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Notes
from Gay Superbowl 7
Full tournament player statistics
Tournament
results
Cyd
Zeigler, New York Warriors:
First, the
most important thing: The thank yous. So many people made
this tournament possible, and only a select few got to play.
Derek Reyes, Kurt Miller, Darin Shaw, Henry Harding, Molly
Lenore, Mike Colgrove, Stephen Osada, Courtney Joseph, and
all the rest of the volunteers busted their butts to make
this tournament amazing. I think they did a fantastic job.
Also thanks to all the sponsors: Coors, PINK Vodka, Corazon,
Quaker Oats, JetBlue,
Cory Crayn Events, Magnum Events, and all the rest.
When I
started the
New
York Gay Football League three years ago this month, I
had a series of goals for the league. Until this weekend, we
had met every one. My final goal before stepping away from
the league and becoming just another player was to host the
Gay Superbowl here in New York City, and to win the
tournament on our home field. With that last goal now
complete (never did I think it would actually be the
league's second GSB title!), I can now walk away from the
league just three years after its birth knowing I did
everything for it I possibly could.
I can't say
enough about the performance of my team's quarterback, Alon
Hacohen. Last year he threw 29 touchdowns and 4
interceptions; this year he threw 29 TDs and 0 INTs. That 0
INTs may be the greatest individual accomplishment in the
history of this tournament. Think about that. Through six
games of playing the best teams in the country, not once did
the other team take away one of his passes. Gary Sherr from
the Boston Bulldogs came close, but a Warrior knocked the
ball out of his hands before he could pull it down. It's
hard to pick an MVP of this team, because the team is built
on just that: TEAM. Selflessness. Doing whatever is best for
the good of the group. With that said, along with Paul
Sokolson, who seemed unstoppable on offense and a monster in
the middle on defense, Alon was deserving of the tournament
MVP award
How much
has the level of competition improved over last year?
Completely. Until this year, a team could show up with
talent, play well, and win the whole thing. Now, preparation
and adjustments are absolutely essential to winning the
title. Consider these firsts: It's the first time the
16-seed won a single game; and the 14-seed San Diego Bolts
beating the 3-seed Washington Monuments was the biggest
upset in the history of the tournament and they ended up
in the finals!
It might
have been because I was the tournament director, but I felt
a higher level of camaraderie and friendship in this
tournament than I had in the past. It seemed there was more
joking before games, more hugging after games, more sharing
stories and less negative aggression. Heck, the only two
teams it seemed were cheering against one another were the
two San Diego teams!
I never
wanted to have to play my old team, the L.A. Motion, but I
had a funny feeling it was going to happen this year. And it
did. I ended up doing something in the game I couldn't even
do when we played against each other in L.A. for seven
years: I intercepted one of Jim's passes. We ended up
winning the game, 21-12, but I don't take any joy in beating
my friends.
I got an
email from Thurman Williams, one of the heads of the Atlanta
Storm, a few months ago. He informed me that my team
wouldn't win this year because "the home team never wins."
So much for that theory. Next year's tournament will be in
Salt Lake City. For my money, they were one of the best
teams in the tournament this year. My guess is they'll be
very, very tough in the thin air of Utah a year from now.
Doug
Komlenic, San Diego Sharks:
The
San Diego Sharks had a great time in NYC at Gay
Superbowl 7. This was the sixth straight year
that
San Diego the Sharks and this year being the 1st
that we sent two teams. Each year we have strived to get
better and in
New York we had our highest finish ever, taking
3rd. We were proud to play the
San Diego Bolts in the "A" division semi-final
game that was a battle for bragging rights, with the
Bolts earning a hard fought win. Congrats to the Bolts
for finishing 2nd behind the juggernaut that is the
New York Warriors.
San Diego made a statement finishing 2nd and 3rd
out of 16 teams and showed the rest of the Cities that
played in the
Super Bowl that our league is extremely
competitive.
MVP - Jared Duncan was by far one of
the best players on the field in this tournament.
Unfortunately in the 1st half of the 2nd game on Friday
after an incredible interception the opposing player
came down on his foot and he fractured his ankle. In a
game and a half he had collected 5 interceptions and
scored a 70 yard touchdown on a reserve punt verse the
Michigan Panthers. He earned a spot on the all defensive
team that only 7 players out of 200 received.
Offensive MVP - Jesse Remer who's arm
got the ball to every offensive player on the team.
Shout out's to Jason Hefley who had a great tournament,
Julius Williams and Todd May who combined at Center and
scored some timely touchdowns, Larry Granville who
caught some beautiful touch down passes, looking every
bit the part of Randy Moss, Shaun Rogers who was Mr.
Consistent and orchestrated the reverse punt and the
hook and latter plays to perfection, Billy VanRaaphorst's blocking was key, H.T. Bennett's diving
touchdown was amazing, Mona Valenzuela's touchdown was
priceless.
Defensive MVP - Alex Figueroa who was
and is the best rusher on the field. The
San Diego Sharks only allowed an average of 16.7
points per game 2nd only to the Champion Warriors
who gave up 14.8 points per game. Shout out's to our
corner Rich Costanzo who was solid and had an
interception returned for a touchdown, Brent Sims our
shut down corner who's interception sealed the win verse
the L.A. Motion, J5 and Billy who at both 6 foot 5
inches where the best Line Backer / Rusher duo the
tournament had. Our safeties Shaun Rogers, Jared Duncan,
Larry Granville played like seasoned pros. Larry
Granville joined Jared Duncan on the All Defensive
Team. Way to go Defense.
The Best 8th Man Award - Junior Buendia did it all
He was a stand out on special teams,
he came in on the offensive and scored touchdown after
touchdown, on defense he had interceptions. When he was
asked to help he came in and did a super job.
Unsung Heroes - Our Managers Jonz
Bonifacio (conditioning coach), Bud Starkey, Steve
Weathers and Phil Winter. With their love, support and
all the water, Gatorade and food we would not have had
such a good tournament.
Jim
Buzinski, L.A. Motion captain:
Team MVP:
Demond. He was on the field most plays both ways and made
big plays in each game. He did not make the All-Tourney
team, which is a shame, but I voted for him.
Offensive
MVP:
Rory. Someone said that I must love Rory. Yep, I love his
hands, routes and instincts. He was clutch with key catch
after key catch.
Also
notable were John (what hands!), Ross (my rookie of the
year), JP (has he stopped whining yet?) and Zach (the
biggest catch of the tournament vs. Boston).
Defensive
MVP:
The 29. Who knew he had such hands? He stepped up when it
counted.
Also
notable were Demond and Brent (they both flew to the ball)
and Toby (some clutch MLB play).
Best game:
LA 36, Boston 33. The offense scored twice in the final
seven minutes and the defense survived Boston running 10(!)
plays at the end. The greatest win in LA Motion history in
terms of drama.
Best catch:
Ross' brilliant TD grab vs. San Diego against double
coverage while managing to secure the ball and get his feet
as he fell out of bounds. Wish we had that one on video; it
would be a YouTube classic.
Runnersup:
John's sideline grab against NYC; Shon's clutch catch
getting drilled against Boston; Rory's TD catch against NYC;
Ross' two-pointer against Boston.
Best pass:
The winning TD against Boston, 40 yards to Zach. I thought
the ball was never going to land.
Runnerup:
JP's 20-yard laser to Ross. It was the best half-yard toss
in history and left JP with the best completion % in the
tournament.
Center
stage:
In the Boston win, our centers had three TDs -- David one
and JP two. In addition, there was not one bad snap in any
game.
Loneliest
LA Motion job:
Punter. We never punted once.
Biggest
play:
Demond's fourth-down catch and run against Boston. Down
13-0, if we don't score there it's likely over and we're
out.
Strategy:
I propose that from now on we allow the opponent to score on
the first play -- we went 2-0 in those games.
Stepping up:
We got off to a great start against Michigan when Toby
picked off the pass on the game's first play and ran it in.
Ruffian:
Brent apologizes to Zach for his elbow that cost Zach an
interception TD runback.
Coolest
plays:
Jeremiah's pick against SD, where he raced diagonally across
the field and snagged the ball.
Shon's option toss to Zach
in the third-place game.
Demond's interception runback on
the last play of the first half against Michigan.
Toby's
TD catch off a deflection against SoFla.
John's long run
after the catch against SD on fourth down.
Shon racing
across to knock down one of Boston's last-second passes.
Rory's sack of the Boston QB near the end of the game.
My
run for a TD against SD.
Hustle:
Ryan just kept going and going on the pass rush, despite the
refs not calling him for being pushed, held and tripped. We
all noticed.
Flag man:
My most enduring image of Brent is him with a flag in his
hands, sprawled on the ground.
He wants
credit:
JP telling teammates that not only did he catch two TDs
against Boston, he called both plays.
Funniest
plays:
Jeremiah celebrating his interception "TD" by dropping the
ball at the 5.
David snapping the ball to Shon's head
after five games of hiking to me (Shon is 6 feet vs. me at
6-5).
Brent calling timeout in the third-place game after
I told the refs to just run the clock and not stop it for
anything.
Ryan's dead-on impersonation of Jeremiah calling
defensive signals; wish we had taped it.
My attempt at
falling after a run against SoFla; my knee is still oozing
and shedding skin.
Oct. 12,
2007 |