ISML 2015: Eru Chitanda elected 14th Saimoe Prime Minister of Japan!
ISML 2015: Eru Chitanda elected 14th Saimoe Prime Minister of Japan!
Yui-nyan wins Divine Circlet, Chitanda automatically retired from ISML Regular Season
By Jo-Ryan Salazar
The Bedlam on Baltic Avenue
November 30, 2015
Bells were ringing in all of the cathedrals of Osaka and all over the Kansai as Eru Chitanda was voted in as the 14th Saimoe Prime Minister of Japan after winning the Heavenly Tiara, defeating Yukino Yukinoshita 6430-5491, winning 54 percent of the vote. With the 2channel Anime Saimoe Tournament gone dark, the International Saimoe League champion will succeed Nodoka Haramura and Saki Miyanaga, the 2014 2channel AST joint winners.
The match is declared to be a massive upset and the Upset of the Round, as Eru Chitanda came into the postseason as a big longshot to the win the Tiara with humble odds of 12-1. The victory also means that the ISML will have two retirements from the competition proper, as Kotori Itsuka also will not be eligible to compete in the regular season.
"Houtarou always told me, if you're going to go out, go out with a bang," said Chitanda at the victory rally at Koshien Stadium. "The one person I love in this world was right all along. This season, I made it a priority to listen to everything he has to say because he told me that if I win this, I won't have to compete in this thing any longer.
"To everyone of you, all my constituents, all my supporters, all my friends, we are in a rough time in this world. I now realize that the mystique of this world is broad, deep, rich, something you just can't explain. To this end, I plan to spend my one year as Saimoe Prime Minister as a servant to the Japanese people. Let me know what you want to make our country better, and I will do the best I can to make your visions a reality.
"This world, despite all its troubles, its wars, strife and social issues...it parallels that of life. Don't be afraid to take advantage of what adventures await you in this beautiful country and in this beautiful world. Live your life and be curious like me! Don't be afraid of what's around the corner or what you will see when you open that door of opportunity.
"2016 will be a year that will get all of Japan pumped up, with the Olympics and many other great things that will captivate the world. Let's team up and make this great country the best country on Earth. Because when all is said and done: we are all curious! Thank you, may God bless you, and may God bless Japan!"
Yukinoshita was unavailable for comment. In Tiara classfication results, Chiyo Sakura hammered Kurisu Makise 5563-4408 to finish third, Yoshino stormed past Saber 5414-4145 for fifth place, Nanami Aoyama cruised past Yui Yuigahama 4931-4002 for seventh, Asuna Yuuki slashed past Kosaki Onodera 5882-4324 for ninth place, Shiro defeated Eucliwood Hellscythe 5092-4780 for 11th place, and Jibril flew past Ayase Aragaki 5320-4072 for 13th place.
In Male Division scepter action, Accelerator accelerated past Edward Elric 5560-4249, Archer prevailed over Yuzuru Otonashi 4987-4863, Koyomi Araragi stunned Hachiman Hikigaya 5387-4727 and Sora slammed Seiya Kanie 5299-4545.
Mitsuki Nase and Sakuraku Kujou will duel for the Fall Diadem. Nase defeated Tsubasa Hanekawa 4880-4731 while Kujou smashed Kuon 4796-3704. Finally, Yui-nyan takes the Divine Circlet after defeating Latifa Fleuranza 5181-4886.
ISML 2015 FALL DIADEM FINAL
BoBA Predicts: Mitsuki Nase by <=500
Over/Under: 10000
Under
Match Day 10 of the 2015 International Saimoe League Postseason is scheduled for December 3, 2015. Vote for your favorite candidates at InternationalSaimoe.com and join the ongoing debate. This match day will include the Tournament of Champions Semifinals. The winner of the Tournament of Champions will succeed Kotori Itsuka as Saimoe Leader of the Free World.
Edmonton Eskimos: 2015 Grey Cup Champions
WINNIPEG -- It’s hard to find a more aggressive coach than Chris Jones, and on Sunday it paid off for the Eskimos.
Jordan Lynch scored a one-yard touchdown on third down with 3:22 left, sending the Edmonton Eskimos to a 26-20 victory over the Ottawa REDBLACKS in the 103rd Grey Cup presented by Shaw.
Mike Reilly threw touchdown passes to Adarius Bowman and Akeem Shavers while completing 21 of 25 passes for 269 yards, while Edmonton’s defence allowed only four second-half points to guide the Eskimos to their first Grey Cup since 2005.
The REDBLACKS opened with a scoring surge with a pair of touchdowns on their opening two drives, but the Eskimos battled back to take the lead at halftime. After entering the fourth quarter behind, Edmonton scored the go-ahead touchdown on a drive fueled by two pass interference penalties.
Henry Burris threw for 220 yards and a pair of touchdowns in the loss, but was also intercepted by Patrick Watkins and failed to generate a touchdown after the opening two drives.
While the focus was on Ottawa’s big four entering Sunday, it was Maurice Price getting the REDBLACKS’ offence moving out of the gate. Price caught a pass over the middle on second and 10 to give Burris and the REDBLACKS a first down and that got things moving.
On the next play, Burris hit Ellingson on the slant over the middle to move the sticks again. Two runs by first-year CFL running back William Powell kept the drive alive, then inside the 25 Burris hit Chris Williams on the right sideline to put Ottawa inside the four.
On first down Burris went play action, then pulled the ball down and hit Patrick Lavoie to put the REDBLACKS in the end zone.
Burris went 5-for-6 on the game’s opening drive for 60 yards and a touchdown, giving the REDBLACKS the first strike and a 7-0 lead in the 103rd Grey Cup only 3:43 into the game. The score capped off a seven-play, 73-yard drive as Ottawa set exactly the right tone for the game.
The REDBLACKS’ early momentum went from a spark to a surge on the very next play. Esks’ shifty returner Kendial Lawrence fumbled Edmonton’s first kick return of the game as Jake Harty forced a loose ball, and there to recover was Damaso Munoz.
Powell sprinted up the heart of the Esks’ defence for 15 on the first play of the next drive, then Burris made his sixth straight completion on a slant over the middle to Ernest Jackson for 15 more.
With a first-and-goal from the 10, the 40-year-old Burris wasn’t fooling around. After a run was stopped on first down, Burris threaded the needle to Jackson in the end zone for a seven-yard score.
Chris Milo missed the extra point, but Burris’ second touchdown of the game and seventh straight completion put the REDBLACKS ahead 13-0 before Reilly and the Eskimos’ offence could even touch the football.
The Eskimos needed a response from their offence, which scrimmaged from the 32-yard-line on its first possession of the game. A completion to Bowman and a pass interference penalty against Antoine Pruneau set up a three-pointer by Sean Whyte to get the Eskimos on the board.
While the drive didn’t end the way the Green and Gold had hoped, it started turn the momentum a little bit in the Eskimos’ favour. That continued on the defensive side of the ball when Burris looked to go long on second down, only to be intercepted by cornerback Patrick Watkins.
Already Reilly’s favourite target, Stafford moved the sticks with a key second down conversion and held onto the ball in Ottawa territory for a 24-yard pickup. After running for a first down, the Eskimos’ gunslinging quarterback hit Bowman on the corner route for a 23-yard touchdown and just like that it was a new ballgame.
Reilly’s first career Grey Cup touchdown pass made it a 13-10 game with two minutes left in the opening quarter, capping off a five-play, 60-yard scoring drive over 2:30 span.
Now it was the REDBLACKS needing an answer, but they were victimized by the game’s first sack as Marcus Howard got to Burris and took him down. Howard was hit with a 15-yard penalty on the play to give Ottawa a second chance on the drive, but an Odell Willis sack right after forced Ottawa to punt while putting an end to the opening 15 minutes.
The REDBLACKS appeared to have another big defensive play when Brandyn Thompson scooped up a fumble and returned it for seven, but it was negated by an offside penalty by Justin Capicciotti. On the same drive though Jonathan Williams sacked Reilly, forcing the Eskimos to punt as the defences settled in.
A catch-and-run by Powell set up Milo’s first field goal of the night to make it 16-10 Ottawa, while the Eskimos missed a 45-yard field goal try and the REDBLACKS were forced to punt.
Down six with under two minutes left, the Esks’ offence looked to strike and take the lead before halftime. Shamawd Chambers got the drive started with a gain into REDBLACKS’ territory on his second catch of the game, then Reilly kept things moving with some fancy footwork.
A pass to Walker for 17 yards along the right sideline gave the Eskimos another first down, and then with the clock ticking and under half a minute left, Reilly found a wide open Akeem Shavers for a 13-yard pickup inside the two.
Reilly went right back to the rookie running back on the next play, and with 12 seconds left in the half the Eskimos took their first lead of the game – 17-16. That 85-yard drive on which Reilly completed all five passing attempts sent the Eskimos into halftime with the lead.
The REDBLACKS took the lead back on a 33-yard field goal following a seven play, 75-yard drive to make it 19-17. Edmonton cut the lead in half with a single point on a punt, but the defences dominated the third quarter as the contest became about field position.
Late in the third though the Eskimos began to tilt the field in their favour. A third down conversion moved the sticks and then a catch by Cory Watson moved the Eskimos into Ottawa territory. Reilly used his legs to keep the sticks moving again, but a stalled drive proved costly.
Whyte missed his second field goal of the game, putting this try off the uprights from 35 yards out leaving the REDBLACKS up by a point, 19-18 entering the fourth and final quarter.
A close game entering the fourth quarter appeared to be in Edmonton’s favour, as the Esks had outscored opponents 107-22 in fourth quarters during their current nine-game winning streak – an average margin of eight points.
In the fourth quarter the defensive duel continued though. The REDBLACKS added a single point to their lead on a 72-yard punt by Milo, while their defence responded with a two-and-out against Reilly.
The Eskimos’ defence rose to the occasion though and the next time Reilly got the ball back he got aggressive. The veteran pivot fired down the right sideline and while his pass fell to the turf, an interference penalty against Abdul Kanneh gave Edmonton a first down at the 47.
Reilly went long again on the very next play, and this time after a challenge by Chris Jones there was another pass interference. After the penalty moved the Eskimos to the Ottawa 10, a completion to Nate Coehoorn put the Esks at the one.
Down two with under four minutes left facing a third and goal from the one, Jones opted to gamble on scoring the go-ahead touchdown. And after a second effort, short-yardage quarterback Jordan Lynch was able to power his way over the line to give Edmonton a 26-20 lead following the two-point conversion with 3:22 remaining.
Burris moved the sticks with a 14-yard completion to Price on second down as the REDBLACKS moved near midfield, but Ottawa's drive quickly stalled after that. An incompletion by Burris and then a sack forced Rick Campbell's hand in punting the football away with two minutes left, and his offence never got the ball back as the Eskimos moved the chains three times to melt away the clock.
The win marks Edmonton's 10th in a row, all with Reilly under centre since he returned from a knee injury to start the Labour Day rematch against Calgary.
In those 10 games the Eskimos defeated division rival Calgary three times to not only win the West but ultimately represent the West in the Grey Cup.
The loss for Ottawa is a disappointing end to a campaign the city will never forget, as the REDBLACKS mounted one of the greatest turnarounds in CFL history in going from two wins a year ago to 12 wins and a Grey Cup appearance this year.
Burris had a career season for the REDBLACKS and won Most Outstanding Player for his efforts at age 40, while Ottawa boasted four 1,000-yard receivers and the CFL's number one-ranked offence.
BoBA ISML 2015 Predictions: Postseason Match Day 9
ISML Championship Match
ARENA 01: [Yukinoshita Yukino] Chitanda Eru
by <=1500
Over/Under: 12000
Over
ARENA 02: [Accelerator] Edward Elric
by >=1000
Over/Under: 11000
Over
ARENA 03: Archer [Otonashi Yuzuru]
by <=1000
Over/Under: 11000
Over
ARENA 04: Araragi Koyomi [Hikigaya Hachiman]
by >=1100
Over/Under: 12000
Over
ARENA 05: Kanie Seiya [Sora]
by >=900
Over/Under: 10000
Over
ISML TIARA CLASSIFICATION:
THIRD PLACE:
ARENA 06: [Sakura Chiyo] Makise Kurisu
by <=800
Over/Under: 12000
Over
5TH PLACE:
ARENA 07: Yoshino [Saber]
by <=700
Over/Under: 12000
Over
7TH PLACE:
ARENA 08: [Yuigahama Yui] Aoyama Nanami
by <=600
Over/Under: 12000
Over
9TH PLACE:
ARENA 09: [Onodera Kosaki] Yūki Asuna
by <=800
Over/Under: 12000
Over
11TH PLACE:
ARENA 10: Shiro [Eucliwood Hellscythe]
by <=500
Over/Under: 12000
Over
13TH PLACE:
ARENA 11: [Aragaki Ayase] Jibril
by <=900
Over/Under: 12000
Over
FALL DIADEM SEMIFINALS:
ARENA 12: Nase Mitsuki [Hanekawa Tsubasa]
by <=400
Over/Under: 13000
Under
ARENA 13: Kujō Sakurako [Kuon]
by <=300
Over/Under: 13000
Under
DIVINE CIRCLET CHAMPIONSHIP
ARENA 14: Latifa Fleuranza [Yui-nyan]
by >=700
Over/Under: 13000
Under
NOTE: It should be noted that in the previous report, Latifa and Yui-nyan had won circlets. This is incorrect, as the winner of the final match below will have won the Divine Circlet.
UBC Thunderbirds: 2015 Vanier Cup Champions
The cup drought is officially over. After a challenging season, the UBC football team finished with a hard-fought 26-23 win over the University of Montréal Carabins to win their first Vanier Cup since 1997.
The T-Birds were first to get onto the scoreboard with two field goals by star kicker Quinn van Gylswyk on UBC’s first two possessions.
With Montréal in possession during the final minute of the first quarter, UBC linebacker Dylan Chapdelaine caught an interception at the Montréal 39-yard line before tailback Marcus Davis caught a six-yard reception from Michael O’Connor early in the second for a touchdown.
Midway in the second, van Gylswyk added another field goal to increase the T-Birds’ lead to 16-0.
On Montréal’s next possession, they were forced to punt after gaining only five yards on three downs, but the Carabins quickly regained the possession on a fumble by O’Connor. Montréal then scored a touchdown on the ensuing drive to narrow the T-Birds’ lead to 16-7.
UBC made another error on its next possession when the team failed to fake a field goal after a third and goal situation. Montréal responded with a successful drive before adding a field goal in the final few seconds, making the score 16-10 by halftime.
Despite two misplays in the second quarter, the T-Birds did see an impressive performance from O’Connor, who racked up 290 passing yards in the first half. Receiver Will Watson caught 120 of those passing yards.
Early in the third, T-Birds star running back Brandon Deschamps rushed the ball 44 yards to score a touchdown for UBC. The Carabins then responded with a field goal on their next possession.
In the final minute of the third quarter, the Carabins made a successful drive near the T-Birds’ end zone before UBC forced a third and goal. Linebackers Terrell Davis and Mitch Barnett both nearly caught interceptions. Montréal then sc
The first seven minutes of the final quarter saw no scoring as strong defence by UBC and Montréal kept each other in check. T-Birds defensive back Stavros Katsantonis forced and recovered a fumble early in the fourth quarter.
With the seven-point deficit, Montréal got a touchdown midway in the fourth quarter to equalize the score. Intensity then peaked as both teams anxiously fought to gain possession and come out on top. The T-Birds did have a field goal attempt, but Montéeal’s defence prevented the team from scoring.
The game changer came with less than 1:32 remaining on the clock, when UBC’s A. J. Blackwell caught an interception. On the ensuing possession, the T-Birds managed to drive to the Carabins’ 13-yard line.
After UBC’s failed a fake field goal attempt earlier, van Gylswyk became the hero for the Thunderbirds as he scored in the final second of the game to give UBC the 26-23 win.
ISML 2015: Chitanda, Yukinoshita to duel for Tiara, Saimoe Prime Minister honors
ISML 2015: Chitanda, Yukinoshita to duel for Tiara, Saimoe Prime Minister honors
By Jo-Ryan Salazar
The Bedlam on Baltic Avenue
November 27, 2015
Yukino Yukinoshita and Eru Chitanda will battle for the 2015 International Saimoe League Heavenly Tiara on Sunday, November 29, 2015. Yukinoshita defeated Mashiro Shiina 5821-4468 while Chitanda defeated Chitoge Kirisaki 5661-4491. Yukinoshita will come in as an EVEN money favorite to succeed Nodoka Haramura and Saki Miyanaga as Saimoe Prime Minister of Japan, while Chitanda placed as a 3-1 second choice.
With the 2channel Anime Saimoe Tournament going dark this year, the 14th Saimoe Prime Minister of Japan will be assumed by the winner of the 2015 ISML Heavenly Tiara, with the Tournament of Champions winner assuming the role of the new Saimoe Leader of the Free World..
BoBA Predicts: Yukino Yukinoshita by <=1500
Over/Under: 12000
Over
In Male Division Scepter action, Seiya Kanie defeated Izayoi Sakamaki 5131-4610 in the Upset of the Round and Sora rolled past Gintoki Sakata 5675-4254. In Tiara classification action, Asuna Yuuki routed Eucliwood Hellscythe 5720-4390, Nanami Aoyama grounded Shiro 4793-4250, Saber slashed past Jibril 5292-4587 and Kurisu Makise prevailed over Ayase Aragaki 5085-4826.
In Fall Seasonal action, Mitsuki Nase defeated Mocha Hoto 5156-4594, Tsubasa Hanekawa pummeled Senritsu no Tatsumaki 5282-4074, Kuon destroyed Anna Kushina 5153-4482 and Sakurako Kujou whipped past Julia-Alexia van Riessfeld 5009-4387.
Latifa Fleuranza and Yui-nyan have also won circlets to wrap up their seasons. Fleuranza cruised past Holo 5278-4550 while Yui-nyan rocked Mikan Yuuki 5263-4707.
Match Day 9 of the 2015 International Saimoe League is scheduled for November 29, 2015. Vote for your favorite candidates at InternationalSaimoe.com and join the ongoing debate.
By Jo-Ryan Salazar
The Bedlam on Baltic Avenue
November 27, 2015
Yukino Yukinoshita and Eru Chitanda will battle for the 2015 International Saimoe League Heavenly Tiara on Sunday, November 29, 2015. Yukinoshita defeated Mashiro Shiina 5821-4468 while Chitanda defeated Chitoge Kirisaki 5661-4491. Yukinoshita will come in as an EVEN money favorite to succeed Nodoka Haramura and Saki Miyanaga as Saimoe Prime Minister of Japan, while Chitanda placed as a 3-1 second choice.
With the 2channel Anime Saimoe Tournament going dark this year, the 14th Saimoe Prime Minister of Japan will be assumed by the winner of the 2015 ISML Heavenly Tiara, with the Tournament of Champions winner assuming the role of the new Saimoe Leader of the Free World..
BoBA Predicts: Yukino Yukinoshita by <=1500
Over/Under: 12000
Over
In Male Division Scepter action, Seiya Kanie defeated Izayoi Sakamaki 5131-4610 in the Upset of the Round and Sora rolled past Gintoki Sakata 5675-4254. In Tiara classification action, Asuna Yuuki routed Eucliwood Hellscythe 5720-4390, Nanami Aoyama grounded Shiro 4793-4250, Saber slashed past Jibril 5292-4587 and Kurisu Makise prevailed over Ayase Aragaki 5085-4826.
In Fall Seasonal action, Mitsuki Nase defeated Mocha Hoto 5156-4594, Tsubasa Hanekawa pummeled Senritsu no Tatsumaki 5282-4074, Kuon destroyed Anna Kushina 5153-4482 and Sakurako Kujou whipped past Julia-Alexia van Riessfeld 5009-4387.
Latifa Fleuranza and Yui-nyan have also won circlets to wrap up their seasons. Fleuranza cruised past Holo 5278-4550 while Yui-nyan rocked Mikan Yuuki 5263-4707.
Match Day 9 of the 2015 International Saimoe League is scheduled for November 29, 2015. Vote for your favorite candidates at InternationalSaimoe.com and join the ongoing debate.
BoBA ISML Predictions: Postseason Match Day 8
ARENA 01: Yukinoshita Yukino [Shiina Mashiro]
by <=600
Over/Under: 9000
Over
ARENA 02: Chitanda Eru [Kirisaki Chitoge]
by <=600
Over/Under: 9000
Over
ARENA 03: [Kanie Seiya] Sakamaki Izayoi
by <=500
Over/Under: 9000
Under
ARENA 04: [Sora] Sakata Gintoki
by>=700
Over/Under: 9000
Under
ARENA 05: [Yūki Asuna] Eucliwood Hellscythe
by <=600
Over/Under: 8500
Over
ARENA 06: [Aoyama Nanami] Shiro
by <=500
Over/Under: 8500
Over
ARENA 07: [Saber] Jibril
by >=400
Over/Under: 8500
Over
ARENA 08: [Aragaki Ayase] Makise Kurisu
by >=400
Over/Under: 8500
Over
ARENA 09: [Hoto Mocha] Nase Mitsuki
by <=500
Over/Under: 8700
Under
ARENA 10: [Hanekawa Tsubasa] Senritsu no Tatsumaki
by >=600
Over/Under: 8500
Over
ARENA 11: Kujō Sakurako [Julis-Alexia van Riessfeld]
by <=500
Over/Under: 8500
Under
ARENA 12: Kuon [Kushina Anna]
by >=400
Over/Under: 8400
Under
ARENA 13: Holo [Latifa Fleuranza]
by >=500
Over/Under: 8500
Over
ARENA 14: Yūki Mikan [Yui-nyan]
by >=600
Over/Under: 8600
Over
by <=600
Over/Under: 9000
Over
ARENA 02: Chitanda Eru [Kirisaki Chitoge]
by <=600
Over/Under: 9000
Over
ARENA 03: [Kanie Seiya] Sakamaki Izayoi
by <=500
Over/Under: 9000
Under
ARENA 04: [Sora] Sakata Gintoki
by>=700
Over/Under: 9000
Under
ARENA 05: [Yūki Asuna] Eucliwood Hellscythe
by <=600
Over/Under: 8500
Over
ARENA 06: [Aoyama Nanami] Shiro
by <=500
Over/Under: 8500
Over
ARENA 07: [Saber] Jibril
by >=400
Over/Under: 8500
Over
ARENA 08: [Aragaki Ayase] Makise Kurisu
by >=400
Over/Under: 8500
Over
ARENA 09: [Hoto Mocha] Nase Mitsuki
by <=500
Over/Under: 8700
Under
ARENA 10: [Hanekawa Tsubasa] Senritsu no Tatsumaki
by >=600
Over/Under: 8500
Over
ARENA 11: Kujō Sakurako [Julis-Alexia van Riessfeld]
by <=500
Over/Under: 8500
Under
ARENA 12: Kuon [Kushina Anna]
by >=400
Over/Under: 8400
Under
ARENA 13: Holo [Latifa Fleuranza]
by >=500
Over/Under: 8500
Over
ARENA 14: Yūki Mikan [Yui-nyan]
by >=600
Over/Under: 8600
Over
ISML 2015: Fall Seasonal Hard To Handicap
ISML 2015: Fall Seasonal Hard To Handicap
By Jo-Ryan Salazar
The Bedlam on Baltic Avenue
November 23, 2015
Match Day 7 of the 2015 International Saimoe League Postseason has concluded, with the race for the Tiara and Scepter continuing. However, the real battle is taking place in the Fall Seasonal, where a number of confirmed upsets by the Bedlam on Baltic Avenue have made this race for the Fall Diadem a wide open affair.
In Tiara action, Yukino Yukinoshita prevailed over Yoshino 4628-4511, Mashiro Shiina hammered Chiyo Sakura 5676-3564, Eru Chitanda defeated Kosaki Onodera 4348-4066 and Chitoge Kirisaki took out Yui Yuigahama 4226-4082. In Tiara action, Koyomi Araragi defeated RyuuJi Takasu and Hachiman Hikigaya routed Keima Katsuragi 5504-2376.
In Fall Seasonal action, Mocha Hoto scored the Upset of the Round over Stella Vermillion 4082-3710, Mitsuki Nase defeated Neko 3956-3548, Tsubasa Hanekawa crushed Milinda Brantini 4224-3333, Senritsu no Tatsumaki won the closest race of the round over Hakua Shiodome 3505-3463, Sakurako Kujou demonolished Froyaltia Capistrano 4243-2896, Julis-Alexia van Riessfield whipped past Sodachi Oikura 3849-3430, Kuon rolled past Aika Tenkuubashi 3601-3199 and Anna Kushina took down Kirin Toudou 3832-3420.
Match Day 8 of the 2015 International Saimoe League Postseason is scheduled for November 26, 2015. Vote for your favorite candidates at InternationalSaimoe.com and join the ongoing debate.
By Jo-Ryan Salazar
The Bedlam on Baltic Avenue
November 23, 2015
Match Day 7 of the 2015 International Saimoe League Postseason has concluded, with the race for the Tiara and Scepter continuing. However, the real battle is taking place in the Fall Seasonal, where a number of confirmed upsets by the Bedlam on Baltic Avenue have made this race for the Fall Diadem a wide open affair.
In Tiara action, Yukino Yukinoshita prevailed over Yoshino 4628-4511, Mashiro Shiina hammered Chiyo Sakura 5676-3564, Eru Chitanda defeated Kosaki Onodera 4348-4066 and Chitoge Kirisaki took out Yui Yuigahama 4226-4082. In Tiara action, Koyomi Araragi defeated RyuuJi Takasu and Hachiman Hikigaya routed Keima Katsuragi 5504-2376.
In Fall Seasonal action, Mocha Hoto scored the Upset of the Round over Stella Vermillion 4082-3710, Mitsuki Nase defeated Neko 3956-3548, Tsubasa Hanekawa crushed Milinda Brantini 4224-3333, Senritsu no Tatsumaki won the closest race of the round over Hakua Shiodome 3505-3463, Sakurako Kujou demonolished Froyaltia Capistrano 4243-2896, Julis-Alexia van Riessfield whipped past Sodachi Oikura 3849-3430, Kuon rolled past Aika Tenkuubashi 3601-3199 and Anna Kushina took down Kirin Toudou 3832-3420.
Match Day 8 of the 2015 International Saimoe League Postseason is scheduled for November 26, 2015. Vote for your favorite candidates at InternationalSaimoe.com and join the ongoing debate.
BoBA ISML 2015 Predictions: Postseason Match Day 7
ARENA 01: [Yukinoshita Yukino] Yoshino
by >=1200
Over/Under: 8000
Over
ARENA 02: Shiina Mashiro [Sakura Chiyo]
by <=700
Over/Under: 8000
Over
ARENA 03: Chitanda Eru [Onodera Kosaki]
by >=1000
Over/Under: 8000
Over
ARENA 04: Yuigahama Yui [Kirisaki Chitoge]
by >=400
Over/Under: 8000
Over
ARENA 05: [Araragi Koyomi] Takasu Ryūji
by >=500
Over/Under: 8000
Under
ARENA 06: [Hikigaya Hachiman] Katsuragi Keima
by >=1000
Over/Under: 8000
Under
ARENA 07: [Stella Vermillion] Hoto Mocha
by >=1000
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 08: Nase Mitsuki [Neko]
by >=1000
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 09: Milinda Brantini [Hanekawa Tsubasa]
by >=1000
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 10: Senritsu no Tatsumaki [Shiodome Hakua]
by >=1000
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 11: Kujō Sakurako [Frolaytia Capistrano]
by <=1000
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 12: [Julis-Alexia van Riessfeld] Oikura Sodachi
by <=1000
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 13: Kuon [Tenkūbashi Aika]
by <=1000
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 14: Kushina Anna [Tōdō Kirin]
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
by >=1200
Over/Under: 8000
Over
ARENA 02: Shiina Mashiro [Sakura Chiyo]
by <=700
Over/Under: 8000
Over
ARENA 03: Chitanda Eru [Onodera Kosaki]
by >=1000
Over/Under: 8000
Over
ARENA 04: Yuigahama Yui [Kirisaki Chitoge]
by >=400
Over/Under: 8000
Over
ARENA 05: [Araragi Koyomi] Takasu Ryūji
by >=500
Over/Under: 8000
Under
ARENA 06: [Hikigaya Hachiman] Katsuragi Keima
by >=1000
Over/Under: 8000
Under
ARENA 07: [Stella Vermillion] Hoto Mocha
by >=1000
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 08: Nase Mitsuki [Neko]
by >=1000
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 09: Milinda Brantini [Hanekawa Tsubasa]
by >=1000
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 10: Senritsu no Tatsumaki [Shiodome Hakua]
by >=1000
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 11: Kujō Sakurako [Frolaytia Capistrano]
by <=1000
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 12: [Julis-Alexia van Riessfeld] Oikura Sodachi
by <=1000
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 13: Kuon [Tenkūbashi Aika]
by <=1000
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 14: Kushina Anna [Tōdō Kirin]
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
I Cheated The Black Friday Box Trap.
That's right, I decided to bail on the Black Friday Box Trap because I was happy winning the Kooh Kindergarten Set last year. So what I learned was that the Premium Memorial Coin drop rate from scratchies was buffed, but the rare item drop from the Premium Memorial Coins was nerfed. In my recent batch, I had won the WT-PEP for Nuri, which was kicked over to Nuri R...and I also won the Bunny Girl Set for Hana.
So I ended up getting a new costume set for Hana. However, as it turned out, it was a Bunny Girl outfit. Now, I am 300 opened spinning cubes away from unlocking the Band Set for Hana on my end after deciding to continue to push to find Black Papel from the opened Spinning Cubes. It's looking very likely that he will appear when I reach Top Master Rank. But I already have Bunny Sets for Lucia and Cecilia, so when this arrived on the scene, I was somewhat disappointed because this was not the 2011 Swimwear that I had been coveting for months.
Not a lot of money is coming in this time around. However, I was determined to finally add the PWC Club Set. This is the golf club set that I believe was used at the Pangya World Championships in 2011 and 2012 over in Japan. It's being used primarily by Spika and Hana to do cube fishing, but there will be a time where I finally put this to regular use. However, the money that I would put into buying up a storm in UCIM Chips to fast-track the ranking up of some of my clubs is instead being used to buy a new computer that will allow me to do my world AND play Pangya uninterrupted.
Currently, my screen has gone black more often than not, and it has gotten on my bad side. I am using a touchscreen computer that is, I think, seven or eight years old and I have plans to migrate the data to the new computer that will arrive in December, contingent on my employer's bonus check being substantial to cover expenses. It's gotten bad to the point where I cannot visit Canada next year due to a dire need for a brand new system.
Thus, I am consigned to counting down the days until the day of reckoning takes place in December, when I find out how much I get from my Christmas bonus check. I'm personally on pins and needles because I've had a faulty screen for weeks and I'm tired of seeing my productivity drop. This isn't just a Pangya issue. It's a PC issue. I know that I won't reach Top Master E until next January, though I am less than 3000 EXP away from reaching that mark. I'll get there in time. For now, I long for a brand-new system.
My screen just crashed again as I was about to publish this. That's how bad things are at the BoBA House. None of the computers I own are usable. Clock's ticking.
ISML 2015: League Finals Boogaloo rolls on like the Dickens
ISML 2015: League Finals Boogaloo rolls on like the Dickens
By Jo-Ryan Salazar
The Bedlam on Baltic Avenue
November 18, 2015
In a match that saw no upsets of the round-a rarity by the Bedlam's standards-form followed in the race for the Tiara and Scepter. In Tiara action, Eru Chitanda pummeled Jibril 3707-3055, Kosaki Onodera defeated Saber 3599-3162, Yui Yuigahama hammered Kurisu Makise 4169-2611 and Chitoge Kirisaki routed Ayase Aragaki 3473-2655. In Scepter action, Archer rolled past Tomoya Okazaki 3369-2964 and Yuzuru Otonashi destroyed Kiritsugu Emiya 3772-2598.
In Fall Seasonal action, Sakurako Kujou demolished Mirei Shikishima 4105-1015, Frolaytia Capistrano scored the closest victory of the round: a 2596-2561 division over Shizuku Kurogane, Julis-Alexia van Riessfeld slashed past Yui Komori 3646-1457 and Sodachi Oikura flattened Kudelia Aina Bernstrei 3789-1186.
Wrapping up Fall Seasonal play, Kuon thumped Hacka Doll #2 3619-1200, Aika Tenkuubashi trounced Hitoka Yachi 3572-1517, Anna Kushina stormed past Hakone 4100-1497 and Kirin Toudou sliced and diced Kikko Hoshino 3549-1366.
Match Day 7 of the 2015 International Saimoe League Postseason is scheduled for November 22, 2015. Vote for your favorite candidates at InternationalSaimoe.com and join the ongoing debate.
By Jo-Ryan Salazar
The Bedlam on Baltic Avenue
November 18, 2015
In a match that saw no upsets of the round-a rarity by the Bedlam's standards-form followed in the race for the Tiara and Scepter. In Tiara action, Eru Chitanda pummeled Jibril 3707-3055, Kosaki Onodera defeated Saber 3599-3162, Yui Yuigahama hammered Kurisu Makise 4169-2611 and Chitoge Kirisaki routed Ayase Aragaki 3473-2655. In Scepter action, Archer rolled past Tomoya Okazaki 3369-2964 and Yuzuru Otonashi destroyed Kiritsugu Emiya 3772-2598.
In Fall Seasonal action, Sakurako Kujou demolished Mirei Shikishima 4105-1015, Frolaytia Capistrano scored the closest victory of the round: a 2596-2561 division over Shizuku Kurogane, Julis-Alexia van Riessfeld slashed past Yui Komori 3646-1457 and Sodachi Oikura flattened Kudelia Aina Bernstrei 3789-1186.
Wrapping up Fall Seasonal play, Kuon thumped Hacka Doll #2 3619-1200, Aika Tenkuubashi trounced Hitoka Yachi 3572-1517, Anna Kushina stormed past Hakone 4100-1497 and Kirin Toudou sliced and diced Kikko Hoshino 3549-1366.
Match Day 7 of the 2015 International Saimoe League Postseason is scheduled for November 22, 2015. Vote for your favorite candidates at InternationalSaimoe.com and join the ongoing debate.
BoBA ISML 2015 Predictions: Postseason Match Day 6
ARENA 01: Jibril [Chitanda Eru]
by >=1000
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 02: [Onodera Kosaki] Saber
by >=1500
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 03: [Yuigahama Yui] Makise Kurisu
by >=1200
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 04: Kirisaki Chitoge [Aragaki Ayase]
by >=1200
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 05: [Archer] Okazaki Tomoya
by >=800
Over/Under: 8000
Under
ARENA 06: [Otonashi Yuzuru] Emiya Kiritsugu
by <=900
Over/Under: 8000
Under
ARENA 07: Kujō Sakurako [Shikishima Mirei]
by <=900
Over/Under: 7000
Under
ARENA 08: Frolaytia Capistrano [Kurogane Shizuku]
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Under
ARENA 09: [Julis-Alexia van Riessfeld] Komori Yui
by >=1000
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 10: [Oikura Sodachi] Kudelia Aina Bernstein
by >=900
Over/Under: 7000
Under
ARENA 11: Kuon [Hacka Doll #2]
by <=900
Over/Under: 7300
Under
ARENA 12: Yachi Hitoka [Tenkūbashi Aika]
by >=1200
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 13: [Kushina Anna] Hakone
by >=1200
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 14: [Tōdō Kirin] Hoshino Kikko
by >=1500
Over/Under: 7100
Over
by >=1000
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 02: [Onodera Kosaki] Saber
by >=1500
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 03: [Yuigahama Yui] Makise Kurisu
by >=1200
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 04: Kirisaki Chitoge [Aragaki Ayase]
by >=1200
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 05: [Archer] Okazaki Tomoya
by >=800
Over/Under: 8000
Under
ARENA 06: [Otonashi Yuzuru] Emiya Kiritsugu
by <=900
Over/Under: 8000
Under
ARENA 07: Kujō Sakurako [Shikishima Mirei]
by <=900
Over/Under: 7000
Under
ARENA 08: Frolaytia Capistrano [Kurogane Shizuku]
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Under
ARENA 09: [Julis-Alexia van Riessfeld] Komori Yui
by >=1000
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 10: [Oikura Sodachi] Kudelia Aina Bernstein
by >=900
Over/Under: 7000
Under
ARENA 11: Kuon [Hacka Doll #2]
by <=900
Over/Under: 7300
Under
ARENA 12: Yachi Hitoka [Tenkūbashi Aika]
by >=1200
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 13: [Kushina Anna] Hakone
by >=1200
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 14: [Tōdō Kirin] Hoshino Kikko
by >=1500
Over/Under: 7100
Over
ISML 2015: Touma Kamijou ambushed as favorites prevail in Postseason
ISML 2015: Touma Kamijou ambushed as favorites prevail in Postseason
By Jo-Ryan Salazar
The Bedlam on Baltic Avenue
November 16, 2015
Match Day 5 of the 2015 International Saimoe League postseason concluded, and Touma Kamijou was ambushed by Edward Elric 4116-3145 in the Upset of the Round after a match day saw most of the primary players prevail.
In Tiara action, Yukino Yukinoshita defeated Eucliwood Hellscythe 4052-3802, Yoshino hammered Asuna Yuuki 4896-2771, Mashiro Shiina throttled Shiro 4696-2861 and Chiyo Sakura dismantled Nanami Aoyama 4682-2790. In other Male Division action, Accelerator accelerated past Gilgamesh 5049-2126.
The Fall Seasonal also kicked off. In Fall Seasonal play, Stella Vermillion routed Kirie Konami 4430-555, Mocha Hoto rolled past Felia 3617-1935, Mitsuki Nase crushed Makio Kidouin 3731-1655, Neko romped past Shuri Komori 4007-1378, Milinda Brantini drubbed Ral Petra 3611-1655, Tsubasa Hanekawa dominated Moe Nishinosono 4535-2072, Senritsu no Tatsumaki defeated Mari Nikaidou 2627-2364 and Hakua Shiodome decapitated Akari Mamiya 3542-2405.
Match Day 6 of the 2015 International Saimoe League Postseason is scheduled for November 17, 2015. Vote for your favorites at InternationalSaimoe.com and join the ongoing debate.
By Jo-Ryan Salazar
The Bedlam on Baltic Avenue
November 16, 2015
Match Day 5 of the 2015 International Saimoe League postseason concluded, and Touma Kamijou was ambushed by Edward Elric 4116-3145 in the Upset of the Round after a match day saw most of the primary players prevail.
In Tiara action, Yukino Yukinoshita defeated Eucliwood Hellscythe 4052-3802, Yoshino hammered Asuna Yuuki 4896-2771, Mashiro Shiina throttled Shiro 4696-2861 and Chiyo Sakura dismantled Nanami Aoyama 4682-2790. In other Male Division action, Accelerator accelerated past Gilgamesh 5049-2126.
The Fall Seasonal also kicked off. In Fall Seasonal play, Stella Vermillion routed Kirie Konami 4430-555, Mocha Hoto rolled past Felia 3617-1935, Mitsuki Nase crushed Makio Kidouin 3731-1655, Neko romped past Shuri Komori 4007-1378, Milinda Brantini drubbed Ral Petra 3611-1655, Tsubasa Hanekawa dominated Moe Nishinosono 4535-2072, Senritsu no Tatsumaki defeated Mari Nikaidou 2627-2364 and Hakua Shiodome decapitated Akari Mamiya 3542-2405.
Match Day 6 of the 2015 International Saimoe League Postseason is scheduled for November 17, 2015. Vote for your favorites at InternationalSaimoe.com and join the ongoing debate.
New York Cosmos: 2015 NASL Champions
HEMPSTEAD, NY (Nov. 15, 2015) – They came in as champions and Marcos Senna and Raúl went out as champions Sunday night, helping lead the New York Cosmos to the NASL Championship title.
The two Spanish legends announced their retirement from the sport earlier this season and were given the sendoff they deserved in front of a NASL modern-day postseason record crowd of 10,166 at Hofstra’s Shuart Stadium with a 3-2 win over the Ottawa Fury FC.
“I’m very happy. It was my last game in my career,” Raúl said. “I’m very proud for everything I did and thank you to the club, my teammates and the fans for this amazing year. For me now, I start a new life with another project. I’m happy, but I’m also very sad.”
For Senna, it is a second NASL title in three years with the Cosmos since the club’s reboot, while Raúl closed out his lone season in New York with one more championship.
“To win next to Raúl was an ideal situation. I’m thankful for him being here throughout the year as he made the difference many times and scored many goals,” Senna said. “In addition, today he didn’t get the goal, but he got the assist. He’s a player that is a game-changer.”
While it wasn’t a Hollywood ending with the late winning goal, Raúl did get an assist to cap Cosmos striker Gastón Cellerino’s hat trick in the 85th minute.
“It is like a dream,” Raúl said. “I would like to say thanks to all my teammates, the club, the supporters. I’m very happy. I have one part of my heart for the Cosmos.”
Senna and Raúl’s influence was felt beyond Sunday’s final, even beyond the Cosmos magical run through an undefeated Spring Season and finishing atop the Combined Standings.
“We’re going to miss them tremendously, most importantly, two great people,” Cosmos captain Carlos Mendes said. “I think they are top professionals who came in and trained hard every day and their experience has rubbed off on the guys. You can’t really replace Marcos and Raúl and obviously the locker room will be different next year.”
Cellerino got the party started early for the Cosmos, scoring in the eighth minute.
Danny Szetela started the sequence with a strong run down the left sideline and headed a ball into the box that Cellerino took off his chest. He took another touch inside the box before slotting past Ottawa goalkeeper Romauld Peiser from eight yards out.
Cellerino added his second goal in the 72nd minute, two minutes after Ottawa equalized on a goal by Tom Heinemann off a through ball from Andrew Wiedeman.
Walter Restrepo chipped a sublime ball toward the back post where Cellerino tapped in the go-ahead goal.
Cellerino capped a spectacular performance five minutes from full time when he was played behind by Raúl on a quick counterattack and pushed a shot past Peiser from 16 yards out.
“Today he was fantastic,” Cosmos head coach Giovanni Savarese said of Cellerino.
Ottawa, which was reduced to 10 men in the 68th minute when Mason Trafford was given a straight red card for a stomp on Sebastian Guenzatti, pulled a goal back late when Heinemann slid in to tap in a rebound in the first minute of second-half stoppage time.
There were some nervy moments late, but when referee Alan Kelly blew the final whistle, the celebration was on.
And when it was all over, Senna and Raúl were lifted in the air by their teammates and given a champions sendoff.
“We feel very lucky, our organization, to have these two great players retire with us,” Savarese said. “These two great players I had the pleasure to coach makes a coach’s life easier because of the quality when they play.
“They were very important all year to push everybody to higher standards. The way they finished their careers today couldn’t be any other way because they’ve been successful.”
King Of The World
Cold as winter in the dead of July
That bitter chill don’t just live in my mind
And I can see us taking over the world
I know loss I’ve looked pain in the eye
I’ve seen the demons that live in the night
But if I was king
If I was king of the world
All the tales
That have never been told
Build up fires to keep away the cold
We’ll sing songs
That will never get old
We’ll be here forever
We’ll rule the world together forever
With hearts of gold who needs any treasure?
We’ll take our time just living our lives
Our castle in the sky
If I was king of the world
I was a stranger
Held my hand to my eyes
Blindly walking on a street full of lies
But I found truth
Buried deep inside of my bones
Lonely nights shaking villains and thieves
So I keep fighting with my heart on my sleeve
But if I was king
If I was king of the world
All the tales
That have never been told
Build up fires to keep away the cold
We’ll sing songs
That will never get old
We’ll be here forever
We’ll rule the world together forever
With hearts of gold who needs any treasure?
We’ll take our time just living our lives
Our castle in the sky
If I was king of the world
Then one day the leaves changed
And all that was once grey
It seemed to just fade away
I’m feeling so alive
In this castle in the sky
All the tales
That have never been told
Build up fires to keep away the cold
We’ll sing songs
That will never get old
We’ll be here forever
We’ll rule the world together forever
With hearts of gold who needs any treasure?
We’ll take our time just living our lives
Our castle in the sky
If I was king of the world
We’ll rule the world together forever
With hearts of gold who needs any treasure?
We’ll take our time just living our lives
Our castle in the sky
If I was king of the world.
That bitter chill don’t just live in my mind
And I can see us taking over the world
I know loss I’ve looked pain in the eye
I’ve seen the demons that live in the night
But if I was king
If I was king of the world
All the tales
That have never been told
Build up fires to keep away the cold
We’ll sing songs
That will never get old
We’ll be here forever
We’ll rule the world together forever
With hearts of gold who needs any treasure?
We’ll take our time just living our lives
Our castle in the sky
If I was king of the world
I was a stranger
Held my hand to my eyes
Blindly walking on a street full of lies
But I found truth
Buried deep inside of my bones
Lonely nights shaking villains and thieves
So I keep fighting with my heart on my sleeve
But if I was king
If I was king of the world
All the tales
That have never been told
Build up fires to keep away the cold
We’ll sing songs
That will never get old
We’ll be here forever
We’ll rule the world together forever
With hearts of gold who needs any treasure?
We’ll take our time just living our lives
Our castle in the sky
If I was king of the world
Then one day the leaves changed
And all that was once grey
It seemed to just fade away
I’m feeling so alive
In this castle in the sky
All the tales
That have never been told
Build up fires to keep away the cold
We’ll sing songs
That will never get old
We’ll be here forever
We’ll rule the world together forever
With hearts of gold who needs any treasure?
We’ll take our time just living our lives
Our castle in the sky
If I was king of the world
We’ll rule the world together forever
With hearts of gold who needs any treasure?
We’ll take our time just living our lives
Our castle in the sky
If I was king of the world.
BoBA ISML 2015 Predictions: Postseason Match Day 5
ARENA 01: [Yukinoshita Yukino] Eucliwood Hellscythe
by >=1500
Over/Under: 7500
Over
ARENA 02: Yoshino [Yūki Asuna]
by <=1500
Over/Under: 8000
Under
ARENA 03: Shiro [Shiina Mashiro]
by >=1000
Over/Under: 7600
Over
ARENA 04: [Sakura Chiyo] Aoyama Nanami
by <=1000
Over/Under: 7800
Under
ARENA 05: [Accelerator] Gilgamesh
by >=1000
Over/Under: 7800
Under
ARENA 06: [Kamijō Tōma] Edward Elric
by <=800
Over/Under: 7700
Under
ARENA 07: [Stella Vermillion] Konami Kirie
by >=500
Over/Under: 7200
Over
ARENA 08: [Hoto Mocha] Felia
by >=600
Over/Under: 7200
Under
ARENA 09: [Nase Mitsuki] Kidōin Makio
by >=800
Over/Under: 7300
Under
ARENA 10: Neko [Komori Shuri]
by <=700
Over/Under: 7200
Under
ARENA 11: [Milinda Brantini] Petra Ral
by >=800
Over/Under: 7600
Under
ARENA 12: [Hanekawa Tsubasa] Nishinosono Moe
by >=800
Over/Under: 7200
Over
ARENA 13: [Nikaidō Mari] Senritsu no Tatsumaki
by >=800
Over/Under: 7500
Under
ARENA 14: [Mamiya Akari] Shiodome Hakua
by <=1000
Over/Under: 7500
Over
by >=1500
Over/Under: 7500
Over
ARENA 02: Yoshino [Yūki Asuna]
by <=1500
Over/Under: 8000
Under
ARENA 03: Shiro [Shiina Mashiro]
by >=1000
Over/Under: 7600
Over
ARENA 04: [Sakura Chiyo] Aoyama Nanami
by <=1000
Over/Under: 7800
Under
ARENA 05: [Accelerator] Gilgamesh
by >=1000
Over/Under: 7800
Under
ARENA 06: [Kamijō Tōma] Edward Elric
by <=800
Over/Under: 7700
Under
ARENA 07: [Stella Vermillion] Konami Kirie
by >=500
Over/Under: 7200
Over
ARENA 08: [Hoto Mocha] Felia
by >=600
Over/Under: 7200
Under
ARENA 09: [Nase Mitsuki] Kidōin Makio
by >=800
Over/Under: 7300
Under
ARENA 10: Neko [Komori Shuri]
by <=700
Over/Under: 7200
Under
ARENA 11: [Milinda Brantini] Petra Ral
by >=800
Over/Under: 7600
Under
ARENA 12: [Hanekawa Tsubasa] Nishinosono Moe
by >=800
Over/Under: 7200
Over
ARENA 13: [Nikaidō Mari] Senritsu no Tatsumaki
by >=800
Over/Under: 7500
Under
ARENA 14: [Mamiya Akari] Shiodome Hakua
by <=1000
Over/Under: 7500
Over
ISML 2015: Yukino, Ayase win Circlets
ISML 2015: Yukino, Ayase win Circlets
Yukinoshita takes Sapphire, Aragaki wins Diamond, Nao Tomori claims Summer Diadem
By Jo-Ryan Salazar
The Bedlam on Baltic Avenue
November 9, 2015
Match Day 4 of the 2015 International Saimoe League Postseason concluded with Yukino Yukinoshita winning the Sapphire Circlet and Ayase Aragaki overcoming regular season difficulties to run away with the Diamond Circlet.
In the Nova Division, Yukinoshita blew apart Kosaki Onodera, 3713-3356 to finish tops of the Division. Wrapping up Nova play for the year, Yui Yuigahama thrashed Chitoge Kirisaki 45073-2203, Chiyo Sakura throttled Jibril 4905-2425, Yoshino silenced Shiro 3575-2809, Shino Asada defeated Kurousagi 3671-3370, Isuzu Sento drove past Marika Tachibana 3790-3211, Kurumi Tokisaki shot down Tohka Yatogami 3888-2887 and Tsukiko Tsutsukakushi won a 3439-3375 thriller over Maki Nishikino.
"Aquamarine and Sapphire heists, not too bad," said Yukinoshita at a press conference in Tokyo. "But now, the real work begins. I want to make this month a month to remember. I am in it to win it. I want that Tiara."
Aragaki took the Diamond circlet with a clinical 3948-3319 smashing of Mashiro Shiina. Because of Aragaki's late-season struggles in the regular season, this is declared by the Bedlam as the Upset of the Round. Wrapping up Stella play for the year, Eru Chitana leveled Yuri Nakamura 4067-3086, Saber slashed past Nanami Aoyama 3899-3024, Kurisu Makise trounced Saber 3678-2704, Illyasviel von Einzbern defeated Rikka Takanashi 3721-3534, Rin Tohsaka routed Kuroyukihime 3847-3190, Eucliwood Hellscythe silenced Azusa Nakano 3562-3531 and Taiga Aisaka roared past Yui-nyan 3671-3555.
"Finally!" Ayase said, raising her fists high like a heavyweight champion after a massive prize fight at the press conference. "It feels good to be back on top and win the trust of the voters. I hope that I can enjoy this feeling one more time and join Ruri among the retired of this competition with a Tiara victory because I've been doing this way too long!"
Nao Tomori won the Summer Diadem with a 4024-3248 scalping of Umaru Doma, while Kurumi Ebisuzawa claimed third place with the closest victory of the round, a 3491-3445 nailbiter over Ayumi Otosaka.
"I want to thank Yuu (Otosaka) personally for his faith in me as well as Joujirou and Yusa and Ayumi for their support," said Tomori at a press conference in Tokyo. "All the voters came out and wanted to give me a taste into what I can expect next year. I won't disappoint you all. I'm going to give it everything I got and make a splash in the Nova in 2016!"
Finally, in other news, Accelerator won the Sapphire crown while Lelouch Lamperouge claimed the Diamond Crown. Accelerator now becomes the odds-on favorite at EVEN to earn the Scepter over Hachiman Hikigaya, who has been downgraded to a 3-2 second choice.
Match Day 5 of the 2015 International Saimoe League Postseason is scheduled for November 15, 2015. Vote for your favorite candidates at InternationalSaimoe.com and join the ongoing debate. And keep it right here on the Bedlam on Baltic Avenue for continuing coverage of the International Saimoe League, the world's premier anime character competition!
Yukinoshita takes Sapphire, Aragaki wins Diamond, Nao Tomori claims Summer Diadem
By Jo-Ryan Salazar
The Bedlam on Baltic Avenue
November 9, 2015
Match Day 4 of the 2015 International Saimoe League Postseason concluded with Yukino Yukinoshita winning the Sapphire Circlet and Ayase Aragaki overcoming regular season difficulties to run away with the Diamond Circlet.
In the Nova Division, Yukinoshita blew apart Kosaki Onodera, 3713-3356 to finish tops of the Division. Wrapping up Nova play for the year, Yui Yuigahama thrashed Chitoge Kirisaki 45073-2203, Chiyo Sakura throttled Jibril 4905-2425, Yoshino silenced Shiro 3575-2809, Shino Asada defeated Kurousagi 3671-3370, Isuzu Sento drove past Marika Tachibana 3790-3211, Kurumi Tokisaki shot down Tohka Yatogami 3888-2887 and Tsukiko Tsutsukakushi won a 3439-3375 thriller over Maki Nishikino.
"Aquamarine and Sapphire heists, not too bad," said Yukinoshita at a press conference in Tokyo. "But now, the real work begins. I want to make this month a month to remember. I am in it to win it. I want that Tiara."
Aragaki took the Diamond circlet with a clinical 3948-3319 smashing of Mashiro Shiina. Because of Aragaki's late-season struggles in the regular season, this is declared by the Bedlam as the Upset of the Round. Wrapping up Stella play for the year, Eru Chitana leveled Yuri Nakamura 4067-3086, Saber slashed past Nanami Aoyama 3899-3024, Kurisu Makise trounced Saber 3678-2704, Illyasviel von Einzbern defeated Rikka Takanashi 3721-3534, Rin Tohsaka routed Kuroyukihime 3847-3190, Eucliwood Hellscythe silenced Azusa Nakano 3562-3531 and Taiga Aisaka roared past Yui-nyan 3671-3555.
"Finally!" Ayase said, raising her fists high like a heavyweight champion after a massive prize fight at the press conference. "It feels good to be back on top and win the trust of the voters. I hope that I can enjoy this feeling one more time and join Ruri among the retired of this competition with a Tiara victory because I've been doing this way too long!"
Nao Tomori won the Summer Diadem with a 4024-3248 scalping of Umaru Doma, while Kurumi Ebisuzawa claimed third place with the closest victory of the round, a 3491-3445 nailbiter over Ayumi Otosaka.
"I want to thank Yuu (Otosaka) personally for his faith in me as well as Joujirou and Yusa and Ayumi for their support," said Tomori at a press conference in Tokyo. "All the voters came out and wanted to give me a taste into what I can expect next year. I won't disappoint you all. I'm going to give it everything I got and make a splash in the Nova in 2016!"
Finally, in other news, Accelerator won the Sapphire crown while Lelouch Lamperouge claimed the Diamond Crown. Accelerator now becomes the odds-on favorite at EVEN to earn the Scepter over Hachiman Hikigaya, who has been downgraded to a 3-2 second choice.
Match Day 5 of the 2015 International Saimoe League Postseason is scheduled for November 15, 2015. Vote for your favorite candidates at InternationalSaimoe.com and join the ongoing debate. And keep it right here on the Bedlam on Baltic Avenue for continuing coverage of the International Saimoe League, the world's premier anime character competition!
Are the Ottawa REDBLACKS for real!!?
Veteran Henry Burris never doubted his ability, despite age not being on his side at this point in his career.
Burris threw for six touchdowns and set a single-season record for completions and the Ottawa RedBlacks clinched first place in the East Division with a 44-28 win over the Hamilton Tiger-Cats on Saturday.
Burris finished the day with 28 pass completions to give him 481 on the season. It broke the old record of 479 set by Ricky Ray with the Edmonton Eskimos back in 2005.
"I've always felt in my heart that I still have it," said the 40-year old pivot.
"I'm not doing anything different than I did last year, I think the thing for me is I never stopped believing in what I could do. I knew I still had the physical ability and the mental toughness to get the job done, and I've been put in the right situation to get the job done."
Ottawa's Greg Ellingson caught three touchdown passes from his quarterback.
Burris set the record with a 10-yard touchdown pass to Brad Sinopoli early in the fourth quarter to give the RedBlacks a 37-26 lead. He then added to the record on his first pass of the next Ottawa series, connecting with Ellingson for a 43-yard gain.
Seconds later Burris threw his sixth touchdown pass of the afternoon as Chris Williams converted a 24-yard catch and run score. The conversion by Chris Milo gave the RedBlacks a 44-28 lead.
A win or a loss by less than six points would have given Ottawa the East Division regular-season crown.
The victory means the RedBlacks, who were 2-16 in their inaugural season a year ago, will host the East Final in two weeks. They will play the winner of next weekend's East semifinal between Hamilton and Toronto.
"Everybody's excited. It's big for the city, it's big for this team to get first place overall," said Ellingson, who had 152 yards receiving to become the fourth RedBlacks receiver this season to go over 1,000 yards — along with Sinopoli, Williams and Ernest Jackson.
"We're proud of this accomplishment but not satisfied," said RedBlacks coach Rick Campbell, before adding: "We're always proud of individual accomplishments but the one we like the most is we had the most wins in the East. We're going to play good teams from here on out and we're just going to keep trying to get better."
Ellingson agreed with his coach about individual accomplishments.
"It's not as important as the success we've had as a team," he said. "Getting 12 wins is huge and first place in the East is way bigger than any milestone I may have myself, but it does feel good to get there."
BoBA ISML 2015 Predictions: Postseason Match Day 4
NOVA DIVISION CHAMPIONSHIP
ARENA 01: Onodera Kosaki [Yukinoshita Yukino]
by >=600
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 02: [Yuigahama Yui] Kirisaki Chitogeby <=800
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 03: [Sakura Chiyo] Jibril
by >=600
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 04: Yoshino [Shiro]
by >=500
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 05: Kurousagi [Asada Shino]
by <=450
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 06: [Sento Isuzu] Tachibana Marika
by <=550
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 07: [Tokisaki Kurumi] Yatogami Tōka
by <=650
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 08: [Tsutsukakushi Tsukiko] Nishikino Maki
by >=700
Over/Under: 10000
Under
STELLA DIVISION CHAMPIONSHIP
ARENA 09: Aragaki Ayase [Shiina Mashiro]
by <=700
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 10: [Chitanda Eru] Nakamura Yuri
by >=600
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 11: [Yūki Asuna] Aoyama Nanami
by <=900
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 12: Saber [Makise Kurisu]
by <=500
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 13: [Illyasviel von Einzbern] Takanashi Rikka
by >=760
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 14: Kuroyukihime [Tōsaka Rin]
by >=530
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 15: [Eucliwood Hellscythe] Nakano Azusa
by >=300
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 16: Aisaka Taiga [Yui-nyan]
by <=700
Over/Under: 10000
Under
SUMMER SEASONAL CHAMPIONSHIP
ARENA 17: Tomori Nao [Doma Umaru]
by <=1000
Over/Under: 10000
Under
SUMMER SEASONAL 3RD PLACE
ARENA 18: [Ebisuzawa Kurumi] Otosaka Ayumi
by <=1000
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 01: Onodera Kosaki [Yukinoshita Yukino]
by >=600
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 02: [Yuigahama Yui] Kirisaki Chitogeby <=800
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 03: [Sakura Chiyo] Jibril
by >=600
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 04: Yoshino [Shiro]
by >=500
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 05: Kurousagi [Asada Shino]
by <=450
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 06: [Sento Isuzu] Tachibana Marika
by <=550
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 07: [Tokisaki Kurumi] Yatogami Tōka
by <=650
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 08: [Tsutsukakushi Tsukiko] Nishikino Maki
by >=700
Over/Under: 10000
Under
STELLA DIVISION CHAMPIONSHIP
ARENA 09: Aragaki Ayase [Shiina Mashiro]
by <=700
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 10: [Chitanda Eru] Nakamura Yuri
by >=600
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 11: [Yūki Asuna] Aoyama Nanami
by <=900
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 12: Saber [Makise Kurisu]
by <=500
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 13: [Illyasviel von Einzbern] Takanashi Rikka
by >=760
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 14: Kuroyukihime [Tōsaka Rin]
by >=530
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 15: [Eucliwood Hellscythe] Nakano Azusa
by >=300
Over/Under: 10000
Under
ARENA 16: Aisaka Taiga [Yui-nyan]
by <=700
Over/Under: 10000
Under
SUMMER SEASONAL CHAMPIONSHIP
ARENA 17: Tomori Nao [Doma Umaru]
by <=1000
Over/Under: 10000
Under
SUMMER SEASONAL 3RD PLACE
ARENA 18: [Ebisuzawa Kurumi] Otosaka Ayumi
by <=1000
Over/Under: 10000
Under
Melbourne Victory: 2015 FFA Cup Champions
Melbourne Victory have added to the A-League’s biggest trophy collection in grand style, downing Perth Glory 2-0 in the FFA Cup final.
The Victory were dominant in the first half of Saturday night’s decider as they became the first side to concurrently hold all three domestic titles, having won a third A-League premiership-championship double in 2014-15.
The only down-side for them was the disappointing crowd of 15,098, with high ticket prices blamed for a half-full AAMI Park. Melbourne were well deserving of their two-goal halftime lead, following an opening 45 minutes played at a tempo worthy of a cup final.
The home side had the ball in the back of net as early as the 16th minute courtesy of a powerhouse strike by in-firm New Zealand international Kosta Barbarouses, although that effort was correctly disallowed as Victory defender Matthieu Delpierre was clearly offside.
Victory went ahead in the 35th minute, when Oliver Bozanic was on hand to lash the ball home after a good build up down the right from Jason Geria and Barbarouses. Melbourne doubled their advantage seven minutes later. Captain Carl Valeri played a perfect through-ball into the path of striker Besart Berisha, whose first touch took him past the final defender.
The Albanian goal-poacher then fired a brilliant strike across Glory keeper Ante Covic and inside the left post. Glory looked dangerous at times on the counter-attack although Brazilian striker Sidnei Sciola was mostly well held by Delpierre. Perth started the second half brightly and almost halved the deficit within four minutes when Diogo Ferreira slammed a shot into the right-hand upright.
In the 61st minute, Glory captain Richard Garcia’s first-time effort flew over the crossbar. The visitors had most of the best scoring chances in the second half without being able to convert any of them.
Victory were forced to play the last eight minutes with 10 men after Valeri was sent off for a second bookable offence - a heavy foul on Dino Djulbic. The same fate befell Valeri in the A-League grand final against Sydney FC earlier this year, although his team held on to win both matches in comfortable fashion.
Perth were unable to consider several important players due to injury on Saturday night including Chris Harold and import Gyorgy Sandor. The two-goal defeat meant Glory are still to win any silverware in the A-League era, having lost last year’s inaugural FFA Cup final to Adelaide United and the 2011-12 A-League grand final to Brisbane Roar.
ISML 2015: Nova, Stella Division Finals Set
ISML 2015: Nova, Stella Division Finals Set
By Jo-Ryan Salazar
The Bedlam on Baltic Avenue
November 6, 2015
Match Day 3 of the 2015 International Saimoe League Postseason concluded, and we have our Nova and Stella Division Finals. In the Nova Division, Kosaki Onodera and Yukino Yukinoshita will duel for the rights to win the coveted Sapphire Circlet. Onodera, the 2015 Amethyst Necklace winner, defeated Ruby necklace holder Chiyo Sakura 3728-2218. Yukinoshita, winner of the Aquamarine necklace, defeated classmate Yui Yuigahama 3719-1756.
In other Nova Division action, Yoshino defeated Kurumi Tokisaki 3257-2501, Shiro scorched Tohka Yatogami 3439-2586, Jibril flew past Kurousagi 3112-2738, Chitoge Kirisaki took down Izusu Sento 3345-2928, Marika Tachibana prevailed over Maki Nishikino 2958-2867 and Shino Asada shot down Tsukiko Tsutsukakushi 3275-2699.
The Diamond Circlet is giving to the best-performing contestant in the veteran-rich Stella Division. Ayase Aragaki, despite a dogged campaign full of detractors and naysayers, has one more chance to win a prize before the Tiara knockout rounds come rolling in later this month. However, she faces the odds-on favorite by the Bedlam, Mashiro Shiina, the defending Topaz Necklace champion. Aragaki clobbered Asuna Yuuki 4060-2436 while Shiina dismantled Eru Chitanda 4013-2405.
In other Stella action, Saber slashed past Eucliwood Hellscythe 3275-3059, Nanami Aoyama rolled past Rin Tohsaka 2797-2248, Kurisu Makise stormed past Illyasviel von Einzbern 3450-2271, Yuri Nakamura scored the Upset of the Round with a 3136-2924 blasting of Kuroyukihime, Azusa Nakano romped past Yui-nyan 3205-2756 and Rikka Takanashi dominated Taiga Aisaka 3354-2428.
In the Summer Seasonal, Nao Tomori and Umaru Doma will duel for the right to be named the Queen of the Summer. Tomori crushed Kurumi Ebisuzawa 3952-2434 while Doma cruised past Ayumi Otosaka 3963-2315.
Match Day 4 of the 2015 International Saimoe League Postseason is scheduled for November 6, 2015. Vote for your favorite candidates at InternationalSaimoe.com and join the ongoing debate.
By Jo-Ryan Salazar
The Bedlam on Baltic Avenue
November 6, 2015
Match Day 3 of the 2015 International Saimoe League Postseason concluded, and we have our Nova and Stella Division Finals. In the Nova Division, Kosaki Onodera and Yukino Yukinoshita will duel for the rights to win the coveted Sapphire Circlet. Onodera, the 2015 Amethyst Necklace winner, defeated Ruby necklace holder Chiyo Sakura 3728-2218. Yukinoshita, winner of the Aquamarine necklace, defeated classmate Yui Yuigahama 3719-1756.
In other Nova Division action, Yoshino defeated Kurumi Tokisaki 3257-2501, Shiro scorched Tohka Yatogami 3439-2586, Jibril flew past Kurousagi 3112-2738, Chitoge Kirisaki took down Izusu Sento 3345-2928, Marika Tachibana prevailed over Maki Nishikino 2958-2867 and Shino Asada shot down Tsukiko Tsutsukakushi 3275-2699.
The Diamond Circlet is giving to the best-performing contestant in the veteran-rich Stella Division. Ayase Aragaki, despite a dogged campaign full of detractors and naysayers, has one more chance to win a prize before the Tiara knockout rounds come rolling in later this month. However, she faces the odds-on favorite by the Bedlam, Mashiro Shiina, the defending Topaz Necklace champion. Aragaki clobbered Asuna Yuuki 4060-2436 while Shiina dismantled Eru Chitanda 4013-2405.
In other Stella action, Saber slashed past Eucliwood Hellscythe 3275-3059, Nanami Aoyama rolled past Rin Tohsaka 2797-2248, Kurisu Makise stormed past Illyasviel von Einzbern 3450-2271, Yuri Nakamura scored the Upset of the Round with a 3136-2924 blasting of Kuroyukihime, Azusa Nakano romped past Yui-nyan 3205-2756 and Rikka Takanashi dominated Taiga Aisaka 3354-2428.
In the Summer Seasonal, Nao Tomori and Umaru Doma will duel for the right to be named the Queen of the Summer. Tomori crushed Kurumi Ebisuzawa 3952-2434 while Doma cruised past Ayumi Otosaka 3963-2315.
Match Day 4 of the 2015 International Saimoe League Postseason is scheduled for November 6, 2015. Vote for your favorite candidates at InternationalSaimoe.com and join the ongoing debate.
BoBA ISML 2015 Predictions: Postseason Match Day 3
ARENA 01: [Sakura Chiyo] Onodera Kosaki
by <=500
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 02: [Yukinoshita Yukino] Yuigahama Yui
by <=500
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 03: Yoshino [Tokisaki Kurumi]
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 04: [Shiro] Yatogami Tōka
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 05: [Jibril] Kurousagi
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 06: [Kirisaki Chitoge] Sento Isuzu
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 07: Tachibana Marika [Nishikino Maki]
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 08: Asada Shino [Tsutsukakushi Tsukiko]
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 09: [Aragaki Ayase] Yūki Asuna
by <=400
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 10: [Shiina Mashiro] Chitanda Eru
by <=700
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 11: [Eucliwood Hellscythe] Saber
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 12: Aoyama Nanami [Tōsaka Rin]
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 13: Makise Kurisu [Illyasviel von Einzbern]
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 14: [Kuroyukihime] Nakamura Yuri
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 15: Yui-nyan [Nakano Azusa]
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 16: [Takanashi Rikka] Aisaka Taiga
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 17: [Tomori Nao] Ebisuzawa Kurumi
by >=600
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 18: [Doma Umaru] Otosaka Ayumi
by >=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
by <=500
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 02: [Yukinoshita Yukino] Yuigahama Yui
by <=500
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 03: Yoshino [Tokisaki Kurumi]
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 04: [Shiro] Yatogami Tōka
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 05: [Jibril] Kurousagi
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 06: [Kirisaki Chitoge] Sento Isuzu
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 07: Tachibana Marika [Nishikino Maki]
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 08: Asada Shino [Tsutsukakushi Tsukiko]
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 09: [Aragaki Ayase] Yūki Asuna
by <=400
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 10: [Shiina Mashiro] Chitanda Eru
by <=700
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 11: [Eucliwood Hellscythe] Saber
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 12: Aoyama Nanami [Tōsaka Rin]
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 13: Makise Kurisu [Illyasviel von Einzbern]
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 14: [Kuroyukihime] Nakamura Yuri
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 15: Yui-nyan [Nakano Azusa]
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 16: [Takanashi Rikka] Aisaka Taiga
by <=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 17: [Tomori Nao] Ebisuzawa Kurumi
by >=600
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ARENA 18: [Doma Umaru] Otosaka Ayumi
by >=800
Over/Under: 7000
Over
ISML 2015: Postseason continues on with Division Finals
ISML 2015: Postseason continues on with Division Finals
By Jo-Ryan Salazar
The Bedlam on Baltic Avenue
November 4, 2015
Match Day 2 of the 2015 International Saimoe League postseason concluded, with a number of winners' bracket matches to go with classification bracket matches in the Nova and Stella Divisions. In the Nova Division, Chiyo Sakura hammered Chitoge Kirisaki 3743-2621, Kosaki Onodera rolled past Yoshino 3709-2242, Yukino Yukinoshita drubbed Jibril 3664-2012, Yui Yuigahama hammered Shiro 3606-2645, Kurousagi bounced past Maki Nishikino 2925-2536, Tohka Yatogami scored the Upset of the Round over Marika Tachibana 3517-2685, Isuzu Sento drove past Tsukiko Tsutsukakushi 3006-2588 and Kurumi Tokisaki mowed down Shino Asada 3759-2602.
In the Stella Division, Ayase Aragaki routed Kuroyukihime 4016-2356, Asuna Yuuki slashed past Eucliwood Hellscythe 3302-3115, Mashiro Shiina whipped past Kurisu Makise 3819-2612, Eru Chitanda trounced Nanami Aoyama 2888-2358, Illyasviel von Einzbern slammed Azusa Nakano 3339-2585, Rin Tohsaka defeated Yui-nyan 3306-3055, Yuru Nakamura shot down Taiga Aisaka 2954-2705 and Saber sliced and diced Rikka Takanashi 3128-2751.
In special exhibition play, Umaru Doma crushed Ayame Kajou 3440-2229 and Ayumi Otosaka burned Lala Satalin Deviluke 3502-2703. Both Dona and Otosaka advance to the Summer Seasonal semifinals.
Match Day 3 of the 2015 International Saimoe League postseason is scheduled for November 5, 2015. Vote for your favorite candidates at InternationalSaimoe.com and join the ongoing debate.
By Jo-Ryan Salazar
The Bedlam on Baltic Avenue
November 4, 2015
Match Day 2 of the 2015 International Saimoe League postseason concluded, with a number of winners' bracket matches to go with classification bracket matches in the Nova and Stella Divisions. In the Nova Division, Chiyo Sakura hammered Chitoge Kirisaki 3743-2621, Kosaki Onodera rolled past Yoshino 3709-2242, Yukino Yukinoshita drubbed Jibril 3664-2012, Yui Yuigahama hammered Shiro 3606-2645, Kurousagi bounced past Maki Nishikino 2925-2536, Tohka Yatogami scored the Upset of the Round over Marika Tachibana 3517-2685, Isuzu Sento drove past Tsukiko Tsutsukakushi 3006-2588 and Kurumi Tokisaki mowed down Shino Asada 3759-2602.
In the Stella Division, Ayase Aragaki routed Kuroyukihime 4016-2356, Asuna Yuuki slashed past Eucliwood Hellscythe 3302-3115, Mashiro Shiina whipped past Kurisu Makise 3819-2612, Eru Chitanda trounced Nanami Aoyama 2888-2358, Illyasviel von Einzbern slammed Azusa Nakano 3339-2585, Rin Tohsaka defeated Yui-nyan 3306-3055, Yuru Nakamura shot down Taiga Aisaka 2954-2705 and Saber sliced and diced Rikka Takanashi 3128-2751.
In special exhibition play, Umaru Doma crushed Ayame Kajou 3440-2229 and Ayumi Otosaka burned Lala Satalin Deviluke 3502-2703. Both Dona and Otosaka advance to the Summer Seasonal semifinals.
Match Day 3 of the 2015 International Saimoe League postseason is scheduled for November 5, 2015. Vote for your favorite candidates at InternationalSaimoe.com and join the ongoing debate.
BoBA ISML 2015 Predictions: Postseason Match Day 2
ARENA 01: [Sakura Chiyo] Kirisaki Chitoge
by >=600
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 02: Yoshino [Onodera Kosaki]
by >=1000
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 03: [Yukinoshita Yukino] Jibril
by >=1500
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 04: [Yuigahama Yui] Shiro
by <=800
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 05: [Nishikino Maki] Kurousagi
by >=600
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 06: [Tachibana Marika] Yatogami Tōka
by >=500
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 07: [Sento Isuzu] Tsutsukakushi Tsukiko
by >=600
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 08: Asada Shino [Tokisaki Kurumi]
by >=700
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 09: [Aragaki Ayase] Kuroyukihime
by <=600
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 10: [Yūki Asuna] Eucliwood Hellscythe
by <=600
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 11: [Shiina Mashiro] Makise Kurisu
by >=1200
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 12: [Chitanda Eru] Aoyama Nanami
by <=650
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 13: Nakano Azusa [Illyasviel von Einzbern]
by >=750
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 14: [Tōsaka Rin] Yui-nyan
by >=600
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 15: Aisaka Taiga [Nakamura Yuri]
by <=800
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 16: [Saber] Takanashi Rikka
by >=700
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 17: [Doma Umaru] Kajō Ayame
by >=1800
Over/Under: 6500
Over
ARENA 18: [Otosaka Ayumi] Lala Satalin Deviluke
by <=1500
Over/Under: 6500
Over
by >=600
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 02: Yoshino [Onodera Kosaki]
by >=1000
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 03: [Yukinoshita Yukino] Jibril
by >=1500
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 04: [Yuigahama Yui] Shiro
by <=800
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 05: [Nishikino Maki] Kurousagi
by >=600
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 06: [Tachibana Marika] Yatogami Tōka
by >=500
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 07: [Sento Isuzu] Tsutsukakushi Tsukiko
by >=600
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 08: Asada Shino [Tokisaki Kurumi]
by >=700
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 09: [Aragaki Ayase] Kuroyukihime
by <=600
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 10: [Yūki Asuna] Eucliwood Hellscythe
by <=600
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 11: [Shiina Mashiro] Makise Kurisu
by >=1200
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 12: [Chitanda Eru] Aoyama Nanami
by <=650
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 13: Nakano Azusa [Illyasviel von Einzbern]
by >=750
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 14: [Tōsaka Rin] Yui-nyan
by >=600
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 15: Aisaka Taiga [Nakamura Yuri]
by <=800
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 16: [Saber] Takanashi Rikka
by >=700
Over/Under: 6300
Over
ARENA 17: [Doma Umaru] Kajō Ayame
by >=1800
Over/Under: 6500
Over
ARENA 18: [Otosaka Ayumi] Lala Satalin Deviluke
by <=1500
Over/Under: 6500
Over
ISML 2015: Postseason Begins In Full Swing
ISML 2015: Postseason Begins In Full Swing
By Jo-Ryan Salazar
The Bedlam on Baltic Avenue
November 2, 2015
On the day of the Melbourne Cup, the first day of the 2015 International Saimoe League Postseason began with Match Day 1 and the first day of the Nova and Stella Division finals. Chiyo Sakura thrashed Kurousagi 3643-3202, Chitoge Kirisaki throttled Maki Nishikino 3722-2989, Yoshino defeated Tohka Yatogami 3331-3209 and Kosaki Onodera flattened Marika Tachibana 4513-1697.
Yukino Yukinoshita destroyed Tsukiko Tsutsukakushi 4407-1886, Yui Yuigahama hammered Isuzu Sento 4546-2381, Jibril flew past Kurumi Tokisaki 3703-2985 and Shiro stormed past Shino Asada 3836-2801. Ayase Aragaki crushed Illyasviel von Einzbern 4154-2672, Kuroyukihime flew past Azusa Nakano 3416-3329, Asuna Yuuki slashed past Yui-nyan 3687-3405 and Eucliwood Hellscythe scored the Upset of the Round over Rin Tohsaka 3496-3426.
Wrapping up division play, Mashiro Shiina routed Yuri Nakamura 3807-3240, Kurisu Makise rolled past Taiga Aisaka 3825-2772, Eru Chitanda defeated Rikka Takanashi 3573-3370 and Nanami Aoyama dominated Saber 3399-3097. In special exhibition play, Nao Tomori and Kurumi Ebisuzawa will battle for the Summer Seasonal honors, with both advancing to the semis. Tomori routed Akane Sakurada 4349-2451 and Ebisuzawa defeated Yusa Kurobane 3324-3124.
Match Day 2 of the 2015 International Saimoe League postseason is scheduled for November 3, 2015. Vote for your favorites at InternationalSaimoe.com and join the ongoing debate.
By Jo-Ryan Salazar
The Bedlam on Baltic Avenue
November 2, 2015
On the day of the Melbourne Cup, the first day of the 2015 International Saimoe League Postseason began with Match Day 1 and the first day of the Nova and Stella Division finals. Chiyo Sakura thrashed Kurousagi 3643-3202, Chitoge Kirisaki throttled Maki Nishikino 3722-2989, Yoshino defeated Tohka Yatogami 3331-3209 and Kosaki Onodera flattened Marika Tachibana 4513-1697.
Yukino Yukinoshita destroyed Tsukiko Tsutsukakushi 4407-1886, Yui Yuigahama hammered Isuzu Sento 4546-2381, Jibril flew past Kurumi Tokisaki 3703-2985 and Shiro stormed past Shino Asada 3836-2801. Ayase Aragaki crushed Illyasviel von Einzbern 4154-2672, Kuroyukihime flew past Azusa Nakano 3416-3329, Asuna Yuuki slashed past Yui-nyan 3687-3405 and Eucliwood Hellscythe scored the Upset of the Round over Rin Tohsaka 3496-3426.
Wrapping up division play, Mashiro Shiina routed Yuri Nakamura 3807-3240, Kurisu Makise rolled past Taiga Aisaka 3825-2772, Eru Chitanda defeated Rikka Takanashi 3573-3370 and Nanami Aoyama dominated Saber 3399-3097. In special exhibition play, Nao Tomori and Kurumi Ebisuzawa will battle for the Summer Seasonal honors, with both advancing to the semis. Tomori routed Akane Sakurada 4349-2451 and Ebisuzawa defeated Yusa Kurobane 3324-3124.
Match Day 2 of the 2015 International Saimoe League postseason is scheduled for November 3, 2015. Vote for your favorites at InternationalSaimoe.com and join the ongoing debate.
New Zealand: 2015 Rugby World Cup Champions
All Blacks 34 Australia 17
Pandemonium at Twickenham. The All Blacks have become the first nation to defend their World Cup title by beating Australia in another tense and agonisingly close final.
They did it not by running away with the game like they threatened to do just after halftime when Ma'a Nonu scored his stunning try from 40m out. No, they had to dig extremely deep in the end, just as they suspected they would, against a Wallabies team that refused to give up.
At 21-17 following Tevita Kuridrani's try, this game looked to be slipping slightly despite the almost unprecedented support from the 80,125 in attendance and the fact that almost everything was going in the All Blacks' favour in the first half.
In the end it was comfortable only due to Dan Carter's incredible last 10 minutes in an All Blacks jersey in which he dropped a goal to push the score to 24-17, and then kicked a penalty from halfway to give his side some proper breathing space.
Beauden Barrett's try from a kick by Ben Smith as the Wallabies chased the game was a piece of opportunism that sealed the match once and for and sent all of the black-clad supporters at this magnificent stadium into raptures.
At the final whistle, the All Blacks leapt for joy, skipper Richie McCaw deservedly mobbed by his teammates. What a test for the 34-year-old - his 148th - to bow out on.
Asked if this was the proudest moment of his career, McCaw was absolutely adamant.
"We played damn good rugby there," McCaw beamed.
"We lost a bit of momentum in the second half but we kept our composure and came home strong. That's been the hallmark of this team for the last four years."
Back home Kiwi fans back home were left squirming when a spirited Wallabies comeback narrowed the score to four points, but on the field the All Blacks captain said he always knew which way it was going.
"I wouldn't say I was anxious. We've been in those situations before and it was a case of not panicking and doing the simple things. Get the ball back and get in control," he said.
"We've done that a lot of times over the years, but to do it in a World Cup, that shows the calibre of men we've got."
And still, McCaw refuses to say whether this will be a fitting swansong to his All Blacks career - instead deflecting questions of retirement to pay tribute to his team mates and "a great bunch of men."
"I still don't want it to end. At the moment, I'm still part of this team. How could you get enough of this?" he said.
"I'll worry about that after today, I'm just going to enjoy having played a great World Cup final with a great bunch of men - and having been able to wear this jersey again.
"I don't think I could ever have enough of it."
The All Blacks had heroes across the park and they needed them as the Wallabies mounted their extraordinary comeback from 21-3 down.
They wanted to attack to win this match, to win their title back, but in the end they had to defend, and it was something to behold.
They were in a hole with Ben Smith controversially sinbined for a lifting tackle on Drew Mitchell. David Pocock's try from the subsequent rolling maul put the Aussies on a roll and momentum was shifting and that gained momentum when Kuridrani went over.
If Barrett's try was crucial - so were the efforts of his fellow bench play Sonny Bill Williams. On for Conrad Smith at halftime, he had two touches and made two offloads, the second sent Nonu away, the second-five - another veteran bowing out - stepping Kurtley Beale and pushing off Mitchell on way.
Willie Apiata has been with the All Blacks at this tournament, just as he was at the last one, and the "Who Dares, Wins" motto of his former SAS days could have been applied to the men in black.
The started as they meant to go on - with a relentless line-speed on attack and a determination to test the Wallabies in every way they could. The impacts in the early exchanges were brutal.
From the fury of the haka, with wing Julian Savea looking particularly fired up (with the help of Aussie coach Michael Cheika's notes indiscreetly shown on the eve of the test maybe?), the All Blacks kicked off and immediately smashed fullback Israel Folau and flanker Michael Hooper in short order. The battle lines were drawn. They had all the ball and all the territory, and while their probes and sorties were shut down by the excellent Wallabies defence, the Australians, who had one less day to prepare for this showdown, had to pay for their efforts at some stage.
Carter and Bernard Foley swapped penalties, before the All Blacks No10 kicked another and then another - the third following a suspiciously forward pass from Nehe Milner-Skudder right in front of his country's former World Cup nemesis Wayne Barnes on the sideline.
And then, the first dagger blow, just before halftime. Commander and chief Richie McCaw got the ball in his hands in his own half twice in succession and then the All Blacks were on the attack, sweeping to the right where Conrad Smith, Aaron Smith and McCaw again combined to put Milner-Skudder over in the corner, a try superbly converted by Carter.
At 16-3 down at halftime, this was an almost impossible margin for the Wallabies to come back from.
They had lost second-five Matt Giteau to concussion from a Brodie Retallick charge, and lock Kane Douglas. But comeback they did and it just made the All Blacks' efforts in defending their title more noteworthy.
Who dares wins, indeed.
All Blacks 34 (Nehe Milner-Skudder, Ma'a Nonu, Beauden Barrett tries; Dan Carter 4 pens, 2 cons, dropped goal)
Australia 17 (David Pocock, Tevita Kuridrani tries; Bernard Foley pen, 2 cons)
Halftime: 16-3.
Pandemonium at Twickenham. The All Blacks have become the first nation to defend their World Cup title by beating Australia in another tense and agonisingly close final.
They did it not by running away with the game like they threatened to do just after halftime when Ma'a Nonu scored his stunning try from 40m out. No, they had to dig extremely deep in the end, just as they suspected they would, against a Wallabies team that refused to give up.
At 21-17 following Tevita Kuridrani's try, this game looked to be slipping slightly despite the almost unprecedented support from the 80,125 in attendance and the fact that almost everything was going in the All Blacks' favour in the first half.
In the end it was comfortable only due to Dan Carter's incredible last 10 minutes in an All Blacks jersey in which he dropped a goal to push the score to 24-17, and then kicked a penalty from halfway to give his side some proper breathing space.
Beauden Barrett's try from a kick by Ben Smith as the Wallabies chased the game was a piece of opportunism that sealed the match once and for and sent all of the black-clad supporters at this magnificent stadium into raptures.
At the final whistle, the All Blacks leapt for joy, skipper Richie McCaw deservedly mobbed by his teammates. What a test for the 34-year-old - his 148th - to bow out on.
Asked if this was the proudest moment of his career, McCaw was absolutely adamant.
"We played damn good rugby there," McCaw beamed.
"We lost a bit of momentum in the second half but we kept our composure and came home strong. That's been the hallmark of this team for the last four years."
Back home Kiwi fans back home were left squirming when a spirited Wallabies comeback narrowed the score to four points, but on the field the All Blacks captain said he always knew which way it was going.
"I wouldn't say I was anxious. We've been in those situations before and it was a case of not panicking and doing the simple things. Get the ball back and get in control," he said.
"We've done that a lot of times over the years, but to do it in a World Cup, that shows the calibre of men we've got."
And still, McCaw refuses to say whether this will be a fitting swansong to his All Blacks career - instead deflecting questions of retirement to pay tribute to his team mates and "a great bunch of men."
"I still don't want it to end. At the moment, I'm still part of this team. How could you get enough of this?" he said.
"I'll worry about that after today, I'm just going to enjoy having played a great World Cup final with a great bunch of men - and having been able to wear this jersey again.
"I don't think I could ever have enough of it."
The All Blacks had heroes across the park and they needed them as the Wallabies mounted their extraordinary comeback from 21-3 down.
They wanted to attack to win this match, to win their title back, but in the end they had to defend, and it was something to behold.
They were in a hole with Ben Smith controversially sinbined for a lifting tackle on Drew Mitchell. David Pocock's try from the subsequent rolling maul put the Aussies on a roll and momentum was shifting and that gained momentum when Kuridrani went over.
If Barrett's try was crucial - so were the efforts of his fellow bench play Sonny Bill Williams. On for Conrad Smith at halftime, he had two touches and made two offloads, the second sent Nonu away, the second-five - another veteran bowing out - stepping Kurtley Beale and pushing off Mitchell on way.
Willie Apiata has been with the All Blacks at this tournament, just as he was at the last one, and the "Who Dares, Wins" motto of his former SAS days could have been applied to the men in black.
The started as they meant to go on - with a relentless line-speed on attack and a determination to test the Wallabies in every way they could. The impacts in the early exchanges were brutal.
From the fury of the haka, with wing Julian Savea looking particularly fired up (with the help of Aussie coach Michael Cheika's notes indiscreetly shown on the eve of the test maybe?), the All Blacks kicked off and immediately smashed fullback Israel Folau and flanker Michael Hooper in short order. The battle lines were drawn. They had all the ball and all the territory, and while their probes and sorties were shut down by the excellent Wallabies defence, the Australians, who had one less day to prepare for this showdown, had to pay for their efforts at some stage.
Carter and Bernard Foley swapped penalties, before the All Blacks No10 kicked another and then another - the third following a suspiciously forward pass from Nehe Milner-Skudder right in front of his country's former World Cup nemesis Wayne Barnes on the sideline.
And then, the first dagger blow, just before halftime. Commander and chief Richie McCaw got the ball in his hands in his own half twice in succession and then the All Blacks were on the attack, sweeping to the right where Conrad Smith, Aaron Smith and McCaw again combined to put Milner-Skudder over in the corner, a try superbly converted by Carter.
At 16-3 down at halftime, this was an almost impossible margin for the Wallabies to come back from.
They had lost second-five Matt Giteau to concussion from a Brodie Retallick charge, and lock Kane Douglas. But comeback they did and it just made the All Blacks' efforts in defending their title more noteworthy.
Who dares wins, indeed.
All Blacks 34 (Nehe Milner-Skudder, Ma'a Nonu, Beauden Barrett tries; Dan Carter 4 pens, 2 cons, dropped goal)
Australia 17 (David Pocock, Tevita Kuridrani tries; Bernard Foley pen, 2 cons)
Halftime: 16-3.
Kansas City Royals: 2015 World Series Champions
Not a drop of Champagne dotted the salt-and-pepper hair or clean-shaven face of Dayton Moore as he sat along the bench inside the visitors’ dugout at Citi Field, the home these last three nights for the greatest Royals team in a generation.
Up above him, hundreds of Royals fans serenaded the players with a rendition of Queen’s “We Are The Champions.” Hidden from sight, away from the spotlight, Moore still looked dazed.
“It hasn’t really sunk in yet,” Moore said. “This is pretty cool.”
Nine years ago, when owner David Glass chose Moore to resurrect this franchise, Moore dreamed about a parade threading through the streets of Kansas City. The final step of his vision — which restored his organization’s credibility within the game, revived the sport in his community and delivered night after night of indelible memories — will happen on Tuesday along Grand Boulevard. Because at 34 minutes after midnight in New York, the Royals captured their first world championship since 1985 with a 7-2 victory in 12 innings in Game 5 over the Mets.
The win followed a blueprint authored by this club all postseason. The Royals collected their eighth comeback victory, and their sixth with a multiple-run deficit. Silent for eight innings, the team conquered Matt Harvey and Jeurys Familia to tie the game in the ninth. Three innings later, Christian Colon cracked the go-ahead single and opened the floodgates for a five-run flourish.
After the last 95-mph fastball from closer Wade Davis whistled into the glove of backup catcher Drew Butera, this cherished group assembled for one last time as a team in the center of Citi Field, the last mountain they ascended en route to the sport’s apex. Thousands of miles away, fireworks popped in Kansas City and fans clambered through the streets. As the champagne flowed in New York, the Royals erased the bitterness of last October and established themselves as a team incapable of cardiac arrest.
“Never give up,” outfielder Lorenzo Cain said. “Never give up. Came through again. We’re the comeback kids, if you want to call us.”
Along the way, the Royals personified the blueprint Moore brought when he took over the team’s baseball operations department in 2006. The team displayed athleticism in the field and on the bases. They refused to roll over in the face of adversity. They leaned upon one another and relished one another’s company. On a team stocked with All-Stars, there was no one singular star.
Salvador Perez received the Most Valuable Player trophy, but the honor could be shared by so many on his team. Eric Hosmer drove in the run that ejected Harvey from the game and bested the infield arms of the Mets for a daring, game-tying score. Only a few days removed from his father’s funeral, Edinson Volquez turned in six innings of two-run ball. Davis did not yield a run all October.
And in his first at-bat of the entire postseason, Colon found a moment to pair with his game-tying infield single from the American League Wild Card game in 2014. That night, so many months ago, solidified the ethos of this team. Pushed to the brink, the Royals do not break. Instead, it is their opponents who buckle.
“This is too good of a group, too good of a team, not to be remembered as world champions,” Hosmer said.
During the regular season, the Royals resembled a freight train, barreling past their foes. In the playoffs, they transformed into Ali in Zaire, luring opponents into a false sense of comfort, only to strike in the highest-leverage spots. The Royals possessed the chin of a champion. After the way the 2014 season finished, no singular shot could shake them.
“We never quit,” Perez said. “We never put our heads down. We never think about, ‘OK, the game is over.’ No. We always compete to the last out.”
When their season ended last October, with the tying run stranded at third base in Game 7 of the World Series, the Royals felt the sort of heartbreak that lingers through the winter. The players mourned the loss and sought to convert the pain into fuel for 2015.
Kansas City became the best team in the American League. They won their first division title in 30 years. Their players shined at the All-Star Game. Their coffers filled with a franchise-record for attendance at Kauffman Stadium. The renaissance emerged in full bloom.
Except all of this would have been coated with bile, rendered meaningless, if the Royals had been unable to defy incredible odds in the first round. The journey from the brink of the abyss to postseason bliss lasted 21 days. It may be difficult to recall now, in the wake of popped bottles and kept promises, but the Royals looked on the verge of a collapse in Houston.
Across 162 games during the season, the Royals played like the best team in the American League. During the first 34 innings of the American League Division Series with the Houston Astros, the Royals played like the second-best team on the field. October allows scant time for second chances, for extended slumps, for platitudes like “We’ll get them tomorrow.” Tomorrows do exist in the postseason, but they disappear with expediency when you lose.
At 3 p.m. on Oct. 12, Kansas City trailed Houston by four runs. Six outs remained in their season. Their bats never found life, and Yost was preparing for a concession speech.
“I was thinking about how I was going to congratulate the Houston Astros in my press conference,” Yost said. “I mean, I really was.”
Then Alex Rios hit the first pitch he saw from reliever Will Harris into left field. Alcides Escobar fished for a curveball and found a hit. Ben Zobrist cracked a line drive into center field, where outfielder Carlos Gomez declined to dive.
By know, of course, the rest of the story has been written into Kansas City legend, standing alongside the Wild Card Game as the exemplars of this club’s fortitude. The club earned a chance to rewrite the chapter they could not get right last year.
When the ninth inning on Sunday began, the Royals found themselves in the predicament that has become so familiar. They were down two runs with three outs to play. They had overcome so much this postseason, yet with Harvey on the mound, this task looked so tall.
Harvey does not deal in deception. He piles power upon power. His fastball approaches triple digits. His slider clocks at 90 mph. His changeup resides only a few ticks lower.
In the fourth, Harvey displayed the depth and breadth of his arsenal. With the count at 3-1, Cain chased a high fastball. Harvey finished him off with a changeup, down and in. Hosmer flailed at a curveball for a second strikeout.
“Harvey was nasty tonight,” Hosmer said. “He was dirty.”
The last victim was Moustakas. Harvey flipped a pair of curveballs for strikes. Then he blazed a 98-mph fastball past Moustakas to strike out the side. Harvey pumped his fist as he headed for his dugout.
The celebration looked premature. The Royals, after all, do their most devastating damage in the later innings. Harvey would receive a reminder in the ninth. At that point, he had struck out nine. He had not allowed a runner to reach third base. The game belonged to him, and Mets manager Terry Collins refused to take it away.
As the bottom of the eighth inning wound down, the fans shouted for another inning from Harvey. Inside the dugout, he argued with Collins, insisting on staying in the game. Harvey wanted the ninth. He wanted the Royals. Perhaps history will forgive him for his impudence. Because the Royals did not.
Down two strikes, Cain battled his way back for a walk. The crowd stirred. There was life. The future felt recognizable to George Brett, the Hall of Famer from the 1985 Royals.
“As soon as Harvey walked that guy in the ninth,” Brett said, “I said, ‘You’ve got to be kidding me. We’re winning this game.’ ”
With Familia ready, Collins let Harvey stay in the game. Harvey tried to drive a 94-mph fastball past Hosmer’s knees. Hosmer did not let the baseball pass. He thumped an opposite-field, RBI double. The hit halved the score and petrified the park.
Collins fetched Harvey and handed the baseball over to Familia. Before this series, the presence of Familia almost guaranteed a Mets victory. Yet in the first four games here, he had already blown two saves. A third would soon follow.
Guile ruled the day. After Moustakas advanced Hosmer to third base, Perez stepped to the plate. He tapped a grounder toward third baseman David Wright. Wright looked at Hosmer before he threw, but Hosmer did not return to the bag. He prepared to sprint home. He knew Wright lacked superior arm strength and he knew the first baseman, Lucas Duda, is a mediocre fielder.
“Bless his heart, Duda,” first-base coach Rusty Kuntz said. “He’s a good bat.”
The Kansas City scouting report on Duda mentioned his sidearm throwing motion. His volleys often tail away from the intended target. And so catcher Travis d’Arnaud reached in vain as the ball skittered away. Hosmer slid across the plate to tie the game. Joy coursed through the Royals dugout, and the knowledge that now the game would come down to bullpens. No team possessed a deeper relief corps than Kansas City.
Kelvin Herrera returned for the ninth inning, his third scoreless inning. Luke Hochevar turned in a pair of spotless innings. In the top of the 12th, Perez smacked a single off reliever Addison Reed. Jarrod Dyson replaced Perez at first base. Dyson proceeded to utilize his finest skill, the speed that convinced the Royals to stick with him as a 50th round draft pick in 2006, as he stole second base.
Two batters later, Colon picked up a bat for the first time this postseason. Reed refused to throw him a fastball. Colon waited until a fifth slider crossed the plate. Then he punched the go-ahead single into left field and thumped his chest at first. He spent each day this October waiting for an opportunity like this.
“I lived it,” Colon said. “You know what I’m saying? I went to bed almost every night, thinking about this moment. And being ready for my team and for my family and everybody.”
In the aftermath, the Mets bullpen combusted. The Royals notched four more runs, the last three on a bases-clearing double by Cain. The rally turned the bottom of the 12th into a fait accompli. As he did so many times this season, Davis insured the outcome was never in doubt.
In the aftermath of their summit, madness descended onto the Royals clubhouse. The players jostled with camera operators inside the cramped confines. They strapped Oakley goggles over beanies that read “2015 World Series champions.” Corks flew from the bottles of Nicolas Francois champagne. Red bottles of Budweiser operated like helicopters, unleashed torrents of hops around the room.
Alex Gordon, the team’s longest-tenured player, slipped through the throng. He has given 10 years of his life to this organization, and Sunday could have been his final night as a Royal. His ankles were still wrapped. He wore shower slides and sipped from a paper cup.
“Gordo’s hammered,” someone shouted.
“Shocker,” Gordon replied, though his eyes appeared clear and lucid.
Moore stayed away from the party, but other executives ringed the room’s periphery. Drenched across his chest, Gene Watson, the team’s director of pro scouting, engulfed advance scout Alec Zumwalt in a bear hug. It was Zumwalt, along with scouts Mike Pazik and Mike Toomey, who filed the advance reports that helped doom the Mets.
The reports called for the team to pitch inside to Daniel Murphy, the MVP of the National League Championship Series, and back him off the plate. Murphy hit .150 in this series. They also mentioned Murphy’s propensity for fielding mishaps. His error in Game 4 aided another comeback. And the reports nothed the vulnerability of both Wright’s arm and Duda’s arm. The Royals capitalized on that in Sunday’s ninth inning.
“You’re a world champion!” Watson shouted as he grabbed Zumwalt. He said the same to Mike Groopman, the team’s director of analytics.
Nearby, Dyson spotted his closest confidante in the organization. Kuntz has said he intends to retire from the big-league staff after this season. When Dyson found him, his idyllic blonde mane was still in place.
“Where you going?” Dyson asked. “You’re dry.”
Dyson dumped a beer on Kuntz’s head. “Yeah, player!” reliever Greg Holland said.
Someone handed Dyson the Commissioner’s Trophy. He carried it from the clubhouse, through a dugout muddied with Gatorade cups, sunflower seeds and Dubble Bubble wrappers, and onto the field.
“This is what you play for,” Dyson shouted toward the crowd. “This is what you play for, baby, right here.”
Blair and Andy recap Royals' World Series-clinching victory
The Star's Blair Kerkhoff and Andy McCullough recapped the Royals' 7-2 win in 12 innings over the Mets in World Series Game 5 on Sunday night in New York, which clinched the championship for Kansas City for the first time since 1985.
The Royals gathered with their families and friends for pictures and interviews. Yost spotted his kids. “You guys want to be on TV?” he said before sauntering toward an MLB Network interview.
Inside the dugout, Moore wrapped up a conversation with a small throng of reporters. He laughed about a Sports Illustrated story that predicted his club would win a championship in 2015. On this night, it was yet another vision fulfilled.
As ushers shooed the fans out of the park, Moore’s wife and his two children found him in the dugout. Moore hugged his son. His daughter wrapped her arms around his neck.
“Dad,” she said, “we won the World Series.”
Moore dashed a tear from his eye. He would fly back to Kansas City on Monday morning. Meetings about the 2016 season would begin on Wednesday. In between, there will be a parade, the one he envisioned nearly a decade ago.
World Series Game 5
Royals 7, Mets 2, 12 innings
ROYALS WIN WORLD SERIES!!!!!
Kansas City | AB | R | H | BI | W | K | Avg. |
A.Escobar ss | 6 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 2 | .231 |
Zobrist 2b | 5 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | .261 |
L.Cain cf | 5 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 1 | 2 | .227 |
Hosmer 1b | 6 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 2 | .190 |
Moustakas 3b | 6 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | .304 |
S.Perez c | 5 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | .364 |
1-J.Dyson pr | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .000 |
Butera c | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | --- |
A.Gordon lf | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | .222 |
Rios rf | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | .133 |
K.Herrera p | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | --- |
a-K.Morales ph | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | .200 |
Hochevar p | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | --- |
c-C.Colon ph | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1.000 |
W.Davis p | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .000 |
Volquez p | 2 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | .500 |
Orlando rf | 3 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .125 |
Totals | 47 | 7 | 10 | 7 | 3 | 11 |
New York | AB | R | H | BI | W | K | Avg. |
Granderson rf | 4 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | .250 |
D.Wright 3b | 5 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 3 | .208 |
Dan.Murphy 2b | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 2 | .150 |
Cespedes cf | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .150 |
Lagares cf | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .300 |
Duda 1b | 2 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 1 | .263 |
T.d’Arnaud c | 5 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | .143 |
Conforto lf | 5 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 1 | .333 |
W.Flores ss | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | .059 |
Harvey p | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .000 |
Familia p | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | --- |
b-K.Johnson ph | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .000 |
Niese p | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | --- |
A.Reed p | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | --- |
B.Colon p | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | --- |
Totals | 37 | 2 | 4 | 2 | 6 | 11 |
Kansas City | 000 | 000 | 002 | 005 | — | 7 | 10 | 1 |
New York | 100 | 001 | 000 | 000 | — | 2 | 4 | 2 |
1-ran for S.Perez in the 12th.
E: Hosmer (2), D.Wright (2), Dan.Murphy (2). LOB: Kansas City 7, New York 6. 2B: A.Escobar (1), L.Cain (1), Hosmer (1). HR: Granderson (3), off Volquez. RBIs: A.Escobar (4), L.Cain 3 (4), Hosmer (6), S.Perez (2), C.Colon (1), Granderson (5), Duda (2). SB: L.Cain 2 (4), Hosmer (1), J.Dyson (1). SF: Duda.
Runners left in scoring position: Kansas City 3 (Hosmer, Moustakas 2); New York 3 (Harvey, T.d’Arnaud, W.Flores). RISP: Kansas City 4 for 11; New York 0 for 5. Runners moved up: Hosmer, Moustakas, S.Perez, A.Gordon, Conforto. GIDP: A.Escobar, Cespedes, T.d’Arnaud, W.Flores. DP: Kansas City 3 (Zobrist, Hosmer), (Moustakas, Zobrist, Hosmer), (A.Escobar, Zobrist, Hosmer); New York 1 (Dan.Murphy, W.Flores, Duda).
TableStyle: SP-basepitchersCCI Template: SP-basepitchers
Kansas City | IP | H | R | ER | W | K | ERA |
Volquez | 6 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 5 | 5 | 3.00 |
K.Herrera | 3 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 0.00 |
Hochevar W, 1-0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0.00 |
W.Davis | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 0.00 |
New York | IP | H | R | ER | W | K | ERA |
Harvey | 8 | 5 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 9 | 3.21 |
Familia | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 1.80 |
Niese | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5.79 |
A.Reed L, 0-1 | 0.1 | 3 | 5 | 4 | 1 | 0 | 9.82 |
B.Colon | 0.2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.00 |
Blown save: Familia (3). Inherited runners-scored: Familia 1-1, B.Colon 3-3. IBB: off Volquez (W.Flores), off A.Reed (Zobrist).
Umpires: Home, Alfonso Marquez; First, Gary Cederstrom; Second, Mike Everitt; Third, Mark Carlson; Left, Mike Winters; Right, Jim Wolf. Time: 4:15. Att: 44,859.
AP-WF-11-02-15 0538GMT
Andy McCullough, 816-234-4370, @McCulloughStar
Read more here: http://www.kansascity.com/sports/mlb/kansas-city-royals/article42181098.html#storylink=cpy
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