|
Open Division: Preview
by Jones Oliver
Note: Thank you to the coaches
and players that contributed via email to these articles;
my apologies for any omissions and errors.
For
a PDF copy of this article click here
The High
School Ultimate Championships in Corvallis, Oregon will
host sixteen of the best open teams from around the country
to
compete for the 2004 trophy.
Judging from each team's depth, this could be the best field yet.
For the first time in the history of the
High School National Tournament, the same school went home
with both the open and
girl's trophy
in 2003. The Amherst
Hurricanes will be traveling to Oregon this year in search of their third
national title, after also winning it in 1998. The almost
famous Tiina Booth coaches the
Hurricanes, who will bring a deep and talented team to Corvallis.
Alameda Dark Meat, in from Alameda, California,
brings a strong senior squad to this year's tournament. They've
been playing in local California
tournaments
and are anxious to play in this year's Nationals.
The Beacon Blue Devils
from NY, NY claims to have learned tough defense from playing
on dirt baseball fields every morning at 6:30 throughout
the spring.
The green grass in Corvallis will hopefully be more inviting. Either
way, this team has a single focus to win the 2004 trophy. The team
in blue is
led by
senior Matthew "Trigger" Troy-Regier with jumps, throws,
and cuts. He's the spark plug in the huddle. Senior Ignacio Yz will
be the player with the disc
in the red zone, and seniors Ricky Charles and Jonah Stevens are
by no means just placeholders with their athletic, blue-collar games.
The rest of the starting
line-up is made of guys with names like "Gonzo" (the "glue
guy"), "Squeak" (great
handler and a great popper), and "The Eraser" (Mr. D).
Their list of tournament successes this year is lengthy. Look for
Beacon
deep in bracket
play
on Sunday.
Midwest Express, from Madison Memorial
High School in Madison, Wisconsin, will roll into Corvallis
for their fifth trip to Nationals.
Their
best finish came
in 2000 where they placed third. This year, with a senior-heavy
squad, they're ready and hungry to improve on their quarterfinals
appearance
last year.
From Maplewood, New Jersey, Columbia High
School is looking again to bring their game to Nationals. With
the longtime question, "Where
was Ultimate invented?" this
team happily maintains their stake on history as the home of
Ultimate. This year, CHS is looking to add to that Ultimate
history.
Nashville's team history, submitted along
with their roster to
the UPA, says it all: "There are forces in this world
besides evil, so in 1999, Brutal Grassburn fought off strong
challengers
to win the coveted Junior Nationals trophy.
Many years passed, and history became legend, legend became
myth, and until now the trophy passed out of all knowledge.
Until when
chance came, it ensnared new
bearers. The championship trophy came to the creatures of MOHO,
Gruel, and Amherst, who took it deep into their tunnels of
the Misty Mountains. And there, it consumed
them. The National Title brought these teams unnatural long
life. For years it poisoned their minds. And in the gloom of
their
caves, it waited. Rumor grew
of a shadow in the East, whispers of a nameless fear, and the
trophy perceived. Now the trophy seeks its former owner, a
brave and cunning fellowship: Brutal
Grassburn." The report continues, "We've been searching
for our National championship; and now you offer us a chance
to take it?
We do
not deny that
our hearts have greatly desired this. We shall take the trophy;
the rightful kings
shall be crowned. Now come to pass the days of Brutal Grassburn,
and may they be blessed."
The Northfield Mt. Hermon squad
calls Northfield, Massachusetts home. This team has been
established for six years and has
attended the
national tournament for
four years, last year competing in the semifinals in Alabama.
This year, they return eleven players from that squad and
are looking
again to make
a run at
the trophy.
The Nathan Hale Raiders of Seattle, Washington will be making
its first trip to Nationals this year. The squad is led by
senior Sam
Harkness
with his big
D and solid handling. A young team, the Raiders are looking
to establish some tradition for years to come.
Northwest School
Varsity from Seattle, Washington arrives in Oregon after
winning the co-ed Spring Reign tournament
in April
and the
open Washington
Trophy in
early May. With a program that beckons back to 1996, the
school switched from co-ed disc to the single-gender game
in 2004.
This is a young
and talented team;
with only three seniors on the 21 player roster, Northwest
School is looking forward to the competition in Corvallis.
Cretin-Derham Hall High School is the
home of Raging Safari. With a long history, including the SOTG
trophy at nationals in 1998, this squad is looking to make some noise in Corvallis.
St. John's-Ravenscourt 1812, from Winnipeg,
Manitoba, may have more frequent flyer miles than any team
in the tournament. They've attended tournaments
in Seattle, Minnesota, Madison, Atlanta, and all across Canada.
Two of their players will be representing Canada in Turku,
Finland this summer at the Juniors World
Championships. Juniors Josh Magnusson and David Bryngelson will
break from their practices with the Canadian National team
to bring their game to Corvallis.
The open team with the shortest
commute, South Eugene
Axemen, brings a gritty game to this year's National
tournament.
The core of this
team is senior Breeze
Strout. He has throws, speed, and jumps. Senior Dusty
Becker brings his up-tempo D, and his resilience,
to the 2004
dance. After breaking
his
throwing thumb earlier
in the season, Dusty didn't rest, and instead, played
the entire fall season throwing with his left hand.
Just completing
a
win at this year's
Oregon High
School Championship, this squad has a single focus
of winning the national title.
The other team from
Madison, Wisconsin, West Ultimate, is coming from
wins at Madison Fall Classic and the
Madison Mudbath.
Defensive minded
senior Bob Sanders
and senior Tom Annen, a competent handler, lead the
squad. Senior Garrett Mortenson, or Mort, rounds
out the team
with
height and
athletic ability.
The coaching tandem
is John Hugget, who helped launch the Madison Summer
League, and Dan Ackerstein is the former Duke coach.
Wissahickon
High School from Ambler, Pennsylvania has had a strong fall
and spring and is looking to
line
up against
the
top teams
in the country
in Corvallis.
Woodward Academy Ultimate from College
Park, Georgia has been around for seven years. This year's
squad
is primarily
juniors,
however,
based on their fall and
spring success, teams won't want to underestimate
Instant Karma.
Yale Secondary, from Abbotsford,
British Columbia, brings a long list of tournament
victories to their
first single
gender
tournament.
Those
W's include four provincial
championships, four league championships, and
four Spring Reign Tournament trophies. This team executes
well on
offense and
plays synchronized
defense. Yale very
well could be playing into Sunday.
So, there you
have it. These are sixteen of the most spirited and competitive
high school teams
around.
Regardless of
the final standings,
this year's
national tournament has all the ingredients
of a classic.
|