KES Old Boy, Rex Wickins book launch ‘Seven Billion People and Me’!

King Edward VII School Old Boy and author, Rex Wickins (Class of 1958), is due to launch his next book, ‘Seven Billion People and Me’. This is the extraordinary tale of Rex’s life and the people he met along his journeys from Gibraltar to Parkhurst and all in between! 

This project has been two and a half years in the writing and now it is completed. Almost 500 pages and 230 photographs later, it will be available in a hard cover limited edition copy, that contain many photos in colour and a soft cover edition version.

It will be available on Kalahari.com link to the public and the launch will take place on the 31 August at Possums in Parkhurst.

Congratulations Rex and thank you for the donation of a limited hard cover edition, to the School Library. Trust the rest of our RED Community will ensure they support and get their own copy of our Old Boy’s book soon. Much success from us all.

KES Old Boy is welterweight Champion!

Congratulations to King Edward VII School Old Boy, Adam Speechly on his title winning fight, that took place on 7 August at Carnival City.

Adam, weighing in at 76,4kg  took on the EFC WW title fight  vs Henry Fadipe 76.5kg and punters report he fought a very strategic fight and thereby eliminated his opponents strengths.

Adam is now the Welterweight Champion! Well done.

KES Old Boy Murray Legg named in M&G Top 200 South Africans!

Congratulations to King Edward VII School Old Boy, Murray Legg (Class of 2001) who was named one of the Mail and Guardian Top 200 South Africans 2014.

Click on given link to read more on this wonderful acknowledgement and achievement:

Murray Legg M&G Top 200 South Africans

Congratulations Murray, the King Edward Community applaud you and wish you continued success into the future!

Quinton De Kock also named in M&G Top 200 South Africans!

Congratulations to King Edward VII School Old Boy, Quinton De Kock, also named in the  Mail and Guardian Top 200 South Africans 2014.

Click on given link to read more:

Quinton De Kock Top 200 South Africans

Well done Quinton, fantastic achievement!

KES Old Boy signs with Cheetahs for Currie Cup!

King Edward VII School Old Boy and team member of the UCT Varsity Cup Champions Team, Vince Jobo (Class of 2009) has been signed to the Cheetahs for the Currie Cup premiere division.

Vince who was part of the very successful 2009 King Edward REDS Team of 2009, which only suffered one loss in their season, is extremely excited about his future and grateful for this opportunity to show his skill and talent for the Cheetahs in the upcoming Currie Cup Tournament. Vince attributes this ‘call-up’ to his successful season as a member of the victorious Varsity Cup Champions of UCT.

The future looks bright and promising for this KES Old Boy, with him studying a  Bsoc Sci Degree majoring in Political studies and Sociology at UCT and now an opportunity to play for a major franchise such as the Cheetahs, we are sure to hear more of this burly no 8 as he paves his way into new challenges, conquering set goals along his path!

Congrats Vince, the RED Community is right behind you, cheering you on!

Vince in action for UCT

KES Old Boy makes a century in County Championship fixture!

Congratulations to KES Old Boy, Keaton Jennings (Class of 2010), on his second innings hundred for Durham. Keaton’s century took Durham to the brink of victory against Sussex at Chester-le-Street. His patient 103 at the top of the order was the backbone of Derbyshire’s 359-6.

Great to see our Saffa batsmen performing for their respective clubs week’s County Championship fixtures. Well done Jet!

Read more at: SA CRICKET MAG

KES Old Boy lands dream job as Highlands Team Doctor!

Congratulations – Greg Macleod – Class of 1995 who has been appointed team doctor for the Highlanders Rugby Union. With four degrees and a couple of postgraduate diplomas from the University of Otago, Greg Macleod has landed his dream job – as team doctor for the Highlanders.

Taken from OTAGO MAGAZINE interview, Greg had the following to say:

It seems almost inevitable in hindsight that Dr Greg Macleod would turn his passions for sport and health sciences into a career.

The Highlanders Super Rugby team doctor was a champion rower in his birth country of South Africa: he was an age-group rowing champion for five years, was awarded Springbok colours for rowing and represented South Africa at the world junior rowing championships. The avid sports fan also played first XV schoolboy rugby. “I went to King Edward VII School in Johannesburg, where rugby is a big part of the school life.”

Macleod studied human movement sciences at the University of Pretoria before emigrating to New Zealand in 1998. (He followed his family here after his father secured a job as a Ministry of Agriculture veterinarian in Thames.) The 20-year-old immediately embarked on serious full-time study at the University of Otago, where he completed four degrees (in physical education, science, physiotherapy, and medicine and surgery) and a couple of postgraduate diplomas (in sports medicine and child health) over the next 13 years.

“Its reputation and status was a big part of it,” Macleod explains, “and Otago was the only university that was offering many of the things that I wanted to study.”

He cites anatomy as his favourite subject. “It’s a fascinating subject for me. There is so much to know and knowing it well gives you confidence in your job. There was one lecturer in anatomy, Dr Latika Samalia, who was so passionate about teaching and I think that rubbed off on a lot of people.”

Macleod says he also values the things he learned that went beyond knowledge of the subjects. “I certainly acquired some of the skills that stand you in good stead in life: communication skills, the ability to relate to people and to understand their point of view, and to think about things critically when you make a decision.”

For most of his time studying at Otago, Macleod was a housemaster at Dunedin’s John McGlashan College, responsible for the residential care of more than 100 adolescent boarders each year. The workaholic also simultaneously worked part-time in various, often overlapping, jobs, including tutor, physiotherapist, health promoter, and medic in the Royal New Zealand Army Medical Corps.

A further part-time role served as a good training ground for the job of Highlanders’ team doctor. Macleod was the strength and conditioning coach for the North Otago and Otago rugby teams as well as an assistant to the Highlanders.

Volunteer work with Special Olympics’ athletes and being a part of the medical staff for Masters’ Games in Dunedin further whetted his appetite for sports medicine. So, too, did a three-month sports medicine elective in Barcelona, where he worked with a professional basketball team in the European League, JCB Badalona.

Macleod worked as a house surgeon at Dunedin Hospital for two years before joining the Highlanders as the full-time team doctor in 2012.

He says the majority of his work involves thinking ahead. “After a game we are treating the injuries that players have picked up, but we are also trying to forecast where the person is going to be in a week or two’s time and what we have to do in terms of rehab to get them stronger so that it doesn’t happen again. When we go to South Africa, we need to think ahead about what we need there. We don’t have the same level of support as we do here.”

At 36, Macleod is three years younger than the oldest Highlanders’ player, Brad Thorn, and not much older than a few of the other players.

“That has its challenges and its benefits. In hospitals, you sometimes get older patients saying, ‘Are you really a doctor? Gosh, you don’t look old enough.’ The plus side is that it helps you relate to the players from a ‘stage-of-life’ point of view and forge a level of rapport with them – particularly those with families of their own, who must also spend days and weeks away from them while playing games away from home.”

Macleod says the most common ailment he treats isn’t directly related to rugby. “Probably coughs and colds, to be honest. It’s amazing how many times in sports medicine a lot of the stuff you are dealing with isn’t strictly sports injuries. If a player gets a cold, it is going to keep him out of training and playing just as much as an injury. We obviously also get lots of common sports injuries – particularly shoulder and ankle injuries. Concussion is another one we pay special attention to.”

Occasionally the non-rugby conditions are by far the most serious. Macleod had to break the news to Highlanders’ winger Buxton Popoali’i that his heart condition meant an end to the 24-year-old’s blossoming rugby career.

“It was heartbreaking. I didn’t know whether to be disappointed or relieved about it. I was bitterly disappointed for Buxton and felt like the bad guy for breaking the news but, at the end of the day, if he had kept on playing it could have been fatal.”

Although he was born and raised in South Africa, Macleod says there is no question of divided loyalties when the Highlanders are playing South African franchise teams.

“Not at all. Where you come from and where you feel your home is, are different things. The Highlanders have been a big part of my life. It’s my team. It’s Highlanders all the way.”

In the medium term, Macleod aspires to emulate one of his sports medicine mentors, Professor Dave Gerrard (Dunedin School of Medicine) and serve as the team doctor with a New Zealand Commonwealth Games’ or Olympic Games’ team.

Meantime, work and family continue to keep him super busy. His wife, Dr Emily Macleod, is a lecturer in psychological medicine at Otago; they have a two-year-old son, Freddy, and another son on the way. Outside of work and family, Macleod has an affection for classic cars, motorbikes and collecting fountain pens.

IAN DOUGHERTY

Photo: Graham Warman

Congratulations Greg and all the very best in your new position!

KES Old Boy awarded an AO in the Queen’s Birthday Honours list

Congratulations to King Edward Old Boy John Myburgh (Class of 1975) who has been awarded an AO in the Queen’s Birthday Honours list.

“Professor John A Myburgh AO, is Director of the Division of Critical Care and Trauma at the George Institute for International Health, Professor of Critical Care at the Faculty of Medicine, University of New South Wales and senior intensive care physician at the St George Hospital, Sydney. He holds honorary professorial appointments at University of Sydney and Monash University School of Public Health.

He has an extensive research track record over 25 years and is regarded as a national and international expert in catecholamine neurophysiology and pharmacology, trials of clinical management of traumatic brain injury, fluid resuscitation and in the development and co-ordination of multi-centred clinical studies in Intensive Care Medicine.

His list of publications and success in recurrent grant funding is in the top 1% of Intensive Care physicians in Australia and within the top 5% internationally. These include over 160 refereed research publication and 45 book chapters and monographs. He has received over $40M in grant funding including a NHMRC Practitioner Fellowship in 2012 and delivered over 300 presentations at national and international scientific meetings since 1994
He is a Foundation Member and Immediate Past-Chairman of the Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Society Clinical Trials Group. In addition to his research profile, he has a long-established national profile in education in Intensive Care Medicine and was instrumental in establishing the College of Intensive Care Medicine, serving as the first elected President from 2010-2012.

In June 2014, John was recognised as an Officer (AO) in the General Division of the Order of Australia for distinguished service to medicine as an intensive and critical care practitioner, educator and researcher, and as an international innovator in patient management.”

What an honour and the King Edward Community applaud John on this award!

Calling on our RED FAMILY to join us at Spring Ball 2014!

Calling on current, past parents and King Edward VII School Old Boys to join us at our first KES SPRING BALL. The date is set for 20 September!

Please peruse invite for booking details ASAP. Limited space.

R400/person. Fantastic venue with entertainment at Birchwood Hotel.

Contact Mrs Edwards: jedwards@kes.co.za for more info and to book your place.

Don’t miss out on this event, fellow Edwardians!

Congratulations to KES Old Boy Quinny De Kock!

Congratulations to King Edward VII School Old Boy, Quinton De Kock on his #CSAAward14 Castle Lager International ODI Cricketer of the Year!
Quinton was recognised and awarded with this accolade at the Cricket SA Awards Evening held on the 4 June.

Well deserved Quinny! The RED Community applaud & salute you on this achievement.