I didn't get to go in on Friday night, as I didn't get to New York till almost midnight. Makes me kind of sad, but I didn't have anything near ready for a sword form, and it's gonna be tough to have one ready for our tourneyand get ready for upcoming testing. I'll have to find spare hours to sneak into the dojang and use the floor.
For us, it was a nine man division, three from our dojang, 4 of Master Rexer's students, one of the guys from Louisiana, and one of the English guys, and nearly everyone that wasn't in my school did Chil Sung of some sort, including one instance of Chil Sung O Ro, which was kind of unexpected in a red belt division. I almost laughed when they called up two of the competitors again and made them do Pyung Ahn E Dan as a tie breaker. It was just such a beautiful choice.
You'll probably see more variety in your opponents as you go on, though - junior color belts generally don't do much travelling to tournaments as a rule of thumb, it's the red belts and the low black belts that generally really want to prove something, and go out to compete. I know I went pretty much because I wanted to play with some of those guys again. You might even get lucky, and draw someone who practices something else entirely at some of the invitationals. At the Pittsburgh tournament this spring, I got into a moderately brutal sparring match with a guy that practiced Eagle Claw Kung Fu. About the only thing that kept us from painting the floor with each other was the frequent intervention of the O Dan judging the match. Most fun I've ever had in a sparring match.