2003 FPA World Championships

2003 FPA Worlds
Rimini, Italy
October, 2003

2003 FPA World Champions

OPEN PAIRS: Arthur Coddington/Dave Lewis
OPEN CO-OP: Paul Kenny/Tom Leitner/Sune Wentzel
MIXED PAIRS: Lisa Silvey/Arthur Coddington
WOMEN’S PAIRS: Cindy Kruger/Lisa Silvey

OPEN PAIRS FINAL

1. Arthur Coddington/Dave Lewis (T 76.9; D 24.5; E 27.7; A 24.7)
2. Tom Leitner/Pat Marron (T 70.4; D 23.8; E 26.1; A 20.5)
3. Clay Collera/Paul Kenny (T 68.7; D 22.3; E 25.8; A 20.6)
4. Dave Murphy/Ted Oberhaus (T 68.5; D 22.7; E 26.3; A 19.5)
5. Jake Gauthier/Randy Silvey (T 66.2; D 22.0; E 22.4; A 21.8)
6. Larry Imperiale/Joel Rogers (T 64.9; D 21.4; E 25.3; A 18.2)
7. Sune Wentzel/Reto Zimmerman (T 64.8; D 21.7; E 24.8; A 18.3)
8. Joakim Arveskär/Stefan Karlsson (T 52.2; D 18.5; E 18.7; A 15.0)

OPEN CO-OP FINAL

1. Paul Kenny/Tom Leitner/Sune Wentzel (T 66.1; D 18.3; E 27.0; A 20.8)
2. Arthur Coddington/Dave Lewis/Dave Murphy (T 62.6; D 19.0; E 21.8; A 21.8)
3. Toddy Brodeur/Jeff Kruger/Reto Zimmerman (T 58.9; D 15.7; E 24.0; AI 19.2)
4. Jake Gauthier/Larry Imperiale/Pat Marron (T 53.3; D 15.5; E 21.2; A 16.6)
5. Lorenzo Apriani/Fernando Botrugno/Clay Collera (T 44.9; D 13.8; E 14.5; A 16.6)
6. Pipo Lopez/Ted Oberhaus/Scott Sailor (T 40.6; D 14.4; E 12.6; A 13.6)

MIXED PAIRS FINAL

1. Lisa Silvey/Arthur Coddington (T 58.9; D 18.9; E 22.2; AI 17.8)
2. Bethany Sanchez/Rodney Sanchez (T 56.0; D 14.3; E 23.1; AI 18.6)
3. Anne Graves/Pipo Lopez (T 53.6; D 16.7; E 23.0; AI 13.9)
4. Karolina Hagenbjork/Roland Karlsson (T 52.4; D 12.5; E 25.9; AI 14.0)
5. Cindy Kruger/Paul Kenny (T 52.2; D 16.6; E 17.2; AI 18.4)
6. Judy Robbins/Dave Murphy (T 49.7; D 15.6; E 19.5; AI 14.6)

Women’s Final

1. Cindy Kruger/Lisa Silvey (T 65.1; D 20.7; E 24.8; AI 19.6)
2. Anne Graves/Judy Robbins (T 55.3; D 16.8; E 22.0; AI 16.5)
3. Karolina Hagenbjork/Linda Torngren (T 48.2; D 11.1; E 23.3; AI 13.8)

discue de rue

Spincollectif’s discue de rue video shows an exciting new direction for the sport – street freestyle. I’ve seen throws that bounce off buildings before, but this video takes street freestyle to the next level. Could the outlaw element of street freestyle attract young players who aren’t interested in learning delay skills?

Pre-Show Festivities

Currently the FPA Competition Manual does not define when an Artistic Impression judge should start evaluating a performance. In Rimini, several teams put on lengthy sketches before the first disc skill. How should judges score thematic introductions?

The Right Price

How much should it costs to enter a competition? I’ve paid as much as $125 to play in a competition and heard complaints about entry fees as low as $5. What is a reasonable entry fee, and what do you expect to get in return for your entry fee?

Beyond Skippy Sez

Skippy Jammer has asked for nominations for this year’s Skippy Sez awards. If you were choosing the winners, who would win and why? What other award categories would you add? Who would win?

Lorenzo Apriani Wins Romashred



Romashred, the first turboshred event in Europe, was a big success this Saturday. Thirteen Roman freestylers competed on the beach in Capociotta as part of Ciakka Uakka Day (http://www.ciakkauakkateam.com). Lorenzo Apriani emerged as the winner in an extremely close final.
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Several of the athletes had never entered a freestyle competition before, including Roberto Loppi, who missed the final by only one spot. A photographer from one of Rome’s largest newspapers covered the gathering.

In turboshred, players are scored as individuals but play as a group in a jam format. Only difficulty is judged. In Roma, each players best two combinations were added together for their score.

In the final, Lorenzo Apriani used a combination of technical turnovers, brush/rolls and strong seals to edge fast-improving Edoardo Favorini by only 3 points. Edoardo learned at least one new move every time I jammed with him in Rome. In the final he nailed a combination he had learned only that afternoon. He sealed his best two combos with a gitis and a scarecrow. Fernando Botrugno and Alessandro Damiano were only two points behind Edoardo. Nando won third place over Alessandro by going to the next best combination score. Nando also had the highest scoring single combination of the final.

Rome is perhaps the fastest growing jam community in the world. Several players beyond the thirteen watched the competition, and a few top players were unable to attend. There are at least two other jam locations in the Rome area with as many freestylers, one that reportedly has over one hundred new players.

The final results, followed by a round-by-round summary:

Romashred at Ciakka Uakka Day

Di Vino Beach

Capociotta, Italy

September 20, 2003

1. Lorenzo Apriani

2. Edoardo Favorini

3. Fernando Botrugno

4. Alessandro Damiano

5. Roberto Loppi

6. Paolo Mirabelli

7. Luca Gagliardi

8. Andrea “Pitone” Farnocchia

9. Paolo Cipolloni

10. Carlo Sestieri

11. Andrea Ienca

12. Serge Marconi

13. Raffaele Pilla

Final

1. Lorenzo Apriani

2. Edoardo Favorini

3. Fernando Botrugno

4. Alessandro Damiano

Semifinal (winner advances to the final)

1. Edoardo Favorini

2. Roberto Loppi

3. Paolo Mirabelli

7th place playoff:

1. Luca Gagliardi

2. Andrea “Pitone” Farnocchia

3. Paolo Cipolloni

4. Carlo Sestieri

11th place playoff:

1. Andrea Ienca

2. Serge Marconi

3. Raffaele Pilla

Consolation Round 1 (top 2 advance to 7th place playoff):

1. Carlo Sestieri

2. Andrea “Pitone” Farnocchia

3. Andrea Ienca

Consolation Round 2 (top 2 advance to 7th place playoff):

1. Luca Gagliardi

2. Paolo Cipolloni

3. Rafaelle Pilla

4. Serge Marconi

Round 1 (winner advances to the final)

Pool A

1. Lorenzo Apriani

2. Roberto Loppi

3. Luca Gagliardi

4. Rafaelle Pilla

Pool B

1. Alessandro Damiano

2. Paolo Mirabelli

3. Carlo Sestieri

4. Serge Marconi

Pool C

1. Fernando Botrugno

2. Edoardo Favorini

3. Andrea “Pitone” Farnocchia

4. Andrea Ienca

5. Paolo Cipolloni