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Old 07-09-2013, 10:58 PM   #1
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The Rauros area was nicely accessible to three of the four teams of Group H- Mordorians could approach over the Brown Lands or sail up the river, those from Rohan could ride across the Wold, and those that dwelt along the Anduin could of course take the river (though those from the north had to deal with a rapid or two).

Arnor had a considerably longer trek, and not surprisingly had a smaller turnout- though they were more in evidence than the Orcs of Mordor, for the Orcs were not bunking and dining in the area immediately surrounding the arena, but rather the Coliseum Construction Committee (CCC) had built for them their own little town at the foot of Amon Lhaw. When asked if they had hastily thrown it up after discovering Mordor would be visiting, the CCC responded: “No, no, we had this nearly completed last year. We thought it’d be good for the future to have an area for visitors that was more isolated, in case there was any bad blood between teams or fans. Now that it’s completed visiting teams will always be welcome to choose the Amon Lhaw section as their area if they want a bit of privacy, or if they just want to avoid the other teams. By next year we hope to have a decent practice field set up over there so that literally everything they need will be there, and soon after we’ll add a couple more buildings so that Amon Lhaw can house two squads if need be.”

The CCC was also asked if they planned for the Amon Lhaw area to become an area of multi-seasonal or permanent use, as much of the west side of the lake was becoming. “Well, we do have a couple ideas for down the road- perhaps an amusement park- but really none of that is even in the planning stages. For the moment the Amon Lhaw guest facilities will stand empty for parts of the year, though after we establish an easier way to make the crossing we may house workers there.”

Some complained that sticking Mordor across the lake was an unhealthy bit of segregation, but the CCC was dismissive. “Mordor was quite willing to stay there- they can create an atmosphere that makes them feel at home, and there’s less worry of their people being arrested for getting into altercations. And it’s not as if we dumped them into tents- those are nice new lodgings and pubs over there, and fully staffed- largely by Orcs who know how to make the preferred liquors and dishes. Really everyone is more comfortable with the arrangement, and those who say otherwise are simply trying to cause trouble.”

But on the eve of the games all of the development and lodging issues faded into the background, and football was the only subject being talked about. According to the betting agencies Group H was by far the most competitive group, with the lowest odds of advancing (Mordor & Rohan) sitting at 42% and Anduin and Arnor sitting at 58%. But interestingly enough Rohan was the heaviest bet for winning the group outright 33%, while Arnor was sitting lowest at around 17%. Needless to say, the public and agencies were split.

Everyone hoped the group was as exciting as it looked to be on paper. They wouldn’t have to wait long to find out….

----------------------------

The first game of the day pitted those historic foes, Mordor and Rohan. With the massive number of seats of Amon Hen Coliseum, visitors of but two squads could not hope to fill it up, thus most of the Anduin and Arnor crowds were there as well, and the remainder was filled by Gondorians, both local and from downriver. Under most circumstances fans wouldn’t have the cash to attend both games each round, but the number of seats allowed the tickets to be sold for a bit cheaper than usual.

Without a doubt the crowd was on the side of Rohan. They had quite a few of their own fans, plus the Gondorians were supporting them to a man. Lucky for Mordor, Sauron had ensured that a sizable travelling group would come in from Dol Guldur, so Mordor at least had one sizable portion of cheerers, and of course they were noisy and rowdy.

At 1 o’clock sharp the game started up, and quickly the crowd was singing and happy, for Rohan was looking impressive. The threat of Shelob appeared nicely contained by Windfola or Snowmane, and the King of the Dead had apparently given some advice on how to combat the ill effects of the Nazgul, or perhaps just being around him in practice constantly had inoculated them. Whatever the reason, Mordor could make no headway against the horse-lords, and at only 5 minutes Faramir and Eowyn played a nice combination and earned Brytta a clear look, but his shot went astray.

A few minutes later it was Helm with an opportunity, but he didn’t summon quite enough will to break through the resistance of the Silent Watcher, and the ball rebounded away. Finally around the 20 minute mark Mordor started seeing some possession and regained their composure, and changed up their tactics just a bit, threatening to spring counters and trying to keep Rohan from attacking as a team. The change did just enough to throw Rohan off their rhythm, and at near the half-hour mark Mordor gained their first real shot, and again a couple minutes later, but both drives by The Mouth were caught by a sure-handed Theoden.

To the dismay of the Men and Elves, just minutes before halftime Mordor drew first blood. Rohan was trying to press the attack a bit before the half, and Gorbag caught them out of position after a steal and a long ball let two Nazgul and Shelob looses on Theoden with only the two horses for help. Snowmane moved to Shelob, leaving Windfola to deal with the Nazgul and the ball. Windfola charged one to force the issue, but the Nazgul left the ball behind them, and no one had noticed Shagrat was loping up behind them. Both Nazgul charged past Windfola as Shagrat reached the ball and sent it skidding into the box. Rohan supporters were certain the pass had been late thus offsides should have been called, but no flag went up, and Theoden was helpless to stop it.

During the half the legality of the goal was the only subject discussed in the Rohan areas—folks from the opposite end made a point of wondering closer to the Rohan goal to ask the fans there what they had seen from their angle. The verdict was unanimous among those that were level with the play—the rear feet of the Nazgul were perhaps onside, but the rest of them certainly weren’t. The commentators tried to give the refs some benefit of doubt, saying that the fact that Windfola was a horse made there appear an illusion of offside, as the Nazgul were indeed past his head, shoulders, and front legs, and thus would be offside with any other person, but the horse had back legs and a tail, and the Nazgul perhaps weren’t beyond that.

At the start of the second half most were expecting Rohan to return to the field with a fury, but instead they looked calculating and controlled. Their discipline and intelligence controlled the opening 10 to 15 minutes, and then Mordor decided to crank up the aggression and break Rohan’s coolness. The Nazgul shrieked and the Orcs let loose warcries and Shelob began menacing the Rohan horses, posturing herself in a way clearly predatory in nature- and the horses recognized it as such.

Rohan protested Shelob’s behavior, saying it was not proper for her to frighten horses to the point where it impacted their play, but the refs insisted that intimidation was fair play, so long as it didn’t involve excess physical contact. And soon the tactic indeed played dividends, as Shelob found herself marked only by a little human on a cross, the horses scared to approach, and she struck it with her mighty head and Mordor was up by two goals!

Most Rohan fans and even a couple players looked like the fight was out of them, but most of the team looked ready to go to war—go all out for 30 more minutes and see if a draw was possible. For a couple minutes Faramir and Helm looked like they would succeeded in spurring Rohan to a comeback, both nearly put it past Silent Watcher with pinpoint midrange snipes, but then disaster!

The King of the Dead had been chippy with Gothmog II and Gorbag for much of the game, and since Mordor took the two-goal lead they’d been needling him constantly. Finally in his temper and desperation he went too far—he had already been carded for his behavior, and a tackle well after the ball was gone got him sent off the field.

The reaction among the Rohan supporters was impotent frustration and despair. Down two goals and a man short, they could not hope for a comeback. What fools they were for aligning themselves with Mr. Dead King—he wasn’t a proper Rohanian, and he had cost them the game.

Mordor made the most of their advantage in numbers, holding possession better than ever before and running the precious seconds away. And in the end there wasn’t really much to tell of the final minutes. Mordor smartly got the job done and soon they were exiting the coliseum with their fans, headed towards the docks to hitch a ride back to Amon Lhaw, where they planned to party the rest of the night.

Mordor 2-0 Rohan
on target 6-4
tot shots 15-12
GOALS:
*40, 1-0 Nazgul#2 (Shagrat)
*63, 2-0 Shelob (Nazgul#1)
YELLOW CARDS:
*Mordor- Mumakil, Mouth
*Rohan- Erkenbrand, King Dead, Hama
RED CARDS:
Rohan- King Dead (69, second yellow)

The departing Orcs were soon replaced by the few fans of Anduin and Arnor that didn’t attend the first match, as well as additional Gondorians. There was still some daylight left, but a few of the stadium lights were lit, and more would be lit periodically as the natural light faded.

After most of the fans were disappointed with the result of the first match, they were looking forward to seeing something to cheer them up—a good match between two well-liked squads. And the fans were not disappointed.

In the opening 20 minutes both sides showed their mettle. Grimbeorn was a powerful menace up front, and the athleticism of Eorl and powerful boot of Boromir complimented him, but Malbeth was farsighted for Arnor and could see the attacks coming, and Elendil the tall was powerful and denied any high ball in the box. At the other end of the pitch the Kings of Arnor flowed together like parts of one machine, while the Witch King threatened with his finishing power, but Fram and Celeborn were up to the task for Anduin.

They were testing one another, and each time the other side passed, and the crowd was enjoying things immensely. Eorl and Haldir both had a chance to show off their burst and ball tricks, but it never yielded a result, while the Witch King showed off his power with a 35-yard bending drive that Amroth was forced to deflect. But everyone knew the squads had more up their sleeves and just weren’t showing it yet. Who would be the first to really crank things up?

It would be the home side. At the 26 minute mark Celeborn made a surprise run forward through the middle and Leod got it to him immediately as Eorl and Haldir rushed to flank him. For a brief moment before the defenders converged Anduin had numbers enough to perhaps gain a clear lane to shoot through as they approached, and indeed Celeborn sent it over to Haldir who looked for certain he’d take a crack at it, but no—he sent it to the right side where Fram had charged up from his position, and though he wasn’t particularly close to goal Fram immediately struck. Arvedui drifted to his left to adjust to the new positioning, and Fram went back behind him to the far post, the ball travelling out away from the keeper only to curve back towards the goal upon passing him! It was a brilliant shot, and the home team had the lead!

But before the Anduin fans could get all their celebrating out of their system, Arnor was going to work, moving the ball with ease and precision not yet seen previously. It was obvious everyone was on the same page, and they were comfortable with one another. They had to be annoyed that Anduin had beaten them to the punch, but it didn’t effect their play negatively.

Already at the 30 minute mark Araphor forced Amroth to make another save, and minutes later he had to jump on a loose ball that had deflected off Felarof, who had surely saved a goal. The Witch King thrice managed to find space to fire on goal, but two of them went wide, while the other hit the top bar. The Elves of Lothlorien and men of Gondor and the Anduin Vales that were supporting Anduin grew quite nervous indeed.

But at 40 minutes it was sheer delight on their faces, as a lovely tackle by Lenwe led to a quick counter, and Haldir hung it up in front of the net and Grimbeorn with a pure burst of strength outmuscled and outleaped everyone for it and nosed it perfectly inside the side and top bars for the two goal lead!

In the second half Arnor came out looking dangerous again, but bit by bit the Anduin defense got better and better—they were learning the patterns and playing things smart, and the tireless effort of Celeborn, Lenwe, and Felarof could apparently not be matched by the mortals of Arnor. Soon it was Anduin that was more threatening, and after Boromir nearly scored off a corner and Eorl forced a difficult save, Arnor shut things down so as not to increase their negative goal differential.

Much to the disappointment of some fans—certainly those of other squads—Anduin was content to accept the surrender and reigned things in, and soon the clock showed time over, and the locals had reason to celebrate. There were fireworks over the lake, and showers of sparks shot outward from the falls, lightning them and their cliffs for miles downstream. Anduin was revealed to all viewers, and it was mighty—just like its football team.

Anduin 2-0 Arnor
on target 7-4
tot shots 16-13
GOALS:
*26, 1-0 Fram (Haldir)
*40, 2-0 Grimbeorn (Haldir)
YELLOW CARDS:
*Anduin- Felarof
*Arnor-

STANDINGS
Anduin______3 pts_____+2
Mordor______3 pts_____+2
Arnor_______0 pts_____-2
Rohan______0 pts_____-2
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Last edited by the phantom; 07-10-2013 at 12:51 PM.
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Old 07-10-2013, 08:49 AM   #2
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Round 1...

Group G @ Angfauglith & Tol-in-Gaurhoth

All rounds in Group G will use two arenas to play matches as 3 of the teams in the group could be considered the home team with Imladris being the one feeling "we're not in Eriador anymore." So, the 6 o'clock game would be at Angfauglith Coliseum vs. Imladris, with the primetime match between Angband and Tol-in-Gaurhoth would be played at Tol-in-Gaurhoth's Stadium.

Angfauglith knew they needed a positive result in their match against Imladris, with the deadly Angband and Tol-in-Gaurhoth looming. So, the Coliseum was packed with screaming orcs, murderous-looking balrogs, and swarms of Ungoliant's children. Elladan and Elrohir managed to get a travelling party put together, but it wasn't very large and when combined with the few hundred swooning Figwit fanelves, it only totaled to about 6 or 7 thousand. (those operating the ticket booths had somehow found a way that would break up the Figwit party. While not being a large bunch they could be annoyingly loud and obnoxious all gathered together. But instead of all hundreds being in one section, they were split into groups of 3 to 5 throughout the stands. The organizers thought the stadium was so large they could accomplish this and if surrounding tiny individual pockets of Figwit followers with enthusiastic Angfauglith fans didn't intimidate them into shutting up, then the noise they could make would at least be drowned out). So it was a sea of blood-red in the stadium seats, crowned in unlight (since the spiders were perched on their webs at the top of the stadium)...and the crowd was looking for elvish blood to be spilled yet again on the barren fields of Anfauglith.

---

Moments before Imladris entered the field, all the baddies in the stands were gearing up to start jeering. They were going to let this Imladris side really have it. "We're going to let them know right away they're far away from home and will find no comfort with us!" they thought. Yet, when Imladris entered, led by Varda, it was as if the Angfauglith crowd suddenly forgot how to taunt and yell. There was nothing, so great was Varda's entrance they could not raise a sound against her. And all the Imladris heard were the greeting cheers of their own small band of followers. But then Angfauglith entered the stadium and the fear Varda struck into the heart of evil was driven from their minds, they were now roaring and supporting Angfauglith and as the match began, the confidence Imladris would be an easy meal for their team returned.

Yet as the 1st half minutes kept ticking away, it became clear Imladris was not going to be so easy to defeat. Their defense when led by Varda are Arda-class professionals, who were not going to be rattled or intimidated by the crowd. Gothmog was having no room to maneuver, being heavily guarded by Varda. And Ecthelion, who is a good goal-scorer but can't beat being doubled by Erestor and Galdor. It was the issue many had foreseen with Angfauglith this year, their mid-field was not good enough to get enough touches to their scorers up front. It was being easily dominated by Imladris' mid-field.

Although, at the other end, Imladris was having no more creating their own scoring chances against the solid Balrog defenders with a fearsome Ungoliant as the last line of defense. Elladan and Elrohir might be superb against orcs, but they were getting bullied by the balrogs. The half ended without really any excitement during the first 45 as both teams had only managed 3 total shots each. It was a display of defensive excellence by both teams, but the crowd had died down to near silence after 20 minutes or so, and realizing the ineffectiveness of both offenses.

The 2nd half started and the crowd appeared waiting for something to happen and cheer about. It wasn't a goal, but something did happen in the 60th minute that got the crowds attention back into the game. Figwit was given a yellow card after his pass was intercepted by Balrog #3. He tried to get the ball he lost back quickly, and got a bit overzealous clearly charging the Balrog and not actually trying to make a play on the ball. Figwit's fans were swooning over the elf's bravery to challenge a Balrog, but the Angfauglith fans were laughing hysterically because it was Figwit who ended up on his back and he got booked for it too! Then they booed even louder when they realized the ref also gave a yellow to the Balrog because the ref judged it used excessive retaliation force. Kneeing Figwit in the chest was not seen as "accidental."

It did spark the crowd back into the action though, as they began realizing this could be a 0-0 draw, and that was just unacceptable. This was the game Angfauglith needed to win if they wanted to advance. Chances just still weren't materializing though, for either team. Imladris' attack was too weak to get past the Balrogs, but Angfauglith's midfield was too weak to move the ball cleanly from their back line to their upfront playmakers.

Having enough of this nonsense, in the 66th minute, Angfauglith moved their defenders up further, close to the mid-field and Balrog #2 instead of passing it to one of the midfielders, just passed it to Ecthelion. Then Ecthelion and Gothmog played a fantastic 1-2 tandem down the left flank. It was a sudden and smooth attack, and Varda realized Gothmog created a match-up problem as Celebrian was now forced to try to stop the balrog captain. Varda sprinted out of her area to challenge Gothmog, and aid her teammate. But once Gothmog saw Varda was committed to him, he rolled a pass back to the middle. Ecthelion was through! He split the double-team of Erestor and Galdor! It was a perfect feed from Gothmog. once Valandil gave away he was trying to take away the right post, Ecthelion had an easy time shooting to the open left post and it was a goal.

Angfauglith got their lead and were focused on protecting it for the remaining 25 minutes. We had chided Gondor earlier for switching conservative to protect a 1-goal lead. But we can't chide Angfauglith, because their defense is not only well organized by Ungoliant but they are exceptional athletes and they showed anyone witnessing the game, what a shutdown defense looked like. Even if Ungoliant had to make a few saves, they were Imladris taking long prayers from a distance which were just never going to give a goalie of Ungoliant's caliber any problems.

Angfauglith 1-0 Imladris
on target 3-3
tot shots 9-8
GOALS:
*66, 1-0 Ecthelion (Gothmog)
YELLOW CARDS:
*Angfaug- Gelmir, Balrog#3
*Imlad- Figwit, Erestor

The 2nd game of Group G took place in Tol-in-Gaurhoth, during the primetime 9pm slot. Tol-in-Gaurhoth, nicknamed "The Den" (which the Doriath Elves perceived as a mockery of their "Cave") was quite an unsettling and gloomy place to be. So, naturally the fans for both teams were feeling right at home. It's interesting that TIG had build a retractable dome stadium, but what's so unusual is...in all other stadiums covered by a dome, the dome is for protection from the outside elements if the weather is too bad. But for Tol-in-Gaurhoth it's the exact opposite. They welcome terrible weather (which is the norm in the haunted isle) and so when it's storming, cold, and thundering outside the roof is left open. But on occasions when the weather is decent and fair, it's closed and it can get very dark and damp underneath the dome. Conditions weren't too awful today, there was a light drizzle and cool breeze, so the roof was open.

It was rather evenly split, Angband was nearby, and there was Morgoth too so of course they would have plenty of fans. Being in Tol-in-Gaurhoth practically every werewolf and ghoul had to be in the stadium (and thousands upon thousands of bats were flying over head to support Thuringwethil). And as always TIG has a small population base to draw from, but their fans can create far more noise than most.

---

Like in the first game, the first half ended in a goalless tie. However, that didn't mean there was nothing happening and the fans attention never left the action happening on the field. Both defenses were strong but the offenses were also capable and created good chances. The wolves were playing hard not only for their fans but to show off their talent to Morgoth. Telvildo was looking rather scared, but Ancalagon was having his way with the werewolf defenders. Shastawolf could not be caught napping though and the wolf stopped 2 quick early chances from the dragon.

When TIG had the ball they had a quite an easy time getting through the Easterling midfield of Angband but then seemed to hit a brickwall that was Morgoth and his defense. And not to be outdone in goal Carcharoth also came up with important saves to keep the game 0-0 going into the break. But it seemed everyone in the stands knew goals were coming. Both offenses were just too talented, too athletic to be shutout, even if the same could be said about their defenses.

Having played a more defensive game the 1st period and having Ancalagon be the large target in the center Morgoth started the 2nd trying to get more players involved in the attack, hoping the TIG defense had been properly set up to pay too much attention to Ancalagon. Morgoth must have lit a fire under the cats during the break because they looked less scared by the wolves now and their agility was starting to cause real problems.

But just when it seemed Oikeroi and Telvildo were going to breakthrough with a goal, TIG had the tactics to freak out Telvildo again. GaladriWight was following Telvildo and could be heard telling the cat he was a handsome kitten and she couldn't wait to take him back to the barrow to add him to her already large handsome cats-in-bow-ties collection. It was too much to Telvildo who ran away hissing (chased by GaladriWight). Oikeroi had passed it to the spot Telvildo was supposed to be, but the only one there was NilpWolf and the wolf launched a sudden counterattack.

TIG had no trouble getting through Angband's midfield in the first half, and they had no troubles this time either. But the speed they were able to cut through the midfield caught Morgoth off guard and when phantomwolf hung a pass up into the box for Thuringwethil, it was a rare occasion Morgoth's defense was out of position. Carcharoth thought Thuringwethil would try to head the ball in, but instead the vampirebat knocked it back on the ground, to SallyWight who kicked it in. TIG had drawn first blood! And even the Angband fans had to admit it was a well deserved goal based on how both teams had played so far.

Unlike Angfauglith though, TIG was aware they couldn't play out the remainder of the game defensively, Angband's attack was just too good. They had Angband by the throat, so now it was time to go for the kill. A few minutes later it looked like InzilWolf would make it 2, and the wolves and wights would really start partying, but no...Carcharoth made a great save, knocking the shot out of bounds. Everyone applauded the save. This was fantastic. This was excitement. Two admirable teams going for it all the way to the end. And it would be a TIG corner now.

Phantomwolf took the corner, hitting a hard drive into the box. It was a congested battle in the middle and it seemed like phantomwolf overshot his target, as no one could see a TIG player and the closest one to the ball was Angband's Balrog defender. But out of the jumbled mess lept up Nilpwolf, outleaping the Balrog at the last second, Carcharoth was caught flat-pawed and could not spring up in time to stop Nilpwolf's header that got over Carcharoth and into the goal. 2-0 TIG!!

Morgoth was looking furious. He knew the wolves were going to be tough this year, but he was not accustomed to conceding 2 goals and losing in this fashion. Angband tried to claw their way back into the match, perhaps trying get at least 1 goal and salvage something. But as the time kept winding down towards the end, their attempts became more and more desperate, which did not trouble the confident wolves in the least bit. TIG carried their momentum and confidence all the way until the referee's final whistle. They had shut out Angband. It was said Morgoth quickly returned and shut himself in Angband after the match. He has much to think on after Angband's opening round loss and starting last in the group.

Angband 0-2 Tol-In-Gaurhoth
on target 4-6
tot shots 14-15
GOALS:
*67, 0-1 SallyWight (Thuringwethil)
*72, 0-2 NilpWolf (PhantomWolf)
YELLOW CARDS:
*Angband- Ulwarth, Ulfast, Ancalagon
*TIG- SallyWight, BoroWolf

Standings (after Round 1)
Tol-in-Gaurhoth, 3 pts, (+2)
Angfauglith, 3 pts, (+1)
Imladris, 0 pts, (-1)
Angband, 0 pts, (-2)
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