2015 IQA European Games explained

European Games
Sport:Quidditch
Year:2015
Location:Sarteano, Italy
Start Date:25
End Date:26 July 2015
Administrator:International Quidditch Association
Quidditch Europe
Tournament Format:Pool play
Single elimination bracket
Host:Associazione Italiana Quidditch
Venues:Pian di Mengole
Teams:12
Champion:[1]
Matches:38
Stat1 Label:SWIM
Next:Oslo 2017

The 2015 IQA European Games, also known simply as the European Games, was the inaugural European championship for the sport of quidditch organized jointly by Sarteano2015, Quidditch Europe and the International Quidditch Association. The tournament was held the weekend of the 24–26 July 2015 in the city of Sarteano, Italy. France took first[2] against the United Kingdom with a final score of 90*–50,[3] and Norway came in third winning 150*–80[4] against Belgium.[5]

As these were the first European Games and since Quidditch is still expanding in Europe, the only requirement for teams wishing to compete was to have a national governing body. Planning is underway for the 2017 European Games. Quidditch Europe and the IQA will work together and start accepting bids in the 2015–2016 season.

Organization

After a bidding process released by Quidditch Europe and the IQA,[6] Sarteano was announced as the winner.[7] Building up to the events, Sarteano established several marketing campaigns across the country, across Europe and in the United States. Teams arrived to major airports within Italy with buses prepared to transport athletes to the site of the Games. The pitches themselves were maintained and organized to offer teams space to practise, to rest and to take shelter. Additionally, the town organized several entertainment events open to the public, from workshops to live concerts.[8]

Competing teams

The following twelve teams competed in the 2015 European Games:[9]

Team Number of athletes National governing body Previous appearances in World Cup
21 1 (2014)
21 Associació de Quidditch de Catalunya
21 Fédération du quidditch français 2 (2012, 2014)
14 Deutscher Quidditchbund
8 Quidditch Ireland
(host) 20 Associazione Italiana Quidditch
13
17 Norges Rumpeldunkforbund
7 Polska Liga Quidditcha
21
14 Quidditch Derneği
21 2 (2012, 2014)

Broadcasting

Unlike many other quidditch events, there was no livestream available. However, volunteers updated a live Twitter account for online followers and several media outlets were present to report on the games.

Match officials

As the games happened during the off-season for most leagues, several officials came from the United States and Canada to referee and snitch events. Most teams supplied volunteer referees to fill in gaps where there was a lack of availability of non-playing officials. There were no player-snitches; in fact, the snitch with the most play time was Nicole Stone of QuidditchUK nicknamed "Little Snitch".

Marketing

The city of Sarteano established an aggressive marketing campaign that extended beyond the city's and country's borders. Importantly, craftspeople and artisans across the city started to sell European Games wares available for a limited amount of time such as pottery, wine and cheese. One of the most ambitious advertising campaigns run was for free bottles of specialty wine where adverts were places across European cities[10] and even in New York.[11]

Structure and results

The tournament structure consisted of an initial pool play where pools consisted of pots which were based on EQC rankings[12] and seasonal performance matched up. The top four teams from each group then would proceed to bracket play, where brackets were decided using the following criteria: games won, head-to-head, QPD and SWIM catches. Finally, matches will end in semi-finals, third place final and the gold medal match.[13]

Notes
  1. IQA European Games . 625361275594403842 . @IQAEuroGames . France with the catch to win European Games . 26 July 2015 . 26 July 2015 . English .
  2. News: France Captures European Games Over UK. The Quidditch Post. Marmer. Andrew. 26 July 2015. 26 July 2015.
  3. IQA European Games . 625361670274203648 . 26 July 2015 . @IQAEuroGames . Final score 90*-50 France . 26 July 2015 . English .
  4. IQA European Games . 625345110503489536 . @IQAEuroGames . Belgium with a last minute goal and Norway with the snitch catch!!! Final score is 150*-80 with Norway winning the bronze! . 26 July 2015 . 26 July 2015 . English .
  5. News: France beats Britain to win first European Quidditch Games. The Guardian. 26 July 2015. 26 July 2015. Rosie. Scammell.
  6. News: Quidditch Europe Announces the Inaugural European Games. Quidditch Europe. 22 November 2014. 26 July 2015.
  7. News: First Quidditch European Games to be held in Tuscany. The Telegraph. Alice. Philipson. 21 July 2015. 26 July 2015.
  8. News: Elethnica. Sarteano2015. 13 July 2015. 27 July 2015. Mirco. Gigliotti. https://web.archive.org/web/20150728024027/http://www.sarteano2015.eu/en/elethnica/. 2015-07-28. dead.
  9. Web site: Tournament and Teams. Sarteano2015, IQA, Quidditch Europe. 27 July 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150519103611/http://www.sarteano2015.eu/en/tournament-and-teams/. 2015-05-19. dead.
  10. News: Catch the Snitch. Facebook. Sarteano2015. 8 July 2015. 27 July 2015.
  11. News: Catch the Snitch. Facebook. Sarteano2015. 8 July 2015. 27 July 2015.
  12. News: EQC III Announcement. Quidditch Europe. Facebook. 1 November 2014. 19 November 2014.
  13. Web site: Tournament Structure . ((Sarteano, Quidditch Europe, International Quidditch Association)) . 5 July 2015 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150727005210/http://www.sarteano2015.eu/en/tournament-structure/ . 27 July 2015 .

Group phase

Group A

TeamQualification
150+5700Qualify for knock-out phase360*–10 160*–10 190*–30 190*–60 150*–50
241+3800150*–0 140*–20 190*–50 140–50*
332−401200*–0 100*–30 100*–80
423−300190*–0 160*–70
514−1700170*–0
605−7200

Group B

TeamQualification
150+5000Qualify for knock-out phase260*–0 200–30* 120–30* 110*–30 100*–40
241+3700280*–10 220*–0 80–50* 110*–40
332+1700180*–0 120*–20 100*–30
423−200110–50* 120–40*
514−480160*–30
605−5400

Final rankings

Rank Team
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12

Prizes

The European Games offered two prizes in total: First Place and MVP. The first place prize was a handcrafted, metal sculpture created by a local artisan for this event,[14] which was awarded to Team France upon their win. The MVP award, a hand-painted artwork,[15] went to player Ollie Craig for his efforts within the tournament.[16]

See also

External links