Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Bibione

This afternoon I am catching another flight, this time to Bibione to get some Beach Ultimate action. Bibione is in northern Italy on the Adriatic coast, near Venice.

I have never been to this beach tourney. I am really curious to see what Paul and the gang that also organise Burla (which, after Paganello, is Europe’s biggest beach tournament) have prepared for us.

I am co-captaining Splash, our super-duper, double-cool, hyper-awesome international mixed team.

Teams entered:

POOL A
Bavarian N.T.
WinonaRiders
Radical
Splash
Soul Gringos

POOL B
Mir San Mir
Zuf
Cheek 2 Cheek
Catch Up
PickUp

POOL C
Flugsaurier
4 Stazioni
HallodigazE
HernyHal'disco
GJB 2

POOL D
Upsadaisy
Espana
Flying Circus
RJP
Ultimate Pirates

POOL E
Zamperl
GJB 1
FreundEZkreis
The Hijackers
UltimatedeLux

Post Tournament report to follow.

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Why Wonderful Copenhagen is wonderful

Because…
  1. It’s the first high level tournament of the spring/summer season in Europe. Many of the big names are there. For some, it's the first tournament with decent weather. For others, it’s the first outdoor tournament of the season. For the better (top 8) teams it’s a chance to have some good intense fights. For the lesser teams it’s a chance to get their ass kicked - often quite hard.
  2. The tournament organisation is very top notch. Mattias, Christian, and the WCU staff are pros.
  3. Accommodation is good. In newly-built state-of-the-art 5-star hostel. At tournaments like this one, you usually have to either camp, sleep on a gym floor, or pay three times as much and get a hotel room.
  4. There is always good music by the fields. I mean a DJ, a good sound system playing chilled grooves in the morning during breakfast, and more upbeat tracks during the day, all good stuff, and a good dose of German and Scandinavian hip-hop that you’d rarely hear otherwise.
  5. There is always food, fruit, water and coffee by the fields. And shelter in case of rain.
  6. The party rocks. Thee pool party was legendary. The Brazilian party (joint with the Capoeira group) was amazing. This year it was a bit different as there was not a women division. The organisers quickly realised that you can’t have a pool party with 400 guys and no girls. So they pulled out an excellent casino party.
  7. Copenhagen is a great city.
  8. Danish women are hot. Trust me on this one.

Friday, April 25, 2008

Wonderful Copenhagen 2008 - Roundup

A roundup from Mattias, the tournament organiser.

Friends!

The sixth edition of Wonderful Copenhagen Ultimate was concluded Sunday afternoon. 3 days of excellent weather, soft pitches, funky dj’s and intense ultimate came to an end Sunday afternoon with a couple of upsets!

After last years final I praised Skogs as the best Swedish team I had ever seen. And I’ve seen quite a few. The 2008 edition of Skogs looked even stronger. Return of strong Swedish handler Michael Hanski from retirement and a surprising pick up in defense super star Nasser Vogel M'Bae (former Ultimate Vibration, Clapham) improved to an already strong 20-piece roster. Strong enough to again take Skogs to the final after wins over KFUM Örebro in the quarter final and Andorra (UK Open defense) in the semi.

The final was to be a rematch of an already great WCU08-game: Lictenstein (UK Open Offense) beat Skogs in the Friday pool play, and they went head to head again in the final.

It was evident that the UK teams came better prepared to WCU than the Scandinavian teams. Skogs offense couldn’t cope with the UK defense – hard man-to-man or zone. And once the UK offense got fired up, they simply ran away from the Swedes.

Both games had similar character. UK coming out strong and gaining a 3-4 point lead early in the game. The teams then traded points before Skogs defense slowly, slowly gained momentum and worked the team back in the game.

The advantage early in the game was enough for Lichtenstein in the pool play. But it got very close in the final. UK’s relative small squad clearly suffered, and Skogs clinically took advantage of the UK mistakes. 13-11 to UK became 14-14 and sudden death to win WCU.

Final point, UK on offense. And the offense did what the offense is supposed to: score under pressure. A good setup isolated one player on the semi-deep for an easy score. Final score: 15-14.

Congratulations to Lichtenstein for an excellent tournament and a spot on the moon.

Skogs were also runner-ups in the Spirit Award. But since winners Kielstock already left for Germany, Skogs were presented with the award. Earlier this year Italian Londoner Daniel Dui took initiative to celebrate one of WCU’s great – Kuki. From now the spirit award is the Kuki Sprit Award. Daniel played with Kuki in The WCU All Stars 2004-2006, and it was in the spirit and memory of Kuki that Daniel presented WCU and Skogs with this trophy. We all miss Kuki, and this is a fantastic way to remember him. Thank you Daniel.

As always, WCU serves as the melting pot of Euro ultimate. This year 22 teams entered, and with Worlds in Vancouver coming up in august WCU was an excellent opportunity to check on the pre-season progress and preparations. Three national teams entered WCU: The Italian National team, Inside Rakete aka German National Team, and Lichtenstein and Andorra – or rather UK offense and UK defense. They all got what they came for – hard and interesting games. Local heroes Ragnarok finished third after a sweet win over Andorra (UK Open Defense), Viksjöfors (SWE) finally managed to enter top 8 with a win over local rivals KFUM Örebro for 5th spot. On the disappointing side were the Finns. Coming directly from the winter, the Finns suffered from the early date. None of the teams matched expectations; no3 seed Kahukopla missed out on quarters, and neither Sipoo or Helsinki managed to advance from the lower pools. Lucky for you that WCU09 is set for 8-10 of May!

Complete results are coming up on www.wcu.dk.

But please check out blockstack.tv - excellent podcast from the tournament with interviews, field action and funky shots of toxic twins Steve and Tom camping out in the hostel bed...

>From the whole WCU organization: Thanks to all the teams and players. Great ultimate, great spirit. You are all welcome back in 2009.


Cheers

Mattias Ahlgren
Wonderful Copenhagen Ultimate
www.wcu.dk

Results

Final standings

1. Lichtenstein (GB O)
2. Skogs Ultimate
3. Ragnarok
4. Andorra (GB D)
5. Viksjöfors IF
6. KFUM Örebro
7. Inside Rakete (Germany Open)
8. Italia
9. Sipoo Odd Stars
10. Cota Rica
11. Karhukopla
12. Helsinki Ultimate
13. Tooting Tigers
14. Kielstock
15. Cambo Cakes
16. Tørring
17. WCU Staff
18. Århus
19. Stockholm Syndromes
20. Lookfly Outernationals
21. KFK
22. Cph DJ's

Sprit scores

94.43% KielStock (DE)
91.29% Skogs Ultimate (SE)
88.00% København Frisbee Klub (DK)
87.64% Helsinki Ultimate (FI)
87.45% Lookfly Outernationals (All over)
87.14% Ragnarok (DE)
86.64% Disc Jockeys KBH (DK)
86.61% Liechtenstein (GB1)
85.50% Karhukopla (FI)
85.43% Cota Rica (IT)
84.92% Sipoo Odd Stars (FI)
82.14% Tooting Tigers (UK)
81.57% Viksjöfors IF (SE)
80.57% Tørring DiscControl (DK)
79.13% Inside Rakete (DE)
76.50% Italian National Team (IT)
76.33% Stockholm Syndromes (SE)
75.00% Andorra (GB)
75.00% Aarhus Ultimate (DK)
74.83% WCU Staff Team (DK)
74.29% Cambo Cakes (NL)
69.86% KFUM Örebro Frisbee (SE)
Picture by Tom Styles.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Wonderful Copenhagen 2008!

It’s wonderful! It’s wonderful! It’s Wonderful Copenhagen!

Tomorrow I am catching a flight to Denmark. I am for the fourth time to WCU. I want also in 2004, 2005, and 2006 playing with with the WCU All Stars (aka the pick up team). Then Kuki left us and last year I just did not feel like going.

This year I am playing with Italy Open and I am really looking forward for some very good Ultimate.

I also have the honour of bringing the spirit trophy, which was timely delivered to my flat in London today.

For those who don’t know, WCU is one of the top tournaments in Europe, it has managed to attract from the beginning the best teams in Europe: Clapham, Scogs, Fire, Ragnarok, etc. Several national teams enter the tournament and use it as a tune-up for competitions like Europeans and World.

The tournament uses an unusual “back door” format that allows underseeded teams to still make their way to the top.

These are the teams that entered this year and how they are seeded:

  1. Skogs Ultimate
  2. Ragnarok
  3. Karhukopla
  4. Liechtenstein (GB O)
  5. Andorra (GB D)
  6. Inside Rakete (Germany Open)
  7. Sipoo Odd Stars
  8. Italian National Team
  9. Helsinki Ultimate
  10. KFUM Örebro Frisbee
  11. Cotarica
  12. Viksjöfors IF
  13. Tooting Tigers
  14. KielStock
  15. WCU Staff Team
  16. Cambo Cakes
  17. Tørring DiscControl
  18. København Frisbee Klub
  19. Aarhus Ultimate
  20. Stockholm Syndromes
  21. Lookfly Outernationals
  22. Disc Jockeys KBH

In the past years the tournament had also a women’s division, but this year too few teams showed interst. I am pretty sure that the credit crunch is taking it’s toll around Europe and that players don’t have as much money to spend on international tournaments. As a result this year’s tournaments are smaller in size and the game quality is generally lower.

Ah yes… this is an expensive tournament. Not only because Denmark is an expensive place, but also because Mattias, the excellent organiser, always secures good fields, good accommodation, good food, and good parties.

Links

Saturday, November 25, 2006

Winter is coming

Here we are. The northerly gales are back. That sounds pretty awful in Ultimate terms.

In Northern Europe and in most of North America people play indoor during the winter because it is just too cold to play outdoor. In the UK, on the other hand, it gets cold, windy, and wet to the point of making playing outdoor painful, but possible. You just have to be prepared and accept mud as a legitimate playing surface. Winter Ultimate is less painful and more possible using the right thermal clothing, waterproff gear, and footwear.

Thermal clothing

Someone once told me: "There is no such thing as bad weather, only bad clothing". Here are my suggestions:

First of all, forget cotton! Cotton clothes are useful for doing sport only for 15 minutes. After that, they will get soaked with sweat and rain. Dump clothing will make you very cold, very quickly. It’s just physics: water conducts heat much better (25-30 better) than air, so dump clothes absorb heat from your body very quickly rather than insulating it from the cold.

What you want is some kind of clothing that stays dry in contact with the skin (you may have heard this already in some tampon commercial) so that the air trapped inside the garment acts as an insulating layer.

Solution: Wear technical clothes. They come in a variety of brand names, such as “dri-fit”, “coolmax”, etc. These garments hare usually made 100% of polyester. The stretchy ones usually are made of “lycra”, “spandex”, or some other elastic material.They are great for 2 reasons. First, they hardly absorb any water, they come out of the washing machine already nearly dry. Second, they are usually made of wicking material that draws water from the inside to the outside of the garment, hence: Never wear them inside-out.

I can recommend:

- Lite Sports top and leggings. They are very stretchy and they cost less than Nike and other brand names.

- EDZ under-layer. All products are on their website. When it’s really cold, I use the base layer top, leggings, neck warmer, and hat. They can all be bought at these online shops:

- http://www.thermalshop.co.uk/

- http://www.mandp.co.uk/

- Decathlon has its own range of thermal wear, which is of decent value. You can have alook at their website.

I have worn this stuff last year and I was always toasty warm, regardless of weather. Some people, incomprehensibly, dress only to the point where they can bear the cold, rather than to the point where they are comfortable. I am definitely in the second group.

Your body burns calories just to maintain its core temperature. If you don’t dress well, your body will be burning a large amount of calories just to keep warm. I’d rather use those calories to play D.

It's better to wear this type of underlayers skin tight. Often it is better to buy them one size smaller than you usually wear.

Water-proof gear

The main thing that characterises winter Ultimate in London is rain. There is no way out. You will play under the rain at some point.

- Bin liners. The easiest way to keep dry bags, shoes, food etc. on the sideline is to put everything inside bin liners. You can buy bin liners at any supermarket. The only problem is that, when the entire team does this, the sideline becomes full of indistinguishable black bags and it will be impossible to find your own.

- Waterproof jacket and (over-)trousers (pants for the Americans). It is a good idea to keep dry and warm between games, and sometime between points. This is easily done with water proof jacket and trousers. I have bought mine for around £10 each; both packable.

- Waterproof poncho. An alternative to jacket and trousers. You can put it on and take it off easily and when you are not wearing it you can use it as a blanket to cover bags and other gear.

- Rucksac liner: Keeps your rucksac dry.

Any half-decent outdoor shop should sell all the above. I have bought most of my stuff from Mountain Warehouse in Covent Garden. They have also a website.

Friday, November 24, 2006

Stretching

There is always quite a bit of discussion about stretching among Ultimate players, who are often also fitness geeks. Should you bounce or hold the stretch? How many repetitions? Should you breathe normally or exhale as you stretch? What’s the difference between a warm up stretch and a warm down stretch?

Here is a decent resource on stretching: http://people.bath.ac.uk/masrjb/Stretch/stretching_toc.html

Worlds in Perth


This week the World Ultimate Club Championship took place in Perth Australia.

Results and final standings on the tournament website: http://www.wucc2006.org/

Some considerations from someone who did not go and followed on and off what what going on from a distance:

Initially the general feeling was that this was not going to be a tournament that represents the best of ultimate around the world. For most teams in North America and Europe it’s very expensive to get to Australia and mid-November is not the ideal time of the year to take 1-2 weeks off work or University. Many Americans have already used up all their holidays for UPA sectionals nationals.

The result is that the tournament would have represented who could afford to go rather than the best teams throughout the world.

On the other hand, it gave the chance to Asian and Australian teams to show their worth. They normally have the same cost problems in coming to Europe and North America.

I have the feeling that the average level was probable lower than at other WUCCs, but at the top end of each division there were some really strong teams.

Buzz Bullet, in particular, have spanked pretty much everyone, showing that in Japan they really know what they are doing.

Apparently the Spirit was bad, especially by European standards. I have seen an email on itadisc by Davide Morri (aka Il Migliore), one of Italy’s strongest players, complaining that the amount of fouls and dodgy calls was simply insane. He was playing with Ultimate Vibration, a team from Paris that is infamous around Europe exactly for poor spirit.

One last thing. It was really difficult to follow what was going on. The tournament website was rubbish: no clips, no blogs, no match reports. The results of individual games were made available via www.scoreomatic.com, the least usable website ever.

Some stories from British teams here:
- DiFranco's Blog
- LTD Release Blog

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

Death of Thyl "Kuki" Luyckx

I am very sad, upset and shocked to learn about Kiki's death.

I have played with him in Copenhagen for the past three years and I have met him a few times also at other tournaments.

I don't remember seeing him without a smile on his face and I don't remember anyone not having a great time when he was around.

We will all miss him very much.

See also: http://www.beachultimate.org/blog/2006/10/thyl_kuki_luyckx.html

Saturday, September 30, 2006

Guerrilla Ultimate

Watch out, this is going to be huge.

Philth and I do some guerrilla Ultimate in Pisa.







Sunday, June 05, 2005

Beachfest, Sandbanks, Poole, UK, June 4-5 2005

This is Keen's match report:

So, we got in as NOLO but turned up as UCL Alums, with Jack Laloe representing the current young blood. It was looking pretty good.

However, Day 1 was a lesson in taking things too easy and expecting too much from too little practice together (read: no practice together).

So, after a thrilling start against the GB Masters club team Age Against the Machine (eventually finished 5th), where we were head to head into the cap and lost by 3 points, we proceeded to drink beers in between matches and duly underperform - granted in between bouts of grand fun and derring-do. We were in a tough pool which included the eventual championes MLF, whom we actually did some good work against. The nadir was when Bristol Plastic Factory creamed us 9-4 in the third game of the day. Grim, grim, grim.

NOTE: Remember this, because the happy ending depends on it ...

A few jokes and some sobering up later, we walked straight into the fourth game against 20th seed Skumy to keep our 13th seed and the right to stay out of the bottom 8. We duly did the business and served them up a neat defeat, barely breaking a sweat.

The most fun of the day was then had at a private Lovers campsite BBQ with enough food to feed a refugee camp and booze that even Easy was too tired to really make a go of. Pasta did his best with some Hoogarden Gran Cru but it had been a long long day in soft sticky sand, and we called it a night at 11pm. Great laughs, though, and it warmed my heart to see old friends again around a fire on a clear night in the woods, randomly abusing everyone (of course), and listening to Chris play guitar songs that nobody knew the words to.

Day 2, the first game was against MILF from Southampton, to take 12th place. We stormed it with a zone D and some very sweet O. The still air allowed my hucks to actually land within 15 feet of target, which Chris G and Jack L, and even sunstroked Baggy, scored with to great shouts of acclamation along the lines of 'Thank God, we don't suck anymore!'

The next game for 9th place was against DHB / Exeter Uni and it should have been glorious. However dropped pulls and bad throws from just about everyone, especially me, meant it was a truly depressing failure by cest moi of keeping my cool. Apologies for shaking the heavens with my curses of rage, everyone, but it was a truly dismal display.

The only way, and I mean the ONLY way Beachfest could end with a high for us was if we could regain some dignity against Bristol Plastic, whom we were meeting again in the match for 11th place. And, oh yes, did we ever!

Showing the kind of ballsy, hard-running, Fuckit Huckit spirit, with the legendary Jedi-strength magic of a 5-of-spades zone, we absolutely blitzed BPF. They were deer in the headlights, and we were the NRA. True proof o character all round, and especially notable was Easy and Chris G anchoring the team with bloody-minded determination that literally dripped from their pores. Chris' layout blocks reminded me of brutal Winter League battles back in the day when he'd regularly leave pints of blood on the pitch, while Easy dominated every matchup he had turning most of them into cowering bowls of 'How-the-fuck-did-he-get-that?' BTW, I think Pasta actually got faster as the day went on ...

Jack L continues to impress for a rookie, and gets props for playing the entire tourney with a busted foot. The rest of us had various degrees of pain but Pasta was dealing Vitamin I, and we were all mostly used to it anyway. :)

Final score, 11-2 to UCL and 11th place overall.

Thanks to Difranco, Easy, Chris D, Pasta, Baggy, and Jack L. It was a helluva weekend ... Next: Britopen!

Cheers and POST-match beers,

Adam Keen

Saturday, October 30, 2004

Porró Open - Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain, Oct 30 - Nov 1 2004 (beach/hat)

This tournament is famous for being a lot of fun. When in central and northern Europe Autumn starts to set, in Catalonia the sun is still warm and the beach is still inviting.

It's a there-day tournament: Saturday 30, Sunday 31, and Monday 1. In Spain the 1st of November is a holiday. I booked my tickets from Friday the 29th to Thursday the 4th. I have had never been in Barcelona and I wanted to spend a few more days there.

Two friends of mine, Miguel and Carlos, live in Barcelona and I was hoping to sleep on one of their floors for the extra nights. Miguel had offered his floor, but a couple of days before leaving he sent me an email explaining that his flatmate, who is in charge for the flat, decided that the flat was already too crowded and did not wanted me on his floor for more than one day. In retrospect that was too bad a news as his flat is really crappy and he's staying there temporarily until he can move in a more decent place. So I emailed Carlos and he told me that he is also pretty much squatting in a shoe-box-size room in his cousin's flat, and that he could not have guests. That left me with the only option to stay in a hostel.

Friday night: Welcome Party.

The welcome party was held at the Bar Glaciar in Paca Reial. I went there after dropping my backpack at Miguel's flat and having some food. Unsurprisingly many of the people there were well known international disc sluts that I had already met in other tournaments (Alian, Lucy, Claudia, Dominick, Peter, Ikram, etc.) and in London (Milja, Beef Cake, Jason, Dribbles, Matt, Diane, etc.).

Darren

I was surprised to see Darren. I had seen his name way down on the waiting list and I was not expecting him to show up. I had already met him in May in Copanhagen and he has become since an Ultimate legend in Europe. This is his story: He used to be a factory manager from Iowa with some money saved and considering to buy a house. Then he thought “fuck it”. He left his jobs and started travelling around, mostly in Europe, hopping from tournament to tournament. He told me that this was going to be his last tournament in Europe and that he was going back to the States. His plans are to find a job, apparently he has one already lined up, save some more money and come back to Europe because he is in love with European Ultimate. We all hope to see him again soon.

Gala Lincoln

This is a hat tournament and on the fist day the first thing that comes to your mind is: What my team will be like? Who am I playing with?

This year's theme is Salvador Dali and all teams are named after Dali paintings. My team was called Gala Lincoln. This is what the painting looks like:



Team Members:

Myself
Rocky
Staphan
Minsu
Nadia
Nick
June
Helena
...
I have already forgotten a lot of names...


more to come...

Matchday One

Surreal Party

Matchday Two

Second Party

Matchday Three

Other Stuff

Saturday, September 11, 2004

Saturday, May 08, 2004