Quarter-Finals

Immediately apparent to us as soon as we arrive at the fields this morning is:  wind.  There is a lot.  Much heavier than in past days, it has a serious intensity and makes a loud whistling noise as it passes through all the netting and fencing at the field complex.  The orientation is much more up-wind/down-wind than in previous days, making the games ugly and much more position oriented than normal ultimate.  Frankly, this weather makes for terrible ultimate and teams just have to abandon the clean games of good weather and get dirty with the turnovers.  Before we get started, two major upsets with huge wind factors have completed – with favorites Australia and Japan both losing to underdogs and we are hoping not to be next.  On to play Finland.

Finland, 17-7 [Stats]
We know in advance we must play a field position game, and we do so trading yardage for possession for the first several points.  At 3-2 we earn an upwind break only to have Finland hold coming right back (a great speed possession for them, punctuated by a strong backhand huck to a laying out cutter).  We finally break upwind again at 7-5, following a fantastic pull from Russel Wynne that leads to a short field going up wind, which Russel converts for the score.  Now we’ve figured out how to work the disc against this wind, and we use the backhand hucking game (and Beaufort Kittredge in the deep position) to gain 3 more upwind goals before Finland stop the bleeding at 12-6.  Their heart is a bit out of it and we continue to play well, picking up more than our fair share of 50-50 discs until we get to 17-7.   The Finland team up to 5-5 played very well, but we gained momentum with some upwind breaks and we never gave it back.  On to semi-finals against Canada.  No better word for it than: big.

Worlds, Day 3

A shout-out to Skyd Magazine’s Gil McIntyre who has published his report on our last practice and final prep for worlds – check out this well done video at Skydmagaize.com

Revolver Prepares for Worlds

Back in Japan, we have the morning off with our only game of the day being at 4:30pm so we decide a team outing is just the thing for this occasion.  Still buzzing from an epic night of Karaoke we set off for the Osaka Aquarium, world renowned for its scale and quality.  And deservedly so.  The tremendous open sea tank and many significant side tanks outmatch even our Monterrey Aquarium back home; the river otters take the best exhibit prize narrowly away from the sea otters, penguins, and giant manta ray.  3 hours of sightseeing time well spent.  Finally on to the fields…

Sweden, 17-7
The tournament has taken it up a notch in shifting to power pools, and we are excited to have another high quality opponent to test ourselves against.  Bart and Pat Baylis joined us last night after weekend commitments in the States and we are finally at full strength.  It is a late afternoon game so the wind is up again, very much like Sarasota in its intensity and quasi-cross wind direction.  Sweden start strong, and we are not ready for them, earning themselves 2 turnovers in the first point (both of which Josh Wiseman gets back with downfield blocks), and then finally convert their break in the second O point after an overthrown dump pass.  We are finally in a hole, and the D has to respond.  We get the break back, and another to go up one with blocks from TJ and Sherwood, and after an O hold, Zach truly sparks the team with a layout point block and subsequent sky for our third break of the game.  At this point the wheels come off for Sweden a bit, and after a dropped pull and dropped first pass we take half 9-3 and are back on track.  The second half features a great block from Pat Baylis, a great huck from Beaufort, and a ridiculous catch by Cassidy in the back of the endzone – truly wished for some video coverage to document that one.  Sweden doesn’t give us any freebies and go 4-6 on their O points, showing that if they can sharpen up they can be a force (especially considering they are by far the tallest team at the tournament across the board, making downfield matchups difficult).  Off to dinner and Jersey trading night, but a team meeting before bed to prepare for tomorrow’s huge matchup against the Aussies.  The tournament gets hotter now, so far so good for team USA. 

Building momentum in Japan

Another first round game and another 6am wakeup for team USA, made somewhat easier by the sweet sound of “One Direction” coming from Kurt’s room. After making it through the long line for the shuttle at Sakai station, we went through a short but focused warmup on the turf fields of athletes village before heading over to the main stadium for an important matchup against the two-seed in our pool, Germany. We were generally satisfied with our level of play on the first day of games, with good defensive intensity and offensive efficiency, but we knew we would need to continue to rise each day of the tournament. We also welcomed Nick Chapman, with hand in (soft) cast, who arrived in Japan last night.

Team USA vs Germany, 17-8, stats

We had been anticipating a good game here against a team we expected to see deep in the tournament – and with our friends and family watching back home on NexGen, we were fired up to play. Coach Dutchy ran through the defensive plan for the game – tight man to man coverage, forcing our matchups under, flashing flat to stop hucks in flow and then clamping down on the short game. Germany came out strong and struck deep, with our offense quickly answering in kind. We traded to 4-4, with the Germans creating lots of space on O and playing intense defense with intelligent poaching, generating the first two turns of the game against our offense but ultimately failing to convert – Highlights included Josh Wiseman with a nice sky grab on a floaty huck. Our defense finally started forcing turns and grabbed three breaks, including one off a great deep layout d by Kurt Gibson. A brief lull and some softer marks saw us trading out to half, 9-6.


After refocusing at half, our O punched it in to put our D line back on the field. In the play of the game, Russell Wynne sparked a 5 break run with an explosive open-side layout point block on a huck from Germany’s quick handler, and we soon closed it out, 17-8.

At the spirit circle, Kurt was honored as MVP with a big bag of Haribo gummy bears, while we selected Philip Haas #8 (who we’ll see again with nexgen), Ali #23, Hans #13, #42, and #29 for recognition. This was the German’s first loss of the season, but there’s no doubt they’ll come back strong for the rest of the tournament.

Team USA vs Singapore, 17-2, stats


After a 4 hour bye spent eating, cooling off, testing our guts throws, and watching the USA women, we returned to the practice field to warm up for our afternoon game with Singapore. Our morning game was calm, but the afternoons here at J-Green have been consistently windy and we looked forward to the opportunity to practice our offense in tough conditions like we might see later in the tournament. A young and athletic team (and current frontrunner for best jerseys), Singapore came out with an energetic zone defense and were happy to bid. The first few points were messy on both sides, with several back and forth turns, point blocks and questionable deep shots. Duchy took advantage of an early Singapore timeout to settle down our offense and remind us to play our normal game even in the wind, trusting our throwers and swinging to attack the break side. We cleaned it up and took half 9-0.

In the second half, USA picked up a few more breaks until Singapore struck deep with a beautiful forehand in the wind for a goal. Our “princess” was again called into action, but for the first time this tournament, she would not be having her way, as our o-line turned it over on a floaty throw and allowed Singapore to work it up the field and convert for the break on a nice hustle play by a Singaporean player on a sailing throw. The o-line converted their next opportunity and our defense finished off the game, 17-2, but both teams celebrated together – us, the win, and Singapore, doing what no other team had yet managed in breaking our offensive line, and deservedly so. Kurt was again chosen as MVP, and Adam “Chicken” Simon called out the thrower and reciever of singapore’s great deep goal as our MVPs. We were also honored to receive a commemorative medallion from the Singapore team – Thank you again for this gift!

We cooled down as Beau, Kurt and Mac Taylor posed for photos, then headed over to catch the end of the Japan – GB game. With only a late afternoon game tomorrow the team is enjoying the evening with dinner in downtown Osaka and karaoke to follow. On to power pools…


Zach Travis>
Official tournament website

Photos from Worlds Day 1

Blatantly ripping from Josh Wiseman’s Facebook stream.  Here are a few photos, left off Chicken’s caption so make up your own in the comments.

Opening Game Japan vs New Zealand
Mac being tall on the subway, nobody would spot the Americans so they tried yellow shirts just to be safe

Davide giving out some homeland cheese

With Team Italy

 With Team South Africa

Elite Player Stretching

Racing stripes are back!!!
Series – Only in Japan – Tennis Court