It’s official: Khayoba are 2011 SA National Champions, defeating Pietermaritzburg’s Long Donkeys 15-13 in the Finals. An incredible end to an incredible weekend!
Today, after an 18-hour drive back from Johannesburg, the SA National Championship Trophy will arrive back in Khayelitsha for the first time since 2006!
Photos are coming soon! In the meantime, here are recaps of the semifinals and finals (as best we remember them). The games were captured on video as well, but we don’t know when the DVD will be available.
Khayoba 14 – UCT 9 (Semifinals)
The two Cape Town teams had split their summer league matches 1-1, though Khayoba seemed to have an upper-hand, coming into the game unbeaten. UCT had lost 15-6 to the Long Donkeys in the group stage and beaten both Zebru and Joburg’s Ult Ctrl Delete.
Khayoba came out firing, not having any trouble with UCT’s zone defense and going up 4-0. The game got tighter and UCT’s defense improved as it neared half, however. The Tigers managed to tie it up 8-8 before Khayoba kicked back into gear, taking three straight points to go up 11-8 and finishing the game on a 6-1 run. Thabane Vuzane made several huge layout D’s, while Finn, Derrick, Anne and Asanda worked the disc all day. Amanda made several big catches, and played an important role in defeating the zone.
“It was a game of runs,” said UCT Captain John Heydinger in the post-game circle. “You guys had one, we had one, then you ran away with it.”
Despite excessive travel calls, the game remained generally well-spirited. UCT went on to lose in a hard-fought 3rd place game against Chilli.
Khayoba 15 – Long Donkeys 13 (Finals)
Both teams entered this match unbeaten (6-0) and nearly 200 spectators watched the game unfold. The veteran Donkey squad was favored to win, having crushed all their opponents and dominated Chilli 15-6 in the semifinals. And the Donkeys–with their 6’6″ monsters, speedy deeps, and insanely accurate hucks–were hungry for their first National Championship, having finished runners-up for the last two years in a row. Khayoba entered its first ever Finals match, though many players had competed in previous years’ finals on different teams (Khayelitsha, Disc Doctors, etc).
If Khayoba players were nervous, it didn’t show. The team turned the disc over only 4 or 5 times in the entire game (28 points), executing nearly flawless, clinical zone offense and capitalizing on the few Donkeys’ mistakes. Despite the lack of wind and Khayoba’s success against the Donkeys’ cup, the Donkeys kept throwing zone defense and Khayoba kept finding holes and taking advantage, often with a 4-handler set.
Colleen Haley rightfully earned female MVP as a popper: constantly creating space and touching the disc hundreds of times (she was arguably the game’s overall MVP). Khayoba handlers (Asanda, Derrick, Anne, Paul, Big Asanda, Finn) demonstrated remarkable composure, working the disc up the field time and again and tiring out the Donkeys’ cup. Colleen, Thabane, Zak, Finn, Richard, Darryn, and Duma stretched out their defense and moved the disc quickly and smoothly upfield when they had their chances. Having established himself during the tournament as Khayoba’s newest deep-threat, Aron Ndzende made arguably the most important catch of the match – a left-handed layout grab for a D-line score off an ambitious forehand from Thabane, putting Khayoba ahead by two points. All but upstaging Aron, Paul Vicars made an enormously clutch tip-toe grab on the Khayoba sideline, preventing a turnover and creating another point when the game was its tightest. Finn de Haan showed incredible fitness, playing all but two or three points.
On offense, the Donkeys had to work much harder for their points than they had previously in the tournament. While other teams had unsuccessfully thrown zone on them (keeping tall defenders in the endzone), Khayoba shut down their long game with hard-man defense, forcing backhand the entire game to prevent Darren’s signature thumber-huck. Several Donkey hucks wound up turnovers in the endzone, and 6’6″ Ryan (who had been unstoppable when these teams met in 2010 Nationals) was virtually a non-factor on offense. That said, the Donkeys only turned the disc over 6 or 7 times in the whole game, executing the methodical, near-perfect offense that they are known for. The Donkeys women touched the disc only 3 or 4 times in the entire game.
The soft cap came on just before the Donkeys tied the game at 13-13, but the Captains conceded to the crowd’s chants and agreed to play a full game to 15 points. On the ensuing point, Khayoba wasted no time getting through the Donkeys zone, and Derrick hit Finn on a handler-cut in the front of the end-zone for the penultimate score (Derrick and Finn connected for nearly a dozen scores during the semis and finals).
Up 14-13, Khayoba brought on a D line with a chance to break the Donkeys one last time and prevent a universe point. The Donkeys’ Darren and Juan had worked the disc up to midfield when things got interesting. With no easy dump and a high stall count, Darren fired a sharp hammer to one of the Donkey women, who was poached in the endzone (note: one of the few times they had thrown to a women in the entire match). She dove forward but couldn’t hold onto the disc. The sidelines erupted with excitement, as Asanda picked up the disc for one last drive down the field. Zak dropped back as a fourth handler and got the disc over the cup with a blady forehand upfield to Thabane. The pace quickened: Thabane to Anne, Anne to Zak, back to Anne on a quick give-and-go on the far sideline – Zak cutting free to the endzone with a Donkey closing in behind. Anne pivoted wide and threw a perfect leading backhand; Zak hauled it in for the score, and a swarm of 19 white jerseys ran to the endzone in celebration. Shouts of Olaaaaaay-Ole-Ole-Ole were heard across the Pirates Club grounds. Khayoba had won its first SA National Championship!
“This was a full-team effort,” acknowledged Asanda Nanise in the post-game huddle. “We couldn’t have done this without any one of you guys.”
Amanda expressed bittersweet feelings, letting the team know she is heading back to the states on Thursday.
“I’ll never forget this,” she said. “This is the most amazing Ultimate team I’ve ever been a part of.”
Big shout-out and THANK YOU to the tournament organizers and to all of our supporters around the world for making this possible!!
Love,
Khayooooooooba