World Rankings – July 2007 (A New #1)

A ton of movement on the rankings list this month as some big 2005 events (WFDF, FPA Worlds, EFC and Vagolino) fall off the list and the 2007 FPA Worlds are added (plus Vagolino, the Swedish Championships and expanded results from the German Championships).

The big news is that there is a new #1 player on the Open list: Fabio Sanna. Fabio has ruled European competitions for the past few seasons and has competed more often than any other player. With his 1/2 finish at this year’s FPA Worlds in Co-op and Pairs, he finally secures the points to jump to the top spot. Tom Leitner drops to #2, only 30 points back. His points from sweeping the 2005 FPA Worlds dropped off this month, creating the opening for Fabio’s ascent.

The rankings list after any world championships is the most dynamic, and this year is no exception. The freestyle story this year is that Europe is not only an emerging region, it has matured to the point where several European teams contend for any given title. That is reflected in the rankings, where 11 of 20 players hail from Europe.

Some big moves upward and some big drops too. Clay Collera re-enters the top 3, and Matt Gauthier reaches a career-best #4. Pat Marron moves up to #6, Piccio to #7 and Andrea Meola to #8. Matteo Gaddoni and Boguslaw Bul enter the top 20, and Dave Murphy jumps back into the top 40 after some time off.

Lots of points disappeared from the rankings this month with both the 2005 WFDF and 2005 FPA Worlds cycling off. Dave Lewis and Arthur Coddington, 2005 WFDF champions, each take a big hit. Lewis falls out of the top 10 for the first time in a decade, down from 5 to 13. Arthur Coddington, who has taken a break from the worlds the last two years, drops from 10 to 32. Dave Schiller, who swept the 2005 worlds with Tom Leitner, drops from 13 to 24.

We’re also seeing some impact from the 2007 rankings changes, which increased the number of events counted toward the rankings to eight and revamped the scoring tables. Active players are seeing a payoff, and consistent performance at Worlds is creating deep point totals for top players.

It’s rare for the women’s list to see much movement. There aren’t many women’s competitions, and upsets in the women’s events have been rare. Not this time. Eleonora Imazio maintains her #1 position, and her world champion teammate Sylvia Caruso rises to the #2 spot. Bianca Strunz has played strong in both women’s and open events this year. She jumps to #5. And Cristina Nicolardi enters the top 10.

Something tells me the shifts in the women’s rankings are not over. The top US women are still at the top of their game, and new players like Ilka Simon (#14) and Gloria Alessandrini (#18) are rising. Amy Schliler and Cindy Kruger lost some points this month, but they will challenge for titles whenever they enter their next tournament.

2007 WFDF/Masters Results

2007 WFDF/Masters
Ithaca, NY
July 14-15, 2007

Open Final

1. Paul Kenny/Tom Leitner
2. Harvey Brandt/Tom Lasher
3. Jake Gauthier/Larry Imperiale
4. Alan Caplin/Rick Williams
5. Doug Korns/Steve Scannell
6. Tomas Burvall/Bill Wright
7. Tom Cole/Andrew Lemann
8. Paul Brenner/Jon Freedman

Semi A

1. Paul Kenny/Tom Leitner
2. Harvey Brandt/Tom Lasher
3. Tom Cole/Andrew Lemann
4. Alan Caplin/Rick Williams
5. Bob Cooksey/Jack Cooksey
6. Jonas Bengtsson/Dan Roddick
7. Eddie Cohn/Christian Voigt
8. Michael Conger/Jim Palmieri
9. Jeff Palmieri/Kevin Palmieri

Semi B

1. Jake Gauthier/Larry Imperiale
2. Doug Korns/Steve Scannell
3. Tomas Burvall/Bill Wright
4. Paul Brenner/Jon Freedman
5. Daisuke Kuroda/Shori Ouchi
6. Randy Lahm/David Taylor
7. Mark Horn/Paul Thompson
8. Eric Wootten/Hunter Wootten

Women’s Final

1. Lori Daniels/Bethany Sanchez
2. Tita Ugalde/Beth Verish
3. Yukari Komatsu/Yumiko Tauchi
4. Tara Brenner

Women’s Semi A

1. Lori Daniels/Bethany Sanchez
2. Tara Brenner
3. Ann-Charlotte Johansson/Stina Persson
4. Aya Ichikawa/Yuriko Sobue

Women’s Semi B

1. Tita Ugalde/Beth Verish
2. Yukari Komatsu/Yumiko Tauchi
3. Susie Horn/Marygrace Sorrentino
4. Kana Yamamoto

2007 Rototom Results

2007 Rototom
Osoppo (Udine), Italy
July 7-8, 2007

Final

1. Clay Collera’/Claudio Cigna 41.8
2. Fabio Sanna/Emmanuele Faustini 41.6
3. Filippo Cavalca/Matteo Feller 40.9
4. Matteo Gaddoni/Marco Prati 39.7
5. Eleonora Imazio/Fabio Caruso 36.3

B Final

1. Eleonora Imazio/Fabio Caruso 39.1
2. Paolo Papini/Ale Collera’ 25.3
3. Davide Bacco/Simone Lo Giudice (Scratch)

Semifinal A

1. Matteo Gaddoni/Marco Prati 54.1
2. Filippo Cavalca/Matteo Feller 40.7
3. Davide Bianchi/Paolo Papini/Ale Collera’ 29.2

Semifinal B

1. Clay Collera’/Claudio Cigna 48.9

2. Fabio Sanna/Emmanuele Faustini 48.1
3. Eleonora Imazio/Fabio Caruso 39.1
4. Davide Bacco/Simone Lo Giudice 25.3

2007 Swedish Championships

2007 Swedish Championships
May 26-27, 2007
(Thanks to Joakim Arvesk‰r for the results)

1. Roland Karlsson/Joakim Arvesk‰r
2. Tomas Burvall/Dieter Johansson
3. Bobbo Karlsson/Peter Karlsson
4. Jonas Bengtsson/Mikael Zewgren
5. Martin fransson/Hampus Colbrand

2007 FPAW – Final Results

Wow! Some big surprises and incredibly close finishes in the finals. Looks like the indoor play led to super clean performances. Your 2007 world champs are:

Open Pairs: Jake Gauthier/Matt Gauthier [video]
Open Co-op: Piccio Cusma/Andrea Meola/Fabio Sanna
Women’s Pairs: Sylvia Caruso/Eleonora Imazio
Mixed Pairs: Lisa Hunrichs/Matt Gauthier

Some early video is already coming in:

TV News Story Featuring Sarah Bergman & Paul Kenny



Day 1 Montage



Days 2 and 3 Montage

Open Pairs

The Gauthier brothers come through to defend their Open Pairs title. I believe they are undefeated since they won in Berlin last year. This was no cakewalk, however, as the top four teams were all within 2.2 points, and all had a 9.0 or greater average execution score. Larry Imperiale/Fabio Sanna edged Dave Lewis/Pat Marron for second place by only 0.1, with Tommy Leitner/Reto Zimmerman another 0.7 back in fourth. It looks like the only thing holding Dave and Pat back from winning the pairs title was Artistic Impression. They won execution and trailed the Gauthiers by only 0.3 in difficulty, but the judges put them 2.0 back in artistic. Like many people, I’ve been a fan of Jake and Matt’s game for a long time. It’s cool to see them building a dynasty. Congratulations Jake and Matt!!!

Open Co-op

The top 4 teams were within 1.1 points of each other. Let me repeat that. The top 4 teams were within 1.1 points of each other. The winning margin was 0.6 points as Antonio Piccio Cusma, Andrea Meola and Fabio Sanna won their first open division title over Pipo Lopez, Tommy Leitner and Pat Marron. It’s the first all-European team to win in the open division, which means Fabio Sanna has been part of the first all-European winning teams in both Open Co-op and Mixed Pairs.
This has to be frustrating for Pipo and Pat, who finished 0.3 away from the title last year. So many close calls. Joakim Arveskär, Clay Collera and Reto Zimmerman were another 0.3 points back to grab third by 0.2 over Dave Lewis, Dave Murphy and Dave Schiller. Basically, it was a one drop difference between first and 4th place. Incredible. Congratulations Andrea, Piccio and Fabio!!!

Mixed Pairs

The Gauthier brothers swept the top two spots of this division too. Lisa Hunrichs and Matt Gauthier outscored Lori Daniels and Jake Gauthier in difficulty and artistic to overcame Jake and Lori’s sick 29.1 execution score. Defending champs Eleonora Imazio and Fabio Sanna finished 1.1 points back in 3rd. Congratulations Lisa and Matt!!!

Women’s Pairs

In maybe the biggest upset of the tournament, Sylvia Caruso and Eleonora Imazio crushed the women’s field by 6.2 points to take the women’s crown. With a super clean round (29.1 ex score), they gained 8 points over Lisa Hunrichs and Lori Daniels, then backed up their squeaky clean performance by winning difficulty. Congratulations Sylvia and Eleonora on being the first all-European team to win the Women’s Pairs title!!!

The scores – format is Total (Diff, Ex, AI):

Open Pairs Final

1. Jake Gauthier/Matt Gauthier 66.9 (21.4, 27.1, 18.4) [video]
2. Larry Imperiale/Fabio Sanna 65.5 (20.2, 27.2, 18.1)
3. Dave Lewis/Pat Marron 65.4 (21.1, 27.9, 16.4)
4. Tom Leitner/Reto Zimmerman 64.7 (20.4, 27.0, 17.3)
5. Dave Murphy/Dave Schiller 61.6 (20.8, 25.1, 15.7)
6. Paul Kenny/Sune Wentzel 61.3 (18.4, 27.3, 15.6)
7. Toddy Brodeur/Pipo Lopez 60.2 (18.0, 27.6, 14.6)
8. Antonio Piccio Cusma/Andrea Meola 57.2 (17.8, 23.7, 15.7)

Open Co-op Final

1. Antonio Piccio Cusma/Andrea Meola/Fabio Sanna 71.4 (21.0, 28.5, 21.9)
2. Tom Leitner/Pipo Lopez/Pat Marron 70.8 (21.9, 27.6, 21.3)
3. Joakim Arveskär/Clay Collera/Reto Zimmerman 70.5 (22.1, 26.1, 22.3)
4. Dave Lewis/Dave Murphy/Dave Schiller 70.3 (22.7, 25.2, 22.4)
5. Toddy Brodeur/Larry Imperiale/Paul Kenny 66.3 (20.2, 23.7, 22.4)
6. Matteo Feller/Matteo Gaddoni/Valerio Occorsio 56.4 (20.8, 18.5, 17.1)
7. Carsten Heim/Flo Hess/Jan Schreck 55.8 (20.2, 19.9, 15.7)
8. Filippo Cavalca/Giovanni Coppo/Paulo Magni 55.6 (19.7, 20.1, 15.8)

Mixed Pairs Final

1. Lisa Hunrichs/Matt Gauthier 67 (18.8, 28.0, 20.2)
2. Lori Daniels/Jake Gauthier 62.5 (16.1, 29.1, 17.3)
3. Eleonora Imazio/Fabio Sanna 61.4 (17.6, 26.0, 17.8)
4. Bethany Sanchez/Toddy Brodeur 56.4 (16.1, 25.5, 14.8)
5. Sarah Bergman/Paul Kenny 53.9 (16.5, 23.2, 14.2)
6. Bianca Strunz/Markus Hein 49.3 (14.9, 23.2, 11.2)

Women Pairs Final

1. Sylvia Caruso/Eleonora Imazio 64.8 (17.1, 29.1, 18.6)
2. Lori Daniels/Lisa Hunrichs 58.6 (16.8, 21.8, 20)
3. Sarah Bergman/Mary Lowry 52.1 (15.2, 20.8, 16.1)
4. Bianca Strunz/Simon 49.2 (12.3, 23.0, 13.9)

Mixed Pairs B Final
(Top 2 teams advance to finals)

1. BethanySanchez/Toddy Brodeur 59.9 (18.5, 26.4, 15)
2. Bianca Strunz/Markus Hein 58.9 (17.1, 26.8, 15)
3. Sylvia Caruso/Enrico Bersanti 56.1 (18.4, 23.9, 13.8)
2. Terry Bogenhagen/Dave Schiller 54.3 (17.9, 23.6, 12.8)
3. Mary Lowry/Dan Yarnell 54.1 (17.6, 22, 14.5)
4. H Bogenhagen/Andrea Meola 51.4 (15.6, 25.3, 10.5)
5. Anne Goh/Steve Scannell 49.3 (15.3, 22.9, 11.1)
6. Cristina Nicolardi/Carlo Perrone 48.4 (15.4, 21.4, 11.6)
7. Ilka Simon/Jascha Wollman 41.6 (13.4, 19.3, 8.9)
8. Gloria Alessandrini/Matteo Gaddoni 0 (0, 0, 0)

2007 FPAW – Day Three Results

Okay, this must have been a long day of indoor play. Mixed Semis, Women’s Semis, Open Pairs Semis and Open Co-op Semis.

Hard to make educated commentary just on the scores. It’s impossible to get past my expectations and substantial biases without actually seeing the performances, but that’s not going to hold me back. Here goes:

1. Mixed Pairs

Defending champs Fabio Sanna and Eleonora Imazio may have their work cut out for them, as they tied Paul Kenny and Sarah Bergman for first in their pool while scoring almost two points higher in execution. Meanwhile, Lisa Hunrichs and Matt Gauthier crushed the other pool by more than 10 points with a super clean (28.2 execution) performance. That indoor play really makes a difference, huh? Fabio and Eleonora could very well have held back some surprises for the finals. We’ll see tomorrow. Four teams qualified for the finals – Bergman/Kenny, Imazio/Sanna, Hunrichs/M. Gauthier and Daniels/J. Gauthier. The other ten teams will battle it out tomorrow morning for the final two positions.

2. Women’s Semis

Looks like Lisa Hunrichs and Lori Daniels have this one well in control as long as they play solid. They hit a solid but not stupendous execution score (26.4 – about 4 drops) and still beat Eleonora Imazio and Sylvia Caruso by 4 points.

3. Open Pairs Semi A

To be honest, I’m a little surprised that Imperiale/Sanna outscored Lewis/Marron by so much given how clean Lewis/Marron played. Not having seen the round, I’ll have to reserve judgment until I see the video. Fabio and Larry have a strong routine with difficult elements. They pulled it off and won the pool on the basis of a higher artistic score. I have my personal biases of course given my longtime teammate was in this battle, but I would have expected the scoring to be closer. The #3 (Meola/Cusmá) and #4 (Kenny/Wentzel) spots were expected. Could have gone either way. Both are standard finals teams. I thought Bo Bul and Hartmut Wahrmann had a shot at the finals, especially given the indoor setting, but they came about 4 points short in 5th place.

4. Open Pairs Semi B

Both Pairs pools were tough, but Pool B was more top heavy on paper. Last year’s champs (Matt & Jake Gauthier) and runners up (Tommy Leitner & Reto Zimmerman) plus legends Dave Murphy and Dave Schiller. You would expect those three teams to battle it out for the top three positions, and everyone else to fight it out for the last finals spot. That’s almost what happened. Tommy Leitner and Reto Zimmerman clearly kicked ass, winning by almost five points. Tommy and Reto have really gel’d as a team. They seem to get stronger with every tournament. Schiller/Murphy and defending champs Gauthier/Gauthier actually tied for second, but Brodeur/Lopez nearly snuck in there to spoil their fun. They were only 0.3 back. The closest other team – Clay Collerá/Joakim Arvesk‰r – was more than five points back.

5. Co-op Semi A

The top seeds held in Pool A as Lopez/Leitner/Marron won their pool followed by Cusmá/Meola/Sanna. Dan Yarnell/Matt Guathier/Steve Hays missed the finals cut, but from their execution score (17.6) it looks like they had a very rough round. Rising to the occasion were Paolo Magni/Filippo Cavalca/Giovanni Coppo and Carstein Heim/Flo Hess/Jan Schreck. I believe it’s the first FPAW finals for all six players, and each team has an interesting story. Last year, Paolo and Filippo were part of the Aloha Award winning team with Philipp Lenarz. This year they are in the finals, but Filippo had to overcome a separated shoulder in April that kept him out of Paganello. Flo Hess and Carsten Heim had planned to play with Christian Lamred. Christian was unable to make FPAW due to a work/school commitment, which opened the door for my Paganello teammate Jan Schreck to jump in and make his first FPAW finals.

6. Co-op Semi B

All four top teams were pretty much expected to make the finals, so there weren’t any huge upsets, though Sanchez/Willett/Meier had a legitimate shot at a finals spot, youth prevailed as Matteo Gaddoni, Valerio Occorsio and Matteo Feller played solid to make the finals. It’s the first finals for Valerio and Matteo, and I think Gaddoz has made one before. The top two teams were only 0.1 apart. Brodeur/Imperiale/Kenny edged Lewis/Murphy/Schiller primarily due to a cleaner performance and a few extra tenths in artistic.

Continue reading “2007 FPAW – Day Three Results”

2007 FPAW – Day Two Results

Looks like the weather has wreaked havoc with the worlds schedule, and they’ve decided to just stay inside for the rest of the tournament rounds. Some first impressions just scanning through the results:

1. Lopez/Leitner/Marron hitting an execution score of 29.7. One bobble routine? Need to see that video immediately!

2. Andrea Meola/Piccio Cusma winning their pairs prelim pool over Dave Lewis/Pat Marron with an Execution score of 28.5. Looks like a one drop routine.

3. Imperiale/Sanna, Kenny/Wentzel and Murphy/Schiller finishing within 0.6 of one another in Pool A. Pairs could be a huge dogfight as we progress. Then again, prelims can be deceiving as teams play with a variety of prepared routines vs. jams. We’ll get a much better idea of the depth of the field in the semis Saturday.

4. Small margins in three of four pairs prelims to make the semifinals. Sanchez/Meier snuck by Occorsio/Coppo by 0.3, Hays/Hess scored only 1.1 more than Willett/Lo-a-sjoe, and Galliani/Cappelman were only 1.2 ahead of Apriani/Torzolini.

5. Lori Daniels and Bianca Strunz making waves in pairs. They passed through the qualification round yesterday. Today they placed third in their pairs pool to move to the semifinals.

Continue reading “2007 FPAW – Day Two Results”

2007 FPAW – Day One Results

Skippy Jammer reported on Jammers On The Net that today was a rainy first day at FPAW. Only the Open Pairs qualifier was completed. 30 teams played for 16 available spots in the Prelim round. The number of legendary players battling in the qualifier – Skippy Jammer, Rodney Sanchez, Dan Yarnell, etc. – speaks to the depth of the competitive field. Whoever advanced out of today’s round has their work cut out for them in the Prelims.

With the exception of Pool A, it looks like there was a clear gap in scores between teams who advanced and those who didn’t. Pool A was pretty close, only 1.4 points, though nothing like last year’s heartbreaking gaps of fractions of a point. It’s great to see players like Anton Capellman, who was on the wrong side of one of those heartbreaking gaps last year, come out on top this year.

There were four pools, and the top four teams advanced from each pool. Teams that advanced are listed in bold. The scores are listed as Total Score (Diff/Ex/Artistic)

Pool A

1. Rodney Sanchez/Roger Meier 62.2 (19.0/25.6/17.6)
2. Rainer Doerr/Dominique Weissenberger 60.1 (18.4/24.1/17.6)
3. Manuel Cesari/Andrea Poli 59.9 (18.1/23.5/18.3)
4. Jens Friebe/Andreas Jaderyd 52.4 (17.5/21.4/13.5)
5. Frank Lejuene/Michael Otte 51.0 (14.9/24.8/11.3)
6. Jacub K/Jacuk Hosek 49.2 (14.4/21.9/12.9)
7. Jan Zahradicek/Jakub Zahradicek 41.5 (8.6/20.9/12)
8. Peter Van Gool/Bram Maassen 30.2 (9.1/16.6/4.5)

Pool B

1. Valerio Occorsio/Giovanni Coppo 63.2 (17.1/25.9/20.2)
2. Dan Yarnell/Sascha Scherzinger 61.4 (18.1/25.0/18.3)
3. Filippo Cavalca/Sergio Arrighi 60.9 (16.6/24.8/19.5)
4. Steve Scannell/Z Weyand 60.1 (16.7/26.0/17.4)
5. Oren Meron/Ofek Agmon 56.7 (14.9/23.7/18.1)
6. Pavel Baranyk/Jan Struz 52.3 (11.6/25.5/15.2)
7. Matteo Ceresa/Allesandro Berra 48.6 (12.9/22.1/13.6)
8. Oliver Baczko/Marconi Serge 43.0 (10.9/19.9/12.2)
9. Paul Seifert/Dom Weber 41.9 (9.2/22.2/10.5)

Pool C

1. Jonathan Willett/Gregory Lo-A-sjoe 58.7 (18.8/25.1/14.8)
2. Skippy Jammer/Doug Korns 55.5 (17.2/24/14.3)
3. Enrico Caruso (aka Enrico Barsanti)/Fabio Caruso 51.7 (16.9/23.4/11.4)
4. Markus Goetz/Niki Thoma 50.2 (16.1/22.3/11.8)
5. Dave Bolyard/John Titcomb 42.5 (13.6/18/10.9)
6. Rafaelle Pilla/Fabrizio De Rossi 41.4 (12.8/19.3/9.3)
7. Kyrre Kristiansen/Espen Furhatt 0 (0/0/0)
8. Paul Seifert/Dominik Weber 0 (0/0/0)

Pool D

1. Ramon Galliani/Anton Capellmann 52.9 (16.9/22.4/13.6)
2. Angelo Mancarella/Carlo Perrone 51.3 (15.3/24.1/11.9)
3. Lori Daniels/Bianca Strunz 51.0 (14.1/24.5/12.4)
4. Philip Lenarz/Markus Hein 50.3 (13.8/24.9/11.6)
5. Urs Hardegger/Baba Brak 41.9 (10.9/21.7/9.3)
6. Ronny Koch/Robert Dittrich 37.9 (9.0/21.4/7.5)
7. Holger Hill/Andrea Hillmann 36.6 (10.0/18.8/7.8)

FPAW2007 Only Hours Away

The FPA World Championships begin in less than 24 hours on the beach in Amsterdam. Early reports are that this year’s field will break last year’s record of 100 competitors. The tournament should be a little less hectic this year as it has been expanded to four days because of the tidal wave of new, awesome players.
Personally, this FPAW will be difficult for me because I won’t be there. It will be the first time since 1993 that I will miss a worlds. I can’t wait to hear reports of every routine, see every photo and drool over every piece of gossip.