Riot Fails To Qualify For Semifinals For First Time Since 2000

Ozone delivered the biggest upset of the tournament.

Ozone celebrating against Riot in quarterfinals. Photo: Paul Rutherford — UltiPhotos.com

Ultiworld’s reporting on the Women’s division of the 2017 National Championships is presented by VC Ultimate as part of their year-long support of our women’s coverage. All opinions are those of the authors. Please support the brands that make Ultiworld possible and shop at VC Ultimate!

The silence hung heavy around Seattle Riot after their 12-11 loss to Atlanta Ozone in the quarterfinals on Friday afternoon. Tears streamed through eye black. Teammates held each other needfully, while mere feet away Ozone players leapt into each other’s arms with the utter joy and slight incredulity of a true underdog.

For the first time in 17 years, Seattle Riot won’t be cleated up for a semifinal game. The story that has long defined Riot was their quest for gold. Nobody imagined that the tournament’s no. 1 seed would falter in the quarterfinals. The defending WUCC champions wouldn’t even qualify for the 2018 tournament.

Riot was poised in every way to succeed this season. They arrived in Sarasota as the no. 1 seed after a nearly perfect season that included wins against the rest of the “Big Four.” They had a 13-10 win already over Ozone from Pro-Elite Challenge. Every game counts, but it’s hard not to wonder if their sights were set deeper in the bracket. 

Seattle Riot was summarily dethroned by two opponents today: Atlanta Ozone and the gusting Florida wind. Ozone had an affinity for long ball ultimate before this season, but the addition of Callahan winner Paula Seville (Brute Squad) and Kate Travaglini (Phoenix) this season made both sides of their offense more powerful. Seville, India Stubbs, and Cate Woodhurst made plays happen from anywhere on the field and at any stall, and Ozone’s Emily Lloyd, Mira Walker, and Marissa Hicks had unbelievably sticky hands.

The notorious Sarasota wind also stymied Riot’s system. Riot’s handlers are renowned for their grass-brushing breaks, but in Friday’s wind, several throws floated out of control or petered out into the grass. Ozone had already won in the wind in prequarters, and their throwers were conscious of never giving up the short field.

The beginning of the game exists in a simpler time, when seeding made sense. Riot broke upwind to open the game. Qxhna Titcomb and Kelly Johnson handled with the confidence and poise that has made them household names. Despite a few focus errors — a fumbled pass, throws into coverage — Riot sealed their break downwind and built a tidy 3-1 lead. Then the trouble began.

Ozone got the better side of a long, turn-heavy point to break. D-line handlers Katherine Wooten and Sophie Darch marched their team toward the upwind endzone with easy arcing breaks until Wooten made a statement grab in traffic for their first break to tie the game.

It was only 3-3, but that break changed the complexion of the game. Ozone knew how to use the wind, and they had the skill to run with Riot.

Riot had only had two turnovers in the five points before Ozone’s break. In the next four points, they had five turnovers. Riot fumbled floaty passes, they dropped too-low reset passes, and they threw into crowded lanes. Ozone executed. They trapped Riot handlers on the windy sideline to force low, high-risk resets, and they shifted downfield to subtly influence Riot’s cutting patterns.

We knew that they love their insides, and they love attacking the middle, so we adjusted downfield to push their cutters to cut really wide, hoping that some of the throws would be longer and have more of a chance to pop up,” said Ozone captain Emily Lloyd.

The adjustment worked. Riot’s cutters spent a lot of time toeing the windy sideline, and break backhands that should have curled into waiting hands sailed out of bounds instead.

I think this game was a game of moments,” said Riot captain Julia Snyder. “One of the parents on the sideline yesterday said, ‘The wind giveth and the wind taketh away,’ and… there’s so many things that fall one way or the other.”

The wind kept taking from Riot and giving to Ozone. Atlanta’s offense wasn’t necessarily efficient, but when Wooten and Seville can crank out 60 yard bombs, Ozone either scores or Riot has to march up another full field.

Another bout of Riot errors helped Ozone break again and build a four point lead. Riot faced the kind of deficit late in the game that they usually inflicted on their opponents. You could almost hear the clock ticking on the field as Riot rallied late to rattle off two breaks and close the margin.

It wouldn’t be enough. At 12-10 with the soft cap in effect, Riot needed three breaks to win. Yet Riot couldn’t close. The hard cap blew as Riot tried to press their last chance at the bracket. Captain Shira Stern caught the final goal upwind from Kelly Johnson to break again. At first, both teams seemed unsure if it was the end. The observers gave the signal, and Ozone erupted. Riot collapsed.

This was supposed to be their year to win it all, and they were finished. This game already seems like a turning point that will change future iterations of Riot.

“I think that’s going to take awhile to figure out, to be honest,” said Snyder when asked what this game meant for Riot. “There’s a lot, you know. I think…” Snyder paused and took a deep, steadying breath. “I think every year we honestly think it’s the year we’re going to get the trophy. I think that’s true every season but then like, that was especially true this year, to a greater degree than usual.”

Their game today dashes the team’s WUCC hopes, and it will reshape how all 27 players see the rest of their year. “I think we will continue to process that [fact],” said Snyder. “I think we’ll have to prove that the best team isn’t there at that tournament. That’ll be on the top of my mind next season.”

For Ozone, the win was a long time coming, and well deserved. Ozone hasn’t made the semifinals since 2008, and they’ve been either the no. 7 or no. 8 seed for the past few years. “It’s so emotional,” said Lloyd. “It’s so exciting. It feels good to have all of that hard work season after season finally pay off. We get to go challenge the top four.”

  1. Katie Raynolds
    Avatar

    Katie Raynolds took a break from Seattle ultimate to test out the Midwestern scene, but now she's back in the Northwest to investigate this "bubble" she keeps hearing about. She played for Northwestern Gungho, two seasons with Chicago Nemesis, and now plays for Seattle Underground. Katie serves as Ultiworld's Women's D1 College Editor, and is damn proud to cover women's ultimate. You can reach her by email ([email protected]) or on Twitter (@kraynolds90).

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