'Super Bowl of Rugby' suffering in a stone-age stadium
It's a digital throwback but we'll have to live with it for the next six years at least so a temporary fix will have to do

We are living in the digital age. Right, and water is wet. Point being? Point being that Hong Kong has not completely arrived in the digital age. This uber-modern shopping hub with the best airport in the world featuring some of the most stylish and luxurious hotels with the most up-to-the-minute amenities imaginable, not to mention THE self-appointed "Events Capital of Asia", has officially been exposed as being more stone age then new age.
When the Beach Boys mounted a makeshift stage in front of the North Stand on Saturday afternoon it was a performance long on emotion and enjoyment but short on high fidelity and visibility. And it certainly was no fault of the Beach Boys, or the production team that put on the show.
Hong Kong Stadium simply does not have the capability to properly host a top-rate act. The sound system and jumbotron screen capabilities are an antiquated albatross of a joke.
Of course the Beach Boys were not particularly bothered. Long-time band member Bruce Johnston was smitten by the experience and called the event the "Super Bowl of rugby." That may have been true at one point, but not anymore.
The Super Bowl is a multi-billion-dollar spectacle which pioneered the art of music at big sporting events by having the likes of Michael Jackson, U2, The Rolling Stones and The Who play at half-time.
And while this year's game in New Orleans had to endure an embarrassing 35-minute blackout, it was not because they did not have a state-of-the-art system. It was because of an electrical malfunction of that system. The difference at the Hong Kong Sevens is that while they may have the desire to elevate the genre of live acts during the event, they simply do not have the physical ability to do so.
Sadly, all this talk of a new stadium is just that: talk. Bureaucratic inertia has doomed any reasonable timetable on the much-discussed new facility at Kai Tak and even the most optimistic folks are saying construction will not start for at least two more years while completion is likely six years off.
