2019 Excelling Eight Crokinole - Doubles - Reinman/Hutchinson v Walsh/Campbell
June 12, 2020A doubles match from the 2019 Excelling Eight Crokinole Tournament with Connor Reinman and Andrew Hutchinson facing Nathan Walsh and Roy Campbell.
A doubles match from the 2019 Excelling Eight Crokinole Tournament with Connor Reinman and Andrew Hutchinson facing Nathan Walsh and Roy Campbell.
"Your so-called boss may own the clock that taunts you from the wall, but, my friends the hour is yours."
Yes, my friends, not only is the hour yours, so is this 2024 (plus a bit) crokinole year in review blog.
Like any quote torn from its context it’s quite flexible in the meaning one can draw from it. Its application to a desired justification is as malleable as double-bubble gum. And its meaning, at this moment, is to inspire a look back at 2024.
Now you are probably thinking, "shouldn’t this have been posted months ago?" My answer to you: I am, bravely of course, unencumbered by the passage of time. I am pushing the boundaries of not only calendar recognition, but also the norms of timing year in review analysis. Why should I let a simple thing like the adoption of the Gregorian calendar a mere not even 500 years ago, or the orbiting of the earth stop me from executing a good idea I had months ago?
Shouldn’t this have been posted before the end of 2024? Shouldn’t this have been posted before tournaments were played in 2025?
My answer: the blog gets written when the little spirit of crokinole penmanship crawls into my fingers to express its will. Should that not happen until a month(s) later, it is only greater evidence that I am an innovator.
And really, who’s to lose from a year in review blog written four months late? When I picked up Easter chocolate a week late it was 50% off and just as delicious! So too will be this blog.
The above quote, for those curious, is from a book in the thriller science-fiction television show Severance. If it wasn’t such a captivating show, then maybe I would have written this earlier. And with that extended prelude, on with the review.
International
The international crokinole scene was a lot harder to follow this year; that’s a good thing. I remember when knowing the results of one tournament would pretty much sum it all up. Even keeping up with the NCA is tough to do, which is where we’ll start.
The NCA’s announcement of a new tournament tiering structure has allowed the Tour to explode in events. Most of those new ones are coming from the USA with events in Texas, Missouri, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Vermont, Florida, New York, California, and the Carolinas. The new tour stops have caused the stock to rise of a few Americans who have been frequenting the events.
To name only a few, Ryan Buhr, Jamie Harter, Darin Van Gammeren and Brian Ruckdeschel have been previously unknown or lesser known and racked up some high finishes.
Also of note in the new events that popped up was the appearance of Antonio Cuaresma in the Brooklyn Doubles Championship. Cuaresma has been promoting crokinole in Spain for a few years and attended the 2022 UK Championships and the 2023 World Championships previously. His journey to Brooklyn was his most successful crokinole trip, winning the title with partner Jose Gonzalez.
Exciting news out of USA in the past year and a bit as well is the emergence of two new crokinole tours, the Northeast Crokinole Tour and the Southeast Crokinole Circuit. It will be exciting to see which competitors rise to the top in those respective tours during their first season.
In Hungary there’s a couple new competitors who have found their way to the top. There are still names we’ll remember like Krisztián Berzlánovich, Árpád Lonsták and Péter Ladányi. But taking the two big Hungarian tournaments in 2024 was a new name, Ádám Huszárik. He won both the World Cup and Hungarian Championships, defeating Berzlánovich in the final, while another new name Nikolett Huszárik finished in the top four in both events.
At the World Cup the reigning Dutch Champions, Joert Edink and Sander Brugman took the doubles title. They’ve been on a roll after coming away from 2024 with the Belgian Championship for the first time. And the duo that’s dubbed themselves the Roaring Twenties will be in competition at the 2025 World Championships.
Crokinole UK completed its first season in 2024, and is now well nearing the completion of its second season and it continues to be a great success. Events in the UK first were a neat spectacle to see Brian Cook back in competitive action and a winner of the first two editions of the UK Championships in 2022 and 2023. He hasn’t been as active since the Tour began, but the level of competition has certainly risen to give Cook a tough time when he is competing.
Tom Curry won 4 events on the 2023-2024 Tour to win the Tour title, including winning the 2024 UK Championships. This season his success has continued, winning 3 events (out of the 5 total events so far). Steve Burrows has played in 2 events and won them both, and is the only one who can catch Curry in the season standings this year. Mike Ray currently sits in a solid position to finish among the top 3 on the Tour.
Not included in the UK Tour standings, but still an event of prestige is the UK Doubles Championship which was won by the Hungarian team of Árpád Lonsták and Nikolett Huszárik.
There’s only one event left in the 2024-2025 Tour and it will be the 2025 UK Championships happening just one week before the World Championships.
In case you missed it
Outside of the pure realm of competition there was a lot of interesting crokinole stuff happening throughout 2024.
A tremendous analysis and description of crokinole was written by Russell Samora of The Pudding. It easily earns the title of best crokinole explainer of the year.
The best data visualization of the year has to go to Shawn Hagarty. He has created his own computer program that allows him to track shot-by-shot crokinole statistics and has published them all on his tableau page. As I have nibbled around such a project for the last five years and not produced anything tangible, I feel confident in expressing that Hagarty’s work is tremendous.
Years ago Ron Langill took a vacation to Cuba and came back with a fantastic story about coming upon a crokinole club there. The story was so fantastic eventually people realized it might have been written more for humour than to describe a factual event. Langill was seemingly inspired from a trip to the Dominican Republic, because soon after another similar sounding story was regaled. Lately Langill has been recapping historic events in crokinole that have involved The Hollies, strongman Louis Cyr, a Babe Ruth imitator, and most recently a crokinole board placed under the curling ice at the 2006 Olympics.
There’s a quote I love from a 1915 novel by George Fitch that reads, ”When crokinole was introduced to Homeburg, some twenty odd years ago, the kerosene wagon had to make an extra mid-week trip.” I love how illustrative that quote is of the time when crokinole was a new game that caused tremendous excitement. It’s hard to believe there was a time before household electricity when people didn’t really have a good reason to stay up past the setting of the sun. That was until crokinole came along, and all of the sudden everyone’s lighting expenses doubled.
Today people still describe crokinole as a great game you can play when the power is out. That was tested at the Ontario Doubles Crokinole Championship this year when the municipal hydro operations had the power cut to the church for about the first 30 minutes of the planned tournament schedule. Tournament organizers decided to wait for the lights to come back on.
In the media world, 20 years after first doing a short segment about the World Crokinole Championship (one which got me into the competitive scene), TVO returned to do another short segment on the event. And in the podcasting world a duo in the UK has created the Hogan’s Alley podcast to give crokinole fans two podcasts to listen to as Andrew Hutchinson’s Pink Shirt podcast continues in its third season.
Simon Dowrick created a tremendously exciting new tournament called The Crokinole Cup. The event modelled itself after the football (aka soccer) World Cup, with players arranging matches against each other over the course of a few weeks, culminating in knock-out matches for the title. It was one of a kind and was capped off with a really exciting final match which I won’t spoil if you have a free hour. Other matches from the event can be viewed on the Crokinole Cup YouTube channel.
In YouTube/video space 2024 was the first year that I, CrokinoleCentre, had pulled back on my media obligations. I note that in my absence crokinole’s popularity has only went up. Coincidence?
But to my great pleasure competitive crokinole is still being broadcast thanks to the efforts of TraceyBoards and Garret Tracey, who have picked up the baton and jumped on a jet pack. Consistently Garret is putting out more videos in a more timely fashion then I ever did, which is no easy feat, and is helping to continue to document the story of competitive crokinole.
Speaking of the story of competitive crokinole: what an amazing year it was for excitement!
Narrow Margins, Similar Results
The quick, too-long-didn’t-read, recap of the 2024 crokinole year is that the same people won, despite the margins being so close.
At the World Championships, Justin and Fred Slater defended their 2023 world championship title with another win. The 2024 margin of victory was a single point over two different teams (Reinman/Conrad, Hutchinson/Tracey). It was their 5th world title, and the third time their world title was won by just one point.
On the singles side, Connor Reinman also defended his 2023 world title, winning 6-2, 5-3 against Josh Carrafiello in the final. It’s worth pointing out the Reinman and the Slaters won not only the 2023 and 2024 world championships, but also 2022 NCA Players Championship, which I had hoped would be viewed on the same level as the worlds, but I don’t think it quite got there. Still though, in a different world these individuals could possibly be three-time defending world champions.
In other doubles events we saw Jason and Ray Beierling win in Owen Sound, then Josh Carrafiello and Ron Langill win the Ontario Championships, and Andrew Hutchinson and Jeremy Tracey win the US Open. The parity of results certainly adds a lot of intrigue into the upcoming World Championships.
The Emergence of Crokinole’s Big 4
If I had gotten around to writing this at the close of 2024 I would have had much more confidence in this segment. Throughout 2024 we saw a phenomenon emerge that was extremely exciting from a spectator point of view. This was the combined dominance and competitiveness of four players in the singles game: Justin Slater, Connor Reinman, Andrew Hutchinson and Josh Carrafiello.
Throughout 2024 here’s how they finished in singles events featuring more than one of them:
That’s only one event where they collectively didn’t cover the top two spots, and only three of the events did any of them finish outside the top 4. Into 2025 their collective performance hasn’t been as dominant, but it is still very impressive:
Now why is this so much fun? I find there’s something about the entertainment of individual sports that is lacking when there is either too few players who are dominant, or when too many players are viewed with a realistic shot to win.
Not so much anymore, but I used to watch a lot of tennis. There was a two year stretch in the early 2000s when 8 different players won the 8 grand slams that took place on the men’s side. It was pretty hard to build up much excitement when there were more people who had a chance to win then I could keep together in my head. And later on there was a stretch in the mid 2000s (Federer) and in the mid 2010s (Djokovic) when the game was dominated pretty much by one player, to the point that every opponent felt like a massive underdog.
Now some like the randomness of sports, and the feeling like anyone can win. And some will say they like the predictability and the feeling that they are watching greatness before them: like Usain Bolt or Michael Jordan. But neither of those are for me. On one hand the outcome feels as interesting as a coin toss, and on the other the outcome can feel pre-determined.
There was a sweet spot in the middle though where men’s tennis was extremely fun to watch, and the game had four household names: Federer, Nadal, Djokovic, Murray. You could count on them to make the semifinals, and you could count on them to have spectacular matches against each other.
That’s where we were with Slater, Reinman, Hutchinson and Carrafiello. You could count on them to make it into the late stages of tournaments, and they frequently produced great crokinole matches.
And from a spectator standpoint it creates a lot of fun having a big 4 dynamic. You can craft story lines in your mind about their respective rivalries, and pick and re-pick favourites depending on the moment. It’s easy to sell the story to prospective fans:
See? You can tell I’m having fun.
And in 2024 it was the first time I can recall having a big 4 in crokinole.
Before the NCA there was Brian Cook and Ray Beierling a clear step ahead of the competition. They were eventually joined by Justin Slater and Jon Conrad, and they did sweep the top 4 at the 2012 Worlds and 2013 Turtle Island. But the combination of those four never did get a good chance to establish itself with Slater out of province most of the year, and Cook later moving out of country.
After that there was never quite the same dominance and competition at the top. Justin Slater did most of the winning in the years that followed, with Ray Beierling also racking up quite a few, with interruptions from Conrad, Nathan Walsh and Jason Beierling.
Note that I said I would have felt more confident in this Big 4 declaration at the end of 2024, because two other names are popping onto the same stage of the established four. Those are Jason Beierling, who won in London and finished second in Elmira, and Devon Fortino, who finished second in Belleville and Ontario.
Should we start to call it a Big 6? I don’t think the delineation is as strong yet. In the CrokinoleCentre ELO rankings the Slater/Reinman/Hutchinson/Carrafiello quartet continue to have a sizeable gap on the rest of the competition, but Beierling and Fortino are getting closer to joining them.
The 20s
If you missed it, in September I wrote a recap of the Belleville event, where the old 20s world record was beaten. Additionally, a record for the highest average 20s score across a group was shattered (previously set at 116, now reset to 133), while 7 players registered a 20s inside the top 13 all-time performances.
The Belleville tournament was an anomaly. Or at least it seemed like one until we got into these 2025 tournaments. In the 2025 Elmira event in January, 3 more players registered 20s scores inside the top 10 all-time. Then at the 2025 Ontario Singles Championship, 3 more players not only set 20s scores inside of the top 10, they all beat the previous world record.
Brian Cook held the world record with an average of 153.3 20s over 10 games at the 2011 Hamilton event. Justin Slater took the record with an average of 164.5 at the 2019 Hamilton event, and then reset it in Belleville at 165.6.
At the Ontario Singles Championship Shawn Hagarty recorded 168.9, and that was only good enough for 3rd on the day.
The new world record is now jointly shared between Josh Carrafiello and Andrew Hutchinson, both who averaged 181.1 over 10 games. The full list can be viewed here. It’s probably not a surprise that the highest average 20s score across a group was also set, with the 10 players in their group averaging 142.2 20s.
There sure are a lot more 20s than there used to be. The Ontario Singles Crokinole Championship was the last event that had a 20s record older than 5 years, previously held by Nathan Walsh with 138 in 2013 (there were nine 20s scores higher than that this year). And now there’s only one tournament left with a 20s record that’s more than two years old, which is the Turtle Island event where Connor Reinman holds the record due to a score in 2019.
What could possibly explain this recent sudden deluge of 20s scoring?
Boards? Discs? Wax? Players?
I’ll leave aside the discussion on what amount of 20s scoring is too much for crokinole, and what could be done if that was the case for another day. For now, I’ll just say, that’s a lot of friggin 20s!
World Crokinole Championships
Just a few words on this because I promised I’d help preview the tournament on an upcoming podcast instead.
I’m really excited for this event. The competitiveness in Doubles competitions in the last year puts a few teams into the mix, and for the first time this year there will be a championship match to determine the World Champion.
And in the singles, the favourites would be among the six names I’ve mentioned above, but many other names have had those flashes of brilliance this year that suggest their skill is good enough to win should it all come together on the day. Additionally, there are a number of international players signed up for this year’s event that could be competitive as well, which always spices things up!
I think it’s likely in the upcoming World Crokinole Championship prognostications that you’ll hear a general consensus that it’s getting harder and harder to win the WCC every year, and that there’s more strong players in crokinole than there ever was before.
I think the first part is true, but the second part is not.
From 2004-2011 Brian Cook made the World Championship final every year. It feels extremely unlikely this feat will be repeated or neared in the coming years. There was a span of 6 tournaments in a row that Justin Slater won between 2015-2016, that too feels extremely difficult to do today.
There’s generally just too many strong players willing to attend most of the crokinole tournaments available on the calendar. But I don’t think that necessarily means there’s more strong players than there used to be.
This will sound unusual to some, but in the past there used to be lots of great crokinole players who would not attend crokinole tournaments. I recall facing some of these players from the Preston, St. Jacobs and Cameron Heights crokinole clubs that I’d never seen before at the Schneider Haus event. They would be very strong players, all capable of finishing in the top 10 at the World Championships, and maybe even making the final and winning it. But they didn’t come to the WCC because they believed Joe Fulop or Brian Cook was better than them, and that they couldn’t win.
I’m not going to pretend to know their motives, but just to pick a couple examples, former World Champions Derek Kidnie, Al Fuhr and Bruce Hartung didn’t attend the World Championships at all in the 2010s. Surely their skill, even if diminished from their peak, was still strong enough for a decent showing.
I’d say it’s harder to win the WCC, undoubtedly, because pretty much all of the top contenders are showing up these years. And it makes for great excitement.
But crokinole has been around for a long time, and it stands to reason there was a lot of great players in the past as well.
I used to check twitter at least weekly for some sort of crokinole content and engage with it in some way in an effort to building some more online activity. I did this for probably a decade, and like my recession from crokinole videos, I eventually came to stop. When reports came out months ago that twitter was removing old content I went spelunking trying to remember some of the humourous moments in the past.
Being at the ripe age to have been at the right age for social media’s introduction into everyday human life I observed with twitter the same life cycle you can find on any other platform that had its day in the sun. In the era before the social media platform gets algorithmically spliced into fragments that turns its user-experience into a jaded daily high school-reunion for anyone who doesn’t have anything better to do, there is a period where the platform is fun to be on. For a time the platform can be unpredictable in a good-natured way that encourages a sense of adventure and discovery.
Looking for crokinole occurrences on twitter back in the good days was like looking for bald eagles in Ontario today; quite rare, but usually amazing when it was spotted. I had a pretty fun time looking back through a treasure trove of unusual spottings, so now I shall share this pleasure with anyone still perusing this particular platform that is well past its best days.
In case these posts do disappear, I provide a link and a screenshot to everything below.
PEI Politics
Not just twitter, but I also used to scavenge all depths of the internet for crokinole, and in 2011 found an article from the University of PEI student newspaper where the school President battled a student in a game of crokinole. Years later I’d see a familiar face flash across my TV as the former UPEI President had been elected Premier of PEI. From then on I knew the Premier, Wade MacLauchlan, was a crokinole player. So I wasn’t surprised when in 2016 a reporter tweeted this:
That tweet was followed up days later with a CBC article comically declaring "Premier Wade MacLauchlan rattled in crokinole game". The Premier showcased classic crokinole sportsmanship when he declared, "There’s always tomorrow."
Another prominent politician, Nate Erskine-Smith, has a strong connection to crokinole. He even has, or had depending on when you read this, a custom 20s board for his Ottawa office. Sadly he was unsuccessful in his bid to become Ontario Liberal leader, so we miss out on having a second premier in Canada starting to play competitively.
Some Good Memes
Who doesn’t love a good meme? Well me, usually. They can get old quick. But if you just look at them for a few seconds before scrolling to something else, the way God intended, they can be pretty funny.
And of course I’d be remiss if I didn’t bring up the twitter account dedicated to crokinole memes, aptly called @crokinolememes.
And here is an appreciation post for the person who may or may not be behind the account.
Did this really happen?
When twitter started it was a great place to brag to strangers about stuff that happened in your life. Eventually, given the lack of accountability that prevails on the internet, people realized they could start bragging about things that didn’t happen. These next two might have happened, but I can’t say for sure.
I used to correspond with someone who worked at Dreamworks and ran an office crokinole league. Always wondered what happened to it.
In 2014 there was a flurry of tweets written in Japanese about crokinole. Trying to find them after the fact has been nearly impossible, but one person did reference the episode years later.
The full story is a film about the life of Japanese Emperor Hirohito was released, in which an off-hand remark was made about an unknown game he played in his childhood. Interested people took to the internet to try to discover the identity of the game, and found it to be crokinole.
Whenever I’m in an ice-breaking activity there’s two fun facts about myself that I trot out. The first is the obvious one, that I play crokinole competitively and even have a world championship title to my name. The second is that as a child I used to know Justin Bieber. Which is why I called into question the veracity of this story.
Now I didn’t go to the same elementary school as Bieber, but I rode the country bus with quite a few who did, and who all knew that I played crokinole in those days. And I just feel like during one of those hour-long bus rides home they would have mentioned that their school had an active crokinole scene. And if they did tell me that 20 years ago there’s absolutely no way I would have forgotten because I would have transferred to that school immediately. Case closed.
What were they thinking when they took this photo?
Growing up with the internet it was always good advice to ask yourself what your grandmother would think if she saw what you were posting online. It turns out questioning the motives of some other generation works with both predecessors and ancestors. You look at the photos below and you just wonder what was going through their mind when they took it?
In all fairness I know what they were thinking in this one. The photographer had to tell them to move their chairs to get an open shot of the board. Little did they know they’d give Jon Conrad a new chair placement strategy to adopt.
And this isn’t a photo but it’s a darn good comic.
TV References
You have to wonder what it’s like working in Hollywood in the set department, trying to dress up some scene with props that tell the story of what a character is like. Do these people even know what crokinole is when they slap a board into the background?
Not specifically a TV thing, but this was how I found out someone wrote the game crokinole into an official Star Wars extended universe piece of entertainment.
Also not TV, but someone went to the effort of making fanart for the game Overwatch, and put crokinole into it.
Yet another celebrity look-a-like in the world of crokinole.
Mennonite Humour
Just as people would be surprised by how much crokinole content exists on the internet, I was constantly surprised by how much mennonite-based humour exists.
The Freundschaft Photo account was one of my favourites.
I like this one for the fact that it is annoying The Crokinole Movie isn’t on Netflix.
And I always love a reference to Punkeydoodles Corners.
There also used to be a bunch of tweets from another Mennonite humour account called The Daily Bonnet. The account has since been removed and rolled under an account called The Unger Review but all of the satire news stories about crokinole can be found here. Some of the best jokes are just in the titles, like "New Regulations Force Female Crokinole Players to Wear Short Skirts" and "LeBron James Quits Basketball to Take on New Challenge: Crokinole".
Fan Appreciation
On twitter it was really common to see people have a passing interest in the game. Usually the least expected posts were when some stranger actually expressed genuine interest in a deep knowledge of the competitive scene.
Garret Tracey introduced me as "the man, the myth, the legend behind CrokinoleCentre" on a video recently, but I think I prefer being known as the Spanish version of "Idol and reference of the crokinole." ¿Estas conmigo?
This guy is such a big fan of Jason Beierling he’s declaring his two finals appearances in Hamilton as good enough to be proclaimed as "damn near every year."
If you are dog-lover you should click through the link to see the short video in this tweet.
Okay, and now one earnest compliment.
Okay, two.
Miscellaneous
My big hope with crokinole on twitter is that some famous people would tweet about it and spark some interest. The closest we got to that was SungWon Cho who is a pretty famous YouTuber and actor (he was in the Blackberry movie).
An astute observation from Zeus.
A $100 idea.
You’ve heard of some people being clue-less about crokinole, how about someone being cue-less.
And if you are a curling fan, take the 38 seconds to watch this clip of a professional curler experimenting with the concept of drag effect in crokinole.
Life without hockey.
Ok I’m going to be pedantic here. This is not an edge case from a crokinole rules perspective.
Never knew this about Brian Cook.
I know the feeling.
And I don’t what to say about this, but it looks cool.
Crokinole where?
One of the joys of constantly surveying twitter for crokinole mentions was being quick to learn of events and clubs happening in places where organized crokinole was unknown,
A prime example was finding out about the club in Japan that brought us Ryotaro Fukuda.
I don’t know anything about this tournament that happened in Manitoba, but the organizer sure has the gist of how it works.
Back in 2015 a pub in Toronto pioneered the act of playing crokinole with alcohol in the vicinity.
Sault Ste Marie draws a big crowd for championship matches.
Before they scored a top 4 finish at the Worlds, we knew there was a group of players from Harvard thanks to their lab sending out practice updates on a regular basis.
Honestly, I respect this attitude following an Alberta tournament.
Tom Thomson
In addition to looking for crokinole content, I also liked to use twitter to briefly experience Canadian art. It is not rare on twitter to have accounts specializing in fandom of particular actors, singers or athletes. It should not be considered too strange that for years someone has been operating an account to showcase the works of Canada’s most famous painter, Tom Thomson.
What was a little strange was when the twitter account pretended to be Thomson living his final days in Algonquin Park before his tragic death. Rather than painting, he was apparently playing a lot of crokinole.
That being said if he was playing a lot of crokinole that could bring new meaning to the Tragically Hip lyrics about Thomson, "He said, "bring on the brand new renaissance / 'Cause I think I'm ready / When I was shaking all night long / But my hands were steady." We all wish our hands were steady on the crokinole board.
Centre Wellington District High School
Now here’s a school I wish I went to.
Gaming Conventions
Twitter was also a fun place to check in on major events that you weren’t attending. It sure made it seem like a great time.
Crokinole Manga
One frequently astonishing occurrence on twitter was to see comic strips detailing an action-based story of crokinole with Japanese dialogue.
I was left who was making these and what the story was about. I’m still wondering, but the full collection of the work can be found here for those interested.
Hutchinson
Always good for a laugh or to tie in some other sport into the crokinole world was Andrew Hutchinson before he quit social media.
Zone of Vanity
Back in the day I definitely held the title for most crokinole tweets, so I’m going to take a victory lap to admire some of my best posts.
The origin of twitter limited posts to 140 characters. This legend only needed 10 to show us the way.
When I started to write this blog 12 years ago I made a resolute but unconscious decision to either exclude any first-person identifiers (I, me, my) from the entirety of a piece, or to make it clear to the reader I was putting myself front and centre into the argument presented. This was a behaviour, along with many others, I mimicked from the political journalists and sports reporters I enjoyed reading, each of whom share the same respect for the mutually exclusive worlds of stories in which their presence is either relied upon heavily, or completely unnecessary.
With good reason, there’s a compulsion to put that aside today.
Some time ago these blogs of tournament recaps, the meat and potatoes of this CrokinoleCentre website, began to feel formulaic and repetitive. Faced with that realization, I felt like there wasn’t much to write about anymore. The words from Ecclesiastes, the most emo book in the bible, rang out in my head “There is nothing new under the sun.”
This will sound jaded, but in crokinole I thought I could no longer be surprised.
After having spent most of the day repeatedly dropping and picking my jaw off the floor of Quinte’s Sports and Wellness Centre, and then searching for my socks on the side of Cannifton Road after they were blown off, I knew I’d have to come out of my exaggerated and self-imposed retirement to write an emergency blog. And fortunately for the reader, after having stared at break-lights on the Toronto section of the 401, I’ve had time to compose my thoughts into something lucid.
The 2024 Belleville Crokinole Challenge brought in a tournament-record 48 contenders, and that was far from the only record that fall on the day.
Justin Slater was seated into Group 1 in the morning and racked up 66 points in 9 games (pro-rates to 73.3 points over 10 games), setting the record for most points ever scored in the Belleville round robin, and good enough for 7th all-time in NCA singles events. Four more players, Andrew Hutchinson, Ron Langill, Ray Beierling and Shawn Hagarty, followed with point scores that prior to the day would have all been within the top 10 round robin scores ever recorded in Belleville.
But beyond the impressiveness of the points scoring was the 20s total of Justin Slater. He scored 149 20s in 9 games, which sets a new world record. The previous world record, set by Slater in Hamilton in 2019, averaged out to 148.1 20s in 9 games, so like Mondo Duplantis setting new pole vault world records, Slater has set a new record by a single 20 shot.
Also worth pondering was that the 20s mark from Slater came in the preliminary round, as most 20s world record close encounters happen in secondary rounds. There many top players are clustered together, boosting each others scores through the repartee in which 20s scored by one player typically only provide an additional opportunity for a 20 for the opposition. Amazingly, Slater achieved this 20s feat without the assistance of top competition.
Momentarily lost in the excitement of the 20s score was the excitement to follow about who actually advanced into what pool for the afternoon in Belleville. Scanning the names of the A pool advancers revealed the elite contender of Josh Carrafiello had missed the cutoff by a margin of less than 1 point, after pro-rating for a different number of games played in each group. Advancing at his expense was the unknown name of Devon Fortino of North Bay; “he’s a pretty good shooter,” was all that was whispered about as players began to settle in for the afternoon. What an understatement.
The afternoon kicked off and I was predicting another 20s record would be broken. Slater was sitting in the same row as the morning, ready to utilize his familiarity with the boards, while the rest of the 20s high-rollers were coming in looking for improvements against the stronger competition. The result would be a unprecedented surplus of 20s across the group.
After 10 games, this was the standings in Group A ordered by 20s only:
While no one would surpass Slater’s morning record, 5 players from the A group had scores that before today would have been in the top 10 all-time 20s rankings, and Josh Carrafiello would have made it a 6th with 147 20s scored in the B group.
Looking purely at the history of the Belleville tournament, nearly the entire top 10 list of 20s performances was replaced in a single day. Darren Carr’s 137 20s from the B group adds in to knock Jason Beierling’s prior tournament-record of a 131.1 average in 10 games from the 2018 tournament down to 9th.
The players across Group A scored an average of 133 20s, which is by far the largest ever average 20s scored in a single round robin. The previous high marks was 116 scored in the 2018 Hamilton, 115 in 2019 Owen Sound, and 113 and 112 scored in the individual Round of 16 groups at the 2024 WCC.
Some theories were bandied about to try to explain the surge in 20s. None were convincing to my liking.
Some pointed to the level of competition, which was high, but arguably not as high as other tournaments one can find on the NCA Tour. Some pointed to boards, but this wasn’t like the good-old days of the Hamilton tournament where boards year-after-year delivered high 20s. The boards were similar to any other Belleville event, which historically hasn’t delivered a specially high number of 20s scored. Don’t even think about mentioning discs, which were certainly not new, in fact they were quite well-used.
Honestly the only thing of note that was new or different about this 2024 Belleville tournament was a commercial-sized fan that looks like it was pulled out of a chicken barn that now looks over the playing area. Somehow I doubt that was the difference.
As much as this achievement is exciting to me, I feel twinged with a vague despair. If the conditions in Belleville, whatever they were, can be repeated then I wonder if we are entering the world of too many 20s. From 2008-2009 there were 130 swimming world records broken, thanks in large part of polyurethane-based swimwear. The organizing body stepped in to ban them. I feel like a caveman who learned how to make fire one minute, and who accidentally burned down a tree the next. Ray Beierling was only half-joking when he lamented that he only had 3 perfect rounds in the afternoon!
Am I being too melodramatic? At this point you’d have to say yes, but it’s something to contemplate the next time you are dragged into a long 20 race against a rival foe.
20s excitement wasn’t all there was in Belleville, as the emergence of Devon Fortino continued unabated. While tournament favourites, Slater and Hutchinson, took the top 2 spots comfortably into the playoffs, Fortino solidified the greatest-ever NCA debut performance with a playoff appearance in 3rd place. He was followed 1 point behind by Jason Beierling for the 4th and final spot, who himself was followed 1 point behind by Nathan Walsh (oh yeah, that’s me).
The murmurs about just how good Fortino was continued as the players settled down for the semifinals. What was there to say? With the 20s parade that had happened throughout the day all that could be said confidently was that he was good at open 20s. He apparently only learned of the existence of competitive crokinole a few months prior to the Belleville event, but he looked like a seasoned pro.
Hutchinson would play Fortino in the semifinal which was a thrilling race-to-9 contest that never saw either player lead by more than 2 points, and featured 3 tied rounds, and eventually ended in a 9-7 victory for Fortino to continue his magical debut run. With the win Fortino became the only player outside of Josh Carrafiello, Justin Slater or Connor Reinman to defeat Hutchinson in an elimination match since crokinole’s return from covid.
In the other semifinal Jason Beierling was the on verge of defeating Justin Slater for the first time in a singles elimination match, before Slater had a miracle escape to come back from 8-4 down to win 10-8.
That setup the final of unheralded, but seemingly invincible, Devon Fortino, against the stalwart, record-setting machine of Justin Slater. A win for Fortino and a statue commemorating the occasion would have to be built outside the Belleville arena, TV news outlets would be forking over big bucks to Garret Tracey to get the video footage, and the crokinole world would have been set into a mayhem no lesser than if the Eagan-Fitzgerald crokinole cabal was actually real.
As I have chronicled the competitive crokinole milieu for a long time, and tried in vain to make mountains out of nuance molehills to make the game intriguing, I need to take a moment to underline just how shocking it was to have this newcomer-performance and 20s-domination on a single day. This wasn’t a case of looking up into the nighttime sky and being wowed by the beauty of a full moon. This was like looking up into the sky and seeing a meteor, 3 moons, and a cow orbiting the earth with the grace of Santa’s reindeer.
For a long time I’ve thought that a player needed to accumulate some competitive experience before they could truly compete with the best in the game. Fortino proved so solidly this was not the case that it makes me question my fundament understanding of competitive crokinole. The only other comparable performance I can think of is before my time in the game, when Bruce Hartung won the World Championship at his first ever event in 2005. “No one’s going to believe me when I get home,” he said. I always wondered what it was like to see a new guy show up and be that good. Now I know. It feels good to be surprised again.
In the end though, Slater was not to be denied with an 11-3 victory, which continued his perfect streak in Belleville of winning all 6 times he has entered the event. Perhaps, once again, there is nothing new under the sun.
The World Crokinole Championship (WCC) Committee has decided to revise the playoff format used at the WCC tournament, and has come up with two proposals for the singles competition. The WCC Committee is seeking player input to help make the decision on which of the two proposals should be implemented for the 2024 edition of the tournament.
The descriptions of the proposals are outlined below. Players wishing to share their opinions on the matter should do so by January 10th, by submitting an email to crokinolecentre@gmail.com.
The WCC Committee has embarked on this process to modify the tournament format after receiving noticeable competitor feedback of a desire to expand the playoff format to include more players. Of key consideration as well for the WCC is a strong desire to maintain the current tournament schedule, given that the tournament offers both doubles and singles competition and serves nearly 400 players.
The format for the competitive, cues, and recreational divisions in 2023 and in prior years was the following:
That format has been mostly unchanged since the first year of the tournament in 1999. The only change of note was in 2019 when the semifinal head-to-head matches were introduced, replacing the prior format where the final 4 consisted of a 3-game round robin.
Proposal #1
If the number of competitors is less than 50 then the format remains unchanged. If the category has more than 50 competitors, then the following format is used:
Here is the proposal described in a visual format:
Proposal #2
For the competitive division:
For the cues and recreational divisions the same format is used, but with the top 8 players (1st-8th) advancing into an upper bracket, and the next 16 (9th-24th) advancing to a lower bracket.
Here is the proposal described in a visual format:
Also worth mentioning is the WCC committee will implement a change to the doubles competitions. Currently the top 6 teams from the preliminary round advance to the playoffs, in which a 5-game round robin determines the champion.
The new doubles format will see the top 12 teams from the preliminary round advance to the Round of 12 playoffs. The 12 teams will be split into two pools of 6 teams each, where a 5-game round robin will be played. The top 2 teams from each pool will advance to the Final 4. In the final 4 the teams will play 2 games (crossing-over to play one game each against the teams from the other pool). The total points scored through all 7 playoff games (5 games in the Round of 12 plus 2 games in the Final 4) will determine the champion.
2023 was crokinole’s first full year back from the covid-pause. I was thinking back on the year and being impressed by the breadth of it all. If you make a small-time hobby out of relaying crokinole stories, there was too much in the last 12 months to stay on top of it all. So in lieu of a professional job, here’s a non-definitive, non-comprehensive, (possibly non-good grammatical) recap of 2023.
There was lots of news regarding the National Crokinole Association early in the year. New tournaments started up in Elmira and Chatham, and the NCA went through a formalization process to enact a set of by-laws and elect an inaugural board of directors.
Elmira saw Ron Langill record his best-ever finish in a singles event, placing 2nd, but his break-through performance was overshadowed with a titanic clash in the other semifinal. Connor Reinman and Justin Slater squared off on the board, but also in the minds of all competitive crokinole players who were wondering which of the two was currently the best player in the game. Reinman won the semifinal match and the tournament, pushing such perceptions in his favour.
Ray Beierling re-emerged at the top of the crokinole game in Chatham, defeating Reinman in the final, and winning his first singles tournament since 2017. That championship match was out-done by the Match of the Year, a stupendous 3rd-place-match between Justin Slater and Jeremy Tracey. Even if you’ve already seen it, that match is well worth a rewatch. I’d recommend sliding it in between your family’s viewing of Charlie Brown’s Christmas Special and the 6-hour re-broadcast of the yule log fireplace.
Champions returned in the Spring-time with Justin Slater winning the NCA event in London. The win was his first singles victory, after 4 non-victorious finishes in prior tournaments, snapping his longest victory drought in over 10 years. A month later the Beierlings won the US Open in Voorheesville, defeating Jeremy and Reid Tracey in the championship match.
The Breakthrough Player of the Year honours is bestowed to Josh Carrafiello. One of the top players in the cues game, he started playing on the fingers side in 2020. Coming into 2023 his best ever finger-singles finish was a 15th, but he had an impressive showing in May, winning the prestigious Ontario Singles Championship after wins against Reinman in the semifinals, and Andrew Hutchinson in the finals. Carrafiello would not play on the fingers side at the World Championships, determined instead to win the cues division once before converting to fingers-play permanently. That goal was achieved in spades, as Carrafiello claimed the triple crown at the Worlds, winning the doubles, singles and 20s categories, including setting a cues 20s world record along the way.
While Connor Reinman was defeated in the Ontario semifinals, the performance was enough to cap off his marvellous 2022-2023 NCA season, culminating in his first ever NCA Tour Championship. He was joined on the NCA podium by Ray Beierling in 2nd, and Andrew Hutchinson in 3rd.
Leading into the World Crokinole Championships there was much excitement about the crokinole action happening around the world.
A number of well-attended crokinole tournaments took place in the UK. A pretty exciting match took place between Tom Curry and Mike Ray early in the year at AireCon. Happening on the same day as the World Championships was the 2nd edition of the UK Crokinole Championship. The legendary Brian Cook won the first edition in 2022, and returned to retain the title in 2023; his stiffest competition on the day coming from Tom Curry in a slim 10-8 semifinal victory.
Following these events was the establishment of the Crokinole UK Tour, which operates in similar fashion to the NCA Tour. The inaugural season is scheduled to have 6 events, concluding on June 1st, 2024 for the UK Crokinole Championship. Winners on the season so far include Árpád Lonsták (more on him in a bit), Tom Curry, Brian Cook and Mark Thurling. The battle for the Tour championship should be fun to watch.
You can follow the UK action via their news page, on their facebook page, or the hopefully to be burgeoning youtube channel.
A new face has entered into the Hungarian crokinole circuit, named Árpád Lonsták. He’s had a very successful 2023, winning in Scotland in the first ever UK Tour event, and then winning on home soil in the last 3 events, which include the 28th and 29th editions of the MOM Kupa, and the 2023 Hungarian Crokinole Championships a couple weeks ago. Krisztián Berzlánovich still remains a top name in Hungary, having finished 2nd twice and 4th in those three tournaments.
The Hungarian Crokinole results can be best followed on the Europe Facebook group, and through the youtube channels run by Berzlánovich, and the new channel recently launched by Lonsták.
In Spain, crokinole has been getting a lot of attention with TV appearances in 2023. The first featuring Antonio Cuaresma, and the second on the subject of the 2023 Open de Catalunya. The marque events of the year seem to be the Spanish Open, the doubles and singles championship matches are available for viewing in their respective links.
The pair of Stef Schenkelaars and Sjoerd Diemel continued their crokinole promotion efforts with another edition of the Dutch Doubles Crokinole Championship in 2023 in Utrecht. Their annual crokinole tournament is one-of-a-kind and has the atmosphere of an English or Dutch darts tournament (with the crowd of spectators using the same types of chants). The 2023 national championship was won again by Sander Brugman and Joert Edink, and the final match can be viewed here.
The team of Brugman/Edink also compete at the Belgian national championships. For the third year in a row Brugman/Edink lost to the powerhouse Belgian pair of Bert Costermans and Dennis Vrints. Crokinole NL provided a short recap of the event. The 2022 championship match can be viewed here, and tournament information for 2024 can be found here. The full 2023 championship match can be viewed here, which features the round of the year in the 6th round when the players scored 19 consecutive open-20s.
And in Engholms, Sweden, Magnus Rundström has started up a club featuring crokinole action.
Some clubs have popped up in Australia in the last few years, and in 2023 was the 3rd edition of the Bottom Half of the World Cup.
The Footscray Flickers facebook is good to follow to get a flavour of what Australian crokinole is like. That club was responsible for presenting the game at the 2023 version of PAX Australia.
There was lots of events of note in the USA. In Ohio Grant Flick and Travis Keener battled in the tournament final, with Flick coming away victorious. The Extra Pink Texas youtube channel has lots of videos one can watch of the action. That group is based in Houston, but there’s also a club in Dallas gaining momentum. A club in Toledo was also launched in the year and is producing enthusiasts and competitive players-alike. There’s also action in Alaska, where the Dry Bay club held the Alaska State Doubles Championship.
I can’t say that I know what the crokinole scene is like in Japan, but I can say this youtube channel posts crokinole videos from time-to-time, and they are always really pleasant and relaxing to watch.
Most of the Canadian news is covered in the rest of the report, but I’ll take this time to point out a couple other items. The first is a new club in Windsor. The second is that the current volunteers of the BC Provincial Championships are looking to hand-off the responsibility and accrued assets to an interested party. Running a tournament is a difficult task, but it is made much easier when there’s boards and a set of procedures readily available.
And lastly, in April of this year Joe Fulop passed away. I had the honour of writing the summary that appeared on the World Championship website regarding Fulop’s influence on crokinole. Crokinole has a long history, but much of it was never written down. When a few people started the effort of chronicling the game, Joe Fulop was the first star of crokinole, and will now always be regarded as one of the greats of the game.
I’ll leave this section with just a couple sentences, because the Tracey Boards social media feeds do a better job of recapping this they I can. Tracey Boards went on an extensive tour of the USA in 2023, hitting up numerous gaming conventions and connecting with several newly formed clubs along the way. If you can’t find the social media feeds, here’s a few links to get you started.
In June Justin and Fred backed-up their 2022 NCA Players Championship with a doubles title as the World Crokinole Championships returned after a 3-year hiatus in 2023. Their title coming by a margin of two points ahead of Connor Reinman and Jeremy Tracey. In the mix as well in the doubles playoffs was the Hartung duo, including Bruce Hartung, the 2005 World Champ making a return to competitive crokinole after a decade absence. He would also be in the mix in the singles, making the top 16. But the headlines in singles are usually reserved for those making the top 4. Matt Brown had the surprise performance of the day, finishing first in his round of 16 group, and becoming the 19th player to make the WCC top 4 more than once. Justin Slater finished 3rd on the day, making the top 4 for the 8th time. Meanwhile, Andrew Hutchinson and Connor Reinman both qualified for the championship match for the first time, where Reinman won a tense and entertaining match to win the World title.
The performance of the year has to go to Reinman as well for his play during the Round of 16. He won all 7 games and along the way scored 2 perfect rounds. He scored 104 20s over 7 games (pro-rates to 148 over 10 games), which is the record 20s score at the World Championships, and good enough for 3rd all-time. He also scored 43 points, which is tied for the 3rd-most points scored in the round of 16 phase at the WCC, and he notched the largest ever margin between 1st and 2nd place finishers in round of 16 group, by finishing 11 points ahead 2nd place Hutchinson.
The NCA Tour returned to Tuscarora in August, and was joined by a visiting Brian Cook who placed 4th. Reinman came away with another victory, beating Ray Beierling in the finals, and narrowly defeating Hutchinson in the semis.
In Belleville, Justin Slater was in spectacular form and played flawlessly in the championship match against Hutchinson, after defeating Ron Langill in the semifinal.
The Owen Sound tournament’s competitive division featured team doubles for the first time. We saw rare Beierling/non-Beierling doubles team as Ray Beierling and Connor Reinman teamed up and went into the tournament as favourites along side the team of Jeremy Tracey/Andrew Hutchinson. However, both of those teams would be defeated in the semifinals. The team of Oliver and Philip Ware finished 30th at the World Championships, and put on a dazzling and surprising display to advance to the finals. They were defeated by the new formed team of Josh Carrafiello and Ron Langill, giving Carrafiello his second NCA title, and Langill his first.
That set the stage for the final event of 2023: the Ontario Doubles Championship. The tournament entry list was stacked with perennial contenders in the Beierlings and the Slaters, while Andrew Hutchinson/Jeremy Tracey, Nolan Tracey/Reid Tracey, and Carrafiello/Langill joined in as tournament favourites. Spicing up the field even more was Jon Conrad, playing in his 3rd event in 2023 after sitting out 2022, partnering with Reinman.
The tournament was defined by many close calls. In the morning action Tracey/Tracey advanced by a margin of 3 points ahead of Gloria Walsh/Nathan Walsh, while Conrad/Reinman advanced by virtue of a tiebreak ahead of Darlene Kuepfer/Jo-Ann Carter. Then in the cut-off for the quarterfinals, Conrad/Reinman again advanced through a tiebreak ahead of Peter Carter/Robert Bonnett. The drama continued in the playoffs where 6 of the 8 matches were decided 2 points, and other 2 matches only decided by 4 points. Darren Carr/Gina Schick, Jason Molloy/Seth Frank, Slater/Slater and Hutchinson/Tracey were eliminated in the quarterfinals. Conrad/Reinman made the finals after beating Tracey/Tracey, but lost to the Beierlings who beat Carrafiello/Langill in the other semifinal.
After such close doubles action, there’s a lot of storylines heading into the US Open and World Championship competitions in 2024.
Crokinole is about fun, and in case you forgot somewhere along in 2023, there was enough tomfoolery to remind you.
Regarding that last one, it’s apparently an American crokinole tradition to have a comical consolation prize. Gary Wasielewski found a historical record of Nebraska politicians playing crokinole, where "considerable amusement was created over the efforts of the gentlemen to avoid winning the consolation prize.”
It was a few years ago when Shut Up & Sit Down reviewed the game of crokinole, in a video that now has over a million views. They talked about crokinole again briefly in a recent video around here and it was pretty funny to hear carrom described as “not as round” as crokinole.
I’ve already given out a few "blank of the year" awards above, and at this point I should remind the reader this is a non-definitive honour bestowed with minimal research effort.
That being said I can confidently award the following:
The hardest selection was that of shot of the year, but I’ve landed on Lizz Mackie-Donnelly’s shot during the US Open, which resulted in a double-takeout 20.
Lastly there is the honour of video of the year. In 2022 the Netherlands group came out with two videos which were pretty hilarious even if one had to use translated subtitles to figure out what was being said. The first was actually on the local news and discussed a doubles partnership that disbanded after one player’s crucial miss eliminated them the following year. The second video gave a dramatic recap of the 2022 event.
An honourary mention goes to video which wasn’t filmed in 2023, but I can’t believe no one made mention of it before I did. I would be a little surprised if famous TV personality Jon Stewart knows what crokinole is, but one of the guests on his show decided to coin a crokinole-related term in hilarious fashion.
“Holy crokinole” gets coined on American TV, during season 1 episode 7 of the The Problem with Jon Stewart
— CrokinoleCentre (@CrokinoleCentre) October 7, 2023
Warning: curse words pic.twitter.com/ZtHP3uRGfE
2023 Video of the Year goes to Calvert Hall College, a catholic prep school from Maryland. Watch and enjoy:
Recently WMAR joined us on campus to learn more about one of our newest clubs on campus - Crokinole! Watch this 90 second video to learn more about the game that has been around since 1876. pic.twitter.com/DMQfcOzJov
— Calvert Hall College (@calverthall) December 5, 2023
While I haven’t seen him take credit, I’m assuming the thanks for creating this club goes to Mr. Ufnar, and doesn’t this look like a good time everyone can get behind!
Some incredible quotes in this video.
"When we tell them 'Hey, it’s a board game.' They’re like 'uh, that’s boring!'" Yep, been there many times in my life.
"I come to crokinole because it’s fun, and I like trash talk." I'm sure this is what Jeremy Tracey was like in highschool.
"You realize it’s not just some stupid game, it’s really competitive." High praise indeed!
"It really does get pretty cut-throat, in this silly board game." And that’s how this game has been for 150 years.
Also seeing students in full suits play crokinole is pushing me even closer to following through on this idea.
Love photos like this! I’m very tempted to show up to a crokinole tournament in a full suit https://t.co/0hlrfCRm5X
— CrokinoleCentre (@CrokinoleCentre) April 6, 2023
The last shot in crokinole, aka the hammer, it’s an advantage right? Certainly! We all know that and it’s perhaps the first bit of strategy any competitive player knows; if it’s all tied up and you’ve got the hammer, you are probably in a position to win.
But how important is it to have the hammer? For a while I’ve thought the advantage of hammer between two equally skilled players was around 60-40. (That is, against an equal opponent the player with hammer would win a single round 60% of the time.) This wasn’t based on any analysis, just a feeling really, and I had a feeling the hammer advantage for doubles play was slightly higher, maybe 65%.
Such an advantage for the hammer, if those percentages were accurate, is significant so it’s a good thing crokinole games are typically four rounds so that such an advantage is nullified. There is of course one exception, which is elimination matches where a tie is not an acceptable result.
Thanks to a 1960 article on the Ontario Crokinole Championships, and to Howard Martin for digging it up, we know the concept of a “first to X points” race format is long familiar to crokinole.
The World Championships utilized a slightly more sophisticated approach, with a best of 3 games format with each game being a race to 5 points. The early years of the NCA saw many innovations for competitive crokinole, but the format used for nearly all championship matches remained identical to that of the World Championships.
Either format was widely considered acceptable for tournament elimination matches, however it was openly acknowledged that both formats presented an inherent advantage for one player. Under the circumstances of closely contested play, the championship match would be determined by one final round that would break a tie, and thus one player would have the hammer advantage for one additional round. But such a case seemed too rare to expend much energy correcting. After all, how likely was it that a first to 11 points match would be tied 10-10, or that a best of 3 games match would be tied 4-4 in the final game?
It turns out, it happens often enough.
The finals of both the 2011 (Ray Beierling winning over Eric Miltenburg) and 2012 London tournaments (Jason Beierling winning over Ray), as well as the 2012 World Championship final (Jon Conrad defeating Justin Slater) would all be decided with a sudden death round after the 3rd and final game was tied 4-4. In all three matches, the player with the hammer advantage was victorious.
No one was disputing the results of the matches, and generally all agreed it was exciting stuff, but people began to ponder if there was a better way. Only two years earlier a first round Wimbledon tennis match had made headlines by lasting 3 days and 11 hours of playtime. The length of the match was due to a rule that equalizes the number of games where each player has the advantage of serving. One of the players in the match, John Isner, has the second-highest percentage of service games won in the history of tennis, doing so 92% of the time. He also had a relatively poor winning percentage in return games, at around 10%, creating a perfect scenario for an extended match.
The Quinte Region Crokinole Club would be the first to come up with an idea to address crokinole’s hammer advantage, creating the Quinte Convention and running it at the 2012 Belleville Challenge, where it would be used immediately. The format was played as a best of 3 games but allowed any game to be tied 4-4. If after 3 games the players were tied with an equal number of games won and tied, then the match would be decided in successive 2-round mini-games. If one player managed a 4-0 or 3-1 win after each player received the hammer advantage for one round, then the match would be over. But if the score was 2-2, then another set of 2 rounds would be played. Both the semifinals of Jon Conrad vs Brian Cook, and Nathan Walsh vs Fred Slater would require 6 rounds of overtime crokinole to be played to determine a winner.
Around the same time Fred Slater came up with a format he dubbed the Wimbledon rule. It allowed the first two games of a best of 3 to be decided by a one-round tie-breaker, but if the final decisive game was tied 4-4, then successive 2-round mini-games would be utilized until a clear winner emerged.
Personally I greatly enjoyed both of these formats when they were introduced. I liked the idea of a thrilling close-fought battle on the crokinole board being stretched out a bit longer than you’d expect, like a thrilling tennis match or NHL overtime playoff game. But mostly I liked the idea of the equality the format brought to both players. If the hammer advantage would give one player a substantial 60-40 edge to win the match, then it made perfect sense to me to utilize a format that negates it.
But then we started to see a few matches where the Wimbledon and Quinte Convention formats were used to their fullest, and I became less enthused.
In the 2013 Belleville B division final, Clare Kuepfer and Phil Somers played the equivalent of 5-games of crokinole and roughly 40 minutes to decide the match. At the 2013 Ontario Doubles Championship, Conrad/Snyder played Johnston/Johnston in a first to 10 points match with a Wimbledon tiebreaker. The match was eventually won 18-16, thanks to the foresight of tournament organizer Ray Beierling who declared the match would switch to sudden death at 16-16. The match took over an hour to complete. The B division semifinals of the 2018 Ontario Singles Championship was a WCC rematch with Robert Bonnett and Jon Conrad. The first to 9 points match should have captured the full attention of the audience as the match was tied 8-8, but spectators drifted away from the board as the Wimbledon rounds extended on and on. Eventually Conrad would win by a score of 18-14 after playing the equivalent of two full matches.
Such marathons caused some headaches for tournament organizers, and the Wimbledon and Quinte Conventions eventually faded from use; the last time it was employed was the 2020 Hamilton final.
Even if the format was fairer, I started to wonder if it was really worth the extra time and waning of spectator interest. From my commentator experience, I feel there is great value in simplicity. Tell your viewer the game is first to 9 points and that’s easy to understand. Tell them it’s a best of 3 games where each game is first to 5 points and they’ll probably still understand. Tell them it’s best of 3 games where each is first to 5, but they stop if it’s 4-4, and then if after all 3 games they are tied because they tied each game, or each won one game and tied the other then they have to keep playing until . . .
You get the point. Not super simple to explain.
And in the simplicity also comes the excitement. Tell the viewer it’s one game, one round, one goal to win the championship, and everyone immediately understands the importance of it. Sports fans love the idea of Game 7 in the playoffs, or sudden death overtime. That really only leaves one question.
Even if the advantage of the hammer in a round is worth a 20% edge (60% vs 40%), that does not mean that the player with the hammer has a 20% better chance to the win when the match starts.
If the strength of the hammer is actually 60%, then a race to 9 points format gives the player with potentially one extra hammer a winning chance of 53% against an equally skilled opponent. A 6% edge.
When you extend the match format to something longer, such as the WCC format, the hammer advantage shrinks to about 51.5% vs 48.5% (a 3% edge). Even from a player perspective, such an edge seems negligible in my mind. And from an entertainment perspective, the advantage didn’t seem worth negating at the cost of the sudden death round excitement.
The crokinolereference database has the round-by-round scores from over 5,000 games, and it has information on which player/team had the hammer for 3,000 of those games.
From that data, the advantage of the hammer for one round is 55-45 for singles, and 52-48 for doubles.
(For all images below, clicking of them will access a pdf of higher resolution.)
I found this a little surprising, as the advantage comes in less than I thought it would be for singles, and the doubles result shows the hammer is even less important than in singles (although the sample size is much smaller, and thus the conclusion is less credible).
A 55-45 hammer advantage further shrinks the pre-match advantage in a race to 9 points down to 51.3%-48.7%, and in the WCC format down to 50.6%-49.4%.
I began to wonder if the result would be different if the two players matched up were of equal skill, or if one player was dominant over another. The thought occurred to me that if one player was much stronger than another, then maybe the hammer wouldn’t be an advantage at all since the stronger player may just win every round regardless. Perhaps the existence of these games was skewing the data to show the hammer being less important than it was when two players were of equal skill.
To test this I utilized the ELO ratings I’ve published on crokinolereference, and pulled out the difference in ELO ratings for each game. This reduced the sample size to only singles matches of roughly 2,000 games. I then put all the results into buckets. The first being cases when one player has an ELO rating 200 points below their opponent, the next when the ELO rating is between 150 and 200 points below their opponent, etc.
As you can see, the percentage points scored, both when a player shoots first and when a player has the hammer, increases as their ELO rating is more favourable compared to their opponent. Obviously this makes sense, and at least shows the ELO rating can be used to predict match results.
What is surprising is that the hammer edge remains pretty level regardless of the skill gap between players. Even between matches of equally skilled players, and matches with one dominant player, the advantage of the hammer compared to the disadvantage of shooting first is roughly the same.
A couple of recent Tracey Boards' social media posts also looked at the advantage of the hammer. Analyzing the games from the 2023 WCC revealed it was the case that actually less rounds were won with the hammer.
It got me wondering if there were any tournaments in the database that bucked the 10% hammer edge trend.
There are a couple of tournaments that show hammer advantages much less or more than 10%. However the sample sizes for these events isn’t too substantial.
As one last piece of analysis I pulled out the results for a select collection of players, curious to see if there was any players who might be more or less favoured with the hammer. I’ve highlighted some of the highs and lows below.
There are a few players who on either end of the high/low spectrum, but there’s no one who’s drastically far away from the average 10% hammer advantage.
The Tracey Boards' post later pointed to the opening round 20 race being a bigger component of which player would win the round. They also found that the player with the hammer more frequently wins the 20 race, which is logical since the player shooting first is more likely to miss first simply because they are the first to shoot.
I decided to dust off some undergraduate math knowledge and calculate the percentage chance of winning the 20 race under varying open 20 proficiency of two players.
The below chart shows the percentage chance that the player with the hammer wins the 20 race, in cases when the player shooting first scores open 20s at the percentages shown in the rows, and the player with the hammer scores open 20s at the percentages shown in the columns.
These probabilities are calculated by conditioning on two geometric probability distributions and assuming the round consists of 8 discs.
The cells where the two players have equal proficiency are highlighted, and shows the hammer’s chance of winning the 20 race is at least 57%, with the advantage improving as the 20 proficiency decreases or increases from 80% success.
I had actually calculated this chart about 10 years ago, and it was the basis for my reasoning thinking the hammer had a 60-40 advantage. It seems to me that players are scoring open 20s with success between 60% and 80%, so I figured the hammer is probably winning the 20 race and the round about 60% of the time. With a similar line of thinking I thought the hammer advantage in doubles would be even higher because it seems to me that open 20% success decreases in that discipline.
Of course there’s more to crokinole than just winning the 20 race.
I have decided to significantly reduce the amount of content I produce with CrokinoleCentre. More specifically I will no longer write post-tournament reports, and I will likely upload only a handful of videos each year.
I wanted to provide this advance notice to the crokinole community, in case anyone else feels compelled to pick up the baton.
I’m making this decision now because I’ve come to feel a weight of burden, purely of my own making, that I feel with performing these routine CrokinoleCentre tasks. Somewhere along the line I have convinced myself that it’s a necessity to publish a written report and every playoff video from every tournament I attend, and somewhere along the way I came to believe that delaying in any of these tasks was an act of laziness. In recent years I also came to be responsible for updating three other websites (that of the NCA, WCC and crokinolereference), all of which I wanted to do, so again there’s no one to blame but myself on that front.
The accumulation of all of this is that nowadays on bad days I feel annoyed and fatigued by the work, and even on good days I never feel a strong enthusiasm for it.
I’ve mentioned these feelings at times to other people, and I usually receive both positive and productive feedback, which praises the work I’ve done in the past and proposes solutions to current woes. However, mostly I just find the work tedious, which anyone with video editing or website experience can relate. I’ve done many things to increase efficiency, but it still takes me roughly 5 times the length of a video to complete the entire production, and it’s not really possible to share the workload across multiple editors because the video file sizes are too large to transfer. Meanwhile the tournament reports I write are somewhat formulaic in format, but still take a few hours to publish.
I’ve experienced all of these exact challenges before and for many years, but I find myself having less patience for them now. I used to chuckle when two players spontaneously selected a new location for their playoff match, after I had already framed my cameras perfectly to capture the match on a now empty board. It’s things like these that I’ve just grown sick of. I’m not quite sure of the reason, maybe it just comes with age.
I’ve also had it suggested to me that I monetize the videos, but money is not a motivator for me to do the work. I did do this briefly in 2017 and 2018 when a couple of videos went viral, and received about $3000 from it. It was nice to have, but after I used the funds to improve the CrokinoleCentre product (by purchasing another camera, a new editing software, and external hard drive), the videos were earning less than $100 per month and that to me was not enough to justify making the viewer experience worse. Even if the sum of money available increased, it has the potential to cause further tension as players and tournaments could rightfully claim some portion is duly owed to them.
I initially started making the crokinole videos because I wanted a video record of the World Championship match, and I was annoyed I couldn’t ever go back and watch Joe Fulop winning the title. I started the blog in the golden era of the medium, where thousands of well written and interesting blogs were available online to peruse. Mine was initially essentially a copy of a blog my brother wrote about his university cross country team.
But eventually CrokinoleCentre grew into a way for me to ensure that crokinole tournaments wouldn’t pass by and eventually be forgotten. I value the historic record and the ability to share stories about events years after they happened with people who were never there. Additionally it’s been nice to have people express that they’ve enjoyed a particular blog or video I’ve made. I’ve also taken joy from CrokinoleCentre work allowing people analyze and understand crokinole more. There used to be less than a handful of names that people recognized as strong crokinole players, and now there’s a long list. When I was in Hungary I was asked questions about dozens of Canadians that people enjoyed watching. It was heart-warming to know that I had played a part in making that connection.
Crokinole will probably always occupy a part of my idle mind. It used to be a joyful daydream from monotonous study or work, and it’s been fun pretending to be some reporter or columnist or commentator. But recently that part has been onerous; the cause of more work to be done, rather than some excitement to daydream about.
I definitely won’t be going anywhere. I’ll still be playing and volunteering, probably bring my camera to each tournament, and I’ll still make the odd video or blog (if no one else does it I’ll still ensure the championship matches are published at some point). But I want to free myself to do other things in crokinole I think I’d enjoy. “Taking a step back” from the limelight, but still doing my part in sustaining the game. I have accumulated a long list of ambitions, but like finishing your homework before playing video games, I’ve deferred these ambitions due to a feeling that I should finish the other routine stuff first. I don’t wish to defer them any longer.
There was excited chatter when Dale Henry published a list of abbreviated names registered for the 9th Turtle Island Crokinole Championship. Included in it was “Brian C” which was quickly deduced to be the 4-time World Champion Brian Cook, who last played an NCA event in 2015, but has continued his spectacular chronicles in crokinole with prestigious titles in Hungary and the UK since then.
Some players strategically altered their morning practice, eagerly occupying the seat opposite Cook when it opened up in order to get some warm-up games against him and scout his quality and style of play. While Cook is an established player, the local crokinole scene has changed enough that the majority of players in attendance had never played against him. Among them were pre-tournament favourites Connor Reinman and Andrew Hutchinson, and there was a great deal of interest among the crowd regarding how Cook’s level would compare to the recent World Championship finalists.
Dale Henry began the day welcoming the crokinole crowd of 43 strong back to the Tuscarora Nation House for the first time since 2019. He took time as well to note the passing of Chief Leo Henry, and his mother Carolyn “Care” Henry, who had both enthusiastically attended all eight previous editions of the tournament. Throughout the day funds were raised for cancer research, most notably with an engraved crokinole disc, and donated to the Center for Indigenous Cancer Research at Roswell Park.
The competitive division had 24 players, and it was a pretty strong field with only room for 8 in the afternoon A group. Ray Beierling had the top score of 63 points in 10 games, one ahead of Reinman and Hutchinson. Walsh scored the most 20s with 110, and finished with 53 points for 5th, behind Jeremy Tracey and ahead of Travis Keener.
Simon Dowrick scored 50 points for 7th; his score boosted by an 8-0 win he recorded against Brian Cook. But that didn’t stop Cook for taking the final spot in group A, with 48 points and 94 20s, just ahead of Jason Beierling’s 48 points and 81 20s. Cook and Jason Beierling met in the preliminary round and drew their game 4-4 as well, showing the margins for the cut-off of the top group were precariously slim.
To remain in contention for the tournament victory the players had to finish in the top 4 of the 8 player group A, so the common line of thinking was that an even score of 28 points would be right around the cut-off for the playoffs.
Hutchinson had a tremendous start and found himself at 28 points after only 5 of the 7 games. In those first 5 games he even had a 0-8 loss to Ray Beierling, but was buoyed by 8-0 wins over Reinman and Dowrick, and a 7-1 win over Tracey. He would finish first in the group with 38 points.
Ray Beierling lost his opening game to Travis Keener 6-2, but rebounded with that aforementioned win against Hutchinson. With 28 points going into the final game he cemented his playoff spot with an 8-0 win against Jeremy Tracey.
Brian Cook had a steady round and sat 4th or 5th in the standings throughout the entirety of the round. A final 4-4 draw against Hutchinson would give him 30 points for 3rd place.
The final playoff position came down to the last game with Reinman having the edge at 27 points, Tracey sitting right behind at 26, and Walsh further back at 22 points thanks to an 0-8 loss at the hands of Tracey. Ray Beierling eliminated Tracey with an 8-0 win in the last game, and Reinman almost met the same fate as he trailed Walsh 0-6, but Reinman got the final 2 points to finish with 29 points to Walsh’s 28 for the 4th playoff entry.
That setup semifinals that were rematches of the 2011 and 2023 World Championships, and in both cases the winners would repeat in Tuscarora. Ray Beierling trailed Brian Cook 2-6 in the race to 9 points, but started to chain open 20s together at the precise moment when Cook struggled make any open 20s, leading to a comeback 10-6 win for Beierling.
The Hutchinson vs Reinman semifinal was tense throughout. At 4-4 there was a late round 20 race, with Hutchinson missing the hammer open 20 shot to go down 4-6. Immediately after another late round 20 race saw Hutchinson miss his final shot as well, but Reinman botched a relatively routine takeout to instead tie the round to make the score 7-5, rather than a commanding 8-4. Hutchinson pushed the match to 7-7, but Reinman prevailed in the last round for a 9-7 win.
The championship game had a couple nice shots, but lacked the suspense and entertainment of the semifinals. Reinman had found his groove in 20s and was scoring comfortably. Beierling was also racking up a good number but couldn’t get his foot in the door and trailed 8-0. Beierling did prevent a shutout, but ultimately lost 10-2 as Reinman defended his 2019 Turtle Island victory and picked up his 7th NCA tournament win.
Connor Reinman took the top spot in the first event when crokinole returned from covid-19 to win the NCA Players Championship in June of 2022, in what was the beginning of a dream season for Reinman that included the NCA Tour Championship and a discussion that he may have supplanted Justin Slater as the best in the current edition of the game. All that remained was an elusive World Championship title, and Reinman earned that final jewel after a thrilling pair of playoff victories.
Planning for the 2023 World Crokinole Championship began as early as 2019, with the organizational committee meeting, as is tradition, 9 months prior to the next event. Registrations poured in for the 2020 tournament that looked set to be a third-straight year of the World Championships pushing the limits on the number of accepted entrants. When the pandemic led to the cancellation of the events from 2020-2022, many participants happily deferred their registrations, and when the 2023 tournament was officially announced yet more registrations piled in, ultimately leading to the tournament setting up a record 127 crokinole boards for the day. Among the registrants included four dedicated crokinole players/promoters:
The Competitive Doubles category had 54 teams in competition, the highest number since the Recreational Doubles division was added to the tournament, and it led to the cutoff to make the top 6 for the playoffs being extremely difficult. The preliminary round has consisted of 8 games since 2015 and the cutoff has ranged between 46 and 49 points each year, but this year 50 points was only enough ensure a 20s tiebreak for the final playoff spot.
The first time pairing of Connor Reinman and Jeremy Tracey didn’t have to worry about tiebreakers, as they finished first in the preliminary round with 56 points, and a tournament-preliminary-round-record of 123 20s. It was Reinman’s third doubles playoff appearance, and Tracey’s second. The 3-time World Champions of Justin and Fred Slater scored 52 points for the third seed, and 109 20s to be the only other team to score a century in the tournament. The Slaters entered the playoffs as the most accomplished team, with 8 prior playoff appearances.
The father-son team of Andrew Hartung, and 2005 World Champion Bruce Hartung, scored 55 points for the second seed, making the playoffs for the first time. The grandfather-grandson team of Josh Bechtel and Ray Kappes finished fourth in the preliminary round with 51 points. It was Ray Kappes’ ninth playoff, and Bechtel’s first, as all eight previous playoffs from Kappes came alongside Kevin Bechtel, with two third place finishes being their best showings.
The final playoff spots went to a pair of teams scoring 50 points and advancing via a 20s-tiebreak. Reid and Nolan Tracey made the playoffs for the second-time in a row, previously finishing in second in 2019, scoring 82 20s. 2017 champions, Clare Kuepfer and Nathan Walsh, nabbed the final playoff spot with 76 20s, making the playoffs for the sixth time in the last seven events; a feat only matched by the Beierlings.
Missing out on their first chance to make the top 6 playoffs were Dale Henry and Eric Miltenburg, who scored 50 points, but only managed 58 20s. They would ultimately finish 10th in the tournament, equaling their best ever World Championship finish. The defending champions, Jason and Ray Beierling missed by one point and a few 20s after scoring 49 points and 74 20s. This snapped a tournament record 7-year playoff streak and ended the Beierlings’ hopes of winning 3-straight World titles.
Also narrowly missing the playoffs were Jeff McKeen and Ron Reesor, who scored 48 points. Three first-time pairing cross-national teams, Jeremy Herrmann (USA) and Tyson Kuepfer (CAN), Garrett Tracey (CAN) and Magnus Rundström (SWE), and Ian Witt (UK) and Mark McCleary (USA) scored 47, 47 and 46 points respectively. Rundström and Witt just missed a chance to be the first European to make the playoffs at the World Championships. Cathy Kuepfer and Bev Vaillancourt also got quite close to the playoffs, scoring 46 points and ultimately finishing 12th for their best ever World Championship result.
The Doubles playoff format at the World Championships has remained unchanged since 2001, and consists of a 5-game round robin among the top 6 teams. Often the margin to become World Champion is a small one. The Slaters and Traceys got out to an early lead, both having registered 12 points after two games to sit tied for first, with a three point gap back to Kuepfer/Walsh, six points to the Hartungs, and seven and eight points to Reinman/Tracey and Bechtel/Kappes.
The Slaters and Traceys met for a first place battle in game three. The Slaters were better on open 20s during the game and it was only a last shot ricochet-20 by Reid Tracey that salvaged a tie in one of the first three rounds to give the Slaters a 5-1 lead. The nerves of the championship stage began to show in a wild fourth round in which the Slaters almost managed a big comeback before the Traceys clinched it. However it was the Slaters moving into a sole first place position with the 5-3 win.
Kuepfer and Walsh weren’t able to make up ground, only managing two ties and 6-2 loss in their final games to finish with 19 points for fourth place. After game three the Traceys also couldn’t collect enough points to challenge for the title, tying Kuepfer/Walsh and losing 6-2 to Bechtel/Kappes to finish third with 21 points.
In the third game Reinman and Tracey mounted a charge with an 8-0 win over the Hartungs to move four points back of the Slaters, just ahead of their fourth game matchup with the Slaters. In that game Reinman/Tracey had a comfortable two 20 lead in round one evaporate and the Slaters had a tough hanger-20 chance to win the round, but it was missed for 2-0 for Reinman/Tracey. Nearly the same happened in the second round where a three 20 advantage for Reinman/Tracey was lost, and only salvaged by a double-takeout-20 by Reinman to lead 4-0.
The third round came down to a pair of hanger-20 chances. Tracey missed his chance, and Justin Slater followed up to make his to get the Slaters on the board at 4-2. The fourth round was won on the stoicism of Fred Slater, who went 4-for-4 on open 20s, and with it the Slaters maintained a four point advantage going into the final playoff game.
Reinman and Tracey won their last game 6-2 to finish with 23 points and second place, as the Slaters’ 4-4 tie against the Hartungs was enough for 25 points and the 2023 World Crokinole Championship.
It was the sixth time since 2011 that 25 points was the winning score of the doubles playoffs (the lowest ever recorded), and it was the third time that the Slaters managed to win with 25 points. They were the only team in the playoffs to not lose a game, managing three ties with wins of 8-0 against the Hartungs and 5-3 against the Traceys.
This is the fourth World Championship for the Slaters (their previous wins coming in 2013, 2014 and 2016), and it moves them into a tie with Jon Conrad for the third-most doubles victories at the Worlds, only trailing the Beierlings.
100 players entered the competitive division, the most since 2010. The preliminary round decides the 20s champion along with the top 16 players advancing to the playoffs. The points cutoff to make the playoffs ended up being the highest in a decade as 57 points were needed to make the top 16. Only from 2008-2010 has such a score been required, when 58, 57 and 58 points were the cutoffs respectively in those years. That was bad news for Nolan Tracey, who scored 57 but lost out on a 20s tiebreak, and for Mike McTague, Clare Kuepfer and Eric Miltenburg, who just missed out by a couple of points. Andrew Hartung and Fred Slater ended up three points out, with Reuben Jongsma and Philip Ware four points out.
The battle for the 20s was pretty interesting, with five players meeting or exceeding 100 in the 20 count (the most players who have ever done this at the World Championships). James Medway and Ray Kappes scored 100 each for their first ever centuries at the Worlds. Ron Langill scored 110, which is the eighth-most 20s ever scored in the preliminary round at the Worlds, but it was only enough for third on the day. Ray Beierling scored 114 (fifth-best preliminary score) but it was also not enough, as Connor Reinman racked up 127 for the 20s crown. The win is Reinman’s first 20s title, and the first time since 2008 that someone other than Ray Beierling and Justin Slater won the crown. The mark of 127 is the third-best preliminary round score in the tournament, behind Beierling’s 131 in 2014, and Slater’s 142 in 2012.
This was the composition of the pools for the playoffs. Pool A:
Pool B:
In Pool A action, Justin Slater moved into a solid position to make the playoffs when he scored an 8-0 win against the only other previous world champion in the group. The 2005 champion, and 2007 runner-up, Bruce Hartung managed a very respectable showing in his first crokinole tournament since 2009, finishing fourth in the pool with 27 points. Reid Tracey was in the hunt for the final four, but lost each of his last three games against Jeremy Tracey, Justin Slater and Matt Brown to ultimately miss out.
The critical matchup occurred in game 6 when Matt Brown played Jeremy Tracey, with the two of them sitting 2nd and 3rd at the time. Matt Brown won the matchup 6-2 and won his final game 8-0 to seal the deal. With it, Brown scored 39 points to nab first place in the pool, with Justin Slater at 38 points for second. Jeremy Tracey gave Slater his only defeat in the pool with a 6-2 win in the last game, but his 32 points was only enough for third in the pool, outside of the playoff cutoff.
In Pool B Connor Reinman was a runaway freight train. Already in first place he scored an 8-0 win over Ray Beierling in game four, which relegated Beierling from third to fifth in the group. At that point it seemed the battle for the second playoff spot would come down to Andrew Hutchinson and Jon Conrad, but Ron Langill put on an incredible late charge. Langill only had 10 points after four games, but racked up wins of 6-2, 8-0 and 6-2 to triple his score, and end up at 30 points.
Meanwhile, Conrad and Hutchinson drew the game against each other 4-4, and then both only managed a 3-5 loss to Reinman, and a 4-4 tie to Ray Kappes in their final two games. The end result would be 30 points for Conrad, tying him with Langill, and 32 points for Hutchinson who got the final playoff spot.
Looking at the playoff cutoffs is always interesting, especially when a score of 32 is good enough for one player (Andrew Hutchinson), and not enough for another (Jeremy Tracey). Historically, 32 points has only been enough to qualify for the playoffs about 20% of the time at the World Championships. Although there could be some karma at play, as Hutchinson still holds the record for the highest ever round of 16 score that did not result in a playoff spot, when he scored 36 points in 2018.
Connor Reinman finished miles ahead in Pool B, with 43 points; tied for the 3rd-highest round of 16 score at the Worlds with Justin Slater’s 2012 and Joe Fulop’s 2001 score, only behind Slater’s 2014 score of 44 and Nathan Walsh’s 2014 score of 45. Reinman did set a round of 16 record by scoring 104 20s, beating Justin Slater’s old record of 94 in 2014.
So the stage was set for the semifinals. Justin Slater was the only prior champion who advanced to the final 4, marking the 19th straight year that the final 4 would be contested with at least one prior winner. For Slater it was his 8th trip to the top 4, and he had made the finals in all previous 7 appearances. Connor Reinman was the next most experienced player, with this being his 3rd final 4, but he had not made the finals in either previous appearance. After Matt Brown’s 4th place in 2014 this was his second trip to the final 4, and he was looking to make his first World and NCA final, while for Andrew Hutchinson it was his first final 4 appearance.
With Brown having surpassed Slater for top spot in Pool A, the semifinals were set with Andrew Hutchinson playing Matt Brown, and the two pre-tournament favourites, Connor Reinman and Justin Slater, playing in the other semifinal.
It was Brown and Hutchinson’s first elimination game meeting, and neither looked too comfortable as both struggled to score open 20s, and missed a few hanger-20 or short ricochet-20 chances. In the first game Hutchinson was leading 4-2 and had the lead in the round until Brown’s follow-through-20 attempt got knocked into the 20 hole thanks to the actions of a damaged disc. Hutchinson looked calm when it happened, but did take an extra pause before his next shot, and recouped to score back-to-back open 20s to tie the round and win the first game 5-3.
Play in game two was much improved, with both players scoring open 20s in succession and the game was tied at 2-2. In the third round Hutchinson had the hammer but Brown managed to keep two discs on in the 15 without allowing a double opportunity for six straight shots. Hutchison played patiently and ultimately settled for a tie to make it 3-3. Hutchinson won the fourth round when he made a touch-20 and Brown hogged his next open-20 shot, giving Hutchinson a 5-3, 5-3 semifinal victory.
Connor Reinman and Justin Slater were meeting for the third time, having previously traded victories with Slater winning in the 2018 Ontario finals, and Reinman winning at the 2023 Elmira semifinals. While touted as a 20-scorer Slater’s key to success for the last several years has been superior board-play, even when matched or surpassed in open-20 shooting. The first game saw the opposite of that with Slater stronger on open-20s, but Reinman more than made up for it. Reinman scored a couple of follow-through 20s to draw level, and then in the fourth round he forced Slater into going for a double-takeout that resulted in Slater scoring a 20 for Reinman, and Reinman taking the first game 5-3.
In game two Slater had a 3-1 lead, and the advantage early in the third round to threaten to win the game. Slater missed a heavy-hanger-20, which Reinman then converted, and then the two players traded 5 open-20s each to tie the round for 4-2. Slater had one follow-through-20 chance to win the game in the fourth round, but missed it and it was tied 4-4 with Slater to have the hammer in the fifth round. Reinman won the 20-race to open the round, and Slater patiently traded takeouts looking for an opening, but none came. Slater was forced to go for a takeout-20 that might have been impossible to extend the match, but missed and Reinman had won the match 5-3, 6-4.
In the 3rd place match, Slater won game one 6-2 after forcing Brown into attempting a triple on this final shot to keep the game alive. In the second game Slater continued to be better on open-20s, but Brown put him under some pressure by never erroring on a takeout and frequently getting multiple discs on the board, but Slater was up to the task, winning the second game 5-1 and taking 3rd place.
That setup a championship match between Connor Reinman and Andrew Hutchinson. It was the first time the championship had been contested by two players who had never previously been to the finals since 2005, and only the fourth time ever with the other two occurrences being in the first two years of the tournament’s history.
Reinman had won all three previous meetings, 11-5 in the 2019 Turtle Island final, 9-1 in the 2022 NCA Players semifinal, and 10-0 in the 2022 Owen Sound final. The most memorable match of the three being Reinman’s 20-barrage at the Players Championship when he made 23 of 24 open-20s.
But it was Hutchinson who was stronger on the open-20s, and Reinman was under pressure. Thankfully Reinman was already stuffing the highlight-reel of the match in game one, when he made a follow-through-20 and a long ricochet-20 on back-to-back shots. The first game went to the fifth round tiebreaker, where Hutchinson was still better on open-20s, going 4-for-4 to win the first game 6-4.
Hutchinson threatened to put the match on its last legs early, using a bounce-back-20 for a 2-0 lead, and winning a 20-race in the following round. But Reinman made a tight ricochet-20 to level the 20-count and Hutchinson finally missed an open 20 on his last shot to make it 2-2. The pressure of the match was relieved briefly when Hutchinson left a hanger-20 that was converted on the opening shot of the third round and Reinman led 4-2. And then Reinman caught a 20s hot streak, going 6-for-6 in the next round to win the second game 6-2.
That pushed the match into a decisive third game, the 5th time in a row, and 9th time in the last 12 years, that the World Championship would need a third game. The shooting in the third game was marvellous. Hutchinson stretch to his right to manufacture a takeout-20 where most players would think only a follow-through was possible, and led 2-0. Reinman then made what can be described as a hybrid follow-through-rebound-20 in the second round, in what was the most technically difficult shot of the match, to tie things at 2-2.
A keen eye would observe a tactic from Reinman in the third round. Hutchinson missed long on the opening 20, leaving a shot in which most top players would attempt a roll-away-takeout when they had the lead. Reinman, as he had in some games earlier in the day, took on additional risk and went for the follow-through-20, making it and moving ahead 4-2, to move one point away from the world title.
Reinman was first to miss in the fourth round, but almost immediately made a long rebound 20 to draw even, leaving his disc hanging heavily over the 20-hole as the crowd audibly gasped. Hutchinson made his most iconic and under-stated shot, leaning to his right to make the roll-away-takeout. Hutchinson then successfully maneuvered the play to the outside of the board. Reinman attempted a couple shots to come back into the middle but finally surrendered by peeling on his second-last shot. The 20 count was tied with Reinman having one disc left, and Hutchinson having two, but disastrously Hutchinson’s open-20 was left short as a heavy-hanger.
The crowd was gripped in silence, and Hutchinson stared at the ceiling, as Reinman tried to steady himself for a hanger-20 that would make him World Champion. He took the shot, made the takeout and the 20, and fist pumped as his dream had been realized.
The crowd applauded handily as the two combatants embraced, and Connor Reinman became 12th different person to win the World Crokinole Championships, and the first to carry a non-Canadian citizenship.
Connor Reinman’s crokinole story dates backs many years; he first played cues at the 2010 World Championships, and can even be seen in the background of some CrokinoleCentre footage from matches in those years. He first became known on the crokinole scene as a commentator on CrokinoleCentre, and then later emerged as a top player in 2017; as his surprise 3rd place finish at the 2017 World Championships was over-shadowed by Bonnett’s victory that year. Even though his tournament attendance was sporadic due simply to location, it was clear quickly that he was rising the ranks.
But before victory came disappointment, and his biggest was the 2019 World Championship semifinal thriller that he lost to Darren Carr, when many would have expected that year’s playoffs to come down to a Reinman v Slater final. Along with that he had the earlier disappointment in the day, finishing second by a mere two points in the doubles competition, while having had a similar fate befall him in 2019.
But when crokinole returned from covid, Reinman would not be denied. Victories at the NCA Players Championship, Owen Sound and Elmira. His first NCA Tour championship for 2022-2023, now backed his first World Championship in 2023.
The Ontario Singles Crokinole Championship has been a marquee event in the crokinole circuit for over 40 years, while the National Crokinole Association Tour attained prominence immediately after it was formed in 2009. Both competitions have been won by the greats of the game, and on May 6th in Elmira Josh Carrafiello joined the prestigious list of Ontario winners, while Connor Reinman joined the coveted list of NCA Tour Champions.
56 players arrived in Elmira (34 in the competitive, 22 in recreational) to compete for the Ontario title and to get one last tune-up before the World Championships. The event was the final stop on the 2022-2023 NCA Tour, and three players were in competition for the title. Connor Reinman had the lead coming into the event, as he had much of the year, and could only be surpassed by Ray Beierling (needing at least a trip to the finals) and Jason Beierling (needing a tournament victory).
Ray Beierling’s Tour hopes were dashed after the preliminary round. He scored 44 points in 10 games for 6th in his pool, knocking him into the B Pool in the afternoon. He was surpassed by Robert Bennett, Kris Flossbach, Jeremy Tracey, and Josh Carrafiello. Carrafiello grabbed the last qualifying spot from the group with 50 points, ahead of Jon Conrad’s 47.
Jason Beierling’s chances remained intact when he scored 58 points in 11 games for second in his group, behind Reinman’s tournament leading 69 points. Ray Kappas also advanced with 58 points, and was joined by Clare Kuepfer who got 50 points, just ahead of Peter Carter (49) and Reid Tracey (47).
The third competitive pool was led by Ron Langill, Nolan Tracey and Andrew Hutchinson. Tom Johnston advanced as well with 45 points in 10 games ahead of Nathan Walsh’s 42 and Jeff McKeen’s 40.
The Recreational division was also one to watch as the recreational side of the NCA Tour was up for grabs. Vuth Vann needed a strong showing to finish ahead of the emerging Grant Flick, and he was off to a good start, grabbing the top seed heading into the playoffs. Flick just missed the playoffs with 42 points in 10 games for 5th, as Julie Bonnett-Woodley scored 44 for 4th. In the semifinals though Bonnett-Woodley would defeat Vann, while Kevin Ranney defeated David Stokoe in the other semifinal. Ranney claimed the recreational division with a 10-6 win in the finals over Bonnett-Woodley. Vann would finish in 3rd place, but his 137 tour points weren’t enough, as Grant Flick scored 138 and won the 2022-2023 Recreational NCA Tour.
Shifting back to the competitive division, Mark Gallas impressed in the afternoon C pool, first defeating Ab Leitch 10-6, then defeating Bob Jones (who eliminated Darren Carr 10-8 in the other semifinal) by a score of 9-7. Ray Beierling was in fine form in the afternoon, getting the top seed in the B pool into the playoffs, and then proceeding to win 10-4 over Nathan Walsh and 10-6 over Reid Tracey. Walsh defeated Roy Campbell 10-6 for third.
The A Pool action saw an extremely large gap emerge between the playoff contenders and the rest of the field. A whopping 12 points separated Carrafiello in 4th from Clare Kuepfer in 5th. Connor Reinman earned the top seed at 70 points in 11 games, and scored 148 20s. The 20s score was almost an Ontario Championships record, good enough for 3rd all-time and just 4 20s back of Nathan Walsh’s record from 2013. Andrew Hutchinson was the second seed with 65 points, Jeremy Tracey (making his 7th top 4 appearance of the season) was the third seed with 58 points, followed by Carrafiello with 57.
With Jason Beierling finishing 7th and failing to make the playoffs, Connor Reinman’s maiden NCA Tour title was sealed, but undoubtedly he was looking to defend his 2019 Ontario Singles Championship.
Both semifinals were tight and tense affairs. Hutchinson and Tracey played a meticulous match. The decisive moment may have come when Tracey scored a 20 for Hutchinson in the final round when trailing 8-6. Tracey did fight back to level the round, but Hutchinson only needed a tie and clinched in by making his last open 20 for a 9-7 win.
While one semifinal ended with the crokinole version of an own goal, the other semifinal began with one when Reinman scored a 20 for Carrafiello in the first round. But that round would also end in a tie when Reinman made a follow-through 20 on his last shot. From 5-1 down Reinman reeled off 6 points for a 7-5 lead, and was in position to win the match in the 7th round, but a missed takeout opened the door for Carrafiello who took advantage to tie the match at 7-7, and then win it in the next round for a 9-7 match victory.
The 3rd place match saw the 2022-2023 NCA Tour nearly end as it had began, with Reinman facing Tracey in a rematch of the NCA Players Championship last June. Reinman won that match in Wilmot, and in Elmira he came back from down 8-0 to win 10-8 to finish 3rd.
That left the Ontario Championship match between two players who still actively play cues. It was Hutchinson’s 9th finals appearance in a singles event on the NCA Tour, and his first at the Ontario Singles Championship. For Carrafiello it was his first ever fingers final or top 4 appearance.
Carrafiello looked unfazed in his first-time finals appearance and was largely error-free in the early rounds. Hutchinson hadn’t found an open-20 rhythm and had a couple takeout errors that led to Carrafiello having an 8-2 lead in the race to 11. Another takeout error from Hutchinson early in the 6th round gave Carrafiello the chance to keep numerous discs in play behind the pegs, and he prevented Hutchinson from having a 20-chance for a 10-2 lead.
With his back against the wall Hutchinson’s play improved and he somewhat comfortably won the next two rounds to stay alive at 10-6. But Carrafiello won the 20-race to start round 7 and again had discs on his side of the board. Hutchinson missed two chances at a double peel to force play back into the middle, and Carrafiello clinched the match with a 12-6 victory.
The win is an impressive one for Josh Carrafiello who became the 13th different person to win the Ontario Singles Championship dating back to 1980, joining the list of crokinole legends like Dan Shantz, Leo Gaessler and Joe Fulop, and the modern-day titans of Justin Slater, Brian Cook, Ray Kappes and Connor Reinman. Carrafiello has chosen to play cues at the upcoming 2023 World Championships; the WCC schedule unfortunately robbing us of a chance to see one of the top players in the fingers division.
Connor Reiman was declared the 2022-2023 NCA Tour Champion after a very impressive season, winning three events (NCA Players, Owen Sound and Elmira) and being the only player to make the top 4 in every event played (7 in total). He becomes the 6th different winner of the NCA Tour after its 13th season.
Ray Beierling finished 2nd on the Tour, having also won three events (Ontario Doubles, US Open Doubles and Chatham) but only having a 3rd place against Reinman’s additional 2nd place finish. This is Beierling’s seventh 2nd place finish on the NCA Tour, to go along with two Tour victories.
Andrew Hutchinson rounded out the NCA Tour podium with one win (Belleville), two 2nd places (Owen Sound and Ontario Doubles) and a 3rd place (NCA Players). The 3rd place finish on the Tour is Hutchinson’s second-best Tour finish after his runner-up performance in 2019-2020.
So that concludes the 2022-2023 NCA Tour. A Tour which returned crokinole from the covid-19 slumber, and pivoted quickly to make up for missing tournaments to include 4 tournaments on the NCA Tour for the first time; in Wilmot at the NCA Players Championship, in Elmira for the Elmira Winter Classic, in Chatham for the Frosty Flick, and in Voorheesville for the US Open.
What’s next for the NCA remains to be seen. An Annual General Meeting has been called for June 14th which should shine more light on what the future holds; more info available here.
But competitive crokinole has not yet met it’s crescendo, as the World Crokinole Championships returns this year in Tavistock for its 22nd edition.