Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Women's Individual Sabre


The two Americans in women’s sabre were Dagmara (or Daga) Wozniak and the two-time reigning Olympic champion, Mariel Zagunis. (Note: women’s sabre first became an Olympic event in 2004, so Mariel was the only women’s sabre Olympic champion.)

Mikini v. Bujdoso in the round of 32. Bujdoso attacked for the first two points. Her next point came on a parry riposte. Bujdoso scored again, and then again on a counter attack. 5-0. She attacked for a sixth point. Then Mikina's parry riposte landed, and then Bujdoso's attack was no and Mikina's was yes. Then simultaneous. Bujdoso attacked twice. 8-2 Bujdoso. Only thirty seconds of fencing time had passed.
Bujdoso's counter attack landed to start the second period. Then Mikina's attack hit. 3-9. Bujdoso's attack scored, then Mikina's did. Mikina's counter attack landed and Bujdoso's attack didn't. 5-10. Mikina pushed Bujdoso, and Bujdoso's attack scored, and then again. Then Bujdoso pushed hard and scored. 11-7. Bujdoso's counter attack put her up 12-7. Mikina's attack, then on the next point Bujdoso's attack was no and Mikina's counter was yes. Mikina's attack landed. 10-12. Then there was a simultaneous, nothing done. Mikina attacked and scored. 11-12. She was really coming back -- impressive. Bujdoso then scored on an composed attack. Then simultaneous. Mikina's counter attack landed and Bujdoso's attack did not. 12-13. Simultaneous again. Mikina attacked and Bujdoso fell, and then Mikina attacked again. 14-13, Mikina leading for the first time! Bujdoso attacked, and Mikina parried and her riposte landed. 15-13, Mikina, not at all would have been expected after the first period.

In Mariel’s round of 32 bout, she didn't look really sharp in the first period, and she let her opponent get some simple attacks. However she also pushed well, and she got some nice parry ripostes. In Daga’s round of 32 bout, and she was moving really well and seemed calm. I hadn't noticed that both she and Mariel are lefties. Her next opponent was Azza Besbes of Tunisia, world #8. Mariel’s next opponent was Seira Nakayama of Japan. Nakayama is world #25.

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Men's Individual Epee


The Americans fencing in men’s epee were Seth Kelsey and Soren Thompson. Thompson lost 4-15 in the round of 32. Kelsey, though, won in the round of 32 and the round of 16.

Seth Kelsey v. Fernandez in quarters.
Kelsey fleched for the first point. Fernandez attacked to Kelsey's torso. Fernandez was awarded the next touch on an opposition parry, but Kelsey asked for video, and the touch was ruled nothing done. Then there was a double touch, Fernandez's attack and Kelsey's counter attack. Then Kelsey scored. Fernandez's attack and Kelsey's counter attack did not land, then Kelsey's attack did. Double touch. Kelsey was ahead at 5-3 at break.
Kelsey started the second period by landing a counter attack. Then a double touch. Kelsey attacked, and Fernandez's counter attack landed but Kelsey's attack didn't. Then double touch, with Kelsey attacking. 6-8. Fernandez attacked, and his attack landed. Kelsey attacked, and Fernandez displaced down for a double touch. Kelsey fleched to go up 10-8, and then his next attack landed. Both fencers stayed pretty high, and they each bounced a little bit. Kelsey was ahead 11-8 to end the second period.
Kelsey scored the first point of the final period on a fleche. Fernandez attacked, and the attack missed, but Kelsey's counter landed. 13-8. Fernandez called for a halt and asked for a doctor -- he lunged and aggravated something. After a couple of minutes with ice, he got back up, and they started fencing again. Fernandez's attack didn't land, but Kelsey's counter did. 14-8. Fernandez attacked and got a hit. 9-14. Kelsey attacked with 10 seconds left in the period to win 15-9. Kelsey was the first American going through to the semis in a fencing event this Olympics.

Earlier in the day, Kelsey defeated the world #1, Nikolai Novosjolov, 15-11. The world #2 also lost in the round of 16, and the #3 lost in the quarters. #s 4 and 5 lost in the round of 16... lots of highly ranked fencers lost. The people remaining have the following rankings (some of these might be slightly off):
Ruben Limardo Gason -- #18
Jung Jinsun -- #9
Bartosz Piasecki -- #47
Seth Kelsey -- #25

Men's Individual Foil


I started watching during the third set of bouts in the round of 32. There were three Americans competing in men's individual foil. Alexander Massialas, number 12 seed and number 13 in the world, won 15-6. Miles Chamley-Watson had lost 10-15. Race Imboden, number 5 in the world, was yet to fence.

Baldini of Italy was leading Miyake of Japan 12-4 with a minute left in the second period. Baldini landed a touch to Miyake's upper torso, but Miyake thought his own off target had right of way. The point was awarded to Miyaki after video, and 13-4 was the score at break. This was a bout of two lefties. Miyake tried to fleche, and both fencers hit off target. Miyake tried again, and was still off target. Miyake then got a touch in some in fighting. Baldwin got a touch to go up 14-5. Miyake fleched and hit. Baldini fleched and missed. Both Miyake and Baldini attacked, but Miyake's did not land, and Baldini's did, so Baldini won 15-6.

Notably in this set of bouts: the reigning Olympic champion, Benjamin Kleibrink of Germany, was defeated by Yuki Ota of Japan. Ota won silver in Beijing. They met so early because their rankings have dropped significantly.

Monday, July 30, 2012

Women's Individual Epee

It's worth noting two things to begin. First, epee is a very deliberate weapon. Of the three weapons, it is the one that most embodies the idea of "physical chess." There's a rule in place that says that after a certain amount of time -- about a minute -- in a period has elapsed with nothing happening (no touches, in the case of epee), then the time will automatically reset to the beginning of the next period, with no break. Second, there is no right of way in epee. This means that if both fencers' lights go off in epee, both fencers are awarded a point. The only exception is in extra time. The point of extra time is to break a tie, so a double touch in extra time is just called simultaneous, nothing done.

Three American women competed in epee. Susie Scanlan lost 13-15 in the round of 64. Maya Lawrence and Courtney Hurley had round of 64 byes, so their first bouts were in the round of 32.

I watched Courtney Hurley's bout against Laura Flessel-Colovic of France, who was their flag bearer. Courtney Hurley held her epee at a higher angle than most people. Laura feinted a lot of attacks. First touch was simultaneous. Second touch both missed first intention, Courtney got second. Third touch was simultaneous. Laura is left-handed. Courtney didn't stay very low -- Laura's knees were much more bent. Next touch was simultaneous, then Courtney attacked and landed on the upper arm or shoulder. 5-3. Laura landed a hit -- looked like it was going to the arm then went lower. Simultaneous on the next one (Laura's attack, Courtney's counter). Next point was Courtney's attack, Laura's counter. 6-7 Courtney ahead. Laura tied it with five seconds left in the period with a touch to the upper inner quadrant of Courtney's torso.
Courtney was bouncy. Laura stayed lower and more turned in, so even when she bounced, it didn't look as bouncy. Laura got the first touch of the period. Her ninth touch came on a fleche. Courtney leaned and ducked a little, and Laura fleched and hit Courtney on the back. Next was simultaneous. Laura led 10-8. It was pretty fast moving, for epee. Attack by Laura was no, and then an attack by Courtney landed. Next touch went to Laura, near the wrist. Then Laura fleched, but the fleche didn't land, and Courtney got the touch. Simultaneous. 11-12, Laura ahead. Laura, on one of the attacks that looks like it'll just be a feint, hit the inner side of Courtney's torso. Courtney got the next touch. 12-13, Laura ahead. Laura lunged in and got a touch to Courtney's leg (at least second intention, maybe third,but all to the leg). And Laura won on another low touch, 15-12.

Men's Individual Sabre

Three Americans were competing in the men's sabre competition:  Daryl Homer, Timothy Morehouse, and James Williams. All three men had byes in the round of 64. Tim defeated Veniamin Reshetnikov of Russia 15-6, which wasn't expected at all. Daryl Homer was expected to win and did, 15-11. James Williams was defeated by Nikolay Kovalev, which was also expected.

Timothy Morehouse and Daryl Homer then won narrowly in the Round of 16. Tim defeated Dmitri Lapkes 15-13. Daryl defeated the Russian Yakimenko, one of the top two in the world, 15 points to 14. Both Tim and Daryl, though, lost in the quarters. Tim lost to Italy's Diego Occhiuzzi, 9-15. Daryl was defeated 15-13 by Rares Dumitrescu of Romania. Also in the quarterfinals, Nikolay Kovalev of Russia defeated the top seed, Nicolas Limbach of Germany, 15-12.

The two semifinals were Diego Occhiuzzi versus Rares Dumitrescu and Aron Szilagyi and Nikolay Kovalev. I missed the Szilagyi-Kovalev bout, but Szilagyi won, 15-7.

After one period, the Dumitrescu-Occhiuzzi score was 5-8. At the beginning of the Dumitrescu-Occhiuzzi second period, in seven seconds of fencing time, went from 5-8 to 7-11.
Once it was 14-9, both were just going in, so quickly, not doing much complicated -- one trying to finish and one trying to save. Dumitrescu got a point the third time they did that. On the next touch, Occhiuzzi was sure he'd won, it seemed, but when it was ruled simultaneous he asked for a new sabre. Dumitrescu clearly got the next point. Occhiuzzi won on the next point, 15-11.

In the bronze medal match, Kovalev was up 4-0, but then Dumitrescu came back and scored 3 points in a row. After twenty seconds of fencing time, it was 6-3, Kovalev.  At period, Kovalev led 8-3. (Note that they weren't even thirty seconds of fencing time in when they went to the next period.)
Kovalev opened the second period by scoring two points in one second. Dumitrescu then scored three points in the next five seconds. Nine seconds into the second period, the score was 11-8, Kovalev.
Kovalev switched sabres when the score was 14-9. Dumitrescu got the next point. Kovalev won on a counter parry riposte, 15-10, thus earning the bronze medal.

The final was fifth seeded Aron Szilagyi of Hungary versus fourteenth seeded Occhiuzzi of Italy. Not-really-related note: In the few bouts of sabre I watched, I was at least three instances of the equivalent of a false start -- someone going before "allez." Szilagyi was rolling at the beginning. First four points were all his, in five seconds of fencing time. For his fifth point, he really pulled Occhiuzzi, and then suddenly attacked, changing direction with little warning. It was very well done.
Twelve seconds into the period, Szilagyi was up 7-0. It was going to take a lot for Occhiuzzi to even make this close. He did get his first point then, so the score was 1-7. Then Szilagyi committed a "false start." Szilagyi then got a point, so the score was 8-1, and that was the end of the first period.
Occhiuzzi got the first two points of the second period. It looked like Szilagyi tried to pull Occhiuzzi again, but Occhiuzzi scored this time. 3-8. Occhiuzzi started to come back a bit. 5-9. After Szilagyi went up 10-5 again, Occhiuzzi pushed and got a point. 6-10. After a few more hits, Szilagyi was up 14-7. Occhiuzzi pushed for the next point and the score was 8-14, but it looked like he hurt his foot or lower leg. Once he got up and walked back to his end of the piste, he looked okay. Far onto his end of the piste, Szilagyi attacked, and his attack landed. Aron Szilagyi of Hungary is the men's sabre Olympic champion.

It's worth noting that seeds don't align perfectly with world rankings. Seeds are drawn, but a higher ranked fencer is more likely to have a better seed.  Still, these medalists were not expected -- Nicolas Limbach of Germany, Alexey Yakimenko of Russia, or Gu Bongil of South Korea were expected.

The Federation Internationale d'Escrime (FIE) rankings have already been updated. Nicolas Limbach is first and Alexey Yakimenko is second (also top two pre-Olympics), but Aron Szilagyi is now third. Gu Bongil is fourth, Dumitrescu is fifth, Kovalev is sixth, and Occhiuzzi is seventh. Daryl Homer has moved up to 12th.

Sunday, July 29, 2012

Women's Olympic Foil

Four years ago, I was very active on the National Novel Writing Month Young Writers' Program (NaNo YWP) forums, and each day, I posted an overview of what had occurred in the fencing at the Olympics.

I decided to continue writing summaries, but I'll post them here, instead.


In the round of 32: Lee Kiefer v. Monica Peterson, American v. Canadian. Lee dominated the beginning of the first period, and then Monica came back and was within a point of Lee, who then changed foils and started scoring again. The second period was mostly Lee -- Monica got a few touches, including a couple after Lee was at 14 points, but Lee was in control.
Both women are five foot four, but Lee has longer legs. Sometimes she sits really low and deep, but other times she's pretty high up -- higher than Monica, who also leans a little. Lots of off-targets and in-fighting in this bout, and it moved pretty quickly. They didn't go up and down the piste a lot. Their first intentions came early, and usually either a first or second intention hit or was off-target.

So Lee Kiefer is the only American female foilist to advance past the Round of 32. It's disappointing for Nzingha Prescod and Nicole Ross; Zingy especially was expected to do better than she did.

Other important results: Elisa di Francisca rolled over Mona Shaito. The first period was reasonable (6 to 2), but in the second period Elisa scored 9 points and shut out Mona. Valentina Vezzali, defending gold medalist, won 14 to 8.

Lee's next bout is in the second half of the Round of 16 against Gil Ok Jung, who beat Aida Shanaeva 15 to 14 in the Round of 32. In the first half, though, is #1 in the world, Hyun Hee Nam of S. Korea, against Aida Mohamed, who defeated Nzingha Prescod in the Round of 32. I saw a bit of Carolin Golubytskyi (of Germany)'s previous match - she did very well, and has a non-bouncy style I like - but in this round she's matched up against Elisa di Francisca, who looked positively dominant.

So, in the round of 16 are three French, three Italians, two Japanese, two South Koreans, one Russian, one German, one American, one Chinese, one Hungarian, and one Tunisian.
The only competitors who rolled like Elisa di Francisca in the round of 32 were Astrid Guyart of France (won 15-2) and Arianna Errigo of Italy (won 15-4). Neither Nam nor Vezzali, the favorites, were as dominant. Astrid faces Ines Boubakri of Tunisia, who defeated Nicole Ross. Arianna Errigo faces Kamilia Gafurzianova, who defeated Martyna Synoradzka15-8.

Hyun Hee Nam was up 3-1 against Aida Mohamed at the end of the first period. They're moving up and down the piste a lot, and lots of off-target when they do manage to attack. Nam can be really bouncy at times. 4-4 at the second break. Nam needed to stop missing her ripostes, and  she to be careful when the taller Aida was in distance but Nam wasn't.
At the end of the third period it was 6-6, so extra time. Nam thought she won on a parry riposte, but the director called off-target. After a few minutes, the result was no point and a yellow card for Nam. On the next point, though, she got the touch and won.
In the other bouts. Arianna won 15-7. Astrid lost 10-15. Chieko Sugawara of Japan beat Corinne Maitrejean of France 15-9.

Now Lee Kiefer v. Gil Ok Jung. They were moving a lot. At the first break, Lee was up 4-2, and there had been some infighting near the end of the period. Lee was moving a lot better than she showed against Monica. The infighting increased dramatically, as did the off targets. Jung came on strong at the end of the second period. Tied 11-11 with 1:42 left in the third period.  Lee was moving better again. It was close at the end, with Lee up 14-13, and they had to check the last touch on video, but Lee won, 15-13.

Carolin Golubytskyi gave Elisa di Francisca some trouble in the first two periods of their Round of 16 bout. It was 9-8 Elisa with two minutes left in the third period. Elisa is tall, but she was sitting pretty deeply in her en garde. The last two minutes were almost all Elisa. She won 15-9.

Ikehata won 15-11. Valentina Vezzali won 15-6, so that sounds like it was pretty easy for Valentina.

In the quarters, Ines Boubakri against Valentina, Lee against Arianna, Chieko Sugawara against Elisa, and Ikehata v. Nam.

So, Lee and Arianna. Arianna scored the first two touches, but Lee responded with two touches on ripostes. Lee was sitting pretty far down in her en garde this match. Arianna was leaning a lot. Lee’s back foot was a lot more turned out than Arianna’s – actually, maybe Arianna’s is turned in more than normal – and Lee’s en garde was pretty wide. Lee got a point on an attack and then on a counter riposte. They were barely using any time because they're just coming in. Arianna got a couple of touches with attacks in preparation on Lee, and Arianna led 13-8. The final score was 15-10, Arianna Errigo winning.

Elisa definitely used her reach against Sugawara. Elisa, 15-9. Nam won 15-6. Boubakri and Valentina were tied 7-7, in extra time, and Valentina won. So three Italians and Nam in the semis.

Nam v. Elisa. Elisa towers over Nam. Both fencers stayed really low and had wide en garde positions. The crowd was very much rooting for Elisa. They weren't moving much, small steps, rocking back and forth. Elisa was trying to hit Nam's blade, but Nam was keeping it up off target. Nam is a lefty, but it wasn’t really helping her. A lot of her hits were off-target, closer to Elisa's arm. It was 2-2 at the end of the first period. Nam got some good touches on Elisa’s upper outside quadrant. At the end of the second period, the score was 5-5. Nam was bouncing off and on throughout the bout, but she was really bouncy at the beginning of the third period. Both fencers were moving their blades, but Nam was using a huge vertical range, and Elisa was mostly keeping hers on target. The beginning of the third period was all Nam, and she was up 9-5. Elisa, however, came back, and the crowd was supporting her very vocally (singing, clapping, chanting).  The third period ended with the score tied 10-10, so extra time. Eight seconds into extra time, Elisa’s attack landed, and she won, advancing to the final.

Valentina and Arianna. Valentina won the first three points. Arianna started attacking, then – she seems more comfortable on offense – and so she lead 6-5. Arianna kept her foil at a higher angle in en garde than did Valentina. They started moving more. Lots of off-targest by Arianna. Arianna did a good job landing her ripostes. On the rare occasion that Arianna missed a riposte, Valentina did a good job of landing a remise. Quick touches, using very little time. The end of the first period, and the score was 12-9, Arianna. Valentina fought back a little at the end, but Arianna won, 15-12.

So it was Nam and Vezzali in the bronze medal bout. Vezzali bent her back leg a lot more than did Nam. They were both down really low, and there was a lot of  blade contact. They barely move, and then one of them attacks really suddenly. At the end of the first period, it was 2-2. In the early second period, they kept getting really close to each other and then passing each other, causing halts. It was 6-4 Valentina at break. Valentina got a yellow card, but I didn’t see why. Nam got lots of touches quickly, and it was 10-6 Nam. Valentina, though, came back, and with 9 seconds left in the third period, she was down 10-12. In the last nine seconds, she got two touches, so they went into extra time tied 12-12. Neither fencer attacked early in the extra time, but eventually Valentina attacked and got the touch, securing an Italian sweep of the medals.

And the final!
Arianna v. Elisa. The tall Italian bout.
They both geot really low occasionally, but they didn't stay low much. Arianna is also a lefty. How did I not catch that? The first two touches were Elisa's. They were both moving their blades a lot. Their styles seemed so similar except that their en garde was somewhat different. At period it was 3-2 Elisa. They were both beating the other's blade. Lots of off target, lots of attacking without much warning (my coach called that exploding). Arianna made some mistakes – there was one touch where she just ran at Elisa. It looked like she was going to fleche, but she never actually did. They were doing a sort of flow more than anyone else I watched bout today. Not the very set flow I learned, but a flow, just going with each other. It was 7-7 after break. Arianna got ahead 10-8, but Elisa came back and tied it 11-11. This was still the score at the end of the third period. Early on in extra time, Elisa attacked, and her attack landed. Elisa di Francisca is the gold medalist.

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Balance and Swing

Before, the room is never crowded. Most people hang to the sides, waiting, sitting, drinking water, talking. The band is on the stage, but they're quiet.

Already, though, it's clear that something is going to need lots of space.
Why else would the center of the room be completely clear?

It's a church, a school, a library -- anywhere with a large, open room. Usually old. Often poorly lit.

But once the music starts, none of that matters, because it's a contra dance.

A mixer comes first, to teach the basics. Everyone stands in a circle and holds hands with their neighbors. Maybe everyone will walk to the center of the circle and then back out. Maybe there will be a circle right and then a circle left, or the other way around. But there is movement through the circle. One does not stay between the same two people. Pass by shoulders, pull through, a la main -- there are lots of ways to rotate.
And then there is the balance and swing.

A balance. The pair takes hands. Both step in, bounce, then step out and bounce. On the step out, it's common for the lady's left hand and the man's right hand to release. This allows them to pull farther apart, which isn't important for the balance but is important for the swing.

A swing. There are many ways to swing, but really, it's just the pair spinning in a circle.
Usually, the lady's left hand is on the man's right shoulder, the man's right hand is on the lady's back, and then they hold hands on the lady's right. The two can either walk around each other (a walking swing), or they can each leave one foot in the center and pivot around it (a buzz step). Buzz step swings are usually much faster.

Some people don't think faster swings are necessarily more fun.

I'm not one of those people.

The balance and swing is the basic step of contra, and practicing it is truly the point of the beginning mixer.

After the mixer, the dances begin. Find a partner, stand in a set -- two long lines, standing across from your partner. Partners move up and down the set together, and as the dance repeats, over and over the partners find each other for a balance and swing.

The fiddle, the caller, the colorful spinning skirts, the loud stomp on a "long lines!", the old man in a kilt.

Two women pull past each other in a ladies' chain, and the men guide them around in a half circle, a courtesy turn -- and maybe they add a twirl or few.
 I live for the twirls in a courtesy turn, even if life isn't quite contra dance.

There's a break in the middle, because contras are not short affairs. They usually last at least two and a half hours, and more often at least three.
Before the break, and at the very end of the dance, there is a waltz.

The waltz calms and lingers, so different in style, movement, music from the contras, but a contra without an ending waltz feels incomplete.

Three years ago today, my first contra dance ended with a waltz, and I had learned to balance and swing.

Monday, June 25, 2012

The Championships, Wimbledon

My summers at home as a child, before I started going to camps, all blur together. It is not because I don't remember them, but because there were such patterns that it is hard to tell one year from the next.

Summers were for staying home with my dad. Summers were for hitting balloons around and trying to keep them from touching the ground, a game I ended up calling Pompidou. Summers were for sunball, my odd variation on baseball.

They were for going to dance. They were for my dad doing my bun in what he called a "funny bun," because the shape was never quite neat and classical, but they were always sturdy, and no dance class ever succeeded in destructing them. Summer was for black leotards, once I had reached Division 1 at dance instead of being in pre-ballet, and I've always loved my black leotards. Summer was for more hours dancing per week than during the school year, smaller classes, and greater variety in teachers.

After I started learning to skate, summers were for spending an hour or so a couple of times a week at the rink, just going around in a circle. They were for stopping to get snow cones on the way home from the rink. They were for finding out what Tiger's Blood was and then coming up with all kinds of other combinations with banana of various red and orange shades and calling them different types of cat bloods -- to this day, my favorite is Snow Leopard's Blood: watermelon and banana.

Summers were for watching lots of baseball. The college world series, pro baseball all summer, and then Little League in August. Lots of summers we went to Houston to visit my grandparents, and we went to Astros games. The first Astros game I remember was in the Astro Dome. I remember going to see games in Minute Maid when it was still Enron. We almost always sat on the first base side, which meant that summer was for proclaiming Jeff Bagwell as my favorite player. (He's six or seven years retired now and that's still true.)

Summer was for Vacation Bible School. The first VBS I remember is the 1998 Cokesbury VBS, which was Storytelling Tree. My dad was assistant director and one of the people in opening in 2001 for Way to Go, and he was director in 2002 for God's Great Gallery. We always had the CD of VBS music at some point in the spring, so by the time it was actually the week of VBS, I already knew all of the songs by heart.

But finally, summers were for tennis. The summer starts with the French Open, Roland Garros, the images of Paris and the bright orange clay. My dad spent seven-ish years as a kid in Belgium, so we cheered for the Belgian players, Justine Henin and Kim Clijsters, and Justine's best tournament was Roland Garros. And then, just a few weeks later, is Wimbledon. Grass, so different from clay, all white, and the tournament that Justine could never win.

Despite watching for all these years, I still don't know a lot of technical things about tennis. But I can talk about it decently, and I love watching it. That love started with those summers with my dad. Baseball was for the afternoons and the evenings. Tennis, because it was in France and London, seven and six hours ahead of CDT respectively, was for the mornings. I remember dancing around the foyer in my leotard and tights, waiting to go to dance class, with Wimbledon on the television.

As I grew up, I was always home for the French. It was so early in the summer that I was never gone that soon. So the French I could see from home.
Wimbledon, though. At least one week of Wimbledon, I was usually gone, starting in 2006.

In 2006 for at least the second week of Wimbledon I was at Duke Young Writers' Camp. We had to walk a ways from the dorm to get to a computer lab, but whenever I went I would check the scores and the bracket, and I emailed my parents about tennis. That year, Amelie Mauresmo won Wimbledon. Justine was the other player who reached the finals, after she had defeated Kim in the semis. I was disappointed that Justine had lost, but Mauresmo was French, and French players were my favorites after Belgians.
Evidently Federer won Wimbledon that year against Nadal. I don't remember that, but at the same time, if you'd made me guess, I would have done so correctly.

In 2007 again I missed at least the second week of Wimbledon. I was at GERI at Purdue, and I remember that sometimes they showed Wimbledon on tiny tv screens in the dining hall. I don't remember anything about Wimbledon that year, though again, I can tell you that Federer won and that he defeated Nadal in the final. And I just looked it up, and Venus won women's singles that year.

2008. Now 2008 I remember. I missed all of the tournament to be at Lac du Bois, a French immersion camp. Most of the news we got from the outside world was in the form of mail from our families. It was the year of a Euro, and that news got through camp decently well because... well, it was a *French* camp, so of course the soccer news traveled. But tennis? Fewer people seemed to care. My father had a habit from my past years at Lac du Bois (2005 and 2006) of sending me newspaper clippings, especially about sports. That was the year that Fresno State won the College World Series over UGA -- I remember because he sent me the article.
But the article I remember better than any other is the one about the several-times-rain-delayed, several hour finals match at Wimbledon between (guess who!) Nadal and Federer.
The match that Nadal won.
I was so excited about getting that particular article that I shared it as my bonne chose at cabin meeting that night. At cabin meetings we all went around said one good thing (bonne chose) and one bad thing (mauvaise chose) about the day, and when I said that my bonne chose was that my dad had sent me an article about Nadal beating Federer, one of the other girls (French name Adelaide, English name Rachel) got really excited, too. So after cabin meeting, Adelaide and I talked excitedly for quite a while. It was one of the few moments that summer when I felt really close to someone in my cabin.
That was also the year that Venus defeated Serena to win ladies' singles, and then they together won ladies' doubles.

In 2009 and 2010 I was at Mathcamp for the second week of Wimbledon, but at Mathcamp I had a laptop, so I was able to check scores regularly. I don't remember a lot from either year, honestly, which probably speaks to the awesomeness of Mathcamp. The second week of Wimbledon was also the *first* week of camp, and the first week of Mathcamp is really important for getting used to the culture and getting a vague idea for what classes one wants to take during the rest of camp.
I know that in 2009, Federer won, Serena beat Venus, and they won doubles again.
2010, what I remember best is actually from the first week, before I left for Mathcamp -- the Isner-Mahut match. Seriously, 70-68 in the last set? It was amazing. I remember posting a status the second day of the Isner-Mahut match about ridiculous tennis, good college baseball, and World Cup soccer. I don't remember anything from the second week. I vaguely knew that Nadal had won that year, but at Mathcamp, I wasn't paying that much attention.

Last year, 2011, I was at a camp at MIT. I had a math research project, which meant that other than meeting with my mentor for an hour or two per day, my time was my own to spend. I worked in the MIT Student Union, the W-20. I liked sitting in the comfy arm chairs on the ground floor of the W-20 -- one chair in particular right by an outlet. I would plug in my laptop, put on my headphones, and get out my notebook and pen/pencil to try to make progress on my math research problem.
What did I listen to -- music? Well, some of the time. But in the mornings and early afternoons, almost never did I listen to music.
Wimbledon Radio.

Someone pointed out at one point that I could actually watch Wimbledon on my computer, but I never really considered it. I couldn't really watch tennis and work at the same time. But I could listen to tennis and work.
And I did. I remember sitting in the W-20 listening to Petra Kvitova win. I remember rooting so hard for Sabine Lisicki once it became apparent that she could do well.

This year is the first time in seven years that I've been home for both weeks of Wimbledon, which started today. This is Kim Clijsters' last Wimbledon, and she won her first round match against Jankovic. Isner lost in five sets in the first round. Venus Williams lost in two sets in the first round. Federer is moving on. Melanie Oudin, who I remember reaching the fourth round in 2009, lost. Sabine Lisicki won her first round match.

There is nothing quite like summer.
Welcome back to The Championships.

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Zwei tausend und elf (2011), first half

January -- I attended the Joint Math Meetings in New Orleans. I went to lots of research presentations on graph theory and the math or puzzles and games and saw lectures on the math in Pixar and fluid dynamics. I explored the exhibits, left with two new math books, and in general spent a lot of time in the Sheraton on Canal Street. I had beignets at Cafe du Monde every morning, and my father and I always found somewhere delicious to eat for lunch and supper --I love Cajun food -- and we only planned the meals ahead of time three times that I remember.
After we got back, I started school, and had the following classes: American Literature, American History, German I, Organic Chemistry II, Special Topics in Math, Data Structures I, Thermal Physics and Waves and Optics, and Differential Equations. 8 classes, but only one lab (physics, TWO for short). Compared to the semester before, my schedule looked like I had lots of free time.
In January I was in the middle of applying for summer camps. I applied to two research camps and was working on an application for a third.

February -- Math contests: the AMC12A and AMC12B. I did better on the A than the B (well enough to qualify for AIME, the next contest), even though I thought the B was easier.

March -- March was all the other competitions: TEAM+S engineering, Chemistry Olympiad local, and AIME. The junior team for TEAM+S wasn't set until a week before the competition, but we still did very well on Part 2, the free response section, just not so well on the multiple choice. Chem Olympiad Local seemed to go pretty well, so I was hoping to qualify for the national exam. AIME was at the very end of the month -- either on the 30th or the 31st. It could have gone better, but the problems were interesting, as always.
Over spring break I went on college visits.
My parents and I flew to Atlanta and visited Georgia Tech, which I really liked. I'd been worried about the school feeling huge, but I liked the campus, and it's very contained. I like their study abroad, co-op, and internship programs, and they have an active Wesley Foundation (which I got to visit!) and an active fencing team. The only thing that worried me was the size of the mechanical engineering department -- there are more than twice as many people per year in the mechE department alone than in my high school.
Next we flew to Baltimore, and we visited Johns Hopkins and University of Maryland, though we also had the chance to walk around Baltimore, eat in Little Italy, and have delicious crab cakes. Anyway. University of Maryland did feel big to me, and unlike at the other two schools I visited I didn't have the chance to talk to anyone in the mechanical engineering department. Of the three schools, it's the one to which I decided not to apply. At Johns Hopkins I actually talked to the most helpful mechanical engineering person. He took me to see a couple of labs, including a fluid mechanics lab -- so awesome.
At the end of spring break, I learned that I had been accepted to my top choice of the summer camps, so I responded to that acceptance and withdrew my applications from the other two.

April -- I learned early on in April that I had qualified for National Chem Olympiad, so that exam was in the middle of the month. I didn't prepare as well as I could have, and the group from Oklahoma was much smaller this year than it had been in the past. I went with one other girl from my school, who did very well, and we had a lot of fun.

May -- May started with AP tests -- Physics C: Electricity and Magnetism, US History, Computer Science, English Lang and Comp, and Statistics. After that I had final presentations instead of exams for Differential Equations and Special Topics in Math, and then final exams for my other six classes. At the end of school, we received our summer homework: for World Literature, Anna Karenina. For Western Civilization, excerpts from the Hebrew Bible as well as the Oresteia.
After leaving school my family went to San Antonio for a family reunion. We ate Mexican food and barbecue (yumm brisket), played lots of 88 (dominoes!), and went to Fiesta Texas and Sea World. It was the first time in years that we were *all* there, so that was cool.

June -- I spent the beginning of June at home writing -- err, trying to write college essays. I think out of everything I wrote this summer, I used one essay. Maybe two. I did get a feel for what I was able to write well about and what I wasn't. I learned I couldn't write a good extra-curricular essay (which has to be very short) about jazz dance or fencing. I couldn't write briefly so well about jazz, and the fencing attempts got too technical. The best extra-curricular essay I wrote this summer? Academic Team. Also the one I ended up using.
I worked one day at a local math workshop for middle schoolers, and this was the third year I had done so (though my first time not working all three workshops). This time, I TAed two classes, which was my normal job, but then before the last class the teacher had to leave...so I taught. The class I was teaching was some simple heat transfer math, which fits for my mechE interest, so that was a lot of fun.
After that, I flew north for camp -- but first a stay with one of my close friends/sister from Mathcamp. I stayed at her house for four or five days, went to a scholarship lunch with her, helped her bake and ice cake and cupcakes for her graduation party, attended said party, and spent a lot of time playing Mancala and variants. We went into the nearby large cities one day to meet up with some other Mathcampers, went to cool museums, ate at a yummy bakery/sandwich shop, and played card games.
Then camp!

Rest of June and July -- All camp. The first week was classes: computer class, humanities (focusing on Frankenstein), engineering (taught by an electrical engineer), and math (focused on some really interesting number theory). At the end of the first week I learned I would be doing mathematics research in graph theory with a grad student.
That was bumpy. I definitely learned that as much as I like math, it's not what I want to do with my life -- I thought I knew that, but now I'm sure. I really loved my project, but my father's description of research to me (you hit your head on a wall for a while, pull back, the wall falls down, and then behind it there's another wall) definitely fits.
I was also disappointed with the social aspect of camp. I had a few good friends, but I had loved Mathcamp people and activities in 2009 and 2010, and camp this year didn't live up to that standard for me.
I still got a lot out of going to camp. I know so much more about writing research papers and giving presentations (even if I'm still not all that good at it), I learned I don't want to be a mathematician, and even if I didn't click with many of the people, I've seen their names come up for all sorts of awards and competitions this year. Most of them want to be research scientists and not engineers (and definitely not industry engineers, like me), but it's still a good group of people to know. I've thought about it a lot, and I've come to the conclusion that even if I had known what camp would be like, I still would have gone.

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Dance, then, wherever you may be.

"Faut-il qu'il m'en souvienne
La joie venait toujours apres la peine."
"L'amour s'en va comme la vie est lente
Et comme l'esperance est violente."
-- Guillaume Apollinaire's "Sous le Pont Mirabeau," and with these I agree so much.

From the same poem:
"Passent les jours
Et passent les semaines
Ni temps passe ni les amours reviennent."
With this -- with this I do not always agree.

"Heart of my own heart, whatever befall
Still be my Vision, O Ruler of All."
- Be Thou My Vision

"I want to change my mind
I want to be enough
I want the water in my eyes
I want to cry until the end of time."
-- Sara Bareilles' "Let the Rain"

"I keep movin' along
Until I can get through this
But maybe this song is the best I can do it."
-- Vanessa Carlton's "Heroes and Thieves"

"Love beyond degree"
-- "Alas! And did my Savior Bleed"

"How deep the Father's love for us,
How vast beyond all measure"
-- "How Deep the Father's Love for Us"

"My voice shakes along with my hands."
-- Stephen Speaks' "Out of my League"

"'For I know the plans I have for you,' says the LORD, 'plans for your welfare and not for harm, to give you a hope and a future.'"
-- Jeremiah 29:11

lyricless
Seamus Egan's "Weep Not for the Memories;" Penguin Cafe Orchestra's "Perpetuum Mobile;" Mark Mothersbaugh's "Mothersbaugh's Canon"

"How much do I love you?
Count the stars in the sky
Measure the waters of the oceans with a teaspoon
Number the grains of sand on the seashore
Impossible, you say?"
-- Philip Glass' "Knee Play 5"