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Our B.S. (Brash Summary) – with pictures!

Yes! The tournament went so well!

Yes! The tournament went so well!

A few weeks ago I posted about the Houston Sword Sports Brash Invitational – a 21 & up tournament in a brewery, with beer for prizes. We pulled it off, and it went great! These types of events are a great way to build recreational fencing and bring the community together, and I want to encourage more clubs to try holding them.

One of our fencers was talking to someone at the national office recently and they wondered why these things aren’t more common, and how to encourage them. For us, it was just about having the idea in the first place. It was pretty easy to organize once we knew what we wanted to do.

Now, we didn’t come up with the idea. The Galveston and Clear Lake fencing clubs, also in the Gulf Coast division, have been running a tournament at a winery for several years (they just held the fifth). Last year, they added a tournament at a rum/tequila/vodka distillery. Both of these events were small, one-weapon tournaments for fencers over 21 and were capped at 16 participants. In both cases the venues were small, so there were two (short) strips.

Last year I was in one of Houston’s many fantastic microbreweries and thought to ask if they would be willing to host a tournament. It didn’t work out with that one, but through some contacts we got in touch with the owner of Brash Brewing. They have a large warehouse where they regularly host concerts, so we were able to expand beyond our original vision (a foil tournament to complement the other two) and host a three-weapon tournament. They didn’t charge us to use the space, and stayed open to the public. It is an un-airconditioned warehouse and got pretty warm as the day wore on, but it was a great size. We had six strips but could have done eight easily (not that we needed them); our strips were a little short but we could’ve made them full-length if we wanted to.

Epee Gold Medal

Davis and Carlos in the epee gold medal bout; you can see our audience and the bar in the background.

We have a club member who’s a fantastic artist, who designed a shirt for us to sell at the event. We went with a local screenprinting company, Bayou City Shirts, and everything on their end went really quickly and smoothly. We were a little too conservative with our preorders and sold out of all sizes except small, so next year we’ll order more shirts. The shirts ended up saving us in terms of the profitability of the tournament – most of the money we made went to pay for beer and food, so the profits from the shirts were a good cushion.

One of our club members works for a company that has a community service program, and she got us listed as an option for that, so we had some volunteers to help with the non-reffing aspects of running a tournament. They set up and tore down strips, one guy did equipment control, and another guy ran the tournament computer for most of the day. We had more helpers than we needed, but they had a good time and a lot of stuff ran really smoothly because they were around.

Well, most of the volunteers had a good time. Some found the whole thing a little confusing.

Well, most of the volunteers had a good time. Some found the whole thing a little confusing.

We had all three events capped at 16 participants. Epee filled up fast so we raised the cap to 24. We had 22 preregister for epee, 12 for foil and 14 for saber, but we had a lot of no-shows so epee was 17 and foil and saber were both at 10. These were good sizes, and we kept the events moving along pretty well in spite of a number of fencers doing multiple events.

Once someone was eliminated from all their events, they came to the bout committee for a ticket that they could use at the bar to get a beer. Multiple events = multiple tickets. We had a running (enormous) tab and this helped us make sure people got the right number of beers and helped the bartenders know which beers to put on our tab.

Carlos with his two beery prizes (for second place) and one post-tournament beer.

Carlos with his two beery prizes (for second place) and one post-tournament beer.

As for the fencing, we had a wide variety of fencers – some who’d been fencing for ages and a few who were basically beginners. There were some fencers who were also doing weapons they don’t usually fence, hoping to win the best-overall-result prize. The people who were just there to have a good time did have a good time, and the more serious fencers also got some good bouts in.

The tournament was a blast, but there are a couple things we will do differently next year. We want to have a staff member whose primary job is to talk to the folks who are at the brewery for beer, to explain what’s going on and get email signups for anyone who wants to try fencing. The biggest change is that we definitely want to hold it earlier in the year. The end of April in Houston is just too hot for a semi-outdoor, unairconditioned tournament. We had a few people who had planned on fencing multiple events but as the day wore on it got to be too hot for them. Depending on the time of year, we may also reverse the order of events so that the most-lame’d people are fencing earlier in the day and the epeeists are last, so you shed layers as the temperature warms up.

It was hot. Some people got tired.

It was hot. Some people got tired.

We got over 500 amazing pictures from the tournament thanks to club member Kat Kelsch-Tournier. You can view the full album here, but I’ve pulled out a few (dozen) of my favorites below.

Are you a fencer who wants to come to next year’s Brash? Sign up for our mailing list to find out when it’s happening! Are you a club owner who wants to hold your own brewery tournament? Email me at liz@houstonswordsports.com if you have any questions, or if you want us to send your tournament info to our list!

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Brash Brewery Bash – fencing tournament at a brewery

Brash logo jpg

Do fencing and beer mix? Let’s find out! On April 30, 2016, join us at the Houston Sword Sports Brash Invitational.

Q: I’m not a fencer, can I come?

A: Absolutely! Brash Brewery will be open to the public during our tournament. There’ll be beer, food trucks, music, and of course there’ll be fencing to see! The fencing will start around 11 and continue until 5, but early afternoon is when you’ll get to see the most going on… we think. Fencing tournaments run at different paces based on a few different factors, so these are our best guesses.

Q: I am a fencer, can I come?

A: Yes, as long as you’re over 21. This is a three-weapon tournament. For every event you enter, you’ll get a ticket for one free beer to use when you are done with all your bouts. Top four in each event get crowlers (growler-sized cans) for prizes, and the top finisher in all three events gets three crowlers! Click here to sign up. Preregistration closes April 28, and all events are capped at 16 participants (epee is at 24 now!), so sign up soon. Close of registration is 10:30 for epee, 12:00 for foil, and 1:30 for saber.

Q: Where is it?

A: The Brash Brewery is located at 508 W Crosstimbers Rd, Houston, TX 77018.

Q: Nice logo, can I get it on a t-shirt?

A: Yes, email Liz@HoustonSwordSports.com with your size to preorder a shirt. We’ll have some for sale at the tournament, too.

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We’re starting Saturday classes, and the first one’s free!

Saturday Class Announcement

Since we started holding classes a year ago, a lot of you have told us that you want to be able to fence on Saturdays. We’ve been working on it, and have found a great place to hold classes every Saturday morning. We’ll be at The Zone, in a spacious upstairs room. We hope you’ll come check it out, especially because the first class on February 27 will be free!

Youth class (6-13): 9:00-10:00 AM
Teen & Adult class (14+): 10:30 AM-12:00 noon
Location: The Zone, 10371 Stella Link Rd, Houston TX 77025

Starting March 5, the classes will be the same rates as at Bellaire: $20 for one class, $75 for four, or $140 for unlimited monthly visits. The best part is that you can use the same plan to pay for classes at Bellaire and the Zone. This means that if you usually come to a youth class on Tuesday, but have to miss a Tuesday, you can come on Saturday to make it up. If you’re on an unlimited membership, you can come to any and every class of the week!

Use the Sign Up buttons below to register for the first, free class on February 27; or email Liz@HoustonSwordSports.com if you have questions.

 

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New Bellaire class rates – now permanent!

We at Houston Sword Sports have a very exciting announcement: our special rates for January were so successful that we are keeping them! The special was a way to say thank you to our loyal members, but it was also an experiment to see if we could get more folks in the doors – and it did. From now on, these are our rates. See you at practice!