The IQA recently announced the location of World Cup VII in North Myrtle Beach, SC. What follows is information regarding the gameplay aspects of this year’s World Cup.
As has been announced previously, there will be no Division 2 at the World Cup. Instead, the full tournament will consist of a single field of 80 Division 1 teams, increased from 60 teams at World Cup VI. This means that more teams than ever before will have a chance to qualify for the association’s premier championship.
The IQA’s general gameplay team has made a few tweaks to the way that teams are selected for this year’s World Cup. Like last year, 16 spots are being reserved for regions based on the performance of their teams at the previous World Cup. Note that the spots are reserved for the region as a whole, not for specific teams. This means that the following numbers of spots are reserved for each region at WCVII (the names in parentheses denote the top 16 finishers from last year’s World Cup):
Southwest: 5 Spots (Texas, Baylor, Texas A&M, LSU, Arkansas)
West: 4 Spots (UCLA, Lost Boys, NAU, USC)
Midwest: 4 Spots (BGSU, Kansas, OSU, MSU)
Northeast: 2 Spots (BU, Emerson)
Mid-Atlantic: 1 Spot (Maryland)
In addition, the teams that made the bracket stage of World Cup VI in places 17-36 each earn their region ½ of a spot. Whenever this produces a non-integer number of spots for a region, the extra ½ goes towards that region’s fraction of bids based on sign-ups, which are discussed below. This means that the following number of spots are reserved for each region at WC VII in addition to the spots reserved above:
Southwest: 0.5 (Texas St.)
West: 1 (Silicon Valley, ASU)
Midwest: 2 (Marquette, Ball St, CMU, Michigan)
Northeast: 2.5 (Tufts, RIT, Rochester, Hofstra, NYU)
Mid-Atlantic: 2 (Villanova, VCU, PSU, Pitt)
South: 1.5 (USF, Tennessee Tech, Miami)
Canada: 0.5 (Ottawa)
The remaining 54 spots will be directly proportional to the number of official team registrations per region. A number of criteria determine how these spots are apportioned:
The distribution of these 54 spots will be performed based on the number of eligible teams on October 1st. The announcement of the final apportionment is expected on October 7th, 2013.
Once the apportionment is complete, the top X finishers at each regional championship will receive invitations to the World Cup, where X is the number of spots each region receives based on the process described above. If a team that qualifies for the World Cup is unable to attend the tournament, that team’s spot will be offered to the next highest-finishing team at the regional championship, then the next-highest, and so on until a team accepts the invitation.
At the World Cup itself, there will be 16 pools of five teams each. The top three teams in each pool will receive a spot in a 48-team, single-elimination bracket. The top team in each pool will receive a bye in the first round of the bracket, thus playing its first game in the round of 32.
With all of this in mind, make sure your team registers as a tournament member with at least 7 individual players by October 1st to ensure the best distribution for your region! With your help, World Cup VII will be the best quidditch tournament ever held.
Questions on any part of this policy? Please email Gameplay Director Will Hack at .