Asian Games Management Profile: Gene Tong

Gene has been involved with women's rugby since 1997 and has played a significant role in the development of the women's game through the last decade. Schooled in the culinary sciences, Singapore may never have reached 2nd  (2004) and 3rd in Asia (2005) if his restaurant had made the Michelin Guide.

Name: Gene Tong
Role: Coach
Occupation: IRB-Regional Training Coordinator for ARFU/Asia since 2009 & St. Andrew's-Head Coach at SAJS n SAJC since 1999

What is your coaching philosophy?
I believe that we should train the way we play. And that the Team is a reflection of the coaches philosophy. There are no bad players, only poor coaches.

What do you like about coaching the women's 7s team? 
It is an honour to coach the NWT. Gals are a lot more motivated n driven than guys... Just need to get them into gym more!

How is it different from coaching Men/Boys?
In my personal opinion, the difference between boys n gals- attitude, beliefs and desire.

You've seen the 7s team go from nothing to 2nd in Asia, how far do you think the team can go in the future?
Realistically speaking. Top 4 in Asia will be a good position to eye for given that China & Japan were not at event when Singapore came in 2nd in 2004.

If you weren't involved in rugby, what would you be doing now?
If I was not in coaching, I would probably be sipping some wine or carving up steaks at my own restaurant!

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Asian Games Player Profile: Tabitha Fong

Photo by Lawrence Ang
Tabitha is the most senior player on the team and arguably one of the most fanatical. She left a career in auditing to gain more experience in the game in the UK and New Zealand and speaks a bit on her views on playing rugby.

Name: Tabitha Fong
Age: 34
Occupation: Finance Manager

Sport before rugby?
Badminton-Intermediate (before national level) squad and dragon boat-IVP games as well as Bukit Timah CSC

How and Why Rugby?
In 1999. The physical nature of the game- you have to think fast before you get hit by your opponents


How does rugby differ from your previous sport?
Dragon boat requires a lot of teamwork. Badminton has a lot to do with agility and skills. The game of Rugby is like "catching". If nobody catches you, you are "free" and it also requires all the components of Dragon boat and Badminton.

So why did you make the change to rugby?
Rugby is a more well-rounded sport. You can still run and practice individual skills when there is no opponent, unlike the game of badminton. As for dragon boat, you need a minimum no. of participants before you can even row the boat out. I do not have this kind of issues when playing rugby. You can practice with a friend and play a game when there is a lot of people.


Do you agree when people say that rugby is a men's game?
Please! People also once said that the earth is square. I think a game is just that- A Game. There is no sexual limitation for games. If you like it, just play it. Life is already complicated enough, we do not need to complicate even the games we play


What did you find the hardest to adapt to, when you took on rugby?
Slip-disc injuries but fortunately, they have a "cure" for it. Concussions- because you really start forgetting things...or maybe I am just getting on in age.


Can you describe your first experience with rugby? 
As a player- I had butterflies in my stomach and I couldn't help smiling. Weird considering you have to be aggressive and "fierce" when you step on the field but I was just feeling exhilarated/high...

As a fan - Loyal fan of the Kiwis. I am caught screaming at the games on TV on numerous occasions.


The lowest moment of your rugby experience...
Was when I came back from overseas to find that Singapore women's rugby standard is in the ****...cos when I left, we were 3rd in Asia.



The proudest moment of your rugby career.
To be the top try scorer of the team that came in 2nd in 2004 Asian Games Womens Rugby Competition .


How much do you love rugby? If you had a choice to represent Singapore in another sport, what would it be?
Very much. Not easy to give up a good career like audit so that I have more time to learn the game. I went overseas to play with the best (New Zealand and England). This is how much I love the game. I would still play rugby.

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Asian Games Player Profile: Wang Shao Ing

Photo by Lawrence Ang
In the last two of the player profiles, we catch up with the "vets". Tomorrow in the final installment of the Asian Games Special, we will feature the management profiles.

Name: Wang Shao Ing
Age: 33
Occupation: Legal Counsel

Sport before rugby?
I played a bit of table tennis and spent afternoons catching tadpoles and butterflies in school but otherwise had very unatheletic pursuits. I was in AVA right up to junior college because apart from the being drinks stall uncle, it was the only way to escape the morning mandatory mass exercises.


How and Why Rugby?
I picked up rugby when I was at Kings College London. As part of my efforts at cultural immersion  I thought I'd learn an English game and the idea of running into a bunch of people without having to give up the ball seemed rather appealing. Plus, the post game activities involved a fair bit of merry-making and moonshine. Suffice to say after the first training session, I was hooked. I joined Blacks RFC when I returned and was selected for the National Team in 2001.


How does rugby differ from your previous sport?
The game demands power, agility, strength and speed. One is required to run, kick, pass, tackle to get past an opponent or rob them of possession. You're constantly dealt with situations in which you have to make swift decisions. Most of all, rugby is incredibly layered, there's the mastery of individual skills, unit skills and team skills, all of which you have to execute in concert with a bunch of other nutters - your teammates.


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Asian Games Player Profile: Leung Wai Mun

Photo by Lawrence Ang
Wai-Mun was a mulit-sport athlete before she picked up the game of rugby union after university. She chats a little about how she started the game and what she loves about it above other sport.

Name: Leung Wai Mun
Age: 31
Occupation: Underwater Surveyor

Sport before rugby?
Track & Field for school. Handball, Softball, Soccer, Touch Rugby, Hockey for varsity and I also represented Singapore at the Touch World Cup in 2003.


How and Why Rugby?
Having played touch rugby I wanted a taste of rugby union. Haseena Allapitchay, then a club teammate of mine, was a proponent of the sport and suggested I give it a shot. I joined the development team in 2003, and made the national team the following year.


How does rugby differ from your previous sport?
The physicality of the game


So why did you make the change to rugby?
Rugby gave me the opportunity to compete at international level. I like the game because it requires the combination of many different skill sets to play it well.


Do you agree when people say that rugby is a men's game?
Rugby used to be a men's-only game. Not anymore - women can play the game as skillfully as men.


What did you find the hardest to adapt to, when you took on rugby?
The aggression required for the sport took some adjusting to.


Can you describe your first experience with rugby? 
My first taste of rugby was a friendly 7s game against my current club (I was with another club then) where the only thing I remembered was catching the ball off a kick-off, and running it in for a try, with Tabitha Fong hot on my heels. I had watched a number of 15s rugby matches on television prior to that and thought it a fine mess. Haha.


The lowest moment of your rugby experience...
Having to get my shoulder operated on, which meant a 6-month lay-off , painful rehab, and the uncertainty of how well I can play when I return to the game.


The proudest moment of your rugby career...
Winning the inaugural Blacks Midnight Sevens, not because of the scale of the competition, but because of what we were playing for.


How much do you love rugby? If you had a choice to represent Singapore in another sport, what would it be?
Enough to give up loads of time and other activitires, and continuing despite racking up injuries that eclipse injuries from all my other sports combined. In an alternate universe, I would represent Singapore in shooting. If it has to be another team sport, then handball.

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Asian Games Player Profile: Priscilla Humphries

It is safe to say that rugby found Priscilla, in a moving vehicle no less. She talks here about how that chance encounter has changed her life.

Name: Priscilla Humphries
Age: 29
Occupation: Teacher


Sport before Rugby?
I didn't really play any team sports seriously before I picked up rugby, just a bit of hockey, softball and some road races I took part in for my hostel when I was in NTU. I used to scuba-dive and canoe a lot though, and also did a spot of wakeboarding. . I also represented VJC in sailing the Laser class.


How and why Rugby?
I joined my current club, Blacks Rugby Football Club, in 2002 and picked up the sport then. I had read quite a bit about the sport previously, but never knew where to start, until one day, I saw this group of female rugby players being featured on a sports show hosted by Glenn Ong. It was TV-Mobile and I happened to be on the bus when it came on, so I quickly noted down the email address and contacted the club manager. And it just started from there. I cannot explain my initial attraction to the sport. I think it's called destiny. Hahaha


How does rugby differ from your previous sport?
I think rugby is different from a lot of other sports, clearly because of the level of contact involved. Compared to the other sports that I used to be involved in fairly frequently, like sailing, scuba diving etc, the obvious difference is that rugby is a team sport.


So why did you make the change to rugby?
I like the teamwork that is required in rugby, you literally need someone to watch your back for you. You also need to be very disciplined and maintain your own fitness otherwise it's very difficult to enjoy the game fully.


Do you agree when people say that rugby is a men's game?
No. Many females are picking up the sport, from the young secondary school student to the married woman with kids.


What did you find the hardest to adapt to, when you took on rugby?
The physicality of the game, and the attendant aches and pains. But after a while, you get used to it and learn how to manage your aches and injuries, and that's when you start to relish the contact.


Can you describe your first experience with rugby? 
At my first training with my club, we were taught how to fall properly upon contact to avoid injuries. I suppose I wasn't listening to instructions because the next day I had the world's worst neck ache, and I couldn't sleep for two days after that because of the pain.


The lowest moment of your rugby experience...
None


The proudest moment of your rugby career...
Finally making it into the national 7s team.


How much do you love rugby? If you had a choice to represent Singapore in another sport, what would it be?
It's the one sport I've stuck with for the longest time, and it's become so much a part of my life that when there's no training during the off season, it feels strange, like there's something missing. The sport has taught me so many valuable life lessons, that without rugby I think I would be a very different person today. I don't think there's any other sport that can replace rugby; I suppose I'm a "sports snob" that way, but if I had to choose something else, then I guess I'd choose sailing.

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Asian Games Player Profile: Sophie Ngin Gollifer

Photo by Kong Ping
Having run cross country for a better part of her teenage years, Sophie stumbled upon rugby through Singapore Rugby Union's efforts to develop rugby at the polytechnic and junior colleges.

Name: Sophie Ngin Gollifer
Age: 21
Occupation: Student

Sport before rugby
I was previously from track and field (long distance) I was at the Singapore Sports School for this and ran for Singapore.


How and Why Rugby?
I wanted to something fun and different in late 07'. My sister was playing touch rugby so i came down for fun. From there a teammate who was coaching RP (where I was due to be enrolled) asked me to  come down for contact training as the team was preparing for a inter polytechnic and junior college tournament. I loved it.


How does rugby differ from your previous sport?
It is so different and challenging because there are so many areas, catching running into space, lineouts, scrums, it takes so many diverse skills to make a complete player.


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Asian Games Player Profile: Amanda Teo

Photo by Kong Ping 
As with a pint of Guinness, Amanda Teo knows all about good things coming to those who wait. Determined to join a rugby club since her secondary school days, she filled the time it would take her folks to agree honing her speed and burning up the tracks.

Name: Amanda Teo
Age: 22
Occupation: Ninja ... Student (NTU)


Sport before rugby
Prior to rugby I was a gymnast and an athlete, representing the latter at state level for a couple of years.

How and Why Rugby?
I’ve always had the intention of joining a local rugby club but could only do so after I graduated from college because my parents were concerned about injuries. As of 2010, I have been playing for slightly more than three years.

How does rugby differ from your previous sport?
It’s definitely much more dynamic and physical. Like any other sport, there’s a psychological golden mean; or the zone, that one hopes to reach in order to compete at one‘s peak. Rugby, in particular, requires one to be in the zone when it is demanded of us, as an individual and more importantly as a team, which makes it one of the most challenging team sports I’ve ever played in.

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