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The US Quadball Cup, previously known as US Quidditch Cup and IQA World Cup,[1] is a quadball tournament held in the United States and organized by US Quadball. The first US Quadball Cup was held in 2007 with only two teams participating, and now features around 60 collegiate and club teams from around the United States.
Tournament information | |
---|---|
Sport | Quadball |
Month played | April |
Established | 2007 |
Administrator | US Quadball |
Format | Pool Play, Bracket Play |
Participants | 60 |
Current champion | |
2024: Harvard University (collegiate), Boom Train (club) |
History
editThe first intercollegiate Quidditch World Cup was held in 2007 at Middlebury College in Vermont, between Middlebury and Vassar College from Poughkeepsie, New York. Since then, the US Quadball Cup has been held in various places in the continental United States. On average, there are 60 or so teams present that proceed to pool play, where teams are grouped and the top teams from the group advance to bracket play.
The 2014 edition was the last event to be called "IQA World Cup". Thereafter, the International Quidditch Association became an international sports federation and the organization of the Cup was handed over to US Quadball. Since 2016, the Cup was renamed to "US Quidditch Cup" and the name "IQA World Cup" now refers to an international competition featuring national teams.
Beginning with the 2017-2018 season, there was a split between college and club level play, resulting in separate regional and national championships for club and collegiate teams.[2]
The tournament was not held in 2020 or 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[3] When the tournament resumed in 2022, it was rebranded as "US Quidditch Cup 2022" rather than "US Quidditch Cup 13."
Format
editParticipation
editIn order to participate in qualification, a team must be registered with USQ. Teams can be either college teams, or community teams. College teams are teams based at a college or university and have only its students on the team; these make up the vast majority of registered quadball teams. A community team is a private club team made up of interested players around the area. Each community team may has its own rules when it comes to trying out or joining the team, and college students may opt to join a community team over their college team. In 2016, Q.C. Boston was the first club team to win the cup. Once a team is started and registered, they may compete in official tournaments.
Qualification
editQualification is achieved through placement in Regional Championships. There are 8 different regions: Great Lakes, Mid-Atlantic, Midwest, Northeast, Northwest, South, Southwest, and West. The Regional Championships, played in tournament form, take place from November to February, with the US Quadball Cup taking place in April. Placing at certain level in each of the respective region's championships (specifics vary per region), which are played in tournament form, will guarantee a berth at the US Quadball Cup.
Gameplay
editPool Play
editBefore the day of the event, all attending teams are sorted into 12 pools of 5 based on their seeding. Seeding is based on a complex algorithm measuring each team's wins, point differentials, snitch grab percentages and strength of schedule at their respective Regional Championships. After each team plays the other four in their pool, all the teams are ranked by the same algorithm. The top 28 teams get a spot in a seeded round-robin bracket and 29-36 join the play-in round, a pre-bracket playoff round of four games to determine the last 4 teams to join the bracket.
Bracket Play
editOn day 2 of the competition, starting with a round of 32, teams are matched up and the winner of each match proceeds to the next round until a champion is determined.
Results
editName | Edition | Year | Host | Champion | Champion (Collegiate) | Champion (Club) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
IQA World Cup | I | 2007 | Middlebury, Vermont | Middlebury College | ||
II | 2008 | Middlebury, Vermont | Middlebury College | |||
III | 2009 | Middlebury, Vermont | Middlebury College | |||
IV | 2010 | New York City | Middlebury College | |||
V | 2011 | New York City | Middlebury College | |||
VI | 2013 | Kissimmee, Florida | University of Texas at Austin | |||
VII | 2014 | North Myrtle Beach, South Carolina | University of Texas at Austin | |||
USQ World Cup | 8 | 2015 | Rock Hill, South Carolina | University of Texas at Austin | ||
US Quidditch Cup | 9 | 2016 | Columbia, South Carolina | Quidditch Club Boston | ||
10 | 2017 | Kissimmee, Florida | Texas Cavalry | |||
11 | 2018 | Round Rock, Texas | University of Rochester | Texas Cavalry | ||
12 | 2019 | Round Rock, Texas | University of Texas at Austin | Texas Cavalry | ||
2022 | 2022 | Salt Lake City, Utah | University of Texas at Austin | Texas Hill Country Heat | ||
US Quadball Cup | 2023 | 2023 | Conshohocken, PA | University of Texas San Antonio | The Warriors | |
2024 | 2024 | Round Rock, Texas | Harvard University | Boom Train |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Quidditch Changes Name to Quadball". US Quadball. 2022-07-19. Retrieved 2024-02-23.
- ^ "2017-18 College/Community Split at USQ Events | US Quidditch". www.usquidditch.org. Retrieved 2018-03-04.
- ^ "History | US Quidditch Cup". www.usquidditchcup.com. Retrieved 2022-04-26.
External links
edit- IQA World Cup IV archived by the Wayback Machine
- IQA World Cup V archived by the Wayback Machine
- IQA World Cup VI archived by the Wayback Machine
- IQA World Cup VII archived by the Wayback Machine
- US Quidditch World Cup 8
- US Quidditch Cup 9