The Coach

June 26, 2023 4:21 AM
“Alrighty, welcome or welcome back.” The coach gave a warm smile to the assembled students, hoping to quell any nerves. Sonora’s team was well-respected enough in their own division, but they were very much a big fish in a small pond. As such, the coach expected the players to take it seriously and do their best to improve, but more important was a genuine love of the game, and the idea that stretching their own personal best was always good enough. “First up, can we have a round of applause for your new Quidditch Captain, Oz Spellman?

“We’re going to run tryouts a little differently today. We have a lot of skill and enthusiasm on the pitch, and I love that. We’ve been getting stronger and stronger in terms of numbers too. But we could always do with more.” It was a concern, for example, to see their first string Beaters graduating out with only one tentative replacement. Even if there was a keen first year, that was a very small amount of overlap, and it meant the balance of the team swung dramatically from hugely experienced players to very green ones. It would be better if replacements could be mentored for a couple of years and be solid by the time they had to take over. Not that the coach would use this example out loud, not wanting to deter any potential Beaters or make them feel undervalued.

“You will each come one by one to me to do a drill of your skills, trying out for whichever position or positions you are interested in. Aside from that, you will spend time in a group with the other players from your desired position. If you’re trying for more than one thing, go to the one you want most, or if you’re really not sure, the one that’s got the fewest people. First up, older players are responsible for running a drill for the younger players.” That was fairly standard, and was a way a lot of the practices operated. “You’ll also be working as a group to work out a drill for someone who is brand new to the sport. Let’s say you were meeting up with a friend in the sports room… How could you show them that Quidditch is fun and accessible? This isn’t entirely hypothetical… I’m not saying to pester people to death, but having casual pick-up type games with a friend can be a really good way to get them into things.

“Alright, anyone dying to go first and get it over with? Otherwise you can just come up in alphabetical order.”


OOC: I figured this would be a fun way to cover tryouts but also have some team interaction. Feel free to post to any part.
Subthreads:
13 The Coach Quidditch Try Outs 0 The Coach 1 5

Hansel Hexenmeister

July 09, 2023 9:14 PM
Hansel was an unreliable Quidditch player. His name had been on the sign-up sheet only for his first two years, and that was only because Hilda had put it there herself or would have been very sad if he hadn't. His third year, he had dropped it entirely because he could and Hilda couldn't make him play if she wasn't physically present.

Since then, having sufficiently established to himself that he didn't need to play if he didn't want to, he'd been a go-to for filling in an empty spot when they needed a few extra players because the actual team wasn't quite big enough to field two full teams for intra-school practice games, but he hadn't been an official member of the school's Quidditch team since becoming the only Hexenmeister at the school.

This year . . . he wasn't quite willing to change that, but he thought maybe he'd be a more steady presence. He still hadn't signed up for the team on the sheet in the Cascade Hall, but he did turn up on the pitch for the official Try-Out, which was nearly the same thing.

While the other people split out into their position groups, Hansel waited for the seeker kid to go through his one-on-one with the Coach, then approach the team's coach, not quite sure the individual in question would like him much for continuing to not really join in on the team after his older siblings had both done so well on it. "Hi," he said a little awkwardly. "Hansel Hexenmeister, sixth year. I'm just here to be a reserve and play in practices. I don't really want to compete with the other schools. I'm open to playing any position you need me in, but I like Chaser best." Which was a little awkward, because he was older than all of the other Chaser players, but that would be the case in any position other than Beater now. Though, he guessed that wouldn't be a bad place to put him either, so he said as much, "Beater's okay, too. Hilda makes sure I remember how to handle a bat and a bludger every summer." Plus one of the reserve beaters had dropped off the team last year, and he was a lot better suited for filling in the empty slot if she didn't come back than some random tiny kid.

With that, he set to demonstrating those skills that Hilda honed every summer because Hansel and his sister didn't really have a lot of overlapping interests, and this was something they could do together and it made Hilda happy. He was a decent flier but not outstanding because he'd never put in the time to practice it as an athlete. Most of his flying, when he wasn't with Hilda, was much more leisurely or practical (the snake ranch was a big place; brooms were a lot faster than walking since he still wasn't quite old enough to apparate on his own). He was better at flying fast than flying with a lot of maneuvering. His Quaffle catching skills were average (which was something he practiced with Heinrich, for about the same reason he did beating drills with Hilda), and his beater skills were somewhat better than one would expect from a guy who wasn't a dedicated Quidditch player (Hilda was the better teacher, and it hurt more if he failed).

All in all, he wasn't a bad player, and his age, size, and years of playing with his siblings (and two years of actually being on the team) probably gave him an edge he didn't want or need over the youngest kids trying out, possibly enough of one that he really hoped the coach wasn't going to try to coax him into playing competitively and take a spot from someone who actually wanted it.
1 Hansel Hexenmeister Doing my One-On-One with the Coach to get a reserve spot on the team 1524 0 5