Quidditch Canada

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Quidditch Canada
File:Quidditch Canada 2014 Logo.png
Abbreviation QC, QuidCan, CQA
Formation 2012
Type National sport organization (NSO)
Legal status Non-Profit Organization
Headquarters Ottawa
Location
President
Chris Daw
Main organ
International Quidditch Association
Website Official Quidditch Canada website

Quidditch Canada is the governing body that oversees quidditch within Canada under its mother organization the IQA. It was originally founded as the Canadian Quidditch Alliance and then Canada Quidditch, but the name changed in late 2013/2014 to reflect its position as official governing body of quidditch within Canada in line with other national sports bodies.

History

Quidditch Canada was founded July 1, 2014 to administer and organize the sport of quidditch in Canada. Prior to the organization of an independent sport body, there was a Facebook group named the Canadian Quidditch Alliance used to help coordinate the sport. There are still many Canadian quidditch players who use the abbreviation CQA to denote the organization. On July 1, 2014, as national leagues in several countries split from the International Quidditch Association, Quidditch Canada became the official Canadian quidditch national organization. The organization is a Registered Canadian Amateur Athletic Association and has grown to include over 20 teams across the country.

Structure

Quidditch Canada is the National Governing Body for quidditch in Canada. It consists of an Executive Director, Chris Daw, and five other Directors for Membership, Gameplay, Communications, Events, and Volunteers. The structure is expected to change slightly in the near future, potentially moving to a policy board governance model, in order to comply with regulatory requirements for recognition by Sport Canada and to enable better communication with members and engagement with volunteers.

Competitions

With the advent of Quidditch Canada, Canadian quidditch has shown an increase in number of teams across the country, enabling more play between Canadian teams. That said, teams from both the US and Canada regularly cross the border for tournaments in order to increase the diversity of competition. Canada is currently split into two regions, Eastern Canada and Western Canada, splitting at the Ontario / Manitoba border. These regions feature annual regional championships and other tournaments, both official and fantasy, throughout the year. The highest level of competition is the annual Quidditch Canada National Championship. The biggest annual Canadian fantasy tournament is the Canada Day Fantasy Tournament (CDFT), an open fantasy tournament held the weekend before Canada Day in Ottawa, ON.

National Championship

The first national championship was held in Burnaby, B.C. at Swanguard Stadium on March 28–29, 2015. This event attracted 8 teams from across Canada, as well as including an exhibition game between McGill Quidditch and US Quidditch member team UBC Quidditch. The championship was won by the Toronto Avengers who beat McGill Quidditch 40*-30 in cold, wet, and muddy conditions.

Prior to this year, the Eastern Canada Regional Championship, known at the time as the Canadian Cup, had often been considered the unofficial national championship for Canadian quidditch.

Regional tournaments

Eastern Canada

The 2014-2015 Eastern Canadian Regional Championship was held at 1000 Islands Sportsplex in Kingston, Ontario. It featured 16 teams from Ontario and Quebec playing against each other for rankings. The final game was McGill Quidditch over Carleton Quidditch with a score of 190-90*. McGill went on to attend the National Championship where they finished second.

The last event known as the Canadian Cup was on November 9, 2013 at Cherry Beach Fields in Toronto, ON.[1] It involved only teams from Eastern Canada as Western Canadian teams were invited to attend the Western Regional Championship along with teams from the western United States. The results from the tournament were:[2][3][4]

  • 1: uOttawa - GeeGees
  • 2: Carleton University
  • 3: McGill University
  • 4: uOttawa - Maple Rush

After Europe's bids were allocated followed European teams' inability to attend the World Cup,[5] Valhalla claimed Canada's additional bid after defeating Guelph University.[6]

Previous Canadian Cups were held on November 11, 2012 at Queen's University[7] and October 29, 2011 at Carleton University.[8] McGill University Quidditch was the regional champion for both the 2012-2013 and 2011-2012 seasons. The 2011 Canadian Cup was also Canada's first quidditch tournament and featured 8 teams, including one, St Lawrence University, from the United States.

Western Canada

The inaugural Western Canadian Regional Championship was held at the Yara Centre in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan on February 1, 2015. This location was chosen due to facility availability and in an attempt to distribute travel costs more evenly between the teams, since the National Championship would be held in the lower mainland of B.C.. Unfortunately, only two teams were able to attend, the Winnipeg Whomping Willows and the Alberta Clippers. The Alberta Clippers won all three games with scores of 210-30*, 150-30*, and 260*-20. Both teams traveled to the National Championship joining the other western Canadian teams, SFU Quidditch, Vancouver Vipertooths, and University of Victoria Valkyries there.

Prior to the creation of Quidditch Canada, the region of Western Canada was grouped with the western United States for competitive purposes. The 2013-2014 Western US Championship was held in Tempe, AZ.[9] Western Canadian teams decided against travelling the distance and so did not participate in the 2013/2014 Western Regional Championship.

The 2012/2013 season saw University of British Columbia's Thunderbirds, then Western Canada's only team, compete at the Western Regional Championships in Placer Valley, CA. The team was eliminated on the first day, and so did not advance to bracket play.[10][11]

In the 2011-2012 season, there were no regional championship requirements to attend the IQA World Cup. As such, the University of Victoria represented western Canada at IQA World Cup V in New York City.

Fantasy tournaments

Canada Day Fantasy

Canada Day Fantasy, or CDFT, is held yearly on the Sunday of the weekend before Canada Day in Ottawa, ON. It was originally organized and hosted by a mix of players and volunteers from the Ottawa quidditch community and is now organized by Quidditch Canada with the assistance of local volunteers. Fantasy tournaments feature teams constructed specifically for the tournament and composed of players from a multitude of regular-season teams. General Managers (GMs) for the tournament select players for their team from a list of eligible participants. The latest CDFT was held on June 28, 2015. Due to weather and field conditions, some games were cut out of the event. The final was won by Jamie Lafrance's Baby Blue team.

The first CDFT happened on June 30, 2013 at Immaculata High School and featured 6 teams and over 100 athletes from across Canada and the United States.[12] The Blue Team/Team Broduce, led by GM Jamie Lafrance of uOttawa Quidditch, won CDFT 2013 with a victory over the Black Team/Hipster Horcruxes.[13]

Other tournaments

Sudbury Quidditch Open Invitational Saturday, September 19, 2015, 10 am to 4 pm Art Gallery of Sudbury, 251 John Street, Sudbury, ON

"Alberta Games" The Edgemont Community Centre in Calgary, AB saw the first annual Alberta Games on November 30, 2013. Three teams competed: University of Calgary, University of Alberta, and Central Alberta Quidditch.[14]

Teams

Canada's first quidditch teams were in Ontario and Québec, but the country has seen a rapid expansion of teams across the country, notably within Ontario, Québec, B.C., and Alberta. Currently, the official member teams as recognized by Quidditch Canada for the 2015-2016 season are:

Unregistered teams, rumoured teams, or teams registered elsewhere include:

National team

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There has been a Canadian national roster set for two international events, with another team being assembled for IQA Quidditch World Cup 2016 to be held in Frankfurt, Germany on July 23–24, 2016. This will be the first time that team selection and coordination will be conducted through Quidditch Canada as the National Sport Organization.

The 2014 Canadian national team competed on July 19, 2014 at the Burnaby Lake sports complex in Burnaby, British Columbia against 5 other announced national teams: Belgium, Italy, Australia, the UK, and the USA.[4] The Global Games was the name of the a biennial event run by the International Quidditch Association that features national teams from quidditch-playing nations instead of collegiate or community teams. Canada took third place in the 2014 IQA Global Games following the United States and Australia, respectively.[1]

2012 saw the first Team Canada formed to compete at the Summer Games in Oxford, UK[15] where the team placed 4th of 5 teams in the first tournament to feature national squads. Quidditch Canada will host a second national team at the 2014 Global Games in Burnaby, BC[16][17] on July 19. The 2014 national team was chosen after a rigorous series of tryouts.

Coaching conferences

The University of Ottawa held a quidditch coaching conference - the first of its kind - on October 5–6, 2013. Approximately 30 people, primarily coaches and captains from 15 different Canadian teams, gathered for a series of workshops to discuss and learn about coaching techniques and tactics.[18]

Relation with Other Sport Bodies

The restructuring of the IQA greatly impacted quidditch in Canada. In particular, while Quidditch Canada and US Quidditch have worked together to allow member teams of both organizations to play limited ranked games against each other, that structure still limited the overall quantity of games between members of each organization.

Kidditch

Kidditch is a modified version of quidditch made for children where there is limited contact and minor changes in the rules. Various teams across Canada have outreach programmes at local primary and secondary school where kidditch is played as an after-school programme.[19]

See also

References

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External links