The Coach

January 10, 2020 4:20 AM
“Good morning” the coach greeted, as all those who had signed up for Quidditch assembled on the pitch. It was, by most standards, a fairly decent day, though those who were used to warmer climates probably felt there was an edge to the air. The key thing though, for a day that would be spent flying, was the visibility and the wind conditions. In this, nature had favoured them; the sky was overcast, which was preferable as it reduced glare, and meant no one was blinded when looking in a particular direction, and the wind was basically at zero. That would do a lot to keep them from becoming too cold as well as not throwing off their passes or making flying more challenging than it needed to be.

“Okay, welcome to try outs! I’m very excited that we’ve got more than enough people to field a full team here, and enough people who are flexible about what they want to play,” the coach smiled. Admittedly, a lot of that flexibility came from barely having ridden a broom and not being sure what they were getting themselves in for. But it was important to remain on the bright side, and also set the tone for what this team was going to be like - one that did not judge but encouraged.

“As a team, we’re strongest when we work together to make each other better. It’s not about any one player, so I want to see lots of co-operation and helping everyone find their space here. You’re not competing with each other - you are competing with other teams. So you need to lift up your teammates and make this a side full of really strong players, so we’re always fielding good options.

“As you know, we will be travelling around playing different matches with other small school teams. We also have an exciting opportunity coming up. There’s going to be a Quidditch fair down in the local town towards the end of term. The details are still being finalised, but these events typically involve demonstration matches or flying shows, which are well worth watching to get an idea of the game at a high level. There’s also sometimes workshops or coaching opportunities. Scouts for different leagues and summer camps also often attend events like this. We’ve been asked if we’d be interested in being part of some events. Possibly a small scale match or maybe offering a flying demonstration. So, whilst today will be tryouts for the team, I’ll also be looking at your skills to think about what ways we might offer to participate. That will, of course, be completely voluntary. A small school show is unlikely to draw a crowd any bigger than your games, but I do understand if people don’t want to be part of it.

“We’re going to start with a jog and a stretch to warm up. The run will include a Seeker trial. The Seeker is the player that searches for a small, golden ball. Its capture ends the match and earns one hundred and fifty points for the team,” the coach reminded them, “Anyone who is interested in Seeker, raise your hand?” The coach assigned a colour to each person who did so. “There are coloured flags placed at intervals around the pitch, anywhere between ground level and head height on the front of the stands. Whilst you do your warm up lap, you need to keep an eye out for your flag - and your flag only - and collect it as you go past.

“Once we are warmed up, anyone interested in Chaser, Keeper or Beater will be doing some ball skills on the ground,” they would run through a reminder of what each position entailed, then do some basic passes, plus aiming at a hoop some distance away, blocking the hoops for Keepers, and hitting some small balls that the coach would enchant to fly at them for the Beaters. After that, they would do some agility flying, and repeat most of the same exercises in the air, with a broader search for the Seekers. That, however, seemed like enough information to be going on with for now.

“On my whistle, get moving.”

OOC - welcome to tryouts. You may post your character attempting any of the activities listed above. You may god-mod the coach slightly if needed. Places on the team will be determined by both IC and OOC factors - the In Character team will be made up of the most experienced players, who the school would logically choose. The OOC team will reflect those who have contributed the best to try outs. In the events of matches being posted, the OOC team will be given priority (e.g. an excuse will be made that an IC first string player was sick, so that a player who is a more reliable poster can participate in the match). Ask on the OOC or in Chatzy if you have any questions. If you are signed up, it will be assumed you came to try outs whether you post or not, but your chances of being on the OOC team are increased by posting.
Subthreads:
13 The Coach Quidditch Try Outs 0 The Coach 1 5

Evelyn Stones

January 12, 2020 8:12 PM
Evelyn had spent her summer running. She ran everyday, building up to several miles in one go. She had always enjoyed running, but the rocky coastal town she grew up in was hardly suited to such endeavors and she'd become more adept at climbing as a result. At Ness', Evelyn could finally run. She could also train. As much as she enjoyed running just for the sake of it, and enjoyed the muscle and definition that came with that, she also knew she wanted to play Quidditch again. Flying a broom around town was impossible, but practicing throwing and kicking and dodging and shooting were all doable. She had flattened a fair number of soccer balls and basket balls with her efforts.

Still, it was flying that she was best at. She could run for miles, but she could fly circles around some of her classmates. She was certainly not the best flyer, a fact which was emphasized when Eden Manager joined the group trying out for Seeker and solidified that Evelyn would not have gotten it even if she'd wanted to, but she was a good one. And for a Chaser, that would have to do.

Evelyn had participated in flying activities for the concert a few years previously and she was excited by the prospect of joining some in-town entertainment one week, as well as getting to watch some herself. But she had to get on the team for the former of those, so that's what she focused on. She'd worn her hair up in a ponytail, and had athletic leggings and a sweatshirt on. A tank top was on underneath that just in case it was warm enough or in cause she became warm enough. Her sports bra was on underneath and it still boggled her mind that she was in a part of life where she needed to think of such things.

Stretching gave her time to focus on getting her head clear, but she knew that wouldn't really happen until she began. When it was time to start running, and then to start doing drills, and then to start flying, Evelyn was ready. Sweat poured in her eyes but she kept going, and it was the best she'd performed at such activities that she could remember. It was nice to know that she wasn't so vulnerable anymore, and she felt powerful when she managed to throw a Quaffle through one of the hoops from several yards away, dodging the Keeper that was there. At some point, she realized she was grinning, and a happy laugh bubbled up between activities.

"I love this," she said, breathing hard and bouncing from one foot to the other; it was impossible to keep still at this point.
22 Evelyn Stones I have learned to love the chase. 1422 0 5

Tatiana Vorontsova

January 16, 2020 10:21 AM
I listen too much to people.

This was Tatiana's main thought as she walked down to the Quidditch Pitch. She had intended, after all, to just keep her head down for the remainder of her school career. She had known that it was socially safer to stick mostly to her friends, where she could be assured that she would be seen for herself rather than through the veil of her English, and that it would also be a better academic decision. Focusing on her academics was...well, she had no idea what she would use passing scores on the theory halves of her Advanced classes for, as she did not really want to attend university in English even if her parents would allow such a thing instead of laughing and assuming she was telling a joke, but she enjoyed achieving things. She enjoyed proving she could do it.

However, Ness had put the idea of returning to Quidditch in her head, and here she was. And, as she looked over the general pickings, she had to admit that she couldn't say that she was utterly unneeded. There were a lot of very small people here, first years, who didn't know what positions they wanted, which made her think they might well not know how to play Quidditch. She was out of practice, but she was afraid some of them might have no practice at all. She shook her head slightly, the sun reflecting off the top of her perfectly smooth, tightly fastened dark chignon. This was...potentially interesting.

Stretching was easy enough; she still remembered those maneuvers well, as she had done them for years and they were not that much different from the ones she had learned from early childhood in dance lessons. They had studied ballet before they learned formal dancing, as it was good for building posture and poise and the habits of graceful movement - useful especially for Sonia, who was the tallest of all the girls in their family. Running, however, was something she approached with a bit of trepidation. She had always run - casually, when she wanted to move fast, rather than in a systematic way - but she wasn't really supposed to do that now that she was an adult lady and she had not done so in some time.

Nevertheless, orders were orders, so she did her best, which did at least manage not to be the worst on the Pitch. Afterward, she wiped her brow with her sleeve, catching her breath without too much difficulty, and tried to figure out how on Earth she was supposed to play Keeper - the position she did, after all, know best - on the ground.In the air, after all, on a broom, she could dart about quickly enough to make up for her comparatively small stature; the two traits balanced each other out. On the ground, though....

She tried her best, watching the hands of Evelyn Stones, but some combination of arm and leg proved inadequate and the goal was accomplished. She swore in Russian, but made herself put on a smile and nod acknowledgement to Evelyn for having adapted better to the unexpected challenge. That was worthy of respect and Tatiana did not have much patience for a bad sport, at least not one whom she had no reason to personally dislike. She picked up the Quaffle and threw it back toward the would-be Chasers, resolving to do better next time.
16 Tatiana Vorontsova I'm just trying to Keep up. 1396 0 5

Mara Morales

January 16, 2020 4:42 PM
Don't kick a ball or a third year, Mara reminded herself as she walked down to the Quidditch Pitch, her expression of unruffled indifference carefully crafted and deliberately put on, mask-like, to conceal any flutters of nerves about walking into try-outs for a sport she had never even heard of before a few weeks ago. Don't kick a ball or a third year. Don't kick a ball or a third year.

She was not, truth to be told, quite sure which task was going to prove more challenging. On one hand, she was on something called a pitch, so it was kind of sheer habit to kick balls where she wanted them to go, not to carry them in her hands and throw them at other people while she flew around on a stick and tried not to get said stick stuck up her own butt. On the other hand, when Mara had mentioned that she had signed up for the magic sport team, her sister had immediately tried to dissuade her from going through with it, citing the Jeremy dude whose name was also on the list and explaining that he had made racist remarks right out in the open at dinner on their first night back. "I cannot stand Zara Jackson, but even she's better company than a freaking racist who isn't even smart enough to keep it to himself," Jessica had concluded.

Mara recognized him as the one Jessica had pointed out right away and made an effort to stand far away from both him and the much older guy who looked uncannily like him, whom she felt it was safe to assume was his brother. From the older guy's expression, he didn't have to worry too much about his broom going anywhere it ought not, because he looked like he already had a massive stick up his rear. His brother, on the other hand - well, maybe she was just imagining it because of what she knew about the jerk-face, but she couldn't help but think that Mini Mordue's resting expression was even more unpleasant. She really hoped they didn't have to interact much. j

The rest of the group was a mixed bag. There was a big, sturdy-looking, very fair-haired girl whom Jessica had pointed out to her as Hilda Hexenmeister, the girl Jessica had made friends with last year after Jezi had started trying to learn German. With her was Mara's feast buddy Heinrich - her brother - whom Mara gave a nod and a smile as she joined the group. She did the same to Morgan and another Aladren she had seen in the girls' corridor, one with short hair whom she had not yet put a name to. There were four other girls older than Mara; two of them managed to somehow actually be whiter than Jessica (Mara wondered if they were another pair of siblings; she didn't recall seeing any matching surnames on the list besides the two Mordues and the two Hexenmeisters, but Mara only shared a last name with one of her sisters, so it was entirely possible that other people had half-siblings too), one she had seen sitting on top of a table at one point in the Hall, and the fourth older girl had a hairstyle which suggested she might have meant to go to theater auditions for something set in the eighteen hundreds, had Sonora had a theater program. Then there was another first year girl, and then Mara.

She realized she was shuffling her weight between her feet and stopped. So it was ridiculously weird, this being on a team with people who were much older than her and three of whom were dudes. So it was a bit unnerving to not know exactly what she had gotten herself into. It was no reason to show anyone that she was nervous at all.

She trained her dark eyes on the coach as the coach said many coach-ly things - cooperation teamwork et cetera et cetera; she wondered if the coach knew about Jeremy and probably his brother, and if so, how exactly these concepts were supposed to work when they presumably deemed Mara inferior simply for the shape of her nose and the color of her hair - and she nodded to herself as they were given directions. She had read up enough on the positions to broadly understand, so just had to keep her eyes open and figure out from watching the others where she was supposed to be and what they would expect from her there.

The Beater job was, she thought, right out for her; she thought she was pretty strong for an eleven-year-old girl, but she was, well, an eleven-year-old girl. That left being an air goalie, an aerial and weirdly active player of a sort of athleticized Where's Waldo (if she could somehow out-perform two much older and presumably more experienced players), or a Chaser. Chasing had the most positions to offer, but it also sounded like the most interactive of the positions, and possibly the most difficult - it was essentially like playing basketball, but in the air. Or at the very least, if she got her head past the whole issue of flying broomsticks, like crossing basketball and polo. Mara had never played polo, or even seen much of it; she thought that might be a shade too posh even for Jessica's old school, which had had a tennis team and a lacrosse team in the upper school. So it was possible that there were hoops in polo too, but that Mara just didn't know about them, making this just polo without helmets (why) and substantially higher off the ground than most horses were wont to go. She had been horseback riding a few times, but found herself rather wishing she had done so more often, now....

One thing was for sure: whether she got a position here or not, or whatever position it happened to be, she was so not telling her parents the details. They would both freak out so fast over the 'no helmet' thing that it wouldn't even be funny. Hearing that she was almost certain to be second string, as she looked over the numbers, would not soothe them on that point. She was engaged in a sport from which she might fall from a height without any protective gear. That was pretty well exactly why Dad and Mrs. H. had rejected the idea of Jezi taking gymnastics lessons out of hand.

She wandered over to the people throwing a ball during the ground practice, for the excellent reason that throwing balls on the ground was something she had done before and the next-closest thing to that - the Beater thing - corresponded to the position she suspected she was least suited for. The moving pictures in her books were enough to convince her that however much it might look like some people were playing t-ball right now, the actual 'Bludger' things were far, far from resembling autonomous baseballs. One of the whiter-than-Jessica older girls got a goal against Miss Mellie, and Mara clapped politely as Miss Mellie said something foreign (Mara mentally, upon registering the Foreign as not sounding anything like a Romance language, associated her with the name 'Tatiana' she had noticed on the list beside a surname she had not even bothered trying to figure out how to pronounce) and tossed the ball back.

"Good job," she said when Blondie said she loved this. "I'm new to this. Mind if I give it a try?"
16 Mara Morales You're probably going to have better luck than I do there, T. 1472 0 5

Evelyn Stones

January 18, 2020 4:21 PM
Evelyn did feel a little bad. She wasn't one to gloat and was pretty sure she hadn't done anything to necessarily make Tatiana feel worse, but also missing a goal was a good way to feel terrible, and there was no good way around that. It was one of those weird situations where they weren't actually playing against each other, but Evelyn's success and odds of getting on the team were inversely proportional to Tatiana's. It didn't really seem fair in that regard, but there wasn't much that could be done about that. Besides, it was just as important to see sportsmanship, friendliness, and fortitude. Tatiana showed that she could keep cool and keep her head in the game, and be happy for those who were happy at her expense. That made Tatiana both a good fit for the team and also a forced to be reckoned with. Evelyn hoped she wouldn't have to do the reckoning.

A smallish girl asked Evelyn if she could try next, and it was one of the first times Evelyn had interacted with a first year in some time. It wasn't like she avoided them, and she had interacted with . . . well. Probably somebody. She wasn't so good at keeping track of who was in which year anyway. It was interesting to see the diversity at Sonora either way. Her home in Oregon was . . . very white. And very American. Sonora might've even had a smaller percentage of white American students than other students, or very close, and that was pretty great. It also felt hilariously ironic considering all the racist crap that Purebloods said, and the racist crap Muggles said. They would both hate each other.

She felt a little bad for thinking that though, too. She didn't want to be somebody who saw someone's skin color or languages or race first, just like she'd been trying not to see people's genders first. At the same time, those things made up a person in a lot of ways, and influenced them a lot, even if just by the ways society influenced them as a result. Evelyn wanted to be someone who celebrated diversity, and that meant being aware of it.

Evelyn was getting good at being aware of things. She'd always been one to pay attention to her surroundings because survival was great, but that was even more so the case as she'd gotten older and started to care about other people more, too. A lot of the people she cared a lot about - Ness, Heinrich, Hilda, and others - were present today and that was beautiful. She loved getting to share in this physical work with them because it was something she really enjoyed. It was also for this reason that she vaguely recognized the first year, as Heinrich had arrived and offered Evelyn a perfect warm smile and then nodded in the first year's direction. The badge on her chest confirmed that they were both Aladren, so that made sense. Also Heinrich was nicer than he gave himself credit for, and there was that too.

"Absolutely!" Evelyn said, passing her the ball. "It's great you're going out for the team in your first year. It's such a good experience. I'm Evelyn. That's Tatiana." She added the last as she suspected that Tatiana was both too far away to hear their conversation clearly, and also too focused to care for introductions. The sixth year was nothing if not intense.
22 Evelyn Stones Y'all are amazing and you got this. 1422 0 5