NexGen Showcase

 A week after kicking off our 2012 domestic campaign at the Emerald City Classic, we again had the opportunity of hosting the NexGen Tour in a San Francisco showcase at Kezar Stadium. We had all been looking forward to this game – there aren’t many chances in ultimate to play in front of a large home crowd, and we had really enjoyed the experience last summer. NexGen puts on a crowd-pleasing show, and the whole tour is doing great things for the sport, increasing involvement and making it more exciting and fan-friendly.

    It would be a fun night, no doubt – but we also knew the college stars would bring a strong game, too. Their roster is filled with elite players at the college and club level, and after 11 games and nearly a month of traveling they had developed the cohesion that turns a group of players into a team and earned wins over top-level competition (e.g. Doublewide, Ironside) in the process.  On our side, injuries and travel meant that we were missing many important players, including Mac Taylor, Russell Wynne, Joel Schlachet, Eric Greenwood, Sam Kanner, and Tom James (who unfortunately tweaked his hamstring in the warmup). Our goal for the game was to raise our intensity and focus as we ramped back up from our worlds break.
    RSD commenter “joaqman” was spot-on with his “bold prediction – it will be colder than anyone expects” – SF lived up to its reputation of being cold and foggy even in late August, and there was a moderate swirly breeze at field level.

Revolver vs. NexGen All-Stars, 10-15

    The wind made for some early turnovers, with our O line working it to the goal line before a floaty dump gave NexGen the disc – which they promptly gave back with a drop. Both o-lines held for the first few points, with NexGen looking particularly sharp deep while we successfully worked it up on shorter throws. At 3-2, a backfield drop gave our defense its first taste of the disc, but we were unable to convert and the all-stars scored on another deep shot with two open receivers. Our offense tried to answer back with deep shots, but NexGen did a great job of poaching off our stack cutters and helping deep and we did a very poor job of seeing these poaches, which led to throws into double or triple coverage and a number of turns. NexGen continued to punish deep on turns, and they broke twice to 5-3. We got a break back off of a deep turnover, then traded to 7-6, after a long Revolver defensive stand with lots of good defense and numerous opportunities to score but unfortunately no joy – our defensive line really suffered from our missing handler corps. Another poach deep d and huck gave the visitors the break into half, 8-6.

    Coming out of half, we knew we had work to do on defense to be prepared for their deep shots, work their handlers and convert when we had the disc. We started well, quickly converting a dump turnover and a risky hammer look into two breaks thanks to better down-field defense taking away options and excellent cutting by Pat Baylis and Beau Kittredge. At 8-8, we earned another turnover, but a great layout point block in the backfield by Philip Haas gave NexGen a quick escape and brought our offensive line back out. Coming out of halftime strong, we thought we were back in the game – but the college all-stars were unfazed and responded in turn, earning three straight breaks back on us. We had several uncharacteristic turns – again, missing deep help, not seeing poachers – but NexGen also played great defense and had a very effective deep game on the turn, with throwers putting up shots that normally we wouldn’t expect to see thrown and athletic receivers coming down with them. We traded for two sets but were broken again to end the game, 15-10 NexGen.

    It’s always disappointing to lose in a showcase match, especially with friends and fans watching, but this was a good reminder of the value of practice and of how much work we need to be putting in to be successful in the club series. It’s always nice to have room for improvement… see you at Labor Day!

Semifinals vs. Canada, a classic matchup

Semifinals brought the matchup we had been looking forward to since last October – Team Canada, two-time reigning WUGC world champions.  With a large Furious George contingent (along with GOAT players and others making it through tryouts) featuring some well known faces, we had no doubts about what we were going up against.  There was some strategizing to be done and matchups to be set, but for the most part we were focused on our mental and emotional preparations ahead of the semi.


Team USA vs. Canada, 17-16 (stats)
    Like several of our earlier games, we started off a little soft against TC.  Our D was unable to get more than a hand on the disc against their O line over their first few points.  Meanwhile, the Canadians capitalized quickly on two turns from Adam “Chicken” Simon, one off a big open side foot block by Andy Collins, to grab an early lead.
At 7-5 Canada, however, suffocating pressure on their handlers from  Mark Sherwood, Tom James,  and Sam Kanner started to pay off, forcing turns and tight throws.  Martin Cochran got a nice layout D under and a missed huck from Oscar Pottinger led to two USA breaks and brought us back on serve.  Our offense really started to click here, with a great Cahill-Wiseman deep shot to tie it at 7.  We couldn’t punch in the break for half, but at 8-8 Robbie Cahill gave a lesson in boxing out with a great catch on a blading huck, and we took half a few throws later.
    We knew it wasn’t enough – we were back to even but had much more work to do.  Out of half we kept up the pressure, shutting down their cutters and working hard to break up their handler motion.  Short field turns led to two more breaks and some momentum for Team USA.
On an unfortunate note, a full-speed collision between Zach Travis and Brendan Wong after the pull at 9-8 knocked the Canadian cutter out for the remainder of the game.  Two shots from Cahill to Kittredge got us two more O points and set us up to get a third break and the 15-12 lead.  After a Canada timeout, the D line worked a long point with chances for both teams, but a deep D by John Hassell got the disc back and the Canadians finally got the goal.
    Team Canada was down late, but far from out of it.  Coming back down in their zone, USA was able to gain yardage but not finish off their points – an end zone turf and a mis-timed jump on an upline cut to the end zone and Canada was able to strike deep for two quick goals and bring it to 15-14.  Our offense finally punched it in to come within one goal of finals but our defense failed to finish it off – leaving us with two chances to win on offense.  Again we worked it patiently to twenty yards out, but a dump miscommunication led to yet another quick deep strike for a Canada break.  Double game point – seven on the line, everyone else pacing the sidelines with nerves on edge.  Again we marched it up the field, and again our O was held up just outside the goal.  A discussion over a contested stall/fast count was tense, but good spirit prevailed, and Beau worked the throw and go dump swing with Cahill for the clinching goal.
    Like our game against the Aussies, this was a well fought game that lived up to our highest expectations for world-class play  We were somewhat drained after the tight finish that perhaps we thought we were going to avoid, but still happy to celebrate our berth in the finals:
Great Britain, tomorrow, 11pm PST. Big thanks to all our supporters and fans, both local and online – see you there!

Power Pools, Day 2

After the jersey swap night at the fields, a late dinner, and a quick team meeting to prep for our last two power pool games, we went to sleep with our 1-2 matchup against Australia on our minds. We knew that it would be a dogfight, and we hoped to use the challenge to hit that next gear in our quest for the championship. It had taken us a few points to get in rhythm against Sweden the day before, and so we also wanted to focus on doing what we needed to start strong.

Team USA vs. Australia, 17-16 (stats)
A tall and athletic team that plays a more US style of ultimate – vert stack, looking to their strong downfield cutters – the Aussies had played a close game against Sockeye a week before the tournament and were undefeated going into this game. There was a swirly breeze in the stadium and an occasional drizzle.
On their first few offensive points, our D was able to force some 50-50 shots, but the Dingoes were great in the air and were able to pull them down. On D, their tough zone and poachy man defense forced some bad throws from our handlers in the wind, and they were able to capitalize and score two early breaks. Our defense turned up the pressure and started generating turns, but our throws weren’t sharp enough and we were left still looking for our first break. Our offense was taking risky shots, but great deep catches by Robbie Cahill and Bart Watson did lead to a few efficient points. At 8-6, after an offensive hold, our d-line finally collected itself and punched in a break, and on the next point Mark Sherwood got a nifty point block-catch leading to a quick score. We put in a strong line to break for half and, after getting the disc, Tom James found John Levy for the important goal.
We had clawed back into the lead from our first half hole, but the Aussies had much more left to give – two quick breaks out of half on backfield turnovers, including an uncharacteristic drop from Cahill, and we were right back in the thick of it. Our defense earned them back to give us a 14-12 lead, but the Aussies connected on great hucks on both O and D and were resilient the entire game through. When we broke, they stopped our runs and broke right back, showing their great spirit and determination – and following this trend, the Dingoes rattled off another two late breaks to snatch a 15-14 lead, continuing to get lots of space open deep and capitalizing on a bevy of offensive drops and misthrows.
A quick deep shot to Beau put our d back out, and Kurt Gibson came up with a big sky d but had to leave the game with a knee injury on the landing, and our d still could not convert. At 16-15, Adam Simon got the disc back after another turn with a layout D on an upline dump cut, and Beau found tons of space deep to bring it to double game point. Australia worked it well to 20 yards out, and threw a bladey hammer to the end zone to a laying out Dingo who saw it bounce off his fingers. Sherwood threw up a hanging deep shot to a crowd, but it was tipped over and into the hands of a bidding Sam Kanner, rewarding his hustle in trailing the play and securing the victory for Team USA.
Full credit to Australia for the best game we’ve had in a long time – as Kittredge said in the circle afterwards, they kept us in a corner for the entire game, punched back even stronger when we struck, and were at least as deserving of victory as us, if not more. Cheers to them for a very spirited and fair game as well. Tom James picked up MVP honors for his efforts on defense while Simon (predictably) gave our awards to the Aussie handling crew for their great play.
A gritty victory for Team USA – one leaving a bad taste in our mouths, as it exposed a number of weaknesses on both sides of the disc, but a win nonetheless. Drops and throwaways on O (Bart Watson was a particularly notable offender) were punished, and our D struggled with the Aussie deep game and with moving the disc after the turn. Still, we improved as the game progressed, had a number of great plays, and were able to grind out a tight game under pressure, and the experience should serve us well later in the tournament. As Dutchy reminded us, “Every victory, perfect or imperfect, is a success.”

Team USA vs. France, 17-6 (stats)
Our last game of power pools was against the French team. At this point in the tournament injuries have started to thin our ranks – Mac Taylor, Cassidy Rasmussen, Kurt Gibson, and Russell Wynne were all sitting for this game (we hope to see them all back in action ASAP). After our morning experience, we hoped to use this game to shape up our offense, creating and using space and working our resets more effectively. Our offense was able to piece apart the French zone early on, and our defense came out playing hard man D after a gauntlet warmup and earned breaks off of layout in-cut D’s by Tom James and Martin Cochran, among others. Although the offense did get broken back once off a deep throw Beau was baiting, we were able to break our trend of going down early. The emotional intensity of our Australian game took its toll here, and while we were playing hard, we were not as focused or engaged on the sidelines. Still, we took half 9-3 and continued our pressure in the second half to win 17-6. Guillaume Espitia, #0 for France, took MVP for his offensive work in scoring three goals, while the French handed out pins bearing le coq sportif to our team (finally us non-MVPs have something to take home with us!).

All in all, a challenging and at times frustrating day for Team USA, but also filled with some of the most exciting ultimate we’ve been a part of so far – and at the end of it, two wins in the book is nothing to be unhappy about. As elimination games begin, we can only work to continue rising!