2014 European Freestyle Open

2014 European Freestyle Open
Stadio dei Marmi (Foro Italico)
Rome, Italy
May 23-25, 2014

Open Pairs Final

1. Balu Major/Fabio Sanna (T: 50.8, E: 17.2, AI 13.2, D: 20.4)
2. Tom Leitner/Marco Prati (T: 49.9, E: 17.2, AI: 14.0, D: 18.7)
3. Clay Collera/Andrea Dini (T: 47.9, E: 18.5, AI: 13.1, D: 16.3)
4. Pavel Baranyk/Ayal Benin (T: 47.7, E: 17.4, AI: 12.4, D: 17.9)
5. Luca Mazzucato/Andrea Rimatori (T: 46.6, E: 17.9, AI: 11.1, D: 17.6)
6. Florian Hess/Alex Leist (T: 45.6, E: 15.0, AI: 15.2, D: 15.4)
7. Robert Dittrich/Christian Lamred (T: 44.8, E: 14.0, AI: 13.0, D: 17.8)
8. Emanuele Faustini/Claudio Massaro (T: 38.7, E: 16.6, AI: 8.4, D: 13.7)

Open Co-op Final

1. Florian Hess/Christian Lamred/Alex Leist (T: 47.8, E: 16.6, AI: 14.5, D: 16.7)
2. Clay Collera/Andrea Dini/Marco Prati (T: 46.7, E: 15.3, AI: 14.5, D: 16.9)
3. Balu Major/Fabio Nizzo/Fabio Sanna (T: 44.9, E: 14.9, AI: 11.7, D: 18.3)
4. Pavel Baranyk/Tom Leitner/Jan Soerensen (T: 43.6, E: 14.2, AI: 12.7, D: 16.7)
5. Emanuele Faustini/Sasche Hoehne/Mehrdad Houssanian (T: 43.2, E: 15.4, AI: 11.8, D: 16.0)
6. Luca Mazzucato/Valerio Occorsio/Andrea Rimatori (T: 39.1, E: 13.3, AI: 11.9, D: 13.9)

Mixed Pairs Final

1. Eleonora Imazio/Fabio Sanna (T: 52.5, E: 18.8, AI: 15.3, D: 18.4)
2. Judith Hess/Florian Hess (T: 48.9, E: 17.4, AI: 13.8, D: 17.7)
3. Anna Bragagnolo/Emanuele Faustini (T: 45.8, E: 17.7, AI: 11.6, D: 16.5)
4. Ilka Simon/Mehrdad Houssanian (T: 45.2, E: 16.2, AI: 11.7, D: 17.3)
5. Lina Bödecker Dittrich/Alex Leist (T: 43.2, E: 15.3, AI: 10.4, D: 17.5)
6. Nadine Klos/Christian Lamred (T: 39.5, E: 14.6, AI: 9.5, D: 15.4)
7. Alice Tommazzini/Fabio Nizzo (T: 39.4, E: 14.6, AI: 8.7, D: 16.1)
8. Fabiana Ciciriello/Francesco Romeo (T: 32.3, E: 12.0, AI: 7.1, D: 13.2)
9. Anna Merlo/Lorenzo Telo (T: 27.3, E: 11.6, AI: 4.5, D: 11.2)

Women’s Pairs Final

1. Judith Hess/Ilka Simon (T: 43.0, E: 15.6, AI: 12.1, D: 15.3)
2. Lina Bödecker Dittrich/Nadine Klos (T: 37.4, E: 13.8, AI: 10.3, D: 13.3)
3. Anna Bragagnolo/Eleonora Imazio (T: 36.8, E: 14.2, AI: 10.6, D: 12.0)
4. Fabiana Ciciriello/Anna Merlo (T: 27.0, E: 13.0, AI: 5.4, D: 8.6)

Continue reading “2014 European Freestyle Open”

123 Four Seasons Hat – Spring 2014 Edition

123 Four Seasons Hat – Spring 2014 Edition
Berlin, Germany
May 3, 2014

Final

1. Philipp Krüger/Nico Schwarz (36.0) [video]
2T. Irena Kulisanova/Ilka Simon (34.5) [video]
2T. Kolja Hanneman/Dan Lustiger (34.5) [video]
4. Anton Capellman/Jan Schreck (32.5) [video]
5. Ben Edelmann/Freddy Finner (31.5) [video]
6. Sascha Höhne/Jan Zverina (29.8) [video]
7. Mehrdad Hosseinian/Michal Maciolek (27.3) [video]
8. Tom Goltz/Marc Pestotnik (26.1) [video]

Semi A

1. Anton Capellman/Jan Schreck (38.4)
2. Tom Goltz/Marc Pestotnik (36.8)
3. Ben Edelmann/Freddy Finner (35.3)
4. Sascha Höhne/Jan Zverina (35.0)
5. Markus Hein/Jiri Weiss (29.7)
6. Tobias Künzel/Katarina Pleskotova (22.1)

Semi B

1. Kolja Hanneman/Dan Lustiger (34.1)
2. Irena Kulisanova/Ilka Simon (31.4)
3. Philipp Krüger/Nico Schwarz (30.4)
4. Mehrdad Hosseinian/Michal Maciolek (27.7)
5. Fabian Dinklage/Philipp Maubach (24.6)
6. Philipp Ludwig/Sophie Wolf (24.4)
7. Thomas Nötzel/Woo Wunder (20.4)

2014 Paganello Results

2014 Paganello
Rimini, Italy
April 18-20, 2014

Pairs Final
1. Balu Major/Fabio Sanna (44.1: A 14.6, E 17.6, D 11.9) [video]
2. Randy Silvey/James Wiseman (43.9: A 13.7, E 18.4, D 11.8) [video]
3. Clay Collera/Andrea Dini (42.0: A 12.7, E 17.4, D 11.9) [video]
4. Tom Leitner/Marco Prati (40.6: A 12.0, E 16.5, D 12.1) [video]
5. Manuel Cesari/Valerio Occorsio (35.7: A 10.1, E 13.7, D 11.9) [video]
6. Pipo Lopez/Fabio Nizzo (35.2: A 7.9, E 16.6, D 10.7) [video]

Co-op Final
1. Larry Imperiale/Randy Silvey/Bill Wright (45.9: A 16.3, E 17.0, E 12.6) [video]
2. Balu Major/Fabio Sanna/James Wiseman (45.3: A 14.7, E 16.9, D 13.7) [video]
3. Manuel Cesari/Clay Collera/Andrea Poli (41.9: A 13.1, E 17.6, D 11.2) [video]
4. Tom Leitner/Pipo Lopez/Marco Prati (41.4: A 12.9, E 15.8, D 12.7) [video]

Mixed Pairs Final
1. Judith Hess/Marco Prati (43.0: A 12.8, E 18.2, D 12.0) [video]
2. Eleonora Imazio/Fabio Sanna (40.6: A 12.3, E 16.6, D 11.7) [video]
3. Anna Merlo/John Titcomb (24.7: A 6.3, E 13.3, D 5.1) [video]

Super Pro: Fabio Sanna

Spirit of the Game: Judith Hess

Continue reading “2014 Paganello Results”

2014 Virginia States

2014 VA States
Fredericksburg, VA
April 12-13, 2014

Final
1. Arthur Coddington/Jake Gauthier/Matt Gauthier
2. Roger Meier/Daniel O’Neill
3. Erwin Velasquez/Jens Velasquez
4. Toddy Brodeur/Steve Scannell
5. Rob Fried/Rodney Sanchez/Jonathan Willett
6. Jay Moldenhauer/Dan Yarnell
7. Tom Lasher/Charles Richard
8. Tim Mackey/Donnie Wallace/Scott Zimmerman (SCR)

Semi A
1. Rob Fried/Rodney Sanchez/Jonathan Willett (26 votes) [video]
2. Roger Meier/Daniel O’Neill (35) [video]
3. Toddy Brodeur/Steve Scannell (54) [video]
4. Tim Mackey/Donnie Wallace/Scott Zimmerman (89)
5. Tom Cole/Jack Cooksey/Jim Herrick (108)
6. Harvey Brandt/Lori Daniels/Gerry Geare (113)
7. Bob Cooksey/Randy Lahm/Dave Steger (121)
8. Paul Mondesire/Lou Sumrall (142)
9. Stephanie Chan/Mark Horn/Sam Kaye (163)

Semi B
1. Arthur Coddington/Jake Gauthier/Matt Gauthier (26 votes) [video]
2. Erwin Velasquez/Jens Velasquez (45) [video]
3. Jay Moldenhauer/Dan Yarnell (73)
4. Tom Lasher/Charles Richard (93)
5. Conrad Damon/Dave Hesselberth (140)
6. Rob McLeod/Hunter Wootten (161)
7. J. Kraut/Bryan Steffen/Ronnie Turner (167)
8. Jon Freedman/Jack Herrick/Spencer Herrick (168)
9. Tobias Cole/Jeff Shelton/Evan Wallberg (198)

The Future of the Freestyle Rankings

In the summer of 1993, I published the first freestyle rankings. First they covered open events, then later I added a separate list for women. Each month since then – and sometimes more often – I have published a new rankings list. It’s time for someone else to lead this project. I will continue to compile rankings through this year’s FPA World Championships. After that, my intention is to step away from the rankings.

I’m excited to see which freestylers are interested in shepherding the rankings through its next chapter. I’m possibly even more excited by how the next team can improve them. The rankings can get better in so many ways:

AUTOMATION

Compiling the rankings is labor-intensive. Lots of data entry and calculations and not enough automation. A freestyler with database skills could simplify the workflow for compiling each rankings list. Flo Hess has done amazing work with the competition spreadsheet and tools to export results into formats for web publishing. It would be great to see a link between his spreadsheet and an automated system.

TRANSPARENCY

The rankings are kind of a mystery for most freestylers. While the process for calculating rankings points is published on the rankings homepage, there could be much more access to information. I’d love for players to be able to drill down from their total points and see the points they received at every event they played. I’ve love for players to be able to see the results of a tournament and how that translates into rankings points. I’d love for players to be able to see statistics and graphs of their rankings performance over their career.

ACCURACY

The rankings are solid. I’ve updated the system throughout the years to reflect the evolution of freestyle and improve accuracy. Below are some opportunities I see for the rankings.

Equalizing Points
We play freestyle in formats that range from individual turboshreds to 3- or more person teams. That creates some unequal situations if the point scale is based purely on tournament placing (1st, 2nd, 3rd). It’s harder to win a turboshred than it is to win a pairs event, if only because winning turboshred means you’ve beaten every competitor, and the pairs winners didn’t have to beat their teammate. 2nd place in co-op means you’ve beaten all but 3 players, which maps to 4th place in a turboshred. I’d like to see a point scale that reflects the relative difficulty of placements across different divisions.

Rewarding Larger Events
When the rankings started, we had official FPA tour events and official status for then-successful WFDF and US Open events. Freestyle has evolved in a more homogenous direction. Tournaments are tournaments. Some are big and some are small, but all are valid. And the FPA Worlds is the big one. Right now, there are some rewards for the number of players entered in an event, and there are rewards in the bonus points for beating lots of players. There is room for improvement here.

I’m in favor of a system that minimizes the categorization of tournaments as important or “major.” The importance or majorness of a tournament comes and goes. I’d love the next rankings system to find other measures to reward importance. One simple approach would be to increase the standard for player turnout. Right now it is 20 players. Raising it to 40 or even 60 players allows tournaments to be differentiated and gives an incentive for events to reach out to new players.

Improving How Multi-Division Events Are Addressed
In the current system, each regular tournament with at least 20 entrants offers the same number of points. If the tournament offers multiple divisions (pairs and co-op, for instance) points are split among those divisions. Points become a measure of performance over the entire tournament. While this has worked fine, one side effect is that it doesn’t reward superior performances fully. A player who wins a deep pairs event but places lower in the same tournament’s co-op event might will probably get lower ranking points than a player who wins a pairs event at a smaller tournament that only offers pairs. I’m not in favor of offering full points for each division. That sets up a glut of points for essentially the same gathering and does not reward the step-up-and-shred reality of one-division tournaments.

One approach I like is to offer points for each division, but for there to be a “drag” on the points with each extra division added. For instance, a tournament with only pairs offers 100% of the normal points. In a tournament with pairs and co-op, both pairs and co-op would offer points like they are separate tournaments, but with a 10% drag. They would each offer 90% of the points of a single-division event. Tournament directors could add as many divisions as they want, but with a diminishing return in rankings points. As always, the tournament director could designate as many or as few divisions as point-earning events as they like.

These are some initial ideas. I’m sure the next team will have their own fresh and inventive ideas. I look forward to seeing how it takes shape.

Wiseman and Hunrichs Top 2013 Year-End Rankings

James Wiseman and Lisa Hunrichs are the year-end number one players on the freestyle rankings for 2013.

Open: James Wiseman

Wiseman linked together strong result after strong result to add to the big points he received in 2012 for winning the FPAW Co-op title. He becomes the youngest year-end number one since the rankings launched in 1993. It was a very tight race throughout the fall among Wiseman, Jake Gauthier, Arthur Coddington and Matt Gauthier. Wiseman took a first or second in every tournament he entered in 2013

Austin: 2nd – pairs; 1st – hat
Virginia: 1st
Jammers: 1st
Boulder: 1st mobop; 1nd pairs
Potlatch: 1st
Worlds: 2nd – open pairs, 6th – open co-op

Though both Gauthiers and Coddington won titles in all their 2013 tournaments, they weren’t able to close the gap. 2014 could be a wild ride as Matt and Jake Gauthier have already made a European road trip and won Frisbeer.

1. Wiseman, James (USA) 1465 points
2. Gauthier, Jake (USA) 1421.5
3. Coddington, Arthur (USA) 1381.25
4. Kenny, Paul (USA) 1347.88
5. Gauthier, Matt (USA) 1335.5
6. Collerà, Clay (ITA) 1315.5
7. Prati, Marco (ITA) 1271.5
8. Leitner, Tom (ITA) 1246.75
9. Cesari, Manuel (ITA) 1214.75
10. Silvey, Randy (USA) 1214.5

Women: Lisa Hunrichs

Lisa Hunrichs is such a dominant force in women’s freestyle that it’s kind of shocking she hasn’t been our year-end number one since 2005. Again, the European dynamic is at play. There are more tournaments in Europe, and more of them offer mixed pairs divisions. The world championships play a big role in the rankings and an even greater one in the women’s rankings. This year Hunrichs won both the Women’s and Mixed titles at FPAW in Santa Cruz, while last year’s number one Eleonora Imazio did not compete and lost hundreds of expired points from her strong play at FPAW Prague in 2011.

1. Hunrichs, Lisa (USA) 1025 points
2. Daniels, Lori (USA) 934.5
3. Strunz, Bianca (GER) 864.5
4. Kahle, Emma (USA) 847
5. Kulisanova, Irena (CZE) 839.5
6. Imazio, Eleonora (ITA) 770.475
7. St. Mary, Cindy (USA) 738.5
8. Powell, Char (USA) 680.25
9. Simon, Ilka (GER) 627
10. Schiller, Amy (USA) 600

Previous Number Ones

Below is a list of all the year-end number one players since the rankings began. The number of ranked players is in parenthesis.

Open
2013: James Wiseman (387)
2012: Marco Prati (367)
2011: Jake Gauthier (369)
2010: Matteo Gaddoni (382)
2009: Tom Leitner (403)
2008: Tom Leitner (407)
2007: Fabio Sanna (416)
2006: Tom Leitner (413)
2005: Tom Leitner (450)
2004: Dave Lewis (435)
2003: Arthur Coddington (342)
2002: Dave Lewis (311)
2001: Dave Lewis (329)
2000: Dave Lewis (318)
1999: Dave Murphy (293)
1998: Dave Murphy (375)
1997: Arthur Coddington (501)
1996: Arthur Coddington (550)
1995: Bob Coleman (545)
1994: Larry Imperiale (469)
1993: Ted Oberhaus (267)

Women
2013: Lisa Hunrichs (61)
2012: Eleonora Imazio (66)
2011: Eleonora Imazio (65)
2010: Judith Haas (52)
2009: Eleonora Imazio (54)
2008: Eleonora Imazio (54)
2007: Eleonora Imazio (47)
2006: Mary Lowry (39)
2005: Lisa Hunrichs Silvey (44)
2004: Lisa Hunrichs Silvey (61)
2003: Cindy Kruger (61)
2002: Judy Robbins (40)
2001: Lisa Hunrichs Silvey
2000: Lisa Hunrichs Silvey (48)
1999: Judy Robbins
1998: Amy Bekken
1997: Amy Bekken
1996: Amy Bekken
1995: Amy Bekken
1994: Gina Sample

123 Four Seasons Hat 2014 Winter Edition

The athletes of 1234 Seasons Hat - Winter 2014 Edition

123 Four Seasons Hat 2014 Winter Edition
Berlin, Germany
February 15-16, 2014

Finals
1. Wu Wunder/Freddy Finner (39,3)
2. Fabio Caruso/Stephan Dünkel (37,7)
3. Philipp Krüger/James Wiseman (34,1)
4. Marc Pestotnik/Andrea Rimatori (33,3)
5. Mehrdad Hosseinian/Gregor Marter (29,7)
6. Tom Goltz/Jan Schreck (29,3)
7. Robert Fried/Bianca Stunz (28,7)
8. Markus Hein/Sascha Höhne (27,8)

Semi A
1. Andrea Rimatori/Mark Pestotnik (34,8)
2. Philipp Krüger/James Wiseman (32,1)
3. Markus Hein/Sascha Höhne (26,7)
4. Jan Schreck/Tom Goltz (26,6)
5. Fabrizio Nizzo/Jean Marie Abel (26,4)
6. Kolja Hannemann/Benjamin Edelmann (25,8)
7. Thomas Nötzel/Ilka Simon (19,7)

Semi B
1. Fabio Caruso/Stephan Dünkel (36,9)
2. Wu Wunder/Freddy Finner (34,2)
3. Mehrdad Hosseinian/Gregor Marter (33,4)
4. Robert Fried/Bianca Strunz (31,7)
5. Tobi Künzel/Irena Kulisanova (30,3)
6. Anton Capellmann/Tim Pattberg (28,2)
7. Jan Sörensen/Fabian Dinklage (new/GER) (26,2)