Tuesday, April 25, 2023

WGI World Championships Recap


     On April 13th, WGI world championships began in Dayton, Ohio. This is an event where top winter guards from around the world come together to compete and watch each other's performances. This recap will focus on the two top divisions, Scholastic World and Independent World Class. 

Onyx Performing at WGI Finals. Photo by Tony McCrackin.

Scholastic World Class are for groups representing high schools. The independent class is for the performers usually out of high school. As the name suggests, they usually have no ties to colleges or schools, however some do. 

The event is spread out into three days. Thursday for prelims, Friday for semi-finals, Saturday for finals. Each round, depending on the number of groups performing, guards are eliminated. By finals only the top 15 will perform. For perspective, some of the classes with the most competitors start with around 50. 

These groups are judged based on 4 categories: movement, equipment, design, and overall general effect. Movement focuses on the dancing abilities, equipment on the spinning of flags, rifles, and sabres. Design focuses on the theming of the show, general effect focuses on the performance and the show overall.  

This year there were 21 Scholastic World groups to start off with. According to the WGI policy manual, 30 groups or less to start with means 20 groups get to move on to semi-finals. However, this year they allowed all 21 groups to perform in semi-finals. This could be because they did not just want to eliminate one group. Below are the standing scores after semi-finals. 


  1. Carmel HS -  95.9

  2. Tarpon Springs HS - 95.1

  3. The Woodlands HS - 94.0

  4. Avon HS - 92.9

  5. Arcadia HS - 91.1

  6. MiamisBurg HS - 89.6

  7. Northview HS - 88.1

  8. West Broward HS - 87.9

  9. Cleveland HS (NC) - 87.1

  10. El Dorado HS - 86.2

  11. Stoneman Douglas HS - 84.9

  12. Center Grove HS - 83.7

  13. Kiski Area HS - 83.5

  14. Warren Central HS - 82.5

  15. Chino Hills HS - 81.9

  16. Bellbrook HS - 81.5

  17. Fishers HS - 80.0

  18. Moe and Gene Johnson HS - 78.7

  19. Flanagan HS - 78.2

  20. Marvin Ridge HS -77.5

  21. Norwin HS - 77.4


As for who gets to move onto finals, only the top 15 make it. Most groups just strive to make it to finals as it is a huge honor in the color guard community. However, comparing the 15th and 16th scores, you can just see how competitive it can be. Bellbrook HS lost their finals spot by four tenths of a point.


Screenshot of Carmel HS Finals Performance.


In comparison, the independent class started off with 35 groups for prelims. In WGI's rules only 24 groups get to move onto semi-finals. Which is exactly what happened. Here are the standing scores for the independent class.


  1. Paramount - 96.9

  2. Blessed Sacrament - 96.2

  3. Pride of Cincinnati - 95.4

  4. Fusion Winter Guard - 93.4 

  5. Onyx - 92.9

  6. Fantasia - 91.5

  7. Mirage - 91.0

  8. ORIGINS - 90.9

  9. UCF Pegasus World - 88.5

  10. Etude - 88.4

  11. AMP Winter Guard - 87.6

  12. FIU Winter Guard - 87.0

  13. Juxtaposition - 85.4

  14. Tampa Independent - 85.4

  15. Mayflower - 83.7

  16. Lexis - 83.4

  17. FeniX Independent - 82.9

  18. Malachi - 81.6

  19. Invictus - 81.1

  20. In Motion Performance Ensemble - 79.4

  21. Icon Winter Guard - 79.2

  22. Relentless - 78.7

  23. First Flight - 77.4

  24. Edge Independent - 77.0


Just like the scholastic class, only the top 15 move on to finals for the independent world class. Comparing the scores of the 15th and 16th spot again, you can see how close it was for this division as well. Lexis lost their spot to just three tenths of a point to Mayflower. 

The WGI Champions of the Scholastic World Class was Carmel HS. They kept their first place standing throughout all three performances, which is extremely impressive. Their performance was named “Lean On Me.” Their music was all piano and super fun. The audience was even clapping along during their final performance. There was no ensemble flag feature, which usually appears in winter guard shows. However, there was a huge rifle presence throughout the whole show. I interpreted the rifles as the piano keys dancing across the floor. This is adamant with the surplus of ripple tosses throughout the show that perfectly match the music.  


Photo by Jolesch Enterprises of Carmel HS. 

Here is a link to view their finals performance.
https://youtu.be/vcbPpqtfKRw


The WGI Champions of the Independent World Class was Paramount. Just like Carmel, Paramount kept their first place title the whole weekend. With each score improving with every performance, there was no doubt their performance was breathtaking. This production was called “Drawn Together.” One of my favorite elements of this show was the flag silks. The first opening silk had a cut out in it, making a huge whole, the choreography even utilized this whole with performance weaving themselves through the silks. The ending silks had each performer's face and name printed on them in a sketch style. Thus the team was drawn together with the completion of the flag feature. 

Screenshot of Paramount's final performance.

Here is a link to view Paramount's Final Performance.



WGI had so many amazing performances this year, I can’t wait to see what is in store for next year!


Photo by Jolesch Enterprises of Paramount.

2 comments:

  1. Oh man. I love watching dancing competitions. I used to dance when I was little and I'm so upset that I stopped doing it. Watching competitions and reality shows about dance make me so nostalgic. Thank you for this recap!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Don’t usually watch many dance competitions, but this seems super interesting. I think the closest thing I’ve watched is dance moms lol

    ReplyDelete