<font color=silver>Coach Amelia Pierce</font>

May 10, 2012 9:30 PM
As she was looking over her notes of Sonora's past few Quidditch seasons, Coach Amelia Pierce had noticed that she had, at some point, fallen victim to an alphabetical bias to put Aladren on the pitch first. Having made this discovery, she immediately eliminated the Hawks as one of her options for the first two teams to play.

She also decided not to have Pecari go first since their roster was the last to come in, and she wasn't above petty retaliation for its tardiness.

That left Crotalus and Teppenpaw to play first, and she vaguely wondered if maybe she should make a habit of putting the two finalists up against each other during the next year's elimination rounds. It had shaken things up nicely last year, even if she would have preferred for her own house to make it further than they had.

She couldn't think about that today, though, because she needed to remain impartial while Crotalus played Teppenpaw. With Marissa Stephenson's graduation, Captain Melcher was now the most experienced captain leading her team and Crotalus would be fielding an untried Seeker. It was, Amelia thought with forced impartiality, going to be anybody's game. Neither team had won a game last year. Crotalus would be looking to redeem themselves. Teppenpaw would be even more eager to prove that they could win at all.

It was also anybody's game in beautiful weather. Amelia paused briefly to enjoy the warm sunlight, then continued carrying the trunk of Quidditch balls out to the center of pitch. The two teams were already gathered in clumps, listening to their captains' pre-game speeches. She gave them as much time as they needed, then called the two captains over.

"Today, we have Captain Kirstenna Melcher leading Teppenpaw and Captain Sam Bauer leading Crotalus. Please shake hands." After they had done so and returned to their respective teams, Amelia continued as she released first the snitch, then the bludgers, "Goals are worth ten points. Game ends when the snitch is caught, which is worth 150 points. Game begins with my whistle. Let's keep it clean, folks. On three." She picked up the Quaffle and readied to throw it into the air. "One. Two. Three. Tweet!" She blew into her whistle and tossed the Quaffle as high as she could.

She picked up her own broom and followed the balls and the players into the sky.


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1 <font color=silver>Coach Amelia Pierce</font> Game One: Crotalus vs Teppenpaw 20 <font color=silver>Coach Amelia Pierce</font> 1 5


<font color=silver>Coach Amelia Pierce</font>

May 17, 2012 10:00 PM
We have a beautiful sunny day for the first Quidditch match of the game.

Seeker Thread
-Cepheus heads up into the air very quickly
-Gareth follows Cepheus up and wishes he wasn't moving so fast. He hits a rogue bludger that was bothering Cepheus at Solomon and feels kind of bad about it.
-Kate fakes a dive.
-Cepheus doesn't fall for it.
-Kate gives up the plan and just flies around
-Gareth hits another rogue bludger at Kate
-Kate avoids it and spots something that might be the snitch
-Cepheus chases after her and it but looses it
-Kate looses it as well and wanders away
-Gareth laments that Seekers are difficult to keep up with


The Quaffle Thread
-Sam gets the ball off the whistle
-Sam passed to Linus
-Solomon starts out his game with a bludger thumping against his back
-Linus attempts a pass, but Marcus intercepts
-Marcus shows off his catch to his captain but drops the ball
-Renee recovers it but decides to help Marcus out by bringing it closer for Kirstenna to see
-She passes it to Sam
-Sam passes it back to Renee
-Renee catches it but also takes a bludger to the leg after Derry shoots it at her. He doesn't feel bad about it.
-Renee takes a shot at goal
-Linus feels bad for his pass being the only one intercepted
-Kirstenna stops it and tosses it off to Solomon
-Topher hits a bludger
-Derry prevents it from hitting anyone and hits it at Sam
-Solomon passes the Quaffle to Arista
-Sam avoids the bludger and tries to intercept Arista's pass but only manages to slap it down
-Marcus gets it and takes a shot at goal
-Nic stops it
-Arista intercepts the Keeper's toss and makes another shot at goal
-Laurie hits a bludger at Sam
-Topher hits the bludger at Arista
-Arista dives away
-Topher tries to hit her again
-Nic stops the goal and passes it to Renee
-Renee attempts to go bother Kirstenna with it

1 <font color=silver>Coach Amelia Pierce</font> Recentering and Recap 20 <font color=silver>Coach Amelia Pierce</font> 0 5


<font color="red">Linus Macaulay, Chaser</font>

May 18, 2012 6:06 AM
Quidditch was often a fast-paced game. A testament to this was the fact that at this point in the game, three attempts had been made at goal and Linus had touched the Quaffle just once (and on that occasion he hadn’t been entirely expert with his handling of the same). It would be humiliating if Quidditch wasn’t, as was widely acknowledged, such a fast-paced game.

So Renée’s early goal attempt hadn’t made it. That was okay; it was still early in the game and there was much time to make up for it. So when the ball went back into play and was caught by a Teppenpaw Chaser, Linus wasted no time in Chasing after it – his role in this game was made pretty clear by its designated title. The journey down the pitch wasn’t easy; neither team managed any mention-worthy volley of passes, and the Beaters were on top form trying to make life as difficult as possible for the collection of players streaking down the pitch. All in all, Linus was disappointed but not entirely surprised when the Quaffle soon made its way into Nic’s domain. Thankfully, the Crotalus Keeper – who was a living example of that ancient proverb about practise and perfection – didn’t let his team down and saved not just one, but two potential goals. Linus couldn’t help the whoop that escaped his lips at the second save as the Quaffle came back into play under Crotalus possession, signalling and end to Teppenpaw’s brief taster of what it might feel like to be the best team on the pitch.

Now normality was restored, Linus was reluctant to let it go. Determined to do as instructed and bother Kirstenna with the Quaffle instead, Linus shot off up the pitch after his teammate, hoping that Teppenpaw’s players would remain too distracted by the Bludgers to cause much interference as the Crotalus players carried the ball back out of Nic’s territory. Renée was fast, and it was all Linus could do to keep up with her, on his school broom and with his comparatively small frame – he liked to think he was tall for his age, but he was still in his third year, and so had much growing to do yet – the wind resistance, even on a relatively calm day, made a better job of buffering him around than it did the older players. Nevertheless, he’d been training with the Crotalus team for long enough to know when to buckle down and just focus on the speed, so that’s what he did, lowering his body, tucking in his knees and making his vessel as streamlined as possible as he urged the broomstick on towards its limits, all the time keeping half an eye on his teammate to identify when she would make the pass.

The moment came, and Linus was ready for it. He anticipated his fellow Chaser’s move as she came closer, and he fought to maintain both his speed and his focus as the red leather ball came sailing, as expected, in his direction. He caught the ball heavily to his chest, the thud of its impact lessened in his experience by the pleasant exhilaration of a successful pass. The Quaffle was in his hands once again, and he would do his duty with it; raising his head he caught sight of Teppenpaw’s Keeper in the distance, a yellow beacon up ahead, and he intended to bother her. Perhaps not directly, as to carry the Quaffle that far up the pitch was simply inviting calamity, and Linus had already suffered sufficient calamity in his short Quidditch career to do desire any further shenanigans, but that would be his eventual aim. For the time being, carrying the ball across the half-way point (or as close to it as possible, as it was always very difficult to tell exactly where halfway was, when one was in the air, not to mention the assorted other distractions that could impede judgement on something so exact) would suffice as a victory. So without any attempts to slow his speed, Linus continued to barrel along full kilter away from his team’s goals and onwards up the pitch.

Once he’d flown as far as he dared – which, to his judgement, was at least some feet beyond that important halfway marker – Linus had already sought an opportunity to pass (and he felt this was definite progression from his previous game, during which he’d only begun to look for a window in which to make a successful pass when he’d already carried the ball as far as he was comfortable, which had the unfortunate side effect of inducing a mild last-minute panic). Reluctant for his pass to be intercepted a second time, Linus swerved closer to his closest teammate before a drew up a little straighter on his broomstick, brought his arm back with the Quaffle secured tightly in his fingertips, and made a neat thrust of a throw towards the red Chaser. Again, he’d done his best to canvas the area for any pesky opposition players who might have smart ideas about knocking his pass off course, but, as always, it was simply not possible to check all angles at the same time. A player could only do his best, and Linus was confident he had achieved that much. If his best wasn’t good enough then let Captain Bauer kick him off the team and have the trouble of replacing him next year.

That was an interesting thought; what if he was kicked off the team? Linus thought he could probably live with the shame just as easily as he’d managed to survive the whole school seeing his abysmal performance in the previous year’s game. Crotalus in particular might be kinder to a player who was unceremoniously retired, and could therefore do no further damage to the honor of the House, than to a player who consistently ruined their chances of glory. That wasn’t to say that Linus had actually experienced any open hostility from his Housemates, but he wouldn’t be surprised if he did experience a little adversity; he hated to disappoint people – and when he thought of people in general, they seemed to take a pictorial representation in his mind of Brianna’s face, for some inexplicable reason - and would forgive them if they decided to express similar viewpoints. On the other hand, he had so far enjoyed being a (somewhat) valued member of the Crotalus Quidditch team, and if pressed he would admit that he would rather be on the team than not. In fact he would very much like to be there when they inevitably were once again victorious in claiming the Quidditch Cup. Of course if he couldn’t make successful simple passes then he’d never be around for that momentous occasion… not as a Chaser, anyway.
0 <font color="red">Linus Macaulay, Chaser</font> Reds for the win! 0 <font color="red">Linus Macaulay, Chaser</font> 0 5


<font color="yellow">Kate Bauer, Seeker</font>

May 18, 2012 2:43 PM
Right now – or so it seemed to Kate, anyway – they seemed to be in a stalemate, the Crotalus Beater-Seeker roommate team and her. She and Cepheus were both still a little disappointed, and Gareth wasn’t trying to hit her, either because he was afraid of hitting his boy at this point or because he just didn’t have a Bludger, which was, after all, always another option at any moment no one was trying to pummel her into a smooth paste. If another Beater had grabbed one after it flew away from him after his last hit, then he might be out of luck until that one or its twin was lost by one of the game Beaters. Truly, Seekers could benefit enormously from there only being two of the death balls flying around out here. She was pretty sure everyone would be retired from the position after a year due to excessive head trauma if not for that grace.

Unless, of course, two Seeker Beaters got hold of both, then proceeded to not care too much about hitting their own wards as they tried to hit the other, but really, Kate did not want to think about that possibility, even with the reduced-strength Beaters they had, for the most part, this year. A pair of second years could do some serious damage with that situation, and the thought of being the poor unfortunate soul caught between Edmond and Demelza, if that had been possible anymore, made her shudder. It could never be her, since she wasn’t an Aladren or a Pecari, but the thought was still bad.

Flexing her shoulders again, reminding herself that she did not feel a Bludger approaching every second for real and that there was other evidence besides paranoia when one was coming around usually, she looked again for the Snitch, crossing the fingers of her right hand against her broom.

That didn’t seem to be hugely effective, though, because the Snitch was remaining invisible again, and since her fingers didn’t feel completely comfortable in that position, she uncrossed them after a minute and just kept looking for the gleam of gold that would turn all their fortunes around and shake up the whole system at Sonora. Crotalus and Aladren had had a good run together, but Pecari had shown last year that they could be challenged; now it was high time Teppenpaw got their turn.
16 <font color="yellow">Kate Bauer, Seeker</font> Moving the Seeker thread up, too. 170 <font color="yellow">Kate Bauer, Seeker</font> 0 5


<font color="red">Paul Bennett, Reserve</font>

May 19, 2012 7:21 PM
Someday, Paul thought, someone was going to think of all the reserves in the world and make Quidditch robes with pockets on them, so the reserves could bring a book or something to keep them occupied while the Quaffle moved back and forth so many times that the interest factor was no longer outweighed by the possibility of getting a crick in his neck if he kept watching them any longer and the rest of the team stubbornly refused to come down no matter how injured they were. In the meantime, though, he just watched the game.

He knew that a lot of his team had been expecting to dominate the game as though the Teppenpaw players weren’t even there, so it gave him a strictly forbidden sort of satisfaction to see that the yellow robes seemed to be putting up a pretty good fight after all as the game got going. He wanted his team to win, of course – his father claimed there were exceptions, times when being a loser at the moment was necessary or at least helpful for being a bigger winner later, but Paul had never seen a situation himself where it wasn’t better to be with the winners – but the arrogance of some of them irked him; one thing his father said that he did believe implicitly was that it was better to at least mentally treat everything that was in front of him as though it could be a real issue, and deal with it from the perspective that if he got sloppy, it could beat him.

Admittedly, if there was ever something to not think that way about, it was the Teppenpaw team, but…he had thought the same thing, too, last year when Pecari went up against Aladren, he would not have even taken a bet on that game if someone had offered it to him with odds which were ridiculously in his favor just because of how embarrassing it would be, and look at how that had ended. He wasn’t completely sure all of the Aladrens had processed that it had actually happened yet.

Anything could happen. Sure, Teppenpaws were not known for being among the great minds of the age, usually, but clearly they could learn, or they would have all been kicked out of school, and after Pecari last year, they wouldn’t be assuming from the beginning that they were going to suffer a humiliating defeat. That combination could give them what they needed to win, if Crotalus was too caught up in being rivals with Aladren and just having these pesky nobodies to brush out of the way before they could get there and finally – if they got their way – beat Aladren. The guys – and girl – in the air needed to be aware of that, and Paul wasn’t too sure that all of them were, though he’d never said as much to them. He was, after all, just the alternate.

He winced slightly as a Bludger headed toward Sam, hoping one of the Beaters got that. No good could come from the captain taking a hit at any point in the game, he thought, unless it was in a case of heroically jumping in front of the Seeker seconds before the catching of the Snitch, and he didn’t think that was, all things considered, very likely. For one thing, it would depend on very exact people placements, and for another, he had never seen it happen, after all, and he had been to a lot of Quidditch games, here and in other places, when they were all put together.
0 <font color="red">Paul Bennett, Reserve</font> Watching, hopefully not waiting 201 <font color="red">Paul Bennett, Reserve</font> 0 5