre... ... ... W Wright, not out ... ... ... A Shah, c Cousens b Turner... ... Extras ... ... ... ... ... Total ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 85 ... 1 ... 2 ... 17 ... 16 ... 0 ... 55 ... 33 ... 2 ... 4 ... 1 ... 34 ...260 Harrow Bowling AW Boyd TCR Morgan HDL Macintyre ARG Turner DJ De Silva MP Ward O 8 5 10 8.5 6 11 M 0 0 1 1 1 1 R 43 32 47 40 45 46 W 0 0 3 4 1 2 Three days after Lord’s and the School became involved in another real scrap. Missing Fosh and Patel through injury, Morgan and De Silva came in after their sterling 12th and 13th man duties at Lord’s. Bose once again dominated the Harrow innings with 114 off just 125 balls. He got Harrow off to a such a flyer that they had 105 off the first 20 overs. They never fell below five an over as the middle order all scored at better than a run a ball. Boyd and Turner contributed particularly fine cameos. A total of 308 was fantastic considering that the Malvern attack was perhaps the best we have seen all season. But then Malvern got off to a flyer themselves thanks to Cadmore. This classy player sped to 85 off just 67 balls and Harrow’s depleted attack were struggling to contain him. The score at tea was 143 for 3 off just 25 overs. But Ward was in the middle of his best spell for a long time and when Cadmore helped a long hop to a grateful Morgan at deep square leg there was great rejoicing. Two excellent Boyd catches reduced Malvern to 153 for 6 and Harrow, perhaps feeling the contest was over, fatally eased off the gas. Harwood and Smith started slowly to rebuild, and then upped the tempo, until Harrow realised that they were back in a game. In fact, rain had made the task tougher for Harrow as the ball was wet. The game was decided by two more great catches. Harwood and Smith were winning the game and did not need to take risks but pressure is a strange thing. For no apparent reason Smith lofted Macintyre to deep extra where Morgan misjudged the catch before recovering to catch it low 10 H A R R O V I A N and behind him. Then Harwood tried to hit Turner into South Harrow and Castleman made a superb catch running back over his head. 248 for 6 had become 250 for 8 and this time the match was over with seven overs still remaining – showing how quickly Malvern had scored. In truth this was another fine game of cricket but the squad were looking weary. Would they cope with the difficult last 5 matches? The School v Hampton (50 overs) 28 June Harrow won by 9 wickets Hampton M Main, b Macintyre ... ... O Friar, lbw Boyd ... ... ... G King, c Whitrow b Macintyre ... M Jones, b Macintyre ... ... S Goodwill, b Macintyre ... ... C O’Brien, c Whitrow b Macintyre... G Harper, b Ward ... ... ... M O’Brien, c Bose b Macintyre ... G Tunnicliffe, c Boyd b Ward ... H Comerford, c Cousens b Boyd ... J Goodwill, not out ... ... ... Extras ... ... ... ... ... Total ... ... ... ... ... Harrow Bowling HDL Macintyre AW Boyd ARG Turner MP Ward MA Fosh O 7 7 5 7 2 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... M 2 0 0 2 0 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 65 (28 R 7 27 16 9 6 ... 0 ... 0 ... 8 ... 0 ... 7 ... 0 ... 27 ... 0 ... 5 ... 0 ... 0 ... 18 overs) W 6 2 0 2 0 Harrow School RG White, not out ... ... ... ... ... ... 25 NMT Castleman, b M O’Brien ... ... ... ... 0 ME Cousens, not out... ... ... ... ... ... 40 (L Bose, AW Boyd, HWD Whitrow, TCR Morgan, ARG Turner, MP Ward, HDL Macintyre, MA Fosh, all did not bat) Extras ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 1 Total ... ... ... ... ...66 for 1 (13 overs) A master class in left arm swing bowling by Hamish Macintyre settled this match well before lunch. The ball swung for all the bowlers but Macintyre exploited the conditions best. Only Harper showed any real resistance but once he had been bowled by Ward trying to keep the strike the innings was effectively over. Cousens and White scored the runs with few alarms after Castleman went early. The School v Whitgift 30 June Whitgift won by 8 wickets Harrow School RG White, lbw Winslade ... L Bose, b Shinwari ... ... ME Cousens, b Shinwari ... NMT Castleman, lbw Shinwari TCR Morgan, c Sibley b Lloyd HWD Whitrow, b Sibley ... ARG Turner, b Sibley ... MP Ward, b Winslade ... HDL Macintyre, not out ... CM Mahon, b Shinwari ... MA Fosh, b Shinwari ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 3 ... 72 ... 15 ... 11 ... 4 ... 16 ... 0 ... 8 ... 23 ... 5 ... 0 T H E Extras ... Total ... H A R R O V I A N ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... Whitgift J Lloyd, c Turner b Morgan... D Sibley, not out ... ... J Winslade, c Bose b Cousens G Dann, not out ... ... Extras ... ... ... ... Total ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 27 ... ...106 ... ... 21 ... ... 10 ... ... 22 ... 186 for 2 Harrow Bowling HDL Macintyre CM Mahon MA Fosh ARG Turner MP Ward TCR Morgan ME Cousens ... ... O 10 9 10 2 4.4 4 3 M 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 R 23 35 29 16 34 26 20 ... 28 ...185 W 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 With Boyd now out for the season and Bose not able to bowl, Cameron Mahon came in for his debut and bowled tidily. Only Macintyre and Fosh supported him as a strong Whitgift team reached their target in 43 overs. Sibley looked a class batsman and scored a good century. Earlier, Harrow struggled against two genuine quick bowlers in Winslade and Shinwari. Bose again batted beautifully to maintain his form but had no real support. Late in the day Turner dislocated his shoulder in attempting a catch in the deep, worsening Harrow’s mounting injury problems. The School v Somerset College 1 July Harrow Won by 7 wickets Somerset College J Hendersen, c Morgan b Mahon 4 L Lami, c Cousens b Mahon 3 E Moses, c Fosh b Ward 24 L De Genaar, st White b Ratnavel 19 P Carstens, lbw Morgan 8 J Freemantle, run out 50 O Nel, c Whitrow b Fosh 5 J Hardy, run out 33 J Sloan, not out 4 Extras 28 Total 178 for 8 Harrow Bowling HDL Macintyre CM Mahon GD Ratnavel MP Ward TCR Morgan MA Fosh O 10 6 10 9 5 10 M 0 2 1 0 0 0 R 42 14 33 31 24 27 W 0 2 1 1 1 1 Harrow School RG White, b Sloan ... ... ... ... ... ... 23 L Bose, c Hendersen b Sloan ... ... ... ... 41 ME Cousens, not out... ... ... ... ... ... 60 NMT Castleman, lbw Nel ... ... ... ... ... 14 HWD Whitrow, not out ... ... ... ... ... 28 (Morgan, Ward, Macintyre, Ratnavel, Mahon, Fosh) Extras ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 14 Total ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 180 for 3 September 15, 2012 Bose again got Harrow off to a lightning start in pursuit of 178. Cousens and Whitrow finished the job in the 35th over. It was a good win considering the long injury list, with only two bowlers from the Lord’s XI still remaining. Ratnavel made his debut and bowled a tidy spell of off spin. Mahon, in his second game, took the first two wickets. Ward and Fosh also bowled valuable spells to restrict a young Somerset College side from Cape Town. The School v Bedford (50 overs) Tuesday 3rd July Bedford won by 115 runs Bedford J Thirston, b Morgan... ... ... P McDuell, c Morgan b Ratnavel ... J McDuell, c Sub b Macintyre ... T Graham, b Ratnavel ... ... A Sohal, b Ward ... ... ... A Wharton, c Castleman b Macintyre D Morecroft, b Assani ... ... G Axon, c L-Baker b Macintyre ... J Humphreys, b Macintyre ... ... H Morecroft, not out... ... ... G Wright, lbw Assani... ... ... Extras ... ... ... ... ... Total ... ... ... ... ... Harrow Bowling HDL Macintyre SJS Assani MP Ward GD Ratnavel MA Fosh NMT Castleman TCR Morgan O 10 8 8 10 1 2 10 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... M 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 Harrow RG White, b Morecroft ... ... NMT Castleman, c Axon b Wharton ME Cousens, c McDuell b Graham... TCR Morgan, st Axon b Graham ... HWD Whitrow, c Axon b Humphries JD Lawson Baker, lbw Graham ... MP Ward, lbw Humphries ... ... HDL Macintyre, st Axon b Wright... SJS Assani, b Wharton ... ... GD Ratnavel, c Wright b Thirston... MA Fosh, not out ... ... ... Extras ... ... ... ... ... Total ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... R 28 52 42 42 16 21 42 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 93 ... 56 ... 32 ... 0 ... 9 ... 19 ... 0 ... 11 ... 1 ... 4 ... 1 ... 17 ...249 W 4 2 1 2 0 0 1 ... 32 ... 0 ... 20 ... 0 ... 1 ... 5 ... 14 ... 32 ... 2 ... 5 ... 0 ... 7 ...118 With Bose, Boyd, Patel and Turner out, Harrow badly needed their top three to make runs, but they could not provide the platform the team needed in chasing a big score. The damage was done before lunch when Thirston and McDuell batted smoothly to take Bedford to 150 for 0 off just 25 overs. Some of the Harrow bowling bordered on the comic. Harrow fought back well after lunch with Ratnavel making the initial breakthroughs and Morgan bowling tightly. Assani on debut came back to bowl a good second spell but Macintyre was the pick of Harrow’s attack with figures of 4 for 28. Lawson Baker took over from White behind the stumps when the latter aggravated his thumb injury. There was some disappointing Harrow batting but the squad is now at full stretch. 11 T H E September 15, 2012 The School v Winchester (50 overs) 5 July Harrow won by 71 runs Harrow RG White, lbw Mills... ... ... L Bose, run out ... ... ... ME Cousens, run out... ... ... NMT Castleman, b Portman... ... HWA Ruffell, not out... ... ... HDL Macintyre, not out ... ... (Morgan, Lawson Baker, Ward, Assani, Extras ... ... ... ... ... Total ... .... ... ... ... Winchester D Escott, run out ... ... N Green, c L-Baker b Macintyre O Mills, c Macintyre b Morgan L Gregory, c and b Morgan... E Wylde, st L-Baker b Fosh... P Rathod, c White b Morgan A Sachak, st L-Baker b Morgan H Sever, not out ... ... W Dunger, c Fosh b Ward ... H Portman, not out ... ... Extras ... ... ... ... Total ... ... ... ... Harrow Bowling HDL Macintyre SJS Assani MP Ward L Bose MA Fosh TCR Morgan ME Cousens O 10 6 10 3 10 10 1 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... M 3 0 0 0 0 2 0 ... ... ... ... ... ... Fosh) ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 17 ... 94 ... 90 ... 19 ... 15 ... 7 ... ... 21 ... 263 for 4 ... ... 28 ... ... 0 ... ... 65 ... ... 10 ... ... 7 ... ... 9 ... ... 2 ... ... 38 ... ... 4 ... ... 10 ... ... 19 ... 192 for 8 R 15 40 46 11 42 22 7 W 1 0 1 0 1 4 0 Harrow ended an eventful season winning in pleasant sunshine against Winchester. Bose continued his great run of form and H A R R O V I A N seemed set for a third century before Cousens ran him out after a stand of 109 which set up a big total. Fred Ruffell did well to score a useful 15 not out on his debut and Cousens went on to a good score. Winchester were quite well placed at 112 for 2 with Mills looking good, but a great catch by Macintyre off Morgan on the boundary ended his knock. Gregory went next ball and Winchester never recovered. Morgan completed a great spell of left arm darts but Macintyre, typical of his last few games, also had special bowling figures. The game quietly petered out with Winchester well short. Rugby 1st XV v Emeka Ilogu’s XV 8 September In typical fashion, Emeka Ilogu’s XV, or VIII as it actually was, arrived late and rather unprepared. Whilst the first XV went through their rigorous warm up and drills with military precision, the OHs applied their sun cream and scouted to find some more players (which they did, eventually). The game was scrappy but enjoyable for the spectators, the new Lyon’s winger Shaquille Jack capitalising on the large amount of loose ball to score four tries. Harry Glover, Rendalls, secured a superb individual solo try, side-stepping the OH forward pack before gliding through the middle and dotting down under the posts. Morgan Ward, The Park, the captain of the Harrow XV, Jamie Grist, The Grove, and Ade Omisore, West Acre, scored the other tries of the rout. Final score 46-0. Colts A v. New Hall School Harrow won 45-14: D.L. Graham 2, Druries; O.R. James, Newlands; R.B. Kawkabani, Moretons; S.J. Meeson-Frizelle, Elmfield, 1, 4 con; C.T.M. Chritchley; Lyon's; M.G. Kendall, West Acre. Junior Colts A: Harrow won 43-12. Ways to contact The Harrovian Articles, opinions and letters are always appreciated. email the Master in Charge tw@harrowschool.org.uk or Desk Top Publishing eberry@harrowschool.org.uk 12