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No Quidditch Cup tournament was held in Year 4 (''Goblet of Fire'') because of the [[Triwizard Tournament]] being hosted by Hogwarts.
Only Quidditch World Cup tournament was conducted in Year 4 (''Goblet of Fire'') because of the 2000 to 2001 [[Triwizard Tournament]] being hosted by Hogwarts.


====Year 5====
====Year 5====

Revision as of 18:11, 3 July 2010

Quidditch is a fictional sport developed by J. K. Rowling for the Harry Potter book series. It is described as an extremely rough, but very popular, semi-contact sport, played by wizards and witches around the world. Matches are played between two teams of seven players riding flying broomsticks, using four balls and six elevated ring-shaped goals. In the Harry Potter universe, Quidditch holds a fervent following similar to the position football (soccer) holds as a globally popular sport.

The sport is featured in every Harry Potter book except for the seventh, because Harry Potter is occupied in fighting Voldemort. Harry plays an important position for his house team at Hogwarts. Regional and international competitions are mentioned throughout the series. In Goblet of Fire, Quidditch is cancelled for the Tri-Wizard Tournament, but Harry and the Weasleys attend the Quidditch World Cup. In addition, Harry uses his Quidditch skills to capture a golden egg from a dragon (in the Tri-Wizard Tournament), to capture a flying key in Philosopher's Stone, and on two key occasions in Deathly Hallows—getting hold of Ravenclaw's Diadem, and during the final fight with Voldemort—the "unerring skill of the Seeker" is vitally useful to him in snatching an object out of the air.

The sport has been adapted under the name of Muggle Quidditch or simply "Quidditch" to the real world. Since at least 2004, Harry Potter fans have played ball games resembling the Harry Potter sport. In the United States, teams from more than 200 colleges are affiliated with the International Quidditch Association and play tournaments.

Players and equipment

Pitches

Quidditch matches are played on (or rather over) an oval-shaped, 500 feet (150 m) long and 180 feet (55 m) wide pitch, with a small central circle approximately 10 feet (3.0 m) in diameter. At each end stand three hooped goal posts, each at a different height: one at 30 ft (9.1 m), one at 40 ft (12 m), and one at 50 ft (15 m), comprising the scoring area. There is also a line that shows mid-field, which is 180 ft (55 m). Quidditch fields have white shaded areas around the goalposts, to mark the scoring area and the bounds where keepers must stay. These are on very few Quidditch fields. Since Quidditch is an aerial sport, Quidditch pitches are shown to feature spectator seating at high vantage points, either in towers (such as at Hogwarts) or in a fully-encircling platform, and the "top box" is considered the most prestigious place for a spectator to be seated. The British stadium that is shown for the 1994 Quidditch World Cup in the film version of Goblet of Fire is of this latter style, which appears similar to modern football or athletics stadia, albeit that the seating continues to curve upwards beyond the vertical, almost enclosing the pitch. Both the Hogwarts and World Cup pitches have been shown turfed with grass. The surface is used primarily for launching off at the beginning of the game, and on occasion for falling onto when players are dismounted from their brooms. Seekers, who sometimes fly close to the pitch surface, can be tricked into crashing into the surface occasionally at great speed (when tricked into doing so by the opposing seeker, it is known as the Wronski feint).

Balls

File:Quidditch balls.jpg
The Quaffle and Bludgers as seen in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone. The Snitch is held behind the Hogwarts crest in the center of the lid.

Quaffle

The Quaffle is spherical in shape (although it is shown with four large dimples in the films, appearing more as a tetrahedron), bright red in colour, and approximately 12 inches (30 cm) in diameter. It is explained in Quidditch Through the Ages that the Quaffle is enchanted to fall very slowly through the air when dropped to prevent players having to continuously dive to retrieve it. The backstory of Quidditch explains that the red colour was instituted to create a stronger contrast between the Quaffle and mud. The Quaffle is also enchanted to make it easy to grip with only one hand. The Quaffle is depicted in the books as being "bright scarlet" in colour.

Bludgers

The two Bludgers are spherical, approximately 10 inches (25 cm) in diameter, and made of iron. They are described as being bewitched to fly without any visible means of propulsion, although they do retain inertia, which makes them unable to change speed of direction swiftly. Their purpose in the game is as an obstacle: they fly around attempting to hit players off their brooms indiscriminately. While it is possible to enchant them to seek out specific targets, as Dobby the house elf had done in Harry's second year,Template:HP2 it is illegal in the rules of the game.

Golden Snitch

The Golden Snitch, often referred to as simply the Snitch, is a small golden ball the approximate size of a walnut (roughly 1 inch (2.5 cm) in diameter). In the cartoons, the wings on the Snitch are white. The winged Snitch is enchanted to hover and dart around the pitch, avoiding capture while remaining within the boundaries of the playing area. Each team has a designated Seeker (most seekers are the lightest, fastest, and smallest players on their team), whose only task is to capture the Snitch. The team who catches the Snitch scores 150 points, and strictly speaking, only the capture of the Snitch will end the game. (However Quidditch Through The Ages describes an instance in which the team captains agreed to end the game without the capture of the Snitch, as the game had gone on for several months, and the captains were unhappy with their respective Seekers' performance.) Games have been known to last for months, so it is of key importance to catch the Golden Snitch as quickly as possible. It is also explained in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows that the Snitch has a "flesh memory", able to recall the first person who has touched it, and will respond only to the first person who caught it. This helps when there is a dispute about who caught the snitch first. Bowman Wright of Godric's Hollow was the first person to fashion a Golden Snitch, replacing the Golden Snidget bird, a magical creature resembling a hummingbird also mentioned in Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, which was previously used in the game, but was replaced due to animal cruelty issues. No other player aside from the Seeker is allowed to touch the Snitch, and referees and Snitch makers wear gloves when handling them.

Players

Each team is made up of seven players, consisting of three Chasers, two Beaters, one Keeper and one Seeker.

The Chasers progress up and down the pitch passing the Quaffle by hand amongst themselves, in an attempt to score goals by throwing it through one of their opponent's three goal hoops. In this respect, the game is similar, as Harry suggests in the first book, to "basketball on broomsticks with six hoops".Template:HP1

The Keeper is charged with protecting the three goal hoops, in much the same way as a goalkeeper in football (soccer).

The Beaters are armed with wooden clubs that are similar to, but shorter than, baseball bats. They are tasked with protecting their team-mates from the Bludgers by knocking these balls off course or towards opponents.

Finally, the Seeker, usually the lightest member of the team and equipped with the fastest broom, is charged with searching the pitch for, chasing down and eventually capturing, the elusive Golden Snitch. Seekers are the only players permitted to touch the Snitch.

Each team includes a captain, who may play any of the four roles. The captain helps the team practice and chooses the team players after the tryouts.

Broomsticks

Magical flying broomsticks are one of the forms of transportation for wizards and witches, as well as for playing Quidditch. Interestingly, Hogwarts Quidditch players are allowed to use whatever broomsticks they or their sponsors can afford, despite the fact that more expensive brooms often confer great (and arguably unfair) advantages in speed and manoeuvrability. The Nimbus model line has a reputation as one of the best in the Wizarding world. Harry receives a Nimbus 2000 during his first year so that he can play for Gryffindor; Lucius Malfoy buys a full set of the more advanced Nimbus 2001s for the Slytherin team in exchange for choosing his son Draco as Seeker the following year. A Firebolt is an advanced professional-level flying broomstick and the most expensive and fastest racing broom in existence. It is said that they are the best in the world. They can even fly out of the atmosphere if the weather conditions are fair. Harry gets one from his godfather, Sirius Black, after his Nimbus is destroyed during a Quidditch match in his third year. Comets and Cleansweeps are cheaper than the Nimbuses and are more common. (The latter, however, has been identified as still a decent broom.) A Shooting Star is another brand of broom, but it is considered to be slow and out of style. Another broomstick series called The Bluebottle was introduced in the advertisements at the Quidditch World Cup, it was described as a family broom, with safety devices such as an anti-theft alarm. There is also another brand called Silver Arrows. As mentioned in Quidditch Through the Ages, along with the Tinderblast, Swiftstick, and Twigger 90, and the Oakshaft 79, the Oakshaft is the broom famed for its journey across the Atlantic and the Moontrimmer was popular due to the fact that it was still controllable at extremely high altitudes. During a Quidditch training session in the third book, Madam Hooch mentioned that she learned to fly on a Silver Arrow and that it was a fine broom.

Game progression

The game starts with the referee releasing all four balls from the central circle. The Bludgers and the Snitch, having been bewitched, fly off on their own accord; the Snitch to hide itself quickly, and the Bludgers to attack the nearest players. The Quaffle is thrown into the air by the referee to signal the start of play.

Chasers score by sending the red, football-sized Quaffle through any of the three goal hoops. Each goal scored is worth ten points. After a goal is scored, the Keeper of the team scored upon throws the Quaffle back into play. Capturing the Snitch earns the Seeker's team 150 points, equivalent to 15 goals scored by Chasers. Since the game ends immediately after the Snitch is caught, the team capturing the Snitch is very likely to win the game. However, teams are ranked according to points scored, not games won. For example, at Hogwarts, the team with the most points at the end of the year wins the Quidditch Cup. There are only two occasions in the books when the team that catches the Snitch loses: once during the Quidditch World Cup, when Viktor Krum of Bulgaria catches the Snitch, and once when Ginny Weasley replaces Harry as Seeker after he has been banned from playing by Dolores Umbridge. It is never explained why a seeker would catch the snitch in a situation where doing so would give the victory to the other team (i.e. the leading team's score exceeds the losing team's by 150 points), instead of simply waiting for the score to change. If teams are ranked according to points scored, however, a team that knows it cannot hope to catch up to the winning team might favour quickly catching the Snitch (also ending the game) so as to end the game before any more points are scored and hence reduce the lead in point difference obtained by the winning team, so that it is easier to win them back in subsequent matches.

All seven players must constantly avoid both being hit by the Bludgers (which attempt to attack them) and accidental contact with the Golden Snitch (which is a foul if anyone but a Seeker touches it).

The length of a Quidditch game is variable, as play can only end with the capture of the Golden Snitch by one of the Seekers or by mutual consent of the two team captains. The game length is therefore determined largely by the Seekers' abilities. The shortest game ever is described as lasting three and a half seconds, with the score obviously being 150-0Template:HPQ. Some games can go on for days, and even months, if the Snitch is not caught. The longest game recorded supposedly lasted three monthsTemplate:HP1.

Rules

The official rules of Quidditch are partially described in Quidditch Through the Ages. They are said to have been laid down in 1750 by the Department of Magical Games and Sports. Some of the more common rules are as follows:

  • Players must not stray over the boundary lines of the pitch, although they may fly as high as desired. The Quaffle must be surrendered to the opposition if any player leaves the boundary. Quidditch matches in the Harry Potter films, however, show players often deliberately flying over the boundary lines and even around the spectator towers.
  • A time out may be called at any time by a team Captain. It may be extended to two hours if a game has already lasted for more than twelve hours. Failure to return to the pitch afterward disqualifies the offending team.
  • The referee can impose penalties if a foul occurs. A single Chaser from the fouled team takes a penalty shot by flying from the central circle towards the scoring area. The opposing team's Keeper may attempt to block this shot, but no other player may interfere, much like a penalty in football (soccer).
  • Contact is allowed, but a player may not grasp another's broomstick or any part of his or her body. (Draco Malfoy breaks this rule in Prisoner of Azkaban by grabbing Harry's broomtail to stop him from seizing the Snitch.)
  • No substitution of a player is allowed, even if one is too badly hurt to continue (rare exceptions may be made when the game continues for a great length of time, and players become too fatigued to continue).
  • Players may take their wands onto the pitch, but they must not be used on or against any players, any player's broomstick, the referee, any of the four balls, or the spectators. (The right to carry wands at all times was granted during the height of wizard and witch persecution by Muggles, according to Quidditch Through the Ages).
  • Players cannot physically touch other players, such as when the commentator, Lee Jordan, jokingly tells Chaser Angelina Johnson to poke one of the opposing team's eye.

Fouls

Rowling writes that there are 700 Quidditch fouls listed in the Department of Magical Games and Sports records, but most of these fouls are not open to the public, owing to the Department's supposed fear the wizards/witches who read the list of fouls "might get ideas". It is claimed that all 700 occurred during the very first Quidditch World Cup. Apparently, most are now impossible to commit as there is a ban on using wands against an opponent (imposed in 1538). The most common of those fouls which are described are enumerated below:

  • Blagging: No player may seize any part of an opponent's broom to slow or hinder the player. (Draco Malfoy commits this foul in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, thus preventing Harry from seizing the Snitch.)
  • Blatching: No player may fly with the intent to collide. (Substitute Slytherin seeker Harper breaks this rule when he collides into Harry after insulting the latter's friend, and Gryffindor Keeper, Ronald Weasley. This occurs in the sixth book, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince.)
  • Blurting: No player may lock broom handles with the intent to steer an opponent off course.
  • Bumphing: Beaters must not hit Bludgers towards spectators (although Harry jokingly orders one of his Beaters to send one at Zacharias Smith in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince), or the Keeper, unless the Quaffle is within the scoring area. (In the first film, however, Marcus Flint, a Chaser, commits this foul with a Beater's bat, and Madam Hooch penalises him for it.)
  • Cobbing: Players must not make excessive use of their elbows against opponents. (Marcus Flint, the Slytherin Chaser, commits this foul against the Gryffindor Chaser, Angelina Johnson, in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban).
  • Flacking: Keepers must not defend the posts from behind by punching Quaffles out of the hoops – goals must be defended from the front.
  • Haversacking: Chasers must not still be in contact with the Quaffle as it passes through a hoop (the Quaffle must be thrown through).
  • Quaffle-pocking: Chasers must not tamper with the Quaffle in any way.
  • Snitchnip: No player other than the Seeker may touch or catch the Golden Snitch.
  • Stooging: No more than one Chaser is allowed in the scoring area at any one time. (However, game play in Harry Potter: Quidditch World Cup and the fan-made Q3D permit this behaviour.)

Fictional history

The backstory of Quidditch is mentioned only in passing in the main Harry Potter books. The majority of information on the origins of the game comes from Quidditch Through the Ages.

Ancient games

Quidditch is explained to be derived from an amalgamation of several fictional ancient games:

  • Stichstock: Originating in Germany and consisting of a single wizard acting as a guardian or goalkeeper, trying to protect an inflated dragon bladder. A number of other players mounted on broomsticks would attempt to pierce the bladder, with the first who successfully did so being declared the winner; the goalkeeper could attempt to hex the other players; if nobody was able to pierce the bladder, the goalkeeper won.[1]
  • Aingingein: An Irish game which required broomstick-mounted players to fly through a number of burning barrels set in the air, whilst all the time clutching a ball with one hand. At the end of this fiery course was a goal into which the ball had to be hurled. The wizard who completed the course and scored a goal in the shortest time, without catching fire along the way, was the winner.[1]
  • Creaothceann: An exceptionally violent and often fatal game originating in Scotland. A large number of boulders were charmed to hover in the air and each player had a cauldron strapped to the back of his/her head. A horn was sounded, the rocks were released, and the players would fly around on their broomsticks trying to catch as many rocks in their cauldron as possible. The winner was the player who caught the most rocks.[1]
  • Shuntbumps: A very simple form of broomstick-jousting where one flyer attempted to knock the other off his broom.[1]
  • Swivenhodge: Rather like tennis on a broom, this involved hitting an inflated pig's bladder back and forth across a hedge.[1]

Evolution of Quidditch

The name "Quidditch" is supposedly derived from Queerditch Marsh, the location of the first recorded game. The first ball to be introduced was the Quaffle, then a leather ball quite similar to the modern Quaffle, and hence the only playing positions were Chaser and Keeper. Soon afterwards were included in the game flying boulders that had been enchanted to attack players – the first Bludgers.

At first, the bludgers had no human opponents on the pitch, but Beaters were introduced not long afterwards. As the heavy bats had the unfortunate tendency to shatter the boulders into flying gravel, the first metal Bludgers replaced them almost immediately. They were originally made of lead, but in the 15th century, magically reinforced beaters bats were introduced. They are currently made of iron. The final modification to the original "Kwidditch" was to set up three half-barrels at either end of the pitch as scoring targets (previously trees had been used for this purpose). The one missing element from this ancient game was the Golden Snitch.

History of the Snitch

File:SnitchHP1.jpg
The Golden Snitch, as seen in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone.

The back-story of the Snitch is the most elaborate of all the Quidditch balls, and its introduction (so it is described in Quidditch Through the Ages) came as the direct result of a game played in 1269 in Kent. By this time, the game had attracted a cult following, and large crowds regularly attended matches.

Barberus Bragge, the Chief of the Wizards’ Council, attended the 1269 game. As a nod to the sport of Snidget-hunting, which was also popular at the time, Bragge brought a Snidget to the game and released it from its cage. He told the players that 150 Galleons – then an enormous sum of money – would be awarded to the player who caught the bird. As the promise of such a large reward would suggest, the players thence totally ignored the game, and simply went off in pursuit of the Snidget, which was kept within the arena by the crowd using Repelling Charms.

A witch named Modesty Rabnott took pity on the Snidget and rescued it with a Summoning Charm, but the connection with Quidditch had been made, and soon a Snidget was being released at every game. Each team added an extra player – originally called the Hunter, later re-named the Seeker – whose sole job was to catch and kill the Snidget, for which 150 points were awarded in memory of the 150 Galleons offered by Bragge in the original game. The popularity of Quidditch led to quickly declining Snidget numbers, and in the middle of the 14th century it was made a protected species by the Wizard's Council. This meant that the bird could no longer be used for Quidditch purposes. The game, however, could not continue without a substitute.

Whilst most people looked for a suitable alternative bird to chase, a metal-charmer called Bowman Wright from Godric's Hollow invented a fake Snidget which he called the Golden Snitch: a golden ball with silver wings, the same size and weight as a real Snidget, enchanted to accurately follow its flight patterns. An additional benefit was that the ball was also charmed to stay within the playing area. The Snitch was also given a "flesh memory", allowing it to remember who touched it first in order to leave no dispute as to who caught it. The Snitch quickly became the approved replacement for the Snidget, and the game of Quidditch has remained largely unchanged ever since.

Quidditch pitch

File:Stadium dive.jpg
The Quidditch World Cup stadium from Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire.

At the time of the introduction of the Golden Snitch, a standard Quidditch pitch consisted of an elongated oval playing area 500 feet (150 m) long and 180 feet (55 m) wide. It had a small circle at the centre, approximately 2 feet (61 cm) in diameter, from which all the balls were released at the start of the game. The early barrel-goals had been replaced by baskets on stilts, but whilst these were practical, they did carry an inherent problem: there was no size restriction on the baskets, which differed dramatically from pitch to pitch.

By 1620, scoring areas had been added at each end of the pitch, and an additional rule in the game dictated that only one Chaser was allowed in these areas at any given time. In addition, the size of the baskets themselves had reduced considerably, although there was still a certain amount of variation between pitches. Regulations were finally introduced in 1883, which replaced the baskets with hoops of a fixed size.

Quidditch in the films and video games

There are some minor differences between how Quidditch is represented in Rowling's Quidditch Through the Ages and how it appears to be played in the films and video games.

Most notably in the films, the rule that players must not stray outside the pitch boundary is not evident, as players can be seen flying around the spectator towers at the Hogwarts Quidditch pitch, as well as the scene where the rogue Bludger chases Harry and Malfoy around the outside of the pitch boundaries in the film version of Chamber of Secrets. In Goblet of Fire, only the scenes around and before the Quidditch World Cup were seen. Quidditch was absent entirely from Order of the Phoenix. However, it returned in Half-Blood Prince, which was released in July 2009.[2]

In the 2003 video game Harry Potter: Quidditch World Cup, the rule of only having a single Chaser in the scoring area is not enforced. Additionally, the game allows players to make special moves whereby several goals are scored in succession as multiple Chasers pass the Quaffle back and forwards through the hoops, whereas the rules dictate that after a goal is scored, possession passes to the Keeper.

Quidditch in the Harry Potter books

Quidditch Cup

Year Champions Year Book
1 Ravenclaw 1991/92 Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone
2 Competition cancelled due to attacks on students 1992/93 Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
3 Gryffindor 1993/94 Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
4 Competition not scheduled due to Triwizard Tournament 1994/95 Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
5 Gryffindor 1995/96 Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
6 Gryffindor 1996/97 Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
7 unknown 1997/98 Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows

Hogwarts teams

A major motif of five of the Harry Potter books is the competition among the four Hogwarts houses for the Quidditch Cup each school year.

Years 1-3

The winning Gryffindor Team of Harry Potter Year 3 consisted of:

Position Name
Keeper Oliver Wood (Captain)
Centre Chaser Angelina Johnson
Outside Chaser Katie Bell
Outside Chaser Alicia Spinnet
Blind Side Beater Fred Weasley
Open Side Beater George Weasley
Seeker Harry Potter

Only Quidditch World Cup tournament was conducted in Year 4 (Goblet of Fire) because of the 2000 to 2001 Triwizard Tournament being hosted by Hogwarts.

Year 5

The winning Gryffindor Team of Harry Potter Year 5 consisted of:

Position Name
Keeper Ronald Weasley
Centre Chaser Angelina Johnson (Captain)
Outside Chaser Katie Bell
Outside Chaser Alicia Spinnet
Blind Side Beater Fred Weasley/Jack Sloper
Open Side Beater George Weasley/Andrew Kirke
Seeker Harry Potter/Ginny Weasley

Harry and the Weasley twins were banned from playing Quidditch for life by Dolores Umbridge for being involved in a fight with Draco Malfoy after the Gryffindor-Slytherin game. Subsequently the seeker spot was taken over by Ginny Weasley, while Andrew Kirke and Jack Sloper became the new beaters. Following Umbridge's removal from the school, Harry's ban was lifted, so he could play again in the next year.

Year 6

The winning Gryffindor Team of Harry Potter Year 6 consisted of:

Position Name
Keeper Ron Weasley/Cormac McLaggen
Centre Chaser Ginny Weasley/Dean Thomas
Outside Chaser Katie Bell/Dean Thomas
Outside Chaser Demelza Robins
Blind Side Beater Ritchie Coote
Open Side Beater Jimmy Peakes
Seeker Harry Potter (Captain)/Ginny Weasley

Ron Weasley and Katie Bell both became unintended victims of Draco Malfoy's attempts to kill Dumbledore, and while they were unable to play, their spots in the team were taken over by Cormac McLaggen and Dean Thomas. After they were healed, they both returned to the team. Snape banned Harry from the season’s last game for cursing Malfoy. Therefore, for that game, Ginny Weasley played as a seeker, and her position as chaser was taken over again by Dean Thomas.

Harry's performance as Seeker

Year Opponent Result
1st Slytherin Harry catches the Snitch in his mouth; Gryffindor wins
1st Hufflepuff Harry catches the Snitch; Gryffindor wins
1st Ravenclaw Harry does not play; unconscious in hospital wing
2nd Slytherin Harry catches the Snitch; Gryffindor wins
2nd Hufflepuff Game cancelled
2nd Ravenclaw Game cancelled
3rd Hufflepuff Harry falls during match due to Dementors; Gryffindor loses (though, Hufflepuff Seeker, Cedric Diggory, thought the win to be unfair, and wanted a rematch)
3rd Ravenclaw Harry catches the Snitch; Gryffindor wins
3rd Slytherin Harry catches the Snitch; Gryffindor wins
4th N/A No Quidditch matches due to Tri-Wizard Tournament
5th Slytherin Harry catches the Snitch; Gryffindor wins
5th Hufflepuff Harry does not play; banned by Umbridge
5th Ravenclaw Harry does not play; banned by Umbridge
6th Slytherin Harry catches the Snitch; Gryffindor wins
6th Hufflepuff Harry knocked out of game injured; Gryffindor loses.
6th Ravenclaw Harry does not play; in detention with Snape; Gryffindor wins anyway with Ginny as Seeker

Professional Quidditch teams

The following teams are listed in Quidditch Through the Ages.

Team Situated Notes
Current Teams of Great Britain and Ireland
England Appleby Arrows[3] Appleby Colors are pale blue with a silver arrow. Founded in 1612. Has a rivalry with the Wasps (see below)
England Chudley Cannons[4] Chudleigh Bright orange and a double C with a speeding cannonball. The team's motto was originally "We shall conquer"; it was later changed to "Let's all just keep our fingers crossed and hope for the best." Ron Weasley is a fan of the team.
England Falmouth Falcons[5] Falmouth Dark grey & white robes with a Falcon on the chest.

Motto: "Let us win, but if we cannot win, let us break a few heads."

England Puddlemere United[6] Puddlemere Place does not exist in the muggle world. Navy blue robes with two crossed Bulrushes. Founded in 1163. Oliver Wood is picked for this team's reserve squad after graduating from Hogwarts. Albus Dumbledore's favourite side.
England Tutshill Tornados[7] Tutshill Sky blue robes with a double T in dark blue on the front and back; league success in 1995; accused of cheating.
England Wimbourne Wasps[8] Wimbourne Horizontally striped robes of yellow and black and a Wasp on the chest. Ludo Bagman played for this team in his younger days.
Republic of Ireland Ballycastle Bats[9] Ballycastle Black robes with a scarlet bat.
Republic of Ireland Kenmare Kestrels[10] Kenmare Emerald green robes with two yellow K's back to back. Founded in 1291
Scotland Montrose Magpies[11] Montrose Black and white robes with a magpie on the front and back
Scotland Pride of Portree[6] Portree Deep Purple Robes with a gold star on the chest Founded 1292
Scotland Wigtown Wanderers[7] Wigtown Blood red robes with a Meat Cleaver on the chest. Founded in 1422
Wales Caerphilly Catapults[12] Caerphilly Vertically striped robes of light green and scarlet. Founded in 1402. Beat the Karasjok Kites to win the 1956 European Cup Final.
Wales Holyhead Harpies[13] Holyhead Dark green robes with a golden talon on the chest. An all-female team whose members have first names that start with G. Founded in 1203. Between 1998 and 2017, Ginny Weasley spends several years playing for this team.
Other teams
Australia Thundelarra Thunderers[14] There is a pastoral lease by that name in Western Australia - but not a town or locality. Has rivalry with Warriors (below)
Australia Wollongong Warriors[14] Wollongong (sic). Has a rivalry with the Thunders (above)
Bulgaria Vratsa Vultures[15] Vratsa Seven times champions of Europe
Canada Haileybury Hammers[16] Haileybury
Canada Moose Jaw Meteorites[16] Moose Jaw
Canada Stonewall Stormers[16] Stonewall
Ethiopia Gimbi Giant-Slayers[16] Gimbi
France Quiberon Quafflepunchers[15] Quiberon
Germany Heidelberg Harriers[17] Heidelberg
Japan Toyohashi Tengu[18] Toyohashi
Lithuania Gorodok Gargoyles Gorodok, Lithuania Ambiguous place name ("gorodok" means "town" in Russian). Won against the Toyohashi Tengu in 1994.
Luxembourg Bigonville Bombers[17] Bigonville
New Zealand Moutohora Macaws[14] Moutohora
Norway Karasjok Kites Kárášjohka - Karasjok lost to the Caerphilly Catapults in the 1956 European Cup final.[19]
Peru Tarapoto Tree-Skimmers[18] Tarapoto
Poland Grodzisk Goblins[17] Grodzisk Ambiguous place name Home team of Josef Wronski
Portugal Braga Broomfleet[17] Braga
Scotland Banchory Bangers Banchory "Team" now defunct
Tanzania Sumbawanga Sunrays[16] Sumbawanga
Togo Tchamba Charmers[16] Tchamba
Uganda Patonga Proudsticks[20] Patonga
United States Fitchburg Finches[21] Fitchburg Captain and seeker Maximus Brankovitch III also captained the USA team at the Quidditch World Cup several times.
United States Sweetwater All-Stars[21] Sweetwater Won a five-day match against the Quiberon Quafflepunchers in 1993

Irish national team

The Irish National Quidditch team appears in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, in which they defeat Bulgaria in the Quidditch World Cup. The team consists of Chasers Troy, Mullet, and Moran, Keeper Barry Ryan, Beaters Quigley and Connolly, and Seeker Aidan Lynch. According to Rowling's website, several players were named after friends of hers as an inside joke.

Despite this, Ireland does not feature in the QWC video game.

Bulgarian national team

The Bulgarian National Quidditch team appears in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, in which they are defeated by Ireland in the Quidditch World Cup. The team consists of Chasers Dimitrov, Ivanova, and Levski, Keeper Zograf, Beaters Volkov and Vulchanov, and superstar Seeker Viktor Krum.

Quodpot

Quodpot is a variant of Quidditch popular in the United States, the Western Hemisphere and, as a minority, Europe, a clear reference to American football and its relative, Canadian football. Quodpot has never been mentioned in the novels, but it is described in Quidditch Through the Ages. There are eleven players on a side, who throw the Quod, a Quaffle modified to explode after a certain amount of time, from player to player, attempting to get it into the "pot" at the end of the pitch before it explodes. Any player in possession of the Quod when it explodes is disqualified. Once the Quod is in the "pot" (a cauldron containing a solution which prevents it from exploding), the scoring team is awarded a point and a new Quod is brought onto the pitch.

Nonfictional Quidditch

Quidditch Lane in Lower Cambourne

There have been video games that simulate playing Quidditch. Major games include:

There have been small-scale attempts to adapt Quidditch to readily available technology, using bicycles, unicycles, and motorcycles instead of broomsticks.

A street in Lower Cambourne, Cambridgeshire, England is named Quidditch Lane, supposedly after a type of nearby dry ditch called a Quidditch. Fans have been known to visit the area.[22]

A Quidditch match on foot was played in Salem, Massachusetts in October, 2005. The real-life teams include the Betas Anonymous, Punctuation Pixies, and the Effortless Edibles Fizzing Whizbees.[23]

Muggle Quidditch

Muggle Quidditch is a co-ed sport based on Quidditch. It is popular with fans of the novels, fictional sports aficionados, and children.[24] In Muggle Quidditch, as in Wizard Quidditch there are four positions on a team. Due to the fact that Wizarding Quidditch is based on fictional devices and concepts such as magic, Muggle Quidditch has been adapted for play on the ground, with game play confined to a playing field comparable in size to a football pitch.[25]

The equipment in Muggle Quidditch varies depending on venue. Often three hula hoops held up by PVC pipes are used as the goals on either side of the playing field. Volleyballs, basketballs and dodge balls are often used as Quaffles, with softer objects like Nerf balls or Wiffle Balls acting as Bludgers. Often, for more competitive leagues, Chasers will use a Frisbee as a Quaffle. This allows for a much more intense experience.[26] Beaters may use tennis rackets to 'serve' the Bludgers. Beaters also may use dodge balls to simulate the Bludgers, while still allowing precise aim. Tennis rackets do not quite allow the precision spoken of in the Harry Potter novels. In more extreme versions of the game, Bludgers are eliminated and the beaters are allowed to tackle the chasers and other players (seeker and keeper are generally off limits when tackling). While the Snitch is a magical object within the canon of the Harry Potter novels, in Muggle Quidditch the Snitch is most often a sort of neutral player, usually dressed in all gold, sometimes adorned with wings. The Snitch, after release, is usually allowed to roam an area beyond the playing field. When played on a college campus the range is often the entire campus.

A Ravenclaw/Slytherin Muggle Quidditch game.

Positions in Muggle Quidditch:

  • Chasers are responsible for passing the Quaffle and scoring points by throwing the Quaffle through one of the opponent's goals. Three or four chasers from a team may be in play at one time. When a Bludger hits a Chaser in possession of the Quaffle, he or she must throw the Quaffle into the air.
  • Keepers are the goal protectors (similar to goalkeepers in football) and must try to block attempts to score by the opposing team's Chasers. One keeper from a team may be in play at a time. In most versions of the game, the keeper is invulnerable to Bludgers when within a reasonable distance of his/her teams' hoops. In other versions, when the keeper is hit by a bludger from the opposing team while that team is in scoring range, the keeper must freeze for 2–3 seconds to simulate the recovery time in magical Quidditch.
  • Beaters attempt to hit the opposing team's players with Bludgers and attempt to block the Bludgers from hitting their team's players. Two Beaters on a team may be in play at a time.
  • Seekers attempt to catch the Golden Snitch, set into play during the game. (In some variations the snitch is released at halftime, in others at an undisclosed time.) Seekers may play as Chasers before the Snitch’s release.
Established Muggle Quidditch games

Other variations

The webcomic Mac Hall created a game called Australian Indoor Rules Quidditch in the comic universe. The spelling of Quidditch was changed to avoid possible copyright infringement issues, and a single bouncy ball with flashing lights in it replaces all four Quidditch balls. Instead of broomsticks, each player is equipped with a baseball bat, to hit the ball at fellow players as hard as possible. The game is played in a dark hallway: the ball lights up when it bounces and players must follow its glow.[29]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Harry Potter Lexicon – Games & Sports
  2. ^ Eric Scull (7 September 2008). "A test screening experience and review by Eric Scull". MuggleNet. Retrieved 16 November 2008.
  3. ^ Whisp, Kennilworthy (2001). Quidditch Through the Ages. WhizzHard Books. p. 32. ISBN 1551924544.
  4. ^ Whisp, Kennilworthy (2001). Quidditch Through the Ages. WhizzHard Books. pp. 33–34. ISBN 1551924544.
  5. ^ Whisp, Kennilworthy (2001). Quidditch Through the Ages. WhizzHard Books. p. 34. ISBN 1551924544.
  6. ^ a b Whisp, Kennilworthy (2001). Quidditch Through the Ages. WhizzHard Books. p. 36. ISBN 1551924544.
  7. ^ a b Whisp, Kennilworthy (2001). Quidditch Through the Ages. WhizzHard Books. p. 37. ISBN 1551924544.
  8. ^ Whisp, Kennilworthy (2001). Quidditch Through the Ages. WhizzHard Books. pp. 37–38. ISBN 1551924544.
  9. ^ Whisp, Kennilworthy (2001). Quidditch Through the Ages. WhizzHard Books. pp. 32–33. ISBN 1551924544.
  10. ^ Whisp, Kennilworthy (2001). Quidditch Through the Ages. WhizzHard Books. p. 35. ISBN 1551924544.
  11. ^ Whisp, Kennilworthy (2001). Quidditch Through the Ages. WhizzHard Books. pp. 35–36. ISBN 1551924544.
  12. ^ Whisp, Kennilworthy (2001). Quidditch Through the Ages. WhizzHard Books. p. 33. ISBN 1551924544.
  13. ^ Whisp, Kennilworthy (2001). Quidditch Through the Ages. WhizzHard Books. pp. 34–35. ISBN 1551924544.
  14. ^ a b c ||Perth||Whisp, Kennilworthy (2001). Quidditch Through the Ages. WhizzHard Books. p. 42. ISBN 1551924544.
  15. ^ a b Whisp, Kennilworthy (2001). Quidditch Through the Ages. WhizzHard Books. p. 40. ISBN 1551924544.
  16. ^ a b c d e f Whisp, Kennilworthy (2001). Quidditch Through the Ages. WhizzHard Books. p. 43. ISBN 1551924544.
  17. ^ a b c d Whisp, Kennilworthy (2001). Quidditch Through the Ages. WhizzHard Books. p. 41. ISBN 1551924544.
  18. ^ a b Whisp, Kennilworthy (2001). Quidditch Through the Ages. WhizzHard Books. p. 46. ISBN 1551924544.
  19. ^ Whisp, Kennilworthy (2001). Quidditch Through the Ages. WhizzHard Books. p. 33. ISBN 1551924544.
  20. ^ Whisp, Kennilworthy (2001). Quidditch Through the Ages. WhizzHard Books. pp. 42–43. ISBN 1551924544.
  21. ^ a b Whisp, Kennilworthy (2001). Quidditch Through the Ages. WhizzHard Books. p. 45. ISBN 1551924544.
  22. ^ Village sign attracts Potter fans, BBC News
  23. ^ "On a recent visit, Only A Game's Karen Given ran into witches who, despite their lack of aerodynamic vehicles cleverly disguised as simple home cleaning devices, were well equipped with Quaffles, Bludgers, and Snitches." Only a Game – Mud and blood and Quidditch in October.
  24. ^ U.S. college students seek the magic of Quidditch
  25. ^ Dr Woolard's Rules
  26. ^ Bristol County Quidditch Club
  27. ^ [1]
  28. ^ http://www.collegequidditch.com
  29. ^ Machall 125