Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Not Just A Fencer

I can also make the one-handed catch in the high stakes of a flag football game. Please also note the look of awe in the background. *pats self on back*



(Thanks Chris for taking the picture!)

Later during the game, my roughly 10-year-old shorts were nearly ripped in two by an overzealous defender, leaving me to walk off the field holding them around my waist to keep myself decent in mixed company. Fortunately I was wearing clean underwear that day, because I think quite a few folks got to see a good portion of it.

Monday, April 24, 2006

Ready? Fence!

Sunday marked my long delayed return to fencing. I fenced off and on for about two years in college, but hadn't picked up a foil in around seven years. A club opened up just down the road from us, and I decided to give it a shot. So, I took classes for a few months, and I took my meager skills on the road to scenic Ada, Ohio, for the 2006 Ohio Northern University Fencing Open.

Fencing tournaments have two stages. The first stage is the pools, in which small groups of fencers compete in a round-robin format. The results from the pools are used to seed the competitors for the direct elimination (DE) bracket. In this part, it's one loss and you're done for the day.

My goals were three: Score a touch, Be competitive, and Win a Bout. Two out of three isn't so bad, I guess. I started off pretty tentative in my pool bouts. Instead of going after my opponents, I let them come to me, which didn't work out so well. I lost my four pool bouts 5-2, 5-1, 5-0, and 5-2. I had accomplished my first goal of just scoring a touch, but I wasn't able to keep the score close in any of my bouts.

Unfortunately, the results of my pool bouts put me at the bottom of the barrel for the DE bracket. The #1 seed had a first round bye, so I wound up fencing the #2 seed, who had already beaten me in the pools. However, I now realized I had nothing to lose, and could fence more aggressively.

After falling behind a couple points to start the bout, I found myself able to stay with my opponent. 3-1 turned into 5-3, and to 7-4. At the first break, I found myself only down 10-6! I was pretty excited that I was able to keep things respectable against a quality opponent.

After the break, I scored the first touch to bring the score to 10-7. Unfortunately, my opponent was prepared with some tactics I haven't learned to counter at this point, and rolled off five straight points to close the bout at 15-7. A loss, perhaps, but I count it as a moral victory, and fulfillment of my second goal: to be competitive.

As for the third goal of winning a bout...well, that will have to wait until another day. I think I learned some things Sunday that will help prepare me for the next tournament I enter. The current plan is for a local novice tournament on May 27 to be my next challenge.

Testing...testing...

Hi everyone! Just wanted to serve notice that I'm going to be posting again after a long absence. Got some new and hopefully interesting things going on, which should be posted this evening.