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

July 07, 2012 12:44 AM
Well, Amelia thought as she dragged the trunk of Quidditch balls out to the middle of the pitch for the season's final game, we had one year that wasn't Aladren-Crotalus as the season's finale. She had needed to pit them against each other in the first game of the season to achieve it, but it had shaken things up enough that neither team had won the championship last year.

Pecari hadn't made it back to the finals this year, though, which Amelia was honestly a little disappointed by. They had performed surprisingly well last year, and Miss Eagle had been working them very hard in practices. Amelia really hoped it wouldn't negatively impact Demelza's chances of going pro because the Pecari captain really was a very good beater and Sonora Quidditch hadn't boosted anyone into the professional leagues since she started coaching here and she was starting to get concerned about that.

But that was not what was at stake today. Today was Aladren versus Crotalus for the year's Quidditch Cup.

And today was such a beautiful day for it, too. The sun shone, large fluffy white clouds drifted lazily across the sky providing patches of intermittent shade, and a light breeze blew, keeping things cool despite the warming Arizona temperatures. It would probably be unpleasantly warm in the afternoon highs later today, but it was still early enough in the morning that the overnight chill and the breeze kept things comfortable.

"Welcome to Quidditch Finale," she announced when it looked like the two captains were finished giving their speeches. With the weather fine enough that she felt no urgency to start (and therefore end) the game, and a match up that some of the older students might start to find dull soon, she felt inclined to dramatize: "We again have Crotalus in the red robes facing off against Aladren in the blue. Captain Wilkes of Aladren will be trying to return his team back to their winning streak, while Captain Bauer of Crotalus seeks to repeat what Pecari managed last year. The next few hours will determine which team will emerge with Sonora's Quidditch Cup. Captains, please shake hands."

After they had done so, she sent them back to their teams. She flipped open the trunk lid and released the bindings on the bludgers. They soared up into the air, and the snitch soon followed. Finally, she lifted up the Quaffle and raised her whistle near her mouth as she made her final remarks, "As always, game starts on my whistle and ends when a seeker catches the snitch. One. Two. Tweeeeet!" The whistle blew on the final count as she threw the ball into the air.

The final had begun.
Subthreads:
1 <font color=silver>Coach Amelia Pierce</font> Quidditch Final: Aladren vs Crotalus 20 <font color=silver>Coach Amelia Pierce</font> 1 5


<font color="blue">Arthur Carey, Chaser</font>

July 20, 2012 11:07 PM
Arthur had been counting on the ball to land neatly in the hands of one of his teammates, completing the pass according to plan and moving them that much closer to Mr. Sawyer, and he felt his eyebrows draw together and lower into a scowl when he saw that it had not gone that way. Mr. Macaulay had never, to Arthur’s mind, presented much of a threat, but he had apparently improved in either ability or nerve, because he had just neatly intercepted the pass. Arthur was impressed; he was not like his brother, generous enough to be pleased even during the game for those who could get between him and his goal, but he was impressed, and not displeased altogether. It meant that things weren’t going to grow just yet.

He turned and followed, but it was Russell who successfully recaptured the ball from Mr. Macaulay’s attempt to pass the ball to another Crotalus. There. They had it back. It was back to Mr. Sawyer, now, as quickly as they coul…well, reasonably quickly, anyway. There was no way to know how long this might last, so it was perhaps best not to exhaust themselves here, at the very beginning. This was a final against Crotalus; Mr. Princeton was not Miss Stephenson, but the game might still go on for hours.

His arm twinged unpleasantly, and he moved his shoulder as he followed the ball back toward the Crotalus side, hoping that the event would come to its conclusion before that. He had gotten through that first championship game, the one in his first year, without any permanent damage, but he knew that even school Quidditch games could drag on far longer than that. He would not like for one of the alternates to have to finish it in Arnold’s place, but could do little, from his current position, to affect the end of the game but trust his twin to be on his toes and on top of things today.

The arguments for having taken the vacant Beater position were, he thought, looking better and better by the moment, despite his left arm and Mother’s opinions about what playing the more aggressive position did for his personality. It was frustrating, when he thought of it, to merely be an item to amuse the crowd, not someone who could really ever meaningfully impact the game. The best he could hope to do was raise the score enough to raise the points count when it was all factored together and entered into the House Point registry. Though that wasn’t bad, all things considered. It wasn’t as worthwhile a way to earn points as being an exceptional student was in his opinion, but it certainly beat some other options.

Russell passed again, and this time it went as Arthur had hoped it would, going from Aladren to Aladren rather than Aladren to Crotalus. The air was sharp against his face, but felt almost pleasant in his hair; the ground below was little more than a greenish blur. There was pleasure, to be sure, in flying fast; sometimes he enjoyed it purely on its own merits, rather than just for training or playing purposes. One wrong move, and he would tumble toward the ground, with even the effects of the spell the coach would use to keep him from being killed enough to hurt; at home, if he lost his seat, he would simply fall and would have to hope for the best. He thought that way was better when it was just flying, anyway; at the very least, it encouraged everyone to learn a good seat very early. The notion of someone being there to catch him became something more like a necessity once Bludgers came into it. He was big enough now, and even Arnold was, that it wasn’t so likely that they would be knocked off their brooms as it had been in first year, but if the force was great enough, or the angles just wrong, it could still happen. Even at the family games, when the rules about not killing the opposition were much more loosely enforced, they had people on the ground to catch them if they fell and put them back together again when they took especially interesting hits.

Some had suggested he should become the next family Healer, since Great-Uncle Adam would not live forever and Morgaine did not seem likely to work out; then it would be primarily his job to do the putting back together at the Reunion. Arthur didn’t know about that. He didn’t doubt that he was smart enough to go through Healer training, that wasn’t the issue, he knew that such a respectable position should have even appealed to him, but the idea just seemed alien to him for some reason. He saw a decent opportunity to pass and took it, frowning hard in concentration as he put what he hoped was the correct amount of force behind the ball to send it into his teammate’s hands, rather than past them. That would, he thought, be embarrassing; it was one of the things he could not remember seeing happen on this Pitch, and that was not a first he wanted to be associated with. He had over-thrown a few times in practices, but he had trained with getting rid of that problem specifically in mind once he noticed it happening.
0 <font color="blue">Arthur Carey, Chaser</font> That is also amusing, I admit 0 <font color="blue">Arthur Carey, Chaser</font> 0 5