Armistice
By: Oddjobgold
Tournament took place at the Bailey Center, Westland, Michigan.
December 1st.

Prop 15 has been installed, so I had to create a new deck for this tourney. 8
participants (the little kids had ben set aside, so only the skilled players
remained.

Deck List:
4 Jigglypuff
4 Wigglytuff
4 Scyther
3 Mewtwo
2 Mr. Mime
2 Ditto
2 Chansey

4 Professor Oak
3 Computer Search
3 Gust Of Wind
3 Scoop up
2 Super Energy Removal

4 Double Colorless Energy
2 Full Heal Energy
18 Psychic Energy


Double Loss Elimination

Round 1: Nathan Bramlett, playing fighting/colorless
His deck was centered around Machamp, with walls like likitung and chansey.
Despite the "uniqueness" of his deck, he was still a force to be reckoned
with. I started with virtually nothing, just a puff, energy, and a search.
Knowing that he played machop and Rocket Sneak Attack, i figured i was
screwed, but i got to go first. Searched for the oak, got some back up and
more wiggly. It took time to win, because of his wall pokemon, but he had to
oak, bill, etc., to get the cards to stall, and ended on the wrong side of
stalling. I gust of winded a final machop for the kill.

Round 2: David Eads, with fighting/colorless
David is a very good player. His deck was very well built, and would serve
him well in the tourney. The game started in my favor, when he played a
resistance gym for Hitmonchan to do 10 to my scyther, which allowed mewtwo to
do 30 to the colorless pokemon ( his deck consisted of hitmonchan, rocket's
hitmonchan, scyther, ditto, chansey, and wigglytuff). I took three quick
prizes, then ran low on cards in my hand. he as able to claim three prizes
before a drew and used a flurry of oaks. The game went back and forth, with
me emerging as the victor.

Round 3: Jared Reeder, with blaine fire deck
He won the last tourney here. His deck was based on blaine's charizard,
rapidash, and ninetales. He ran lots of oak and blaine to power up quickly.
The game was up for grabs, when I topdecked an oak, and drew three wiggly.
before the game was over, I had played all three, as well as the fourth
wiggly. He couldn't take 60 damage very long. He had drawn blaine's charizard
the turn after i had killed his blaine's charmeleon. This would have
completely altered the game.

Round 4: Nathan Bugosh, with lighting/grass/fighting/colorless
This guy is good. He placed 32 in the East Coast Super Trainer Showdown. He
also had not changed his deck since the STS. The lighting element was
Rocket's Zapdos; Th fighting element was Hitmonchan; the grass element was
Muk and scyther (for which he had no grass energy); the colorless element was
clefairy/clefable. he mulliganed three times, so i had almost won before we
had started. The game went back and forth. He would constantly rocket sneak
attack me, and hit an oak, which i would draw back immediately. The game
slowly wound down with me taking a prize, then him, then me, etc. when he
forfeited because i had a prize advatange and he was close to decking.

Round 5: David Eads, as from Round 2.
These were the championships. I was undefeated, and he had one loss, so he
would have to beat me twice to win, and i need to win only once. I lost most
of my wigglies searching and oaking early, so i had to use scyther, mewtwo,
mr mime, and chansey. He had problems pulling the right cards, so i
eventually wore him down. He finally gave up and offered up a very damaged
scyther for my last kill.

Armistice wins, undefeated. It is a great prop 15 deck. The only idea is to
drop something for pluspowers, which would have helped alot in almost all of
my matches.

Props:
Jared for running the tourney
The Four Nathans (there are four people at this tourney named nathan, ones a
little  kid, one is 15, one is 16 ( me), and one is nineteen. one of us
almost always   wins)

Slops:
Bo, for the prize being only five dollars

Comments, criticism, etc. Ncspencer1@aol.com
Have a nice day!