| Champs! |
Okay. I know it was like a month ago, but apparently I'm being held to my blog-promises. Disclaimer: I did not take any of the photos or videos. I don't know where most of them came from (a teammate got a bunch from friends on other teams and from fb).
It was unlike any other tournament I've ever been to. We got to skip school to play Ultimate! The tournament was on Thursday and Friday and was located at my school (and the one across the street - Polytech) with a field in each of our gyms and one outside. Initially it was designed to be two separate competitions: mixed and open, but several of the mixed teams were unable to meet the 3 girl requirement and had to switch to the open division last minute, leaving other mixed side with only three teams. In order for the mixed teams that traveled from afar to not feel like they came all that way to play just two other teams, the mixed competition was folded into the open tournament. I'm not entirely sure how the pools worked, but I think there were three pools of 4 (each with a mixed squad) and one of three (without a mixed team). On Thursday we played 3 open teams in pool play and a cross over game, finishing 2nd in our pool and 2-2 for the day. Games were 30 minutes long with up to an hour and a half between games... I may have spent more time & energy re-warming up than actually playing. A game by game recap can be found after these (hopefully) more interesting observations from the tourney:
- The open finals, between Université Lyon and Université Franche-Comté Besançon, was exciting to watch. It was outdoors and the outside field had disproportionately large endzones, which lead to some dramtic plays. I was cheering for Comté, because really tasty cheese comes from there and because Lyon skunked us (more on that later) in pool play. Comté had a nice long game (it was sorta sneaky) and their team was predominantly made up of people who were studying Sport (like many of the other teams), but their athleticism wasn't enough to overcome. It was nice to see someone scoring on Lyon; I think they trounced everyone pretty well in pool play (that said our pool wasn't very strong: a mixed team, the last place team and a team that didn't finish the competition {they had exams on Friday})
- Each of the teams in the Open Final had a girl (even Lyon, who also had a mixed team). They were soooo good. I'm glad they didn't play mixed because they would have spent the whole game embarrassing me! (the first row of photos is of the same play)
- After we won the mixed championship, I received a few marriage proposals from my teammates so that I could stay in France and play with them again next year. It's been awhile since I've been proposed to so that was nice, I guess. Although, getting French citizenship probably wouldn't keep me in Nantes.
- So much swag! I netted two t shirts (one for the tournament and one that says I'm a champion), a handy Nantes drawstring bag, a nice pink scarf (so French) with loire atlantique printed really small in one of the corners, some stickers and, of course, a medal!
- Indoor Ultimate is so strange. I found out during the practice before the tourney that the stall count is only to 8. Thanks teammates for letting me count to ten while marking you for the past two months! There is also some rule about not throwing the disc short and having it bounce for the pull... I don't know what I did wrong, but it made the other team really angry (I didn't even do it on purpose, my shoulder was just tired).
- The Uni Nantes team is really good and fast and if they were taller, they might could've made it to the finals. My whole team (minus our 1-2 first years) is about to leave for their 3 month internships, so I may have to branch out to the wider Nantes Ultimate community.
- It's still really weird for me to be a handler, who isn't like the third handler on the field who doesn't get the disc much, but like the one who is expected to throw some of the scores. From watching clips of some of our games, I saw that I was actually breaking around my mark and not just relying on my IOs, which is neat to know.
Pool Play:
- University Lyon - the Pentagônes - They went on to win the Open Championship. On the way to that achievement, they beat us 13-0. They were great players and they knew it. I mean when you are 5 guys who score to go up 10-0 against a mixed squad playing 3/2, does that really call for a spike? They even looked like ultimate players (my team is strong, but deceptively scrawnier than average). Getting skunked always hurts, but for it to happen during the first game of a tourney that you have such high hopes for was rough. Really, I'm glad we played them first - we were able to iron out some kinks (and by that I mean that I may have gotten a little angry at my teammates for setting the wrong force or not cutting until 5, I shouldn't have gotten upset, but got it out of my system and we were so much better about both of those things for the rest of the day).
(I'm not sure about the order of these next two games)
- Ecole Centrale Nantes - our neighbors and arch rivals - We scrimmaged ECN twice to get ready for the tournament and it was usually very close (we'd be winning throughout the whole evening, but then when we'd play a game to 3 at the end, we'd loose!). We know their players' strengths and weaknesses and had practiced how to stop some of their set plays in training. I taught our team how to prevent the dump from making a strike cut. It was a tight, fun game. I don't remember exactly how the scoring flowed, but I think we were generally a little behind, but came back to win 9-8! It was also a bit of a confidence booster to beat an open team (we found out we could play them 4/1, but frequently had a 3/2 line out).
- Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon - everyone on the team was from the physics department! - We played this game outside, which was nice since the whole weekend was beautiful. We beat this team, I want to say like 9-4, but I'm not entirely sure.
The Crossover game was against our own school's Open team. The winner would make it into the top 8 and be contending for the open title, the loser would fight it out for 9th place. The teams were chosen primarily based on who had been on campus and who was away on internship (3rd years are required to do a 6 month internship), with some consideration for team chemistry. Basically the guys I'd been practicing with since February were on the mixed team along with two more girls and a guy with the nickname "D-machine", so our side had a bit more finesse. However, it was always known that the mixed side had a greater chance of winning a title (since we were guaranteed to podium), so the open team definitely had something to prove. We lost on a hammer that was thrown to the guy I was marking, but there was absolutely no way for me to defend that against a 6 footish guy. Losing this game put a little ding in our pride, but allowed us to focus on our mixed performance.
| After the Mines vs Mines Battle... still friends (mostly) |
Friday we were supposed to have a round robin of the mixed teams scattered around our open tournament games, which sounds complicated, but since we had the "best" performance (I don't know how that was determined) of the bottom half of the bracket on day one, we got a first round bye. Then we lost to an Open team from Montpelier. Because the other mixed teams won their first few open games it came to a point the the open bracket where we were supposed to play each other, after having played our round robin, but before playing the final... Three games in a row against the same team is a bit excessive, so they just said that our mixed games could count for that part of the open rankings. So, we played that one open game, lost it, and came in 10th for the open tourney.
All of the mixed games were outside and the weather was so unbelievably perfect! The Games:
- University Lyon - I was a little intimidated going into this game considering how dominant their open side was. They were pretty good and would pull ahead by a few points and we'd catch back up. After the cap was on, the count was high and I threw a flick with to one of our guys in the endzone. His man was too close and I probably should't have done it, but he came down with it, then there was lots of cheering and someone was giving me a hug. We had won the match! I had no idea that it was tied and double game point. There's no way I would have thrown that, if I had known! After each game, we have a spirit circle, where we stand in a circle alternating teams with our arms around each other while each captain talks about how great the sportsmanship was during the game. This is very characteristic of European ultimate. After the circle in most of the games at this tourney, the other team votes on a player of the match and gives them a little gift (our team gave bottles of cidre, apple cider that is well known from our region). I'm unclear whether it is an MVP or a spirit decision, but whatever the case I won for this game. I got a picture that was basically a set of trading cards of each member of their team. It was a very clever gift.
- University Poitiers - This team was almost entirely composed of non-french people. They were all really athletic and nice. They were communicating with each other in 3 different languages, wore jerseys borrowed from their basketball team and usually practice barefoot in a park. They were fast and taller than us, so it was a fun and exciting game.
Mixed Finals (against U Lyon): We started out down 0-2, so I was really paranoid that we were loosing the whole time, even when it was game point and we were up 6-4. My favorite part of the game was when I bid for a D, which I immediately threw for a score, then looked down and saw that I had an inch-long cut down the side of my thumb and then had to go deal with getting a bandage in French. Our boys played crazy defense the whole game -- anything in the air was theirs!!! I had a few throws that were a little out of reach of my teammates, but we've since had a layout practice, so we're good to go for the future.




I see a North Carolina State University shirt in France.
ReplyDeleteSuper!
Grandma Yar!
I loved hearing the French cheers and shouts in the videos! I bet your French ultimate vocab is pretty strong...
ReplyDeleteMy favorite bit of French ultimate lingo is that they yell, "Upside!" whenever anyone throws a hammer or scoober.
ReplyDeleteVery Nice Recap !
ReplyDeleteI am a player from The Franche-Comté Team and i saw the coed finale before playing the open one.
It's really nice to know you cheer for us ! x) We made our best against lyon, but they were too strong :'(
And about the girls in the finale, you should know that they're are amongst the best girl in Europe, anyway, i believe so.
Hope to see you next year !
Cheers !