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USHA National Outdoor Wallball Records

MEN’S SINGLES
YEAR CHAMPION RUNNER-UP SEMIFINALIST A SEMIFINALIST B
2008 JOHN WRIGHT GIVONNI VAZQUEZ WILLIAM POLANCO ROLAND BROWN III
2009 JOHN WRIGHT YUBER CASTRO ANDRES CALLE WILLIAM POLANCO
2010 YUBER CASTRO HAN-CHING LIN TYRONE SNELL ED RAMOS (3RD)
2011 JOHN WRIGHT YUBER CASTRO RAY LOPEZ TIMOTHY GONZALEZ
2012 TIMOTHY GONZALEZ GIVONNI VAZQUEZ JOHN WRIGHT RAY LOPEZ
2013 TIMOTHY GONZALEZ TYWAN COOK CARLIN ROSA GIVONNI VAZQUEZ
2014 TIMOTHY GONZALEZ TYWAN COOK ANDRE CALLE ERIC CRUZ
2015 TYWAN COOK TIMOTHY GONZALEZ KADEEM BUSH ERIC CRUZ
2016 TYWAN COOK KADEEM BUSH CARLOS PENA TIMOTHY GONZALEZ

MEN’S DOUBLES
YEAR CHAMPIONS RUNNERS-UP SEMIFINALISTS A SEMIFINALISTS B
2008 WILLIAM POLANCO YUBER CASTRO ANDRE CALLE DAVE ROJAS
  STEVE ROBALINO PAULIE YAGUAL VICTOR LOPIERRE JOHN WRIGHT
2009 YUBER CASTRO WILLIAM POLANCO HENRY SANTIAGO ANDRE CALLE
  RAY LOPEZ STEVE ROBALINO JOHN WRIGHT EDDIE NEVILLE
2010 TIMOTHY GONZALEZ YUBER CASTRO TYREE BASTIDAS CHARLIE CARUSO
  MICHAEL OLARTE RAY LOPEZ JOSHUA GARCIA TYRONE SNELL
2011 EDDIE NEVILLE TIMOTHY GONZALEZ DELBERT GARNETT ANTHONY DITORE
  JOHN WRIGHT GIVONNI VAZQUEZ CARLIN ROSA CHRIS MIRANDA
2012 TIMOTHY GONZALEZ TYWAN COOK WALLY AMARO WILLIAM POLANCO
  GIVONNI VAZQUEZ GEORGE FIGUEROA HERMAN MENDEZ STEVE ROBALINO
2013 TIMOTHY GONZALEZ DELBERT GARNET YUBER CASTRO DELBERT GARNET
  TYWAN COOK CARLIN ROSA JOHN WRIGHT CARLIN ROSA
2014 OSCAR CARDENAS ANDRES CALLE JOSHUA GARCIA TYWAN COOK
  GIVONNI VAZQUEZ WILLIAM POLANCO CARLOS PENA TIMOTHY GONZALEZ
2015 TIMOTHY GONZALEZ OSCAR CARDENAS ANDRES CALLE  TYWAN COOK
  ALLAN SANCHEZ GIVONNI VAZQUEZ WILLIAM POLANCO CARLIN ROSA
2016 TYWAN COOK TIMOTHY GONZALEZ IGNAZIO ACCARDI YUBER CASTRO
CARLIN ROSA ALLAN SANCHEZ ANDRES CALLE KADEEM BUSH

WOMEN’S SINGLES
YEAR CHAMPION RUNNER-UP SEMIFINALIST A SEMIFINALIST B
2008 ANASTASIYA OLEYNIK MAGGIE CRESPO LORI ACEVEDO BRENDA PARES-DUBOSE
2009 KAREN MCCONNEY BRENDA PARES-DUBOSE ANASTASIYA OLEYNIK MAGGIE CRESPO
2010 BRENDA PARES-DUBOSE KAREN MCCONNEY DORI TEN (3RD) STEPHANIE VEGA
2011 TARAISHA SIMMONS JESSICA SANTIAGO MICHELLE MELENDEZ KAREN MCCONNEY
2012 MELISSA SKY KAREN MCCONNEY ADRIAN FLOYD SANDY NG
2013 DANIELLE DASKALAKIS MELISSA SKY BRENDA PARES-DUBOSE NA LIU
2014 DANIELLE DASKALAKIS KAREN MCCONNEY JESSICA SANTIAGO MELISSA SKY
2015 SANDY NG DANIELLE DASKALAKIS KAREN MCCONNEY BRENDA PARES-DUBOSE
2016 KAREN MCCONNEY VERONICA FIGUEROA BERNICE TORRES BRENDA PARES-DUBOSE

WOMENS DOUBLES
YEAR CHAMPIONS RUNNERS-UP SEMIFINALISTS A SEMIFINALISTS B
2008 LORI ACEVEDO TAMIKO PEARSON BARBARA CANTON-JACKSON BRENDA PARES-DUBOSE
  MAGGIE CRESPO ANASTASIYA OLEYNIK DORI TEN BERNICE TORRES
2009 ADRIAN FLOYD MAGGIE CRESPO BRENDA PARES-DUBOSE GLADYS MIRANDA
  KAREN MCCONNEY ANASTASIYA OLEYNIK BERNICE TORRES TAMIKO PEARSON
2010 ADRIAN FLOYD BRENDA PARES-DUBOSE MARIA RIVERA LORI ACEVEDO
  KAREN MCCONNEY BERNICE TORRES STEPHANIE VEGA GLADYS MIRANDA
2011 ADRIAN FLOYD MAGGIE CRESPO GLADYS MIRANDA DENISHA LOYD
  KAREN MCCONNEY MELISSA SKY TAMIKO PEARSON JESSICA SANTIAGO
2012 MAGGIE CRESPO ADRIAN FLOYD LORI ACEVEDO DANIELLE DASKALAKIS
  MELISSA SKY KAREN MCCONNEY MICHELLE MELENDEZ BERNICE TORRES
2013 MAGGIE CRESPO BRENDA PARES-DUBOSE VERONICA FIGUEROA ADRIAN FLOYD
  MELISSA SKY BERNICE TORRES QUASIA WATSON KAREN MCCONNEY
2014 MAGGIE CRESPO DANIELLE DASKALAKIS MARIA RIVERA KAREN MCCONNEY
  MELISSA SKY SANDY NG STEPHANIE VEGA BERNICE TORRES
2015 DANIELLE DASKALAKIS JESSICA SANTIAGO VERONICA FIGUEROA  LIAN CHIN
SANDY NG MELISSA SKY YOLANDA MONROE THERESA HALEY
2016 JESSICA SANTIAGO VERONICA FIGUEROA BRENDA PARES-DUBOSE KAREN MCCONNEY
MELISSA SKY QUASIA WATSON BERNICE TORRES SULY RUIZ

Hosting Overview

Hosting Overview

USHA Pro Stop Guidelines

Goals/Objectives

  • To promote the sport of handball
  • To showcase elite handball play of males and females
  • To showcase an existing elite tournament for national recognition
  • To increase participation and membership by showcasing handball
  • To provide handball instructional clinics by elite players
  • To promote the sport of handball
  • To showcase elite handball play of males and females
  • To showcase an existing elite tournament for national recognition
  • To increase participation and membership by showcasing handball
  • To provide handball instructional clinics by elite players 

Tournament Application Criteria for the Championship Series

  • Agree to conduct a USHA sanctioned event, requiring USHA membership for all entrants
  • Provide a minimum of $5,000 toward the prize money for men’s and women’s open events
  • Provide ample tournament promotion in the city and region tournament will be held
  • Help promote media coverage for the event to include interviewing of at least one player
  • Provide time and location for an instructional clinic held by one of the elite players
  • Promote the USHA
     
    USHA Responsibilities
  • Provide prize money funding toward the men’s and women’s purse ($2,500 -$5,000) which would be used with the host’s fee to make a total purse of approx. $7,500-$10,000).
  • Provide national exposure for the tournament through the HANDBALL magazine and website
  • Provide tax deductible status for financial donations to support the tournament
  • Provide a USHA representative from the USHA staff or USHA Board of Directors or USHA Ambassador list of that region 

Fill out the Event Host Agreement or contact USHA to learn more.

USHA Sanctioning Agreement

United States Handball Association
Sanctioning Agreement

 

Sanction your next tournament and receive:

  • Free Calendar Listing in Handball Magazine

  • A commission on any adult USHA membership ($55) sold at the tournament 
    New member commission is $10
    Renewal commission is $5

  • Authorization to use USHA logo on entry form and souvenir

  • Buy USHA merchandise at the “bulk” price

  • Insurance coverage when required by host club (fee)

  • Draw sheets and scorecards

  • Tournament software program

  • Best case price on balls

  •       Access to Regional Database (names/addresses/emails)
  •         Students attending your USHA Sanctioned Event are eligible for Wafe Risner Travel Grants

 

Sanctioning criteria:

  • Fill out and return sanctioning agreement to USHA

  • Send in entry form to USHA for inclusion on the USHA Tournament Calendar

  • Enforce USHA Rules, including mandatory eye protection.  See the USHA’s Eye Protection Study [CLICK HERE].

  • Agree to post USHA membership information and offer to each player, upon proof of USHA membership, a $5 rebate or a USHA headband or a can of handballs

  • Use of Official USHA Red 21 and White 21 handballs

  • Provide registration list and results to USHA after the tournament

WPH Race4Eight 2017-2018 Season

2017-2018 SEASON SCHEDULE 

 

#1  October 6-8, 2017Peach Tree Open/Ron Cook Memorial, Atlanta, GA
           
(Men’s qualifier Friday @ 9am, Men’s Elite Rd 16 Friday @ 1pmNot to be aired on ESPN!

#2  November 10-12, 2017Tucson Memorial, Tucson, AZ
           
(Men’s qualifier Friday @ 9am, Men’s Elite Rd 16 Friday @ 1pm, Women’s Pro Friday 3pm)

#3  January 26-28, 2018Red Death, Missoula, Montana
           
(Men’s qualifier Friday @ 9am, Men’s Elite Rd 16 Friday @ 1pm)
#4  February 9-11, 2018Las Vegas Royal Flush, Las Vegas, Nevada
            (
Men’s qualifier Friday @ 9am, 
Men’s Elite Rd 16 Friday @ 1pm, Women’s Pro Friday after 4pm, Sr 40+ Pro Friday @ 4pm)
#5  March 9-11, 2018USHA National Master Doubles, Houston, Texas 
            
(Men’s qualifier Friday @ 9am, Men’s Elite Rd 16 Friday @ 1pm, Sr 40+ Pro Friday @ 4pm * Sr48pro to use USHA Red 21)
#6  April 12-15, 2018NYAC Spring Invitational, NYAC. New York, New York
           
(Men’s qualifier Thursday @ 12pm, Men’s Elite Rd 16 Friday @ 1pm, Women’s Pro Friday @ 9am, Not to be aired on ESPN!
#7  May 4-6, 2018Salt Lake City Aces, Sports Mall, Salt Lake City, Utah 
          
(Men’s qualifier Thursday @ 6pm, Men’s Elite Rd 16 Friday @ 1pm, Women’s Pro Friday @ 4pm, Sr 40+ Pro Friday @ 6pm)
 

Tools to Run a Tourney

USHA Tournament Guidelines

Intro: These guidelines supplement previous articles/guides and is written to standardize tournament procedures at USHA events. Of course, every nuance can’t be foreseen and the tournament director will have to use his best judgment in those circumstances.  For extensive step-by-step instructions, download the GUIDELINE FOR TOURNAMENTS [pdf].

This Printable USHA Sanctioning Agreement includes a time line.

Use the “Contact Us” form to get your tournament placed on the USHA Calendar and in Handball Magazine.

Entry info:

See Handball Magazine for samples.  Set entry deadline 10 days to 2 weeks prior to event to give yourself time to call people you heard were coming and didn’t enter, late entries, etc., and still allow you to do draws and prepare a start time listing. Include “no refunds after deadline.” As a general rule, we accept late entries until we’ve made the draws and set starting times. Once that is done, late entries are invited to show up and enter on a stand-by basis, much like getting on an airplane on a stand-by basis. When a no-show occurs, we will put someone into the event as long as they are ready to play when the court is available and their ability level doesn’t hurt the integrity of the draw. We would not insert a player who would have been a top seed into a spot which is way below their ability level. In other words, the insertion can’t ruin the integrity of the draw.

Canceling/combining:

Recommend to have round robins for four players, especially when they can’t be combined easily. Five players will mean four matches and a bye for five rounds of play. This can be very tough to get in over a weekend unless the players are young and enthusiastic. If combining, call the players to see if they still want to play or would choose a different event. When Combining, the USHA will not combine younger players with older players if the older group had enough entrants to make their own event. As an example, if you have two 35-plus players and 8 40-plus players you would not move the 35s into the 40s, they would have to play Open or B. Likewise, if you have 2 B entrants and 8 C entrants, would move the B players to Open. It’s not fair to the players who have enough for their own bracket to be combined with younger, better skilled players.

Round Robin Tiebreakers

1) Head to Head results

2) Most Games Won  (as in who lost in three games vs. two)

3) Fewest Games Lost

4) Most Total Points Scored 

5) Fewest Points Scored Against

6) Playoff

7) Coin Toss

Seeding:
Always give the no. 1 seed to the defending champ.  No other seeds are automatic.  Players winning skill level events must move up to the next level.  Try to separate players who may play each other on a regular basis.  People like to play new people. 

Draw changes:
Should a seeded player cancel after the draw and times have been posted but no match has been played, the draw should be adjusted for a fair tournament.  Once a match has been started in the specific event, the draw should remain the same.  Forfeits can be avoided with last-minute replacements but the replacement should not hurt the integrity of the draw. 

Consolation:
The goal is to provide players a second chance as well as an opportunity to compete against competition of similar abilities.  With that in mind, the USHA allows players who lose their first match and/or lose in the second round when 50% or less of the players have a preliminary match.

First-round forfeits:
When weather or other travel-related difficulties arise that cause a player to show up late, the USHA can make exceptions to the forfeiture rule.  Players who call to notify the director of travel complications will have a better chance than players who just show up.  Accommodations for players traveling to the event from more than 100 miles away should be considered more than those for local players.  This accommodation is for a player’s first match only.

Additionally, players who are on the road to the event can be given the grace period of being the last match to go off, i.e, a player with a 4 p.m. start time wouldn’t be forfeited until all the 4 p.m. matches have been assigned courts, then the clock would start ticking on the 10-minutes.

Whether or not to forfeit should never be in the hands of the opponent waiting to play.

Rest Time:
Players playing two events should be accommodated as best possible in the scheduling.  However, players choosing two singles or two doubles events will be more likely to face back-to-back matches.

Tournament Director’s responsibilities on site:

1)      Make sure courts are in safe condition (sweep/dust mop courts as needed)

2)      Have a rulebook on hand to settle any disputes

3)      Have an in-charge person on site at all times

4)      Follow host’s injury-reporting procedures

*** For outdoor play***

Daylight:

Stop play when players have trouble reacting to the opponents’ shots.

Rain:

Stop play at the start of a drizzle and don’t resume until the entire possible playing area is completely dry.

In both these cases, the players will probably want to play longer than it’s safe and resume prior to the surface being safe.  You are in charge of their safety.

Also, in regard to the playing area and where the spectators are allowed to view the matches, the tournament director should have the “live” court area outlined in paint, or chalk at the least.  As an example: in Toledo , the red paint at the back of the court is the end of the “live” area.  If a player is interfered with by a spectator, referee or player from another court within this area, a hinder should be called.  (It is up to the referee and tournament director to keep this area safe and clear.)  However, if a player goes beyond the red line, they are allowed to make the play but they will not be given a hinder if obstructed by a spectator, etc.

Here’s how the One-Wall Rulebook handles this:

1) Spectators. The referee shall have jurisdiction over the spectators, as well as the players, while the match is in progress (See Rule 5.6). A ball that hits an official or spectator before hitting the wall shall be judged as if it had hit an opponent (See Rule 4.7A2). If a “non-seated” spectator or official interferes with a player in his attempt to play a ball, it is a hinder. In the interest of safety, when sufficient playing area cannot be provided, the referee may call a dead-ball hinder for interference that prevents a player from having a fair chance to see or return the ball (See Rule 4.7A7).

7) Other interference. Any other unintentional interference that prevents a player from having a fair chance to see or return the ball.

8th USHA National One-Wall Big-Ball Championships

QUEENS, N.Y. — A round of new champions were crowned for all Men’s and Women’s Pro events in the 8th USHA National One-Wall Big-Ball Championships.   
 
An off-and-on drizzle frustrated players and tournament organizers for most of Sunday morning, keeping the courts wet until matches were forced inside at the Elks Club in Queens.   Once players weren’t battling the elements, they focused their efforts to putting on an awesome display of handball and athleticism on the courts.  
 
Tywan Cook reached his third-straight finals and was able to win his first singles title over Timbo Gonzalez, 25-23.  
 
Gonzalez regrouped and joined partner Allan Sanchez to win the Men’s Pro Doubles title over defending champions Oscar Cardenas and Gio Vazquez, 25-21
 
Sandy Ng was arguably the most dominant player in the Women’s bracket as she defeated Danielle Daskalakis handily, 25-9.  Previously Ng had found success in playing Small Ball before injuries had sidelined her.  Ng and Daskalakis teamed up to win the doubles, just edging past Melissa Sky and Jessica Santiago, 25-24.
 
Thank you to all the players who braved the elements and were patient to move to a new location for the 8th USHA National One-Wall Big-Ball Championships.  Thanks to the members of the One-Wall Committee who put in the long hours, attempted to predict the weather and got all the matches running.  
 
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