Saturday 27 August 2011

And now I'm home...

It's been an unforgettable ten days. I've met some lovely, amazing, wonderful people who, now that I'm home, I miss very much already, and I'm sure that we'll stay in touch and hopefully meet again in the future. I've been privileged to take part in some fantastic debates against many highly skilled speakers, and be part of a friendly (if slightly eccentric) team who've supported me when I was nervous and allowed me to be myself.

There are a lot of people without whom this tournament would not have been the incredible experience it was. On behalf of Team Wales, I want to thank the OVT for their outstanding logistical management and sense of humour, all the financial sponsors who are listed at http://wsdctournament.wordpress.com/sponsors/, the schools who so generously opened their doors to us and made us feel so welcome, the pupils who showed us around (especially Max, Iona, Rose and Rory), the co-CAs Beth James and Andrew Marshall, the Chief Adjudication Panel, Cameron Wyllie for organising our day out in Edinburgh, and the co-convenors Malcolm Smart and Gaynor Sullivan. I also want to thank our coaches, Jonathan Leader-Maynard and Ellen Robertson, and Martin Pollard and the staff at CEWC Cymru for all their supportive texts and for putting up with me when I forget to post my consent form and find myself unable to work the scanner.

But most of all, my thanks go to Irene McGrath, the convenor of WSDC 2011. Irene, thank you so much for all your hard work in making this a truly fantastic tournament, and for making my final year as a debater at WSDC so special.

I've been really lucky to be able to attend three wonderful tournaments, each different to the last and completely unique. Being a part of the WSDC community for these last three years has been so special, and I want to thank everyone who has been a part of it, in whatever capacity, for making it happen and being so wonderful. I definitely want to remain in touch with the tournament and hear all about Wales winning the final and claiming the top five speaker positions in the near future.

So to all the members of the WSDC community, thank you, and goodnight.

The speaker tab has been released!

The speaker tab have been released and can be found by clicking on the following links:

Overall speaker tab (top 50 speakers): http://www.scribd.com/doc/63150624/WSDC-2011-Best-Speakers-Tab
ESL speaker tab (top 20 speakers): http://www.scribd.com/doc/63150622/WSDC-2011-Best-ESL-Speakers-Tab
EFL speaker tab (top 20 speakers): http://www.scribd.com/doc/63150618/WSDC-2011-Best-EFL-Speakers-Tab

As a team, Wales ranked 13th overall, despite breaking 8th, because so many of the teams who broke 9th-16th beat their opponents in the octo-finals (Ireland, Singapore, Scotland, South Africa and Hong Kong all achieved this). As individuals, we all made it into the top 30 speakers, with our average scores being less than half a point apart.

I'd like to take this opportunity to thank the very efficient tabbing team, who've been great in making sure that every score has been entered correctly (which was no mean feat, as in the preliminary rounds there were 192 debates in total, each involving 6 speakers being judged by a panel of 3 judges, meaning that over the course of these 8 rounds 3456 scores were generated in total). Thank you!

Thursday 25 August 2011

And Singapore are crowned the champions!

After a very close debate between Australia and Singapore on the motion THBT autocracy is doomed in the age of Facebook, Singapore were crowned the champions of WSDC 2011 on a 7-2 split. This is the first time Singapore has ever won the tournament, and emotions were running high for all concerned.

Following the final, we had an hour of free time before the closing ceremony, so with Ayellet, Miriam and Hodaya from Team Israel we headed off to Wetherspoons to enjoy some British culture. Then we met the rest of the WSDC community outside Caird Hall, where we were serenaded with bagpipes before the ceremony could begin.

There were several speeches and a meal, and then the prizes were announced. These went to the following:

Champions: Singapore 
Runners-up: Australia
Best ESL (English as a Second Language) Team: South Korea
Best EFL (English as a Foreign Language) Team: The Netherlands
Best New Nation: Barbados
Best Individual Speaker: Teoh Rin Jie, Singapore
Best ESL Speaker: Ye Eun Chun, Republic of Korea
Best EFL Speaker: Chan Keun Kim, Republic of Korea
Best Speaker from a New Nation: Stefan Stojanovic, Serbia

After the ceremony, Sarah and Paul headed back to the flat while David and I took on the Ceilidh, which was a combination of laughter, chaos and a little bit of dancing. Some of the steps were similar enough to folk dancing for me to pick up (David had been to the Ceilidh practice, and was therefore an expert - I'd gone to the whiskey tasting instead), but some were quite different.

We then went back to the Students' Union for a different type of dancing in the nightclub there, and at around 3am we said our final goodbyes to all the amazing people we had met over the course of the tournament, and returned to the flat.

I'm particularly sad that I won't be returning to WSDC as a debater - many of the people I've met will be eligible to return for WSDC in Cape Town, South Africa. But I've had an incredible three years - I've met some fantastic people and, whether or not it dooms autocracy, Facebook is certainly a marvelous invention for keeping us all in touch.

Wednesday 24 August 2011

The quarter-finals and semi-finals!

Today, we woke up in plenty of time to watch one of the quarter final debates - Paul went to see Hong Kong versus Ireland, rediscovering his Hong Kong allegiance, and the rest of Team Wales chose to go and see Australia versus South Africa, mainly because this debate was taking place on a ship.

It was a genuinely brilliant debate, the motion being TH supports free immigration, and although Australia won unanimously, South Africa performed incredibly well too. The results of the quarter-finals are as follows:

Scotland defeat England 4-1
Australia defeat South Africa 5-0
Ireland defeat Hong Kong 4-1
Singapore defeat Canada 4-1


Interestingly, all of the winning teams were in opposition to the motion.

So then it was time for the semi-finals, and the motion was THBT every region should have the right to independent statehood if a majority of its members wish. The results were as follows:

Australia defeat Scotland 5-2
Singapore defeat Ireland 5-2

And once again, both of the winning teams were in opposition. 

So tomorrow night's final will be between Australia and Singapore. Australia have a strong record at WSDC, winning the tournament 8 times in total, though the last time they did so was in 2006. Singapore have made the final twice and the semi-finals numerous times, but have never actually won the competition.

This evening, Team Wales invaded Team Israel's flat and played some card games before heading off to the Iftar, a meal to celebrate the end of Ramadan for those who had been fasting. After, we headed back to the Students' Union for a few rounds of pool before going out to a nightclub with most of the over-18s involved in the tournament, where we learnt to party like true Dundonians! 

Tuesday 23 August 2011

Our tournament may be over, but the fun is only just beginning...

Sadly, Team Wales was knocked out of WSDC 2011 in the octo-final against Scotland. The final result was a 4-1 split against us, and it was a very close debate that many people in the audience felt could have gone either way, the motion being THW abandon nuclear energy. Scotland were deserving winners - they put forward an incredibly strong proposition case, and we wish them luck for the rest of the tournament.

But while we are obviously disappointed to be out of the tournament, we're determined to enjoy the few days we have left in Dundee! This afternoon we visited St. Andrews, and had a walking tour of the town, before deciding to go on a hunt for an amazing ice-cream parlour that one of Paul's friends had told him about - we were not disappointed!

This evening, we decided to experience some British culture by getting chips from the local chippy and eating them sat on a wall next to a relatively busy road in the city centre. Sarah and I, as legal adults, then headed off to go whiskey tasting, and are now far better informed on the subject of whiskey and far more light-headed than we were prior to the event. But the evening didn't stop there - Beatrice from Australia and I formed a Welsh-Australian alliance on the pool table, taking on David and Paul, and then David and Sarah battled it out on the dance mat.

Just as we were about to head off, Nina appeared with her guitar and the rest of Team Israel and a few members of Team Philippines and Team Kuwait, and we all went and sat on the grass outside the Students' Union for a 'jamming session' or 'circle of music'. Nina is incredibly talented both vocally and on the guitar (as well as being extremely modest about it) and we had a great time, although after being gatecrashed by a selection of drunken students we relocated to Team Philippines' kitchen.

After a final song, at around half one in the morning, we headed back to our rooms. Although it would obviously have been wonderful to get further in the tournament, it can't be denied that the teams that don't break or get knocked out in the octo-finals get to enjoy the incredible social atmosphere created by the tournament for much longer.

The results of the octo-finals are as follows:

England defeat Mexico 4-1
Scotland defeat Wales 4-1
Australia defeat Greece 5-0
South Africa defeat UAE 4-1
Ireland defeat the Republic of Korea 3-2
Hong Kong defeat the Netherlands 3-2
Canada defeat Pakistan 4-1
Singapore defeat New Zealand 3-2

Monday 22 August 2011

The Break!

I've just got back from the break night party where the break was announced and Team Wales have danced the night away with debaters from England, Kuwait, Canada, Australia and Barbados, to name just a few countries. The break is out, and is as follows:

1. England - 8 wins, 23 judges, 6180.5 speaker points*
2. New Zealand - 8, 23, 6107.5
3. The Netherlands - 8, 22, 6055.0
4. Australia - 7, 21, 6178.5 
5. UAE - 7, 21, 6096.0
6. Republic of Korea - 7, 21, 6093.0
7. Canada - 7, 19, 6136.5
8. Wales - 6, 20, 6120.5
9. Scotland - 6, 18, 6043.0
10. Pakistan - 6, 17, 6052.0
11. Ireland - 6, 16, 6049.0
12. South Africa - 6, 16, 6045.0
13. Greece - 6, 16, 6038.0
14. Hong Kong - 6, 15, 6056.5
15. Singapore - 5, 17, 6239.5
16. Mexico - 5, 16, 5960.5


So Wales has broken eighth, and if you consult my diagram from the earlier rounds you can work out that we will face Scotland, the home nation, once again in the octo-finals tomorrow!

Just to point out, as I said I would - the ladies of Team Wales (i.e. myself and Sarah) took on Matt from Team England (assisted by Greg) at pool this evening... and won! We're holding firm to the line that it was pure skill as opposed to sheer fluke...

*The speaker points shown here are the cumulative total of all speaker points accrued by the teams in the course of the debates - each debate has a maximum of 350 points that can be earned - 100 each for the main speeches and 50 for the reply. 70 points is considered an average speech in this tournament. You can see that Wales achieved the fifth highest cumulative speaker score out of all the countries in the tournament, behind Singapore, England, Australia and Canada.

The preliminary rounds are done...

It wasn't exactly the note we'd hoped to end the prelims on  - although we beat Nigeria unanimously this morning, we lost to Pakistan this afternoon despite having debated the motion against England the weekend before. We've established that between us, our sporting knowledge consists of netball (me) and wrestling (Sarah), with a bit of American basketball (Paul), so we weren't too surprised when the chair judge told us there was a fundamental lack of knowledge on our side of the house. All in all, it was an extremely close debate with very tight margins and we managed to once again take a judge.

So what does this mean in terms of our chances of breaking? We are certain to break on six wins and as all the debates we won were unanimous and the two we lost were both on a split decision, we have a higher number of judges than any of the other teams on six wins. Paul is frantically trying to calculate the tab, but we'll have to wait for this evening to find out for sure. I mentioned in my last post that the break is going to be streamed live online, and that starts at 9:30 tonight.

Just a reminder that the order of teams will be calculated by wins, then judges, then speaks, and finally alphabetically.

So the summary of the results of rounds 7 and 8 is as follows:

Round 7 - THBT women can only achieve equality under a secular system of government (pre-prepared)
Nigeria 0 - 3 Wales

Round 8 - THW punish sports teams for the poor behaviour of their fans (impromptu)
Wales 1 - 2 Pakistan