August Triwizard Report

For August 2014, the Triwizard train converged on the sports fields of Macquarie University, just as we had at the same stage last year.Though things have come so far and every team is now top quality, the hierarchy coming into August remained essentially as it did this time last year. UNSW and UWS were still clearly on top. The inconsistent Newcastle continued to threaten greatness without quite achieving it, though a third straight impressive tournament here would firmly establish them as the state’s third powerhouse. But it couldn’t quite be said just yet.Wollongong and UTS continued to toil hard without due rewards for their efforts. Macquarie struggled for results for much of the year so far but with such a dearth of talent on their roll you know it’s only a matter of time. Sydney are now happily with us always unlike this time last season, struggling for consistent results as they have all year but continuing to grow as a club on the back of their landmark QUAFL showing and World Cup sojourn. The Nargles also made the journey up yet again and having built on their eye-catching May performance with some show-stopping form at Melbourne Mudbash, the nation’s capital was clearly on the verge of something special. The Weasleys completed the field and would be looking to take another of their baby steps towards future competitiveness and official team status. The total count therefore was nine, once again necessitating a mighty day overloaded with quidditch action.It is this way in which Triwiz has most transformed in the intervening twelve months. Right to the end of 2013 it remained a quaint tournament of single fields and seven or eight games. But with fourteen matches across two pitches to pile through on this occasion, again the seeds for countless dramatic stories had been planted. It took just seven short hours for all sorts of momentum shifts to take hold. Newcastle’s fortunes plateaued as always seems inevitable. At their best they are now clearly a match for anybody, as consecutive May and Midwinter wins over UNSW showed. But that best remains hard to find. Macquarie’s fortunes in turn spiked dramatically, more than doubling their two scant wins in ranked play all year with a triple treat of efficient triumphs. The Weasleys made critical breakthroughs, putting in a competitive showing against the class of the Nargles, including a snitch catch, then taking a surprisingly huge win over UTS which once and for all firmly established their powerful chaser unit as a force to be reckoned with.For UNSW and UWS, it was more of the same and without either having faced too much of a meaningful test this month (particularly in the form of each other), little can be said on where they definitively lie. UWS proved something with a controlling performance against Newcastle, but nobody got near UNSW, not even the inherently strong Marauder and Unspeakable units. Sydney for their part fluctuated wildly. They were a rabble in their smashing at the hands of the Snapes and looked confined to the doldrums after a tough snitch catch loss to a Macquarie team they’d have felt confident of beating. But then they took out Newcastle a little bit from nowhere, reminding everyone of how defensively supreme America taught them to be and restoring some momentum before September.Wollongong remained at their same professional and consistent level, but with everyone else on the rise even more rapidly, it’s just not proving enough to compete at the moment. UTS remain clearly in transition and with a small squad they could not make any major impact on the day, but they have firepower in reserve for coming months. 

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The first match of the day was between UNSW and Sydney, with little to split them early on. The Snapes had all their Drop Bear stars back and they all made a penetrative impact early. But Sydney’s physical defence kept things tight, with only a couple of solo efforts from Raj Kapoor and Andrew Culf on the board in the first five minutes. The Unspeakables' chaser solidity and depth held them in good stead, but their beater stocks suffered the cruel loss of captain and Drop Bear Luke Derrick to an early ankle injury. This made a big difference, allowing Emmanuel Berkowicz and Holly Shuttleworth in particular to control the bludger game.It was UNSW’s newly decorated second wave who really made the decisive difference though, with Leigh Morrell and Michael Thomson carrying on their Midwinter work. They each scored early in their runs, putting Sydney out of snitch range to which they would never return.40-0 in twelve minutes suddenly blossomed to an even century just five minutes later with Thomson’s hat-trick leading the way. Sydney’s early play was highly competitive, but as the match got away from them so did much of their discipline and it all broke down sadly, allowing UNSW to draw away to an unrepresentative margin. Andrew Culf’s hat-trick made it a twelve goal lead, before Berkowicz’s catch sealed a 150-0 thrashing. Newcastle then faced a big acid test against their bogey side UWS. The Fireballs have proven a recent match for UNSW, as they often are, but UWS have been too difficult for them for more than a year and a half. QUAFL 2012 was the last time UWS dropped a game to Newcastle and after some perceived scratchy form (but it must be said, consistent results), an emphatic triumph here would reinforce their position as one of the state’s two strongest teams.UWS won brooms up and so they led immediately, with no beaters home to stop Corey Ingold-Dawes. With James Mortensen hamstrung by a rib injury carried over from Midwinter, it was down to the recovered Marcus Bradtke, who Newcastle had so missed in that Midwinter final, to lead the chaser ship. He equalised in due course and was consistently threatening up forward, but UWS’ beaters were too good to let the Fireballs ever take a lead.Drop Bear Dom Bell was missing but they managed well, still able to put forward the likes of Stephen Butler and Christian Barquin to start, before the less experienced but by now increasingly seasoned Evan Wright was employed effectively alongside his beater leaders.Hannah Monty and Ingold-Dawes ground UWS out to a 30-10 lead and though an impatiently frenetic burst from Mortensen before substituting off levelled things again, it was brief respite within a period otherwise controlled by UWS, who eked out a 60-30 lead by the time the seekers went wandering.From there everything was to and fro, with Newcastle possessing the chaser penetration to rally behind the class of Bradtke, but UWS always looking the slicker unit and keeping the score under control. By the time the snitch was back around with seekers in tow, UWS were 40 up and so it was Tom Russell who was employed as a specialist defensive seeker, to keep new recruit Liam O’Callaghan at bay.O’Callaghan’s transfer from Sydney was a real coup for UWS, giving them a dedicated seeker, allowing Barquin to concentrate full time on his beating. But his first game for UWS was proving a frustrating one as Russell continued to interfere with his bursts at the snitch. It was proving a fruitless exercise though, because a final Monty-led surge pulled UWS out to a 110-60 lead and the momentum suggested it would only get worse. Final Newcastle seeker Liam Dawson duly got the jump on the tiring O’Callaghan, snapped the catch, and so UWS took victory by twenty, 110-90Macquarie vs UTS marked a huge opportunity for both teams. The Opaleyes from the big ugly building hadn’t really gotten their year properly off to a start yet and would play their first ranked match against a Marauders side who had been hamstrung by bad luck and bad draws. Macquarie were yet to put together a string of decent results despite a fundamentally sound team. They entered August on the back of a standout effort from their real breakout star of Midwinter, Adam Halliday. With 2013 star Harry Mahoney back in the fray to lend further height and power to proceedings, the Marauders finally had the muscle to match their guile and depth.It was all Macquarie early as Halliday and then Mahoney dominated, sharing a majority of scores between them. As their inexperienced side got into the rhythm of the contest, UTS lifted. Beaters Sabeth Kastanias and Poya Heidari brought experience and once they were up and running, going blow for blow with the influential Maria Wizbicki and returned sensation Ana Barciela in particular, things evened out.Kevin Yates and Christopher White both showed once again that they can easily be future superstars, denying some monster Macquarie runs courageously.With John’s Ilacqua’s weathered wiliness to make the play, goals can always be found. UTS managed two on the board as a consequence, but it was too little too late as Macquarie’s depth was just too much for the eight-person squad and they slithered away to an eventual ninety point lead.UTS improved markedly from the first minute to the last though and deserved some reward, which they got through Arthur Triantos’ snitch catch, ending the match 110-50 in favour of the Marauders. The Nargles and Wollongong started their respective days against each other. It was clear from the outset, given even the most general analysis of the two teams, that the match would be all about whether Wollongong’s sturdy defence and top class beating could deny the powerful Nargle chasers who were no doubt going to control proceedings.This is exactly how it proved and the answer, happily, was pretty much yes they could, initially. Only Gary Hague’s muscular early surge split the teams for most of the first ten minutes.  Aman Nalli was devastating in midfield, destroying all before him and handing the Warriors a clear beating advantage, thanks also to Morgan Legg’s tightness at the back. The Nargles’ struggled to get a second bludger, thanks almost entirely to Nalli’s dexterity and despite some fearless energy in the line of fire from Andy Cruwys. They did however use the one they had to good effect. Oscar Cozens was deadly on his keeper line, snuffing out any chances Wollongong threatened to develop.The Nargles’ chaser firepower was therefore enough in time, with Hague and Matt Armstrong making it 30-0 before one of the more comical degenerations of a match in recent times took hold.The next five minutes saw just one goal but an astonishing five yellow cards, including two each for the subsequently excluded Josh Chicharo and Zaz Neulinger, denying each team one of their more impactful chasers.Once play finally got going into any kind of rhythm, Brandon Heldt gave Wollongong a deserved first score, but the Nargles’ had too much depth, with Danny Fox and Nathan Askey-Doran doing the late work, pulling them 60-10 clear.Jacob Fleming then snapped a magnificent standing catch of the unlucky passing snitch to tighten the scoreline, but the Nargles were safely home, 60-40. The Weasleys’ third Triwizard campaign started with the tough ask of facing an in form UWS unit, fresh with new blood and complete with all their old troops after some recent attendance dramas. Seeing Weasley captain Arfy Papadam line up against his regular team-mates is always a pleasure, for there is both a mutual respect and spirited rivalry which clearly provides the greatest interest in an otherwise one-sided clash.The Weasleys’ brought a tight and actually quite experienced unit of ten, defined by their unusual but therefore potentially effective balance of female beaters and big and powerful all-guy chasers. The chaser team was less experienced together though, with Papadam and his most experienced lieutenant Craig Cockcroft making the greatest impact. Not unexpectedly, Papadam scored both Weasley goals but by then UWS were easily home.As they often do, UWS employed the strategy of Hannah Monty beating against lesser opposition, which is effective given that Monty’s experience and talent is such that against any but the very best beaters, she is still the most dominant force on field.Corey Ingold-Dawes led the chaser game, charging effortlessly to a major haul of goals, with Stephen Butler proving to be his most proficient lieutenant in a semi-rare chasing cameo. Arfy Papadam did manage the satisfaction of scoring the goal of the game, the day, and possibly more though. Hemmed in near his keeper zone by two encroaching bludgers and with no free forward chaser, the Weasley captain had no option but to throw a pure speculator in the general direction of goal, more than 25m away. It fired straight through and the Weasleys were on the board.UWS were never troubled though, easily beating the undisgraced but inevitably outclassed rookies 160-20Macquarie vs Sydney was perhaps the hardest match to pick of the day. Both have underperformed relative to their impressive rosters. If you had to make a pick you would say that Sydney, with their American experience, rapidly improving depth and leadership setup should have just about enough supremacy in a physical game to do the job. But Macquarie played a smart game to beat them in the trenches of a scratchy May clash and more than anything they are a confidence team. Confidence was high after their big UTS win first-up, so they came out strong.The Unspeakables can always be trusted to stop goals and even without Luke Derrick they were impressive at the back, with Lachlan Chisholm bullying the oncoming Marauder chasers with his bludgers.Stand-in captain Cameron Brown was inevitably and brilliantly the most dramatic influence on the chaser game, with an amazing four goal burst in two minutes taking Sydney to a 50-30 lead by the release of the seekers. The ultra-experienced Belinda Toohey and Kathryn Cooper also stood up, filling the leadership void.Macquarie of course had two of their own pieces of tall timber to respond with and a pair of goals each for Halliday and Mahoney brought things level again.Macquarie were continuing to make most of the play and Scott Palmer effectively found space for his forward chasers, particularly the fighting Amber Williams. But Sydney were unbowed, keeping it to 50-50 and guaranteeing the snitch catch would decide things. Conveniently though, Macquarie have the services of Daniel Commander and Leslie Fox, either of whom would serve any team very nicely. After spending the UTS game in the able secondary role of being a top notch relief chaser, it was Fox's turn this time to go after the snitch. Fox's catch took Macquarie to 80-50 for their second win of what was now their most successful game day of the year. The last game before lunch saw the Nargles face the ultimate challenge of UNSW. On paper the Snapes shouldn’t have had too much trouble but the Nargles’ chaser line-up at present can live with anyone. A less developed Nargle unit had also pushed UNSW hard at May Triwizard, but it was against a largely second string side who underestimated the unknown quantity facing them.There was no complacency this time, with all the UNSW big guns taking to the field and making an immediate impact. Captain Kapoor won the opening exchanges by scoring and though his opposite number Danny Fox quickly equalised, Andrew Culf and Minh Diep assured UNSW of early supremacy.The score did not move from 30-10 for a long while though as the Nargles’ battened down the hatches. The chaser game was as frenetic as one would expect, but the Nargle beater game was doing a highly creditable job in living with the powerhouse Snapes. Oscar Cozens once again impressed and is quickly developing into the Nargles’ key beating leader.A tough disallow on Gary Hague’s apparent tenth minute goal did not help as the competitive but increasingly frustrated Nargles struggled to find a path to goal. Eventually UNSW took things to a place of safety, finally going beyond the snitch margin approaching the fifteen minute mark.With their greater depth in numbers and quality, the Snapes were increasingly in control late, moving out to a 70-10 advantage before Emmanuel Berkowicz’s snatch confirmed yet another barely representative lopsided margin. 100-10 said far more about the Snapes than the Nargles certainly. 

 *

It was an early finish to UWS’ day, with a third match straight after lunch against Wollongong. There was zero complacency this time against a tough nut of a unit to crack, with UWS playing all their best cards early.Corey Ingold-Dawes again pounced straight from brooms up, but a piercing counter-punch from Ezekiel Azib levelled the scores almost immediately.Riskily but smartly, the Warriors shook up their beater stocks, avoiding predictability by withholding their obvious choices Nalli and Legg, forcing Butler and Wright to re-adjust and deal with the unknown pairing of Niamh Joyce and Daniel Nesbitt. Given the UWS tendency to plant with the bludgers, the inexperienced Warrior pairing actually found themselves with a lot of room to move and made quite an impact, slowing down what would otherwise have been devastating progress from the well-oiled UWS chasers and restricting them to three early goals.Wollongong’s chasers were more cohesive than ever before, combining brilliantly and creating more threats on goal than UWS might have expected. Brandon Heldt and Jacob Fleming brought play out from the back and managed to consistently find Nicole Cabrera, who somehow finds herself in the right position every time and can always be relied upon to make a difficult take. Nicole Langridge was back from a long injury layoff and seemed intent to make up for lost time, pugnaciously scrapping as the first line of defence and coming back harder with every winding blow.The UWS structure was just too solid though. They found a way to keep Wollongong to 10 and you can’t score one goal and expect to compete with UWS. Their goal-scoring prowess is such that no matter how well you’re playing, they will rack up points. So they inevitably did, with another Hannah Monty hat-trick leading the way and some quality late contributions from the newer breed of Juan Demin and Jeff Howard who took the lead beyond one hundred. Mitchell Tudor took on the job of catching the snitch this time, his snatch wrapping up the match 150-10Sydney were next to finish their day, against Newcastle. After one smashing and one painful tight defeat, the Unspeakables were desperate for a win here. Newcastle also needed to perform too, having been below their best against UWS and wanting to affirm to all that they are now a force at the very top of the game.After a slow and even start, Newcastle began to take slight control, starting with Ryan Hanwright’s goal. The Fireballs were managing Unspeakable superstar Cameron Brown brilliantly, marking him largely out of the game. Ajantha Abey took up much of the slack and scored a quality goal, before Shara Longbotham's effort tensed Newcastle nerves further. Still though, Sydney didn’t have the penetration to break through Newcastle’s ironically American style defence and increasingly efficient beating, with Ben Keough and Jordan Hunt more than ably covering the mid-afternoon loss of Joel Murphy before this match.Newcastle looked the better team but Sydney’s defensive spirit and will to win was remarkable. The Unspeakables were utterly unmovable, with the Fireballs firing raid upon raid at the goal but being constantly denied by stellar defence, their own poor finishing, and a little bit of misfortune from the officials’ calls.Jason Taylor continued to grow impressively into his role as Newcastle’s latest power chaser, helping set up up Liam Dawson for his first goal of the day and being unlucky not to manage one of his own. Taylor’s cautioning arrested further momentum away from the frustrated Fireballs, who despite their domination were only a single goal up. 30-20 presented an opportunity for an increasingly confidence and proud Sydney outfit and the experienced and powerful Isabella Moore didn’t let them down, catching the snitch to hand Sydney a dramatic and emotional 50-30 win. The Nargles and Weasleys first squared off back at the Macarthur team’s first ever tournament in March. It was the Weasleys who won on that occasion as well and although they brought their biggest and most impressive unit that day and have only improved further still, they are nevertheless still the minnows of NSW quidditch for the moment. Nothing can better illustrate the progress of the Nargles than remembering this early loss, with the Canberra team having gone from unranked cellar dwellers who couldn’t match fellow growth teams from Macarthur and UTS, to a major threat who have made genuine waves with their results against top opposition from both NSW and Victoria.This was obviously the Nargles’ game to lose and they quickly took the reins, making sure to take any threat of an upset off the table. Both teams play the same highly unusual formation, based around an armoury of big, strong and quick chasers and anchored by a troupe of reliable and experienced female beaters. Teenage sensations Alli and Julia Baston continue to improve with game time and age, while Aleena Ali and Clare Thorn quickly developed a strong understanding on defence.But the Nargles just had too much quality in both departments, with Danny Fox and Gary Hague dominating the quaffle game and the growing young Weasley beater unit not quite having enough to deal with the nimble rotating Nargle set. New recruit Lee Shu Ying showed particular guile, with a quiet but deceptively brilliant game, showing an intelligence and economy of beats rarely seen in such a raw rookie.After a relatively tight start, the middle exchanges saw the Nargles pull well clear, but the Weasleys rallied. Debutant Ben Towers was the Weasley revelation of this contest, leading the way alongside his captain Papadam and putting the Nargles under some late pressure on the pitch, if not on the scoreboard. Craig Cockcroft then snuck a sneaky snatch well and truly against the run of play to add further respectability, but nevertheless, 140-70 was still a convincing margin for the Nargles. After a long break, UTS finally lined up for their second game of the day, against UNSW.  There was respect but therefore no mercy from the Snapes, who made sure to start with a top tier line-up. Andrew Culf was consequently present to make his inevitable impact, but a quick opener was all UNSW could manage in the first few minutes.UTS fought hard, improving markedly from their first game as would have been their primary objective, putting defensive pressure on the less sinuous than usual Snapes. It took the best part of five minutes for Culf’s second, while a quick brace from Minh Diep took things to relative safety at 50-10, even despite some trademark power from John Ilacqua to deservedly put UTS on board.Still though, UNSW could not effortlessly pull clear. Though they were clearly improved, the Opaleyes’ efforts nevertheless provided a greater insight into just how slick Macquarie were today, for they put UTS to bed with far greater efficiency than the higher rated UNSW were managing.The second wave eventually did the trick, though they were helped by a fatiguing UTS naturally fading as time passed. Michael Thomson compiled a slick hat-trick while James Clarke was unlucky not to, scoring two and setting up more. Meanwhile, Midwinter breakout star Leigh Morrell kept things safe at the back, also finding time to score a goal of his own.They had to work for it, but it was all UNSW in the end, with Emmanuel Berkowicz’s catch ending proceedings 140-10Macquarie and Wollongong have shared a good rivalry in recent times defined by the similarity of each contest’s balance. You can firmly rely on a Marauders vs Warriors showdown to feature powerful bursts of Macquarie offence, steadfast Wollongong defence and a subsequent low-scoring stalemate.This trend played out more dramatically than ever on this occasion. Aman Nalli was back front and centre to control his beating domain, but had a hard time against the dynamic duo of Ana Barciela and Maria Wizbicki’s newfound beater bond. Scott Palmer was the dominant playmaker early, ensuring the expected Macquarie possession predominance. But no one could score. Palmer and Nick Burton continually went close while the counterattacking Warriors also got within inches. But as ten minutes approached it was still 0-0.At long last it was Rebecca Hibberd, whose nimbleness and fight stood out all game in centre field, who deservedly broke the deadlock in the ninth minute. Ezekiel Azib then broke clear and scored at a crucial time as he so often does, but a quick reply from Harry Mahoney restored Macquarie’s lead.The Marauders did well to survive a shorthanded minute after Andrew Emmerson was cautioned, then took control through Palmer and the unleashed Mahoney, who had been wisely held back. They managed two goals each and by the twenty minute mark, Macquarie led 50-10.It was still a nervous situation for the Marauders, who were one Warrior goal then snatch away from overtime, but those nerves never show in the steely face of Daniel Commander. His hunger for snitch tags in unrivalled in the country and he was too good as usual, his merciless pressure sending the panicked snitch into a hasty retreat. Commander waited for his moment then seized it, springing on the snitch and coming up with the goods, to finish an 80-10 win for Macquarie. The great old rivals from the north and south beyond Sydney at long last got a chance to meet at this Triwizard, in their first ranked contest for almost two years. Newcastle vs Nargles promised much, with both teams impressing heavily enough in recent months to suggest that they are no longer in a transition phase but instead are legitimately in the game. There can be no more excuses of inexperience, growth or some ‘honeymoon period’ for either.Both teams did still have a fresh feel about them though. This was in part due to the impressive performance of the Nargle rookies, with their new chasers Clara Barrs and Harris Law Yee Fat especially stepping up in this, their fourth game of the steep learning curve that is a first career game day.The new look in the Fireball ranks came from a change-up in philosophy, rather necessitated by the under-performance in their first two losses. Still struggling with injury, James Mortensen was sensationally employed for the seemingly foreign purpose of beating, alongside beating stalwart Tom Russell, stepping out of his keeper shoes and back in time. This left usual beater Amy Ey and sprightly rookie chaser Holly Cairncross to work up front together, in a new arrangement which worked wonders.It was all Newcastle early. Mortensen and Russell’s power beating effectively dulled the impact of the Nargle beaters, though Oscar Cozens still controlled the back third enough to limit Newcastle to three goals in the first ten minutes. All three of these goals belonged to Marcus Bradtke and when he added yet another then set up Liam Dawson, the Fireballs were 50-10 up and drawing away.The Nargles had more to give though, while Newcastle were short one of their best as Ryan Hanwright was taken out and off with the gnarliest of dislocated fingers. Nathan Askey-Doran was the dominant chasing force late in the game, with a step none could get near. He scored one of his own, though not before the eye-catching Law Yee Fat sped to a brilliant solo strike.50-30 meant it was anyone’s game and it was nervous times for Newcastle, given their lack of experienced seekers compared to the Nargles’ imposing dearth. But Liam Dawson made his second quality snatch of the day, taking Newcastle narrowly over the line, 80-30. After the climax of Newcastle’s tough win over the Nargles, the denouement of UTS vs Macarthur came. Though this represented NSW’s closest thing to a bottom of the ladder clash, both teams had impressed in patches today and stepped up now the big opportunity to win a game was there.It was anyone’s game early, with goals spread evenly and slow to come by. Sabeth Kastanias and Poya Heidari’s vast experience was controlling the bludgers for UTS, but the Weasleys' six-strong unit of hulking chasers was still a big threat. Blake Stone was standing up this time, alongside the now established leader Ben Towers.As the match wore on, bludger control began to shift. Alli and Julia Baston have improved rapidly with every game they’ve played, across the six months of Triwizard play this year and throughout this day alone. But they stepped up to another level on this occasion, forcefully taking bludger control, keeping it and using it efficiently. Improvement on that kind of scale is an advantage of youth and it is scary to think how good they might be in ten years, when they are the age of many of their current opponents.With space to roam free, the Weasley chasers were unstoppable and a 40-30 lead quickly blossomed to 100-40, then beyond. Aleena Ali continued the good work of the Baston sisters, refusing to relinquish bludger control back to the frustrated Opaleyes.A slippery snitch prolonged the game well beyond twenty minutes, which only further tipped the scales in the direction of the resourcefully rotating Weasleys. After chasing like a veteran earlier, Blake Stone completed his performance with the match-ending catch, as the Weasleys took a landmark big win, 180-60.  

Results

 

University of New South Wales 150* vs 0 University of Sydney Unspeakables
University of Western Sydney 110 vs 90* Newcastle Fireballs
Macquarie Marauders 110 vs 50* University of Technology Sydney Opaleyes
Australian National Nargles 60 vs 40* Wollongong Warriors
University of Western Sydney 160* vs 20 Macarthur Weasleys
Macquarie Marauders 80* vs 50 University of Sydney Unspeakables
University of New South Wales 100* vs 10 Australian National Nargles
University of Western Sydney 150* vs 10 Wollongong Warriors
University of Sydney Unspeakables 50* vs 30 Newcastle Fireballs
Australian National Nargles 140 vs 70* Macarthur Weasleys
University of New South Wales 140* vs 10 University of Technology Sydney Opaleyes
Macquarie Marauders 80* vs 10 Wollongong Warriors
Newcastle Fireballs 80* vs 30 Australian National Nargles
Macarthur Weasleys 180* vs 60 University of Technology Sydney Opaleyes

  

Global Games Final Wrap & Merchandise Update

After a multi-week North American odyssey, at long last Australia’s quidditch heroes are mostly back home and safe.Throughout July, our Drop Bears represented Australia with great distinction on their way to a sensational runner-up finish at the 2014 Global Games in Vancouver, BC, Canada on July 19. Only the still unstoppable Americans were beyond the Australian team, who brilliantly upset both the highly fancied United Kingdom side and accomplished hosts Canada on their way to a dream showdown in the Final against America’s greatest superstars. The journey had started a week earlier in Los Angeles when our team first made waves and caught international attention with an impressive run deep into the Sunday Finals at the West Fantasy Tournament. Against a quality roll call of hundreds of experienced American quidkids, as well as many Team USA and Team UK stars, Australia won three of four matches in their group. The team was then won their first knockout final Sunday on Sunday morning as-well, before going out at the Quarter Final stage. Ironically and impressively, it was a team that Australia topped on Saturday who went on to win the tournament.Then came the feature event, as Australia faced six other national teams at quidditch’s biggest ever international event. Our boys and girls overcame some slow starts against less fancied but spirited opponents to win three from three as predicted in the morning session. No game was more remarkable than the first against France, where Australia overcame the blow of a French snitch catch which took proceedings to overtime at 90-90, with an astonishing seven goal burst to win 160-90 after the extra five minutes expired with the snitch unconquered.Australia’s big challenges lay after lunch and it was in these games that Australia’s fighting spirit came to the fore, with their defence matching up to the always mighty scoring firepower. ‘It was dramatic deja-vu when a UK snitch catch levelled the fourth match at fifty-all, but Australia triumphed in overtime thanks to Dameon Osborn’s capture. Andrew Culf was our greatest chasing hero all day, particularly in that game, and he topped Australia’s goal-scoring count with 10. But his enforced absence from the showdown with Canada through injury just reinforced the quality and spirit present through the whole team.Against all the odds, Australia rose again, defeating the heavily fancied hosts 70-40 in the battle for second place, booking a place in the final against the United States.The two teams first faced off in the final group game, with Australia fighting hard in a gallant and creditable performance, going down 130-20. Unfortunately the final was a step too far with the United States winning 210-0, but they are of course on a different level to the rest of the world. Australia though, have been definably crowned as the very best throughout the rest of that world. The AQA and the Drop Bears team would like to thank Australia’s quidditch community for so enthusiastically contributing their money and support to this epic journey and hope that all our donators feel proud and rewarded for their efforts by the amazing performance.The AQA can confirm that all merchandise orders have been placed and most, such as water bottles and headbands, will soon be dispatched to their purchasers. As for the prized team jerseys, their ETA is late August to the order address, at which point they will be immediately dispatched.Further information on order progress will be forthcoming and can also be sought on our AQA Facebook page and groups. AUSTRALIA’S RESULTSWest FantasyRed 110* - Australia 20Australia 110* - Gray 80Australia 70* - Cyan 20Australia 90* - Black 70SECOND ROUND – Australia 110* - Black 50QUARTER FINAL – Red 90* - Australia 80 Global GamesAustralia 160(90) – France 90(90*)Australia 140* - Mexico 70Australia 160* - Belgium 0Australia 80^(50) – United Kingdom 50(50*)Australia 70* – Canada 40United States 130* - Australia 20FINAL – United States 210* - Australia 0 Full West Fantasy ResultsFull Global Games Results

Midwinter Cup 2014 Report

The third annual Midwinter Cup has seen the crowning of a third new champion, with UNSW’s accomplished Snapes On A Plane finally adding a Midwinter title to their two QUAFL crowns. The Snapes proved once and for all that they have unmatched strength in depth, overcoming the loss of their Global Games stars to top the table undefeated on Saturday and then rally to overcome the fully firing Fireballs on Sunday. The hosts had stepped up from a scratchy Saturday with an impressive Sunday that looked set to finally bring them a first major trophy, but once again they were cruelly denied in the decider by their great Sydney rivals. 

Game 1 – Newcastle vs Wollongong

As they did in the inaugural 2012 tournament, the Fireballs and Warriors opened Midwinter 2014. These teams have made rather a habit of playing each other early on Saturday mornings at major tournaments, usually resulting in Newcastle victory. But Wollongong won the last time the two teams met in April and brought a far more experienced side to the party.It was therefore no surprise that it was tight early. Newcastle had the greater firepower, but they were plagued by the teething problems inherent in blooding a new team. It was the underdogs who spent more time in the early lead.The first goal of the tournament was scored by Ezekiel Azib. James Mortensen quickly equalised and combined with Matt Ingram to share the early Fireball goals. But Wollongong captain Jacob Fleming was a class act, responding in kind and preserving a 30-20 lead before the balance began to shift.Newcastle’s control of the chaser game was negated by some poor late options and by the brilliant dexterity of Aman Nalli and the rotating guile of Hannah Davidson and Morgan Legg at the back. The Warriors’ beaters made Newcastle’s rookie bludging roster look slightly out of their depth early, which was enough to keep them well in the contest for an extended period.Mortensen was ruthless, piling up seven goals, but still they were not safe. Four in reply to Fleming led the charge as Wollongong kept things in range at 90-60 approaching the twenty minute mark.The passage of time was Wollongong’s enemy though. With only nine to play with, the Fireballs’ depth, especially in the beating game, slowly redressed the balance. Newcastle just needed one more breakout to get clear and bring things home, so up stepped the unknown quantity of debutant Mitch McMahon, whose quick and powerful hat-trick relaxed the situation. Joshua Naismith’s subsequent snatch then wrapped it up, 150-60.Newcastle – 150*: J.Mortensen 7, M.McMahon 3, M.Ingram 2 goals, J.Naismith Snitch CatchWollongong – 60: J.Fleming 4, E.Azib, J.Simpson goals 

 Game 2 – UNSW vs Macquarie

Australia’s No.1 ranked team opened their campaign against a packed but by their standards inexperienced Marauders squad. On paper it was obvious that UNSW had the squad depth to effectively cover the absence of their Global Games five. Phil Vankerkoerle and Michael Thomson were always going to stand out, but it was keeper Leigh Morrell who made the greatest early impact, skilfully defending against a number of early Marauder threats then powerfully countering.UNSW’s starting seven remained as formidable as ever. Emily Webster was stellar in defence before running quality lines behind the hoops in support of her playmakers, while the scrummaging Nick Allan and planting Holly Shuttleworth were a perfect beating combination.Adam Halliday was proving to be Macquarie’s standout chaser and he managed to put them on the board six minutes in. But UNSW were already thirty up and quickly drew further away.The Marauders’ attack was far from ineffective, with Kieran Tolley on top form and matching Allan, clearing Dan Phipps an initial channel to carry the quaffle forward. But they could not break into the opposition half, thanks mainly to a curiously high defensive line held by the UNSW chasers. It was a radical strategy, especially on the occasions where keeper Morrell would push beyond halfway with his chasers, but it was smart and it was effective. With Phipps unable to break through, his brilliant burrowers up forward were not sufficiently in play.UNSW meanwhile pounced again and again, their textbook counter-attacks putting the game well and truly to bed. By the catch of the snitch, the Snapes were over a hundred clear, but Daniel Commander at least brought thirty points back for the Marauders with his capture.UNSW – 120: M.Thomson 5, L.Morrell 4, P.Vankerkoerle 2, A.Tembe goalsMacquarie – 40*: A.Halliday goal, D.Commander Snitch Catch 

Game 3 – Newcastle vs Victory Belles

The tournament’s wildcard opened their campaign against the hosts. The Victory Belles unified some best bits of UWS and Sydney, topped off by Victorian icing. But there was never going to be anything sweet and fancy about this game. The Victory Belles brought the most decorated beater lineup in the competition, while Newcastle’s chaser-based defensive structure can be impenetrable at its best.The scoring was opened by Daniel Ormshaw, who burst clear from his own keeper zone with no beaters home. Marcus Bradtke equalised for Newcastle, in the middle of a sustained stint of intense pressure which Bradtke was front and centre in applying. The rising star was the most damaging chaser of the game through its early exchanges, yet still the score remained 10-10 after ten minutes.The Newcastle chasers were overpowering their rivals, but it was the emphatic beating supremacy of Christian Barquin, Stephen Butler and Lachlan Chisholm which was defining proceedings.Ormshaw scored once again to restore the Victory Belles lead, but they were caught on the hop by Mortensen who retaliated before they could retreat and restored the equilibrium. Newcastle then took their first lead through Matt Ingram, but there was far worse news to be had for Newcastle’s tournament, as Ingram went down in the process, damaging a knee and ruling him out for the rest of the weekend.After the long stoppage, Ormshaw quickly completed his hat-trick and it was 30-30, only for Mortensen to counter-attack Newcastle’s way back into the lead once more. But snitch decisiveness was inevitable for this match and it was Christian Barquin who won that contest, handing his team a huge win and the tournament’s first tangible upset.Victory Belles – 60*: D.Ormshaw 3 goals, C.Barquin Snitch CatchNewcastle – 40: J.Mortensen 2, M.Bradtke, M.Ingram goals 

Game 4 – UNSW vs Wollongong

UNSW’s opening win blew away any doubts over their title credentials, so they were always going to be a difficult task for Wollongong. But the battle was uphill enough without the relative incapacitation of Hannah Davidson, who suffered an arm injury against Newcastle. Morgan Legg filled the void ably in her goal line bludger defence, mirroring the steadfast and pinpoint Holly Shuttleworth who swept up at the other end with her one bludger. This left the powerhouse that is Nick Allan to take possession of the third bludger in centre-field and engage in supreme combat against Aman Nalli’s off the ball brilliance.Meanwhile, a quaffle contest was still happening. The Warriors’ beaters were doing just about enough to neutralise their contest, but unfortunately you need more than neutral against UNSW, who simply controlled proceedings through their chasers instead.Once again the spoils were shared, with Vankerkoerle, Morrell and Thomson each formidable individually and nearly unstoppable working together. With such quality but equal firepower across the board, it was the intelligence and structure of UNSW’s play that stood out, as their unusual lack of reliance on any smaller set of lead stars gave way to a smarter patient game.By the ten minute mark, the trio had shared nine goals between them and the game was essentially over. However there was still time for Wollongong to fight and this they did with considerable aplomb.It was a game of two distinct halves, with the Warriors falling back in defence and beginning to more than hold their own. UNSW’s chaser runs were still penetrative, but they could not get through and make the final killer blow.Jacob Fleming put Wollongong deservedly on the board, while goals from Matthew Yuen and Emily Webster took the lead back beyond 100. The final fifteen minutes yielded only three Snape goals though, a defensive effort from the unmoved Warriors that any team would do well to match. 150-10 was not a margin they deserved, but thanks to Chris Rock’s snitch catch, it’s what they got.UNSW – 150*: L.Morrell 5, M.Thomson 3, P.Vankerkoerle 2, M.Yuen, E.Webster goals, C.Rock Snitch CatchWollongong – 10: J.Fleming goal 

Game 5 – Macquarie vs Victory Belles

Following their respective first up performances, the Victory Belles were justifiable favourites against Macquarie and would only get better, as they grew in confidence and coherence. The Marauders’ great strength is always their depth, which they expressed by shuffling around their starting line-up. The twin threats of Amber Williams and Allison Hore sat up forward, but they were fed with particular effectiveness thanks to the smart and increasingly dominant physicality of keeper Scott Palmer being brought forward to start.  Maria Wizbicki was also brought on to start alongside Kieran Tolley, continuing her recent shift towards regular beating.It was the beaters who provided the greatest early entertainment. It was a low scoring match, with the chaser game progressing slowly and cagily, under the threatening eye of all the class beaters in play. Kieran Tolley and Christian Barquin’s personal clash was immense, as it so often is. But worries over Tolley’s apparent lack of support were put to bed thanks to the quality in depth shown by Wizbicki, Morgan Thorndyke and the improving and effective defender Helen Glover.The standout chaser of the match was proving to be Victory Belle keeper Liam O’Callaghan, whose hat-trick slowly ground his team out to a 30-10 lead. Macquarie’s new breed of chasers, most notably Andrew Emmerson and Kieran Richards, were brilliantly agile in short bursts, nimbly finding their way into space. But Adam Halliday and Dan Phipps once again were the most powerful penetrators, scoring both of Macquarie’s goals as they kept in range.Belinda Toohey and Kathryn Cooper worked hard in centre-field and got themselves into perfect forward positions to support O’Callaghan and Daniel Ormshaw’s frenetic attacks. Meredith Apps continued the good work on her competitive debut and was rewarded with a quality finish which reinforced the Victory Belle lead, but they were not yet out of snitch range. Christian Barquin therefore took it upon himself yet again, nabbing the catch and confirming victory.Victory Belles – 70*: L.O’Callaghan 3, M.Apps goals, C.Barquin Snitch CatchMacquarie – 20: A.Halliday, D.Phipps goals 

Game 6 – UNSW vs Newcastle

The players paused following the first five matches, ostensibly for lunch. But with the Snapes and Fireballs scheduled to meet next, you would be forgiven for thinking games stopped just to build the tension before this ultimate of not-quite-grudge matches.After a less than convincing morning, Newcastle needed to find another gear to push UNSW. But it was no surprise that they easily found one, taking an early 20-10 advantage through a pair of goals to keeper Mortensen. Joel Murphy was pushed up front to start for the first time, alongside and in front of the more defensive Jordan Hunt in what has fast become the Fireballs’ new standout combination. But it was the chasers and keeper doing the real defending, as has become Newcastle’s game. UNSW’s destructive threesome continued their punching forward, but they could just not get through and for ten minutes the score did not move.The match slowed in pace and increased in scrappy intensity as it progressed. A quick pair of yellows to the rapidly acclimatising beater Ben Keough and the even more meteoric chaser Mitch McMahon were blows to the Fireball attack, but still their defence held firm.After fifteen minutes, Vankerkoerle finally scored his team’s and his own second goal, then completed his hat-trick quickly afterwards. When Leigh Morrell made it 40-20, it was clear the momentum was shifting. Nick Allan and Holly Shuttleworth were the true catalysts for this, taking total control of the beater game.UNSW were threatening to pull clear but by now the snitch was back. Chris Rock vs Joshua Naismith was inevitably a titanic but also ferocious encounter, with Naismiths’s pure speed countered by Rock’s brilliant bullying of the snitch. It was Rock who made the decisive catch and so the better team, albeit narrowly, deservedly won.UNSW – 70*: P.Vankerkoerle 3, L.Morrell goals, C.Rock Snitch CatchNewcastle – 20: J.Mortensen 2 goals 

Game 7 – Macquarie vs Wollongong

After two morning losses each, this match marked the one big chance of a Saturday win for the Marauders and Warriors. Adam Halliday won the quaffle at brooms up and with no beaters yet home and no-one able to stop his sheer size and speed, it was duly 10-0 to Macquarie after just a few seconds.That was pretty much that as far as goals were concerned though, as the match proceeded towards a state of total stalemate. Jacob Fleming’s eventual equaliser was cancelled out soon after by a Kieran Richards strike, then nothing for ten further minutes.Both teams either matched or mirrored each other for physical and tactical strength. The Marauders made all the running with the quaffle, but the Warriors’ defence was an equal force in opposition. Both teams employed firmly planting beaters, as Thorndyke and Glover matched Davidson and Legg from faraway. Kieran Tolley and Aman Nalli were left forward to annoy each other with equally raucous aplomb.The end result of this collection of impasses was a very open centre-field, through which Macquarie generally brought possession, coming slowly and patiently forward as they always do. Wollongong would then stop them at the goal face and pounce quickly on the counter, only for Macquarie’s beaters to stop them in turn.Adam Halliday scored another to put Macquarie 30-10 up. Ultimately, Halliday was the only real difference between the two teams. He scored two, which was the Marauders’ lead by snitch time. Even fatigue and depth could not split the two teams, which was a remarkable effort for Wollongong considering their nine was barely half the size of the Marauder squad.Given the state of the game, it was curious that Daniel Commander was not pursuing the snitch when it came down to it. Instead, the total mystery factor of Leslie Fox was employed for the purpose. But there was a vague buzz surrounding Commander’s potential protégé, which was vindicated right when it mattered. Fox beat the always difficult Ezekiel Azib to the snitch catch and took Macquarie home to victory.Macquarie – 60*: A.Halliday 2, K.Richards goals, L.Fox Snitch CatchWollongong – 10: J.Fleming goal 

Game 8 – UNSW vs Victory Belles

With both teams as yet undefeated, this was the top of the table clash to decide Saturday supremacy.The Victory Belles had done just about enough to beat Macquarie and stayed in snitch range against a still building Newcastle, but UNSW was an altogether different prospect. The Phil, Leigh and Michael show continued, as they each scored in the first, second and third minutes respectively. Bianca Connell pushed forward and managed the Victory-Belles’ first reply, but 30-10 was an emphatic early statement after just four minutes.Once the initial flood had passed through, the game tightened. Four goals in the first four minutes were followed by none in the next eight as the Victory Belles stood firm against raid after raid from the UNSW chasers.As time passed, the Victory Belles began to look increasingly competitive thanks to their beater depth. Barquin and Butler’s quality is known but the level did not drop in the long term thanks to Lachlan Chisholm and Emma Morris’ added work. Chisholm was somewhat of a revelation, given he is usually employed by the Unspeakables as a chaser. But having brought a whole set of experienced and consistent chasers for this weekend, it was beaters which Sydney were short of providing, so Chisholm stepped up to a role he clearly has trained extensively for. Morris smartly dulled the impact of UNSW’s most gamechanging beater Nick Allan, frustrating him particularly with her close range catching prowess.Shortly before the snitch return, UNSW at long last added a fourth and were beginning to reassert their ascendancy. But overtime was still there to be had if the Victory Belles could somehow overcome Chris Rock. Sadly though, that was a near impossible task on this particular weekend and Rock’s catch sealed a solid 70-10 win for the Snapes On A Plane.UNSW – 70*: P.Vankerkoerle 2, L.Morrell, M.Thomson goals, C.Rock Snitch CatchVictory Belles – 10: B.Connell goal 

Game 9 – Newcastle vs Macquarie

There was clear work to do for both the Fireballs and Marauders, after just one win from three matches each. This last Saturday match for both was crucial, with third place the prize. Defeat for either would consign them to a Sunday morning knockout match with Wollongong and a sudden death run to glory.Unsurprisingly, goals were hard to come by in this match too. Newcastle were controlling the play. The Marauders just did not have the firepower to get through the immense quaffle defence of the Fireballs, but Newcastle were not able to pounce easily in reply thanks to Macquarie’s beaters and the wall that was Dan Phipps.The first ten minutes were a bizarre sight to behold, with both teams visibly keeping their cards close to their chest and their aces in the pocket. The Fireballs withheld their most experienced beaters, with Joel Murphy kept on ice to have a later impact when Kieran Tolley needed a rest or fatigued on field without one. But the Marauders outsmarted Newcastle, holding Tolley back.It took five minutes for James Mortensen to finally open the scoring, with Adam Halliday quickly equalising. Little else followed for either team as stalemate reigned, but the Fireballs greater size slowly ground the Marauders down. Mortensen managed the first four goals by himself, with only one counter-strike from Phipps. Desany Phanoraj’s first goal of the tournament took Newcastle’s lead to thirty and briefly it went beyond but again Macquarie rallied, keeping it in range at 60-30.If anything, chaser momentum was now with the Marauders, whose courage somehow kept them in a game Newcastle looked for all money like they should be winning easily. The Fireballs had finally unleashed all their beating aces though. Murphy and Ben Keough muscled control out of Marauding chaser hands, while also expertly isolating Joshua Naismith with the snitch. The Newcastle captain duly did his job and safely guided his team home 90-30.Newcastle – 90*: J.Mortensen 5, D.Phanoraj goal, J.Naismith Snitch CatchMacquarie – 30: A.Halliday, D.Phipps, A.Emmerson goals 

Game 10 – Victory Belles vs Wollongong

Saturday came to a somewhat leisurely conclusion with a meandering match between the Victory Belles and Wollongong. Final positions on the ladder could not be altered regardless of this result, but the Warriors had a lot to play for. They looked to come out of the day with a win they would richly deserve, if only as reward for how efficiently they had utilised their limited resources to maximum effect.The Victory Belles’ expected beater supremacy was not quite there early given their leisurely approach to the match, but Liam O’Callaghan was the standout chaser in play. Wollongong defended well but did not have the power of O’Callaghan or Ormshaw who drew their team away to a 30-10 lead. It was Christian Barquin who scored next though, having a rare turn with quaffle in hand.If there was any doubt that the Victory Belles were saving their bacon to an extent, it was confirmed when Barquin’s effort was followed up by the absurd concept of a goal to Stephen Butler.To his credit, Butler was penetrative in his lines and both he and Barquin managed second goals, taking the margin to sixty. It was surprising to see Wollongong falling away given their own beater quality should have been more than enough to control a game without Butler and Barquin present. But Chisholm and Morris were just too good again, effectively neutralising proceedings and opening space for their chasers.Again, the Warriors belied their squad size with a quality late rally, narrowing the Victory Belle lead to 70-30 through Ezekiel Azib, who completed a spectacular hat-track, celebrated effusively then promptly went down injured. The Victory Belles were never in danger though, Butler completing his quality match by moving into seeker and making the catch.Victory Belles – 100*: L.O’Callaghan 2, C.Barquin 2, S.Butler 2, D.Ormshaw goals, S.Butler Snitch CatchWollongong – 30*: E.Azib 3 goals 

RESULTS

Newcastle Fireballs 150* vs 60 Wollongong Warriors
University of New South Wales 120 vs 40* Macquarie Marauders
Victory Belles 60* vs 40 Newcastle Fireballs
University of New South Wales 150* vs 10 Wollongong Warriors
Victory Belles 70* vs 20 Macquarie Marauders
University of New South Wales 70* vs 20 Newcastle Fireballs
Macquarie Marauders 60* vs 10 Wollongong Warriors
University of New South Wales 70* vs 10 Victory Belles
Newcastle Fireballs 90* vs 30 Macquarie Marauders
Victory Belles 100* vs 30 Wollongong Warriors

 

POINTS TABLE

Team P W L + - Adj Diff* Snitch Points
1 University of New South Wales 4 4 0 410 80 +310 3 12
2 Victory Belles 4 3 1 240 160 +80 3 9
3 Newcastle Fireballs 4 2 2 300 220 +80 2 6
4 Macquarie Marauders 4 1 3 150 290 -140 2 3
5 Wollongong Warriors 4 0 4 110 460 -330 0 0

  

 Qualifying Final – Victory Belles vs Newcastle

Sunday saw all five teams return to fight for glory through the iconic top five playoffs system made famous within Australian Rugby League competition of past decades. First up, the surprise second placed finishers from Saturday played the underperforming hosts.When they met 24 hours earlier, the Victory Belles snuck a snitch catch win in a low-scoring thriller. But Newcastle looked the vaguely better team and were clearly not yet at their best, so it would be a bigger ask to overcome them this time. Recognising the need to do something different and spurred on by the relative success of the experiment against Wollongong, Victory Belles captain Christian Barquin once again threw himself and his erstwhile beating partner Stephen Butler on to start as chasers. It was an astonishing move which reaped initial benefit when Barquin opened the scoring. The beater game was even enough early on to further justify the decision, but unfortunately, the chaser game was not such a close run thing.James Mortensen equalised shortly after Barquin’s strike, before Liam Dawson, back to his best after a disruptive Saturday plagued by injury scares and ball-handling issues, dexterously broke clear to hand Newcastle the lead.The Fireballs had too much strength in defence and too much speed in attack, with Phanoraj breaking clear from the back and building unstoppable momentum which allowed her to step and turn her way to a third Fireball goal.Mortensen remained the defensive talisman, but Newcastle had so much more to offer in attack than they’d previously shown. Mitch McMahon made it four different goal-scorers out of four when he got on the end of yet another slick chaser drive.Daniel Ormshaw and Bianca Connell kept it close with replies of their own and Nicola Gertler looked likely with a series of strong and frenetic forward charges. But Newcastle’s supreme back trio of Mortensen, Phanoraj and Marcus Bradtke held firm and did not let the Victory Belles through again. Simple counter-attack drives led to a goal each for all three and a comfortable looking lead for the Fireballs, which super-sub Ryan Hanwright made sure of with two bustling charges to goal of his own.At 90-30, Newcastle were home and set up another mighty UNSW showdown, but captain Naismith got himself into the required zone for snitch hunting he would doubtlessly need for later with a quality catch. Newcastle – 120*: J.Mortensen 2, D.Phanoraj 2, R.Hanwright 2, L.Dawson, M.McMahon, M.Bradtke goals, J.Naismith Snitch CatchVictory Belles – 30: C.Barquin, D.Ormshaw, B.Connell goals 

Elimination Final – Macquarie vs Wollongong

Macquarie and Wollongong’s second clash for the weekend would see one become the first team to drop out of the tournament. Their first encounter had been slow and beater dominated. For this second match, Wollongong’s nine had become an even more impossible eight with the loss of Brandon Heldt. Macquarie’s big out was star seeker Daniel Commander. But Heldt’s absence was structurally covered by the combined defensive pressure of Jacob Fleming and Huw Tomlinson, while Saturday showed they knew how to manage limited resources. Macquarie in turn had Leslie Fox to do the job for them, so the status quo had no reason to shift.Inevitably then, this repeat match proceeded largely as the first had. Kieran Tolley and Aman Nalli dominated proceedings, with the combative Maria Wizbicki also getting forward and creating problems for Nalli. Davidson, Legg, Thorndyke and Glover’s combined defensive solidarity made scoring largely impossible again, with only Halliday breaking through in the first five minutes.Macquarie’s attack took its familiar form, but with Allison Hore and Amber Williams both at the top of their game, it began to display a greater cutting edge as time passed. Williams’ lively runs opened space for Hore, who used her trademark perfect protection of quaffle possession to fight her way clear of defence and double the Macquarie lead.It was in defence where the Marauders looked more dynamic and different though, pushing heavily forward beyond halfway. Again, Allison Hore stood out, utilising her forward attack position to put pressure on the Wollongong counter as it came out of zone. Her timely dispossession of the defensively brilliant Tomlinson just as he looked set to break clear on the counter further frustrated the scoreless Warriors.As so often happens, Fleming had the class and guile to finally get clear and score Wollongong’s only goal of the match. Relief chaser Nick Burton then used his power well to add a Marauder third, but the returned snitch was to decide everything. It was all over in seconds though, with Fleming unable to muster a meaningful challenge thanks to an amazing no-fuss grab from Leslie Fox. Fox belied the tradition of diving dramatics with an enormously efficient standing snatch to seal victory by the repeat margin of 60-10.Macquarie - 60*: A.Halliday, A.Hore, N.Burton goals, L.Fox Snitch CatchWollongong - 10: J.Fleming goal 

Major Semi Final – UNSW vs Newcastle

After their undefeated Saturday afforded them a Sunday morning sleep-in, UNSW lined up for the first time against a slowly gelling Newcastle outfit who were much improved in their first up win over the Victory Belles win. A win here would book one team into the first Grand Final spot, while sending the other to a Preliminary Final encounter against either the Victory Belles or Macquarie, either of whom both would feel confident of beating.So with not a lot to lose, it was time to go all out. To combat the speed and strength of the UNSW chasers Newcastle went for sheer size, starting Mortensen, McMahon and Hanwright alongside the more diminutive but no less defensively resolute Desany Phanoraj. The strategy paid off handsomely and immediately, with two goals on the board inside the first minute, then a third shortly afterwards when McMahon busted robustly through the Snapes’ left side defence.Newcastle were dominating the chaser game early but some powerful work by Nick Allan up forward bought his chasers some space and Leigh Morrell quickly added two goals in a matter of seconds. Hanwright replied in turn, but momentum was with UNSW now as captain Michael Thomson then Morrell again leveled the scores at 40-40.This second time of asking was turning into the blue riband match of the tournament that Saturday had promised to be but failed to deliver on. Phil Vankerkoerle briefly handed UNSW their first lead, before Hanwright scored again, finishing brilliantly on brooms up after a perfect setup from Kathleen Kerr, yet another rookie rising to the occasion with a best performance yet when it mattered.With UNSW’s beaters needing relief, the safe hands of Chiani Sharma gamely kept up the fight. But the Fireball beater game was finally ticking at its best. Murphy and Keough dominated with their third bludger retrieval and merciless execution and Jordan Hunt and Amy Ey cleaned up any UNSW raid. The late lack of Nick Allan to control bludger possession further tipped the scales towards Newcastle, but it meant his power as a chaser could be utilised and he once again returned UNSW to the lead.At 60-50 beyond the twenty minute mark, a decisive snitch catch looked inevitable. With both sets of beaters increasingly distracted, McMahon completed his impressive hat-trick, followed quickly by a lead-protecting reply from Morrell. But then Josh Naismith popped suddenly out of the bushes, arms aloft in triumph at an off-field snitch catch which dramatically won the game for the delirious hosts.Newcastle – 90*: M.McMahon 3, R.Hanwright 2, J.Mortensen goals, J.Naismith Snitch CatchUNSW – 70: L.Morrell 4, M.Thomson, P.Vankerkoerle, N.Allan goals 

Minor Semi Final – Victory Belles vs Macquarie

UNSW now awaited either the Victory Belles or Macquarie, who ended the morning session with their sudden death showdown. Saturday form suggested the Victory Belles should be favourites and Liam O’Callaghan showed why, again dominating the early exchanges of a match. An Adam Halliday reply kept Macquarie in range, as did their solid beater defence, but the Victory Belles had the superior chaser movement, impressively so given their inexperience playing together as a single team.Goals to Bianca Connell and Daniel Ormshaw before the ten minute mark established further control, before O’Callaghan completed his hat-trick and put the Marauders forty points down.Thanks no doubt to the influence of their captain Barquin, the Victory Belles approached their play with a tactical process that can best be described as ‘YOLO’. The freedom bred quality, with frenetic and penetrative attack, but it also bred some confused defence which let Macquarie in. The increasingly slick Marauders looked their most threatening yet all weekend, but only some faulty finishing and desperate scrambling defence from Ormshaw kept them to just one more surging Halliday score.At 50-20, the weekend’s longest stoppage in play came after Maria Wizbicki took a blow to the head. It was bad news for both teams. The Marauders were of course concerned for the health of their fallen inspiration, while the stoppage scuppered the momentum that the Victory Belles had wrested back. Ajantha Abey, who was arguably underused throughout Saturday, finally got an extended chance and made a series of brilliant runs that deserved but did not quite result in a goal.On brooms up, Halliday quickly burst through again and completed his hat-trick, narrowing the Victory Belle lead to twenty and opening a window for his seeker. Leslie Fox was arguably the revelation of the weekend and he was magnificent again, pouncing with ferocity but pristine balance and completing a sensational come from behind win.Macquarie – 60*: A.Halliday 3 goals, L.Fox Snitch CatchVictory Belles – 50: L.O’Callaghan 3, B.Connell, D.Ormshaw goals 

Preliminary Final – UNSW vs Macquarie

The hosts awaited in the decider, ready to meet either the Snapes or the Marauders. Phil Vankerkoerle scored upon brooms up, but Macquarie were subsequently tight at the back, pressuring Thomson and Morrell well and holding UNSW out. But there was quality all over the park, with Matthew Yuen and Emily Webster simply doing the scoring instead.The Marauders fought hard, with Scott Palmer in particular monstering all comers on offence and defence, while captain Laura Bailey led from the front, literally and figuratively. A couple of early yellows (especially a tough call on Allison Hore, whose pugnacious defence finally backfired) did not help their cause, nor did the absence of the injured Wizbicki. A quick pair of strikes to the ever-dominating Leigh Morrell made it 50-0 and UNSW throttled back, knowing there were bigger fish to come.Thomson and Vankerkoerle continued to notch up the odd score, while Ashwin Tembe powered his way belligerently to goal then promptly celebrated by getting a behind yellow of his own.Macquarie’s defence remained resolutely gallant, but their UNSW counterparts had the total measure of this Marauder attack, again pushing high and cutting them off completelyTwenty minutes came and went and UNSW were safe at 90-0, but Chris Rock was once again unstoppable, topping the previously undefeated Leslie Fox to complete a total emphatic display.UNSW – 120*: P.Vankerkoerle 3, L.Morrell 2, M.Yuen, E.Webster, M.Thomson, A.Tembe goals, C.Rock Snitch CatchMacquarie – 0 

Grand Final – Newcastle vs UNSW

It may have felt slightly inevitable, but the decider between UNSW and Newcastle was still an epic prospect to behold. These teams had faced twice already, splitting both contests, with the second ramping well up on the quality of the first. This then was the final that was long expected, this rivalry matches any in the country, their May Triwizard match was of supreme quality and consummate controversy, and it had been a long eighteen months since they last faced off in a major championship final.The Fireballs had been brilliant through Sunday, finally connecting all the growing elements of their new wave game and nearing perfection. UNSW are never far from perfect and hadn’t been all weekend, but they would still need more this time.Just as they had in the Major Semi, the hosts and perhaps narrow favourites scored first. Mortensen’s third minute goal was the only for a long time, with both team’s superlative defences looking impenetrable. Nick Allan and Joel Murphy were brilliant, annihilating each other while Jordan Hunt and Holly Shuttleworth annihilated chasers.UNSW made more regular quaffle attacks, but even without Marcus Bradtke who had been injured in their last face-off, Newcastle were utterly unmoved at the back. Little was different at the other end either. Defensive colossus though he may be, even Mortensen could somehow not break through the decidedly smaller Morrell.The game changed when first Desany Phanoraj was forced off with injury, then Nick Allan was sent to chase. His quick brace handed the Snapes the lead, but still Newcastle could not stop his charges from deep beyond halfway. A brilliant solo run completed his hat-trick, before Morrell made it 40-10 as the frazzled Fireballs threatened to fall away.A surprising but steadfast cameo from Tom Russell in goal kept Newcastle hanging on tenuously, before he helped set up Mitch McMahon for yet another of his massive finishes. Mortensen and Phanoraj then returned fresh and reinvograted and the team raised to another level with them. Soon it was 40-40 and Newcastle were taking control. But the snitch was back and would decide the awarding of the trophy.It took just seconds for Joshua Naismith to pounce on the shocked and frustrated snitch, who was ruled down, controversially and as later evidence showed, probably incorrectly. It was an impossible call for the officials though, given its tightness and lack of proximity to any one referee. Play continued, UNSW’s beaters controlled an already devastated Naismith effectively for the rest of the match, then Chris Rock finished it off. Given his work all weekend it was apt that UNSW’s seeker would seal them their first Midwinter Cup title.UNSW - 70*: N.Allan 3, L.Morrell goals, C.Rock Snitch CatchNewcastle – 40: J.Mortensen 3, M.McMahon goals It was cruel luck for Newcastle even beyond the misfortune of the fifty-fifty call going against them. They were arguably the best unit on Sunday and had all the momentum in the match to continue running over the Snapes. But nothing can be taken away from the efforts of UNSW, who were the most consistently strong side over the whole weekend and were the marginally better team for the balance of the final. Stand-in captain Michael Thomson carved out the legacy he’s long threatened to build, lifting a major trophy. But it was Raj Kapoor’s replacement as keeper who made the biggest impact, with Leigh Morrell topping the goal count for UNSW against the quality of Thomson and Vankerkoerle and despite spending most of his time saving goal after goal at the back. It was a stellar breakout performance Morrell had shown clear signs of developing towards through early 2014 and he was a deserving player of the tournament. 

Midwinter 2014 Preview

This weekend, Newcastle host their third annual Midwinter Cup, but a fresh beginning for the tournament is guaranteed as a new champion will be crowned and new faces will step into the limelight.The vagaries of the packed quidditch schedule and all it demands means that 2014’s edition of Midwinter comes without either champion from 2012 or 2013 and without more than a dozen would-be tournament stars. Australia’s 21 fairest and finest are spending the present fortnight plying their trade across the Pacific Ocean, representing their country on a grand tour which culminates in Global Games 2014 in Canada next weekend. While any tournament will of course suffer to an extent without its most eye-catching superstars, there is instead an air of even greater excitement at the magnitude of unknowns going into Midwinter 2014.So many of the absent players have defined the successes of their teams, at Midwinter and beyond, for more than two years. The powerhouse UNSW and UWS units are understandably the most affected by far, with five legends each missing. UNSW have such depth that they may still be impossible to beat. UWS on the other hand will relinquish their title. Unable to manage a full and competitive squad after being so decimated by the loss of their leadership core, their remnants have put the icing on the newly risen Victory Belles mercenary team, who structurally revolve around an experienced sextet of Sydney Unspeakable travelers. This means that the 2013 champions join inaugural title holders Perth in not returning this year for a second tilt at glory.Meanwhile, Newcastle and Macquarie bring their own new cards to the table, even without any major Global Games disruption, while Wollongong will need all their experience to overcome their personnel shortfall.

UNSW

UNSW were undefeated until the final last year only to fall to UWS. They are yet to engrave their names on the Midwinter trophy and with captain Rajtilak Kapoor, Andrew Culf, Minh Diep, Emmanuel Berkowicz and Rhiannon Gordon all missing, it looks at a glance like they won’t be able to do it this year either. But any complacency against the Snapes from any team and they will be punished.Deputising captain Michael Thomson has the temperament and guile to run an efficient well-oiled machine. Filling that leadership void and creating a sense of purpose will be their biggest challenge, because they will have no trouble filling the quality void. Phil Vankerkoerle remains to steer the chaser ship, while Nick Allan and Holly Shuttleworth’s vast utility experience will serve them well. New generation talents like Leigh Morrell, Chiani Sharma and Emily Webster fill out an impressive line-up which though depleted is at least still perfectly balanced.Prediction: Should make the final really. Their best seven still looks near or at the top on paper, so they’re every chance of winning the whole thing. Only question mark is over depth and how an unusually small squad of 13 will hold up over a weekend.

Newcastle

Newcastle come into Midwinter 2014 with only Dameon Osborn of their central old guard busy across the Pacific. Yet the old guard still barely remains. Drastic rebirth in early 2014 has seen the Fireballs dramatically power their way back to top form, with new general James Mortensen marshaling troops from the back and a plethora of spectacular new talents. The Fireball chaser stocks have been given a distinctly muscular and athletic injection with the rapid development of Marcus Bradtke and Liam Dawson, while the beater team also has newfound variety thanks to Jordan Hunt’s wily work and a further influx of rookies.Experience is clearly what’s lacking, especially considering the reshuffle that has taken place even within the old hands. Matt Ingram rarely finds himself beating and Desany Phanoraj now sits firmly planted at the back, while the keeping power of Roy Velting is often witnessed with bludger in hand these days.Prediction: If you look at things in terms of outright firepower and pure peak performance potential, Newcastle will win it. But the Fireballs possess an alarming lack of big game experience and they’ll need to hope that their revitalised squad has left behind the old habit of falling at late hurdles as well as it has left behind its former structures and strategies. A big step to say that they should win it, but anything less than a final berth would me a major disappointment. Call them slight favourites.

Macquarie

The Macquarie Marauders have certainly flown with the winds of change in terms of personnel shuffling, but not in terms of form. Macquarie’s annual pattern now seems set in stone. They slowly build over the second half of the year and compile all their resources for a huge tilt at QUAFL glory. Then in the afterglow of that hard work, things decay to an extent and the opening half of the subsequent year meanders alarmingly. Midwinter last year represented the lowest point of their indifferent mid-season. It may be slightly cruel but not necessarily unjustified to suggest that this year will mark the same, if only because their results have been reasonable, even if consistent form has been hard to come by.The basic infrastructure is still there for Macquarie to succeed. They provide the tournament’s biggest squad, anchored by the imposing rotating duo of Dan Phipps and Scott Palmer and shaped by the collective wisdom of the Laura Bailey, Allison Hore, Amber Williams and Maria Wizbicki brains trust with all its vast experience. Kieran Richards and Adam Halliday are also developing into classy chasers who could provide the ball-carrying support needed for Phipps and Palmer to achieve penetration. QUAFL megaseeker Daniel Commander is on hand to ensure that every team will have to work to get forty clear as their top priority.Kieran Tolley is always talismanic with bludger in hand as well and in Morgan Thorndyke he has an able starting partner. But beater depth is where the Marauders’ problem lies and the issue is major. Tolley may find himself unrelieved and no-one can carry a team with that kind of workload no matter how stellar.Prediction: Most of the key ingredients are there to be fundamentally competitive, but they lack of bit of star power and more than a bit of necessary beater relief. Watch for them to start strong in both individual games and in the tournament as a whole, but even despite their healthy roster, sustaining that form may prove tough. Don’t rule them out, eventual glory is far from out of the question, but it would be worth riding a good dollar or two on because the odds are long and juicy. Expect them to come in 3rd  at a stretch, though 4th  might be more realistic.

Wollongong 

For Wollongong, Midwinter looks to be yet another example of the frustratingly pleasant problem that has dogged their season so far; everyone is amazing now. The Warriors are now a classy team but somehow, because there are no true easy-beats anywhere in NSW quidditch, they’ve once again been shuffled to the back of the queue and are finding victories extremely hard to come by. This is likely to be the case this weekend too, thanks largely to their lack of numbers. Just nine Warriors have made the trip and though they are all high quality Warriors, nine just isn’t enough to cut the mustard with in such a quality field.Defensively, expect Wollongong to be as sturdy as ever, with Brandon Heldt’s goal-saving guile and Huw Tomlinson’s physicality both providing high quality presences in goal. Aman Nalli remains one of the country’s very best off the ball beaters and Hannah Davidson is steadfast at the back. Jacob Fleming is a highly astute leader and knows how to get the best out of his team, especially his rotating chaser unit which the energetic Jarrod Simpson and Ezekiel Azib fill out, alongside the ever-present experience of Morgan Legg and Nicole Cabrera.As good as they are at stopping them these days though, the Warriors’ problem all year has been scoring goals. This is where they badly miss the services of Michael Krysa and Daniel Lowe. Josh Nielsen’s absence may be felt just as keenly this weekend though, for his unwavering plant defence takes crucial pressure off Nalli and relieves Davidson.Prediction: Given the quality of the squad, it feels sad and cruel to have to say 5th, but it is probably the reality. It all comes back to numbers. The Warriors will be fantastic in periods and if they can find a way to efficiently sustain their resources for whole games on multiple occasions, then they could win a couple and who knows how other results might fall their way. But a win or two and maybe 4th place seems to be the likely peak. 5th is even more likely.

Victory Belles

As with any mercenary team, it is impossible to judge just what the Victory Belles might bring to the table. The team is made up of six Unspeakables, five Thestrals, a Manticore and a Muggle. What is immediately clear is the intimidating quality of the core UWS quartet present. Daniel Ormshaw and Bianca Connell are always immense at the back. But the real difference for the Victory Belles, which may genuinely propel them from typical mercenary also-rans to legitimate title chances, will surely be Christian Barquin and Stephen Butler. In this Global Games depleted tournament, no-one can lay claim to such a mighty beater unit. This pair will no doubt start and if they can gain beater control, that alone may completely control proceedings, regardless of how well their disparate chaser elements gel. Emma Morris will be the crucial third point in this beating triangle, a triple threat which may very easily take the Victory Belles deep into Sunday.The chaser unit is far from a weak one. Sydney’s experienced and reliable rotating quartet of Ajantha Abey, Kathryn Cooper, Belinda Toohey and Meredith Apps will provide the strength in depth around which Lachlan Chisholm and Ormshaw can work, with Nicola Gertler’s passionate and demonstrative leadership rounding out proceedings. Connell gives permanent assuredness in defence. Liam O’Callaghan, whose catches in the QUAFL quarter final and World Cup have built him a serious reputation, will also keep the Victory Belles in any game as long as the margin is thirty or lower.Prediction: The hardest prediction to make. 1st and 5th are equally likely, or perhaps anywhere in between. It will all depend on how long Butler, Barquin and Morris can retain the control they will almost without question gain in most matches. I’ll tip them to lead at some point early in every match. But I’m not sure they have the depth to win too many. Looking at 3rd or 4th.

Muggles and Basilisks to battle for Victorian crown

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The Victorian Quidditch Association’s season championships, The Victoria Cup, will reach a climactic end this coming Sunday as the Blackburn Basilisks Quidditch Club takes on the Monash Muggles, to crown a new champion. After commencing the season in October of 2013, a gruelling 12 rounds, semi, and preliminary finals have left us with a final two teams to play off for the bragging rights that come from being the inaugural Victoria Cup champion.The Victoria Cup has seen the Monash Muggles, under the leadership of Captain Georgia Tredrea and coach Nicola Gertler, transform from the team that just enjoyed having fun and drinking like the undergrad university students they are to a team that has developed into a compact well-oiled unit of quidditchy goodness.Created and captained by Scott Cody, The Blackburn Basilisks defined themselves as serious contenders for the Cup even before the season started with impressive lead-up performances against all teams, only falling short to the Melbourne Manticores in a number of close encounters.Previous matches between the Muggles and Basilisks have seen mixed results result, however recent encounters have been of the highest quidditch standard. While the Basilisks prevailed easily over the Muggles in both the VQA Winter League and Mudbash 2013, their first clash in the Victoria Cup saw the Muggles pull off a 90*- 40 win, while they advanced to the Grand Final with an 180*-70 triumph in the Preliminary Final just weeks ago.Both teams provide a diverse range of skill and tactical moves, but rely on largely different styles of play. Where the Basilisks’ skill relies on the physicality and height of their chasers, the Muggles place great pride in the role of their beaters. Led by Dean Rodhouse, arguably one of the best beaters in Victoria, the Muggles’ beaters are disciplined and accurate in their defensive formation. This is not to discount the Basilisks beaters though. Their form has improved in recent times, as shown by their displays in wins over the Melbourne Manticores in Round 12 (130-70*) then again in the semi-final (130* - 80). The Basilisk beaters were instrumental in those wins, ensuring a solid defense to go with their always impressive attack. However the semi-final was both beneficial and detrimental to the Basilisks’ squad. While their triumph earned them a well-deserved spot in the Grand Final, the squad suffered some heavy blows in the form of injury to beater Adrian Marshall as well as minor hits to other players.The most obvious difference between the Muggles and Basilisks on game day is the size of their squads. Will the tightknit Muggles usual roster of 10 to 13 players be able to match the depth of the Basilisks’ 21 or will that staying power and the seemingly endless line of subs be able to tire out the Monash kids.This could so very easily be a snitch catch decided nail bitter of a match. Snitch Sam Washington is no newbie to the art of dodging seekers and avoiding capture. The catch will rely on the skill, speed and smarts of the seekers, with Muggles Georgia Wallis and Nathan Morton and Basilisks Luke Teys and James Osmond all potential seeking heroes, so this is truly going to be one to watch.Will the Muggles’ Shake n’ Bake be able to out-score, out-beat and out-chase their more aggressive opponents, or will the Blackburn Basilisks be able to power their way to victory?The match will take place at 11am on Sunday June 1, at Fawkner Park in South Yarra. 

Written by Nicola Gertler and James Hosford
Photography by Hussain Al-Qallaf