123 Four Seasons Hat 2014 Winter Edition

The athletes of 1234 Seasons Hat - Winter 2014 Edition

123 Four Seasons Hat 2014 Winter Edition
Berlin, Germany
February 15-16, 2014

Finals
1. Wu Wunder/Freddy Finner (39,3)
2. Fabio Caruso/Stephan Dünkel (37,7)
3. Philipp Krüger/James Wiseman (34,1)
4. Marc Pestotnik/Andrea Rimatori (33,3)
5. Mehrdad Hosseinian/Gregor Marter (29,7)
6. Tom Goltz/Jan Schreck (29,3)
7. Robert Fried/Bianca Stunz (28,7)
8. Markus Hein/Sascha Höhne (27,8)

Semi A
1. Andrea Rimatori/Mark Pestotnik (34,8)
2. Philipp Krüger/James Wiseman (32,1)
3. Markus Hein/Sascha Höhne (26,7)
4. Jan Schreck/Tom Goltz (26,6)
5. Fabrizio Nizzo/Jean Marie Abel (26,4)
6. Kolja Hannemann/Benjamin Edelmann (25,8)
7. Thomas Nötzel/Ilka Simon (19,7)

Semi B
1. Fabio Caruso/Stephan Dünkel (36,9)
2. Wu Wunder/Freddy Finner (34,2)
3. Mehrdad Hosseinian/Gregor Marter (33,4)
4. Robert Fried/Bianca Strunz (31,7)
5. Tobi Künzel/Irena Kulisanova (30,3)
6. Anton Capellmann/Tim Pattberg (28,2)
7. Jan Sörensen/Fabian Dinklage (new/GER) (26,2)

Frisbeer Cup 2014

Frisbeer Cup 2014
Prague, Czech Republic
February 8-9, 2014

Open Pairs Final
1. Jake Gauthier/Matt Gauthier (45,9) [video]
2. Pavel Baranyk/Marco Prati (44,1) [video]
3. Mehrdad Hosseinian/Randy Silvey (43,5) [video]
4. Ryan Young/Paul Kenny (43,1) [video]
5. Manuel Cesari/Christian Lamred (42,9) [video]
6. Balu Major/Fabio Sanna (42,5) [video]
7. James Wiseman/Tom Leitner (39,5) [video]
8. Florian Hess/Alex Leist (38,8) [video]

Open Co-op Final
1. Paul Kenny/James Wiseman/Daniel O´Neill (46,4) [video]
2. Tom Leitner/Fabio Sanna/Jason Salkey (46,0) [video]
3. Ryan Young/Sasha Hohne/Emmanuele Faustini (40,3) [video]
4. Alex Leist/Florian Hess/Merdi Hossenian (39,4) [video]
5. Matt Gauthier/Marco Prati/Jiří Weiss (38,9) [video]
6. Randy Silvey/Manuel Cesari/Jake Gauthier (37,6) [video]
7. Balu Major/Freddy Finner/Christian Lamred (36,9) [video]
8. Stephan Dünkel/Philipp Lenarz/Philipp Krüger (33,0) [video]
9. Rob Fried/Jan Schreck/Thomas Nötzel (29,3) [video]

Mixed Pairs Final
1. Emma Kahle/Pavel Baranyk (43,8) [video]
2. Ilka Simon/James Wiseman (38,7) [video]
3. Bianca Strunz/Freddy Finner (37,6) [video]
4. Irena Kulišanova/Paul Kenny (36,9) [video]
5. Anna Bragagnolo/Emmanuele Faustini (36,7) [video]
6. Martina Solařová/Lukáš Lacina (29,5) [video]
Continue reading “Frisbeer Cup 2014”

New FPA Judging System Announcement

Dear FPA Members (Jammers),

What started almost 5 years ago has finally come to an end – the revision of the judging system. Freestyle Disc is a sport with many facets and passionate players each of whom have their own perspectives about how judging should work. This, together with a very detailed, thorough and democratic process (according to the FPA judging system changes process rules) and the fact that all members of the judging committee* are volunteers and come from different time-zones contributed to the long process time. I’m a bit sorry for that, but on the other hand I’m also convinced/proud of what we did and I hope that our hard work will result in an improved judging system that meets with the needs of competitive freestyle play. Be assured that we always tried to act in the best interest of the sport and that many decisions made were the best compromise between all numerous valid arguments presented to the committee as well as pragmatic considerations like financial, time and human resources at tournaments.

Based on your initial input in 2009 we had set three overarching goals the last of which we probably accomplished the least due to the many facets and complex nature of Freestyle Disc:

– Encourage diverse, risky and innovative styles of play;
– Make judging more fair;
– Make judging less demanding.

The new judging system will be active 6 weeks after publication/now, starting Monday the 19th March 2014. It will be implemented tentatively for 15 months from that point on. This means that after 15 months, all changes will be reviewed again and one-by-one accepted, dismissed or adapted. The FPA board will form a new committee for this. Please collect your feedback about the new system for the 15 month implementation time-period and share it when the FPA board asks you to do so (of course, you can start discussions anytime and anywhere before this, but then there’s no guarantee that your thoughts will be considered for the review in that case).

The hyperlinks below lead you to the new judging documents and explanations about them (I recommend to read the explanations first!). Please note that the format, numbering and wording of the documents (but not the content!) is still subject to changes until March the 19th. I wanted to post them quickly, so you can read them before Frisbeer in Prague and ask me questions there. The explanations are based on a proposal for changes to the previous judging system that the committee had published on Shrednow.com in 2012. Jammers had the opportunity to give feedback to this, based on which the committee accepted, dismissed and fine-tuned their proposal. The results were then accepted by the FPA board (majority vote per item):

Explanations about the judging system changes, including:
1. Artistic Impression
2. Difficulty
3. Execution
4. The Bonuses
5. Crossing out high and low scores
6. Judging Education

All explanations as a PDF file

The new judging documents:
Judging system manual (PDF)
Judging sheets (XLS)
Variety checklist (PDF)
Difficulty mp3 audio files (3 minute | 4 minute | 5 minute)

* Many thanks to Lori Daniels, Claudio Cigna, Rodney Sanchez and Jan Zahradnicek for all those endless hours of dedicated and competent work. It was really a pleasure working with you!!!
And thanks to Arthur and the FPA board for their support, too!

Best regards,

Philipp (a.k.a. Sleepy Jammer)

Housseinian and Wiseman Win Jingle-JIK 2013

2013 Jingle-JIK
Cologne, Germany
December 22-23, 2013

Finals

1. Mehrdad Hosseinian/James Wiseman (42.8)
2. Freddy Finner/Alex Leist (42.1)
3. Sascha Höhne/Dan Lustiger (36.4)
4. Philipp Krüger/Harald Skomroch (34.0)
5. Tim Pattberg/Waldemar Wagner (31.6)
6. Johanna Matthia/Ilka Simon (30.6)

Semi A

1. Mehrdad Hosseinian/James Wiseman (43.1)
2. Tim Pattberg/Waldemar Wagner (38.9)
3. Philipp Krüger/Harald Skomroch (37.1)
4. Irena Kulisanova/Toby Künzel (36.9)
5. Naim Megassabi/Pepyn Tavernier (29.4)
6. Udo Engeter/Jan Zverina (26.0)

Semi B

1. Freddy Finner/Alex Leist (45.6)
2. Sascha Höhne/Dan Lustiger (42.2)
3. Johanna Matthia/Ilka Simon (41.3)
4. Benjamin Edelmann/Nico Schwarz (36.6)
5. Jonathan Kriss/Andreas Nogay (25.2)
6. Chris Bellaj/Ian Schwarz (21.7)

German language event recap

FPAW 1988: Incredible Video Treasure Chest

Stefan Karlsson and Rob Fried opened up their archives this month and treated us to hours of video from the 1988 FPA World Championships in Santa Barbara. Aside from the privilege of seeing legends like Chip Bell and Joey Hudoklin at arguably the peaks of their game, we get a chance to see some magical freestyle from the late Mika Nordman, the mythical Hal Erickson and Konn Cummings plus many others. FPAW 1988 is notable as Dave Murphy’s first world championships, and it looks like he came mighty close to winning the co-op title (with Dave Schiller and Joel Rogers) in his first try.

The 1988 FPA World Champions

Open Pairs: Chip Bell/Joey Hudoklin
Open Co-op: Larry Imperiale/Skippy Jammer/Tom Leitner
Women’s Pairs: Stacy Anderson/Carolyn Yabe
Mixed Pairs: Kate Dow/Dave Schiller

Videos from Stefan Karlsson

Jams

Mike Cloud made a great observation on Facebook about these jams: “In many ways its more informative to watch the masters warming up, than to watch their tournament routines.” So true.

Joey Hudoklin, Bob Coleman, Dave Schiller, Ritchie Smitz, Randy Silvey
Joey Hudoklin, Rick Castiglia
Joey Hudoklin, Konn Cummings, Adrian Wainwright , Ritchie Smits, Jamie Chantiles
Joey Hudoklin, Chip Bell, Dave Zeff
Joey Hudoklin, Mike Nordman, Chip Bell

Open Pairs Final

1. Chip Bell/Joey Hudoklin
(remaining order of finish not known)
Skippy Jammer/Tom Leitner
Doug Branigan/Rick Castiglia
Larry Imperiale/Bill Wright
Craig Burris/Mike Connaway
Tristan Doshier/Steve Hanes
Ritchie Smits/Dave Zeff
Bob Coleman/Dave Schiller

Continue reading “FPAW 1988: Incredible Video Treasure Chest”

Aichi Flying Disc Tourment 2013

Aichi Flying Disc Tournament 2013
Chubu University, Aichi, Japan http://goo.gl/maps/fc13h
December 1,2013
AIFDA

The Aichi Flying Disc Tournament was an overall tournament that included Distance, Accuracy, SCF and Freestyle. It may have been the first tournament in Japan to have a mixed pairs freestyle division.

Open
1.Yutaka Harashina/Masaki Hirashima
2.Kimitoshi Murakami/Ryuichi Suzuki
3.Hiroyuki Takeuchi/Takahiko Yamamoto/Hiroshi Oguri

Mixed Pairs
1.Ryuichi Suzuki/Mayumi Suzuki(f)
2.Tomokazu Yamamoto/Yukari Komatsu(f)
3.Masaki Hirashima/Aya Ichikawa(f)
*female marks (f) after the names.

Amateur
1.Naoki Maeda/Tomoyuki Matsuki
2.Yutaro Hirasawa/Keisuke Watanabe

Why I Love the 2013 Beach Stylers Judging System

There was a judging experiment this year at Beach Stylers, and I loved it.

The Beach Stylers judging system was a simplified version of the FPA system. Two panels of judges scored routines. The first panel handled Execution and Artistic Impression. The second panel handled Difficulty. Key changes across the board created a competition that served our sport by rewarding ambitious play.

Execution
Penalties for mistakes were reduced and collapsed into fewer deduction categories. With 0.2 as the worst penalty for any mistake, taking risks got very attractive.

Difficulty
Difficulty was scored by phrase. Normally this doesn’t affect risk incentive because the easier, transitional phrases mute the effect of the peak moments. At Beach Stylers, only the top 10 phrases counted, creating an incentive to go bigger and bigger. Every time a team replaced a weaker move with a stronger one, their mark went up noticeably. Combined with the reduced penalties from execution deductions, the top 10 approach encouraged players to pushing their limits.

Artistic Impression
AI was simplified but touched enough elements to measure the performance while not being a burden. With the added responsibility of judging Execution, it was helpful for AI judges to track fewer subcategories.

Linking Execution/Artistic Impression
In the Beach Stylers system, the AI score and the Ex scores are multiplied together. This is a cool approach to reducing the skewed impact AI and Ex traditionally have on the final score and preserving the importance of Difficulty. Here’s how it works. AI/Ex can contribute a maximum of 50 points to the score. Let’s say a team maxes out in AI for 50 points (10 x 5 subcategories). But they have 3 drops. That would result in an Ex score of 9.4 and an Ex multiplier of 0.94 (Ex score divided by 10). The AI/Ex score is 50 x 0.94 or 47 points.

This is a reversal of the scoring dynamic from the FPA system where AI adds points to the score and Difficulty is locked in a narrow averaged range. At Beach Stylers, Difficulty was unleashed by the top 10 approach, allowing teams to add to their score in a tangible way every time they replaced a weaker top 10 combination. Meanwhile, AI/Ex stayed in a solid range, generating modest distinctions between teams. Teams that sacrificed difficulty for AI were likely to be hurt more than teams that sacrificed a AI for difficulty. That said, I saw a team or two lose points by not addressing AI.

The Judging Experience
I judged only AI/Ex, and it wasn’t taxing. Cooperation among judges helped to minimize Execution tracking errors. It’s possible to judge AI without taking many notes, so focusing on Execution marks while taking in the whole performance felt relatively effortless.

Let’s Do This More Often
This judging approach is a breath of fresh air. Like the turboshred approach, it incentivizes state-of-the-art freestyle play. It unleashes us. It’s an engraved invitation to step up. Turboshred has a presumption of mistakes that the general public understands. That’s not usually the case in team play. Beach Stylers addresses this by including enough incentive for cleaner and cooperative play to be fun for the general public to see. Let’s try this approach to competition more often!

Lazzaroni 2013

Lazzaroni 2013
Bologna, Italy
November 23-24, 2013

Final
1. Andrea Meola/Valerio Occorsio (40.8) [video]
2. Clay Collera/Andrea Dini (40.0) [video]
3. Manuel Cesari/James Wiseman (39.7) [video]
4. Mehrdad Hosseinian/Dan Lustiger (37.1) [video]
5. Gloria Alessandrini/Marco Prati (34.7) [video]
6. Piccio Cusma/Andrea Poli (34.6) [video]
7. Luca Mazzucato/Andrea Rimatori (34.3) [video]
8. Emanuelle Faustini/Fabrizio Nizzo (31.2) [video]

Semi A
1. Clay Collera/Andrea Dini (44.7) [video]
2. Piccio Cusma/Andrea Poli (43.4) [video]
3. Emanuelle Faustini/Fabrizio Nizzo (40.0) [video]
4. Luca Mazzucato/Andrea Rimatori (38.2) [video]
5. Sascha Höhne/Freddy Finner (36.9) [video]
6. Marco Fera/Andrea Sarti (33.6) [video]
7. Andrea Marciano/Lorenzo Modarelli (33.5) [video part 1 | video part 2]
8. Gianluca Giglio/Mirco Zanchetta (31.9) [video]

Semi B
1. Mehrdad Hoseinian/Dan Lustiger (41.8) [video]
2. Gloria Alessandrini/Marco Prati (39.1) [video]
3. Andrea Meola/Valerio Occorsio (38.8) [video]
4T*. Manuel Cesari/James Wiseman (38.7) [video]
4T. Andrea Girodo/Fabrizio Nicco (38.7)
6T. Edoardo Gargano/Andrea Ludergnani (28.1) [video]
6T. Marco Chessa/Francesco Lucci (28.1) [video]
8. Dario Marinoni/Lorenzo Telo (24.0) [video]

* tiebreak

Prelims A
1. Andrea Marciano/Lorenzo Modarelli (37.6)
2. Andrea Girodo/Fabrizio Nicco (35.2)
3. Gianluca Giglio/Mirco Zanchetta (32.2)
4. Dario Marinoni/Lorenzo Telo (26.9)
5. Gianluca Bertoncelli/Simone Nonnis (25.8)
6. Anna Bragagnolo/Andrea Pecchiari (23.9)

Prelims B
1. Luca Mazzucato/Andrea Rimatori (38.5)
2. Marco Fera/Andrea Sarti (33.6)
3. Marco Chessa/Francesco Lucci (33.1)
4. Edoardo Gargano/Andrea Ludergnani (27.5)
5. Roberto Borghesi/Raffaele Pilla (24.9)

Mob Op

1. Mehrdad Hosseinian (13 Votes)
2. Valerio Occorsio (11 Votes)
3. Manuel Cesari & Freddy Finner(10 Votes)
4. Marco Prati (7)
5. Sascha Hohne (6)
6. Andrea Poli (5)
7. Dan Lustiger (4)
8. Luca Mazzucato, Emanuele Faustini, James Wiseman (3)
9. Andrea Marcianò, Raffaele Pilla, Silvia Caruso, Paolo Magni, Clay Collerà, Gianluca Giglio, Fabrizio Nicco, Andrea Rimatori (2)
10. Lorenzo Modarelli, Fabio Nizzo, Anna Bragagnolo, Andrea Meola, Mirco Zanchetta, Lorenzo Telò, Marco Chessa, Andrea Pecchiari, Andrea Girodo, Gloria Allessandrini (1)