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 Bay Area Dragons Take First Place in the 250 Meter Sprint Race
By John Herrera
TEMPE -
After being beaten from pillar to post all weekend long in the 500 meter
sprints by the likes of LARD, San Diego, Space Dragons, and Wasabi, the Bay Area
Dragons picked themselves off of the canvas and exacted some revenge on their
Southern California foes as BAD sprinted its way to victory in the 250 meter
sprint championship. It was yet another
first place finish in an event that has become BAD's specialty. The victory was a much needed one, as it
started the march to Penang on a very positive note.
In making
its third visit to Arizona in the last four years, the Bay Area Dragons brought
a premier mixed, one premier open, and a women's master's crew to the desert to
compete in a race that has become very competitive thanks to the rise of the
Southern California teams who are able to get all of their strongest paddlers
to make the short trek to Arizona.
The first
race of the weekend featured the premier mixed crew going up against the local
MCC Altier Thunder Dragons and the Los Angeles Racing Dragons, otherwise known
as LARD. BAD and LARD battled it out for
first place as strokes Sidney Tao
and Andy Wong set a blistering pace
which was backed up with authority by Jai
Dahr, Judy Wong, Armaan Vachani, Adrian Crawford, and Kathy
Phipps. Unfortunately BAD would fall
to a very hard paddling LARD team at the finish. BAD would finish second in the first race,
mere seconds behind LARD. The Altier
Thunder Dragons would cross the finish line about ten minutes later.
The second
race featured the open crew. For the
open crew, BAD combined with Dragon Max, a dragon boat team from Alameda
whose claim to fame is that they paddled a dragon boat out to Angel
Island and then spent the night
there. The combination of Dragon Max and
BAD formed what would be affectionately known as "Maxy BAD." After what seemed like a one hundred year
wait at the marshalling area, BAD would finish second again, this time behind San
Diego and ahead of Space Dragons.
In race 3,
the women's masters' team faced off against Wasabi in a World Club Crew
Championship preview. BAD, behind the
valiant efforts of Angie Toy, Aggie Quan, and Sue Gok paddled their hearts out, but finished second behind
Wasabi.
The mixed
crew looked to get back on track in their second race of the day against UC San
Diego and Wasabi Grand Masters. The race
went down to the wire but BAD would again come up short as they finished second
behind UC San Diego. I believe Wasabi
grand masters are still on their way to the finish line, but hey, they're
grandmasters. What did you expect?
The final
race of the day featured "Maxy BAD" against the Killer Guppies and
the up and coming Space Dragons. It
appeared from all vantage points that BAD was on its way to its first victory
of the weekend as Kurt Berger, Justin Lien, Norm Gok, and Tony Lee
powered "Maxy BAD" down the race course. One hundred meters remained when the Killer
Guppies lost control of their boat. With
the Guppies looking like they were in ramming speed mode and their boat just
inches away from causing a violent collision, helmsman Steve Yan pulled off a minor miracle by swerving away to avoid
catastrophe and quickly recovering to put "Maxy BAD" back on a
straight path to the finish line.
Unfortunately, the time lost in avoiding the collision would cost "Maxy
BAD" the race as they would finish the first day with yet another second
place finish behind Space Dragons and ahead of the Killer Guppies who steered
their way into a giant cactus. Rescue
efforts are still under way.
Despite the
tough luck of day one racing, the BAD mixed crew finished third overall with an
average race time if 2:15.2, good enough to be third overall, just two seconds
behind San Diego, and one second
behind Water's Edge. BAD was even
leading the mighty LARD after the first day of racing.
The tough
luck would continue on the second and final day of racing. After an early morning wake up call, BAD once
again found the Southern California powerhouse LARD
waiting for them in the marshalling area for the semifinal. Many were confused as to why BAD would have
to race LARD in the semis instead of the final.
The reason was because LARD faltered in its second race on Saturday
after having defeated BAD in the first race, giving them a worse average time
than BAD and thus sending them to BAD's semi final heat. USC and Wasabi were also hoping to crash the
party. BAD got tremendous efforts from Kiran Dahliwai, Phoi Trinh, Felicia Ordaz,
and Tiffany Su as they quickly
surged ahead of USC and Wasabi. Gary Phipps, Louise Chu, Judy Wong and Cecilia Pang paddled their hearts out, but alas, it wasn't enough
to overpower LARD's superiority, and BAD would fall two seconds short of
advancing to the finals.
Despite the
mixed team's early exit in the 500, all was not lost as the women's masters and
"Maxy Bad" still had opportunities to bring home some hardware. In the open semifinals, "Maxy BAD"
again would find itself in an ultra competitive heat that included Team Pinoy
and world class opponent San Diego. To advance to the finals "Maxy BAD"
would have to place first or second, which would be a challenging task against
such stiff competition. Tim 'I've spent more time in the water
than most fish' Lee, Dan 'the ageless wonder' Folk, and Gold's Gym natives Luis Bacayo and Nolan Louie were huge as they ripped through Arizona's cactus
water. At the 250 meter mark "Maxy BAD"
had put Team Pinoy in its rear view as they matched San
Diego stroke for stroke. At the 350 mark the Maxy part of "Maxy
BAD" kicked it into gear as Rodger
Garfini, Edmund Lee, and Kim Vaulkner (not to be confused with
author William Faulkner) helped give "Maxy BAD" the lead. "Maxy BAD's" best race of the day
would end in a close finish with "Maxy BAD" coming in second behind San
Diego.
"Maxy BAD's" victory over Team Pinoy meant a birth in the
finals and a chance for hardware.
The women
quickly followed suit with their best race of the day as they dropped a good
old fashioned BAD women 'chicks with sticks' butt kicking on the Killer Guppies
and the Los Angeles Pink Dragons. It was
BAD's first win of the weekend and it gave the cactus loving natives of Arizona
a chance to witness world cup caliber dragon boat racing. Val Ogi
and Wanda Fong helped BAD shred the
competition in a race that will be repeated several times this season on the
road to Penang.
The finals
got off to inauspicious beginning when the race organizers flipped the schedule
so that the women's final came first.
The scheduling snafu left "Maxy BAD" hung out to dry as they
had to endure a two hour wait in the hot desert sun. The moment of truth would finally arrive, but
first, "Maxy BAD" was treated to an exciting women's final which saw
the women's masters' team blaze their way to a third place finish. Hardware would be the order of the day for
the women's team as they took home the bronze.
It was an impressive feat for the Penang bound
crew, and the strong showing in Arizona
reflected all of the diligent work that BAD's hardest working crew has put in
since beginning preparation to go to Penang.
Finally,
the open final was ready to be run.
After two hours of withering in the sun, "Maxy BAD" got the
fortunate break of being able to load the boat, paddle to shade below the
bridge, and wait while our friendly rivals from San Diego waited at the
marshalling area for their boat and then had to paddle out to the start line
and then race just moments after the long paddle out to the start line. The odds makers had to like "Maxy BAD's"
chances against an aging, dehydrated, and tired San Diego in lane one. In lane two, LARD was ready to roll; that is,
LARD mixed. That's right; LARD opted to
go with its mixed crew in the open final so you had to like "Maxy
BAD" in that match up. Lane four
featured a very beatable Space Dragons team.
The race began with all four teams neck and neck. BAD was going strong, but then seemed to run
out of gas. "I called a blend and
the next thing I know, LARD was just gone," said Steve Yan. With 100 meters
left in the race, gold and silver were out of the question. It came down to how hard "Maxy BAD"
was willing to fight for the bronze as the Space Dragons were nipping at "Maxy
BAD's" heels for third place. "Maxy
BAD" showed tremendous heart in not letting the disappointment of getting buried
by an old team and a mixed team get them down.
Instead, "Maxy BAD" would win the bronze medal thanks to a
furious finish that would leave Space Dragons in "Maxy BAD's" wake.
At long
last it was time for the BAD special: the 250 meter sprints. For the past five years BAD has simply been
unbeatable in this event as a veritable smorgasbord of world class dragon boat
teams have been defeated by BAD in this race.
Arizona would be no
different. BAD mixed things up for the
250 as the women's masters and the BAD portion of "Maxy BAD" came
together for a little fusion action. The
result: instant chemistry baby! BAD's
250 meter heat featured Space Dragons and, yes that's right, LARD. This time it would be BAD's turn to
shine. Simmy Lee, one of the strongest women paddlers on BAD whose time
during time trials was better than a lot of the men on BAD, was a welcome
addition on the 250 crew. Her inspired
paddling helped BAD jump out to an early lead on its Southern
California rivals. It would
be a lead that BAD would never relinquish.
BAD blew through the race course at a blistering pace as every member on
board was paddling in a fit of controlled rage, fury and chaos. Despite an intense headwind, BAD crossed the
finish line in first place with a tremendous time of 1:12 to claim the 250 meter sprint championship.
The painful
memory of BAD's early exit in the 500 meter premier mixed competition was
erased with BAD's dramatic victory in the 250 meter race. With this dominating performance, BAD proved
that it belongs on the world stage of dragon boat racing. Suddenly, in the span of 1:12, the road to Penang got a lot
brighter.
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