2005 Wisconsin States

2005 Wisconsin States
Elver and Hiestand Parks
Madison, WI
August 13-14, 2005

1. Steve Jennings/Pat Marron
2. Dave Bolyard/Rodney Sanchez
3. Bethany Sanchez/Rico Schneider
4. Mike Hughes/Brad Wendt
5. John Elsner/Andy Lemann
6. Duster Hoffman/Don Hunkel
7. Chris Sieben/Mike Danomie

Women

1. Bethany Sanchez
2. Barrett White
3. Karen Wendt

Juniors

1. Andrew Van Lanen

Getting The Media To Care

The Press & Sun Bulletin in Binghamton, New York published a profile of me today. Any news story would be a cause for celebration, and the timing of this one was a nice surprise – it was published on my birthday.

This article is particularly significant for another reason. For years, my father called the sports section of the paper to let them know about my accomplishments. Now, this is a small city that creates virtually no national or international sports news. Occasionally there will be an Olympian, and that will be well-covered. But, the sports department was blunt in telling my father that freestyle was not a sport, so who cares about Arthur’s world titles.

Enter ESPN. The day the ESPN story was broadcast, the sports department called me for a story. Coincidence? The important thing is that they get it now. A sports writer did the story. It was more than a quick, one paragraph note. They sought out other interviews (Dave Lewis) and tournament imagery (they went with a photo from a shoot I did in their offices about two years ago). They treated the topic with interest and they treated me with respect, and I appreciate that.

But, these type of situations happen for all of us. The local media many times will give extended coverage to activities like a bowling league (legitimate sport but local importance, and not a championship) instead of telling the community about a “local boy/girl who did good,” someone who made their mark on the world stage. That’s really one of freestyle’s biggest challenges. To create stories that are compelling enough that any editor will get it and want to carve out square inches for us.

The sports knowledge of reporters is what it is – usually profound understanding of a very limited range of sports – and we won’t change that. Our responsibility is to make ourselves interesting enough to them, if we want media coverage. In this case, ESPN did the job for me. Usually, it’s up to us.

Let’s take the recent World Championships. Dave Schiller and Tom Leitner won Open Pairs. That’s not a strong media story, because most sports fans aren’t following the Open Pairs race. A better story? That Dave Schiller and Tom Leitner were the first team to sweep the pro divisions of the worlds since 2001. Better yet? That Dave Schiller and Tom Leitner were the first team to win with a perfect (dropless) performance since 1997. Even better? That Dave Schiller was the first player to sweep all three divisions and have a perfect day since 1987. Possibly even better? That little Brady Schiller watched his mom and dad win a world title and watched his dad achieve a once-in-a-lifetime feat. There are hundreds of other angles with which to tell th story, but it’s essential to tell the story in a way that grabs the editor’s attention.

You can read the article online for the next few days. After that, read it as a pdf (280k) or text file (12k).

2005 Narragansett/Rhode Island Jam

2005 Narragansett/Rhode Island Jam
Narragansett Common by The Sea
Narragansett, RI
August 6, 2005

Pairs

1. Rob Fried/Petri Isola (28 votes)
2. Carl Emerson/Gary Auerbach (35)
3. Rick Williams/Steve Scannell (62)
4. Doug Simon/Joey Hudoklin (71)
5. Nicki Nicholson/Toddy Brodeur (86)
6. Ryan Vinoski/Steve Vinoski (92)
7. Ted Oberhaus/Tom Robidoux (99)
8 Brad Keller/Donny Baker (112)
9. Anne Goh/Mark Ide (146)
10 Jill Simon/Lou Sumrall (159)

90 Second Individual

1. Ted Oberhaus (8.8)
2. Rob Fried (8.7)
3. Rick Williams (8.5)
4. Doug Simon (8.1)
5 Petri Isola (8.0)
6. Gary Auerbach (7.7)
7T. Toddy Brodeur (7.6)
7T. Brad Keller (7.6)
9. Ryan Vinoski (6.7)
10T. Carl Emerson (6.6)
10T. Donny Baker (6.6)
12. Steve Vinoski (6.5)
13. Steve Scannell (6.3)
14. Mark Ide (6.2)
15. Chris DePaola (6.1) 5
16. Joey Hudoklin (5.8) 4
17. Tom Robidoux (5.3)
18. Lou Sumrall (5.1)
19. Anne Goh (4.5)

2005 Swedish Championships

2005 Swedish Championships
Uppsala, Sweden
August 5-6, 2005

1. Stefan Karlsson/Joakim Arveskär
2. Andreas Jaderyd/Thomas Burvall
3. Dieter Johansson/Niklas Bergehamn
4. Christian Sandström/Roland Karlsson

5. Jonas Bengtsson/Fredric Celinder
6. Jonathan Brandberg/Mattias Sandkvist
7. Victor Grundström/Oscar Grundström

Happy 10th Birthday, Frisbee.com

Ten years ago today, Tom Leitner launched frisbee.com. It was a smart move for him to reserve the domain for use by disc athletes before corporate interests realized how valuable it could be.

Frisbee.com was the first and most important freestyle website, gathering together historical data on tournaments, providing locations for jams and jammers and keeping the sport updated while we all caught up technologically. Over the years, Tom has fended off the occasional challenge to the ownership of the frisbee.com domain and luckily for us, his enthusiasm for the project has continued. Ten years later, there are dozens of freestyle websites, each with its own personality, each with a specialty, but almost all of them were inspired by one common ancestor – frisbee.com.

Happy 10th birthday, frisbee.com.

Freestyle On TV: The ESPN Sportscenter Segment

ESPN covered the FPA World Championships as part of its 50 States/50 Days tour. Washington State was represented by freestyle. Yeah, that’s right. Little old us!

ESPN Teasers (3.5mb avi file – right click to save)

ESPN Segment (9.1mb avi file, right click to save)

On Tuesday, the ESPN producers decided they wanted to focus their story around Dave Lewis and Arthur Coddington (that’s me!) as the defending Pairs champions. This surprised me since I figured the tournament would just be background action for Sportscenter and the worlds competitors wouldn’t really get to show freestyle to the world.

The opposite was true. They filmed some b-roll and the Arthur/Dave segment on Thursday, then broadcast Sportscenter live from the competition field on Friday. Word was that the producers were very happy with the footage they got. Though no freestyle was visible during the live news broadcasts, the prerecorded piece aired several times, including teasers.

Shelley Smith interviewed Bill Wright, Dan Magallanes, Dave and me. The audio guy wrote down all our names, then the editors proceeded to misspell Dan’s last name. No fair!!!

For the interview, we sat by Greenlake on a little patch of fake grass, with reflectors softening the light on our tender faces and microphones snaked underneath our shirts. We had to halt production at one point because a duck walked behind Dave Lewis. Bill Wright faced the toughest interview since Shelley Smith is a childhood friend of his. We never heard Bill’s answer about what he was doing in the closet at Shelley’s house that day…

Dave gave the best soundbite of the piece, calling freestyle “the best thing ever.” When Dave told Shelley that his favorite catch was the double spinning barrel gitis, we all looked at each other and chuckled – now Dave would have to actually catch one of them. The pressure was on, but Dave actually had no trouble grabbing his favorite catch for the cameras, and ESPN ended up using the catch for the teasers to the piece.

Cultivate Peace, Play Frisbee: T-Shirts Still Available

The Hunger Site stepped up as the lead sponsor of the 2005 FPA World Championships, creating the tagline “Cultivate Peace, Play Frisbee” for the event. They are an organization devoted to generosity, and we appreciate the generosity they showed our sport this weekend.

Event t-shirts are still available. For each sale, they will donate 25 cups of food toward eradicating hunger worldwide. So you not only get a great t-shirt, you make the world a better place.

2005 FPA Worlds: Expanded Complete Results

The final score in a competition never tells the full story. Knowing that Tom Leitner and Dave Schiller scored 71.9 in the Open Pairs final does not tell you how difficult their moves are, that they went dropless or that their performance was electric.

I have a mental shorthand when looking at Total scores. If a team is over 70 points, they did something special. They played well and the judges really liked it. A score in the high 60’s means the team played a solid but not quite epic routine. Strong finalist teams usually score at least in the low 60’s. Semifinalist teams or higher ranked teams that had a bad day may turn in scores in the 50’s. Scores under 50 indicate either a lower ranked team that is still putting all the pieces together, or a mid-level team that had an off day.

The story does not end with the Total score, though. Each Total score is made up of Difficulty, Execution, and Artistic Impression scores. Some teams specialize in one of the categories. Other teams are generalists, scoring solidly on all three categories. Sometimes one category will be the most important in one round of freestyle, but not important in the next. For instance, if conditions are good and all the teams play cleanly, execution is a wash. Difficulty and Artistic Impression become the deciding factors. If all the teams play at approximately the same skill level, Execution and Artistic Impression become more important. A team that knows its strengths can try to showcase those strengths, work on its weaknesses – or both.

Below are the results of the 2005 FPA Worlds with category scores broken out. There are many stories hidden in the numbers. Which ones can you find?

Continue reading “2005 FPA Worlds: Expanded Complete Results”