Wimbourne Wasps - 690* vs Appleby Arrows - 410
Wasps
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Arrows
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Keeper
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Brookstanton (C)
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Delaney
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Chasers
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Pippins
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Fladbury (C)
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Branstone
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Cauldwell
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Johnston
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Comstock
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Beaters
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Nutt
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Flitley
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Oddpick
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Belcher
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Seeker
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Vogler
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Sapworthy
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“(The Wimbourne Wasps) are alleged to have taken their name from a nasty incident which occurred during a match against the Appleby Arrows in the mid-seventeenth century, when a Beater flying past a tree on the edge of the pitch noticed a wasps' nest among the branches and batted it towards the Arrows' Seeker, who was so badly stung that he had to retire from the game. Wimbourne won and thereafter adopted the wasp as their lucky emblem.”
Kennilworthy Whisp - “Quidditch Through The Ages”
Kennilworthy Whisp - “Quidditch Through The Ages”
There are no words I can say which better that better encapsulate the intense rivalry between the Wimbourne Wasps and Appleby Arrows than that iconic story. It really is the perfect Grand Final. Just three years ago British Quidditch’s greatest rivals met in a Grand Final, and it was the Arrows won in an anticlimactically short bout thanks to Ava Mustaq taking the snitch inside the first hour.
But here we go with it all over again. For the Wasps, the dominant team of not just this but a number of the most recent seasons, failure was not an option. Retribution for 2009 had to be achieved at all costs. For the Arrows, there was no pressure. After last year’s performance, reaching the Grand Final was an unexpected success, and they came into the match as underdogs.
But once you’re there, Grand Final defeat is always the most horrible thing in the world and must be avoided. The exciting thing was, there was every chance the Arrows could successfully complete this massive achievement, for they have been not just the Wasps’ rival team in recent years, but their bogey team.
The 2009 Grand Final may have been short, but their Round 6 match this year was not. But they both had Appleby victory in common. The Arrows won 770-710 in what remained the Wasps one and only loss of the season leading into the Grand Final. If you were a believer in fate, in omens, you could almost justify Apple favouritism.
Naturally, neither manager considered making any changes to their on-fire teams. Maeve Halcyeone and Amos Golpalott can both be proud of successful years. Their job is done, not it was all down to the fourteen men and women on the pitch in the biggest (annual) day in the world of Quidditch.
When the brooms up call came, Jadzia Johnston was first to the Quaffle and before Perecles Delaney knew what had hit him, the Wasps were 10-0 up.
It was a very good sign for Wasps fans that their troops were not nervous. But as ever, the Arrows rose against their great rivals. Even at something resembling their best, the Wasps still did not have it their own way.
For the first hour it was Wimbourne who led, but only narrowly. Their Chasers and legendary Keeper Apollo Brookstanton had their opposite numbers’ numbers. But it was always going to be the Beater contest that captured the imagination here. Erasmus Oddpick, Gaius Nutt, Gifford Belcher and Ragmar Flitley are arguably the four best Beaters in the league, but undoubtedly the two greatest pairs. Two time premiers Belcher and Flitley are the old masters though and took this opportunity to once and for all put to bed any doubts over their continued supremacy.
As the Arrows’ Quaffle unit rallied on the back of their boys’ mighty Bludging, the margin narrowed until early in the third hour, Appleby hit the front for the first time.
But they would not stay there, despite continued dominance, for the supposedly aging Brookstanton was pulling off remarkable feats of agility, combined with his trademark brute strength. At one juncture, in what will surely go down as one of the most memorable Grand Final moments of all time, he chewed up all Three Chasers in making a save and was then able to break clear alone while his injured Chasers recovered and score.
For the third hour, Appleby continued to have the run of play, but Brookstanton was utterly impenetrable. Amazingly his efforts allowed the Wasps to surge back to a lead of eighty points. From there there was no stopping a team as ruthless as Wimbourne.
With all three Chasers recovered from various knocks at the hands of Flitley and Belcher, they began to fly rings around their Arrow counterparts. Delphine Branstone’s immense run of form continued as she led the way towards a potential breaking of the snitch margin.
Arrows Seeker Millie Sapworthy knew she had to act fast, but was marked unfailingly by Venus Vogler. There were question marks over Vogler’s ability to handle the pressure after she began to show signs of her early-season yips during the Finals. But she will only truly be remembered for her Grand Final performance either way. Here was a chance to stamp her name into the record books as a rookie success, and a potential superstar for the future.
Vogler did not waste her chance, shadowing Sapworthy all the way then swooping below her, with the Wasps leading by 130 after four hours and the match still alive, to take the snitch.
Justice had been served. The clear dominant team of modern times and the 2012 Minor Premiers, the Wimbourne Wasps, are 2012 British and Irish Quidditch League champions.
Wimbourne Wasps - 690: Branstone 25, Johnston 21, Pippins 7, Brookstanton 1, Vogler Capture
Appleby Arrows - 410: Cauldwell 19, Fladbury 12, Comstock 10
PLAYER OF THE MATCH: APOLLO BROOKSTANTON (WASPS)
2012 British and Irish Quidditch League Champions:
WIMBOURNE WASPS
Player of the Finals: DELPHINE BRANSTONE (WASPS)
Player Of The Year: MARINA GRINDERFORD (FALCONS)