Paintball players take on Fairplex
Campus Times
February 13, 2004
Kimo Schaedel, of Team Rodents, hides and shoots as he participates in the
three on one exhibition during the 2004 Paintball Expo at the Fairplex in Pomona.
Schaedel, a two-year veteran, is one of three professional paintball players
involved in this exhibition.
People dressed in military fatigues hooked up with guns and ammunition carried
out missions at the Fairplex last weekend.
Fortunately, the guns were actually markers, the ammunition consisted of paint
balls and the mission was capturing a flag within a given time limit.
In addition to the war games, many companies displayed their products at the
third annual Paintball Expo.
Hundreds of people gathered to buy low cost supplies, see what the new items
are and meet some of their favorite players.
The Paintball Expo was designed to give people an opportunity to not only
buy and sell paintball supplies, but also to expose the up and coming sport
to more people.
Starting as a few people shooting balls full of paint at each other, paintball
has been around for more than 20 years and attracts an estimated seven million
players nationwide.
Paintball used to be a weekend recreational sport, said Rick Vaughn,
a player for team Savex.
Vaughn said that when the players became better, they attracted sponsors and
formed leagues.
I started playing a few years ago, when paintball was tiny, said
Eric Peterson of Tropical Illuzion.
It has blown up and has no signs of slowing down anytime soon,
he added.
Paintball is a multibillion dollar business, not until recently have
companies began to buy into the sport. In fact, just a few months ago Dick Clark
purchased the National X-Ball League, planning to bring it to national television,
said Darryl Trent, sales representative for Smart Parts inc.
More than 50 companies displayed booths selling anything from low cost paint
balls ($30 a box), to a $3,000 paintball gun.
They filled their booths with colorful displays, of any paintball equipment,
hoping to get their product out and known.
This summer paintball will shoot at the mainstream for the first time as the
X-Games, the Olympic equivalent of extreme sports, have added it to the line-up.
The X-Games make small sports huge. Look at snowboarding, look at surfing,
paintball is next, said Jules Foote, a player for team Ironmen.
Games will be played in X-ball format.
X-ball is played on a field about the size of a basketball court, with several
inflatable bunkers. It is timed just like college basketball with two twenty
minute halves.
The goal is to capture and hang the flag of the opposing team in your own
teams base.
After a Flag Hang (a score), a two-minute time-out for a strategic
team huddle is given before the action resumes.
The Expo was the first contact to the paintball sport for many of the visitors.
Some of them tested the equipment on two set up courses, others jumped in
just for fun, hoping to mark someone.
My son has never played, and he has been begging me for a year or more
now, so I thought the Expo would be the perfect place for him to get a feeling
for the sport before he jumped head first into something he wasnt going
to like, said Joshua Brown, father of 8-year-old Tyler.
They shot at me, and I shot back, Tyler said It was cool.
Once you play, Foote said, Youre hooked for life.