The tournament seemed to be relatively well run and organized. One note I'd like to make about my experiences with Asian Ultimate Frisbee tournaments: they are significantly more expensive than American tournaments. You may wonder, "why are they so much more expensive in Asia if Asia is SO much cheaper than the States?" Well the answer, my friend, is double-sided.
1. Cost of field space. In the U.S. generally speaking, it is not terribly difficult to find space for 5, 10, 15, or ever 20 teams to play. There are, of course exceptions to this rule: NYC, LA, etc. But most average college campuses have enough field space to host at least 8 teams, often many more (see: College Southerns, UF's Florida Winter Classic, and NCState's wolfpack, all usually held on campus and hosting between 10 and 36 teams). In Asia, any city that is easily accesible by air (a necessity as ultimate in asia is still relatively small and hasn't penetrated beyond the largest, ex-pat laden cities throughout most of Asia) has almost now green space whatsoever. Look at Seoul for example: our team can barely find a space big enough for a single field twice per week for our practices and our small 4-team league.
2. Amenities. At a standard U.S. tournament, you will receive maybe 6-8 games, depending on performance, bagels in the morning with peanut butter, water at the fields, and one party Saturday night which consists of x number of kegs. At a standard Asian tournament you will receive a disc (and often a swag bag like I did at Bangkok hatter and Jeju-- t-shirts, water bottle, stickers, lotion, sunscreen, power powders, etc), bagels/peanut butter in the morning, a lunch on Saturday and Sunday (always quite tasty and plenty filling), Dinner on Saturday, a registration party Friday night, water during play, 6-8 games, a tournament party Saturday night (typically with all you can drink beer... sometimes more, see later Shanghai), and beer up the ass during the day at the fields. All in all, the extra 20-40 dollars I pay for the tournament fee covers every last penny I might spend at the tournament and thereby helps me to actually save money instead of spend it.
bekah and I sure are glad we didn't have to worry about food
A note about ultimate in the Philippines: Manila has probably the single best ultimate scene in Asia. The sport is exploding in popularity due to various celebrities (news anchors, models, actors) playing the sport competitively. One girl who plays for the Team Philippines is sponsored by Nike, which is possibly the tightest thing ever. Another guy is an actor and lives in a mansion on the side of an inactive volcano. Additionally, almost all the people who play in Manila are Filipinos, which is impressive as the majority of the Asian ultimate community is ex-pat.
The Philippines team was good. They were REALLY REALLY fast. We played this team in Manila in November and got wrecked because they were so much faster. However, this year our team was greatly improved, with all of our best players present, and we won the game 11-7 or so.
Because we won our pool, we got a first-round bye the next morning, which was awesome.
Saturday night we went to the party extremely briefly because it kind of sucked. However, it should be noted that each team received two bottles of liquor (vodka and whiskey). Plus unlimited beer. Our team didn't really use hardly any of our supply. Instead, we went out and walked around a bit through the fancy shopping district near the party. Chanel, Coach, Ferragamo, Fendi. I was in 7th heaven. I just wanted to buy everything.
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