Quiyk Draft Roundup: Round 3
This round saw three GMs pick up beaters, and not necessarily the ones we expected to. We are starting to see regional diversity, with no more than three picks from a single region this week and a new region represented. Let’s get into it:
Round 3, Pick 17: David Fox, Emerson College (K) GM: Alex Wilson Previous Picks: Sarah Holub, David Gilbert
With commentary by Ethan Sturm and Third Bludger Rewind, Fox’s stock has taken a big hit in the last week or so. Fox is a proficient passer in the context of moving the quaffle around the perimeter of the defense, but isn’t the kind of player who will thread a pass through traffic to a teammate by the hoops. Although he plays keeper for Emerson, his best position may actually be an off-ball chaser who can make the second pass and plays as a point defender on defense.
With this pick, Wilson hasn’t filled his biggest need in a distributor who can get Fox and Holub the ball. Wilson also has chosen 3 support players. He’ll also need to grab some beaters but without a pick for another 2 weeks, he’ll need to make some great picks to put him back in the game. The good news for Wilson is that Fox may be one of the best drivers in the game. If Wilson picks up a great distributor later in the draft and Fox leads Emerson to a deep WC7 run, this pick will be validated in the face of strong criticism from the likes of Sturm and Third Bludger Rewind authors Lee and Seto. The key will be seeing how Fox fares against teams outside of the Northeast/Mid-Atlantic.
Round 3, Pick 18: Katrina Bossotti, Boston University (B) GM: Amanda Dallas Previous Picks: Tony Rodriguez, Max Havlin
Bossotti has pretty much cemented herself as the best female beater in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic combined. Her dominance allowed BU to play a two-female beater line last year with great success. The emergence of Havlin has led her to successfully play a lesser role so far.
Pairing Bossotti with Havlin lets Dallas solidify her starting beating lineup, and gives Dallas the chance to grab a point defender and off-ball chasers who would be great fits with Rodriguez. We really like Team Dallas so far, and are eager to see her add some pieces to combine with her star keeper. Depending on what chasers are drafted in the next week, she may not have fallen behind in the quaffle department by picking two beaters early on.
Round 3, Pick 19: Kifer Gregoire, Texas A&M University (C) GM: Dan Hanson Previous Picks: Drew Wasikowski, Chris Seto
In Kifer Gregoire, Hanson acquired an excellent all-around chaser who is physically and technically on par with other quaffle players drafted in the first two rounds. Gregoire’s speed, like that of his Quiyk fantasy teammates, means his opponents will have to find a way through him rather than around him. This is easier said than done against a point defender who boasts a similar build to Kody Marshall - short but powerful. On offense, Gregoire’s agility and finishing ability allows him to cut through defenses and score with ease.
Not only does Gregoire join his A&M teammate Drew Wasikowski, but all three of Hanson’s players also joined forces on the Burgundy team at the past summer’s Southwest fantasy tournament. We don’t want to exaggerate the familiarity that can be built in two days of playing together, but these two, along with second-round pick Chris Seto, have proven the ability to be successful on the same team. While Seto earned considerable recognition by being credited for Burgundy’s run to the finals, Gregoire was the one who turned snitch ranges losses in pool play into close victories in bracket play With Seto providing hypothetical protection for Gregoire in the coming Quiyk bracket matchups, the underrated utility seeker is a viable choice to best elite competition when it matters.
Gregoire and Wasikowski are both strong point defenders, which may make this pick seem slightly redundant, so Wasikowski may be shunted over to keeper. Having stated his flexibility in changing Wasikowski’s role, it will be interesting to see if Hanson picks up a top-notch keeper to play alongside Wasikowski or if he intends to hand Wasikowski the green headband.
Round 3, Pick 20: Chris Rhodes, Baylor University (B) GM: Evan Bell Previous Picks: Brittany Ripperger, Brendan Stack
Bell joins fellow GM Dallas in playing the chemistry card by drafting a pair of beaters who usually play together in their club teams. The chemistry argument is compelling, but it’s also remarkably boring. Speculating about how talented players from different teams would work together is part of the fun in this draft, and we’d like it more if the GMs mixed it up!
Round 3, Pick 21: Hope Machala, Lone Star Quidditch Club (B) GM: Beto Natera Previous Picks: Stephen Bell, Mollie Lensing
Speaking of mixing it up, Natera is now 3 for 3 in reaching for a Lone Star teammate and has temporarily pulled ahead of fellow GM Dugie in the contest for the title of Biggest Homer. Machala burst onto the national scene as one of the University of Texas’s beaters who had bludger control 100% of the game against UCLA’s beaters, who many consider to be the best beaters ever (although Andy Abayan didn’t play and Kara Levis could barely move). Machala played a role as a “back beater” who made sure that her team kept bludger control.
While she is good in that role, her defensive responsibilities for both Texas and LSQC have hardly been expansive, which makes sense when you are surrounded by such dominant quaffle players. It’s difficult to imagine Natera being unable to find a beater who can play this role similarly well much later in the draft. If Machala is meant to be Mollie Lensing’s backup, Natera wasted his third round pick on a luxury, rather than a necessity. But if he plans to follow through on his hint that Lensing and Machala could play together, then Natera clearly paid no heed to our Round 2 Roundup, in which we made the case for him to pick a fast, aggressive beater with a strong arm to complement Lensing’s brains.
Round 3, Pick 22: Adam Richardson, University of California, Los Angeles (C) GM: Andrew Canto Previous Picks: Augustine Monroe, Kody Marshall
A quick, physical player with a strong shot, UCLA’s Adam Richardson was a key player last season for the Western Cup winners and World Cup runners-up. His impact on offense and at the point of the defense earned him the nod for The Eighth Man’s Third Team All-Americans. Richardson is perhaps not as adept at driving as his teammates, but his superior ability to shoot accurately from range keeps defenders honest and adds an extra dimension to Team Canto’s attack.
As captain of UCLA this season, Richardson has taken more of a back-seat approach to competition, organizing the team from the sideline more often than not. In brief minutes he has shown flashes of the ability we saw last season, but for Canto’s sake, Richardson must lead by example and play a more visible role in UCLA’s success this spring - especially given the unlikelihood of the Bruins matching last year’s lofty heights.
Round 3, Pick 23: Zach Luce, University of California, Los Angeles (K) GM: Zach D’Amico Previous Picks: Vanessa Goh, Peter Lee
D’Amico followed up Canto’s selection with Richardson’s UCLA teammate Zach Luce to fill his hole at keeper. Luce probably played his best last April at World Cup, where he was able to hit a series of tough shots to keep UCLA in the game against Texas. That game highlighted his greatest strength - his shooting ability. Luce is lethal from the edge of the keeper zone and his Quiyk teammate Peter Lee can clear a path to get him there.
Although not an elite distributor who can carry its offense on every possession like Rodriguez can, Luce can still pass the ball and often makes a quick secondary pass to an off-ball chaser near him, looking for the ball back to get an open look at a shot. With this pick, D’Amico should also look for another chaser who can be comfortable handling the ball and dishing it back and forth with Luce.
This team’s weakness is still in the size department. Although Goh is a physical player who can take down anyone who underestimates her and tries to truck through her, this team still lacks the size to hang with some of the other teams in the draft. Luce is a solid tackler, but lacks the pure athleticism to consistently stop most players he will face in this draft. D’Amico should look for a tough point defender or another beater with his next pick.
Round 3, Pick 24: Daniel Daugherty, Bowling Green State University (C) GM: Hank Dugie Previous Picks: Simon Arends, Chris Morris
Not only is Dugie’s pick not a former University of Texas player, but he’s also the first selection from the Midwest. Not content to rest on his laurels after showing D’Amico what a “best available chaser” really looks like, Dugie took our retrospective advice to heart, showed Natera how to diversify in sourcing talent, and leads the pack in showing up fellow GMs. Bravo, Hank.
Dan Daugherty was arguably the biggest star of World Cup VI. With the ability to hit incredible long shots as well as make blocks in his own hoops by coming out of the middle of nowhere, the Eighth Man’s Sportsman of the Year became a Quidditch household name. Undeniably the most popular in the Midwest and as one of the best chasers, he plays an interesting role in this team. Dugie’s reference to Daugherty’s performance in the “Hero Ball Bowl” against the Lost Boys alludes to the fact that Daugherty carries the Bowling Green offense. Without the burden of having to carry his own team and bringing the ball up, Daugherty can play a smaller role where he can most importantly be a floor spacer who stretches opposing beaters and chasers, but will he thrive in that role?
WIth his first three picks, it seems that Dugie is picking the best players left in the draft as opposed to looking for fit and chemistry. Dugie does have three fantastic quaffle players who may or may not be able to play well with each other. What he doesn’t have are any beaters or female players, players who are crucial in a team’s composition. This is a team that would be fascinating to watch play together, as the players don’t fill any obvious complementary roles so far. Unfortunately, we won’t get the chance to see it for ourselves, which means voters will have to decide whether to take Dugie’s word that the talent he has collected will be cohesive. Then again, there are still 13 rounds for this team to take shape and Dugie could surprise us all by leaving it late to show his hand with some complementary picks.
Closing Thoughts
We’re starting to see who the GMs want as their main cornerstones of their fantasy teams. There are chaser heavy teams (Dugie/Canto), cornerstone chaser-heavy teams with an elite beater (D’Amico/Hanson/Wilson), and more beater-heavy teams (Dallas/Bell/Natera). These picks underscore how these GMs think about positional scarcity as well as simply showing us which positions are most important to win.





















