We are excited to announce the appointment of Katrina (Kat) Roszynski as our new women’s Kelpies (2nd team) Head Coach and wanted to take the opportunity to ask her a few questions about her journey so far.
Position: 12 happily, 10 at a push if there is no one else, 7 with a bit of confusion but for the love of God please not 15.
Nationality/heritage: Born in Guernsey, grandparents are Dutch, Irish, Polish and German
Nickname: Kat, Button Nose
Secret Skill: I can lick my elbow
How long have you been playing rugby for: 15ish years
Can you tell us a little bit about yourself and your background? (a little birdie told us you have a PhD…but please make it interesting 🙂 )
Yes, so of the last six years five of them have been spent studying for my Masters and PhD. The topics have been varied but in some shape or form they have looked at epistemology (wiki definition: Epistemology is the branch of philosophy concerned with knowledge. Epistemologists study the nature of knowledge, epistemic justification, the rationality of belief, and various related issues). I’m interested in how the concept of knowledge is constructed, what counts as evidence and what (as well as who) is left out in Western discourse, both scientific as well as quotidian.
Prior to arriving in Hong Kong most of my traveling had been around Latin America. My undergraduate degree was Spanish and Philosophy, mid-degree I was offered the chance to live in Chile for a year, I took the opportunity and haven’t ever really looked back, going on to return there almost every year for ten years. Asia wasn’t really on the radar, in part because of the language barrier. One year on I don’t regret the decision to come over for a single second, despite being unexpected I have loved the experience.
What has been your most memorable rugby highlight/experience over your 15+ year rugby career? (ideally a juicy rugby story)
Not sure it is a highlight, but in my top three annoying moments in rugby is playing Dicky (Sarah Monaghan)! One minute she would be there and the next you would be flying through the air, tackling nobody and chocking on the dust she left behind. Irritating and embarrassing.
I have a few hazy memories of a couple of tours but telling you those stories would be breaking the tour code.
How has your first year living in Hong Kong been, including playing for Hong Kong Scottish and coaching for Flying Kukris?
The first year has been a little wild, aside from the socio-political climate and Covid19, I came from a quaint little university town in Scotland with the rolling hills as my playground and everything I needed within a 20-minute cycle. The verticality of Hong Kong is something that everyone goes on about, but for good reason, it is quite a sight. The difference in landscape is pretty stark.
Despite arriving not knowing anything about Hong Kong, I have always thought playing a sport means having a ready-made community waiting for you (the most surprising place I have trained is in La Paz, Bolivia) and Hong Kong Scottish has been just that. The last season wasn’t quite what we had hoped, but how we build ourselves back up to fight for the opportunities that we know we are worthy of is all part of the challenge; I’m definitely up for it.
Coaching has been great; I haven’t done much for a long time so it is nice to get back into it. It’s mad to be part of young girls getting into rugby, working with the U16s feels like an important time to be using rugby to positively engage with some of the social pressures of being a teenager. I can remember being pretty awkward and weird at that age, so if I can help them work through that in any way, as well as building on their rugby skills, I’ll be pretty happy.