The tiny school also punches well above its weight when it comes to netball.
There are about two dozen girls in the senior school and a third of them are in Dunedin this week at the South Island secondary schools tournament.
Coach and former Otago player Trudie Marsh reckons it is the best little area school in the South Island.
"We have 26 girls in the senior school. Nineteen of them play netball and we've got nine of them here," Marsh said.
"So in terms of population, to be competing in B grade against much, much bigger schools with a lot more girls that play netball, I just think it is amazing."
The school won promotion to the B grade two years ago and last year finished 19th out of 32 teams in the grade.
This year, the team is targeting a place in the top 16 of B grade. It is ambitious but the side showed plenty of potential with a 34-13 win against Cromwell College yesterday before narrowly losing to Kavanagh College 32-27 in the afternoon.
Star players Emma Parker and Meghan Scanlan are in the New Zealand area schools team and the Otago secondary schools development side.
But while the school boasts undoubted talent, it also has to make do. Kendall Johnston, for example, has played just about every position on the court since making her debut for the school in year nine. She started out in the shooting circle and also filled in at centre before eventually shifting to defence.
She also competes in rodeos in the barrel race event, which makes her the ultimate all-rounder, although wing defence Shanna Moore can also lay claim to the title. She plays rugby for Blue Mountain College and wins her share of prizes for hunting and fishing.
"At our school you just pick the nine best athletes and they have to slot in where they can," Marsh said.
"Kendall came in during the third form and I had her playing goal attack and then centre because we had an injury. Then she was a goal shoot for a couple of years and now she is in the defensive line-up, and has been for a couple of years."
Marsh has been the coach for five years and Teresa Bennetts has been the manager for the same period.
In A grade, defending champion Craighead Diocesan had wins against Dunstan High School and Christchurch Girls' yesterday.
Dunedin's leading prospect, Columba College, was upset by St Andrew's College 31-29 in the morning, but rebounded to beat Otago Girls' 42-14 in the afternoon.
Traditional heavyweights St Margaret's College and Waimea College remain unbeaten in their respective pools.