Did you know that the Czech teams switch back and forth between indoor and outdoor competition? posted: Aug 31st, 2017 The Indoor Cloud League competition has continued while most of the active 4-way teams are also jumping from air planes for training and competition. The national championships of most countries are taking place at the end of the summer season, as the recent leaderboards have been showing.
However, indoor training continues at the same time and usually parallel with outdoor training, and several teams continue to add their ICL scores to the monthly leaderboards.
The Czech 4-way teams attend their national outdoor championships this weekend, and they still posted scores and videos in all six... (more)
Did you know that Dallas 350 member Lucas King had a successful Indoor Cloud League July event? posted: Aug 6th, 2017 The Indoor Cloud League competition continues, while teams from across the world compete at the FAI World Cup 2017 in Germany.
The July competition is over, and the new August sequences have been posted. The ICL teams from iFLY Seattle and iFLY Dallas were the latest ones to add more scores and videos to the 14+ leaderboard, and no major changes happened. The deadline for any July submissions ends this weekend.
In the Northwest, Seattle Swift once again provided the AAA/AA numbers for Deb Correia's iFLY Seattle team. It was impossible for the new Open Class team to keep up with the experienced... (more)
Did you know that Indoor Cloud League participants learn from world champions at Paraclete XP? posted: Aug 3rd, 2017 Paraclete XP keeps picking up the pace and increasing the numbers on the 14+ leaderboard of the Indoor Cloud League.
The total of 161 points for July is the new record number for the Paraclete team, which was outscored only two times so far. The Czech teams posted 164 points at the Hurricane Factory in June 2016, and iFLY Dallas boosted the total for the same month with a 57-pointer to 170.
Paraclete XP finished the month with four of the six highscores. The Hurricane Factory team might have come close to the same total with a score for the R Class sequence.
In fact, the Czech teams are... (more)
Did you know that the Bad Boys are back in full strength? posted: Jul 27th, 2017 It's getting closer to the end of July, which means that Indoor Cloud League teams begin to submit their scores and videos for the month. There are a few exceptions here and there, when ICL teams begin to fill the leaderboards earlier. However, there is competition, and teams may not want to give opposing ICL groups the opportunity to quickly schedule a new visit at the home tunnel to improve the scores.
The Czech ICL teams at the Hurricane Factory have now added their numbers to the 14+ leaderboard where Florida's ICL team has been the only one so far. iFLY Sacramento, Brazilian team Harpia... (more)
Did you know that the tie-breaking rules could not break the internal AAA tie at Paraclete? posted: Jul 8th, 2017 The June competition of the Indoor Cloud League is over, and both leaderboards are closed. Paraclete XP's ICL team won the AAA Class competition with Fast4ward XP's 23-pointer on the 14+ leaderboard, while iFLY SF Bay's AAA Class lineup (Deanna Frank, Julius Frank, Leander van Schriek, Volker Haag) posted the highest score for the sequence on the 12+ leaderboard.
The Paraclete team had actually a second AAA Class lineup that tied the 23-pointer. Phoenix XP members Morgan Womble and Lauren Byrd once again teamed up with two Golden Knights (Matt Accord, Drew Star) and took on the slot switching... (more)
Did you know that the Hurricane Factory took the lead on the Indoor Cloud League June 14+ leaderboard? posted: Jun 30th, 2017 The end of the month is once again creating moves on the leaderboards of the Indoor Cloud League.
The Czech 4-way teams are taking a break from the WTL/ETL meets during the outdoor season in the summer. However, they continue to post scores for the Hurricane Factory on the ICL 14+ leaderboard.
The senior teams who jump from planes in the summer are using the ICL sequences for their ongoing indoor training, while the junior teams are naturally limited to indoor training and competition. It is no surprise that the participation of the junior teams is almost equal compared to the 4-way seniors... (more)