St Benedict’s Boys row their way to green and gold
Christopher Viljoen (Grade 12) and Jayden Thomson (Grade 11) were awarded their national colours blazers.
The South African Junior Rowing colours award ceremony, held on September 4, honoured two St Benedict’s learners.
Christopher Viljoen (Grade 12) and Jayden Thomson (Grade 11) were awarded their national colours blazers.
This comes after the pair represented South Africa at the Junior World Rowing Championships in Plovdiv, Bulgaria, in August.
The Rowing South Africa (RowSA) award ceremony, held in Parkview, celebrated the young men and their outstanding achievements.
Viljoen and Thomson, alongside rowers from various schools, made up the South African Junior Men’s Coaxed Four team.
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In a gutsy performance, the young men achieved seventh place overall, winning the B final at the championships.
The moment was a proud one for the athletes, their parents and the school.
St Benedict’s already boasts 27 consecutive national titles, over 45 national athletes, and a body of learners who truly love the sport.
“Rowing is a Bennies flagship sport, and we’re incredibly proud of our athletes who have taken it up a notch by representing their country. The achievement of their national colours blazers is also a significant milestone for these young men,” said headmaster Dave Jeffrey.
“We’re all extremely gratified to have achieved this accolade and it perpetuates the winning culture instilled by the school, in all its learners. Rowing is a sport that requires unbelievable discipline and ongoing perseverance, and these athletes bear testimony to hard work paying off,” said Bennies Old Boy Darryn Roff, who runs and coaches the school’s rowing club.
From humble beginnings in 1988, the rowing club has grown to its largest ever size of 140 rowers.
Much is expected from these young men, as the club has produced four Olympians in its 33 years.
“This is arguably the most successful youth programme in South Africa and ranks among the best globally. We look forward to producing many more champions of the sport,” said Roff.
“We are also appreciative of the coaches, teachers and schoolmates who were so supportive and are now helping them to catch up on what they missed ahead of the upcoming exams.
“We pay testimony to the unwavering community support that enabled the learners to achieve the greatest honour of all: a green and gold blazer. There’s no greater honour than representing your country and to do so at such a young age and in such a competitive sport, is quite remarkable,” added Jeffrey.
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