Coach Amelia Pierce

December 15, 2010 5:04 PM
The day of the final Quidditch match was another beautiful spring day after a string of them. Coach Amelia Pierce had worried the good weather wouldn't hold until the weekend, but the sky remained blue, the clouds white and fluffy, and the temperature comfortably warm.

She went out onto the pitch in good spirits with her whistle hanging around her neck, her broom in hand, and the box of Quidditch balls floating behind her. She dumped the box in the middle of the Pitch and flipped open its lid to reveal the Quaffle, the two restrained bludgers, and the fluttering golden snitch that tried to escape its own enclosure.

She looked over the two groups of players already gathered to hear their captains give their pre-game speeches, and then glanced up into the full stands. There were always more spectators on nice days like this than on game days cursed with miserable weather.

She straighted her own referee robes, carefully chosen to have none of the red or silver of the House she was the Head of, or any blue or black of Aladren, which, between them, disqualified the vast majority of her wardrobe. She'd eventually found a dark green set of robes that she really hoped would not get confused with a student's uniform. Lacking anything better (the ancient bronze robes that had once been her own school uniform at Salem certainly did not qualify), the dark green was what she wore now over a purple blouse and a pair of khaki pants.

She looked again at the teams, and the captains seemed to be wrapping up. "Welcome to the Quidditch Finals," she said in a magically amplified voice that carried up to the stands. "Could the captains, Thomas Fitzgerald of Aladren and Charlotte Abbott of Crotalus please shake hands." It was a request, not a question.

Once they had done so, Amelia continued, "We have a beautiful day for some Quidditch, so let's get started shall we?" She set first the snitch, then the bludgers free from the box, and then picked up the quaffle. "On my whistle the game begins. It ends with the capture of the snitch. Everyone play nice in between." She hefted the quaffle in her hand, readied her whistle, and then tossed the red ball as high into the air as she could.

Her whistle blew at the same time and the game was on.
Subthreads:
1 Coach Amelia Pierce Quidditch Final: Aladren vs Crotalus 20 Coach Amelia Pierce 1 5


<font color="red">Charlotte Abbott, Chaser</font>

December 20, 2010 12:43 PM
OOC - talk about posting at the same time! I'm going to assume each player got the quaffle in the ordet they posted - Coach if there's a problem with this let me know!

Charlie subdued the urge to rejoice externally when her pass to Sam was successful. She knew it was just a pass, and the first in the game, but every team success was worth celebrating in its own little way. Unfrotunately, if any of them stopped to cheer whenever one of them did something well, they wouldn't get very far in their game. So it was that the cpatain merely allowed herself an internal exclamation of pleasure, before continuing on up to the other end of the pitch. She passed her chaser with the quaffle, ready for him to do a leap-frog style pass back to her, when something went wrong - the Quaffle left sam's hands but seemed to find itself in possession of Thomas Fitzgerald, and going the wrong way. Huh, that wasn't such good news. She could hardly hold it against the seventh year; he had enough experience that he should be able to intercept the ball from time to time, but Charlie hated that it had to be on her watch. Reluctantly, she turned her broom, facing back the way she'd just come. She supposed this was why they were called Chasers - the central players were always chasing that Quaffle this way and that.

Not taking her eye off the Quaffle, Charlie watched as it was passed from Thomas and then - then somehow Renee had it, almost looking as if she'd caught it by accident. Or maybe instinct. Renee had been lagging behind Charlie and Sam a bit - maybe she'd just been in the right place at the right time. Whatever, Charlotte didn't care, Crotalus had the Quaffle again and it was speeding up towards Grayson, having only been diverted from this course for a brief moment. It looked to the captain like Renee might try for a goal. It seemed reasonable, the pitch that end was still fairly empty of other players and potential obstacles, and she had confidence that Renee could get a goal past Grayson. But just in case, she lowered her broom to be ready to receive a pass if it was coming.

This was why they practised so hard, Charlie thought as she caught the throw she had anticipated from her other Chaser. Renee knew she would be there, and Charlie knew to be there. Whatever the outcome of this game, or any other, for that matter, she was confident that Crotalus had the best Chasing team of any of the Sonora teams, and they had so for years. They had tactics and they worked together, not like pecaris who just yelled at each other or Tepps who seemed to just wing it. Focus, that's what Crotalus had, and that's what Grayson would need right now. Renee had feinted a shot at the left hoop, so Charlie pulled her weight to the side and aimed directly at the right hoop. It should have been enough to confuse someone with Grayson's track record, but she couldn't deny that he had been improving. She watched the Quaffle sail through the air, hoping it would score.
0 <font color="red">Charlotte Abbott, Chaser</font> Merging some posts 0 <font color="red">Charlotte Abbott, Chaser</font> 0 5

<font color="blue">Gray Wright, Keeper</font>

December 20, 2010 2:21 PM
Gray clapped happily when Thomas stole the Quaffle from between Crotalus Dude and Crotalus Girl, but quickly found, to his dismay, that he had celebrated too soon. Thomas managed to stall the Crotalus progression toward the Aladren goals, but not to stop it; somehow, they lost the ball to Small Crotalus, who appeared to be ready to try for a shot.

But he looked on the bright side. At least it was Small Crotalus, who presumably wasn’t as good as Larger Crotali. She was clearly going left, and –

Wait, what had just happened? Where was the ball?

He realized that he’d been fooled by a firstie a second too late; though he lunged for it, and got close enough that his fingertips brushed the Quaffle, all he accomplished was to knock it into the side of the goal hoop and therefore further away from him before it went through anyway. He ended up having to grab the hoop for a second to keep from falling off his broom until his lower half caught up with the upper – the game was actually affecting him; normally, he would never have even tried that move, because he’d have been smart enough to know it would mean potentially falling to his death – before swinging away from it to grab the slowly-falling Quaffle. Bless Daisy Pennifold.

It was a setback, not a loss. Charlie Abbott was good, but she was also a priority target, so surely Edmond or Devlin would put enough of the fear into her soon for her to not risk being the shooter as much, or just keep the Quaffle out of her hands enough for the whole thing not to be an issue. Heck, the Chasers could do that without backup from the Beaters. Deciding to worry about being disturbed at being able to think strategically later, Gray threw the ball back into the action, aiming, as intently as he’d ever aimed anything in his life, including jinxes in Defense class, for an Aladren Chaser.
16 <font color="blue">Gray Wright, Keeper</font> Two seconds. It must be some kind of record. 113 <font color="blue">Gray Wright, Keeper</font> 0 5


Coach Amelia Pierce

December 21, 2010 8:53 AM
[Also, nice merge, Charlie. Play on, guys.]
1 Coach Amelia Pierce Goal! 10 points to Crotalus! 20 Coach Amelia Pierce 0 5

<font color="blue">Daniel Nash II, Chaser</font>

December 21, 2010 9:19 AM
Daniel was having an off day. He hadn't thought so when he woke up, of course. His hair had conformed to its styling charms without any difficulty. The Cascade Hall was serving his favorite kind of pre-game fare - toast lightly sprinkled with cinnamon, fresh apples, and apple cider. He'd managed to largely avoid James Anthony when he had need to be in their shared dorm, and his uniform and broom were all ready to go, freshly pressed (the uniform) and well-maintained (the broom).

He even made it down to the pitch with time to spare and found the weather was nigh on near to perfect for a Quidditch game. Thomas's speech was everything he would have expected of the school's Head Boy. Then the game began and the day went to pieces.

Charlie had gotten to the Quaffle first, which wasn't the worst thing that could have happened, but even with them being so tightly packed, Daniel had failed his intercept attempt when she passed to Sam Bauer. He'd then somehow let that little twerp come out from nowhere when Thomas tried to pass to him and then he hadn't even been able to get in her way to stop her from throwing it to Charlie.

As if in punishment for all these missed chances, Gray was also forced to have as bad a Quidditch day as Daniel was having, and Aladren's Keeper was unable to block Charlie's shot.

Then Gray recovered the ball and tossed it in Daniel's direction. Fortunately, the worst of their luck seemed to be over. Daniel caught it easily, and turned his broom around, back toward the Crotalus Goals.

It was redemption time.

His broom was the best money could buy and he'd been using it for just over a year now, so he milked it for all the speed it could give him. Not daring to hold on to the ball for too long though, he passed it on to another Aladren Chaser when he was almost to the middle of the pitch.

With any luck (and surely it was Aladren's turn for some luck), his teammate would catch it without any interference.
1 <font color="blue">Daniel Nash II, Chaser</font> Gotta make up for that 130 <font color="blue">Daniel Nash II, Chaser</font> 0 5


<font color="blue">Thomas Fitzgerald,Chaser</font>

December 21, 2010 11:37 PM
His pass had fallen into the hands of a Crotalus Chaser.

His pass had fallen into the hands of a Crotalus Chaser.

Thomas was not pleased.

He became even less pleased when it proved impossible to get the ball back before the Crotalus Chaser in question appeared ready to make a move on the goals. Luckily, though not entirely unexpectedly given her age, it looked like it was going to be a straightforward shot, something Gray could block without a great deal of difficulty….

And then she tricked them. If the pass to Charlotte had come a second earlier, Thomas was sure he could have reacted and stolen the ball back at the very edge of the scoring area, but the timing was perfect. And since Thomas knew he was much quicker to notice and react to a situation than Gray was, he was sure, before it even happened, that the shot was going to make it.

It did, but he was impressed with Gray’s effort. Impressed, and a little scared. He hadn’t thought Wright had it in him; if he’d been a respectable member of society, his level of caution, on most days, would have landed in him in Crotalus for sure. Where he would have been knifed in a fortnight, tops, but that was beside the point. The Quaffle was back in play, with Daniel taking lead.

Well, good. Thomas had suspected he’d be a future captain for some time, and had been trying to subtly bring him along even before Jera’s year-jump gave him an early assistant captainship. The more practice he got at leading plays, the better; between Geoff Layne having a few issues and Paul Tarwater being more or less a walking issue, Thomas had never gotten much before he became captain, and he was sure it had hindered his overall effectiveness.

Daniel was also bold; his broom was fast, which explained some of it, but most people wouldn’t try going half the pitch in one. Thomas wasn’t complaining, though; it made it that much easier for Aladren to make up ground on the Crotali. The only players who truly mattered, as he made an effort to impress on his Beaters, were the Seekers, but still, it wouldn’t do to let people think the Crotali were better than his Chasers.

His broom wasn’t quite as good as his assistant’s, but he did his best to replicate the feat, weaving back and forth and going up and down to avoid Bludgers in case his defense didn’t manage to keep them both contained. He decided – he hoped not fatally – to pass it off after covering about three quarters of the remaining distance of the new Crotalus Keeper. As much as he’d like to be noted for such a play, his broom wasn’t as good as Daniel’s, and even if they were intercepted at this point, the Crotali cooperated very well. That meant there would be at least one chance to steal back before they even got out of their own territory, and maybe more than one. He didn’t go in for anything very fancy with the pass, instead just aiming to get it to the nearest Aladren Chaser across the shortest, most Crotalus-free distance he thought he could reasonably count on.
0 <font color="blue">Thomas Fitzgerald,Chaser</font> Yes, we do 0 <font color="blue">Thomas Fitzgerald,Chaser</font> 0 5


<font color="blue">Edmond Carey, Beater</font>

December 21, 2010 11:48 PM
Edmond decided to take the results of his first play of the game as a draw. Marissa hadn’t been disabled, but she was on the run, which would do for the moment.

Meanwhile, Crotalus had scored a goal. He frowned, disappointed. They could easily make the points up, and even if they couldn’t, Jera could override it all in a moment, but he didn’t like it when the winning team wasn’t winning before their Seeker caught the Snitch. It made all of the real action – he supposed he was still a Chaser at heart – seem irrelevant; if it was really just a contest between Jera and Marissa, why were the Chasers and Keepers even here? Beaters would still have a function, but everyone else could be off studying for their exams.

There was, of course, the obvious reason – Quidditch was a money sport outside of schools, sometimes even in them, and watching two people look for something while two other people defended each of the first two people while trying to hurt the Seeker they didn’t support would be dull. Audiences would not pay for that, so Chasers had retained their function. Edmond hated studying economics, not because he found it difficult, or because Jane, with her penchant for numbers, was better at it than he was, but because he often found it deeply depressing. Everything was about money. There was no consideration for quality or functionality or even beauty. Just money.

He wanted to hit something, just to vent his feelings for a moment. Half-trusting Devlin to cover Jera for a moment – he would keep one eye on her himself, not so much because he doubted the younger boy’s skills as because he had taken Thomas’ instruction to them both to keep her safe as a personal charge – he appraised the situation below, flew to intercept another Bludger, and hit it as hard as he could toward the Crotalus he thought was most likely to try to sabotage either a pass or the goal clearly approaching.
0 <font color="blue">Edmond Carey, Beater</font> Doing my part to help with that 0 <font color="blue">Edmond Carey, Beater</font> 0 5

<font color="blue">Daniel Nash II</font>

December 22, 2010 8:29 PM
Given Thomas's erratic course as he avoided potential bludgers and opposing Chasers, Daniel's more straightforward route got him to a position near the goals ahead of the Captain. He fell back a little as Thomas got nearer, hoping to find spot where there weren't many Crotali in the way of a pass, and soon found one.

Thomas made the throw and Daniel made the catch and it was classic. A part of his mind cheered that the bad luck was over for a second before another part of his mind battered down the first part for potentially jinxing it. Most of his thoughts, however, were on moving a little closer to the goal and lining up a shot.

It was a new kid as Keeper, but he was backed up by some of the best Chasers in the school. Since it was as much the older Crotali that he'd need to get his shot past as the tall second year, Daniel decided to try a double fake out. He made it obvious he was aiming for the center goal, then made as if to change his mind and throw it toward the left, and then, just before letting go, he changed direction again, and threw it at the right-most hoop.

And then he held his breath to see if it worked.
1 <font color="blue">Daniel Nash II</font> Keeping it up 130 <font color="blue">Daniel Nash II</font> 0 5


<font color="red">Charlotte Abbott, Chaser</font>

January 03, 2011 11:52 AM
The shot had made it! Charlie was ecstatic that Gray hadn't saved it, but then again, it had been a great pass-and-shoot. Even a Keeper with more skill than Grayson might have been thwarted, which just went to show what a great team Crotalus had. Of course, after the score, the Quaffle was in Aladren's hands, and Charlie hated it when that happened. Moreover, it was travelling down the pitch in the direction of Nic, their stand-in Keeper. It was never good to have the Quaffle going to wrong way, but when it was going the wrong way towards someone who had never played Keeper, even in practise, and Charlie thought her anxiety might be understandable.

Chasing that Quaffle down the pitch was no easy feat; even as she flew flat out on her broom, heading on to try and intercept while Reneé or Sam would hopefully hang back to catch a pass if Charlie did intercept, the Crotalus captain acknowledged that Daniel was going super fast. His broom was probably the best money could buy, considering his family background. Charlie's own broom was decent enough, and paid for by her Uncle Raymond, but it wasn't top of the league by any means. She was pushing it hard to get down the other end of the pitch before the Quaffle got anywhere neat those goals.

Keeping an eye on the red ball at all times, Charlie saw it passed to Thomas, and then back again. She was gaining on Daniel now, but was over to his side. He was gaining on the goals. He might make another pass, but he might try and shoot. charlie didn't know which was more likely, but coming in from the side she did her best to make sure it didn't happen. Planning on surging in from the side, swooping the Quaffle up just as it left Daniel's hands and taking it back up the pitch, Charlie didn't notice the Bludger coming in from her other side until it was close enough to mess up her plans. It was one of those moments where time seems to stand still for a short while, as if it wants to give you space to make the right decision. Already on her course to intercept, Charlie continued on, praying that metal ball wouldn't catch up with her.

Mentally crossing her fingers, Charlie watched the ball leave Daniel's hand, stretched out her own arm to curl it in, and then she found herself being flipped uncontrolably through the air as the Bludger made contact with the back of her broom. Returning her hand to the handle to cling on for dear life while she waited for her broom to stop spinning, Charlie knew she'd touched the Quaffle, that she'd hit it out of the way. She didn't hold onto it, though, and now it was probably falling towards the ground. She wasn't sure she'd done much to improve the situation, and she might have damaged her broom into the bargain. Where had her Beaters been? She was going to kill the pair of them.
0 <font color="red">Charlotte Abbott, Chaser</font> Keeping it interesting 0 <font color="red">Charlotte Abbott, Chaser</font> 0 5


Jera Valson, Aladren Seeker

January 03, 2011 3:35 PM
Quidditch could be repetetive if you played it too often. look for the Snitch, catch the Snitch. Then again, look for the Snitch, catch the Snitch. Luckily, Jera enjoyed the flying, and especially on a beautiful day like this. So long as she avoided the Bludgers, all the had to do was fly around and catch the ball before Marissa. There was no better way to spend her weekend, really. As for those Bludgers, they seemed to be coming after Marissa, rather than Aladren's Seeker. Looks like her team's Beaters were pulling their strength on the pitch today. Unfortunately, the Cotalus Chasers seemed to be pulling theirs, too. Not that Jera was playing a huge amount of attention to the game (she was supposed to be looking for the Snitch, after all) but she heard the crowds and the whistle and the announcement that Crotalus had scored. Poor Gray, he tried so hard in practises, and Jera knew he'd gotten so much better recently. She knew he'd catch the next one (she was assuming there would be a next one because the Crotalus Chasers really did seem to have things sorted).

Then again, maybe there wouldn't be another one. It seemed unlikely that she'd see the Snitch on her first glimpse so early on in the game, but Jera could have sworn she'd just seen a tiny golden ball fluttering over the other side of the pitch. unfortunately, from where they were both positioned, if jera went sraight to the Snitch now, Marissa would definitely see her. Jera had to rely on her skills and experience here if she wanted to win the game; the Crotalus Seeker was good, but Jera knew she was better.

Keeping half an eye on the other Seeker, and her ears open to Bludgers, Jera kept the majority of her focus on that shimmering gold at the other side of the pitch, and she carefully made her way over to it, trying her very best to look like she was still searching so Marissa wouldn't see it. However, there was only so long she could keep this up. the Snitch might move, Marissa might see it anyway and make a dash for it - she was still closer. Choosing her moment carefully, Jera suddenly laid flat on her broom, urging it forward as fast as humanly possible. She knew it would oly be a matter of time before the other Seeker was alerted, so she really had to get to the Snitch as fast as she could. She could still see it, taunting and gold and glittery, becoming ever closer and clearer in her vision. Her heartbeat was so fast and hard it was pounding in her chest, making her feel sick with the exhileration. She reached out her arm, leant even further forward on her broom, preparing herself from the catch. She was terrified that any moment she would be ambushed by Bludgers, or Mariisa's hand would appear in her vision and squash her dream flat.

None of these things happened. Jera's fingers touched the Snitched, her hand closed over it, her fist closed round it, and she tugged her broom handle to soar right up into the sky, momentarily forgetting about the Bludgers, with her fist held high above her head as she let out a victorious whoop for the Aladren team.
0 Jera Valson, Aladren Seeker I'll meet that interest, and raise you a win. 0 Jera Valson, Aladren Seeker 0 5


Coach Amelia Pierce

January 03, 2011 4:50 PM
 
1 Coach Amelia Pierce Aladren Wins! 150-10 (nm) 20 Coach Amelia Pierce 0 5