# It's More Fun to Compete

**Source:** Pinball News Website  
**Type:** article  
**Published:** 2026-02-23  
**Beat:** Pinball

**URL:** https://www.pinballnews.com/news/tournaments.html

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## Analysis

This article surveys the resurgence of competitive pinball tournaments globally, attributed largely to the IFPA's establishment and WPPR ranking system. It highlights expanding tournament circuits in North America and the UK, featuring new events at major shows (ASI Las Vegas, Rochester, Allentown), and the launch of regional UK pinball leagues feeding into the UK Pinball Open. The piece argues that tournaments drive media attention and growth for both the sport and the venues hosting them.

### Key Claims

- [HIGH] The IFPA was established by Josh Sharpe, Roger Sharpe and Steve Epstein to promote and run tournaments. — _Direct attribution in article text about IFPA founding_
- [HIGH] In 2006, WPPR website tracked players at 52 tournaments with points awarded at all of them, leading to Keith Elwin being crowned 2006 champion. — _Factual claim about historical WPPR data and Keith Elwin's championship_
- [HIGH] P3Tournament expanded from a single fun tournament in 2004 to hosting tournaments at multiple shows including Pinball Wizards Convention in Allentown and Rochester Gameroom Show. — _Direct quote from P3Tournament President Brian Smith_
- [HIGH] The Pinball News UK Pinball Open will feature a new two-day tournament format with qualifying on day one and finals on day two. — _Article describes UK Pinball Show tournament format in September_
- [HIGH] The European Pinball Championships relaunched in 2005 in the Netherlands, was held in Germany the following year, and will be in Sweden the year of this article. — _Factual tournament schedule stated in article_

### Notable Quotes

> "We never planned on any of this happening. Our goal at first was just to run a small tournament for fun."
> — **Brian Smith, P3Tournament President**
> _Shows organic growth of competitive pinball from grassroots origins_

> "We are trying to bring pinball and competitive pinball back into the mindset of the general public. The more that competitive pinball can grow, the more press it can accumulate which will only be beneficial to helping the pinball hobby in general."
> — **Brian Smith, P3Tournament President**
> _Articulates strategy of using tournaments as media vehicle for hobby growth_

> "In the first two years of the show we wanted to gradually introduce the idea of competing by creating a friendly and simple format to appeal to new players and those who think they won't do well in a full-blown tournament. We've done that, so now it's time to ramp up to a more recognisable and competitive format."
> — **Martin Ayub, Tournament Director**
> _Demonstrates strategic evolution of tournament formats to scale participation_

> "The UK Pinball League is one of the end products of a conversation between Greg Mott, Martin Ayub and myself, that took place after the European Championships in Germany. I was on a high and in awe at some of the skills I'd seen there."
> — **Edwin Mole, UK League Organiser**
> _Shows inspiration for league development came from witnessing European competition_

> "It's a chance to play new games, meet friends, talk pinball and have fun. It's also a chance for inexperienced and young players to learn from the more experienced."
> — **Edwin Mole, UK League Organiser**
> _Articulates dual purpose of league: social/competitive development and mentorship_

### Entities

| Name | Type | Context |
|------|------|---------|
| IFPA | organization | International Flipper Pinball Association; established by Josh Sharpe, Roger Sharpe, and Steve Epstein; driving tournament expansion and WPPR ranking system |
| WPPR | organization | World Pinball Player Rankings system created by IFPA; tracks tournament points and player rankings globally |
| Josh Sharpe | person | Co-founder of IFPA |
| Roger Sharpe | person | Co-founder of IFPA |
| Steve Epstein | person | Co-founder of IFPA |
| Keith Elwin | person | 2006 WPPR champion |
| P3Tournament | organization | Tournament organizing entity that expanded from single 2004 event to hosting multiple shows; now operates at Allentown Pinball Wizards Convention and Rochester Gameroom Show |
| Brian Smith | person | President of P3Tournament |
| Martin Ayub | person | Tournament Director for UK Pinball Show; organizer of Pinball News UK Pinball Open |
| Edwin Mole | person | Organiser of UK Pinball League |
| Greg Mott | person | Involved in UK Pinball League conception discussions |
| Pinball Wizards Convention | event | Convention in Allentown hosting P3Tournament |
| ASI show | event | Las Vegas trade show in March hosting ASI-IFPA Pinball Tournament and video pinball tournament |
| Rochester Gameroom Show | event | End of March show hosting P3Tournament tournament |
| UK Pinball Show | event | September UK event hosting Pinball News UK Pinball Open and UK Pinball Team Tournament |
| European Pinball Championships | event | International tournament relaunched 2005; held in Netherlands (2005), Germany (2006), Sweden (year of article) |
| Global VR | company | Sponsor of ASI video pinball tournament; manufactures UltraPin machines |
| UK Pinball League | organization | New regional league structure in UK with regional meetings and qualifying pathway to UK Pinball Open |
| Pinball News | organization | Media outlet organizing UK Pinball Open and related tournaments |

### Topics

- **Primary:** Tournament infrastructure and growth, IFPA and WPPR impact on competitive pinball, Regional league development (UK)
- **Secondary:** Media attention and hobby promotion through tournaments, Venue partnership models (shows and tournaments), European competitive pinball landscape
- **Mentioned:** Tournament format innovation and accessibility

### Sentiment

**Positive** (0.85) — Article is optimistic about competitive pinball expansion, highlighting growth trajectories, enthusiastic organizers, and infrastructure improvements. Uses language suggesting revival and momentum ('resurgence,' 'bright future'). No negative criticisms of tournament scene or major concerns raised.

### Signals

- **[business_signal]** Competitive pinball tournament circuit expanding significantly with new WPPR-scoring events at major trade shows (ASI Las Vegas, Rochester) and dedicated tournament organizing entities (P3Tournament, IFPA) professionalizing the space (confidence: high) — Article documents 52 WPPR-tracked tournaments in 2006, new events planned for 2007 at multiple venues, and P3Tournament expansion from single 2004 event to multiple annual shows
- **[community_signal]** Grassroots competitive pinball participation rising globally with regional league structures developing in UK and European Championships relaunched with multi-country hosting rotation (confidence: high) — UK Pinball League with regional meetings across multiple areas; European Championships held in multiple countries (Netherlands, Germany, Sweden) with future hosts lined up
- **[event_signal]** Major competitive pinball events now feature structured formats designed to accommodate larger participant bases and scale accessibility (two-day qualifiers, regional league pathways, 'open' and 'industry' divisions) (confidence: high) — Pinball News UK Pinball Open uses two-day qualifying/finals format; ASI show offers both open and industry divisions; UK league designed to provide pathway for inexperienced and young players
- **[market_signal]** Venue operators (shows/conventions) increasingly recognizing tournament addition as mechanism to grow attendance, media profile, and overall event stature (confidence: high) — Multiple sources (Brian Smith, Martin Ayub) explicitly state tournaments help attract media and grow venue profiles; shows actively recruiting tournament organizers
- **[personnel_signal]** Key tournament organizers and directors (Martin Ayub, Edwin Mole, Brian Smith) motivated by media exposure and hobby growth, driving format innovation and venue expansion (confidence: high) — Multiple organizer quotes emphasizing media attention as driver for hobby growth and tournament expansion strategy

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## Transcript

Pinball is all about competing. Whether you're playing to beat your friends, your highest score, the leader in the ToPS tournament on your nearest location, you are also battling against the machine to stave off the inevitable.

But competing in tournaments is also a significant part of the pinball scene and one that is becoming increasingly popular in recent times.

There have been a number of well-established and well-supported pinball tournaments around the world for many years, including those supported by former pinball manufacturers and arcades, but when the sport's fortunes took a turn for the worse in the mid to late '90s, some of those faltered and competitive pinball contracted to the bigger events.

Now though, more and more shows want to have tournaments and the level of play has risen to match the increased prizes values.

Much of this growth can be attributed to the establishing of the new IFPA by Josh Sharpe, Roger Sharpe and Steve Epstein. By both promoting and running tournaments they have increased the number of competitive events in the pinball calendar, while the creation of the WPPR points system gives players something long-term to compete for in addition to the prizes.

Last year, the WPPR website tracked players at 52 tournaments and awarded points at them all, which led to Keith Elwin being crowned as 2006 champion.

This year is looking to be just as busy if not more so with new WPPR-scoring events planned at several shows.

One such is the ASI show in Las Vegas at the end of March. The IFPA ran a tournament at the AMOA show in Las Vegas last year and this year the ASI show is also host to an IFPA event with The ASI-IFPA Pinball Tournament. There will be "open" and "industry" divisions to remind those in the industry how pinball can play an important role in their machine mix and how many dedicated players there are who will seek out good places to play.

But the ASI show is going one better with the ASI-IFPA Video Pinball Tournament sponsored by Global VR and played out on their UltraPin machines with the chance for the winner to take home one of the UltraPin machines valued at more than $6,000.

The IFPA are not alone in expanding their tournaments into events previously lacking any competitive play.

This year, P3Tournament have picked up the mantle and are expanding from a single fun tournament in 2004 designed as an extension of a local pinball league, to host of tournaments at the Pinball Wizards Convention in Allentown and - new for this year - also at the Rochester Gameroom Show at the end of March.

P3Tournament's President Brian Smith told Pinball News: "We never planned on any of this happening. Our goal at first was just to run a small tournament for fun". But the event's popularity soon demanded a larger location. "We then approached the Allentown show about hosting our tournament

during the convention. To our delight they were more then happy to host. That year we had almost 60 players from over 12 different states."

This year, when the Rochester show contacted the P3 team, they felt ready to take on the challenge and organise a tournament for the event. Brian said "We are trying to bring pinball and competitive pinball back into the mindset of the general public. The more that competitive pinball can grow, the more press it can accumulate which will only be beneficial in helping the pinball hobby in general. We also are already talking to some more shows and conventions in regards to running future tournaments."

In the UK, competitive play is also on the rise. The UK Pinball Show in September will feature a new format two day tournament - the Pinball News UK Pinball Open. Qualifying will take place on the first day with the final rounds played out between the qualifiers on the second. There will also be the Pinball News UK Pinball Team Tournament for groups of four players from around the UK and the rest of the world.

Tournament Director Martin Ayub also thinks getting players to compete helps bring pinball to the attention of the media. He told Pinball News: "In the first two years of the show we wanted to gradually introduce the idea of competing by creating a friendly and simple format to appeal to new players and those who think they won't do well in a full-blown tournament. We've done that, so now it's time to ramp up to a more recognisable and competitive format so we can use the tournaments to grow the show, attract more media attention and encourage international players to attend."

Meanwhile, a UK-wide league is just getting underway with regional meetings in the South West, London & the South East and the Midlands taking place in the past few weeks and a schedule of meetings established, with the top players qualifying for the UK Pinball Open tournament later in the year.

League organiser Edwin Mole explained to Pinball News how the league came about and what he wants to achieve with it. "The UK Pinball League is one of the end products of a conversation between Greg Mott, Martin Ayub and myself, that took place after the European Championships in Germany. I was on a high and in awe at some of the skills I'd seen there. We discussed how we could organise something to raise skill levels and interest in pinball in the UK. It's a chance to play new games, meet friends, talk pinball and have fun. It's also a chance for inexperienced and young players to learn from the more experienced."

All this builds on the success of the European Pinball Championships which relaunched in 2005 and was held in The Netherlands that year, Germany last year and will be in Sweden this year. Beyond that, there are several contries wanting to hold future EPCs so the tournament has a bright future as the centrepiece of European competitive pinball.

The enthusiasm of players to pit their skills against fellow players is nothing new, but the growth in the number and scope of tournaments around the world brings those players into the media spotlight and shows how there is a dedicated fanbase who support and promote the sport.

Setting up a tournament is not a simple task but it has been shown time and again how adding one to a show provides the organisers with a way to grow the stature and profile of their event. With organisations such as IFPA and P3Tournaments taking on the responsibility of running the event to a professional standard, why would any amusement or gameroom show not want to have competitive pinball as part of the mix?

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*Exported from Journalist Tool on 2026-04-13 | Item ID: 9819404c-13ba-41ab-8b03-84e776241c2e*
