YOUNGER HAYAKAWA MAKES COMEBACK FOR 1ST @ DUEL IN THE DEN 2, 2022

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YOUNGER HAYAKAWA MAKES COMEBACK FOR 1ST @ DUEL IN THE DEN 2, 2022

RESULTS

PROMOTIONS & RERATINGS

  • Liam Hiyakawa U->E

  • Garrison Demazeliere U->E

  1. Liam Hayakawa

  2. Garrison Demazeliere

  3. John Mullins

SUMMARY

Last Saturday, May 14th, Lone Wolf Base hosted the second event in the Duel in the Den Series, Episode II. The tournament brought in three seasoned competitive veterans; an Irvine “Knight”, John Mullins (Rank E), a Los Angeles “Krait Dragon”, William Alonzo (Rank C), and an Escondido “Lone Wolf” Dustin Speratos (Unranked). They met with three fresh-faced newcomers, Liam Hayakawa and Garrison Demazeliere, from Lone Wolf Base and the fifteen year-old Logan de Guzman, who trained out of Phoenix Saber Academy, who is completely new to the Lightspeed scene.

In the pools and semi-finals, we once again saw one-minute and forty-five second rounds, to eight points, making the matches a slightly faster paced fighting scene. Speratos’ last tournament appearance was almost a year ago, the last time Lone Wolf hosted, at Summer Slash V. Shaking off the cobwebs and determined to earn his first rank, he found a lot of resistance with this group. He earned a very decisive win against C-ranker, Alonzo, nine to five. However, this was his only win of the evening.

Being the highest-ranked fencer, Alonzo was one of the “favored-to-win”. However, with so many new faces, this also meant many new challenges. His signature anime-inspired moveset was quickly dismantled by Mullins and Speratos. His other three fights were extremely close, with eight to seven spreads. However, only one of those was in his favor, as he only managed to close a win against Demazeliere.

Hayakawa has not been practicing for most of the past year, yet he felt that this was the time to dip his feet into the competitive light saber scene! Younger brother to Hikaru, the exalted “Defender of the Den”, from Episode I and Summer Slash V, Liam found himself with some big shoes to fill. With a close win versus Alonzo and a commanding defensive closeout versus teammate, Speratos, Hayakawa had an amazing start. However, he was immediately met with some adversity, after losing to Mullins eight to two and Demazeliere, seven-two. However, with Alonzo and Speratos at only one win each, Hayakawa just barely slides into the top four!

Coming off of a win from a heavy-grade tournament the weekend before, Cadet de Guzman was in the hot seat for his Lightspeed debut. Although he is very new to these rules, de Guzman showed a lot of skill and kept up with all of his opponents, including having the most defensive-bonus strikes coming out of the pools! De Guzman exited the pools with three wins, and showed that at fifteen-years old, he was not to be underestimated!

Demazeliere also came out of the pools with 3 wins. If Alonzo took a lot of his style from anime, then Demazeliere would be drawing most of his style from fighting games. His up-tempo, unorthodox stances and seemingly random combat style kept many of his opponents at a distance. Giving himself the advantage of being “the wildcard”, he beat out both of his teammates and the Cadet, but had some struggles with the ranked fencers in play. Due to some of his point spreads, he was able to land out of the pools at number two.

Coming off his second place win at Lone Wolf’s first Duel in the Den, Mullins was looking for the BIG win. We all knew that he meant business when he cleared all five of his pool matches with commanding leads; eight-four, nine-six, eight-six and two of The Wolves with a staggering eight-two. Mullins was looking to be the “Big Bad”, seeding as the dominating first seed into the brackets.

With the top four established, the eliminating rounds were still a minute-forty-five, to eight points, but now set to best-of-three rounds, which allows any underdog to come back strong! The first up was Mullins versus Hayakawa. After getting taken down with great ease, two to eight, Hayakawa really had to work to make sure and get in on Mullins’ long reach. The first round was well fought, however Mullins crushed Hayakawa, nine-six.

After a brief “coaching break”, they swapped sides and continued on a very back and forth round two. The exchanges lead us to a seven-all match in the last few seconds, but Hayakawa brought it in and took round two, just barely, at eight-seven. In round 3, it looked as though it could be anyone’s game. A lot of the exchanges were extremely close, however Hayakawa seemed to have a completely different strategy at bypassing Mullins’ range. At four-all, Hayakawa allowed Mullins to make the first move and countered with two back-to-back hookshots to Mullins’ hands, closing out the third round, eight to four and with an incredible upset, found a way into the finals.

Demazeliere and de Guzman couldn’t be any different of fighters. Demazeliere, the hip-hop-dance-battle fighter, de Guzman, the methodical two-hander. However, with the “power restriction rules” a little more relaxed in the brackets, they were both able to have a great rematch. In round one, Demazeliere did not look to want to take it to the time limit again. In similar fashion to their pool match, Demazeliere dominated the round and closed it out eight to four.

Coming back into round two, de Guzman had a few seconds to get some outside coaching from his dad. With both fighters increasing some intensity, the second round progressed slightly slower. However, whatever advice de Guzman’s father had for him in the coaching corner seemed to have paid off, because he turned everything around and, looking to follow in Hayakawa’s footsteps with the reverse sweep, took round two, with a massive three-point defensive bonus, nine-six.

With both fighters gathering themselves, we came to round three. Although both fighters seemed to be on their game with evasions and clean strikes, only one would be able to face Hayakawa in the finals. Demazeliere was able to take the lead, and he held on strong. De Guzman pulled out a few new moves, but to no avail. Demazeliere clutched onto that lead and took it to the finals, closing out eight to four.

With two Wolves in the finals, we entered into a very uncertain finale. Both ranked fighters, who were highly favored to win, were eliminated. The stage was set, the Wolves were ready. Demazeliere versus Hayakawa in a best-of-three, first to ten, two-minute rounds, battle!

With both fencers knowing that they cannot pull out too many tricky moves against their teammate, there were a lot of simultaneous maneuvers and some ranged stalling, finding ways to get past each other’s defenses. Once Hayakawa pulled ahead, he stayed on the defensive and took the round to time, winning nine to five.

Not to be left in the dust, Demazeliere did not want to fall into the same defensive trap as last time, and attempted to goad Hayakawa into over committing. This round remained fairly slow as both competitors did not want to be put behind in points. Going tit-for-tat, they again went the full two-minutes, with Hayakawa attempting a last minute score, but did not land in time, leaving Demazeliere out on top, just barely, seven-six.

With the final round of the evening and both competitors leaving it up to anyone’s game, we see Demazeliere come out hot, much more committed and landing amazing lunges. Only seconds into round three we see Demazeliere in a very commanding lead at five to one. Making it seem like he was on the warpath, and about to close this out by outspeeding “the Younger”, Hayakawa pulls out the big-guns with a incredibly close-to-call parry-riposte, and landing three points, keeping him in the game, at four to five. Demazeliere, still believing he can land quick “hand snipes” at the encounter start, gets completely deflected, yet again,  and just like that, Hayakawa takes the lead, seven to five.

With the whole crowd hyped on the back-to-back defensive actions, the referees reminding the fighters that the fight is to ten points and the commentators completely on the edges of their seat, Demazeliere attempts a third lounge to the hand of Hayakawa, only to be foiled a third time, and just like that, his lead was quickly dismantled. In a very surprising “Cinderella Story”; a clutch, back-to-back-to-back, nine-point defensive star is born. Liam Hayakawa takes round three and is Duel in the Den: Episode II’s winner!

I want to thank everyone who competed for this start of a great Lightspeed series. It’s definitely a drive for some of you, however we really enjoy hosting these things and really love having you all out here. A big thank you to the Hayakawa family for helping staff this event. Thank you Dustin for being on staff for the first week.

A big thank you to Lightspeed Saber League and Cang Snow for making all of this possible, and bringing us the World’s Fastest Light-Based Saber Fencing!I have sent out a Satisfaction Survey, of sorts, to all of the competitors via email, please take your time, but I really want this series to be a staple in the SoCal LSL events. We need your feedback to help us make it better!

M.T.F.B.W.Y.A.

Andre “Moose” Gonzalez

Cpt. Lone Wolf Base


ANDRE “MOOSE” GONZALEZ
Base Captain - Lone Wolf Base, Escondido, CA


STAFF

Andre Gonzalez
Hikaru Hayakawa
John Hayakawa

COMPETITORS

Dustin Speratos - Lone Wolf
William Alonzo - L.A. Krait Base
Garrison Demazeliere - Lone Wolf
Logan de Guzman - Phoenix Sabers
Liam Hayakawa - Lone Wolf
John Mullins - Irvine Knights

COMMENTARY
Cang Snow
Patricia Bauler



Win Data

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SUBMIT YOUR FENCING CLIPS FOR OUR VIDEO COMPETITION

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SUBMIT YOUR FENCING CLIPS FOR OUR VIDEO COMPETITION

Hello Lightspeed Saber friends!

Our esteemed EPO is hosting a different kind of competition for you all… 

In order to bring some more faces to our social media page, he has requested that you send in your best Lightspeed Saber fencing clips. These can be clips showing you (or a pal!) doing something especially impressive or fun, you (or an enemy!) doing something especially fun that flops, you having an amazing exchange, you scoring a stellar hit, something funny, or anything else that you’re proud of and want to show off! Show us exactly how badass our fencers can be! It’s YOUR time to shine, so don’t be afraid to showcase your personality. 

Your clips can be from a tournament, practice, your backyard, someone else’s backyard, a match it doesn’t matter. What’s most important is that we get to show you off, so bring your wow factor!

These clips might be used on our social medias at Facebook, Instagram, or YouTube, so please make sure that anything you send in is something you are comfortable with us sharing. 

The news gets even better though because there’s opportunities for you to win prizes! While the prize has not been confirmed yet, you can expect it to be a new lightsaber. However, this also depends on you. The more clips we get, the better a prize we can give you, so encourage all your teammates and friends to send in their clips as well! Please note that the winner will be based on the member(s) in the video and not the person who has submitted it. 

All footage can be submitted at: lightspeedsaber.com/highlights. The winners will be announced at this year’s Lightspeed Strikes Back on June 23rd - 26th. 

We cannot wait to see what you send our way!

For more information, check out the video on our Instagram page, and feel free to reach out to dinahk@lightspeedsaber.com with any questions. 

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OFFICIALLY ANNOUNCING NEW TEAM IN IRVING, TX: STARBIRD SABER ACADEMY

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OFFICIALLY ANNOUNCING NEW TEAM IN IRVING, TX: STARBIRD SABER ACADEMY

We are extremely excited to officially announce our newest team: Starbird Saber Academy! They are based in Irving, Texas, and headed by the magnificent and badass duo of Kat Laurange and Russ Mitchell.

They’re a small, yet dedicated and diverse team with their youngest member being 11 years old and with most of their members cross-training in at least one other fencing method. 

Currently their big goals are to train, work hard, have fun, and hopefully find some more friends to join in. Holding the mantra of "playing this game is more fun when you're REALLY GOOD at it!", they’ve got the fun-to-hard-work ratio down pat. They meet 3 times a week on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays.

Their addition to the Lightspeed Saber family makes Texas the second largest region for Lightspeed Saber activity across the country. We’re very excited to have them and can’t wait to see what they get up to!

If you’re in the area and interested in joining, find them at 1915 Peters Rd, Irving, TX 75061 Suite 108, 7pm-9pm. Find them on Instagram and Facebook at StarbirdSaber for more information. 

And help us give them a warm welcome in the Discord, and introduce yourselves at Lightspeed Strikes Back.

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HAYAKAWA TAKES 1ST @ DUEL IN THE DEN 1, 2022

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HAYAKAWA TAKES 1ST @ DUEL IN THE DEN 1, 2022


SUMMARY

RESULTS

  1. Hikaru Hayakawa

  2. John Mullins

  3. Priscilla Haile

PROMOTIONS & RERATINGS

  • Hikaru Hiyakawa D->D

  • John Mullins U->E


The last day of April brought about part one (of two) of the Lone Wolf Base’s Duel in the Den Series! With the hopes of ranking up some Novice or Unranked fighters by excluding ranks C and above, Duel in the Den allowed newer fencers to test their mettle against others in the same general experience levels. Los Angeles Krait Base and Irvine Knights each sent down two members looking to get in some great fights versus Lone Wolf’s own D-rank fighter.

Coming from Krait base we had the lovely yet fierce, power-couple of Kieran and Priscilla Haile! Although they were unable to make it down to Escondido for Summer Slash V they came down with their heads high and in great spirits! John Mullins and Dinah Kolasa joined us from Knight base, with this being Dinah’s second ever appearance in competitive bouts. Hikaru “Ru” Hayakawa was the literal “Lone Wolf” fighting from his home base and the only currently ranked fighter with a D-rank. The tournament was smaller than planned due to various circumstances, and we hope to see the other fighters who had hoped to compete during our second tournament on May 14!

Dinah made a great “second debut” here in Escondido. Her third match of the night was versus Kieran, with Kieran racked 3 points on the board in the first 38 seconds of the match. However, Dinah was not disheartened and through some long exchanges bringing it back with a 4 point succession. Kieran fought back landing a first-strike and bringing us to 4-4 with only 25 seconds left on the clock. After some back and forths, including an amazing hook shot from Dinah, we were staring at 9 seconds left on the clock with Kieran leading 7 to 6. As soon as “Fight” was called by referee Liam, Dinah threw out the hook shot again and with 8 seconds left on the clock closing out the tense match 8 to 7 and claiming her first competitive win!

Priscilla brought a very interesting tandem grip style to the Duel and showed us that you cannot count out a two-handed grip in this primarily one-handed sport! Keeping very strong horse and bow stances she threw her opponents a little off of their game, as not many fencers come from such explosive stances! With such power comes amazing defense maneuvers, and Priscilla was very capable of controlling any basic one-handed blade movements against her, including scoring a parry riposte versus Dinah, which kept her well in the lead during their match and landing her a win in the pools.

Kieran kept up with his wife well by showing that he too was capable of defense bonus points! Although he lost versus John in the round-robin, he made him work for it by scoring an early 3-pointer scored by defending on the way into a hand pick! With some really great back-and-forth exchanges, Kieran was able to have a massive lead on Priscilla, handing him a win, and potentially a heated debate on the way home, lol!

John brings to us the old adage “Don’t judge a book by its cover,” John may be a big guy but his speed and accuracy made him an extremely tough opponent for most of the other fencers. With quick hand picks and amazing blade work, he kept his opponents on their back foot, afraid to come in, for fear of getting picked from his massive reach. John did find difficulty in Priscilla’s lateral and lower movements. She brought the score up to a 7-all comeback, but John was ultimately able to close it out with a fiercely accurate hand pick, ending 9 to 7.
Although John was looking to be the top competitor of the night, the true test was versus our only ranked fighter of the evening, D-ranked Hikaru. Hikaru was by far the most agile fighter in this comp. taking an immediate lead. One minute in, however, John was able to chain together some amazing picks and took the lead 5 to 4. Not wanting to lose as the “Home Team”, and also probably gathering the strength of the wolf pack, Ru pulled out some hookshots to the hand in order to close out the match 8 - 5.To make brackets extremely interesting, we took the number one fighter and gave them a bye through the brackets, letting them rest and recouperate until the finals match. Much like his showing at Summer Slash V, Ru was riding the home-field advantage in first place out of pools. The other four competitors had a ways to go to get to the final boss match, as all matches were now first eight points, but best of three rounds, with a 90 second “coaching intermission” between rounds.

The brackets started with the Irvine pair facing off in the “Quarterfinals”. John stepped into the ring with a mission and faced his teammate, Dinah, with a heavy heart. The first round was very reminiscent of their pool match with John keeping a massive lead the whole time, ending it 9 to 2. After a few words with her coach Cang Snow, Dinah looked to have a whole new battle plan. Her defensive movements were much more effective this time around and she was able to stall out John’s hand picks for a large part of the round. The end result was our very first round to go to a time call, ending with John in the lead at 7 to 3.

To find out who John was facing in the semi-finals, we went back to the lovely Krait Base couple! Kieran pulled off the win versus Priscilla in the pool match, but here in the best of three brackets Priscilla said, “Rings are off when we’re in the ring!” The first round was already a change up from the pools, as the two would go back and forth with some intense exchanges. Kieran took the first round win with some rapid fire combo attacks, but this time, Priscilla kept up, keeping it close at 8 to 5. With spectators hoping for an amazing comeback story, we entered round two with Priscilla mixing up her move pool with attacks very reminiscent of her base leader Tony Zaldua. This worked out well to her advantage as it kept her and Kieran going back and forth just long enough to run the clock down, ending the round at 7 to 6, Priscilla! Which meant we entered Round Three. As with any multi-round fight, both fighters seemed to have slowed down from their previous two rounds. Although Kieran put together some amazing combos with quick succession, Priscilla was able to counter back with amazing evasion and quick picks to take Round Three and the match, with a score of 9 to 6!

That brought Priscilla and John to the Semi-Finals match to see who would fight Hikaru! Keeping to her typical two handed stance and giving up quite a few honor calls, Priscilla realized that she was being beaten by John’s accurate snipes. Although she was able to deflect quite a few, she was still unable to retaliate at the range John was capable of, and John quickly closed out both rounds, 9 to 3 and 8 to 3. John was given as much time as needed to catch his breath, because he now faced Ru in The Finals!

What I did not say earlier is that all of these fighters drove out here to Escondido from OC and LA, respectively, to compete not only at a shot to earn their first ranks, but also to earn their own lights and sound lightsaber! Yes, a full equipped, lightweight, Lightspeed-legal lightsaber! Are you C or lower? Want a chance to get your own lightsaber? Come on out to Duel in the Den Episode II on May 14th! The tournament will be a Qualifier only event, meaning it is not “Prized”, however, all competitors will get an free entry into the raffle. Additional entries can be purchased online or on site. Raffle is open to all competitors and their guests! Tickets are on sale now on Duel In The Den 2 Eventbrite! C-ranks, please contact Andre to get your “discount code” before purchasing a ticket!

Anyway, where were we? OH! Right, The Final Fight. Although John lost to Ru in the pools, he had the heart of a lion... or a warrior... or maybe it was both, because he was on a fighter’s high and ready to take on any challenge, even if that meant the Lone Wolf at the end of the tunnel!

The First round started out extremely strong, as Ru bounced in and out looking for that first strike, while John was also stepping in and out to counter, not leaving space for Ru to feel comfortable. Although Ru opened up with a misparry and a clean hand shot, John’s extended reach proved to be a problem for Ru immediately afterwards. A few clashes in, the fight turned into survival match of who could keep their hands safe. After that tactic stalled out, John decided to aim high and score a massive head strike to keep him in the game. Ru followed up with a first-hit hand strike to close out round one, just barely, 8 to 7.

After a brief water break, both competitors came into Round Two refreshed. Irvine Coach Snow turned to his pupil during the intermission to give some helpful pointers, hopefully on how to slow down the smaller, younger Ru. The start of the round was promising for John as his tempo was definitely different this time around. Scoring a head shot early and with some quick retalitions, it looked as though John was at the start of a “reverse sweep”. Unfortunately, Ru seemingly picked up on John’s new methods and started to off-set the tempo of his fighting, which John was not prepared for. After a few devastating clean strikes, Ru finished the round 9 to 5, taking the match and first place for Duel in the Den Episode I!

For earning second place, John earns his first rank, coming in at E-rank! Hikaru re-earned his D-rank.

I want to thank all of the other competitors for coming out. I know we’re a little far from the rest of SoCal, but it means so much for us to be able to host these things, and we honestly love to have novice fighters earning ranks with us! If you fought on Saturday, you’re more than welcome to come back on the 14th. If you would like your chance to earn a ranking within the league, we gladly welcome you down here in The Den!

A big thank you to Lightspeed Saber League and Cang Snow for making all of this possible, and bringing us the World’s Fastest Light-Based Saber Fencing!

M.T.F.B.W.Y.A.

Andre “Moose” Gonzalez

Cpt. Lone Wolf Base

 

ANDRE “MOOSE” GONZALEZ
Base Captain - Lone Wolf Base, Escondido, CA


STAFF

Liam
Rico
Fonzie
Dustin

COMPETITORS

Priscilla Haile
Kieran Haile
Dinah Kolasa
Hikaru Hayakawa
John Mullins



Win Data

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ARMORY UPDATED AND REOPENED

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ARMORY UPDATED AND REOPENED

Hey, Junior Assistant Maddi Garrett here! It’s my lucky day to share about some work that has been going on behind the scenes to improve our Armory! We have been hard at work to make it easier for members to navigate. Let’s talk about what has changed!

For starters, the Armory has a new appearance that is easier to navigate. We now showcase our saber parts and apparel separately, as well as separately showcasing our Custom Equipment Packages. Each individual product page has been formatted with information to help you make the most informed decisions.

We have also worked through the shipping issues we had been having and reconfigured a streamlined shipping process. Shipping calculations will be more accurate and less difficult to figure out. You will no longer have to figure out the size of your package for shipping!

All that to say, the Armory is reopened! Come stock up on saber parts and Lightspeed Saber apparel!

If you have any issues with what we’ve got, feel free to contact me at maddimgarrett@gmail.com. I’d love to hear feedback!

May the Force be with you! - Maddi G

 

Junior Assistant Maddi Garrett

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RANKINGS TO DROP FOR EXPIRED MEMBERSHIPS

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RANKINGS TO DROP FOR EXPIRED MEMBERSHIPS

Starting on September 1st, 2022, Lightspeed Saber fencers will start to be dropped from the competition ladder unless they have a current, active Lightspeed Saber League membership. Any fencer is welcome to participate in competitions that they are eligible for, regardless of membership status; but without a membership they cannot hold a rank higher than Grade E. Squadron captains with a registered team are exempt.

Fencers who wish to keep their grade and position must open or renew their membership at: LightspeedSaber.com/register. If you fall off the ladder you can still renew your membership at a later date. There are still 4 months before September in which fencers can do so.

Lightspeed Saber League relies on membership support in order to put on major tournaments and events, retain our excellent staff, and pay for insurance.

Lightspeed Saber League is an open competition system, so you don’t need to be a member to compete and members of other organizations and related activities are always welcome.

If you have any questions or concerns reach out to dinahk@lightspeedsaber.com

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ZALDUA TAKES GOLD @ IRVINE OPEN 2022

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ZALDUA TAKES GOLD @ IRVINE OPEN 2022

Irvine Open 2022 Finalists


SUMMARY

RESULTS

  1. Tony Zaldua

  2. Jeremiah Rodriguez

  3. Raphael Estrada

  4. Hunter Allison

PROMOTIONS & RERATINGS

  • Tony Zaldua A->A

  • Jeremiah B->B

  • Raphael Estrada U->C

  • Hunter Allison D->C


The second competition in our Southern California season started strong, with strong showings from all competitors, and some newer competitors showing an insane amount of work and practice and skill.

 Starting in the pools, we saw Jeremiah take a dominant lead out of the pools, with Tony, Hunter, Jose, and Alex who are all seasoned and D or greater ranked competitors also doing well. Some surprises came out of these, with Raphael Estrada and Antoinette Vidal of Krait Base, and Kevin Criswell of TSL San Diego earning into the top 6 out of the pools - Raphael being the only previous LSL competition fighter, and Antoinette and Kevin in their first competitions. Of note was that this was the most balanced pool results of any competition in the last few years by score exiting the pools.

The fighters then entered top 8 brackets with some blistering fights. Starting with Box A’s bracket fights we saw Jose and Tony paired up, with Tony taking the win but Jose getting some very great shots and going all out with a ton of very very close shots a lot of the time. Raphael and Kevin’s match was next with both fighters flying back and forth with their lunges and dodges constantly with some amazing blade work shown much like their match in the Boxes, running to time.

In Box B we saw Jeremiah and Alex fight first, with Jeremiah taking a commanding lead early, and Alex fighting hard and changing things up coming back 9 points in a row before Jeremiah was able to get in another point for the win. Then we saw Antoinette and Hunter fight, with a lot of stalemate going on with Hunter having to get extremely aggressive with her movement and lunging due to Antoinette showing great control of her location and lots of great defenses.

Then in the quarter finals we saw Jeremiah and Hunter fight with Jeremiah really hammering in great return actions and holding a great defensive play while countering Hunter’s range and mobility well. Then Raphael and Tony had Raphael surprising Tony with how hard he was going and Tony having to pull out the stops to prove why he is number one, but Raphael pushing him that hard was certainly a surprise Tony hadn’t fully expected.

Then in the finals saw Jeremiah and Tony go back and forth with amazing returns, great defensive strikes, and a lot of close shots. The entire match showed how much energy and skill both fighters had, and how serious Jeremiah has been gunning for an A rank and the number one slot. Tony, however, managed to eek out a win by only one point after a 14-14 tie.

All in all the fights were great and seeing some of the fighters in this tournaments growth was an amazing experience. We hope to see more from all the fighters of this event.

 

SEAN HOLTZMAN
Director of Southern California


STAFF

John Mullins
Cang Snow
Sean Holtzman
Patricia Bauler
Jamar Johnson
David Walker

COMPETITORS

Jose Miranda-Ortiz
Tony Zaldua
Kieran Haile
Raphael Estrada
Jeremiah Rodriguez
William Alonzo
Walter Simbol
Alex Monterrosa
Kevin Criswell
Hunter Allison
Jacob Areias
Antoinette Vidal



Win Data

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