https://www.qbwiki.com/w/api.php?action=feedcontributions&user=David+Reinstein&feedformat=atomQBWiki - User contributions [en]2024-03-29T15:37:38ZUser contributionsMediaWiki 1.35.1https://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Belvidere&diff=62885Belvidere2024-01-12T16:03:45Z<p>David Reinstein: Created page with "{{Highschoolteam|Name = Belvidere Buccaneers |image = |citystate = Belvidere, Illinois |currentcoach = Stuart Warner |state = |nats = |nats appearances = HSNCT: 2016, 2017,..."</p>
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<div>{{Highschoolteam|Name = Belvidere Buccaneers<br />
|image = <br />
|citystate = Belvidere, Illinois<br />
|currentcoach = Stuart Warner<br />
|state = <br />
|nats = <br />
|nats appearances = HSNCT: 2016, 2017, 2019, 2021<br>NSC: 2023<br />
|status = active<br />
|size = 1200 }}<br />
<br />
'''Belvidere High School''' is located in Belvidere, Illinois, which is just east of Rockford.<br />
<br />
They play in the [[Northern Illinois Conference]], where they have finished 2nd behind [[Auburn (Rockford, IL)|Rockford Auburn]] many times. The team made it to the Quarterfinals of the [[1996 IHSA State Championship Tournament]], and they finished 2nd in the [[Masonic tournament]] that year. They won the [[David Riley Memorial Kickoffs|2017 Byron Kickoff]] and 2018 Belvidere Kickoff. They won the Standard Division of the 2019 Loyola [[Ultima]]. In 2023, they finished 2nd in the Standard Division of the [[Reinstein Varsity]].</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Category:Daniel_Wright&diff=62884Category:Daniel Wright2024-01-12T15:47:26Z<p>David Reinstein: Created page with "Daniel Wright is a middle school in Lincolnshire, Illinois. It feeds Stevenson."</p>
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<div>[[Daniel Wright]] is a middle school in Lincolnshire, Illinois. It feeds [[Stevenson]].</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=David_Reinstein&diff=62871David Reinstein2024-01-09T12:53:42Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox|Name = David Reinstein<br />
|Image = Reinstein QuizBowl.jpg<br />
|Subjects = Math<br />
|highschool = coached at [[New Trier]] (1994-2011)<br />
| }}<br />
<br />
'''David Reinstein''' was a coach at [[New Trier]] from 1994–2011, the chair of [[IHSSBCA]] from 2004–14, and the president of [[PACE]] from 2016–18. He now writes the questions for the [[Scobol Solo]], [[Masonic tournament]], and [[IESA]] tournaments, and he runs [[Scobol Solo]] and [[Reinstein Varsity]]. David also produces match questions in IESA format, and he uses questions from the Masonic tournament to write the Reinstein Set.<br />
<br />
==Question Writing & Editing==<br />
David is the head writer and editor of the [[IESA]], [[Scobol Solo]], and [[Masonic]] sets each year, and he oversees several rounds produced for Illinois middle schools to use during the regular season. He has been in charge of Scobol Solo since it started in 2001, and he took over the Masonic set for the 2012 tournament. He has gotten varying amounts of help with the sets over the years, especially editing help from [[Jonah Greenthal]]. The middle school regular season questions were produced starting in the 2019-20 school year, and David became the question supplier for the IESA State Championship starting in 2023. David was also a significant contributor to [[NAQT]] from 2011-17, and for a few years he also wrote a bunch of questions for [[CMST]].<br />
<br />
For the 2012 [[IHSA]] set, David was the social studies editor. Because the writers flaked out, he wrote half the questions. For the 2013 IHSA set, David was the math editor and assistant editor for the whole set. [[IHSA plagiarism scandal|When he told the IHSA that a bunch of the questions were copied and pasted from the internet, he was fired]]. Some other writers quit, and the questions got worse until the Head Editorship changed for the 2017-18 season. Reinstein and Jonah talked about the problem at a [[May 2014 Illinois General Assembly hearing on the IHSA]].<br />
<br />
==Illinois Scholastic Bowl & Quizbowl==<br />
David has played a major role in [[IHSSBCA]] since the organization was about one year old. He first gained attention by starting a petition asking [[IHSA]] to improve question quality. Coaches from over forty schools signed the petition, and the result was that [[New Trier]] got a bunch of angry phone calls from [[IHSA]]. A few years later, however, [[IHSA]] improved its question quality somewhat when it switched from [[Answers Plus]] to a secret cabal. The [[Masonic]] Tournament used improved questions written in part by some of David's former students at [[Aegis Questions]] for 2008 and 2009, then regressed to [[Questions Galore]] for 2010 and 2011, then used David starting in 2012.<br />
<br />
David has a long history of managing Turnabouts and writing letters and articles for [[IHSSBCA]]. He succeeded [[David Riley]] as Chair in 2004, and the organization grew under his leadership. Some of the programs that came into being while Reinstein was Chair are the Awards Dinner, Hall of Fame, ethics guidelines, moderator certification, annualization of [[SchoBowlFest]], Novice Tournaments, IHSSBCA Grants, IHSSBCA Liaisons, and a Members Only section of their website. The organization now sponsors a team that competes at [[NASAT]]. (Before David took over and for his first few years, the organization sponsored a team that competed at [[PAC]].)<br />
<br />
==Coaching==<br />
Reinstein coached consistently strong teams for many years at New Trier that placed highly at many local tournaments and had decent showings at Nationals. His teams won nine [[IHSA]] Sectionals, one each IHSA and NAQT State Championship, and many [[Central Suburban League]] titles.<br />
<br />
Reinstein took over as coach when he started teaching at [[New Trier]]. He had planned on coaching Math Team, but that team already had many coaches, so he filled a need in Scholastic Bowl. He was told that he could have the position if he was willing to drive a van, since the other coach that year did not have a license. David has worked with several coaches over the years. After becoming a father in 1998, David dropped from attending all team matches to about half of them. In 2011, he stepped down from coaching, though he still teaches at New Trier.<br />
<br />
Until its 2009 cancellation, Reinstein was an annual guest on the ''[https://soundcloud.com/user-186507147/05-scholastic-bowl?in=user-186507147/sets/kj-cd-42 Kathy and Judy Show]'' on Chicago's WGN radio during the week of the IHSA State Championship. Most of the time was spent asking sample questions to the hosts of the show, with somewhat humorous outcomes. It was annually the biggest publicity moment in [[Illinois Scholastic Bowl]].<br />
<br />
==Tournament Hosting==<br />
In addition to an occasional IHSA or Masonic Regional or Sectional tournament, Reinstein has run the [[Scobol Solo]] each year since 2001. He at first did everything--writing the questions and drawing up the pairings, which involve roughly 400 matches each year put together using a power-matching format. He more recently gets significant help from [[Jonah Greenthal]], who designed software that pretty much runs the tournament.<br />
<br />
From 2005 to 2007, the [[New Trier Varsity]] was hosted by [[Carlo Angiuli]] and [[Nick Matchen]], who graduated from New Trier in 2007. Reinstein ran it in 2008 and since 2014, while from 2009 to 2013 it was primarily run by [[Jonah Greenthal]] with help from Reinstein. In 2021, the tournament changed its name to [[Reinstein Varsity]] because it was not held at New Trier.<br />
<br />
In order to separate David's tournaments from the New Trier Business Office, in 2016 David started [http://www.reinsteinquizbowl.com/ Reinstein QuizBowl], which is a Doing Business As that handles the financials for David's tournaments and questions.<br />
<br />
David also writes card systems for tournaments that power match. He has done so for the Scobol Solo since its inception, for the first day of [[HSNCT]] from 2010 to 2016, and for the first day of [[MSNCT]] from 2013 to 2016. In 2017, David was replaced by a computer.<br />
<br />
==Personal==<br />
David graduated from [[Niles North]] in Skokie, Illinois in 1986 and from [[Brown]] in 1990. David and his wife have two daughters and a son.<br />
<br />
:Website: [https://reinsteinquizbowl.com Reinstein QuizBowl]<br />
:[https://www.facebook.com/ReinsteinQuizBowl Facebook Question of the Day]<br />
:[https://www.instagram.com/reinsteinqb/ Instagram Question of the Day] (It's the same question.)<br />
:[https://www.reinsteinquizbowl.com/10-ways-to-improve-your-team/ David's 10 Ways to Improve Your Team]<br />
:[https://www.reinsteinquizbowl.com/10-ways-to-improve-scholastic-bowl/ David's 10 Ways to Improve Scholastic Bowl]<br />
<br />
[[Category:People]]<br />
[[Category:High school coaches]]<br />
[[Category:New Trier]]<br />
[[Category:Original QBWiki Page]]<br />
[[Category:IHSSBCA]]<br />
[[Category:Question writers]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=David_Reinstein&diff=62820David Reinstein2023-12-28T23:54:59Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox|Name = David Reinstein<br />
|Image = Reinstein QuizBowl.jpg<br />
|Subjects = Math<br />
|highschool = coached at [[New Trier]] (1994-2011)<br />
| }}<br />
<br />
'''David Reinstein''' was a coach at [[New Trier]] from 1994–2011, the chair of [[IHSSBCA]] from 2004–14, and the president of [[PACE]] from 2016–18. He now writes the questions for the [[Scobol Solo]], [[Masonic tournament]], and [[IESA]] tournaments, and he runs [[Scobol Solo]] and [[Reinstein Varsity]]. David also produces match questions in IESA format, and he uses questions from the Masonic tournament to write the Reinstein Set.<br />
<br />
==Question Writing & Editing==<br />
David is the head writer and editor of the [[IESA]], [[Scobol Solo]], and [[Masonic]] sets each year, and he oversees several rounds produced for Illinois middle schools to use during the regular season. He has been in charge of Scobol Solo since it started in 2001, and he took over the Masonic set for the 2012 tournament. He has gotten varying amounts of help with the sets over the years, especially editing help from [[Jonah Greenthal]]. The middle school regular season questions were produced starting in the 2019-20 school year, and David became the question supplier for the IESA State Championship starting in 2023. David was also a significant contributor to [[NAQT]] from 2011-17, and for a few years he also wrote a bunch of questions for [[CMST]].<br />
<br />
For the 2012 [[IHSA]] set, David was the social studies editor. Because the writers flaked out, he wrote half the questions. For the 2013 IHSA set, David was the math editor and assistant editor for the whole set. [[IHSA plagiarism scandal|When he told the IHSA that a bunch of the questions were copied and pasted from the internet, he was fired]]. Some other writers quit, and the questions got worse until the Head Editorship changed for the 2017-18 season. Reinstein and Jonah talked about the problem at a [[May 2014 Illinois General Assembly hearing on the IHSA]].<br />
<br />
==Illinois Scholastic Bowl & Quizbowl==<br />
David has played a major role in [[IHSSBCA]] since the organization was about one year old. He first gained attention by starting a petition asking [[IHSA]] to improve question quality. Coaches from over forty schools signed the petition, and the result was that [[New Trier]] got a bunch of angry phone calls from [[IHSA]]. A few years later, however, [[IHSA]] improved its question quality somewhat when it switched from [[Answers Plus]] to a secret cabal. The [[Masonic]] Tournament used improved questions written in part by some of David's former students at [[Aegis Questions]] for 2008 and 2009, then regressed to [[Questions Galore]] for 2010 and 2011, then used David starting in 2012.<br />
<br />
David has a long history of managing Turnabouts and writing letters and articles for [[IHSSBCA]]. He succeeded [[David Riley]] as Chair in 2004, and the organization grew under his leadership. Some of the programs that came into being while Reinstein was Chair are the Awards Dinner, Hall of Fame, ethics guidelines, moderator certification, annualization of [[SchoBowlFest]], Novice Tournaments, IHSSBCA Grants, IHSSBCA Liaisons, and a Members Only section of their website. The organization now sponsors a team that competes at [[NASAT]]. (Before David took over and for his first few years, the organization sponsored a team that competed at [[PAC]].)<br />
<br />
==Coaching==<br />
Reinstein coached consistently strong teams for many years at New Trier that placed highly at many local tournaments and had decent showings at Nationals. His teams won nine [[IHSA]] Sectionals, one each IHSA and NAQT State Championship, and many [[Central Suburban League]] titles.<br />
<br />
Reinstein took over as coach when he started teaching at [[New Trier]]. He had planned on coaching Math Team, but that team already had many coaches, so he filled a need in Scholastic Bowl. He was told that he could have the position if he was willing to drive a van, since the other coach that year did not have a license. David has worked with several coaches over the years. After becoming a father in 1998, David dropped from attending all team matches to about half of them. In 2011, he stepped down from coaching, though he still teaches at New Trier.<br />
<br />
Until its 2009 cancellation, Reinstein was an annual guest on the ''[https://soundcloud.com/user-186507147/05-scholastic-bowl?in=user-186507147/sets/kj-cd-42 Kathy and Judy Show]'' on Chicago's WGN radio during the week of the IHSA State Championship. Most of the time was spent asking sample questions to the hosts of the show, with somewhat humorous outcomes. It was annually the biggest publicity moment in [[Illinois Scholastic Bowl]].<br />
<br />
==Tournament Hosting==<br />
In addition to an occasional IHSA or Masonic Regional or Sectional tournament, Reinstein has run the [[Scobol Solo]] each year since 2001. He at first did everything--writing the questions and drawing up the pairings, which involve roughly 400 matches each year put together using a power-matching format. He more recently gets significant help from [[Jonah Greenthal]], who designed software that pretty much runs the tournament.<br />
<br />
From 2005 to 2007, the [[New Trier Varsity]] was hosted by [[Carlo Angiuli]] and [[Nick Matchen]], who graduated from New Trier in 2007. Reinstein ran it in 2008 and since 2014, while from 2009 to 2013 it was primarily run by [[Jonah Greenthal]] with help from Reinstein. In 2021, the tournament changed its name to [[Reinstein Varsity]] because it was not held at New Trier.<br />
<br />
In order to separate David's tournaments from the New Trier Business Office, in 2016 David started [http://www.reinsteinquizbowl.com/ Reinstein QuizBowl], which is a Doing Business As that handles the financials for David's tournaments and questions.<br />
<br />
David also writes card systems for tournaments that power match. He has done so for the Scobol Solo since its inception, for the first day of [[HSNCT]] from 2010 to 2016, and for the first day of [[MSNCT]] from 2013 to 2016. In 2017, David was replaced by a computer.<br />
<br />
==Personal==<br />
David graduated from [[Niles North]] in Skokie, Illinois in 1986 and from [[Brown]] in 1990. David and his wife have two daughters and a son.<br />
<br />
Website: [https://reinsteinquizbowl.com Reinstein QuizBowl]<br />
<br />
[[Category:People]]<br />
[[Category:High school coaches]]<br />
[[Category:New Trier]]<br />
[[Category:Original QBWiki Page]]<br />
[[Category:IHSSBCA]]<br />
[[Category:Question writers]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=File:Reinstein_QuizBowl.jpg&diff=62819File:Reinstein QuizBowl.jpg2023-12-28T23:54:01Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
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<div></div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=IESA&diff=62818IESA2023-12-28T23:51:46Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div>The '''Illinois Elementary School Association''' (IESA) is the governing body for middle school and junior high school athletics and activities in Illinois. It is an affiliate of the National Federation of State High School Associations. <br />
<br />
Although the vast majority of Illinois high schools are members of the analogous [[IHSA]], many Illinois middle schools and junior high schools are ''not'' members of the IESA; membership is especially low in the Chicago area. It is unusual for high schools to have a team but not compete in the IHSA tournament, but there are many middle schools that have teams do not compete in the IESA tournament. That being said, there are about 400 schools that compete in the IESA tournament each year.<br />
<br />
==History==<br />
The IESA was founded in 1928. <br />
<br />
The IESA began sponsoring a Scholastic Bowl State Tournament in 1988-89, with Canton (Ingersoll) beating Springfield (Grant) in the first ever Championship match. In 1997, IESA split into two classes, with Washington (St. Patrick) winning the first Class A (small school) Championship. Comparatively, the [[IHSA]] began their State tournament in 1986-87. <br />
<br />
==State Tournament Format==<br />
Since 1997 the IESA Scholastic Bowl State Series has divided schools into two classes based on size (designated "AA" for larger schools and "A" for smaller schools). Within each class, schools are assigned to one of eight geographic sectionals, and each sectional is divided into four regionals. Teams play to advance from regionals to sectionals to the state championship.<br />
<br />
Originally, the tournament consisted of only a State championship match with the teams with the best records in each pool advancing to the final round. In 1993, a consolation match was introduced with the teams having the second-best records advancing to a 3rd/4th Place game.<br />
<br />
The IESA uses a [[round robin]]-based format at the regional level (in contrast to the IHSA's use of [[single elimination]]), and allows for tiebreaker rounds if necessary. Regionals with more than four teams, which is most of them, have two round robin pools and the pool winners playing a single match for the championship. Teams are guaranteed at least two matches, so in the rare case of a two-team regional the teams play best-of-three. Each sectional has four teams play a round robin format. At all levels, pool ties are broken by playing five-tossup matches.<br />
<br />
==Tournament Hosts==<br />
The IESA State Tournament has been hosted at many venues over the years. Since 2012, it has been hosted by the Peoria Civic Center, the former venue of the [[IHSA]] State Tournament. For many years the event bounced around the Bloomington-Normal area, due to its central geographic location in the state. Locations included Illinois State University, Illinois Wesleyan University, Heartland Community College, Bloomington JHS, & Normal Metcalf. <br />
<br />
==Match Format==<br />
IESA matches consist of 24 [[tossups]] and 20 [[bonuses]]. Excluding ties, the match ends when either the 24th tossup (and associated bonus) has been read, the 20th bonus has been read, or either team exceeds 300 points. Match ties are broken using tossups only; the team that is first to answer two tossups correctly wins.<br />
<br />
All tossups are worth ten points; there are no [[powers]] or [[negs]]. All bonus questions are four parts, with each part worth 5 points each. Unlike in standard quiz bowl, but like the IHSA format used until 2012, the entire bonus is read before teams have any opportunity to confer or answer, so no bonus part can mention a previous part's answer, which significantly constrains the writing style. After the question is read completely, both teams have up to 30 seconds to confer; the controlling team may end conferral early. After conferral, the controlling team gives its answers, then [[bounceback|the non-controlling team may attempt to answer any parts the controlling team missed]].<br />
<br />
IESA Scholastic Bowl rules contain many stipulations about behavior. Perhaps the most famous behavior rule is that when the bonus conferral period ends, all players must put down their writing implements; a penalty is given to any team with a player who does not do so, even if they are clearly not writing or communicating.<br />
<br />
Protests are not allowed in IESA matches (rule 6, article 2, c2, case manual 6-1-2b). Coaches may call a "Clarification time out" in order to ask questions about a moderator decision, but not to protest the acceptability of answers.<br />
<br />
==Questions==<br />
For many years, the questions were provided by [[Questions Galore]], with [[Avery Enterprises]] taking over after Avery purchased Questions Galore. Since 2023, the questions are provided by [[David Reinstein|Reinstein QuizBowl]].<br />
<br />
==IESA vs. IHSA==<br />
Historically, the IHSA has kept a great distance from quizbowl coaches and players, with change and reform taking a long time because of the lack of good communication between coaches and IHSA administrators. The IESA, while still using a top-down approach that limits communication, has shown far more interest in working in their community. Among other initiatives, the IESA sponsors a well-attended biannual meeting for coaches and officials with workshops which can be helpful to new coaches. The IESA has a link on its website which advertises local tournaments. The IESA also recently began experimenting with online scorecards.<br />
<br />
The quirky rules, however, have been a barrier to crossover between IHSA and IESA officials. Many people who work IHSA events as moderators and scorekeepers have refused to work IESA events.<br />
<br />
The IESA has a committee edit the questions before they are sent out and then gives the moderators time before the tournament to review the questions and submit edits.<br />
<br />
==State Championship Results==<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0"<br />
! Years<br />
! Host<br />
! AA Champion<br />
! AA Second Place<br />
! A Champion<br />
! A Second Place<br />
|- <br />
| [[1989 IESA State Championship Tournament|1988-89]]<br />
| Mattoon<br />
| [[Ingersoll|Canton Ingersoll]]<br />
| [[Grant|Springfield Grant]]<br />
|<br />
| <br />
|-<br />
| [[1990 IESA State Championship Tournament|1989-90]]<br />
| Mattoon<br />
| [[Mt. Zion]]<br />
| [[Cumberland|Toledo Cumberland]]<br />
|<br />
| <br />
|-<br />
| [[1991 IESA State Championship Tournament|1990-91]]<br />
| Summit Hill|Frankfort Summit Hill<br />
| Mt. Zion<br />
| Cumberland<br />
|<br />
| <br />
|-<br />
| [[1992 IESA State Championship Tournament|1991-92]]<br />
| [[Franklin|Springfield Franklin]]<br />
| Forrest Prairie Central<br />
| Dallas City<br />
|<br />
| <br />
|-<br />
| [[1993 IESA State Championship Tournament|1992-93]]<br />
| Danville (North Ridge)<br />
| Chatham (Glenwood)<br />
| Morris (Saratoga)<br />
| <br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| [[1994 IESA State Championship Tournament|1993-94]]<br />
| Chatham (Glenwood)<br />
| Chatham (Glenwood)<br />
| Morris (Saratoga)<br />
| <br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| [[1995 IESA State Championship Tournament|1994-95]]<br />
| Metamora GS<br />
| Channahon<br />
| Bradford<br />
| <br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| [[1996 IESA State Championship Tournament|1995-96]]<br />
| Metamora GS<br />
| Streator (St. Anthony)<br />
| Channahon<br />
| <br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| [[1997 IESA State Championship Tournament|1996-97]]<br />
| Pekin (Edison) & Wenona (Fieldcrest)<br />
| Ottawa (Shepard)<br />
| Mahomet-Seymour<br />
| Washington (St. Patrick)<br />
| Wheeler (West)<br />
|-<br />
| [[1998 IESA State Championship Tournament|1997-98]]<br />
| Illinois State University<br />
| Danville (North Ridge)<br />
| Washington (Centra)l<br />
| Bartonville (Monroe)<br />
| Griggsville-Perry<br />
|-<br />
| [[1999 IESA State Championship Tournament|1998-99]]<br />
| Illinois Weslyan University<br />
| [[Springfield (Franklin)]]<br />
| Glasford (Illini Bluffs)<br />
| Bartonville (Monroe)<br />
| Effingham (St. Anthony)<br />
|-<br />
| [[2000 IESA State Championship Tournament|1999-00]]<br />
| Illinois Weslyan University<br />
| [[Dunlap Middle]] School<br />
| [[Barrington Station Middle]]<br />
| Dallas City<br />
| Breese (All Saints)<br />
|-<br />
| [[2001 IESA State Championship Tournament|2000-01]]<br />
| Illinois Weslyan University<br />
| Morton (JHS)<br />
| Cahokia (Wirth)<br />
| [[Normal (Metcalf)]]<br />
| Colfax (Ridgeview)<br />
|-<br />
| [[2002 IESA State Championship Tournament|2001-02]]<br />
| Illinois State University<br />
| Streator (Northlawn)<br />
| Morton (JHS)<br />
| Mazon-Verona-Kinsman<br />
| Raymond (Lincolnwood)<br />
|-<br />
| [[2003 IESA State Championship Tournament|2002-03]]<br />
| Normal (Metcalf) & Pekin (Edison)<br />
| Jacksonville (Turner)<br />
| St. Jacob (Triad)<br />
| Flanagan<br />
| Bunker Hill (Meissner)<br />
|-<br />
| [[2004 IESA State Championship Tournament|2003-04]]<br />
| Normal (Metcalf) & Pekin (Edison)<br />
| Rockford (West)<br />
| Springfield (Franklin)<br />
| Springfield (Blessed Sacrament)<br />
| Catlin<br />
|-<br />
| [[2005 IESA State Championship Tournament|2004-05]]<br />
| Normal (Metcalf) & Pekin (Edison)<br />
| Rockford (West)<br />
| Lincolnshire ([[Daniel Wright]])<br />
| Columbia (ICS)<br />
| Paris (Crestwood)<br />
|-<br />
| [[2006 IESA State Championship Tournament|2005-06]]<br />
| Heartland Community College<br />
| Lincolnshire (Daniel Wright)<br />
| Morton (JHS)<br />
| Normal (Metcalf)<br />
| Peoria (St. Vincent de Paul)<br />
|-<br />
| [[2007 IESA State Championship Tournament|2006-07]]<br />
| Heartland Community College<br />
| Lincolnshire (Daniel Wright)<br />
| River Forest (Roosevelt)<br />
| Streator (St. Anthony)<br />
| Normal (Metcalf)<br />
|-<br />
| [[2008 IESA State Championship Tournament|2007-08]]<br />
| Heartland Community College<br />
| Macomb<br />
| Lincolnshire (Daniel Wright)<br />
| Bloomington (Cornerstone)<br />
| Columbia (ICS)<br />
|-<br />
| [[2009 IESA State Championship Tournament|2008-09]]<br />
| Heartland Community College<br />
| Macomb<br />
| Rochester<br />
| Metamora (St. Mary’s)<br />
| Bloomington (Holy Trinity)<br />
|-<br />
| [[2010 IESA State Championship Tournament|2009-10]]<br />
| Heartland Community College<br />
| Lincolnshire (Daniel Wright)<br />
| Dunlap (Valley) <br />
| Normal (Metcalf)<br />
| Paris (Crestwood)<br />
|-<br />
| [[2011 IESA State Championship Tournament|2010-11]]<br />
| Heartland Community College<br />
| Dunlap (MS)<br />
| Springfield (Franklin)<br />
| Palatine (Quest)<br />
| Bushnell-Prairie City<br />
|-<br />
| [[2012 IESA State Championship Tournament|2011-12]]<br />
| Peoria Civic Center<br />
| Barrington (Prairie)<br />
| Dunlap (MS)<br />
| Normal (Metcalf)<br />
| Springfield (Our Savior’s)<br />
|-<br />
| [[2013 IESA State Championship Tournament|2012-13]]<br />
| Peoria Civic Center<br />
| Barrington (Station)<br />
| Bloomington (JHS)<br />
| Palatine (Quest)<br />
| Champaign (Next Generation)<br />
|-<br />
| [[2014 IESA State Championship Tournament|2013-14]]<br />
| Peoria Civic Center<br />
| Lincolnshire (Daniel Wright)<br />
| Danville (North Ridge)<br />
| Champaign (Next Generation)<br />
| Normal (Metcalf)<br />
|-<br />
| [[2015 IESA State Championship Tournament|2014-15]]<br />
| Peoria Civic Center<br />
| Buffalo Grove ([[Aptakisic]])<br />
| Morton (JHS)<br />
| Palatine (Quest)<br />
| Normal (Metcalf)<br />
|-<br />
| [[2016 IESA State Championship Tournament|2015-16]]<br />
| Peoria Civic Center<br />
| Springfield (Franklin)<br />
| Rockford (Marshall)<br />
| Peoria (Academy)<br />
| Palatine (Quest)<br />
|-<br />
| [[2017 IESA State Championship Tournament|2016-17]]<br />
| Peoria Civic Center<br />
| Barrington (Station)<br />
| Rockford (Marshall)<br />
| Normal (Metcalf)<br />
| Springfield (Christian)<br />
|-<br />
| [[2018 IESA State Championship Tournament|2017-18]]<br />
| Peoria Civic Center<br />
| Lincolnshire (Daniel Wright)<br />
| Springfield (Franklin)<br />
| Palatine (Quest)<br />
| Peoria Heights (St. Thomas)<br />
|-<br />
| [[2019 IESA State Championship Tournament|2018-19]]<br />
| Peoria Civic Center<br />
| Lincolnshire (Daniel Wright)<br />
| Springfield (Franklin)<br />
| Peoria Academy<br />
| Champaign (Next Generation)<br />
|-<br />
| [[2022 IESA State Championship Tournament|2021-22]]<br />
| Peoria Civic Center<br />
| Barrington Prairie<br />
| Champaign (Edison)<br />
| Champaign (Next Generation)<br />
| Springfield (Christian)<br />
|-<br />
| [[2023 IESA State Championship Tournament|2022-23]]<br />
| Peoria Civic Center<br />
| Lincolnshire (Daniel Wright)<br />
| Springfield (Franklin)<br />
| Palatine (Quest)<br />
| Spring Bay (Riverview)<br />
|-<br />
{|<br />
<br />
<br />
The 2020 & 2021 tournaments were cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Unlike the [[IHSA]], no aspect of the State series was conducted.<br />
<br />
==Top Teams from the IESA State Championship Tournament==<br />
<br />
===Multiple State Titles===<br />
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:1.00em; line-height:1.5em;"<br />
|-<br />
! Count<br />
! Team<br />
! Years<br />
|-<br />
| 7<br />
| Lincolnshire (Daniel Wright)<br />
| 2006 (2A), 2007 (2A), 2010 (2A), 2014 (2A), 2018 (2A), 2019 (2A), 2023 (2A)<br />
|-<br />
| 5<br />
| Normal (Metcalf)<br />
| 2001 (1A), 2006 (1A), 2010 (1A), 2012 (1A), 2017 (1A)<br />
|-<br />
| 5<br />
| Palatine (Quest)<br />
| 2011 (1A), 2013 (1A), 2015 (1A), 2018 (1A), 2023 (1A)<br />
|-<br />
| 2<br />
| Mt. Zion<br />
| 1990-91<br />
|-<br />
| 2<br />
| Chatham (Glenwood)<br />
| 1993-94<br />
|-<br />
| 2<br />
| Bartonville (Monroe)<br />
| 1998-99<br />
|-<br />
| 2<br />
| Dunlap (Middle)<br />
| 2000 (2A), 2011 (2A)<br />
|-<br />
| 2<br />
| Rockford West<br />
| 2004 (2A), 2005 (2A)<br />
|-<br />
| 2<br />
| Macomb<br />
| 2008 (2A), 2009 (2A)<br />
|-<br />
| 2<br />
| Springfield (Franklin)<br />
| 1999 (2A), 2016 (2A)<br />
|-<br />
| 2<br />
| Barrington (Station)<br />
| 2013 (2A), 2017 (2A)<br />
|-<br />
| 2<br />
| Peoria Academy<br />
| 2016 (1A), 2019 (1A)<br />
|-<br />
| 2<br />
| Champaign (Next Generation)<br />
| 2014 (1A), 2022 (1A)<br />
|-<br />
| 2<br />
| Barrington (Prairie)<br />
| 2012 (2A), 2022 (2A)<br />
|-<br />
{|<br />
<br />
<br />
==Notable Milestones==<br />
*The 1991 IESA State Tournament saw the first title re-match between Mt. Zion & Toledo (Cumberland).<br />
*The 1995 IESA State Tournament was the first tournament that did not feature a returning team from the year before<br />
*The 1998 IESA State Tournament saw all four pools in both Class A & AA require tiebreakers to determine who advanced to each round.<br />
*The 2001 Class A State Championship featured two schools from McClean County: Normal (Metcalf) & Colfax (Ridgeview)<br />
*The 2004 IESA State Tournament saw Rockford (West) win the State championship in its first year with a program.<br />
*The 2008 IESA State Tournament saw Lincolnshire (Daniel Wright) become the first team to appear in the State championship match 4-consecutive years<br />
*The 2010 IESA State Tournament saw both Normal (Metcalf) & Lincolnshire (Daniel Wright) become the first three-time IESA State champions.<br />
*The 2011 IESA State Tournament Class AA championship saw Barrington Prairie defeat Dunlap MS, a rematch of the 2000 Class AA championship between Barrington & Dunlap school districts.<br />
*The 2012 IESA State Tournament saw Normal (Metcalf) become the first school in either class to become a 4-time state champion.<br />
*The 2017 IESA State Tournament saw Normal (Metcalf) become the first school in either class to become a 5-time state champion.<br />
*The 2019 IESA State Tournament saw Lincolnshire (Daniel Wright) overtake Normal (Metcalf) for the most state titles in either class and the first to become a 6-time state champion.<br />
*The 2019 Class AA State Championship featured a rematch between Lincolnshire (Daniel Wright) & Springfield (Franklin).<br />
*The 2023 IESA State Tournament saw Lincolnshire (Daniel Wright) become the first school in either class and the first to become a 7-time state champion.<br />
*The 2023 Class AA State Championship featured another rematch between Lincolnshire (Daniel Wright) & Springfield (Franklin), the third meetup between both teams in the State title match.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:State championships]]<br />
[[Category:Middle school quizbowl in Illinois]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Reinstein_Varsity&diff=62671Reinstein Varsity2023-12-19T13:05:28Z<p>David Reinstein: /* Results */</p>
<hr />
<div>The '''Reinstein Varsity''' is a high school tournament held each December since 2005. From 2005 through 2019, it was held at [[New Trier]] High School in Winnetka, Illinois and called the '''New Trier Varsity'''. It was not held in 2020 due to the [[COVID-19 pandemic]]. In 2021, New Trier put up too many obstacles to keep hosting it, so [[David Reinstein]] moved it to [[Barrington]].<br />
<br />
This tournament typically attracts many of the top teams in Illinois and a couple of top teams from outside Illinois. In 2010, the tournament split into two divisions so that the elite teams could play more matches against each other, with the top division being called the Über-Competitive Division. Since 2014, the Über-Competitive Division has been played on collegiate questions. The Standard Division, which is larger, continues to be played on high school questions, and it has used an NAQT A-Set since 2016.<br />
<br />
==History==<br />
In Spring 2005, student [[Nick Matchen]] asked Coach [[David Reinstein]] if the New Trier students could host a tournament. Reinstein said they could do it as long as they found good questions in [[Illinois Scholastic Bowl]] format. Nick and his friend [[Carlo Angiuli]] decided the best way to do that would be to write their own questions. Most of the questions were written during Fall 2005, the junior years of Nick and Carlo, with help from some of the seniors on that year's team.<br />
<br />
Twenty teams attended the first tournament. The tournament used power pairings like the Scobol Solo, but due to the small number of teams and some logistical errors by Reinstein, there were too many repeat matches. In the Championship, [[Bloomington]], featuring Kristina Warren and Hunter Fast, won a close upset against a very strong [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Auburn]] team featuring Tyler Kerr and Colleen Powers. A discussion during lunch of the tournament led to the formation of [[Aegis Questions]], who would write the questions for the tournament in future years.<br />
<br />
The second tournament, in 2006, followed a standard format of round robin brackets followed by single elimination in the afternoon. For the second year in a row, [[Bloomington]] won a close Championship Match. This time, they beat [[Oak Park-River Forest]] in the Final after OPRF had qualified for the afternoon as the 8th seed.<br />
<br />
The third tournament, in 2007, returned to power matching and, for the first time, featured ACF style bonuses. There was rough weather the day of the tournament, forcing [[Bloomington]] and [[IMSA]] to cancel and the tournament to get off to an uneven start. Everything worked out OK in the end, however. In the Championship, [[Wheaton North]] continued its undefeated season by defeating [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Auburn]]. Wheaton North had finished in 3rd Place the first two years.<br />
<br />
The 2008 New Trier Varsity was written mostly by '08 alumnus [[Jonah Greenthal]] and Reinstein with some contributions from New Trier alumni and players, [[Illinois]] ABT members, and [[Jeff Price]] and was edited by Greenthal. It essentially used ACF format except for the presence of computational math tossups and bonuses which were handled as usual in Illinois, and for the fact that bonus parts rebounded. [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Auburn]] went undefeated in the 32-team power-matching morning, then lost to only [[Loyola]] in the afternoon. Based on overall records, Auburn won the tournament and Loyola collected second place; [[Carbondale]] was third and [[Stevenson]] fourth, with [[Maine South]] as the consolation champion.<br />
<br />
New Trier Varsity 2009 featured the long-awaited elimination of computational math, as part of a move to a near-ACF distribution. It was once again edited by [[Jonah Greenthal]], assisted by Reinstein, [[Matt Laird]], and [[Dan Donohue]], among others. It was won by [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Auburn]] A in the second game of a final in which they had the disadvantage against [[St. Ignatius]]. The top scorer was [[Andrew Deveau]].<br />
<br />
The 2010 tournament was a mirror of [[GSAC]], which that year was edited by [[J.R. Roach]] and [[Tommy Casalaspi]]. There were 24 teams from 4 states in the “Über-Competitive” division, and 24 teams in the “Standard” division. In the former, [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Auburn]] A won over [[Stevenson]]; in the latter, [[Keith Country Day]] A won over [[Fenton]].<br />
<br />
In 2011, the tournament again mirrored GSAC and again split into an Über-Competitive Division and a Standard Division. The Über-Competitive Division featured 24 teams from 6 states, and was won by [[IMSA|IMSA A]] clearing the field; [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois high school)|Auburn A]] got second place. In the Standard Division, [[Barrington]] earned first place over [[St. Viator|St. Viator A]].<br />
<br />
2012's NTV was the third consecutive year of mirroring GSAC, and the third consecutive year of splitting into Über-Competitive and Standard divisions. Likely due to the relatively late date of December 22, attendance was slightly depressed. In the Über-Competitive Division, [[Belvidere North|Belvidere North A]] defeated [[Detroit Catholic Central]] in the second game of a final in which they had been advantaged; in the Standard Division, a less-than-full-strength [[Carbondale]] beat a less-than-full-strength [[Wheaton North]] in a one-game cross-bracket final.<br />
<br />
The tournament continues to this day, though we no longer write a paragraph in the wiki every year.<br />
<br />
==Results==<br />
<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0"<br />
! Year<br />
! # of Teams<br />
! Set<br />
! Champion<br />
! Second<br />
! Third<br />
! Fourth<br />
|-<br />
| 2005<br />
| 20<br />
| housewrite<br />
| [[Bloomington]]<br />
| [[Auburn (Rockford, IL)|Auburn]]<br />
| [[Wheaton North]]<br />
| [[Loyola]]<br />
|-<br />
| 2006<br />
| 36<br />
| by [[Aegis Questions]]<br />
| [[Bloomington]]<br />
| [[Oak Park-River Forest]]<br />
| [[Wheaton North]]<br />
| [[Carbondale]]<br />
|-<br />
| 2007<br />
| 32*<br />
| by [[Aegis Questions]]<br />
| [[Wheaton North]]<br />
| [[Auburn (Rockford, IL)|Auburn]]<br />
| [[Maine South]]<br />
| [[Loyola]]<br />
|-<br />
| [http://org.newtrier.k12.il.us/activities/sbowl/ntvsqbs08/NTV08Playoffs_standings.html 2008]<br />
| 32<br />
| housewrite<br />
| [[Auburn (Rockford, IL)|Auburn A]]<br />
| [[Loyola|Loyola A]]<br />
| [[Carbondale]]<br />
| [[Stevenson]]<br />
|-<br />
| [http://www.ihssbca.org/statistics/2009_NTvarsity_full/NT_Varsity_Overall_standings.php 2009] ("ANTACID")<br />
| 48<br />
| housewrite<br />
| [[Auburn (Rockford, IL)|Auburn A]]<br />
| [[St. Ignatius]]<br />
| [[Oak Park-River Forest]]<br />
| [[Carbondale|Carbondale A]]<br />
|-<br />
| 2010 ("ADVANTAGE") [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/3061/stats/uber-competitive_combined/ Über-Competitive Division]**<br />
| 24<br />
| [[GSAC]]<br />
| [[Auburn (Rockford, IL)|Auburn A]]<br />
| [[Stevenson|Stevenson A]]<br />
| [[DCC|DCC A]]<br />
| [[IMSA]]<br />
|-<br />
| 2010 ("ADVANTAGE") [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/647/stats/full/ Standard Division]<br />
| 24<br />
| [[GSAC]]<br />
| [[Keith Country Day|Keith Country Day A]]<br />
| [[Fenton]]<br />
| [[PORTA]]<br />
| [[Auburn (Rockford, IL)|Auburn C]]<br />
|-<br />
| 2011 ("ELEGANT") [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/3009/stats/uber-competitive_combined/ Über-Competitive Division]<br />
| 24<br />
| [[GSAC]]<br />
| [[IMSA|IMSA A]]<br />
| [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois high school)|Auburn A]]<br />
| [[Dorman]]<br />
| [[Seven Lakes]]<br />
|-<br />
| 2011 ("ELEGANT") [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/3009/stats/standard_combined/ Standard Division]<br />
| 30<br />
| [[GSAC]]<br />
| [[Barrington]]<br />
| [[St. Viator|St. Viator A]]<br />
| [[Fenton]]<br />
| [[Oak Park-River Forest]]<br />
|-<br />
| 2012 ("INTENSE") [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/2995/stats/uber-competitive_combined/ Über-Competitive Division]<br />
| 16<br />
| [[GSAC]]<br />
| [[Belvidere North|Belvidere North A]]<br />
| [[Detroit Catholic Central]]<br />
| [[Loyola Academy|Loyola Academy A]]<br />
| [[Stevenson|Stevenson A]]<br />
|- <br />
| 2012 ("INTENSE") [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/2995/stats/standard_combined/ Standard Division]<br />
| 36<br />
| [[GSAC]]<br />
| [[Carbondale]]<br />
| [[Wheaton North]]<br />
| [[St. Viator|St. Viator A]]<br />
| [[Keith Country Day]]<br />
|-<br />
| 2013 ("MENTALIST") Über-Competitive Division<br />
| 24<br />
| [[GSAC]]<br />
| [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois high school)|Auburn]] A<br />
| [[IMSA]]<br />
| [[Stevenson]]<br />
| [[Northmont]]<br />
|-<br />
| 2013 ("MENTALIST") Standard Division<br />
| 36<br />
| [[GSAC]]<br />
| [[Latin]]<br />
| [[Wheaton Warrenville South]]<br />
| [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois high school)|Auburn]] C<br />
| [[Kaneland]]<br />
|-<br />
| 2014 [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/2793/stats/uber_div_complete/ Über-Competitive Division]<br />
| 14<br />
| [[DEES]]<br />
| [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois high school)|Auburn]]<br />
| [[Detroit Catholic Central]]<br />
| [[Northmont]]<br />
| [[Hinsdale Central]]<br />
|-<br />
| 2014 [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/2793/stats/standard_div_combined/ Standard Division]<br />
| 42<br />
| [[HSAPQ]]<br />
| [[Latin]]<br />
| [[Oak Park-River Forest]]<br />
| [[Homewood-Flossmoor]] & Williams<br />
|-<br />
| 2015 [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/3498/stats/uber-competitive_complete/ Über-Competitive Division]<br />
| 8<br />
| [[Missouri Open]]<br />
| [[Hinsdale Central]]<br />
| [[Barrington|Horse]]<br />
| [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois high school)|Auburn]]<br />
| [[Stevenson]] A<br />
|-<br />
| 2015 [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/3498/stats/standard_division_complete/ Standard Division]<br />
| 48<br />
| [[SMART]]<br />
| [[Macomb|Specters of Europe]]<br />
| [[Latin]]<br />
| [[Stevenson]] B<br />
| [[Wheaton Warrenville South]]<br />
|-<br />
| 2016 [https://neg5.org:3000/t/SyoC94fNe/stats Über-Competitive Division]<br />
| 12<br />
| [[Terrapin XXIX]]<br />
| [[Naperville North]]<br />
| [[Barrington]]<br />
| [[Chattahoochee|Chattahoochee A]]<br />
| [[Stevenson]] A<br />
|-<br />
| 2016 [https://www.naqt.com/go/stats/7874 Standard Division]<br />
| 48<br />
| [[NAQT]] IS-161A<br />
| [[Loyola]]<br />
| [[Carmel]]<br />
| [[Fremd]] B<br />
| [[Lyons]]<br />
|-<br />
| 2017 [https://www.naqt.com/go/stats/8796 Über-Competitive Division]<br />
| 8<br />
| [[WAO II]]<br />
| [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois high school)|Auburn A]]<br />
| [[Miami Valley School|Miami Valley]]<br />
| [[Latin School (IL)|Latin A]]<br />
| [[St. Joseph (IN)|St. Joseph]]<br />
|-<br />
| 2017 [hhttps://www.naqt.com/go/stats/8796 Standard Division]<br />
| 28<br />
| [[NAQT]] IS-171A<br />
| [[Palatine|Palatine A]]<br />
| [[Fremd|Fremd B]]<br />
| [[Evanston]]<br />
| [[Latin School (IL)|Latin C]]<br />
|-<br />
| 2018 [https://www.naqt.com/go/stats/9857 Über-Competitive Division]<br />
| 10<br />
| [[Sun God]]<br />
| [[University of Illinois Lab]]<br />
| [[Chattahoochee]]<br />
| [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois high school)|Auburn A]]<br />
| [[Detroit Catholic Central]]<br />
|-<br />
| 2018 [https://www.naqt.com/go/stats/9857 Standard Division]<br />
| 46<br />
| [[NAQT]] IS-180A<br />
| [[Oak Park-River Forest]]<br />
| [[Fremd|Fremd A]]<br />
| [[Evanston|Evanston A]]<br />
| [[Latin School (IL)|Latin B]]<br />
|-<br />
| 2019 [https://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/5896/stats/uber_-_all_games/ Über-Competitive Division]<br />
| 10<br />
| [[Penn Bowl]]<br />
| [[Stevenson]]<br />
| [[Miami Valley]]<br />
| [[Chattahoochee]]<br />
| [[University of Illinois Lab]]<br />
|-<br />
| 2019 [https://www.naqt.com/go/stats/10735 Standard Division]<br />
| 38<br />
| [[NAQT]] IS-189A<br />
| Chicago Christian<br />
| Palatine<br />
| Evanston<br />
| Latin<br />
|-<br />
| 2021 [https://www.naqt.com/go/stats/12721 Über-Competitive Division]<br />
| 16<br />
| [[ARCADIA]]<br />
| [[Carmel|Carmel A]] and [[Buffalo Grove|Buffalo Grove A]] (co-champions)<br />
| <br />
| [[Barrington|Barrington A]] <br />
| [[Chattahoochee|Chattahoochee A]] <br />
|-<br />
| 2021 [https://www.naqt.com/go/stats/12721#17518 Standard Division]<br />
| 36<br />
| [[NAQT]] IS-207A<br />
| [[Timothy Christian]] <br />
| [[Springfield]] <br />
| [[Maine East]] <br />
| [[Carl Sandburg|Carl Sandburg A]] <br />
|-<br />
| 2022 [https://www.naqt.com/go/stats/13422 Über-Competitive Division]<br />
| 16<br />
| [[C++]]<br />
| [[Barrington|Barrington A]]<br />
| [[Buffalo Grove|Buffalo Grove A]]<br />
| [[Chattahoochee|Chattahoochee A]] <br />
| [[Fremd|William Fremd A]] <br />
|-<br />
| 2022 [https://www.naqt.com/go/stats/13422#18695 Standard Division]<br />
| 54<br />
| [[NAQT]] IS-216A<br />
| [[Timothy Christian]] <br />
| [[Springfield]] <br />
| [[Walter Payton|Walter Payton College Prep A]] <br />
| [[Evanston|Evanston A]]<br />
|-<br />
| 2023 [https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament/standings.jsp?tournament_id=14684 Über-Competitive Division]<br />
| 24<br />
| [[ILLIAC II]]<br />
| [[Barrington|Barrington A]]<br />
| [[Buffalo Grove|Buffalo Grove A]]<br />
| [[Innovation|Innovation Academy A]] <br />
| [[Fremd|William Fremd A]] <br />
|-<br />
| 2023 [https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament/standings.jsp?tournament_id=14684#20658 Standard Division]<br />
| 47<br />
| [[NAQT]] IS-225A<br />
| [[Springfield]] <br />
| [[Belvidere]] <br />
| [[Carbondale]] <br />
| [[Lisle]] <br />
|}<br />
<br />
<nowiki>*</nowiki>In 2007, there was a separate B Team division with 6 teams won by [[Loyola]]<br />
<br />
<nowiki>**</nowiki>This is the first recorded use of the phrase "Über-Competitive Division"<br />
<br />
The 2020 tournament was not held due to the COVID-19 pandemic.<br />
<br />
{{Navbox HS Quizbowl in Illinois}}<br />
<br />
[[Category: High school tournaments]]<br />
[[Category: High school quizbowl in Illinois]]<br />
[[Category: New Trier]]<br />
[[Category:Original QBWiki Page]]<br />
[[Category:Ridiculous Acronyms]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=David_Reinstein&diff=62585David Reinstein2023-12-06T20:16:04Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox|Name = David Reinstein<br />
|Image = 2007NTStatechamps.jpg<br />
|Subjects = Math<br />
|highschool = coached at [[New Trier]] (1994-2011)<br />
| }}<br />
<br />
'''David Reinstein''' was a coach at [[New Trier]] from 1994–2011, the chair of [[IHSSBCA]] from 2004–14, and the president of [[PACE]] from 2016–18. He now writes the questions for the [[Scobol Solo]], [[Masonic tournament]], and [[IESA]] tournaments, and he runs [[Scobol Solo]] and [[Reinstein Varsity]]. David also produces match questions in IESA format, and he uses questions from the Masonic tournament to write the Reinstein Set.<br />
<br />
==Question Writing & Editing==<br />
David is the head writer and editor of the [[IESA]], [[Scobol Solo]], and [[Masonic]] sets each year, and he oversees several rounds produced for Illinois middle schools to use during the regular season. He has been in charge of Scobol Solo since it started in 2001, and he took over the Masonic set for the 2012 tournament. He has gotten varying amounts of help with the sets over the years, especially editing help from [[Jonah Greenthal]]. The middle school regular season questions were produced starting in the 2019-20 school year, and David became the question supplier for the IESA State Championship starting in 2023. David was also a significant contributor to [[NAQT]] from 2011-17, and for a few years he also wrote a bunch of questions for [[CMST]].<br />
<br />
For the 2012 [[IHSA]] set, David was the social studies editor. Because the writers flaked out, he wrote half the questions. For the 2013 IHSA set, David was the math editor and assistant editor for the whole set. [[IHSA plagiarism scandal|When he told the IHSA that a bunch of the questions were copied and pasted from the internet, he was fired]]. Some other writers quit, and the questions got worse until the Head Editorship changed for the 2017-18 season. Reinstein and Jonah talked about the problem at a [[May 2014 Illinois General Assembly hearing on the IHSA]].<br />
<br />
==Illinois Scholastic Bowl & Quizbowl==<br />
David has played a major role in [[IHSSBCA]] since the organization was about one year old. He first gained attention by starting a petition asking [[IHSA]] to improve question quality. Coaches from over forty schools signed the petition, and the result was that [[New Trier]] got a bunch of angry phone calls from [[IHSA]]. A few years later, however, [[IHSA]] improved its question quality somewhat when it switched from [[Answers Plus]] to a secret cabal. The [[Masonic]] Tournament used improved questions written in part by some of David's former students at [[Aegis Questions]] for 2008 and 2009, then regressed to [[Questions Galore]] for 2010 and 2011, then used David starting in 2012.<br />
<br />
David has a long history of managing Turnabouts and writing letters and articles for [[IHSSBCA]]. He succeeded [[David Riley]] as Chair in 2004, and the organization grew under his leadership. Some of the programs that came into being while Reinstein was Chair are the Awards Dinner, Hall of Fame, ethics guidelines, moderator certification, annualization of [[SchoBowlFest]], Novice Tournaments, IHSSBCA Grants, IHSSBCA Liaisons, and a Members Only section of their website. The organization now sponsors a team that competes at [[NASAT]]. (Before David took over and for his first few years, the organization sponsored a team that competed at [[PAC]].)<br />
<br />
==Coaching==<br />
Reinstein coached consistently strong teams for many years at New Trier that placed highly at many local tournaments and had decent showings at Nationals. His teams won nine [[IHSA]] Sectionals, one each IHSA and NAQT State Championship, and many [[Central Suburban League]] titles.<br />
<br />
Reinstein took over as coach when he started teaching at [[New Trier]]. He had planned on coaching Math Team, but that team already had many coaches, so he filled a need in Scholastic Bowl. He was told that he could have the position if he was willing to drive a van, since the other coach that year did not have a license. David has worked with several coaches over the years. After becoming a father in 1998, David dropped from attending all team matches to about half of them. In 2011, he stepped down from coaching, though he still teaches at New Trier.<br />
<br />
Until its 2009 cancellation, Reinstein was an annual guest on the ''[https://soundcloud.com/user-186507147/05-scholastic-bowl?in=user-186507147/sets/kj-cd-42 Kathy and Judy Show]'' on Chicago's WGN radio during the week of the IHSA State Championship. Most of the time was spent asking sample questions to the hosts of the show, with somewhat humorous outcomes. It was annually the biggest publicity moment in [[Illinois Scholastic Bowl]].<br />
<br />
==Tournament Hosting==<br />
In addition to an occasional IHSA or Masonic Regional or Sectional tournament, Reinstein has run the [[Scobol Solo]] each year since 2001. He at first did everything--writing the questions and drawing up the pairings, which involve roughly 400 matches each year put together using a power-matching format. He more recently gets significant help from [[Jonah Greenthal]], who designed software that pretty much runs the tournament.<br />
<br />
From 2005 to 2007, the [[New Trier Varsity]] was hosted by [[Carlo Angiuli]] and [[Nick Matchen]], who graduated from New Trier in 2007. Reinstein ran it in 2008 and since 2014, while from 2009 to 2013 it was primarily run by [[Jonah Greenthal]] with help from Reinstein. In 2021, the tournament changed its name to [[Reinstein Varsity]] because it was not held at New Trier.<br />
<br />
In order to separate David's tournaments from the New Trier Business Office, in 2016 David started [http://www.reinsteinquizbowl.com/ Reinstein QuizBowl], which is a Doing Business As that handles the financials for David's tournaments and questions.<br />
<br />
David also writes card systems for tournaments that power match. He has done so for the Scobol Solo since its inception, for the first day of [[HSNCT]] from 2010 to 2016, and for the first day of [[MSNCT]] from 2013 to 2016. In 2017, David was replaced by a computer.<br />
<br />
==Personal==<br />
David graduated from [[Niles North]] in Skokie, Illinois in 1986 and from [[Brown]] in 1990. David and his wife have two daughters and a son.<br />
<br />
Website: [https://reinsteinquizbowl.com Reinstein QuizBowl]<br />
<br />
[[Category:People]]<br />
[[Category:High school coaches]]<br />
[[Category:New Trier]]<br />
[[Category:Original QBWiki Page]]<br />
[[Category:IHSSBCA]]<br />
[[Category:Question writers]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Talk:Bounceback&diff=62092Talk:Bounceback2023-09-24T02:12:22Z<p>David Reinstein: /* GATA being the only regular tournaments using bouncebacks */</p>
<hr />
<div>== GATA being the only regular tournaments using bouncebacks ==<br />
<br />
To the best of my knowledge, the IHSA state series, IHSSBCA Kickoff, IHSSBCA Turnabouts, and probably IHSSBCA Novice all use bouncebacks with standard three-part bonuses, as do most or all regular-season conferences/leagues in Illinois at the high school level. [[User:Jonah Greenthal|—Jonah]] ([[User talk:Jonah Greenthal|talk]]) 20:44, 22 September 2023 (CDT)<br />
<br />
Ah, I thought Illinois still used its unique bonus format. Will revise/delete. [[User:Matt Weiner|Matt Weiner]] ([[User talk:Matt Weiner|talk]]) 21:59, 22 September 2023 (CDT)<br />
<br />
The IESA (middle school level) still uses the "read all at once" format, and may allow numbers of parts other than 3 (I'm not sure), but the IHSA (and as a result IHSSBCA and local leagues/conferences, but I think relatively few invitationals) moved to three parts, read and answered one at a time, maybe about a decade ago. [[User:Jonah Greenthal|—Jonah]] ([[User talk:Jonah Greenthal|talk]]) 12:17, 23 September 2023 (CDT)<br />
<br />
Can confirm that IESA is still using what used to be called the IHSA bonus format. All IESA bonuses are four parts. IHSA made the change in 2013--the decision was made in 2012 to change the format for the 2013 tournament. There are bouncebacks at the statewide Illinois high school tournaments except NAQT State, and a lot of tournaments do not have bouncebacks. [[User:David Reinstein|David Reinstein]] ([[User talk:David Reinstein|talk]]) 21:12, 23 September 2023 (CDT)</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Talk:List_of_high_school_state_champions&diff=61673Talk:List of high school state champions2023-07-19T13:23:12Z<p>David Reinstein: /* Updates??? */</p>
<hr />
<div>To do:<br />
<br />
* Fill in older results -- I just put the most recent one available for each<br />
* Link all tournament & team names to appropriate pages<br />
* Figure out way to indicate when tournaments or divisions of tournaments began or ended -- e.g. the California Quizbowl Championship was created for the 2014 season so there will never be earlier results. Just leave blank or fill in each cell with "Tournament began in 2014"??? Could also use Wiki table functions to merge all dead cells into a single cell with the message or color-code (e.g. use the colors of the state flag or the usual host school to block out cells that don't have data).<br />
<br />
[[User:Matt Weiner|Matt Weiner]] ([[User talk:Matt Weiner|talk]]) 06:52, 21 February 2014 (PST)<br />
<br />
<br />
Can we do this in a more list-like form, or perhaps with separate tables for each state (rows are years, columns are different titles)? This is really hard to read, even on my large monitor, and is going to have tons of wasted space for years that tournaments didn't run. [[User:Jonah Greenthal|Jonah]] ([[User talk:Jonah Greenthal|talk]]) 10:42, 21 February 2014 (PST)<br />
<br />
Well, the tournaments all have (or should have) individual pages; this is designed as a quick way to see all the winners in a specific year. There are probably some aesthetic tricks that could be done to make it more usable (like a light gray shading on alternate columns) that would make it more appealing to use with just the vertical and horizontal scroll bars. [[User:Matt Weiner|Matt Weiner]] ([[User talk:Matt Weiner|talk]]) 11:02, 21 February 2014 (PST)<br />
<br />
Why not have a list under a heading for each year? --[[User:Fred Morlan|Fred Morlan]] ([[User talk:Fred Morlan|talk]]) 17:08, 21 February 2014 (PST)<br />
<br />
For Masonic results before 2010, when all the teams were grouped together, which class should I put them in? Is it possible to merge rows? [[User:James Zhou|James Zhou]] ([[User talk:James Zhou|talk]]) 16:30, 9 March 2014 (PDT)<br />
<br />
I added blank rows to divide the championships for each state. I think this makes the table easier to process in cases where there are a whole bunch of championships for a single state, but it has the disadvantage that these dummy rows get screwed up if you resort the table. Is there a way to use Wiki markup to modify particular row spacings in a more robust way? [[User:Stephen Eltinge|Stephen Eltinge]] ([[User talk:Stephen Eltinge|talk]]) 01:42, 21 May 2014 (PDT)<br />
<br />
== Page split and transclusion ==<br />
The page was getting very large, which was presenting some difficulties (for example, it was not possible to view page diffs; the page just froze and didn't load anything). Therefore, I split the actual content of the page into three sub-pages: [[List of high school state champions (A-F)]], [[List of high school state champions (G-M)]], and [[List of high school state champions (N-W)]]. These pages should be easier to manage.<br />
<br />
The formatting is fairly straightforward. Each page has the same table header. However, on the sub-pages, the header is enclosed in <tt>&lt;noinclude&gt;...&lt;/noinclude&gt;</tt> tags, so it's not copied over. Only the table rows are copied to the parent page. The content is transcluded to the main page by including the line <tt><nowiki>{{:List of high school state champions (x-y)}}</nowiki></tt> (note the preliminary colon). If you run into any technical difficulties, please let me know. [[User:Stephen Eltinge|Stephen Eltinge]] ([[User talk:Stephen Eltinge|talk]]) 13:20, 21 May 2014 (PDT)<br />
<br />
== Updates??? ==<br />
This page is now messed up because somebody added 2015 and 2016 to the G-M page and not the others. Also, it is quite obviously out of date. Does anybody want to spend a few hours working on this? [[User:David Reinstein|David Reinstein]] ([[User talk:David Reinstein|talk]]) 07:33, 11 July 2023 (CDT)<br />
<br />
Does anybody know how I messed this up? The problem is what I did on the three table pages, not this page. It probably can be fixed by getting rid of my changes, but then this page only goes up to 2014. [[User:David Reinstein|David Reinstein]] ([[User talk:David Reinstein|talk]]) 20:04, 18 July 2023 (CDT)<br />
<br />
I think I fixed it. Now it just needs the three pages that this page links to to be updated so there aren't so many blank spaces. [[User:David Reinstein|David Reinstein]] ([[User talk:David Reinstein|talk]]) 08:23, 19 July 2023 (CDT)</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=List_of_high_school_state_champions_(G-M)&diff=61672List of high school state champions (G-M)2023-07-19T13:20:59Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div><noinclude><br />
This page is transcluded into the full list, which is available at [[List of high school state champions]].<br />
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"<br />
! State !! Tournament !! 2023 Champion !! 2022 Champion !! 2021 Champion !! 2020 Champion !! 2019 Champion !! 2018 Champion !! 2017 Champion !! 2016 Champion !! 2015 Champion !! 2014 Champion !! 2013 Champion !! 2012 Champion !! 2011 Champion !! 2010 Champion !! 2009 Champion !! 2008 Champion !! 2007 Champion !! 2006 Champion !! 2005 Champion !! 2004 Champion !! 2003 Champion !! 2002 Champion !! 2001 Champion !! 2000 Champion !! 1999 Champion !! 1998 Champion !! 1997 Champion !! 1996 Champion !! 1995 Champion !! 1994 Champion !! 1993 Champion !! 1992 Champion !! 1991 Champion !! 1990 Champion !! 1989 Champion !! 1988 Champion !! 1987 Champion !! 1986 Champion !! 1985 Champion !! 1984 Champion !! 1983 Champion !! 1982 Champion<br />
</noinclude><br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Varsity State Championship Division 6A || || || || || || || || || || Chattahoochee || Etowah || Division began in 2013 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Varsity State Championship Division 5A || || || || || || || || || || Flowery Branch || Bainbridge || Centennial || Walton || Centennial || Walton || Chattahoochee || Brookwood || Walton || Walton || Walton || Chattahoochee || Brookwood || Brookwood || Division began in 2001 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Varsity State Championship Division 4A || || || || || || || || || || Marist || Marist || Chattahoochee || Chattahoochee || Lakeside || Heritage || Lakeside || Lakeside || Central Macon || Heritage || Heritage || Heritage || Heritage || Heritage || Brookwood || Brookwood || Brookwood || Brookwood || Brookwood || Walton || Brookwood || Walton || Walton || Walton || Brookwood || Tournament began in 1990 || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Varsity State Championship Division 3A || || || || || || || || || || Gordon Central || Gwinnett Math and Science || Eastside || Eastside || Woodward Academy || Woodward Academy || Westminster || Westminster || Dunwoody || Westminster || Central Macon || Central Macon || Central Macon || Westminster || Woodward || Woodward || North Atlanta || Central Macon || Gordon Central || Gordon Central || Westminster || Westminster || Woodward || Northside || Marist || Tournament began in 1990 || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Varsity State Championship Division 2A || || || || || || || || || || Westminster || Westminster || Westminster || Westminster || Westminster || Blessed Trinity || Paideia || Bleckley County || Paideia || Greater Atlanta Christian || Greater Atlanta Christian || Decatur || Greater Atlanta Christian || Paideia || Westminster || Westminster || Westminster || Westminster || Westminster || Division not held || Dublin || Manchester || Darlington || Lovett || North Fulton || Tournament began in 1990 || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Varsity State Championship Division 1A || || || || || || || || || || Baconton Charter || Athens Academy || Athens Academy || Savannah Country Day || Paideia || Paideia || Baconton Charter || Savannah Country Day || Athens Academy || Athens Academy || Athens Academy || Brookstone || Savannah Country Day || Athens Academy || Paideia || Savannah Country Day || Paideia || Paideia || Savannah Country Day || Greater Atlanta Christian || Greater Atlanta Christian || Greater Atlanta Christian || Savannah Country Day || Greater Atlanta Christian || Savannah Country Day || Tournament began in 1990 || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Junior Varsity State Championship Division 6A || || || || || || || || || || Alpharetta || Chattahoochee || Division began in 2013 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Junior Varsity State Championship Division 5A || || || || || || || || || || Flowery Branch || Cedar Shoals || Walton || Walton || Lakeside || Lakeside || Not held || Not held || Lakeside || Not held || Chattahoochee || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Junior Varsity State Championship Division 4A || || || || || || || || || || Marist || Westminster || Chattahoochee || Chamblee Charter || Lakeside || Lakeside || Not held || Not held || Lakeside || Not held || Heritage || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Junior Varsity State Championship Division 3A || || || || || || || || || || Westminster (single division) || Division not held || Macon Central || Eastside || Flowery Branch || Flowery Branch || Not held || Not held || Dunwoody || Not held || Central Macon || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Junior Varsity State Championship Division 2A || || || || || || || || || || Westminster (single division) || Division not held || Westminster || Gwinnett Math and Science || Lovett || Westminster || Not held || Not held || GACS || Not held || Bleckley County || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Junior Varsity State Championship Division 1A || || || || || || || || || || Oak Mountain || Baconton Charter || Savannah Country Day || Oak Mountain || Savannah Country Day || Savannah Country Day || Not held || Not held || Baconton || Not held || Savannah Country Day || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Idaho || NAQT Idaho State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || Treasure Valley || Treasure Valley || Tournament began in 2012 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Illinois || NAQT Illinois Championship || || || || || || || || || || IMSA || IMSA || Rockford Auburn || Stevenson || Rockford Auburn || Rockford Auburn || Rockford Auburn || New Trier || Stevenson || Stevenson || Tournament began in 2005 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Illinois || Illinois Masonic Academic Bowl Class AA || || || || || || || || || || IMSA || Loyola || IMSA || Stevenson || St. Ignatius || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Illinois || Illinois Masonic Academic Bowl Class A || || || || || || || || || || Newman Central Catholic || Litchfield || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Illinois || IHSA State Championship Tournament Class AA || || || || || || || || || || IMSA || IMSA || IMSA || IMSA || Stevenson || Carbondale || Auburn || New Trier || Fremd || Stevenson || Wheaton North || Wheaton North || Wheaton North || IMSA || Stevenson || IMSA || IMSA || IMSA || IMSA || Richwoods || IMSA || Quincy Senior || Hinsdale Central || Centralia || IMSA || IMSA || Quincy Senior || Quincy Senior || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Illinois || IHSA State Championship Tournament Class A || || || || || || || || || || Litchfield || Peoria Christian || Peoria Christian || Lisle || Lisle || Latin || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Indiana || Rotary Club Indiana Quizbowl State Championship Class AAA || || || || || || || || || || St. Joseph || St. Joseph || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Indiana || Rotary Club Indiana Quizbowl State Championship Class AA || || || || || || || || || || Clay || Riley || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Indiana || Rotary Club Indiana Quizbowl State Championship Class A || || || || || || || || || || North White || North Miami || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Indiana || Indiana Frosh/Soph State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Harrison || St. Joseph || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Indiana || "Traditional" Quiz Bowl State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Park Tudor || St. Joseph || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Iowa || Iowa Knowledge Bowl || || || || || || || || || || Unknown || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Iowa || NAQT Iowa State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || || Tournament was not held after 2011 || Ames || Bettendorf || West Des Moines Valley || Ames || Regina || Regina || Regina || Tournament was held, but results were not posted || Tournament was held, but results were not posted || Tournament was held, but results were not posted || Ames || Tournament was held, but results not posted || Tournament began in 2000 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kansas || KSHSAA Scholar's Bowl Class 6A || || || || || || || || Overland Park-Blue Valley || Overland Park-Blue Valley || Overland Park-Blue Valley || Stilwell-Blue Valley || Maize || Wichita East || Washburn Rural || Washburn Rural || Washburn Rural || Wichita East || Lawrence || Washburn Rural || Wichita East || Overland Park-St. Thomas Aquinas || Lawrence || Olathe South || Lawrence || Lawrence || Wichita East || Lawrence || Washburn Rural || Tecumseh-Shawnee Heights || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (6A and 5A competed in same championship through 1995)" || Lawrence || || || || || || || || Manhattan || Lawrence || Lawrence || Hutchinson || Lawrence || Manhattan || Manhattan || first championship in 1987 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kansas || KSHSAA Scholars Bowl Class 5A || || || || || || || || Maize || Shawnee-Mill Valley || Wichita-Bishop Carroll || Wichita-Kapuan Mt. Carmel || Stilwell-Blue Valley || Stilwell-Blue Valley || Wichita-Bishop Carroll || Shawnee-Mill Valley || Topeka-West || Wichita-Bishop Carroll || Wichita-Bishop Carroll || Pittsburg || Winfield || KC-Sumner Academy || Wichita-Kapaun Mt. Carmel || Wichita-Kapaun Mt. Carmel || Andover || Tecumseh-Shawnee Heights || Tecumseh-Shawnee Heights || Topeka-West || Wichita-Kapaun Mt. Carmel || Tecumseh-Shawnee Heights || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (6A and 5A competed in same championship through 1995)" || Lawrence || || || || || || || || Manhattan || Lawrence || Lawrence || Hutchinson || Lawrence || Manhattan || Manhattan || first championship in 1987 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kansas || KSHSAA Scholars Bowl Class 4A || || || || || || || || Andover-Central || Rose Hill || Andover-Central || De Soto || De Soto || De Soto || Topeka-Hayden || Wichita-The Independent School || Buhler || Pittsburg || Topeka-Hayden || Topeka-Hayden || Basehor-Linwood || Topeka-Hayden || Lindsborg-Smoky Valley || Mulvane || Topeka-Hayden || Baldwin || Hays-Thomas More Prep-Marian || Lansing || Augusta || Lansing || Lansing || Lansing || Towanda-Circle || Augusta || Towanda-Circle || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (4A and 3A competed in same championship through 1990)" || Wichita-Collegiate || || || || || || || || Eureka || Horton || first championship in 1987 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kansas || KSHSAA Scholars Bowl Class 3A || || || || || || || || Wichita-The Independent School || Wichita Collegiate || Wichita Collegiate || Wichita-The Independent School || Wichita-The Independent School || Hays-Thomas More Prep-Marian || Hays-Thomas More Prep-Marian || Wichita Collegiate || Salina-Sacred Heart || Wichita-The Independent School || Wichita-The Independent School || Shawnee-Maranatha Academy || Shawnee-Maranatha Academy || Hays-Thomas More Prep-Marian || Cherokee-Southeast || Hoisington || Wichita Collegiate || Wichita Collegiate || Seneca-Nemaha Valley || Riley County || Wichita Collegiate || Wichita Collegiate || Wichita Collegiate || Wichita Collegiate || Wichita Collegiate || Leavenworth-Immaculata || Towanda-Circle || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (4A and 3A competed in same championship through 1990)" || Wichita-Collegiate || || || || || || || || Eureka || Horton || first championship in 1987 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kansas || KSHSAA Scholars Bowl Class 2A || || || || || || || || Oberlin-Decatur Community || Yates Center || Yates Center || Leavenworth-Immaculata || Inman || Burden-Central || Salina-Sacred Heart || Inman || Clifton-Clyde || Leavenworth-Immaculata || Hutchinson-Trinity || Leavenworth-Immaculata || Leavenworth-Immaculata || Oberlin-Decatur Community || Lyndon || Ness City || Wichita County || Meade || Meade || Buffalo-Altoona-Midway || Kinsley || Stanton County || Quinter || Pittsburg-St. Mary's-Colgan || Atwood || Oskaloosa || St. Paul || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (2A and 1A competed in same championship through 1990)" || Quinter || || || || || || || || Mineola || Wichita Collegiate || first championship in 1987 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kansas || KSHSAA Scholars Bowl Class 1A Div. I || || || || || || || || Leavenworth-Immaculata || Goessel || Satanta || Satanta || Bucklin || Rolla || Ness City || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (1A run as a single division from 1991-2010)" || Greeley County || || || || || || || || Ashland || Rolla || Greeley County || Bucklin || Ashland || Rolla || Bushton-Quivera Heights || Rolla || Ness City || Rolla || Rolla || Bennington || Rolla || Rolla || Cunningham || Madison || Rolla || Rolla || St. Paul || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (2A and 1A competed in same championship through 1990)" || Quinter || || || || || || || || Mineola || Wichita Collegiate || first championship in 1987 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kansas || KSHSAA Scholars Bowl Class 1A Div. II || || || || || || || || Rolla || Beloit-St. John's Catholic || Beloit-St. John's Catholic || Hutchinson-Central Christian || Rolla || Hutchinson-Central Christian || Ness City || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (1A run as a single division from 1991-2010)" || Greeley County || || || || || || || || Ashland || Rolla || Greeley County || Bucklin || Ashland || Rolla || Bushton-Quivera Heights || Rolla || Ness City || Rolla || Rolla || Bennington || Rolla || Rolla || Cunningham || Madison || Rolla || Rolla || St. Paul || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (2A and 1A competed in same championship through 1990)" || Quinter || || || || || || || || Mineola || Wichita Collegiate || first championship in 1987 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kentucky || NAQT Kentucky Championship || || || || || || || || || || Dunbar || Dunbar || duPont Manual || Dunbar || Dunbar || Dunbar || Dunbar || Madisonville North Hopkins || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kentucky || KAAC Governor's Cup Quick Recall State Tournament || || || || || || || || || || Dunbar || Dunbar || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Louisiana || NAQT Louisiana State Championship || || || || || || || || || || New Orleans Jesuit || New Orleans Jesuit || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Louisiana || Louisiana Association for Academic Competition Overall Championship || || || || || || || || || || Episcopal School of Acadiana || Lusher Charter || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Louisiana || Louisiana Association for Academic Competition Division 1 Championship || || || || || || || || || || New Orleans Jesuit || New Orleans Jesuit || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Louisiana || Louisiana Association for Academic Competition Division 2 Championship || || || || || || || || || || E.D. White || Vandebilt Catholic || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Louisiana || Louisiana Association for Academic Competition Division 3 Championship || || || || || || || || || || Holy Savior Menard || Lusher Charter || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Louisiana || Louisiana Association for Academic Competition Division 4 Championship || || || || || || || || || || Episcopal School of Acadiana || Cedar Creek || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Manitoba || Manitoba Reach for the Top Provincial Finals || || || || || || || || || St. Paul's || Kelvin || St. Paul’s || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Maryland || Maryland Quizbowl Championship || || || || || || || || || || Richard Montgomery || Tournament began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Maryland || NAQT Maryland/DC State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Not held || Montgomery Blair || St. Anselm's || Richard Montgomery || Georgetown Day || Not held || Not held || Richard Montgomery || Richard Montgomery || Blake || Eleanor Roosevelt || Blake || Not held || Georgetown Day || Tournament began in 2001 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Massachusetts || Massachusetts Quizbowl Championship || || || || || || || || || || Sharon || Tournament began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Michigan || Michigan High School Quiz Bowl State Championship Class A || || || || || || || || || || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Grosse Pointe North || Detroit Catholic Central || East Lansing || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Okemos || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Eisenhower || Detroit Catholic Central || Plymouth Salem || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Henry Ford II || Seaholm || Plymouth Canton || Eisenhower || Detroit Catholic Central || Eisenhower || Detroit Catholic Central || Tournament began in 1988 || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Michigan || Michigan High School Quiz Bowl State Championship Class B || || || || || || || || || || Huron || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || DeWitt || Detroit Country Day || Williamston || White Cloud || Detroit Country Day || Harper Creek || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || North Branch || Haslett || Haslett || North Branch || Hartland || Division began in 1991 || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Michigan || Michigan High School Quiz Bowl State Championship Class C/D || || || || || || || || || || Utica Academy || Hillsdale Academy || Hillsdale Academy || Utica Academy || Kalamazoo Christian || Kalamazoo Christian || Kalamazoo Christian || Grand Rapids City || Kent City || Manchester || Kent City || Kent City || Kent City || Hancock || Kent City || Hancock || Houghton || Houghton || Houghton || Grand Rapids City || Grand Rapids City || Detroit Country Day || White Cloud || Grand Rapids City || Williamston || Division created in 1990 || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Michigan || NAQT Michigan State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Results missing || Detroit Country Day || East Lansing || Results missing || Results missing || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Results missing || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Country Day || Eisenhower || Tournament began in 2000 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Minnesota || NAQT Minnesota State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Eden Prairie || Wayzata || Wayzata || St. Thomas || Eden Prairie || Chaska || Eden Prairie || Eden Prairie || Eden Prairie || St. Thomas || Chaska || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Minnesota || Minnesota High School Quiz Bowl League || || || || || || || || || || Eden Prairie || Wayzata || Wayzata || Chanhassen || Eden Prairie || Chaska || Eden Prairie || Eden Prairie || St. Thomas || St. Thomas || Chaska || Chaska || St. Thomas || St. Thomas || Chaska || Chaska || Blake || Blake || Blake || Blake || Eden Prairie || Chaska || Chaska || Rosemount || St. Thomas Academy || Results missing || Results missing || Saint Paul Academy || Blake || St. Paul Academy || St. Paul Academy || Results missing || St. Thomas Academy<br />
|-<br />
| Minnesota || Minnesota State Knowledge Bowl Meet Class AA || || || || || || || || || || Buffalo || Spring Lake Park || Chaska || St. Anthony Village || St. Anthony Village || Chaska || Eden Prairie || St. Anthony Village || St. Anthony Village || St. Thomas || St. Anthony Village || Chaska || St. Thomas || Hibbing || St. Cloud Tech || Cretin-Derham Hall || Cretin-Derham Hall || Chaska || Hibbing || Chaska || Moorhead || Chaska || Chaska || Bemidji || Greenbush || Northfield || Moorhead || Duluth Cathedral || Little Falls || Fergus Falls || Fergus Falls || Fergus Falls || Fergus Falls<br />
|-<br />
| Minnesota || Minnesota State Knowledge Bowl Meet Class A || || || || || || || || || || St. John's Prep || Glencoe-Silver Lake || St. John's Prep || Sebeka || Sebeka || Loyola Catholic || St. John's Prep || Glencoe-Silver Lake || St. John's Prep || East Grand Forks || Park Christian || Springfield || Cook || NRHEG || Moose Lake || Moose Lake || Murray County Central || Morris || Grygla || Division created in 1996 || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Mississippi || NAQT Mississippi State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || || Tournament was not held after 2010 || Madison Central || St. Andrew's || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Mississippi || NAQT Mississippi Championship JV || || || || || || || || || || || || || Title not awarded after 2009 || Mississippi Math & Science || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || NAQT Missouri Qualifier (Overall) || || || || || || || || Hickman || Hallsville || Hallsville || Ladue || Ladue || Savannah || Helias || North Kansas City || North Kansas City || Tournament began in 2008 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || NAQT Missouri Qualifier (Small School) || || || || || || || || Hallsville || Hallsville || Hallsville || Hallsville || Pilot Grove || Centralia || North Shelby || Richland || Richland || Tournament began in 2008 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || MSHSAA Scholar Bowl State Championship Class 4 || || || || || || || || Hickman || Clayton || Ladue || Ladue || Ladue || Ladue || Kirksville || Ladue || North Kansas City || North Kansas City || Ladue || Liberty || Parkway Central || Liberty || Cape Girardeau Central || Nixa || Nixa || North Kansas City || North Kansas City || North Kansas City || North Kansas City || Class 4 added when MSHSAA took over in 1996 || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || MSHSAA (MAA 1992-1995) Scholar Bowl State Championship Class 3 || || || || || || || || Orchard Farm || Hallsville || Hallsville || Priory || Savannah || Savannah || Priory || Priory || Notre Dame || John Burroughs || Savannah || Westminster Christian || Savannah || Savannah || Savannah || Salem || Boonville || Priory || Cuba || Cuba || Cuba || Savannah || Savannah || Liberty || Unknown (or class 3 did not exist in 1992) || First MAA tournament held in 1992 || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || MSHSAA (MAA 1992-1995) Scholar Bowl State Championship Class 2 || || || || || || || || Calvary Lutheran || Saxony Lutheran || Richland || Saxony Lutheran || Barstow || Richland || Barstow || Richland || Richland || Richland || Richland || Richland || Richland || Richland || Bernie || Richland || Richland || Richland || Richland || Richland || Richland || Cuba || Bernie || Mary's Institute/St. Louis Country Day || Hannibal || First MAA tournament held in 1992 || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || MSHSAA (MAA 1992-1995) Scholar Bowl State Championship Class 1 || || || || || || || || Thomas Jefferson || Tuscumbia || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Mound City || Heartland || Heartland || Tarkio || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Mound City || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Koshkonong || Koshkonong || Mound City || Mound City || Mound City || Mound City || Bernie || North Shelby || Bernie || North Shelby || First MAA tournament held in 1992 || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || MACA JV State Large School || || || || || || || || Washington || Washington || Hannibal || Rock Bridge (single division) || SLUH || Hosted, but results unknown || Kirksville || Rock Bridge || Lee's Summit North (single division) || Kirksville || Savannah? || Savannah (single division) || Kirksville? || || || || || || || || || (MACA founded in 1996, unknown if tournament existed before) || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || MACA JV State Small School || || || || || || || || Hallsville || Hallsville || Hallsville || Rock Bridge (single division) || Hallsville || Hosted, but results unknown || Savannah || Barstow || Lee's Summit North (single division) || Savannah || Single division? || Savannah (single division) || Single division? || || || || || || || || || (MACA founded in 1996, unknown if tournament existed before)<br />
|<br />
<br />
<br />
[[category: Quiz Bowl Lists]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=List_of_high_school_state_champions_(N-W)&diff=61671List of high school state champions (N-W)2023-07-19T13:17:32Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div><noinclude><br />
This page is transcluded into the full list, which is available at [[List of high school state champions]].<br />
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"<br />
! State !! Tournament !! 2023 Champion !! 2022 Champion !! 2021 Champion !! 2020 Champion !! 2019 Champion !! 2018 Champion !! 2017 Champion !! 2016 Champion !! 2015 Champion !! 2014 Champion !! 2013 Champion !! 2012 Champion !! 2011 Champion !! 2010 Champion !! 2009 Champion !! 2008 Champion !! 2007 Champion !! 2006 Champion !! 2005 Champion !! 2004 Champion !! 2003 Champion !! 2002 Champion !! 2001 Champion !! 2000 Champion !! 1999 Champion !! 1998 Champion !! 1997 Champion !! 1996 Champion !! 1995 Champion !! 1994 Champion !! 1993 Champion !! 1992 Champion !! 1991 Champion !! 1990 Champion !! 1989 Champion !! 1988 Champion !! 1987 Champion !! 1986 Champion !! 1985 Champion !! 1984 Champion !! 1983 Champion !! 1982 Champion<br />
</noinclude><br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| New Brunswick || New Brunswick Reach for the Top Provincial Finals || || || || || || || || || || Kennebecasis Valley || Kennebecasis Valley || Kennebecasis Valley || Kennebecasis Valley || Kennebecasis Valley || Kennebecasis Valley || Kennebecasis Valley || Kennebecasis Valley || Kennebecasis Valley || Kennebecasis Valley || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| New Hampshire || NAQT New Hampshire State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || || event suspended || Hanover || event began in 2011 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| New Hampshire || New Hampshire Quiz Bowl League || || || || || || || || || || Portsmouth Christian || Portsmouth Christian || results missing || results missing || Hanover || Hanover || Hanover || Manchester West || Manchester West || Hanover || Hanover || Hanover || Hanover || Hanover || Hanover || Oyster River || Oyster River || Hanover || Hanover || Tournament started in 1997 || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| New Hampshire || Granite State Challenge || || || || || || || || || || || Plymouth Regional || No tournament || Bishop Brady || Manchester Central || Hollis/Brookline || John Stark || Hanover || Manchester West || Alvirne || Winnisquam || Hanover || Salem || Oyster River || Keene || Plymouth || Laconia || Alvirne || Winnisquam || Portsmouth || Hanover || Laconia || Alvirne || Winnisquam || Bishop Guertin || St. Thomas || Phillips Exeter Academy || Londonderry || || || || || Tournament started in 1983<br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| New Jersey || NAQT New Jersey State Championship || || || || || || || || || || High Tech || High Tech || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| New Mexico || NAQT New Mexico State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Not held || Not held || Not held || Not held || La Cueva || La Cueva || La Cueva || La Cueva || Results missing || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| New York || New York Quizbowl Championship || || || || || || || || || || Ithaca || Tournament began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| New York || MasterMinds State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || Bethlehem || Fayetteville-Manlius || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| New York || NAQT Upstate New York State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Not held || Ithaca || Ithaca || Ithaca || Not held || Kellenberg || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| New York || NAQT Metro New York State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Tournament not held || Tournament not held || Great Neck South || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| North Carolina || NCATA Quizbowl Championship || || || || || || || || || || Raleigh Charter || East Chapel Hill || Tournament began in 2013 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| North Carolina || NCASA State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Early College at Guilford || Myers Park || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| North Carolina || Public Library Quizbowl State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || state championship tournament ended || Hoggard || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Nova Scotia || Nova Scotia Reach for the Top Provincial Finals || || || || || || || || || || Dartmouth || || || Cobequid Educational Centre || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Ohio || Ohio Academic Competition || || || || || || || || || || Northmont || Northmont || Olmsted Falls || Copley || Solon || Green || Garfield Heights || Garfield Heights || Fisher Catholic || Copley || Fisher Catholic || St. Charles || Copley || Beavercreek || Beavercreek || Copley || Copley || St. Xavier || Brecksville-Broadview Heights || Copley || Beavercreek || Elyria || Beachwood || Wellington Academy || Beavercreek || Gilmour Academy || Gilmour Academy || Norwalk || Wheelersburg || Wheelersburg || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Ohio || NAQT Ohio State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Northmont || Northmont || Warren G. Harding || Olmsted Falls || Northmont || Walnut Hills || Garfield Heights || Tippecanoe || "Division I: Garfield Heights<br />
|-<br />
| <br />
|-<br />
| Division II: Fisher Catholic" || "Division I: Firestone<br />
|-<br />
| <br />
|-<br />
| Division II: Tippecanoe" || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Oklahoma || NAQT Oklahoma State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Norman North || Norman || Yukon || Yukon || Edmond Santa Fe || Edmond Memorial || Mustang || Edmond Santa Fe || Edmond Santa Fe || Edmond Santa Fe || Booker T. Washington || Edmond Memorial || Edmond Memorial || Booker T. Washington || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Oklahoma || OSSAA State Championship Class 6A || || || || || || || || || || Edmond Santa Fe || Booker T. Washington || Booker T. Washington || Claremore || Jenks || Jenks || Division created in 2009 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Oklahoma || OSSAA State Championship Class 5A || || || || || || || || || || Bishop Kelley || Claremore || Bishop Kelley || Booker T. Washington || Claremore || Thomas Edison || Jenks || Booker T. Washington || Booker T. Washington || Booker T. Washington || Edmond North || Booker T. Washington || Edmond Memorial || Lawton Eisenhower || Edmond North || Edmond Santa Fe || Edmond Santa Fe || Edmond Santa Fe || Edmond Memorial || Edmond Memorial || Booker T. Washington || Edmond Memorial || Booker T. Washington || Broken Arrow || Broken Arrow || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Oklahoma || OSSAA State Championship Class 4A || || || || || || || || || || Cascia Hall || Cascia Hall || Blanchard || Cascia Hall || Plainview || Bristow || Booker T. Washington || Claremore || Claremore || Bishop Kelley || Booker T. Washington || Claremore || Booker T. Washington || Claremore || Booker T. Washington || Booker T. Washington || Bishop Kelley || Booker T. Washington || Booker T. Washington || Bishop Kelley || Duncan || Bishop Kelley || Poteau || Guymon || Guymon || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Oklahoma || OSSAA State Championship Class 3A || || || || || || || || || || Chelsea || Chelsea || Warner || Oklahoma Bible Academy || Oklahoma Bible Academy || Oklahoma Bible Academy || Holland Hall || Holland Hall || Holland Hall || Holland Hall || Holland Hall || Holland Hall || Holland Hall || Edmond Deer Creek || Bishop McGuinness || Bishop McGuinness || Tecumseh || Tecumseh || Harrah || Hilldale || Byng || Antlers || Claremore Sequoyah || Chandler || Central-Sallisaw || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Oklahoma || OSSAA State Championship Class 2A || || || || || || || || || || Rock Creek || Drummond || Rock Creek || Rock Creek || Rock Creek || Haileyville || Minco || Warner || Okemah || Caney Valley || Rush Springs || Caney Valley || Adair || Woodland || Rush Springs || Caney Valley || Indianola || Watonga || Watonga || Chouteau || Caney Valley || Meeker || Westville || Cache || N/A || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Oklahoma || OSSAA State Championship Class 1A || || || || || || || || || || OK Christian Academy || Crossings Christian || Drummond || Drummond || Drummond || Drummond || Porter Consolidated || Pioneer-Pleasant Vale || Rock Creek || Waurika || Rock Creek || Rock Creek || Drummond || Oklahoma Bible Academy || Oklahoma Bible Academy || Union City || Union City || Fletcher || Classen SAS || Calera || Hinton || Cordell || Washington || Caney Valley || N/A || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Oklahoma || OSSAA State Championship Class B || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || Division ended after 2008 || Drummond || Drummond || Drummond || Drummond || Drummond || Drummond || Kremlin-Hillsdale || Drummond || Drummond || Drummond || Drummond || Kremlin-Hillsdale || Hammon || Drummond || Washita Heights || Oklahoma Bible Academy || Davenport || Sharon-Mutual || N/A || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Ontario || Ontario Reach for the Top provincial finals || || || || || || || || || || London Central || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Ontario || NAQT Ontario Provincial Championship || || || || || || || || || || Colonel By || Lisgar || Lisgar || Lisgar || Lisgar || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Oregon || NAQT Oregon State Championship || || || || || || || || || || "Cancelled <br />
|-<br />
| Westview (de facto)" || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Pennsylvania || NAQT Western Pennsylvania State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Winchester Thurston || DuBois || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Pennsylvania || NAQT Eastern Pennsylvania State Championship || || || || || || || || || || State College || Manheim Township || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Pennsylvania || Pennsylvania State Academic Competition || || || || || || || || || || Downington || Conestoga || B. Reed Henderson || B. Reed Henderson || West Chester Rustin || Wilson || State College || Scranton || State College || Emmaus || Emmaus || Emmaus || Downington || Moravian || Lancaster Catholic || Manheim Township || Manheim Township || State College || West Chester East || General McLane || Downington || Radnor || Conestoga || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Québec || Quebec Reach for the Top Provincial Finals || || || || || || || || || || Marianopolis College || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Québec || Génies en herbe Secondary School Championship || || || || || || || || || || Georges-Vanier || École Saint-Viateur d'Amos || || || event revived in 2011 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Québec || Génies en herbe Primary School Championship || || || || || || || || || || Paul Bruchési || || || || event revived in 2011 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| South Carolina || NAQT South Carolina State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Riverside || James Island || Dorman || Spartanburg || Southside || James Island || Southside || James Island || Not available || Not available || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Tennessee || Tennessee Academic Coaches Association State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Hume-Fogg || Ezell-Harding || University School of Nashville || University School of Nashville || Ezell-Harding || MLK Magnet || MLK Magnet || MLK Magnet || Not available || Not available || Not available || Cookeville || Cookeville || Riverdale || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Texas || TQBA State Championship || || || || || || || || || || LASA || St. John's || Seven Lakes || LASA || LASA || Bellaire || LASA || St. John's || St. John's || Bellaire || Bellaire || St. John's || St. John's || Huntsville || Cistercian || Tournament began in 2000 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Texas || Sam Houston State University Academic Challenge || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || unclear if tournament was held after 2007 || Clear Lake || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Vermont || Vermont-NEA Scholars' Bowl State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Essex || Essex || Hanover || Hanover || Essex || Hanover || Hanover || Champlain Valley || Middlebury || St. Johnsbury || Hanover || Hanover || Essex || Burlington || Burlington || Burlington || Lyndon || Burlington || Montpelier || Essex || St. Johnsbury || Hanover || BFA-St. Albans || Mt. Mansfield || St. Johnsbury || Colchester || Fair Haven || Winooski || Rice Memorial || Middlebury || Rice Memorial || || <br />
|-<br />
| Vermont || NAQT Vermont State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Essex || Hanover || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Virginia || VHSL Scholastic Bowl State Championships Class 6A || || || || || || || || || || Langley || Division began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Virginia || VHSL Scholastic Bowl State Championships Class 5A || || || || || || || || || || Albemarle || Division began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Virginia || VHSL Scholastic Bowl State Championships Class 4A || || || || || || || || || || Loudoun || Division began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Virginia || VHSL Scholastic Bowl State Championships Class 3A || || || || || || || || || || Western Albemarle || Division began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Virginia || VHSL Scholastic Bowl State Championships Class 2A || || || || || || || || || || Maggie Walker || Division began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Virginia || VHSL Scholastic Bowl State Championships Class 1A || || || || || || || || || || Honaker || Division began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Virginia || VHSL Scholastic Bowl State Championships Class AAA || || || || || || || || || || Division ended after 2013 (mostly reconfigured into 6A and 5A) || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Maggie Walker || Maggie Walker || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Maggie Walker || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Maggie Walker || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Maggie Walker || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Tournament began in 1998 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Virginia || VHSL Scholastic Bowl State Championships Class AA || || || || || || || || || || Division ended after 2013 (mostly reconfigured into 4A and 3A) || New Kent || Cave Spring || Christiansburg || Blacksburg || James Monroe || Charlottesville || Charlottesville || Charlottesville || Charlottesville || Robert E. Lee || Salem || Robert E. Lee || Poquoson || Charlottesville || Blacksburg || Western Albemarle || Tournament began in 1998 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Virginia || VHSL Scholastic Bowl State Championships Class A || || || || || || || || || || Division ended after 2013 (mostly reconfigured into 2A and 1A) || George Mason || George Mason || George Mason || George Mason || Rappahannock || Radford || George Mason || Radford || James Monroe || Eastern Montgomery || George Mason || George Mason || Radford || Buffalo Gap || Radford || Radford || Tournament began in 1998 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Virginia || NAQT Virginia Championship || || || || || || || || || || Western Albemarle || Western Albemarle || Cave Spring || Maggie Walker || Maggie Walker || Maggie Walker || Maggie Walker || Maggie Walker || Maggie Walker || Thomas Jefferson || Maggie Walker || No tournament || Thomas Jefferson || Maggie Walker || C.D. Hylton || Tournament began in 2000 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Virgin Islands || Virgin Islands Quiz Bowl || || || || || || || || || || || St. Croix Country Day || || St. Croix Country Day || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Washington || NAQT Washington State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Interlake || Lakeside || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Washington || Washington State Knowledge Bowl Tournament Class 4A || || || || || || || || || || Olympia || Camas || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Washington || Washington State Knowledge Bowl Tournament Class 3A || || || || || || || || || || Hanford || Charles Wright || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Washington || Washington State Knowledge Bowl Tournament Class 2A || || || || || || || || || || Lakewood || West Valley || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Washington || Washington State Knowledge Bowl Tournament Class 1A || || || || || || || || || || Stevenson || Stevenson || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Washington || Washington State Knowledge Bowl Tournament Class 2B || || || || || || || || || || Northwest Christian || Harrison Prep || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Washington || Washington State Knowledge Bowl Tournament Class 1B || || || || || || || || || || Pope John Paul II || Valley Christian || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| West Virginia || NAQT West Virginia State Championship Large School || || || || || || || || || || George Washington || South Charleston || Bridgeport || Parkersburg High || Parkersburg High || Parkersburg High || Bridgeport || Bridgeport || Cabell Midland || Parkersburg High || Ripley || George Washington || George Washington || Parkersburg High || George Washington || Results missing || Results missing || Results missing || Results missing || Results missing || Results missing || Results missing || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| West Virginia || NAQT West Virginia State Championship Small School || || || || || || || || || || Bridgeport || Bridgeport || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Wisconsin || NAQT Wisconsin State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Stoughton || Stoughton || Stoughton || not held || results missing || not held || results missing || Oshkosh West || results missing || results missing || Conserve || Conserve || First held in 2003 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Wyoming || Wyoming Academic Challenge || || || || || || || || || || Big Horn || Cheyenne East<br />
|}<br />
<br />
[[category: Quiz Bowl Lists]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=List_of_high_school_state_champions_(G-M)&diff=61670List of high school state champions (G-M)2023-07-19T13:17:11Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div><noinclude><br />
This page is transcluded into the full list, which is available at [[List of high school state champions]].<br />
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"<br />
! State !! Tournament !! 2023 Champion !! 2022 Champion !! 2021 Champion !! 2020 Champion !! 2019 Champion !! 2018 Champion !! 2017 Champion !! 2016 Champion !! 2015 Champion !! 2014 Champion !! 2013 Champion !! 2012 Champion !! 2011 Champion !! 2010 Champion !! 2009 Champion !! 2008 Champion !! 2007 Champion !! 2006 Champion !! 2005 Champion !! 2004 Champion !! 2003 Champion !! 2002 Champion !! 2001 Champion !! 2000 Champion !! 1999 Champion !! 1998 Champion !! 1997 Champion !! 1996 Champion !! 1995 Champion !! 1994 Champion !! 1993 Champion !! 1992 Champion !! 1991 Champion !! 1990 Champion !! 1989 Champion !! 1988 Champion !! 1987 Champion !! 1986 Champion !! 1985 Champion !! 1984 Champion !! 1983 Champion !! 1982 Champion<br />
</noinclude><br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Varsity State Championship Division 6A || || || || || || || || || || Chattahoochee || Etowah || Division began in 2013 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Varsity State Championship Division 5A || || || || || || || || || || Flowery Branch || Bainbridge || Centennial || Walton || Centennial || Walton || Chattahoochee || Brookwood || Walton || Walton || Walton || Chattahoochee || Brookwood || Brookwood || Division began in 2001 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Varsity State Championship Division 4A || || || || || || || || || || Marist || Marist || Chattahoochee || Chattahoochee || Lakeside || Heritage || Lakeside || Lakeside || Central Macon || Heritage || Heritage || Heritage || Heritage || Heritage || Brookwood || Brookwood || Brookwood || Brookwood || Brookwood || Walton || Brookwood || Walton || Walton || Walton || Brookwood || Tournament began in 1990 || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Varsity State Championship Division 3A || || || || || || || || || || Gordon Central || Gwinnett Math and Science || Eastside || Eastside || Woodward Academy || Woodward Academy || Westminster || Westminster || Dunwoody || Westminster || Central Macon || Central Macon || Central Macon || Westminster || Woodward || Woodward || North Atlanta || Central Macon || Gordon Central || Gordon Central || Westminster || Westminster || Woodward || Northside || Marist || Tournament began in 1990 || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Varsity State Championship Division 2A || || || || || || || || || || Westminster || Westminster || Westminster || Westminster || Westminster || Blessed Trinity || Paideia || Bleckley County || Paideia || Greater Atlanta Christian || Greater Atlanta Christian || Decatur || Greater Atlanta Christian || Paideia || Westminster || Westminster || Westminster || Westminster || Westminster || Division not held || Dublin || Manchester || Darlington || Lovett || North Fulton || Tournament began in 1990 || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Varsity State Championship Division 1A || || || || || || || || || || Baconton Charter || Athens Academy || Athens Academy || Savannah Country Day || Paideia || Paideia || Baconton Charter || Savannah Country Day || Athens Academy || Athens Academy || Athens Academy || Brookstone || Savannah Country Day || Athens Academy || Paideia || Savannah Country Day || Paideia || Paideia || Savannah Country Day || Greater Atlanta Christian || Greater Atlanta Christian || Greater Atlanta Christian || Savannah Country Day || Greater Atlanta Christian || Savannah Country Day || Tournament began in 1990 || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Junior Varsity State Championship Division 6A || || || || || || || || || || Alpharetta || Chattahoochee || Division began in 2013 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Junior Varsity State Championship Division 5A || || || || || || || || || || Flowery Branch || Cedar Shoals || Walton || Walton || Lakeside || Lakeside || Not held || Not held || Lakeside || Not held || Chattahoochee || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Junior Varsity State Championship Division 4A || || || || || || || || || || Marist || Westminster || Chattahoochee || Chamblee Charter || Lakeside || Lakeside || Not held || Not held || Lakeside || Not held || Heritage || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Junior Varsity State Championship Division 3A || || || || || || || || || || Westminster (single division) || Division not held || Macon Central || Eastside || Flowery Branch || Flowery Branch || Not held || Not held || Dunwoody || Not held || Central Macon || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Junior Varsity State Championship Division 2A || || || || || || || || || || Westminster (single division) || Division not held || Westminster || Gwinnett Math and Science || Lovett || Westminster || Not held || Not held || GACS || Not held || Bleckley County || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Junior Varsity State Championship Division 1A || || || || || || || || || || Oak Mountain || Baconton Charter || Savannah Country Day || Oak Mountain || Savannah Country Day || Savannah Country Day || Not held || Not held || Baconton || Not held || Savannah Country Day || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Idaho || NAQT Idaho State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || Treasure Valley || Treasure Valley || Tournament began in 2012 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Illinois || NAQT Illinois Championship || || || || || || || || || || IMSA || IMSA || Rockford Auburn || Stevenson || Rockford Auburn || Rockford Auburn || Rockford Auburn || New Trier || Stevenson || Stevenson || Tournament began in 2005 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Illinois || Illinois Masonic Academic Bowl Class AA || || || || || || || || || || IMSA || Loyola || IMSA || Stevenson || St. Ignatius || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Illinois || Illinois Masonic Academic Bowl Class A || || || || || || || || || || Newman Central Catholic || Litchfield || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Illinois || IHSA State Championship Tournament Class AA || || || || || || || || || || IMSA || IMSA || IMSA || IMSA || Stevenson || Carbondale || Auburn || New Trier || Fremd || Stevenson || Wheaton North || Wheaton North || Wheaton North || IMSA || Stevenson || IMSA || IMSA || IMSA || IMSA || Richwoods || IMSA || Quincy Senior || Hinsdale Central || Centralia || IMSA || IMSA || Quincy Senior || Quincy Senior || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Illinois || IHSA State Championship Tournament Class A || || || || || || || || || || Litchfield || Peoria Christian || Peoria Christian || Lisle || Lisle || Latin || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Indiana || Rotary Club Indiana Quizbowl State Championship Class AAA || || || || || || || || || || St. Joseph || St. Joseph || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Indiana || Rotary Club Indiana Quizbowl State Championship Class AA || || || || || || || || || || Clay || Riley || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Indiana || Rotary Club Indiana Quizbowl State Championship Class A || || || || || || || || || || North White || North Miami || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Indiana || Indiana Frosh/Soph State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Harrison || St. Joseph || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Indiana || "Traditional" Quiz Bowl State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Park Tudor || St. Joseph || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Iowa || Iowa Knowledge Bowl || || || || || || || || || || Unknown || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Iowa || NAQT Iowa State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || || Tournament was not held after 2011 || Ames || Bettendorf || West Des Moines Valley || Ames || Regina || Regina || Regina || Tournament was held, but results were not posted || Tournament was held, but results were not posted || Tournament was held, but results were not posted || Ames || Tournament was held, but results not posted || Tournament began in 2000 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kansas || KSHSAA Scholar's Bowl Class 6A || || || || || || || || Overland Park-Blue Valley || Overland Park-Blue Valley || Overland Park-Blue Valley || Stilwell-Blue Valley || Maize || Wichita East || Washburn Rural || Washburn Rural || Washburn Rural || Wichita East || Lawrence || Washburn Rural || Wichita East || Overland Park-St. Thomas Aquinas || Lawrence || Olathe South || Lawrence || Lawrence || Wichita East || Lawrence || Washburn Rural || Tecumseh-Shawnee Heights || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (6A and 5A competed in same championship through 1995)" || Lawrence || || || || || || || || Manhattan || Lawrence || Lawrence || Hutchinson || Lawrence || Manhattan || Manhattan || first championship in 1987 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kansas || KSHSAA Scholars Bowl Class 5A || || || || || || || || Maize || Shawnee-Mill Valley || Wichita-Bishop Carroll || Wichita-Kapuan Mt. Carmel || Stilwell-Blue Valley || Stilwell-Blue Valley || Wichita-Bishop Carroll || Shawnee-Mill Valley || Topeka-West || Wichita-Bishop Carroll || Wichita-Bishop Carroll || Pittsburg || Winfield || KC-Sumner Academy || Wichita-Kapaun Mt. Carmel || Wichita-Kapaun Mt. Carmel || Andover || Tecumseh-Shawnee Heights || Tecumseh-Shawnee Heights || Topeka-West || Wichita-Kapaun Mt. Carmel || Tecumseh-Shawnee Heights || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (6A and 5A competed in same championship through 1995)" || Lawrence || || || || || || || || Manhattan || Lawrence || Lawrence || Hutchinson || Lawrence || Manhattan || Manhattan || first championship in 1987 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kansas || KSHSAA Scholars Bowl Class 4A || || || || || || || || Andover-Central || Rose Hill || Andover-Central || De Soto || De Soto || De Soto || Topeka-Hayden || Wichita-The Independent School || Buhler || Pittsburg || Topeka-Hayden || Topeka-Hayden || Basehor-Linwood || Topeka-Hayden || Lindsborg-Smoky Valley || Mulvane || Topeka-Hayden || Baldwin || Hays-Thomas More Prep-Marian || Lansing || Augusta || Lansing || Lansing || Lansing || Towanda-Circle || Augusta || Towanda-Circle || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (4A and 3A competed in same championship through 1990)" || Wichita-Collegiate || || || || || || || || Eureka || Horton || first championship in 1987 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kansas || KSHSAA Scholars Bowl Class 3A || || || || || || || || Wichita-The Independent School || Wichita Collegiate || Wichita Collegiate || Wichita-The Independent School || Wichita-The Independent School || Hays-Thomas More Prep-Marian || Hays-Thomas More Prep-Marian || Wichita Collegiate || Salina-Sacred Heart || Wichita-The Independent School || Wichita-The Independent School || Shawnee-Maranatha Academy || Shawnee-Maranatha Academy || Hays-Thomas More Prep-Marian || Cherokee-Southeast || Hoisington || Wichita Collegiate || Wichita Collegiate || Seneca-Nemaha Valley || Riley County || Wichita Collegiate || Wichita Collegiate || Wichita Collegiate || Wichita Collegiate || Wichita Collegiate || Leavenworth-Immaculata || Towanda-Circle || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (4A and 3A competed in same championship through 1990)" || Wichita-Collegiate || || || || || || || || Eureka || Horton || first championship in 1987 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kansas || KSHSAA Scholars Bowl Class 2A || || || || || || || || Oberlin-Decatur Community || Yates Center || Yates Center || Leavenworth-Immaculata || Inman || Burden-Central || Salina-Sacred Heart || Inman || Clifton-Clyde || Leavenworth-Immaculata || Hutchinson-Trinity || Leavenworth-Immaculata || Leavenworth-Immaculata || Oberlin-Decatur Community || Lyndon || Ness City || Wichita County || Meade || Meade || Buffalo-Altoona-Midway || Kinsley || Stanton County || Quinter || Pittsburg-St. Mary's-Colgan || Atwood || Oskaloosa || St. Paul || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (2A and 1A competed in same championship through 1990)" || Quinter || || || || || || || || Mineola || Wichita Collegiate || first championship in 1987 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kansas || KSHSAA Scholars Bowl Class 1A Div. I || || || || || || || || Leavenworth-Immaculata || Goessel || Satanta || Satanta || Bucklin || Rolla || Ness City || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (1A run as a single division from 1991-2010)" || Greeley County || || || || || || || || Ashland || Rolla || Greeley County || Bucklin || Ashland || Rolla || Bushton-Quivera Heights || Rolla || Ness City || Rolla || Rolla || Bennington || Rolla || Rolla || Cunningham || Madison || Rolla || Rolla || St. Paul || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (2A and 1A competed in same championship through 1990)" || Quinter || || || || || || || || Mineola || Wichita Collegiate || first championship in 1987 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kansas || KSHSAA Scholars Bowl Class 1A Div. II || || || || || || || || Rolla || Beloit-St. John's Catholic || Beloit-St. John's Catholic || Hutchinson-Central Christian || Rolla || Hutchinson-Central Christian || Ness City || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (1A run as a single division from 1991-2010)" || Greeley County || || || || || || || || Ashland || Rolla || Greeley County || Bucklin || Ashland || Rolla || Bushton-Quivera Heights || Rolla || Ness City || Rolla || Rolla || Bennington || Rolla || Rolla || Cunningham || Madison || Rolla || Rolla || St. Paul || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (2A and 1A competed in same championship through 1990)" || Quinter || || || || || || || || Mineola || Wichita Collegiate || first championship in 1987 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kentucky || NAQT Kentucky Championship || || || || || || || || || || Dunbar || Dunbar || duPont Manual || Dunbar || Dunbar || Dunbar || Dunbar || Madisonville North Hopkins || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kentucky || KAAC Governor's Cup Quick Recall State Tournament || || || || || || || || || || Dunbar || Dunbar || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Louisiana || NAQT Louisiana State Championship || || || || || || || || || || New Orleans Jesuit || New Orleans Jesuit || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Louisiana || Louisiana Association for Academic Competition Overall Championship || || || || || || || || || || Episcopal School of Acadiana || Lusher Charter || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Louisiana || Louisiana Association for Academic Competition Division 1 Championship || || || || || || || || || || New Orleans Jesuit || New Orleans Jesuit || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Louisiana || Louisiana Association for Academic Competition Division 2 Championship || || || || || || || || || || E.D. White || Vandebilt Catholic || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Louisiana || Louisiana Association for Academic Competition Division 3 Championship || || || || || || || || || || Holy Savior Menard || Lusher Charter || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Louisiana || Louisiana Association for Academic Competition Division 4 Championship || || || || || || || || || || Episcopal School of Acadiana || Cedar Creek || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Manitoba || Manitoba Reach for the Top Provincial Finals || || || || || || || || || St. Paul's || Kelvin || St. Paul’s || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Maryland || Maryland Quizbowl Championship || || || || || || || || || || Richard Montgomery || Tournament began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Maryland || NAQT Maryland/DC State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Not held || Montgomery Blair || St. Anselm's || Richard Montgomery || Georgetown Day || Not held || Not held || Richard Montgomery || Richard Montgomery || Blake || Eleanor Roosevelt || Blake || Not held || Georgetown Day || Tournament began in 2001 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Massachusetts || Massachusetts Quizbowl Championship || || || || || || || || || || Sharon || Tournament began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Michigan || Michigan High School Quiz Bowl State Championship Class A || || || || || || || || || || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Grosse Pointe North || Detroit Catholic Central || East Lansing || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Okemos || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Eisenhower || Detroit Catholic Central || Plymouth Salem || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Henry Ford II || Seaholm || Plymouth Canton || Eisenhower || Detroit Catholic Central || Eisenhower || Detroit Catholic Central || Tournament began in 1988 || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Michigan || Michigan High School Quiz Bowl State Championship Class B || || || || || || || || || || Huron || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || DeWitt || Detroit Country Day || Williamston || White Cloud || Detroit Country Day || Harper Creek || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || North Branch || Haslett || Haslett || North Branch || Hartland || Division began in 1991 || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Michigan || Michigan High School Quiz Bowl State Championship Class C/D || || || || || || || || || || Utica Academy || Hillsdale Academy || Hillsdale Academy || Utica Academy || Kalamazoo Christian || Kalamazoo Christian || Kalamazoo Christian || Grand Rapids City || Kent City || Manchester || Kent City || Kent City || Kent City || Hancock || Kent City || Hancock || Houghton || Houghton || Houghton || Grand Rapids City || Grand Rapids City || Detroit Country Day || White Cloud || Grand Rapids City || Williamston || Division created in 1990 || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Michigan || NAQT Michigan State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Results missing || Detroit Country Day || East Lansing || Results missing || Results missing || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Results missing || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Country Day || Eisenhower || Tournament began in 2000 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Minnesota || NAQT Minnesota State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Eden Prairie || Wayzata || Wayzata || St. Thomas || Eden Prairie || Chaska || Eden Prairie || Eden Prairie || Eden Prairie || St. Thomas || Chaska || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Minnesota || Minnesota High School Quiz Bowl League || || || || || || || || || || Eden Prairie || Wayzata || Wayzata || Chanhassen || Eden Prairie || Chaska || Eden Prairie || Eden Prairie || St. Thomas || St. Thomas || Chaska || Chaska || St. Thomas || St. Thomas || Chaska || Chaska || Blake || Blake || Blake || Blake || Eden Prairie || Chaska || Chaska || Rosemount || St. Thomas Academy || Results missing || Results missing || Saint Paul Academy || Blake || St. Paul Academy || St. Paul Academy || Results missing || St. Thomas Academy<br />
|-<br />
| Minnesota || Minnesota State Knowledge Bowl Meet Class AA || || || || || || || || || || Buffalo || Spring Lake Park || Chaska || St. Anthony Village || St. Anthony Village || Chaska || Eden Prairie || St. Anthony Village || St. Anthony Village || St. Thomas || St. Anthony Village || Chaska || St. Thomas || Hibbing || St. Cloud Tech || Cretin-Derham Hall || Cretin-Derham Hall || Chaska || Hibbing || Chaska || Moorhead || Chaska || Chaska || Bemidji || Greenbush || Northfield || Moorhead || Duluth Cathedral || Little Falls || Fergus Falls || Fergus Falls || Fergus Falls || Fergus Falls<br />
|-<br />
| Minnesota || Minnesota State Knowledge Bowl Meet Class A || || || || || || || || || || St. John's Prep || Glencoe-Silver Lake || St. John's Prep || Sebeka || Sebeka || Loyola Catholic || St. John's Prep || Glencoe-Silver Lake || St. John's Prep || East Grand Forks || Park Christian || Springfield || Cook || NRHEG || Moose Lake || Moose Lake || Murray County Central || Morris || Grygla || Division created in 1996 || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Mississippi || NAQT Mississippi State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || || Tournament was not held after 2010 || Madison Central || St. Andrew's || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Mississippi || NAQT Mississippi Championship JV || || || || || || || || || || || || || Title not awarded after 2009 || Mississippi Math & Science || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || NAQT Missouri Qualifier (Overall) || || || || || || || || Hickman || Hallsville || Hallsville || Ladue || Ladue || Savannah || Helias || North Kansas City || North Kansas City || Tournament began in 2008 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || NAQT Missouri Qualifier (Small School) || || || || || || || || Hallsville || Hallsville || Hallsville || Hallsville || Pilot Grove || Centralia || North Shelby || Richland || Richland || Tournament began in 2008 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || MSHSAA Scholar Bowl State Championship Class 4 || || || || || || || || Hickman || Clayton || Ladue || Ladue || Ladue || Ladue || Kirksville || Ladue || North Kansas City || North Kansas City || Ladue || Liberty || Parkway Central || Liberty || Cape Girardeau Central || Nixa || Nixa || North Kansas City || North Kansas City || North Kansas City || North Kansas City || Class 4 added when MSHSAA took over in 1996 || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || MSHSAA (MAA 1992-1995) Scholar Bowl State Championship Class 3 || || || || || || || || Orchard Farm || Hallsville || Hallsville || Priory || Savannah || Savannah || Priory || Priory || Notre Dame || John Burroughs || Savannah || Westminster Christian || Savannah || Savannah || Savannah || Salem || Boonville || Priory || Cuba || Cuba || Cuba || Savannah || Savannah || Liberty || Unknown (or class 3 did not exist in 1992) || First MAA tournament held in 1992 || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || MSHSAA (MAA 1992-1995) Scholar Bowl State Championship Class 2 || || || || || || || || Calvary Lutheran || Saxony Lutheran || Richland || Saxony Lutheran || Barstow || Richland || Barstow || Richland || Richland || Richland || Richland || Richland || Richland || Richland || Bernie || Richland || Richland || Richland || Richland || Richland || Richland || Cuba || Bernie || Mary's Institute/St. Louis Country Day || Hannibal || First MAA tournament held in 1992 || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || MSHSAA (MAA 1992-1995) Scholar Bowl State Championship Class 1 || || || || || || || || Thomas Jefferson || Tuscumbia || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Mound City || Heartland || Heartland || Tarkio || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Mound City || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Koshkonong || Koshkonong || Mound City || Mound City || Mound City || Mound City || Bernie || North Shelby || Bernie || North Shelby || First MAA tournament held in 1992 || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || MACA JV State Large School || || || || || || || || Washington || Washington || Hannibal || Rock Bridge (single division) || SLUH || Hosted, but results unknown || Kirksville || Rock Bridge || Lee's Summit North (single division) || Kirksville || Savannah? || Savannah (single division) || Kirksville? || || || || || || || || || (MACA founded in 1996, unknown if tournament existed before) || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || MACA JV State Small School || || || || || || || || Hallsville || Hallsville || Hallsville || Rock Bridge (single division) || Hallsville || Hosted, but results unknown || Savannah || Barstow || Lee's Summit North (single division) || Savannah || Single division? || Savannah (single division) || Single division? || || || || || || || || || (MACA founded in 1996, unknown if tournament existed before)<br />
|}<br />
<br />
<br />
[[category: Quiz Bowl Lists]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=List_of_high_school_state_champions_(A-F)&diff=61664List of high school state champions (A-F)2023-07-19T01:08:05Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div><noinclude><br />
This page is transcluded into the full list, which is available at [[List of high school state champions]].<br />
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"<br />
! State !! Tournament !! 2023 Champion !! 2022 Champion !! 2021 Champion !! 2020 Champion !! 2019 Champion !! 2018 Champion !! 2017 Champion !! 2016 Champion !! 2015 Champion !! 2014 Champion !! 2013 Champion !! 2012 Champion !! 2011 Champion !! 2010 Champion !! 2009 Champion !! 2008 Champion !! 2007 Champion !! 2006 Champion !! 2005 Champion !! 2004 Champion !! 2003 Champion !! 2002 Champion !! 2001 Champion !! 2000 Champion !! 1999 Champion !! 1998 Champion !! 1997 Champion !! 1996 Champion !! 1995 Champion !! 1994 Champion !! 1993 Champion !! 1992 Champion !! 1991 Champion !! 1990 Champion !! 1989 Champion !! 1988 Champion !! 1987 Champion !! 1986 Champion !! 1985 Champion !! 1984 Champion !! 1983 Champion !! 1982 Champion<br />
</noinclude><br />
|-<br />
| Alabama || Alabama Scholastic Coaches Association State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Gadsden City || Spain Park || Hoover || Vestavia Hills || Indian Springs || Alabama School of Fine Arts || Hoover || Indian Springs || Alabama School of Fine Arts || Indian Springs || Grissom || Grissom || LAMP || Grissom || Grissom || Altamont || Grissom || Auburn || Tournament began in 1997 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Alabama || Alabama Scholastic Coaches Association State Championship JV || || || || || || || || || || Gadsden City || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Alabama || Alabama Scholastic Coaches Association Small School State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Brindlee Mountain || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Alabama || NAQT Alabama State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || Tournament no longer held after 2012 || Hoover || Hoover || Hoover || Hoover || Hoover || Brindlee Mountain || Indian Springs || Brindlee Mountain || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Alabama || NAQT Alabama State Championship JV || || || || || || || || || || || || || JV title not awarded after 2010 || Brindlee Mountain || Brindlee Mountain || JV title first awarded in 2009 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Alberta || Alberta Quizbowl Tournament (de facto championship) || || || || || || || || || || Webber || Harry Ainlay || Harry Ainlay || Tournament began in 2011 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Alberta || Alberta Reach for the Top Provincial Finals || || || || || || || || || || || Old Scona || Bellerose || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arizona || NAQT Arizona State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Desert Vista || Desert Vista || Desert Vista || Brophy || Brophy || Tournament began in 2010 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || NAQT Arkansas State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Watson Chapel || Watson Chapel || Watson Chapel || Watson Chapel || Parkview Arts & Science || Parkview Arts & Science || Episcopal Collegiate || Parkview Arts & Science || Parkview Arts & Science || Not clear if held in 2005 || Conway || Not held || Benton || Tournament began in 2002 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || Arkansas Governor's Quizbowl Association Senior High State Finals Class 7A || || || || || || || || || || Fort Smith Southside || Fort Smith Southside || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || Arkansas Governor's Quizbowl Association Senior High State Finals Class 6A || || || || || || || || || || Benton || Searcy || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || Arkansas Governor's Quizbowl Association Senior High State Finals Class 5A || || || || || || || || || || Watson Chapel || Watson Chapel || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || Arkansas Governor's Quizbowl Association Senior High State Finals Class 4A || || || || || || || || || || Arkadelphia || Subiaco Academy || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || Arkansas Governor's Quizbowl Association Senior High State Finals Class 3A || || || || || || || || || || Episcopal Collegiate || Episcopal Collegiate || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || Arkansas Governor's Quizbowl Association Senior High State Finals Class 2A || || || || || || || || || || Cedar Ridge || Conway Christian || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || Arkansas Governor's Quizbowl Association Senior High State Finals Class 1A || || || || || || || || || || Haas Hall || Haas Hall || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| British Columbia || British Columbia Reach for the Top Provincial Finals || || || || || || || || || || || St. George’s || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| California || California Quizbowl Championship || || || || || || || || || || Bellarmine || Tournament began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| California || NAQT California State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || Split into Northern and Southern California tournaments after 2003 || Bentley || Los Alamitos || Los Alamitos || Edison || Tournament began in 2000 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| California || NAQT Northern California State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Bellarmine || Escobar || Bellarmine || Bellarmine || Mission San Jose || Mission San Jose || Bellarmine || Bentley || Monta Vista || Tournament was held in 2005 but results were never posted || Mission San Jose || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| California || NAQT Northern California State Championship JV || || || || || || || || || || Not held || Challenger-Berryessa || JV title was not awarded from 2005 to 2012 || JV title was not awarded from 2005 to 2012 || JV title was not awarded from 2005 to 2012 || JV title was not awarded from 2005 to 2012 || JV title was not awarded from 2005 to 2012 || JV title was not awarded from 2005 to 2012 || JV title was not awarded from 2005 to 2012 || Missing results || Half Moon Bay || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| California || NAQT Southern California State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Torrey Pines || Arcadia || Arcadia || Torrey Pines || Torrey Pines || Rancho Bernardo || Santa Monica || Santa Monica || Santa Monica || Santa Monica || Santa Monica || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Colorado || Colorado State Knowledge Bowl Meet Governor's Cup round || || || || || || || || || || Grand Junction || Fossil Ridge || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Colorado || Colorado State Knowledge Bowl Meet Class 5A || || || || || || || || || || Grand Junction || Fossil Ridge || Grand Junction || Grand Junction || Grand Junction || Grand Junction || Grand Junction || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Colorado || Colorado State Knowledge Bowl Meet Class 4A || || || || || || || || || || Palisade || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Colorado || Colorado State Knowledge Bowl Meet Class 3A || || || || || || || || || || Estes Park || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Colorado || Colorado State Knowledge Bowl Meet Class 2A || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Colorado || Colorado State Knowledge Bowl Meet Class A || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Connecticut || NAQT Connecticut State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Darien || Tournament began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| District of Columbia || Washington, D.C. Quizbowl Championship || || || || || || || || || || Georgetown Day || Tournament began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| District of Columbia || NAQT Maryland/DC State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Not held || Montgomery Blair || St. Anselm's || Richard Montgomery || Georgetown Day || Not held || Not held || Richard Montgomery || Richard Montgomery || Blake || Eleanor Roosevelt || Blake || Not held || Georgetown Day || Tournament began in 2001 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Delaware || NAQT Delaware State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Not held || Wilmington Charter || Not held || Wilmington Charter || Wilmington Charter || Wilmington Charter || Wilmington Charter || Wilmington Charter || Wilmington Charter || Not held || Wilmington Charter || Wilmington Charter || Wilmington Charter || Tournament was announced, but results were not posted || Tournament began in 2001 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Florida || NAQT Florida State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || Split into North and South Florida tournaments after 2012 || Ransom Everglades || Ransom Everglades || Ransom Everglades || Ransom Everglades || Ransom Everglades || Ransom Everglades || Plant City || Ransom Everglades || Tournament began in 2005 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Florida || NAQT Florida State Championship JV || || || || || || || || || || || Split into North and South Florida tournaments after 2012 || || || || || || JV title not awarded after 2006 || Choctawhatchee || JV title not awarded before 2006 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Florida || NAQT South Florida State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Ransom Everglades || Ransom Everglades || Tournament began in 2013 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Florida || NAQT North Florida State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Buchholz || Buchholz || Tournament began in 2013 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Florida || Commissioner's Academic Challenge Division I || || || || || || || || || || Seminole || Pinellas || Orange || Escambia || Escambia || Brevard || Pinellas || Polk || Escambia || Manatee || Brevard || Escambia || Escambia || Palm Beach || Escambia || Brevard || Seminole || Duval || Leon || Broward || Pinellas || Duval || Pinellas || Dade || Pinellas || Polk || Duval || Orange || Seminole || Tournament began in 1986 || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Florida || Commissioner's Academic Challenge Division II || || || || || || || || || || Okaloosa || Martin || Leon || Leon || Santa Rosa || Indian River || Martin || Leon || Santa Rosa || Okaloosa || St. Lucie || Leon || Leon || Indian River || Leon || Indian River || Hernando || Indian River || Osceola || Clay || Bay || St. Lucie || Collier || Indian River || Highlands || Bay || Clay || Highlands || Suwannee || Tournament began in 1986 || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Florida || Commissioner's Academic Challenge Division III || || || || || || || || || || Suwannee || Suwannee || Monroe || Suwannee || Jackson || Jackson || Hardee || Hardee || Hardee || Gadsden || Hardee || Suwannee || Suwannee || Suwannee || Taylor || DeSoto || Suwannee || DeSoto || Suwannee || Suwannee || Suwannee || DeSoto || Suwannee || Suwannee || Suwannee || Suwannee || Suwannee || Division began in 1988<br />
|<br />
<br />
[[category: Quiz Bowl Lists]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Talk:List_of_high_school_state_champions&diff=61663Talk:List of high school state champions2023-07-19T01:04:56Z<p>David Reinstein: /* Updates??? */</p>
<hr />
<div>To do:<br />
<br />
* Fill in older results -- I just put the most recent one available for each<br />
* Link all tournament & team names to appropriate pages<br />
* Figure out way to indicate when tournaments or divisions of tournaments began or ended -- e.g. the California Quizbowl Championship was created for the 2014 season so there will never be earlier results. Just leave blank or fill in each cell with "Tournament began in 2014"??? Could also use Wiki table functions to merge all dead cells into a single cell with the message or color-code (e.g. use the colors of the state flag or the usual host school to block out cells that don't have data).<br />
<br />
[[User:Matt Weiner|Matt Weiner]] ([[User talk:Matt Weiner|talk]]) 06:52, 21 February 2014 (PST)<br />
<br />
<br />
Can we do this in a more list-like form, or perhaps with separate tables for each state (rows are years, columns are different titles)? This is really hard to read, even on my large monitor, and is going to have tons of wasted space for years that tournaments didn't run. [[User:Jonah Greenthal|Jonah]] ([[User talk:Jonah Greenthal|talk]]) 10:42, 21 February 2014 (PST)<br />
<br />
Well, the tournaments all have (or should have) individual pages; this is designed as a quick way to see all the winners in a specific year. There are probably some aesthetic tricks that could be done to make it more usable (like a light gray shading on alternate columns) that would make it more appealing to use with just the vertical and horizontal scroll bars. [[User:Matt Weiner|Matt Weiner]] ([[User talk:Matt Weiner|talk]]) 11:02, 21 February 2014 (PST)<br />
<br />
Why not have a list under a heading for each year? --[[User:Fred Morlan|Fred Morlan]] ([[User talk:Fred Morlan|talk]]) 17:08, 21 February 2014 (PST)<br />
<br />
For Masonic results before 2010, when all the teams were grouped together, which class should I put them in? Is it possible to merge rows? [[User:James Zhou|James Zhou]] ([[User talk:James Zhou|talk]]) 16:30, 9 March 2014 (PDT)<br />
<br />
I added blank rows to divide the championships for each state. I think this makes the table easier to process in cases where there are a whole bunch of championships for a single state, but it has the disadvantage that these dummy rows get screwed up if you resort the table. Is there a way to use Wiki markup to modify particular row spacings in a more robust way? [[User:Stephen Eltinge|Stephen Eltinge]] ([[User talk:Stephen Eltinge|talk]]) 01:42, 21 May 2014 (PDT)<br />
<br />
== Page split and transclusion ==<br />
The page was getting very large, which was presenting some difficulties (for example, it was not possible to view page diffs; the page just froze and didn't load anything). Therefore, I split the actual content of the page into three sub-pages: [[List of high school state champions (A-F)]], [[List of high school state champions (G-M)]], and [[List of high school state champions (N-W)]]. These pages should be easier to manage.<br />
<br />
The formatting is fairly straightforward. Each page has the same table header. However, on the sub-pages, the header is enclosed in <tt>&lt;noinclude&gt;...&lt;/noinclude&gt;</tt> tags, so it's not copied over. Only the table rows are copied to the parent page. The content is transcluded to the main page by including the line <tt><nowiki>{{:List of high school state champions (x-y)}}</nowiki></tt> (note the preliminary colon). If you run into any technical difficulties, please let me know. [[User:Stephen Eltinge|Stephen Eltinge]] ([[User talk:Stephen Eltinge|talk]]) 13:20, 21 May 2014 (PDT)<br />
<br />
== Updates??? ==<br />
This page is now messed up because somebody added 2015 and 2016 to the G-M page and not the others. Also, it is quite obviously out of date. Does anybody want to spend a few hours working on this? [[User:David Reinstein|David Reinstein]] ([[User talk:David Reinstein|talk]]) 07:33, 11 July 2023 (CDT)<br />
<br />
Does anybody know how I messed this up? The problem is what I did on the three table pages, not this page. It probably can be fixed by getting rid of my changes, but then this page only goes up to 2014. [[User:David Reinstein|David Reinstein]] ([[User talk:David Reinstein|talk]]) 20:04, 18 July 2023 (CDT)</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=List_of_high_school_state_champions_(A-F)&diff=61662List of high school state champions (A-F)2023-07-19T01:03:25Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div><noinclude><br />
This page is transcluded into the full list, which is available at [[List of high school state champions]].<br />
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"<br />
! State !! Tournament !! 2023 Champion !! 2022 Champion !! 2021 Champion !! 2020 Champion !! 2019 Champion !! 2018 Champion !! 2017 Champion !! 2016 Champion !! 2015 Champion !! 2014 Champion !! 2013 Champion !! 2012 Champion !! 2011 Champion !! 2010 Champion !! 2009 Champion !! 2008 Champion !! 2007 Champion !! 2006 Champion !! 2005 Champion !! 2004 Champion !! 2003 Champion !! 2002 Champion !! 2001 Champion !! 2000 Champion !! 1999 Champion !! 1998 Champion !! 1997 Champion !! 1996 Champion !! 1995 Champion !! 1994 Champion !! 1993 Champion !! 1992 Champion !! 1991 Champion !! 1990 Champion !! 1989 Champion !! 1988 Champion !! 1987 Champion !! 1986 Champion !! 1985 Champion !! 1984 Champion !! 1983 Champion !! 1982 Champion<br />
|-<br />
| Alabama || Alabama Scholastic Coaches Association State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Gadsden City || Spain Park || Hoover || Vestavia Hills || Indian Springs || Alabama School of Fine Arts || Hoover || Indian Springs || Alabama School of Fine Arts || Indian Springs || Grissom || Grissom || LAMP || Grissom || Grissom || Altamont || Grissom || Auburn || Tournament began in 1997 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Alabama || Alabama Scholastic Coaches Association State Championship JV || || || || || || || || || || Gadsden City || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Alabama || Alabama Scholastic Coaches Association Small School State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Brindlee Mountain || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Alabama || NAQT Alabama State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || Tournament no longer held after 2012 || Hoover || Hoover || Hoover || Hoover || Hoover || Brindlee Mountain || Indian Springs || Brindlee Mountain || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Alabama || NAQT Alabama State Championship JV || || || || || || || || || || || || || JV title not awarded after 2010 || Brindlee Mountain || Brindlee Mountain || JV title first awarded in 2009 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Alberta || Alberta Quizbowl Tournament (de facto championship) || || || || || || || || || || Webber || Harry Ainlay || Harry Ainlay || Tournament began in 2011 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Alberta || Alberta Reach for the Top Provincial Finals || || || || || || || || || || || Old Scona || Bellerose || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arizona || NAQT Arizona State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Desert Vista || Desert Vista || Desert Vista || Brophy || Brophy || Tournament began in 2010 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || NAQT Arkansas State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Watson Chapel || Watson Chapel || Watson Chapel || Watson Chapel || Parkview Arts & Science || Parkview Arts & Science || Episcopal Collegiate || Parkview Arts & Science || Parkview Arts & Science || Not clear if held in 2005 || Conway || Not held || Benton || Tournament began in 2002 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || Arkansas Governor's Quizbowl Association Senior High State Finals Class 7A || || || || || || || || || || Fort Smith Southside || Fort Smith Southside || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || Arkansas Governor's Quizbowl Association Senior High State Finals Class 6A || || || || || || || || || || Benton || Searcy || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || Arkansas Governor's Quizbowl Association Senior High State Finals Class 5A || || || || || || || || || || Watson Chapel || Watson Chapel || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || Arkansas Governor's Quizbowl Association Senior High State Finals Class 4A || || || || || || || || || || Arkadelphia || Subiaco Academy || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || Arkansas Governor's Quizbowl Association Senior High State Finals Class 3A || || || || || || || || || || Episcopal Collegiate || Episcopal Collegiate || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || Arkansas Governor's Quizbowl Association Senior High State Finals Class 2A || || || || || || || || || || Cedar Ridge || Conway Christian || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || Arkansas Governor's Quizbowl Association Senior High State Finals Class 1A || || || || || || || || || || Haas Hall || Haas Hall || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| British Columbia || British Columbia Reach for the Top Provincial Finals || || || || || || || || || || || St. George’s || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| California || California Quizbowl Championship || || || || || || || || || || Bellarmine || Tournament began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| California || NAQT California State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || Split into Northern and Southern California tournaments after 2003 || Bentley || Los Alamitos || Los Alamitos || Edison || Tournament began in 2000 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| California || NAQT Northern California State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Bellarmine || Escobar || Bellarmine || Bellarmine || Mission San Jose || Mission San Jose || Bellarmine || Bentley || Monta Vista || Tournament was held in 2005 but results were never posted || Mission San Jose || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| California || NAQT Northern California State Championship JV || || || || || || || || || || Not held || Challenger-Berryessa || JV title was not awarded from 2005 to 2012 || JV title was not awarded from 2005 to 2012 || JV title was not awarded from 2005 to 2012 || JV title was not awarded from 2005 to 2012 || JV title was not awarded from 2005 to 2012 || JV title was not awarded from 2005 to 2012 || JV title was not awarded from 2005 to 2012 || Missing results || Half Moon Bay || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| California || NAQT Southern California State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Torrey Pines || Arcadia || Arcadia || Torrey Pines || Torrey Pines || Rancho Bernardo || Santa Monica || Santa Monica || Santa Monica || Santa Monica || Santa Monica || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Colorado || Colorado State Knowledge Bowl Meet Governor's Cup round || || || || || || || || || || Grand Junction || Fossil Ridge || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Colorado || Colorado State Knowledge Bowl Meet Class 5A || || || || || || || || || || Grand Junction || Fossil Ridge || Grand Junction || Grand Junction || Grand Junction || Grand Junction || Grand Junction || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Colorado || Colorado State Knowledge Bowl Meet Class 4A || || || || || || || || || || Palisade || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Colorado || Colorado State Knowledge Bowl Meet Class 3A || || || || || || || || || || Estes Park || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Colorado || Colorado State Knowledge Bowl Meet Class 2A || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Colorado || Colorado State Knowledge Bowl Meet Class A || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Connecticut || NAQT Connecticut State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Darien || Tournament began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| District of Columbia || Washington, D.C. Quizbowl Championship || || || || || || || || || || Georgetown Day || Tournament began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| District of Columbia || NAQT Maryland/DC State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Not held || Montgomery Blair || St. Anselm's || Richard Montgomery || Georgetown Day || Not held || Not held || Richard Montgomery || Richard Montgomery || Blake || Eleanor Roosevelt || Blake || Not held || Georgetown Day || Tournament began in 2001 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Delaware || NAQT Delaware State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Not held || Wilmington Charter || Not held || Wilmington Charter || Wilmington Charter || Wilmington Charter || Wilmington Charter || Wilmington Charter || Wilmington Charter || Not held || Wilmington Charter || Wilmington Charter || Wilmington Charter || Tournament was announced, but results were not posted || Tournament began in 2001 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Florida || NAQT Florida State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || Split into North and South Florida tournaments after 2012 || Ransom Everglades || Ransom Everglades || Ransom Everglades || Ransom Everglades || Ransom Everglades || Ransom Everglades || Plant City || Ransom Everglades || Tournament began in 2005 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Florida || NAQT Florida State Championship JV || || || || || || || || || || || Split into North and South Florida tournaments after 2012 || || || || || || JV title not awarded after 2006 || Choctawhatchee || JV title not awarded before 2006 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Florida || NAQT South Florida State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Ransom Everglades || Ransom Everglades || Tournament began in 2013 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Florida || NAQT North Florida State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Buchholz || Buchholz || Tournament began in 2013 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Florida || Commissioner's Academic Challenge Division I || || || || || || || || || || Seminole || Pinellas || Orange || Escambia || Escambia || Brevard || Pinellas || Polk || Escambia || Manatee || Brevard || Escambia || Escambia || Palm Beach || Escambia || Brevard || Seminole || Duval || Leon || Broward || Pinellas || Duval || Pinellas || Dade || Pinellas || Polk || Duval || Orange || Seminole || Tournament began in 1986 || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Florida || Commissioner's Academic Challenge Division II || || || || || || || || || || Okaloosa || Martin || Leon || Leon || Santa Rosa || Indian River || Martin || Leon || Santa Rosa || Okaloosa || St. Lucie || Leon || Leon || Indian River || Leon || Indian River || Hernando || Indian River || Osceola || Clay || Bay || St. Lucie || Collier || Indian River || Highlands || Bay || Clay || Highlands || Suwannee || Tournament began in 1986 || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Florida || Commissioner's Academic Challenge Division III || || || || || || || || || || Suwannee || Suwannee || Monroe || Suwannee || Jackson || Jackson || Hardee || Hardee || Hardee || Gadsden || Hardee || Suwannee || Suwannee || Suwannee || Taylor || DeSoto || Suwannee || DeSoto || Suwannee || Suwannee || Suwannee || DeSoto || Suwannee || Suwannee || Suwannee || Suwannee || Suwannee || Division began in 1988<br />
|<br />
<br />
[[category: Quiz Bowl Lists]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=List_of_high_school_state_champions&diff=61661List of high school state champions2023-07-19T01:01:13Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div>This is a list of '''state champions''' in various '''high school quizbowl''' formats. The information is transcluded from the pages [[List of high school state champions (A-F)]], [[List of high school state champions (G-M)]], and [[List of high school state champions (N-W)]]. If you would like to help fill the table out, please head on over to one of those pages. Any changes you make there will automatically show up here.<br />
<br />
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"<br />
|-<br />
! State<br />
! Tournament<br />
! 2023 Champion<br />
! 2022 Champion<br />
! 2021 Champion<br />
! 2020 Champion<br />
! 2019 Champion<br />
! 2018 Champion<br />
! 2017 Champion<br />
! 2016 Champion<br />
! 2015 Champion<br />
! 2014 Champion<br />
! 2013 Champion<br />
! 2012 Champion<br />
! 2011 Champion<br />
! 2010 Champion<br />
! 2009 Champion<br />
! 2008 Champion<br />
! 2007 Champion<br />
! 2006 Champion<br />
! 2005 Champion<br />
! 2004 Champion<br />
! 2003 Champion<br />
! 2002 Champion<br />
! 2001 Champion<br />
! 2000 Champion<br />
! 1999 Champion<br />
! 1998 Champion<br />
! 1997 Champion<br />
! 1996 Champion<br />
! 1995 Champion<br />
! 1994 Champion<br />
! 1993 Champion<br />
! 1992 Champion<br />
! 1991 Champion<br />
! 1990 Champion<br />
! 1989 Champion<br />
! 1988 Champion<br />
! 1987 Champion<br />
! 1986 Champion<br />
! 1985 Champion<br />
! 1984 Champion<br />
! 1983 Champion<br />
! 1982 Champion<br />
{{:List of high school state champions (A-F)}}<br />
{{:List of high school state champions (G-M)}}<br />
{{:List of high school state champions (N-W)}}<br />
<br />
[[Category:NAQT State Championships]]<br />
[[Category:State championships]]<br />
{{c|Lists}}</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=List_of_high_school_state_champions_(A-F)&diff=61660List of high school state champions (A-F)2023-07-19T00:59:52Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div><noinclude><br />
This page is transcluded into the full list, which is available at [[List of high school state champions]].<br />
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"<br />
! State !! Tournament !! 2023 Champion !! 2022 Champion !! 2021 Champion !! 2020 Champion !! 2019 Champion !! 2018 Champion !! 2017 Champion !! 2016 Champion !! 2015 Champion !! 2014 Champion !! 2013 Champion !! 2012 Champion !! 2011 Champion !! 2010 Champion !! 2009 Champion !! 2008 Champion !! 2007 Champion !! 2006 Champion !! 2005 Champion !! 2004 Champion !! 2003 Champion !! 2002 Champion !! 2001 Champion !! 2000 Champion !! 1999 Champion !! 1998 Champion !! 1997 Champion !! 1996 Champion !! 1995 Champion !! 1994 Champion !! 1993 Champion !! 1992 Champion !! 1991 Champion !! 1990 Champion !! 1989 Champion !! 1988 Champion !! 1987 Champion !! 1986 Champion !! 1985 Champion !! 1984 Champion !! 1983 Champion !! 1982 Champion<br />
|-<br />
| Alabama || Alabama Scholastic Coaches Association State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Gadsden City || Spain Park || Hoover || Vestavia Hills || Indian Springs || Alabama School of Fine Arts || Hoover || Indian Springs || Alabama School of Fine Arts || Indian Springs || Grissom || Grissom || LAMP || Grissom || Grissom || Altamont || Grissom || Auburn || Tournament began in 1997 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Alabama || Alabama Scholastic Coaches Association State Championship JV || || || || || || || || || || Gadsden City || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Alabama || Alabama Scholastic Coaches Association Small School State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Brindlee Mountain || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Alabama || NAQT Alabama State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || Tournament no longer held after 2012 || Hoover || Hoover || Hoover || Hoover || Hoover || Brindlee Mountain || Indian Springs || Brindlee Mountain || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Alabama || NAQT Alabama State Championship JV || || || || || || || || || || || || || JV title not awarded after 2010 || Brindlee Mountain || Brindlee Mountain || JV title first awarded in 2009 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Alberta || Alberta Quizbowl Tournament (de facto championship) || || || || || || || || || || Webber || Harry Ainlay || Harry Ainlay || Tournament began in 2011 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Alberta || Alberta Reach for the Top Provincial Finals || || || || || || || || || || || Old Scona || Bellerose || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arizona || NAQT Arizona State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Desert Vista || Desert Vista || Desert Vista || Brophy || Brophy || Tournament began in 2010 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || NAQT Arkansas State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Watson Chapel || Watson Chapel || Watson Chapel || Watson Chapel || Parkview Arts & Science || Parkview Arts & Science || Episcopal Collegiate || Parkview Arts & Science || Parkview Arts & Science || Not clear if held in 2005 || Conway || Not held || Benton || Tournament began in 2002 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || Arkansas Governor's Quizbowl Association Senior High State Finals Class 7A || || || || || || || || || || Fort Smith Southside || Fort Smith Southside || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || Arkansas Governor's Quizbowl Association Senior High State Finals Class 6A || || || || || || || || || || Benton || Searcy || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || Arkansas Governor's Quizbowl Association Senior High State Finals Class 5A || || || || || || || || || || Watson Chapel || Watson Chapel || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || Arkansas Governor's Quizbowl Association Senior High State Finals Class 4A || || || || || || || || || || Arkadelphia || Subiaco Academy || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || Arkansas Governor's Quizbowl Association Senior High State Finals Class 3A || || || || || || || || || || Episcopal Collegiate || Episcopal Collegiate || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || Arkansas Governor's Quizbowl Association Senior High State Finals Class 2A || || || || || || || || || || Cedar Ridge || Conway Christian || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Arkansas || Arkansas Governor's Quizbowl Association Senior High State Finals Class 1A || || || || || || || || || || Haas Hall || Haas Hall || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| British Columbia || British Columbia Reach for the Top Provincial Finals || || || || || || || || || || || St. George’s || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| California || California Quizbowl Championship || || || || || || || || || || Bellarmine || Tournament began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| California || NAQT California State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || Split into Northern and Southern California tournaments after 2003 || Bentley || Los Alamitos || Los Alamitos || Edison || Tournament began in 2000 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| California || NAQT Northern California State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Bellarmine || Escobar || Bellarmine || Bellarmine || Mission San Jose || Mission San Jose || Bellarmine || Bentley || Monta Vista || Tournament was held in 2005 but results were never posted || Mission San Jose || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| California || NAQT Northern California State Championship JV || || || || || || || || || || Not held || Challenger-Berryessa || JV title was not awarded from 2005 to 2012 || JV title was not awarded from 2005 to 2012 || JV title was not awarded from 2005 to 2012 || JV title was not awarded from 2005 to 2012 || JV title was not awarded from 2005 to 2012 || JV title was not awarded from 2005 to 2012 || JV title was not awarded from 2005 to 2012 || Missing results || Half Moon Bay || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| California || NAQT Southern California State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Torrey Pines || Arcadia || Arcadia || Torrey Pines || Torrey Pines || Rancho Bernardo || Santa Monica || Santa Monica || Santa Monica || Santa Monica || Santa Monica || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Colorado || Colorado State Knowledge Bowl Meet Governor's Cup round || || || || || || || || || || Grand Junction || Fossil Ridge || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Colorado || Colorado State Knowledge Bowl Meet Class 5A || || || || || || || || || || Grand Junction || Fossil Ridge || Grand Junction || Grand Junction || Grand Junction || Grand Junction || Grand Junction || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Colorado || Colorado State Knowledge Bowl Meet Class 4A || || || || || || || || || || Palisade || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Colorado || Colorado State Knowledge Bowl Meet Class 3A || || || || || || || || || || Estes Park || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Colorado || Colorado State Knowledge Bowl Meet Class 2A || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Colorado || Colorado State Knowledge Bowl Meet Class A || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Connecticut || NAQT Connecticut State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Darien || Tournament began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| District of Columbia || Washington, D.C. Quizbowl Championship || || || || || || || || || || Georgetown Day || Tournament began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| District of Columbia || NAQT Maryland/DC State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Not held || Montgomery Blair || St. Anselm's || Richard Montgomery || Georgetown Day || Not held || Not held || Richard Montgomery || Richard Montgomery || Blake || Eleanor Roosevelt || Blake || Not held || Georgetown Day || Tournament began in 2001 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Delaware || NAQT Delaware State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Not held || Wilmington Charter || Not held || Wilmington Charter || Wilmington Charter || Wilmington Charter || Wilmington Charter || Wilmington Charter || Wilmington Charter || Not held || Wilmington Charter || Wilmington Charter || Wilmington Charter || Tournament was announced, but results were not posted || Tournament began in 2001 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Florida || NAQT Florida State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || Split into North and South Florida tournaments after 2012 || Ransom Everglades || Ransom Everglades || Ransom Everglades || Ransom Everglades || Ransom Everglades || Ransom Everglades || Plant City || Ransom Everglades || Tournament began in 2005 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Florida || NAQT Florida State Championship JV || || || || || || || || || || || Split into North and South Florida tournaments after 2012 || || || || || || JV title not awarded after 2006 || Choctawhatchee || JV title not awarded before 2006 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Florida || NAQT South Florida State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Ransom Everglades || Ransom Everglades || Tournament began in 2013 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Florida || NAQT North Florida State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Buchholz || Buchholz || Tournament began in 2013 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Florida || Commissioner's Academic Challenge Division I || || || || || || || || || || Seminole || Pinellas || Orange || Escambia || Escambia || Brevard || Pinellas || Polk || Escambia || Manatee || Brevard || Escambia || Escambia || Palm Beach || Escambia || Brevard || Seminole || Duval || Leon || Broward || Pinellas || Duval || Pinellas || Dade || Pinellas || Polk || Duval || Orange || Seminole || Tournament began in 1986 || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Florida || Commissioner's Academic Challenge Division II || || || || || || || || || || Okaloosa || Martin || Leon || Leon || Santa Rosa || Indian River || Martin || Leon || Santa Rosa || Okaloosa || St. Lucie || Leon || Leon || Indian River || Leon || Indian River || Hernando || Indian River || Osceola || Clay || Bay || St. Lucie || Collier || Indian River || Highlands || Bay || Clay || Highlands || Suwannee || Tournament began in 1986 || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Florida || Commissioner's Academic Challenge Division III || || || || || || || || || || Suwannee || Suwannee || Monroe || Suwannee || Jackson || Jackson || Hardee || Hardee || Hardee || Gadsden || Hardee || Suwannee || Suwannee || Suwannee || Taylor || DeSoto || Suwannee || DeSoto || Suwannee || Suwannee || Suwannee || DeSoto || Suwannee || Suwannee || Suwannee || Suwannee || Suwannee || Division began in 1988<br />
|}<br />
<br />
[[category: Quiz Bowl Lists]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=List_of_high_school_state_champions_(N-W)&diff=61659List of high school state champions (N-W)2023-07-19T00:56:45Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div><noinclude><br />
This page is transcluded into the full list, which is available at [[List of high school state champions]].<br />
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"<br />
! State !! Tournament !! 2023 Champion !! 2022 Champion !! 2021 Champion !! 2020 Champion !! 2019 Champion !! 2018 Champion !! 2017 Champion !! 2016 Champion !! 2015 Champion !! 2014 Champion !! 2013 Champion !! 2012 Champion !! 2011 Champion !! 2010 Champion !! 2009 Champion !! 2008 Champion !! 2007 Champion !! 2006 Champion !! 2005 Champion !! 2004 Champion !! 2003 Champion !! 2002 Champion !! 2001 Champion !! 2000 Champion !! 1999 Champion !! 1998 Champion !! 1997 Champion !! 1996 Champion !! 1995 Champion !! 1994 Champion !! 1993 Champion !! 1992 Champion !! 1991 Champion !! 1990 Champion !! 1989 Champion !! 1988 Champion !! 1987 Champion !! 1986 Champion !! 1985 Champion !! 1984 Champion !! 1983 Champion !! 1982 Champion<br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| New Brunswick || New Brunswick Reach for the Top Provincial Finals || || || || || || || || || || Kennebecasis Valley || Kennebecasis Valley || Kennebecasis Valley || Kennebecasis Valley || Kennebecasis Valley || Kennebecasis Valley || Kennebecasis Valley || Kennebecasis Valley || Kennebecasis Valley || Kennebecasis Valley || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| New Hampshire || NAQT New Hampshire State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || || event suspended || Hanover || event began in 2011 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| New Hampshire || New Hampshire Quiz Bowl League || || || || || || || || || || Portsmouth Christian || Portsmouth Christian || results missing || results missing || Hanover || Hanover || Hanover || Manchester West || Manchester West || Hanover || Hanover || Hanover || Hanover || Hanover || Hanover || Oyster River || Oyster River || Hanover || Hanover || Tournament started in 1997 || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| New Hampshire || Granite State Challenge || || || || || || || || || || || Plymouth Regional || No tournament || Bishop Brady || Manchester Central || Hollis/Brookline || John Stark || Hanover || Manchester West || Alvirne || Winnisquam || Hanover || Salem || Oyster River || Keene || Plymouth || Laconia || Alvirne || Winnisquam || Portsmouth || Hanover || Laconia || Alvirne || Winnisquam || Bishop Guertin || St. Thomas || Phillips Exeter Academy || Londonderry || || || || || Tournament started in 1983<br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| New Jersey || NAQT New Jersey State Championship || || || || || || || || || || High Tech || High Tech || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| New Mexico || NAQT New Mexico State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Not held || Not held || Not held || Not held || La Cueva || La Cueva || La Cueva || La Cueva || Results missing || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| New York || New York Quizbowl Championship || || || || || || || || || || Ithaca || Tournament began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| New York || MasterMinds State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || Bethlehem || Fayetteville-Manlius || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| New York || NAQT Upstate New York State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Not held || Ithaca || Ithaca || Ithaca || Not held || Kellenberg || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| New York || NAQT Metro New York State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Tournament not held || Tournament not held || Great Neck South || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| North Carolina || NCATA Quizbowl Championship || || || || || || || || || || Raleigh Charter || East Chapel Hill || Tournament began in 2013 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| North Carolina || NCASA State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Early College at Guilford || Myers Park || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| North Carolina || Public Library Quizbowl State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || state championship tournament ended || Hoggard || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Nova Scotia || Nova Scotia Reach for the Top Provincial Finals || || || || || || || || || || Dartmouth || || || Cobequid Educational Centre || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Ohio || Ohio Academic Competition || || || || || || || || || || Northmont || Northmont || Olmsted Falls || Copley || Solon || Green || Garfield Heights || Garfield Heights || Fisher Catholic || Copley || Fisher Catholic || St. Charles || Copley || Beavercreek || Beavercreek || Copley || Copley || St. Xavier || Brecksville-Broadview Heights || Copley || Beavercreek || Elyria || Beachwood || Wellington Academy || Beavercreek || Gilmour Academy || Gilmour Academy || Norwalk || Wheelersburg || Wheelersburg || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Ohio || NAQT Ohio State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Northmont || Northmont || Warren G. Harding || Olmsted Falls || Northmont || Walnut Hills || Garfield Heights || Tippecanoe || "Division I: Garfield Heights<br />
|-<br />
| <br />
|-<br />
| Division II: Fisher Catholic" || "Division I: Firestone<br />
|-<br />
| <br />
|-<br />
| Division II: Tippecanoe" || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Oklahoma || NAQT Oklahoma State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Norman North || Norman || Yukon || Yukon || Edmond Santa Fe || Edmond Memorial || Mustang || Edmond Santa Fe || Edmond Santa Fe || Edmond Santa Fe || Booker T. Washington || Edmond Memorial || Edmond Memorial || Booker T. Washington || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Oklahoma || OSSAA State Championship Class 6A || || || || || || || || || || Edmond Santa Fe || Booker T. Washington || Booker T. Washington || Claremore || Jenks || Jenks || Division created in 2009 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Oklahoma || OSSAA State Championship Class 5A || || || || || || || || || || Bishop Kelley || Claremore || Bishop Kelley || Booker T. Washington || Claremore || Thomas Edison || Jenks || Booker T. Washington || Booker T. Washington || Booker T. Washington || Edmond North || Booker T. Washington || Edmond Memorial || Lawton Eisenhower || Edmond North || Edmond Santa Fe || Edmond Santa Fe || Edmond Santa Fe || Edmond Memorial || Edmond Memorial || Booker T. Washington || Edmond Memorial || Booker T. Washington || Broken Arrow || Broken Arrow || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Oklahoma || OSSAA State Championship Class 4A || || || || || || || || || || Cascia Hall || Cascia Hall || Blanchard || Cascia Hall || Plainview || Bristow || Booker T. Washington || Claremore || Claremore || Bishop Kelley || Booker T. Washington || Claremore || Booker T. Washington || Claremore || Booker T. Washington || Booker T. Washington || Bishop Kelley || Booker T. Washington || Booker T. Washington || Bishop Kelley || Duncan || Bishop Kelley || Poteau || Guymon || Guymon || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Oklahoma || OSSAA State Championship Class 3A || || || || || || || || || || Chelsea || Chelsea || Warner || Oklahoma Bible Academy || Oklahoma Bible Academy || Oklahoma Bible Academy || Holland Hall || Holland Hall || Holland Hall || Holland Hall || Holland Hall || Holland Hall || Holland Hall || Edmond Deer Creek || Bishop McGuinness || Bishop McGuinness || Tecumseh || Tecumseh || Harrah || Hilldale || Byng || Antlers || Claremore Sequoyah || Chandler || Central-Sallisaw || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Oklahoma || OSSAA State Championship Class 2A || || || || || || || || || || Rock Creek || Drummond || Rock Creek || Rock Creek || Rock Creek || Haileyville || Minco || Warner || Okemah || Caney Valley || Rush Springs || Caney Valley || Adair || Woodland || Rush Springs || Caney Valley || Indianola || Watonga || Watonga || Chouteau || Caney Valley || Meeker || Westville || Cache || N/A || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Oklahoma || OSSAA State Championship Class 1A || || || || || || || || || || OK Christian Academy || Crossings Christian || Drummond || Drummond || Drummond || Drummond || Porter Consolidated || Pioneer-Pleasant Vale || Rock Creek || Waurika || Rock Creek || Rock Creek || Drummond || Oklahoma Bible Academy || Oklahoma Bible Academy || Union City || Union City || Fletcher || Classen SAS || Calera || Hinton || Cordell || Washington || Caney Valley || N/A || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Oklahoma || OSSAA State Championship Class B || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || Division ended after 2008 || Drummond || Drummond || Drummond || Drummond || Drummond || Drummond || Kremlin-Hillsdale || Drummond || Drummond || Drummond || Drummond || Kremlin-Hillsdale || Hammon || Drummond || Washita Heights || Oklahoma Bible Academy || Davenport || Sharon-Mutual || N/A || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Ontario || Ontario Reach for the Top provincial finals || || || || || || || || || || London Central || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Ontario || NAQT Ontario Provincial Championship || || || || || || || || || || Colonel By || Lisgar || Lisgar || Lisgar || Lisgar || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Oregon || NAQT Oregon State Championship || || || || || || || || || || "Cancelled <br />
|-<br />
| Westview (de facto)" || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Pennsylvania || NAQT Western Pennsylvania State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Winchester Thurston || DuBois || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Pennsylvania || NAQT Eastern Pennsylvania State Championship || || || || || || || || || || State College || Manheim Township || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Pennsylvania || Pennsylvania State Academic Competition || || || || || || || || || || Downington || Conestoga || B. Reed Henderson || B. Reed Henderson || West Chester Rustin || Wilson || State College || Scranton || State College || Emmaus || Emmaus || Emmaus || Downington || Moravian || Lancaster Catholic || Manheim Township || Manheim Township || State College || West Chester East || General McLane || Downington || Radnor || Conestoga || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Québec || Quebec Reach for the Top Provincial Finals || || || || || || || || || || Marianopolis College || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Québec || Génies en herbe Secondary School Championship || || || || || || || || || || Georges-Vanier || École Saint-Viateur d'Amos || || || event revived in 2011 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Québec || Génies en herbe Primary School Championship || || || || || || || || || || Paul Bruchési || || || || event revived in 2011 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| South Carolina || NAQT South Carolina State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Riverside || James Island || Dorman || Spartanburg || Southside || James Island || Southside || James Island || Not available || Not available || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Tennessee || Tennessee Academic Coaches Association State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Hume-Fogg || Ezell-Harding || University School of Nashville || University School of Nashville || Ezell-Harding || MLK Magnet || MLK Magnet || MLK Magnet || Not available || Not available || Not available || Cookeville || Cookeville || Riverdale || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Texas || TQBA State Championship || || || || || || || || || || LASA || St. John's || Seven Lakes || LASA || LASA || Bellaire || LASA || St. John's || St. John's || Bellaire || Bellaire || St. John's || St. John's || Huntsville || Cistercian || Tournament began in 2000 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Texas || Sam Houston State University Academic Challenge || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || unclear if tournament was held after 2007 || Clear Lake || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Vermont || Vermont-NEA Scholars' Bowl State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Essex || Essex || Hanover || Hanover || Essex || Hanover || Hanover || Champlain Valley || Middlebury || St. Johnsbury || Hanover || Hanover || Essex || Burlington || Burlington || Burlington || Lyndon || Burlington || Montpelier || Essex || St. Johnsbury || Hanover || BFA-St. Albans || Mt. Mansfield || St. Johnsbury || Colchester || Fair Haven || Winooski || Rice Memorial || Middlebury || Rice Memorial || || <br />
|-<br />
| Vermont || NAQT Vermont State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Essex || Hanover || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Virginia || VHSL Scholastic Bowl State Championships Class 6A || || || || || || || || || || Langley || Division began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Virginia || VHSL Scholastic Bowl State Championships Class 5A || || || || || || || || || || Albemarle || Division began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Virginia || VHSL Scholastic Bowl State Championships Class 4A || || || || || || || || || || Loudoun || Division began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Virginia || VHSL Scholastic Bowl State Championships Class 3A || || || || || || || || || || Western Albemarle || Division began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Virginia || VHSL Scholastic Bowl State Championships Class 2A || || || || || || || || || || Maggie Walker || Division began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Virginia || VHSL Scholastic Bowl State Championships Class 1A || || || || || || || || || || Honaker || Division began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Virginia || VHSL Scholastic Bowl State Championships Class AAA || || || || || || || || || || Division ended after 2013 (mostly reconfigured into 6A and 5A) || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Maggie Walker || Maggie Walker || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Maggie Walker || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Maggie Walker || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Maggie Walker || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Tournament began in 1998 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Virginia || VHSL Scholastic Bowl State Championships Class AA || || || || || || || || || || Division ended after 2013 (mostly reconfigured into 4A and 3A) || New Kent || Cave Spring || Christiansburg || Blacksburg || James Monroe || Charlottesville || Charlottesville || Charlottesville || Charlottesville || Robert E. Lee || Salem || Robert E. Lee || Poquoson || Charlottesville || Blacksburg || Western Albemarle || Tournament began in 1998 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Virginia || VHSL Scholastic Bowl State Championships Class A || || || || || || || || || || Division ended after 2013 (mostly reconfigured into 2A and 1A) || George Mason || George Mason || George Mason || George Mason || Rappahannock || Radford || George Mason || Radford || James Monroe || Eastern Montgomery || George Mason || George Mason || Radford || Buffalo Gap || Radford || Radford || Tournament began in 1998 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Virginia || NAQT Virginia Championship || || || || || || || || || || Western Albemarle || Western Albemarle || Cave Spring || Maggie Walker || Maggie Walker || Maggie Walker || Maggie Walker || Maggie Walker || Maggie Walker || Thomas Jefferson || Maggie Walker || No tournament || Thomas Jefferson || Maggie Walker || C.D. Hylton || Tournament began in 2000 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Virgin Islands || Virgin Islands Quiz Bowl || || || || || || || || || || || St. Croix Country Day || || St. Croix Country Day || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Washington || NAQT Washington State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Interlake || Lakeside || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Washington || Washington State Knowledge Bowl Tournament Class 4A || || || || || || || || || || Olympia || Camas || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Washington || Washington State Knowledge Bowl Tournament Class 3A || || || || || || || || || || Hanford || Charles Wright || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Washington || Washington State Knowledge Bowl Tournament Class 2A || || || || || || || || || || Lakewood || West Valley || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Washington || Washington State Knowledge Bowl Tournament Class 1A || || || || || || || || || || Stevenson || Stevenson || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Washington || Washington State Knowledge Bowl Tournament Class 2B || || || || || || || || || || Northwest Christian || Harrison Prep || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Washington || Washington State Knowledge Bowl Tournament Class 1B || || || || || || || || || || Pope John Paul II || Valley Christian || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| West Virginia || NAQT West Virginia State Championship Large School || || || || || || || || || || George Washington || South Charleston || Bridgeport || Parkersburg High || Parkersburg High || Parkersburg High || Bridgeport || Bridgeport || Cabell Midland || Parkersburg High || Ripley || George Washington || George Washington || Parkersburg High || George Washington || Results missing || Results missing || Results missing || Results missing || Results missing || Results missing || Results missing || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| West Virginia || NAQT West Virginia State Championship Small School || || || || || || || || || || Bridgeport || Bridgeport || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Wisconsin || NAQT Wisconsin State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Stoughton || Stoughton || Stoughton || not held || results missing || not held || results missing || Oshkosh West || results missing || results missing || Conserve || Conserve || First held in 2003 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Wyoming || Wyoming Academic Challenge || || || || || || || || || || Big Horn || Cheyenne East<br />
|}<br />
<br />
[[category: Quiz Bowl Lists]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=List_of_high_school_state_champions_(G-M)&diff=61658List of high school state champions (G-M)2023-07-19T00:52:39Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div><noinclude><br />
This page is transcluded into the full list, which is available at [[List of high school state champions]].<br />
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"<br />
! State !! Tournament !! 2023 Champion !! 2022 Champion !! 2021 Champion !! 2020 Champion !! 2019 Champion !! 2018 Champion !! 2017 Champion !! 2016 Champion !! 2015 Champion !! 2014 Champion !! 2013 Champion !! 2012 Champion !! 2011 Champion !! 2010 Champion !! 2009 Champion !! 2008 Champion !! 2007 Champion !! 2006 Champion !! 2005 Champion !! 2004 Champion !! 2003 Champion !! 2002 Champion !! 2001 Champion !! 2000 Champion !! 1999 Champion !! 1998 Champion !! 1997 Champion !! 1996 Champion !! 1995 Champion !! 1994 Champion !! 1993 Champion !! 1992 Champion !! 1991 Champion !! 1990 Champion !! 1989 Champion !! 1988 Champion !! 1987 Champion !! 1986 Champion !! 1985 Champion !! 1984 Champion !! 1983 Champion !! 1982 Champion<br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Varsity State Championship Division 6A || || || || || || || || || || Chattahoochee || Etowah || Division began in 2013 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Varsity State Championship Division 5A || || || || || || || || || || Flowery Branch || Bainbridge || Centennial || Walton || Centennial || Walton || Chattahoochee || Brookwood || Walton || Walton || Walton || Chattahoochee || Brookwood || Brookwood || Division began in 2001 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Varsity State Championship Division 4A || || || || || || || || || || Marist || Marist || Chattahoochee || Chattahoochee || Lakeside || Heritage || Lakeside || Lakeside || Central Macon || Heritage || Heritage || Heritage || Heritage || Heritage || Brookwood || Brookwood || Brookwood || Brookwood || Brookwood || Walton || Brookwood || Walton || Walton || Walton || Brookwood || Tournament began in 1990 || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Varsity State Championship Division 3A || || || || || || || || || || Gordon Central || Gwinnett Math and Science || Eastside || Eastside || Woodward Academy || Woodward Academy || Westminster || Westminster || Dunwoody || Westminster || Central Macon || Central Macon || Central Macon || Westminster || Woodward || Woodward || North Atlanta || Central Macon || Gordon Central || Gordon Central || Westminster || Westminster || Woodward || Northside || Marist || Tournament began in 1990 || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Varsity State Championship Division 2A || || || || || || || || || || Westminster || Westminster || Westminster || Westminster || Westminster || Blessed Trinity || Paideia || Bleckley County || Paideia || Greater Atlanta Christian || Greater Atlanta Christian || Decatur || Greater Atlanta Christian || Paideia || Westminster || Westminster || Westminster || Westminster || Westminster || Division not held || Dublin || Manchester || Darlington || Lovett || North Fulton || Tournament began in 1990 || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Varsity State Championship Division 1A || || || || || || || || || || Baconton Charter || Athens Academy || Athens Academy || Savannah Country Day || Paideia || Paideia || Baconton Charter || Savannah Country Day || Athens Academy || Athens Academy || Athens Academy || Brookstone || Savannah Country Day || Athens Academy || Paideia || Savannah Country Day || Paideia || Paideia || Savannah Country Day || Greater Atlanta Christian || Greater Atlanta Christian || Greater Atlanta Christian || Savannah Country Day || Greater Atlanta Christian || Savannah Country Day || Tournament began in 1990 || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Junior Varsity State Championship Division 6A || || || || || || || || || || Alpharetta || Chattahoochee || Division began in 2013 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Junior Varsity State Championship Division 5A || || || || || || || || || || Flowery Branch || Cedar Shoals || Walton || Walton || Lakeside || Lakeside || Not held || Not held || Lakeside || Not held || Chattahoochee || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Junior Varsity State Championship Division 4A || || || || || || || || || || Marist || Westminster || Chattahoochee || Chamblee Charter || Lakeside || Lakeside || Not held || Not held || Lakeside || Not held || Heritage || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Junior Varsity State Championship Division 3A || || || || || || || || || || Westminster (single division) || Division not held || Macon Central || Eastside || Flowery Branch || Flowery Branch || Not held || Not held || Dunwoody || Not held || Central Macon || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Junior Varsity State Championship Division 2A || || || || || || || || || || Westminster (single division) || Division not held || Westminster || Gwinnett Math and Science || Lovett || Westminster || Not held || Not held || GACS || Not held || Bleckley County || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Georgia || GATA Junior Varsity State Championship Division 1A || || || || || || || || || || Oak Mountain || Baconton Charter || Savannah Country Day || Oak Mountain || Savannah Country Day || Savannah Country Day || Not held || Not held || Baconton || Not held || Savannah Country Day || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Idaho || NAQT Idaho State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || Treasure Valley || Treasure Valley || Tournament began in 2012 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Illinois || NAQT Illinois Championship || || || || || || || || || || IMSA || IMSA || Rockford Auburn || Stevenson || Rockford Auburn || Rockford Auburn || Rockford Auburn || New Trier || Stevenson || Stevenson || Tournament began in 2005 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Illinois || Illinois Masonic Academic Bowl Class AA || || || || || || || || || || IMSA || Loyola || IMSA || Stevenson || St. Ignatius || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Illinois || Illinois Masonic Academic Bowl Class A || || || || || || || || || || Newman Central Catholic || Litchfield || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Illinois || IHSA State Championship Tournament Class AA || || || || || || || || || || IMSA || IMSA || IMSA || IMSA || Stevenson || Carbondale || Auburn || New Trier || Fremd || Stevenson || Wheaton North || Wheaton North || Wheaton North || IMSA || Stevenson || IMSA || IMSA || IMSA || IMSA || Richwoods || IMSA || Quincy Senior || Hinsdale Central || Centralia || IMSA || IMSA || Quincy Senior || Quincy Senior || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Illinois || IHSA State Championship Tournament Class A || || || || || || || || || || Litchfield || Peoria Christian || Peoria Christian || Lisle || Lisle || Latin || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Indiana || Rotary Club Indiana Quizbowl State Championship Class AAA || || || || || || || || || || St. Joseph || St. Joseph || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Indiana || Rotary Club Indiana Quizbowl State Championship Class AA || || || || || || || || || || Clay || Riley || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Indiana || Rotary Club Indiana Quizbowl State Championship Class A || || || || || || || || || || North White || North Miami || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Indiana || Indiana Frosh/Soph State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Harrison || St. Joseph || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Indiana || "Traditional" Quiz Bowl State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Park Tudor || St. Joseph || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Iowa || Iowa Knowledge Bowl || || || || || || || || || || Unknown || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Iowa || NAQT Iowa State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || || Tournament was not held after 2011 || Ames || Bettendorf || West Des Moines Valley || Ames || Regina || Regina || Regina || Tournament was held, but results were not posted || Tournament was held, but results were not posted || Tournament was held, but results were not posted || Ames || Tournament was held, but results not posted || Tournament began in 2000 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kansas || KSHSAA Scholar's Bowl Class 6A || || || || || || || || Overland Park-Blue Valley || Overland Park-Blue Valley || Overland Park-Blue Valley || Stilwell-Blue Valley || Maize || Wichita East || Washburn Rural || Washburn Rural || Washburn Rural || Wichita East || Lawrence || Washburn Rural || Wichita East || Overland Park-St. Thomas Aquinas || Lawrence || Olathe South || Lawrence || Lawrence || Wichita East || Lawrence || Washburn Rural || Tecumseh-Shawnee Heights || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (6A and 5A competed in same championship through 1995)" || Lawrence || || || || || || || || Manhattan || Lawrence || Lawrence || Hutchinson || Lawrence || Manhattan || Manhattan || first championship in 1987 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kansas || KSHSAA Scholars Bowl Class 5A || || || || || || || || Maize || Shawnee-Mill Valley || Wichita-Bishop Carroll || Wichita-Kapuan Mt. Carmel || Stilwell-Blue Valley || Stilwell-Blue Valley || Wichita-Bishop Carroll || Shawnee-Mill Valley || Topeka-West || Wichita-Bishop Carroll || Wichita-Bishop Carroll || Pittsburg || Winfield || KC-Sumner Academy || Wichita-Kapaun Mt. Carmel || Wichita-Kapaun Mt. Carmel || Andover || Tecumseh-Shawnee Heights || Tecumseh-Shawnee Heights || Topeka-West || Wichita-Kapaun Mt. Carmel || Tecumseh-Shawnee Heights || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (6A and 5A competed in same championship through 1995)" || Lawrence || || || || || || || || Manhattan || Lawrence || Lawrence || Hutchinson || Lawrence || Manhattan || Manhattan || first championship in 1987 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kansas || KSHSAA Scholars Bowl Class 4A || || || || || || || || Andover-Central || Rose Hill || Andover-Central || De Soto || De Soto || De Soto || Topeka-Hayden || Wichita-The Independent School || Buhler || Pittsburg || Topeka-Hayden || Topeka-Hayden || Basehor-Linwood || Topeka-Hayden || Lindsborg-Smoky Valley || Mulvane || Topeka-Hayden || Baldwin || Hays-Thomas More Prep-Marian || Lansing || Augusta || Lansing || Lansing || Lansing || Towanda-Circle || Augusta || Towanda-Circle || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (4A and 3A competed in same championship through 1990)" || Wichita-Collegiate || || || || || || || || Eureka || Horton || first championship in 1987 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kansas || KSHSAA Scholars Bowl Class 3A || || || || || || || || Wichita-The Independent School || Wichita Collegiate || Wichita Collegiate || Wichita-The Independent School || Wichita-The Independent School || Hays-Thomas More Prep-Marian || Hays-Thomas More Prep-Marian || Wichita Collegiate || Salina-Sacred Heart || Wichita-The Independent School || Wichita-The Independent School || Shawnee-Maranatha Academy || Shawnee-Maranatha Academy || Hays-Thomas More Prep-Marian || Cherokee-Southeast || Hoisington || Wichita Collegiate || Wichita Collegiate || Seneca-Nemaha Valley || Riley County || Wichita Collegiate || Wichita Collegiate || Wichita Collegiate || Wichita Collegiate || Wichita Collegiate || Leavenworth-Immaculata || Towanda-Circle || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (4A and 3A competed in same championship through 1990)" || Wichita-Collegiate || || || || || || || || Eureka || Horton || first championship in 1987 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kansas || KSHSAA Scholars Bowl Class 2A || || || || || || || || Oberlin-Decatur Community || Yates Center || Yates Center || Leavenworth-Immaculata || Inman || Burden-Central || Salina-Sacred Heart || Inman || Clifton-Clyde || Leavenworth-Immaculata || Hutchinson-Trinity || Leavenworth-Immaculata || Leavenworth-Immaculata || Oberlin-Decatur Community || Lyndon || Ness City || Wichita County || Meade || Meade || Buffalo-Altoona-Midway || Kinsley || Stanton County || Quinter || Pittsburg-St. Mary's-Colgan || Atwood || Oskaloosa || St. Paul || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (2A and 1A competed in same championship through 1990)" || Quinter || || || || || || || || Mineola || Wichita Collegiate || first championship in 1987 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kansas || KSHSAA Scholars Bowl Class 1A Div. I || || || || || || || || Leavenworth-Immaculata || Goessel || Satanta || Satanta || Bucklin || Rolla || Ness City || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (1A run as a single division from 1991-2010)" || Greeley County || || || || || || || || Ashland || Rolla || Greeley County || Bucklin || Ashland || Rolla || Bushton-Quivera Heights || Rolla || Ness City || Rolla || Rolla || Bennington || Rolla || Rolla || Cunningham || Madison || Rolla || Rolla || St. Paul || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (2A and 1A competed in same championship through 1990)" || Quinter || || || || || || || || Mineola || Wichita Collegiate || first championship in 1987 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kansas || KSHSAA Scholars Bowl Class 1A Div. II || || || || || || || || Rolla || Beloit-St. John's Catholic || Beloit-St. John's Catholic || Hutchinson-Central Christian || Rolla || Hutchinson-Central Christian || Ness City || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (1A run as a single division from 1991-2010)" || Greeley County || || || || || || || || Ashland || Rolla || Greeley County || Bucklin || Ashland || Rolla || Bushton-Quivera Heights || Rolla || Ness City || Rolla || Rolla || Bennington || Rolla || Rolla || Cunningham || Madison || Rolla || Rolla || St. Paul || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| (2A and 1A competed in same championship through 1990)" || Quinter || || || || || || || || Mineola || Wichita Collegiate || first championship in 1987 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kentucky || NAQT Kentucky Championship || || || || || || || || || || Dunbar || Dunbar || duPont Manual || Dunbar || Dunbar || Dunbar || Dunbar || Madisonville North Hopkins || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Kentucky || KAAC Governor's Cup Quick Recall State Tournament || || || || || || || || || || Dunbar || Dunbar || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Louisiana || NAQT Louisiana State Championship || || || || || || || || || || New Orleans Jesuit || New Orleans Jesuit || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Louisiana || Louisiana Association for Academic Competition Overall Championship || || || || || || || || || || Episcopal School of Acadiana || Lusher Charter || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Louisiana || Louisiana Association for Academic Competition Division 1 Championship || || || || || || || || || || New Orleans Jesuit || New Orleans Jesuit || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Louisiana || Louisiana Association for Academic Competition Division 2 Championship || || || || || || || || || || E.D. White || Vandebilt Catholic || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Louisiana || Louisiana Association for Academic Competition Division 3 Championship || || || || || || || || || || Holy Savior Menard || Lusher Charter || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Louisiana || Louisiana Association for Academic Competition Division 4 Championship || || || || || || || || || || Episcopal School of Acadiana || Cedar Creek || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Manitoba || Manitoba Reach for the Top Provincial Finals || || || || || || || || || St. Paul's || Kelvin || St. Paul’s || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Maryland || Maryland Quizbowl Championship || || || || || || || || || || Richard Montgomery || Tournament began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Maryland || NAQT Maryland/DC State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Not held || Montgomery Blair || St. Anselm's || Richard Montgomery || Georgetown Day || Not held || Not held || Richard Montgomery || Richard Montgomery || Blake || Eleanor Roosevelt || Blake || Not held || Georgetown Day || Tournament began in 2001 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Massachusetts || Massachusetts Quizbowl Championship || || || || || || || || || || Sharon || Tournament began in 2014 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Michigan || Michigan High School Quiz Bowl State Championship Class A || || || || || || || || || || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Grosse Pointe North || Detroit Catholic Central || East Lansing || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Okemos || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Eisenhower || Detroit Catholic Central || Plymouth Salem || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Henry Ford II || Seaholm || Plymouth Canton || Eisenhower || Detroit Catholic Central || Eisenhower || Detroit Catholic Central || Tournament began in 1988 || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Michigan || Michigan High School Quiz Bowl State Championship Class B || || || || || || || || || || Huron || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || DeWitt || Detroit Country Day || Williamston || White Cloud || Detroit Country Day || Harper Creek || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || Detroit Country Day || North Branch || Haslett || Haslett || North Branch || Hartland || Division began in 1991 || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Michigan || Michigan High School Quiz Bowl State Championship Class C/D || || || || || || || || || || Utica Academy || Hillsdale Academy || Hillsdale Academy || Utica Academy || Kalamazoo Christian || Kalamazoo Christian || Kalamazoo Christian || Grand Rapids City || Kent City || Manchester || Kent City || Kent City || Kent City || Hancock || Kent City || Hancock || Houghton || Houghton || Houghton || Grand Rapids City || Grand Rapids City || Detroit Country Day || White Cloud || Grand Rapids City || Williamston || Division created in 1990 || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Michigan || NAQT Michigan State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Results missing || Detroit Country Day || East Lansing || Results missing || Results missing || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Catholic Central || Results missing || Detroit Catholic Central || Detroit Country Day || Eisenhower || Tournament began in 2000 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Minnesota || NAQT Minnesota State Championship || || || || || || || || || || Eden Prairie || Wayzata || Wayzata || St. Thomas || Eden Prairie || Chaska || Eden Prairie || Eden Prairie || Eden Prairie || St. Thomas || Chaska || Tournament began in 2004 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Minnesota || Minnesota High School Quiz Bowl League || || || || || || || || || || Eden Prairie || Wayzata || Wayzata || Chanhassen || Eden Prairie || Chaska || Eden Prairie || Eden Prairie || St. Thomas || St. Thomas || Chaska || Chaska || St. Thomas || St. Thomas || Chaska || Chaska || Blake || Blake || Blake || Blake || Eden Prairie || Chaska || Chaska || Rosemount || St. Thomas Academy || Results missing || Results missing || Saint Paul Academy || Blake || St. Paul Academy || St. Paul Academy || Results missing || St. Thomas Academy<br />
|-<br />
| Minnesota || Minnesota State Knowledge Bowl Meet Class AA || || || || || || || || || || Buffalo || Spring Lake Park || Chaska || St. Anthony Village || St. Anthony Village || Chaska || Eden Prairie || St. Anthony Village || St. Anthony Village || St. Thomas || St. Anthony Village || Chaska || St. Thomas || Hibbing || St. Cloud Tech || Cretin-Derham Hall || Cretin-Derham Hall || Chaska || Hibbing || Chaska || Moorhead || Chaska || Chaska || Bemidji || Greenbush || Northfield || Moorhead || Duluth Cathedral || Little Falls || Fergus Falls || Fergus Falls || Fergus Falls || Fergus Falls<br />
|-<br />
| Minnesota || Minnesota State Knowledge Bowl Meet Class A || || || || || || || || || || St. John's Prep || Glencoe-Silver Lake || St. John's Prep || Sebeka || Sebeka || Loyola Catholic || St. John's Prep || Glencoe-Silver Lake || St. John's Prep || East Grand Forks || Park Christian || Springfield || Cook || NRHEG || Moose Lake || Moose Lake || Murray County Central || Morris || Grygla || Division created in 1996 || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Mississippi || NAQT Mississippi State Championship || || || || || || || || || || || || Tournament was not held after 2010 || Madison Central || St. Andrew's || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Mississippi || NAQT Mississippi Championship JV || || || || || || || || || || || || || Title not awarded after 2009 || Mississippi Math & Science || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || NAQT Missouri Qualifier (Overall) || || || || || || || || Hickman || Hallsville || Hallsville || Ladue || Ladue || Savannah || Helias || North Kansas City || North Kansas City || Tournament began in 2008 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || NAQT Missouri Qualifier (Small School) || || || || || || || || Hallsville || Hallsville || Hallsville || Hallsville || Pilot Grove || Centralia || North Shelby || Richland || Richland || Tournament began in 2008 || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || MSHSAA Scholar Bowl State Championship Class 4 || || || || || || || || Hickman || Clayton || Ladue || Ladue || Ladue || Ladue || Kirksville || Ladue || North Kansas City || North Kansas City || Ladue || Liberty || Parkway Central || Liberty || Cape Girardeau Central || Nixa || Nixa || North Kansas City || North Kansas City || North Kansas City || North Kansas City || Class 4 added when MSHSAA took over in 1996 || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || MSHSAA (MAA 1992-1995) Scholar Bowl State Championship Class 3 || || || || || || || || Orchard Farm || Hallsville || Hallsville || Priory || Savannah || Savannah || Priory || Priory || Notre Dame || John Burroughs || Savannah || Westminster Christian || Savannah || Savannah || Savannah || Salem || Boonville || Priory || Cuba || Cuba || Cuba || Savannah || Savannah || Liberty || Unknown (or class 3 did not exist in 1992) || First MAA tournament held in 1992 || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || MSHSAA (MAA 1992-1995) Scholar Bowl State Championship Class 2 || || || || || || || || Calvary Lutheran || Saxony Lutheran || Richland || Saxony Lutheran || Barstow || Richland || Barstow || Richland || Richland || Richland || Richland || Richland || Richland || Richland || Bernie || Richland || Richland || Richland || Richland || Richland || Richland || Cuba || Bernie || Mary's Institute/St. Louis Country Day || Hannibal || First MAA tournament held in 1992 || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || MSHSAA (MAA 1992-1995) Scholar Bowl State Championship Class 1 || || || || || || || || Thomas Jefferson || Tuscumbia || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Mound City || Heartland || Heartland || Tarkio || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Mound City || Thomas Jefferson || Thomas Jefferson || Koshkonong || Koshkonong || Mound City || Mound City || Mound City || Mound City || Bernie || North Shelby || Bernie || North Shelby || First MAA tournament held in 1992 || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || MACA JV State Large School || || || || || || || || Washington || Washington || Hannibal || Rock Bridge (single division) || SLUH || Hosted, but results unknown || Kirksville || Rock Bridge || Lee's Summit North (single division) || Kirksville || Savannah? || Savannah (single division) || Kirksville? || || || || || || || || || (MACA founded in 1996, unknown if tournament existed before) || || || || || || || || || || || || || <br />
|-<br />
| Missouri || MACA JV State Small School || || || || || || || || Hallsville || Hallsville || Hallsville || Rock Bridge (single division) || Hallsville || Hosted, but results unknown || Savannah || Barstow || Lee's Summit North (single division) || Savannah || Single division? || Savannah (single division) || Single division? || || || || || || || || || (MACA founded in 1996, unknown if tournament existed before)<br />
|}<br />
<br />
<br />
[[category: Quiz Bowl Lists]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Talk:List_of_high_school_state_champions&diff=61631Talk:List of high school state champions2023-07-11T12:34:51Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div>To do:<br />
<br />
* Fill in older results -- I just put the most recent one available for each<br />
* Link all tournament & team names to appropriate pages<br />
* Figure out way to indicate when tournaments or divisions of tournaments began or ended -- e.g. the California Quizbowl Championship was created for the 2014 season so there will never be earlier results. Just leave blank or fill in each cell with "Tournament began in 2014"??? Could also use Wiki table functions to merge all dead cells into a single cell with the message or color-code (e.g. use the colors of the state flag or the usual host school to block out cells that don't have data).<br />
<br />
[[User:Matt Weiner|Matt Weiner]] ([[User talk:Matt Weiner|talk]]) 06:52, 21 February 2014 (PST)<br />
<br />
<br />
Can we do this in a more list-like form, or perhaps with separate tables for each state (rows are years, columns are different titles)? This is really hard to read, even on my large monitor, and is going to have tons of wasted space for years that tournaments didn't run. [[User:Jonah Greenthal|Jonah]] ([[User talk:Jonah Greenthal|talk]]) 10:42, 21 February 2014 (PST)<br />
<br />
Well, the tournaments all have (or should have) individual pages; this is designed as a quick way to see all the winners in a specific year. There are probably some aesthetic tricks that could be done to make it more usable (like a light gray shading on alternate columns) that would make it more appealing to use with just the vertical and horizontal scroll bars. [[User:Matt Weiner|Matt Weiner]] ([[User talk:Matt Weiner|talk]]) 11:02, 21 February 2014 (PST)<br />
<br />
Why not have a list under a heading for each year? --[[User:Fred Morlan|Fred Morlan]] ([[User talk:Fred Morlan|talk]]) 17:08, 21 February 2014 (PST)<br />
<br />
For Masonic results before 2010, when all the teams were grouped together, which class should I put them in? Is it possible to merge rows? [[User:James Zhou|James Zhou]] ([[User talk:James Zhou|talk]]) 16:30, 9 March 2014 (PDT)<br />
<br />
I added blank rows to divide the championships for each state. I think this makes the table easier to process in cases where there are a whole bunch of championships for a single state, but it has the disadvantage that these dummy rows get screwed up if you resort the table. Is there a way to use Wiki markup to modify particular row spacings in a more robust way? [[User:Stephen Eltinge|Stephen Eltinge]] ([[User talk:Stephen Eltinge|talk]]) 01:42, 21 May 2014 (PDT)<br />
<br />
== Page split and transclusion ==<br />
The page was getting very large, which was presenting some difficulties (for example, it was not possible to view page diffs; the page just froze and didn't load anything). Therefore, I split the actual content of the page into three sub-pages: [[List of high school state champions (A-F)]], [[List of high school state champions (G-M)]], and [[List of high school state champions (N-W)]]. These pages should be easier to manage.<br />
<br />
The formatting is fairly straightforward. Each page has the same table header. However, on the sub-pages, the header is enclosed in <tt>&lt;noinclude&gt;...&lt;/noinclude&gt;</tt> tags, so it's not copied over. Only the table rows are copied to the parent page. The content is transcluded to the main page by including the line <tt><nowiki>{{:List of high school state champions (x-y)}}</nowiki></tt> (note the preliminary colon). If you run into any technical difficulties, please let me know. [[User:Stephen Eltinge|Stephen Eltinge]] ([[User talk:Stephen Eltinge|talk]]) 13:20, 21 May 2014 (PDT)<br />
<br />
== Updates??? ==<br />
This page is now messed up because somebody added 2015 and 2016 to the G-M page and not the others. Also, it is quite obviously out of date. Does anybody want to spend a few hours working on this? [[User:David Reinstein|David Reinstein]] ([[User talk:David Reinstein|talk]]) 07:33, 11 July 2023 (CDT)</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Blake&diff=61627Blake2023-07-09T11:55:56Z<p>David Reinstein: /* Notable Alumni */</p>
<hr />
<div>{{Highschoolteam|Name = James Hubert Blake High School<br />
|image = BlakeHS.jpg<br />
|citystate = Silver Spring, MD<br />
|currentcoach = [[Joe Caulfield]]<br />
|state = <br />
|nats = }}James Hubert Blake HS is located in Silver Spring, MD. It has been competing in quizbowl since its creation in 1998. The 2010 roster was listed as [[Paul Sausville]], Dan Pistolessi, and [[Isaac Hirsch]]. By the end of the year, only one of those people was still playing quizbowl.<br />
<br />
==Notable Alumni==<br />
*[[Michael Braun]], 2005 teen [[Jeopardy]] winner<br />
*[[Isaac Hirsch]]<br />
<br />
[[Category: Maryland high school teams]]<br />
[[Category: High school teams]]<br />
[[Category: Original QBWiki Page]]<br />
[[Category: Blake]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Dennis_Sun&diff=61626Dennis Sun2023-07-09T11:52:34Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox|Name = Dennis Sun<br />
|Subjects = Music, Baseball<br />
|schoolpast = [[Harvard]] (2007-2010), [[Stanford]] (2012-2015)<br />
|highschool = [[Shanghai American]]<br />
| }}<br />
{{confuse|[[Yi Sun]]|[[Dennis Jang]]}}<br />
'''Dennis Sun''' is a former quizbowl player for [[Harvard]] and [[Stanford]].<br />
<br />
[[Category: People]]<br />
[[Category: Harvard]]<br />
[[Category: Stanford]]<br />
[[Category: Original QBWiki Page]]<br />
[[Category: Players on ICT Division I championship teams]]<br />
[[Category: Players active in 2007]]<br />
[[Category: Players active in 2008]]<br />
[[Category: Players active in 2013]]<br />
[[Category: Players active in 2014]]<br />
[[Category: Players active in 2015]]<br />
[[Category: Players active in 2016]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=David_Reinstein&diff=61594David Reinstein2023-07-02T15:37:06Z<p>David Reinstein: /* Question Writing & Editing */</p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox|Name = David Reinstein<br />
|Image = 2007NTStatechamps.jpg<br />
|Subjects = Math<br />
|highschool = coached at [[New Trier]] (1994-2011)<br />
| }}<br />
<br />
'''David Reinstein''' was a coach at [[New Trier]] from 1994–2011, the chair of [[IHSSBCA]] from 2004–14, and the president of [[PACE]] from 2016–18. He now writes the questions for the [[Scobol Solo]], [[Masonic tournament]], and [[IESA]] tournaments, and he runs [[Scobol Solo]] and [[Reinstein Varsity]]. David also produces match questions in IESA format, and he uses questions from the Masonic tournament to write the Reinstein Set.<br />
<br />
==Question Writing & Editing==<br />
David is the head writer and editor of thev [[IESA]], [[Scobol Solo]], and [[Masonic]] sets each year, and he oversees several rounds produced for Illinois middle schools to use during the regular season. He has been in charge of Scobol Solo since it started in 2001, and he took over the Masonic set for the 2012 tournament. He has gotten varying amounts of help with the sets over the years, especially editing help from [[Jonah Greenthal]]. The middle school regular season questions were produced starting in the 2019-20 school year, and David became the question supplier for the IESA State Championship starting in 2023. David was also a significant contributor to [[NAQT]] from 2011-17, and for a few years he also wrote a bunch of questions for [[CMST]].<br />
<br />
For the 2012 [[IHSA]] set, David was the social studies editor. Because the writers flaked out, he wrote half the questions. For the 2013 IHSA set, David was the math editor and assistant editor for the whole set. [[IHSA plagiarism scandal|When he told the IHSA that a bunch of the questions were copied and pasted from the internet, he was fired]]. Some other writers quit, and the questions got worse until the Head Editorship changed for the 2017-18 season. Reinstein and Jonah talked about the problem at a [[May 2014 Illinois General Assembly hearing on the IHSA]].<br />
<br />
==Illinois Scholastic Bowl & Quizbowl==<br />
David has played a major role in [[IHSSBCA]] since the organization was about one year old. He first gained attention by starting a petition asking [[IHSA]] to improve question quality. Coaches from over forty schools signed the petition, and the result was that [[New Trier]] got a bunch of angry phone calls from [[IHSA]]. A few years later, however, [[IHSA]] improved its question quality somewhat when it switched from [[Answers Plus]] to a secret cabal. The [[Masonic]] Tournament used improved questions written in part by some of David's former students at [[Aegis Questions]] for 2008 and 2009, then regressed to [[Questions Galore]] for 2010 and 2011, then used David starting in 2012.<br />
<br />
David has a long history of managing Turnabouts and writing letters and articles for [[IHSSBCA]]. He succeeded [[David Riley]] as Chair in 2004, and the organization grew under his leadership. Some of the programs that came into being while Reinstein was Chair are the Awards Dinner, Hall of Fame, ethics guidelines, moderator certification, annualization of [[SchoBowlFest]], Novice Tournaments, IHSSBCA Grants, IHSSBCA Liaisons and a Members Only section of their website. The organization now sponsors a team that competes at [[NASAT]]. (Before David took over and for his first few years, the organization sponsored a team that competed at [[PAC]].)<br />
<br />
==Coaching==<br />
Reinstein coached consistently strong teams for many years at New Trier that placed highly at many local tournaments and had decent showings at Nationals. His teams won nine [[IHSA]] Sectionals, one each IHSA and NAQT State Championship, and many [[Central Suburban League]] titles.<br />
<br />
Reinstein took over as coach when he started teaching at [[New Trier]]. He had planned on coaching Math Team, but that team already had many coaches, so he filled a need in Scholastic Bowl. He was told that he could have the position if he was willing to drive a van, since the other coach that year did not have a license. David has worked with several coaches over the years. After becoming a father in 1998, David dropped from attending all team matches to about half of them. In 2011, he stepped down from coaching, though he still teaches at New Trier.<br />
<br />
Until its 2009 cancellation, Reinstein was an annual guest on the ''[https://soundcloud.com/user-186507147/05-scholastic-bowl?in=user-186507147/sets/kj-cd-42 Kathy and Judy Show]'' on Chicago's WGN radio during the week of the IHSA State Championship. Most of the time was spent asking sample questions to the hosts of the show, with somewhat humorous outcomes. It was annually the biggest publicity moment in [[Illinois Scholastic Bowl]].<br />
<br />
==Tournament Hosting==<br />
In addition to an occasional IHSA or Masonic Regional or Sectional tournament, Reinstein has run the [[Scobol Solo]] each year since 2001. He at first did everything--writing the questions and drawing up the pairings, which involve roughly 400 matches each year put together using a power-matching format. He more recently gets significant help from [[Jonah Greenthal]], who designed software that pretty much runs the tournament.<br />
<br />
From 2005 to 2007, the [[New Trier Varsity]] was hosted by [[Carlo Angiuli]] and [[Nick Matchen]], who graduated from New Trier in 2007. Reinstein ran it in 2008 and since 2014, while from 2009 to 2013 it was primarily run by [[Jonah Greenthal]] with help from Reinstein. In 2021, the tournament changed its name to [[Reinstein Varsity]] because it was not held at New Trier.<br />
<br />
In order to separate David's tournaments from the New Trier Business Office, in 2016 David started [http://www.reinsteinquizbowl.com/ Reinstein QuizBowl], which is a Doing Business As that handles the financials for David's tournaments and questions.<br />
<br />
David also writes card systems for tournaments that power match. He has done so for the Scobol Solo since its inception, for the first day of [[HSNCT]] from 2010 to 2016, and for the first day of [[MSNCT]] from 2013 to 2016. In 2017, David was replaced by a computer.<br />
<br />
==Personal==<br />
David graduated from [[Niles North]] in Skokie, Illinois in 1986 and from [[Brown]] in 1990. David and his wife have two daughters and a son.<br />
<br />
Website: [https://reinsteinquizbowl.com Reinstein QuizBowl]<br />
<br />
[[Category:People]]<br />
[[Category:High school coaches]]<br />
[[Category:New Trier]]<br />
[[Category:Original QBWiki Page]]<br />
[[Category:IHSSBCA]]<br />
[[Category:Question writers]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Reinstein_QuizBowl&diff=61593Reinstein QuizBowl2023-07-02T15:33:53Z<p>David Reinstein: Redirected page to David Reinstein</p>
<hr />
<div>#REDIRECT [[David Reinstein]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Cambridge&diff=61588Cambridge2023-07-01T02:21:59Z<p>David Reinstein: /* Current Players */</p>
<hr />
<div>The '''University of Cambridge''' in England has a quiz bowl team known as the Cambridge Quiz Society.<br />
<br />
==History==<br />
UK University quizzing sprang up, or at least gently emerged from its cave, in the mid-1990s when the return of BBC quiz show University Challenge in 1994 began to reanimate those competitive instincts among the new generation of trivia-hungry students. In 1998 Chris Harrison, one of the Imperial team who had won the 1996 TV series, organised the first British Student Quiz Championships, and several Cambridge colleges sent teams. A year later Oxford plucked up the courage to challenge Cambridge to the first Varsity quiz match, and though the result was eventually decided by a scoring error it at least started an august annual tradition of hard-fought rivalry. It was clearly time to back up the brave teams with a proper university society and so in June 1999 Sean Blanchflower and Robin Bhattacharyya of Trinity's 1995 winning University Challenge team founded the Cambridge University Quiz Society.<br />
<br />
Although Oxford has largely had a stranglehold over the British Quizbowl scene, Cambridge has emerged as a strong challenger over the past few years. In 2014, University Challenge winner Alex Guttenplan inspired Cambridge to its first ever victory in the Varsity match, a feat which was repeated in 2016 with a strong performance from Samuel Cook.<br />
<br />
==Performances==<br />
A strong core of novice players contributed to success at the 2016 VCU Novice tournament in London.<br />
<br />
Cambridge teams additionally performed very well at MUT with all 4 Cambridge teams handily defeating a strong Oxford A and an upset with Cambridge B defeating Cambridge A.<br />
<br />
At 2016 ACF Fall's UK site, Cambridge A cleared the field taking a win against both Oxford A and Oxford B by healthy margins.<br />
<br />
==Hosted Tournaments==<br />
*Cambridge Open 2015<br />
<br />
*Penn Bowl 2016<br />
<br />
*MUT 2016<br />
<br />
*Cambridge Open 2017<br />
<br />
==Former Players==<br />
{{Columns-list|colwidth=200px|<br />
* [[Ewan MacAulay]]<br />
* [[Sam Cook]]<br />
* [[Oliver Sweetenham]]<br />
* [[Elysia Warner]]<br />
* [[Matthew Nixon]]<br />
* [[Daniel Chiverton]]<br />
* [[Ephraim Jacob Jacobus Levinson]]<br />
* [[Tom Hill]]<br />
* [[Bobby Seagull]]<br />
* [[Theo Howe]]<br />
* [[Vitalijs Brejevs]]<br />
* [[Julian Sutcliffe]]<br />
* [[Salman Iftikhar]]<br />
* [[Florence Chen]]<br />
* [[Tomas Kesek]]<br />
* [[Sarah Binney]]<br />
<br />
}}<br />
<br />
==2023-24 Players==<br />
{{Columns-list|colwidth=200px|<br />
* [[Abigail Tan]]<br />
* [[Harrison Whitaker]]<br />
* [[Liam Hughes]]<br />
* [[Oscar Despard]]<br />
* [[Agnijo Banerjee]]<br />
* [[Sam Foo]]<br />
* [[Montagu James]]<br />
* [[Oliver Church]]<br />
* [[Linus Luu]]<br />
* [[Sarah Henderson]]<br />
* [[Rachel Bentham]]<br />
* [[Krishnan Mulholland]]<br />
* [[Rhys Lewis]]<br />
* [[Benjamin Richards]]<br />
* [[Thomas Banbury]]<br />
* [[Jeremi Jaksina]]<br />
* [[Jon White]]<br />
<br />
}}<br />
<br />
<br />
[[category: British quizbowl]][[category:college clubs]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=New_Trier&diff=61494New Trier2023-06-19T22:42:11Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Highschoolteam|Name = New Trier Trevians<br />
|image = Trevianhelmet.jpg<br />
|citystate = Winnetka, Illinois<br />
|currentcoach = Benjamin Yang<br />
|state = [[2007 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2007 IHSA]], 2007 [[NAQT Illinois State Tournament|NAQT]]<br />
|nats = }}<br />
<br />
'''New Trier High School''' is a public high school in Winnetka, Illinois, a suburb north of Chicago. Until 2011, it competed in pretty much all of the [[mACF]] tournaments near Chicago, a national tournament each year, the [[Central Suburban League]], [[Masonic]], and [[IHSA]] Class AA, though the team has cut many tournaments from its schedule since then. The team is often stylized as the "New Trier High School Happy Buzzer Squadron". Past coaches include David Dickman (who started the team during the 1980s), Terry Witt, Michelle Shade (nee Karlin), Erin Weller, and [[David Reinstein]]. Reinstein coached the team from 1994-2011, during which time the team was pretty much always considered among the top ten teams in Illinois and usually among the top five.<br />
<br />
==Tournament Hosting==<br />
2005 saw the start of the [[New Trier Varsity]], whose questions were written by [[Carlo Angiuli]] and [[Nick Matchen]], two juniors on that year's team. The 2006 tournament was written by [[Aegis Questions]], the official company started by Carlo and Nick along with others, most notably [[Loyola]]'s [[Matt Laird]]. In 2007, Aegis again provided the questions, and the rules were modified to better fit [[mACF]] rather than [[Illinois Scholastic Bowl]] Format. In 2008, Aegis stopped providing questions to the tournament that had led to its own creation in order to focus on the [[Masonic]] series, but Aegis folded a month later. The 2008 tournament was thrown together in the last month mostly by [[Jonah Greenthal]] and [[David Reinstein]]. For 2009, Jonah recruited several writers who put together a solid housewrite that was mirrored by [[UCLA]]. From 2010 to 2013, the tournament was a mirror of GSAC; in roughly the same time period, it started attracting many of the strongest teams from all around the country. New Trier hosted the tournament until 2019, when the school administration started putting up enormous obstacles against using the school. The tournament was renamed [[Reinstein Varsity]] and moved to [[Barrington]] in 2021 after missing the 2020 COVID year.<br />
<br />
From 2001 to 2019, New Trier hosted the [[Scobol Solo]], which almost always took place in November. The questions are written by [[David Reinstein]], who received varying amounts of help over the years, and it has annually attracted about 128 of the top players in the state (and occasionally some from outside of Illinois). Some consider it "the unofficial individual state championship." The tournament is Tossup Only and is power matched, guaranteeing students seven matches. Starting in 2010, the tournament uses a computer program written by Jonah Greenthal that instantly posts results, and since about then Jonah has edited the questions. After 2019, the New Trier administration also decided to put up huge obstacles against hosting. The tournament was online during the 2020 COVID year and then moved to [[Sandburg]] since then.<br />
<br />
==Noted Team Accomplishments==<br />
[[Image: 2007NTStatechamps.jpg|thumb|400px|The 2007 IHSA State Champions at the IHSSBCA Awards Dinner: Coach [[David Reinstein]], [[Robert Sido]], [[Sohaib Qadri]], [[Carlo Angiuli]], [[Nick Matchen]], [[Jonah Greenthal]]. This is the only known photo showing Nick Matchen without a hat. Not pictured: Jeff Hirschey.]]<br />
* [[Central Suburban League|CSL]] Frosh-Soph Season Champions (12): 1994-97, 2000-04, 06-08<br />
* CSL Frosh-Soph Tournament Champions (9): 1995-96, 98-2001, 03, 06-07<br />
* CSL Varsity Season Champions (12): 1995, 97, 99-2003, 07-11<br />
* CSL Varsity Tournament Champions (10): 1995, 99, 02-03, 05, 07-11<br />
* IHSA Regional Titles (14): 1997-2000, 2002-10, 2012<br />
* IHSA Sectional Titles (11): 1990, 1995, 1997-99, 2002-03, 2006-07, 2010, 2012<br />
* IHSA Championship Tournament Champions: [[2007 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2007]]<br />
* IHSA Championship Tournament Runner-Up: [[1995 IHSA State Championship Tournament|1995]]<br />
* IHSA Championship Tournament Third Place: [[1999 IHSA State Championship Tournament|1999]], [[2002 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2002]], [[2003 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2003]]<br />
* [[NAQT Illinois State Tournament]]: 2007<br />
* Midwest Championship: 2007<br />
<br />
New Trier has qualified for the second day championship rounds almost every time it has entered a national tournament, namely the 2004 and 2007 [[PACE]] [[NSC]]s, and the 2005-10 [[NAQT]] [[HSNCT]]s. At the 2009 PACE NSC, the team ended up in the second tier after a close loss to [[Chaska]], and the team finished lower at the 2011 NSC. The team finished 4-6 at the 2015 HSNCT and made the playoffs in 2018.<br />
<br />
==IHSSBCA Individual Awards==<br />
The following were honored by the Illinois High School Scholastic Bowl Coaches Association ([[IHSSBCA]]) for outstanding play through their [[IHSSBCA All State Program|All-Sectional/All-State Program]]. Each sectional comprises roughly 24 geographically concentrated teams, and thus roughly 125 starting players. Through the 2006-07 season, the top ten players were recognized in each sectional,(starting with 2007-08, the number was raised to 15) with teams restricted to no more than two nominations (three nominations starting in 2007-08). There are twenty All-State awards given each year (10 First Team, 10 Second Team) in each of Illinois' two classes.<br />
<br />
===All-Sectional Honorees===<br />
* 2001-02: [[Matt Keenan]], [[Alex Slack]]<br />
* 2002-03: [[Michael Evans]], [[Matt Keenan]]<br />
* 2003-04: [[Michael Evans]], [[Yian Chen]]<br />
* 2004-05: [[Cliff Chang]], [[Greg Poulos]]<br />
* 2005-06: [[Thomas Buley]], [[Nick Matchen]]<br />
* 2006-07: [[Carlo Angiuli]], [[Nick Matchen]]<br />
* 2007-08: [[Ben Cohen]], [[Jonah Greenthal]], [[Robert Sido]]<br />
* 2008-09: [[Ben Cohen]]<br />
* 2009-10: [[Steve Server]]<br />
* 2010-11: [[DJ Germano]], [[Andrew Wang]]<br />
* 2011-12: [[Andrew Wang]]<br />
<br />
===All-State Honorees===<br />
* 2001-02: [[Matt Keenan]] (1st team)<br />
* 2002-03: [[Matt Keenan]] (1st team)<br />
* 2003-04: [[Michael Evans]] (1st team), [[Yian Chen]] (2nd team)<br />
* 2004-05: [[Cliff Chang]] (1st team)<br />
* 2006-07: [[Carlo Angiuli]] (1st team), [[Nick Matchen]] (2nd team)<br />
* 2007-08: [[Ben Cohen]] (1st team), [[Robert Sido]] (2nd team)<br />
* 2008-09: [[Ben Cohen]] (1st team)<br />
* 2009-10: [[Steve Server]] (1st team)<br />
* 2010-11: [[Andrew Wang]] (1st team)<br />
<br />
===Playing for [[Illinois Panasonic Team|Team Illinois]]===<br />
*[[David Shalowitz]] (1998, 1999)<br />
*[[Shao-Yun Guo]] (2002)<br />
*[[Colin Davy]] (2003)<br />
*[[Matt Keenan]] (2003)<br />
*[[Cliff Chang]] (2005)<br />
*[[Carlo Angiuli]] (2006, 2007)<br />
<br />
==Players==<br />
===Team Captains===<br />
*1994-95: [[Matt Bender]] and [[Matt Caywood]]<br />
*1995-96: [[Ernie Brodsky]]<br />
*1996-97: [[Rob Dolan]]<br />
*1997-98: [[Sue Paik]]<br />
*1998-99: [[David Shalowitz]]<br />
*1999-2000: [[Brian Ginsberg]], [[Kevin Pearce]], and [[Craig Segall]]<br />
*2000-01: [[Nick Poulos]]<br />
*2001-02: [[Alex Slack]]<br />
*2002-03: [[Colin Davy]] and [[Matt Keenan]]<br />
*2003-04: [[Michael Evans]]<br />
*2004-05: [[Greg Poulos]]<br />
*2005-06: [[Thomas Buley]]<br />
*2006-07: [[Carlo Angiuli]] and [[Nick Matchen]]<br />
*2007-08: [[Jonah Greenthal]] and [[Robert Sido]]<br />
*2008-09: [[Ben Cohen]]<br />
*2009-10: [[Steve Server]]<br />
*2010-11: [[DJ Germano]] and [[Daniel Thirman]]<br />
*2011-12: [[Andrew Wang]]<br />
<br />
{{NAQT Illinois State Champions}}<br />
{{IHSA State Champions}}<br />
<br />
[[Category:High school teams]]<br />
[[Category:Illinois high school teams]]<br />
[[Category: New Trier]]<br />
[[Category:Original QBWiki Page]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=NASAT&diff=61490NASAT2023-06-19T12:59:01Z<p>David Reinstein: /* Results by year */</p>
<hr />
<div>The '''National All-Star Academic Tournament (NASAT)''' is a national tournament where all-star teams from each state (including the District of Columbia) can participate. The tournament is also open to all-star teams from Canadian provinces and other country subdivisions.<br />
<br />
The first NASAT was held on June 12–13, 2010 at [[Vanderbilt]].<br />
<br />
NASAT was run by [[HSAPQ|High School Academic Pyramid Questions]] from 2010 through 2017. It is now run by [[IQBT|International Quiz Bowl Tournaments]].<br />
<br />
NASAT is not the first tournament to use state all-star teams, since that is done by [[PAC|PAC/NTAE]]. However, it is the first tournament using all-star teams to feature pyramidal questions and one-on-one matches.<br />
<br />
Since 2016, states have been allowed to enter more than one team (i.e., B teams).<br />
<br />
2020 NASAT was cancelled due to the [[COVID-19 pandemic]]. Since 2021, NASAT has been held online.<br />
<br />
In addition to US state all-star teams, NASAT has received interest from teams outside of the United States. In 2018, [[Quizbowl in Asia|Asia]] fielded a team, but renamed it to [[Quizbowl in China|China]] after players from Singapore were unable to attend. Asia has fielded teams at NASAT from 2021 onward. [[Quizbowl in Canada|Canada]] also sent a team in 2021, and [[Quizbowl in Liberia|Liberia]] fielded one in 2022 and 2023.<br />
<br />
==Results by year==<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" class="wikitable"<br />
! Year<br />
! Champion<br />
! Second<br />
! Third<br />
! Fourth<br />
! Location<br />
! Field Size<br />
! Stats<br />
! Set<br />
! Discussion<br />
|- <br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=7719 2010]<br />
| '''[[Team Pennsylvania|Pennsylvania]] ([[State College]])'''†<br />
| [[Team South Carolina|South Carolina]] ([[Dorman]] and [[Southside]])<br />
| [[Team Illinois|Illinois]] ([[Rockford Auburn]], [[Ignatius]], [[OPRF]], [[Stevenson]])<br />
| [[Team Virginia|Virginia]] ([[Maggie Walker]] and [[Thomas Jefferson (VA)|TJ]])<br />
| [[Vanderbilt]] <br />
| 16<br />
| [http://hsapq.com/nasat/NASATprelims_standings.html prelims] [http://hsapq.com/nasat/NASATcomplete_standings.html overall]<br />
| [http://hsapq.com/nasat/nasat.zip] [http://www.qbwiki.com/post/2010NASAT_secondplace.mp3 Audio from the 2010 second-place match]<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=10086&p=189373 General Discussion] [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=10093&p=189963 Question Discussion]<br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=11090 2011]<br />
| [[Team Texas|Texas]] ([[LASA]] and [[Seven Lakes]])<br />
| [[Team Illinois|Illinois]] ([[Rockford Auburn]], [[Ignatius]], [[OPRF]], [[Stevenson]])<br />
| [[Team Ohio|Ohio]] ([[Copley]], [[Warren G. Harding]], [[Northmont]], [[Olmsted Falls]], [[Solon]], [[Walnut Hills]])<br />
| [[Team California|California]] ([[Bellarmine]], [[Rancho Bernardo]], [[University_(Irvine,_California_high_school)|University]])<br />
| [[Maryland]]<br />
| 10<br />
| [http://www.hsapq.com/nasat11/nasat2011_standings.html]<br />
| [http://www.hsapq.com/questions/21]<br />
| <br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=12093 2012]<br />
| [[Team California|California]] ([[Bellarmine]] and [[Escobar]])<br />
| [[Team Illinois|Illinois]] ([[Rockford Auburn]], [[Carbondale]], [[Loyola]], [[Latin School]])<br />
| [[Team New York|New York]] ([[Hunter]] and [[Ardsley]])<br />
| [[Team Georgia|Georgia]] ([[Centennial (GA)|Centennial]], [[Norcross]], [[Alpharetta]], [[Bainbridge]], and [[Brookwood]])<br />
| [[Ohio State]]<br />
| 13<br />
| [http://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/1004/stats/prelims_and_playoffs/]<br />
| [http://www.hsapq.com/qzip/NASAT2012.zip]<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=13234&p=244983 Combined Discussion]<br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=13772&p=264837 2013]<br />
| [[Team Missouri|Missouri]] ([[Ladue]])<br />
| [[Team Texas|Texas]] ([[Cistercian]], [[Harmony]], [[LASA]], [[St. John's (TX)|St. John's]])<br />
| [[Team California|California]] ([[Arcadia]], [[Bellarmine]], [[Foothill]], [[Torrey Pines]])<br />
| [[Team Ohio|Ohio]] ([[Dublin Scioto]], [[Northmont]], [[Olmsted Falls]], [[Solon]])<br />
| [[Ohio State]]<br />
| 13<br />
| [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/1432]<br />
| [http://www.hsapq.com/downloads/tournament41/]<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=14573&p=264599 Set and Tournament Discussion]<br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=14870&p=277344 2014]<br />
| [[Team Texas|Texas]] ([[LASA]], [[St. John's]], [[Harmony]], [[St. Mark's]])<br />
| [[Team Illinois|Illinois]] ([[Rockford Auburn]], [[IMSA]], [[Stevenson]])<br />
| [[Team California|California]] ([[Menlo]], [[Westview (CA)|Westview]], [[Saratoga]], [[Arcadia]])<br />
| [[Team New Jersey|New Jersey]] ([[High Tech]], [[East Brunswick]], [[St. Joseph (NJ)|St. Joseph]])<br />
| [[Ohio State]] + Blackwell Columbus<br />
| 17<br />
| [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/1680/stats/2014_nasat/]<br />
| [http://www.hsapq.com/downloads/tournament52/]<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=16019&p=286204 Discussion]<br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=16798&p=298691 2015]<br />
| [[Team California|California]] ([[Arcadia]], [[Rancho Bernardo]], [[Saratoga]])<br />
| [[Team Virginia|Virginia]] ([[Loudoun County]], [[Maggie Walker]], [[Thomas Jefferson (VA)|Thomas Jefferson]], [[Western Albemarle]])<br />
| [[Team Illinois|Illinois]] ([[Rockford Auburn]], [[IMSA]], [[University of Chicago Lab]])<br />
| [[Team Michigan|Michigan]] ([[Detroit Catholic Central]])<br />
| [[Ohio State]]<br />
| 12<br />
| [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/3081]<br />
| [http://www.hsapq.com/downloads/tournament55/]<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=197&t=17463&p=308401 Errata] [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=197&t=17464&p=304569 General Discussion] [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=197&t=17465&p=304579 Specific Question Discussion]<br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=17902 2016]<br />
| '''[[Team Illinois|Illinois]] ([[Rockford Auburn]], [[Barrington]], [[Hinsdale Central]], [[Naperville North]])'''†<br />
| [[Team California|California]] ([[Rancho Bernardo]], [[La Jolla]], [[Westview (CA)|Westview]])<br />
| [[Team Ohio|Ohio A]] ([[Fisher Catholic]], [[Dublin Scioto]], [[Solon]], [[Dublin Jerome]]<br />
| [[Team Georgia|Georgia A]] ([[Marist]], [[Lakeside (GA)|Lakeside]], [[Johns Creek]], [[River Ridge]], [[Chattahoochee]])<br />
| [[Kentucky]]<br />
| 15<br />
| [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/3772/]<br />
| [http://www.quizbowlpackets.com/1834/]<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=18741&p=318210 Science] [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=18735&p=318105 Visual Arts] [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=18734&p=318104 General Discussion] [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=18733&p=318103 Specific Question Discussion]<br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=19239 2017]<br />
| '''[[Team Illinois|Illinois A]] ([[Rockford Auburn]], [[Barrington]], [[Naperville North]], [[IMSA]])'''†<br />
| [[Team New York|New York]] ([[Hunter]], [[Ithaca]])<br />
| [[Team Texas|Texas A]] ([[James E. Taylor]], [[LASA]], [[St. John's]], [[St. Mark's]])<br />
| [[Team California|California]] ([[La Jolla]], [[Los Alamitos]], [[Crystal Springs Upland]], [[Homestead]], [[Cathedral Catholic]], [[Mission San Jose]])<br />
| [[Kentucky]]<br />
| 25<br />
| [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/4414/]<br />
| [http://www.quizbowlpackets.com/1975/]<br />
| <br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=21031 2018]<br />
| [[Team Illinois|Illinois A]] ([[Rockford Auburn]], [[IMSA]], [[Stevenson]], [[Williamsville]])<br />
| [[Team Virginia|Virginia]] ([[Thomas Jefferson (VA)]], [[McLean]])<br />
| [[Team Ohio|Ohio]] ([[Beavercreek]], [[Dublin Scioto]], [[Miami Valley School|Miami Valley]], [[Solon]])<br />
| [[Team California|California]] ([[Canyon Crest]], [[Crystal Springs Upland]])<br />
| [[Kentucky]]<br />
| 29<br />
| [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/5108/]<br />
| [http://hsquizbowl.org/db/questionsets/2158/]<br />
| <br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=22189&p=352700 2019]<br />
| [[Team Illinois|Illinois A]] ([[Rockford Auburn]], [[IMSA]], [[Stevenson]], [[University of Illinois Lab]])<br />
| [[Team Ohio|Ohio A]] ([[Beavercreek]], [[Miami Valley School|Miami Valley]], [[Ottawa Hills]], [[Solon]])<br />
| [[Team Texas|Texas]] ([[LASA]], [[Ronald_Reagan|San Antonio Reagan]], [[Strake Jesuit]], [[Katy Taylor]])<br />
| [[Team New Jersey|New Jersey]] ([[High Tech]], [[Millburn]])<br />
| [[Kentucky]]<br />
| 23<br />
| [http://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/5812/]<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/db/questionsets/2319/]<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=366148#p366148 2020]<br />
| Canceled<br />
| Canceled<br />
| Canceled<br />
| Canceled<br />
| Canceled<br />
| Canceled<br />
| Canceled<br />
| Canceled<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=383145#p383145 2021]<br />
| [[Team Illinois|Illinois Blue]] ([[Barrington]], [[Buffalo Grove]], [[Naperville North]], [[Stevenson]])<br />
| [[Team Georgia|Georgia]] (Lambert, [[Chattahoochee]])<br />
| [[Team Ohio|Ohio]] ([[Beavercreek]], [[Solon]], [[Northmont]], [[Miami Valley]])<br />
| [[Team Texas|Texas Vermillion]] (Saint Mark's, [[TAG Magnet]])<br />
| Online<br />
| 32<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/6822/]<br />
| <br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=387557#p387557 2022]<br />
| [[Team New Jersey|New Jersey A]] ([[High Tech]], [[J.P. Stevens]], [[Millburn]], [[Ridgewood]]) <br />
| [[Team Illinois|Illinois Blue]] ([[Barrington]], [[Buffalo Grove]], [[Stevenson]], [[Rockford Auburn]])<br />
| [[Team Missouri|Missouri A]] ([[College Heights Christian]], [[Ladue]], [[Parkway West]], [[St. Joseph Central]])<br />
| [[Team Maryland|Maryland Gold]] ([[Richard Montgomery]], [[Montgomery Blair]], [[Winston Churchill (MD)|Winston Churchill]])<br />
| Online<br />
| 23<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/7549/]<br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?t=26766 2023]<br />
| '''[[Team Illinois|Illinois Blue]] ([[Barrington]], [[Buffalo Grove]], [[Rockford Auburn]])'''†<br />
| [[Team California|California]] ([[Bellarmine]] or [[Westview]], [[Canyon Crest]], [[Del Norte]], [[Rancho Bernardo]])<br />
| [[Team Illinois|Illinois White]] ([[IMSA]], [[Metro-East Lutheran]], [[Northside Prep]], [[Winnebago]])<br />
| [[Team Illinois|Illinois Orange]] ([[Benet Academy]], [[Fremd]], [[Lisle]], [[University of Illinois Lab]], [[Waubonsie Valley]])<br />
| Online<br />
| 19<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/8234/]<br />
|}<br />
teams marked in '''bold''' with a † symbol were undefeated<br />
<br />
==Results by team==<br />
:''Main page: [[NASAT results by state]]''<!--<br />
<br />
Hello, it appears you are interested in editing this table.<br />
<br />
The contents of this table are transcluded from the "NASAT results by state" page indicated as the "Main page" for this section. That table is compiled from the pages of "NASAT results by state by year" by various arcane formulae.<br />
<br />
Visit that page and use the navigation above the table to visit the year you wish to edit or create a page for.<br />
--><br />
{{:NASAT results by state}}<br />
<br />
[[Category:High school national championships]]<br />
[[Category:High school tournaments]]<br />
[[Category:HSAPQ]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=NASAT&diff=61489NASAT2023-06-19T12:58:00Z<p>David Reinstein: /* Results by year */</p>
<hr />
<div>The '''National All-Star Academic Tournament (NASAT)''' is a national tournament where all-star teams from each state (including the District of Columbia) can participate. The tournament is also open to all-star teams from Canadian provinces and other country subdivisions.<br />
<br />
The first NASAT was held on June 12–13, 2010 at [[Vanderbilt]].<br />
<br />
NASAT was run by [[HSAPQ|High School Academic Pyramid Questions]] from 2010 through 2017. It is now run by [[IQBT|International Quiz Bowl Tournaments]].<br />
<br />
NASAT is not the first tournament to use state all-star teams, since that is done by [[PAC|PAC/NTAE]]. However, it is the first tournament using all-star teams to feature pyramidal questions and one-on-one matches.<br />
<br />
Since 2016, states have been allowed to enter more than one team (i.e., B teams).<br />
<br />
2020 NASAT was cancelled due to the [[COVID-19 pandemic]]. Since 2021, NASAT has been held online.<br />
<br />
In addition to US state all-star teams, NASAT has received interest from teams outside of the United States. In 2018, [[Quizbowl in Asia|Asia]] fielded a team, but renamed it to [[Quizbowl in China|China]] after players from Singapore were unable to attend. Asia has fielded teams at NASAT from 2021 onward. [[Quizbowl in Canada|Canada]] also sent a team in 2021, and [[Quizbowl in Liberia|Liberia]] fielded one in 2022 and 2023.<br />
<br />
==Results by year==<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" class="wikitable"<br />
! Year<br />
! Champion<br />
! Second<br />
! Third<br />
! Fourth<br />
! Location<br />
! Field Size<br />
! Stats<br />
! Set<br />
! Discussion<br />
|- <br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=7719 2010]<br />
| '''[[Team Pennsylvania|Pennsylvania]] ([[State College]])'''†<br />
| [[Team South Carolina|South Carolina]] ([[Dorman]] and [[Southside]])<br />
| [[Team Illinois|Illinois]] ([[Rockford Auburn]], [[Ignatius]], [[OPRF]], [[Stevenson]])<br />
| [[Team Virginia|Virginia]] ([[Maggie Walker]] and [[Thomas Jefferson (VA)|TJ]])<br />
| [[Vanderbilt]] <br />
| 16<br />
| [http://hsapq.com/nasat/NASATprelims_standings.html prelims] [http://hsapq.com/nasat/NASATcomplete_standings.html overall]<br />
| [http://hsapq.com/nasat/nasat.zip] [http://www.qbwiki.com/post/2010NASAT_secondplace.mp3 Audio from the 2010 second-place match]<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=10086&p=189373 General Discussion] [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=10093&p=189963 Question Discussion]<br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=11090 2011]<br />
| [[Team Texas|Texas]] ([[LASA]] and [[Seven Lakes]])<br />
| [[Team Illinois|Illinois]] ([[Rockford Auburn]], [[Ignatius]], [[OPRF]], [[Stevenson]])<br />
| [[Team Ohio|Ohio]] ([[Copley]], [[Warren G. Harding]], [[Northmont]], [[Olmsted Falls]], [[Solon]], [[Walnut Hills]])<br />
| [[Team California|California]] ([[Bellarmine]], [[Rancho Bernardo]], [[University_(Irvine,_California_high_school)|University]])<br />
| [[Maryland]]<br />
| 10<br />
| [http://www.hsapq.com/nasat11/nasat2011_standings.html]<br />
| [http://www.hsapq.com/questions/21]<br />
| <br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=12093 2012]<br />
| [[Team California|California]] ([[Bellarmine]] and [[Escobar]])<br />
| [[Team Illinois|Illinois]] ([[Rockford Auburn]], [[Carbondale]], [[Loyola]], [[Latin School]])<br />
| [[Team New York|New York]] ([[Hunter]] and [[Ardsley]])<br />
| [[Team Georgia|Georgia]] ([[Centennial (GA)|Centennial]], [[Norcross]], [[Alpharetta]], [[Bainbridge]], and [[Brookwood]])<br />
| [[Ohio State]]<br />
| 13<br />
| [http://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/1004/stats/prelims_and_playoffs/]<br />
| [http://www.hsapq.com/qzip/NASAT2012.zip]<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=13234&p=244983 Combined Discussion]<br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=13772&p=264837 2013]<br />
| [[Team Missouri|Missouri]] ([[Ladue]])<br />
| [[Team Texas|Texas]] ([[Cistercian]], [[Harmony]], [[LASA]], [[St. John's (TX)|St. John's]])<br />
| [[Team California|California]] ([[Arcadia]], [[Bellarmine]], [[Foothill]], [[Torrey Pines]])<br />
| [[Team Ohio|Ohio]] ([[Dublin Scioto]], [[Northmont]], [[Olmsted Falls]], [[Solon]])<br />
| [[Ohio State]]<br />
| 13<br />
| [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/1432]<br />
| [http://www.hsapq.com/downloads/tournament41/]<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=14573&p=264599 Set and Tournament Discussion]<br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=14870&p=277344 2014]<br />
| [[Team Texas|Texas]] ([[LASA]], [[St. John's]], [[Harmony]], [[St. Mark's]])<br />
| [[Team Illinois|Illinois]] ([[Rockford Auburn]], [[IMSA]], [[Stevenson]])<br />
| [[Team California|California]] ([[Menlo]], [[Westview (CA)|Westview]], [[Saratoga]], [[Arcadia]])<br />
| [[Team New Jersey|New Jersey]] ([[High Tech]], [[East Brunswick]], [[St. Joseph (NJ)|St. Joseph]])<br />
| [[Ohio State]] + Blackwell Columbus<br />
| 17<br />
| [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/1680/stats/2014_nasat/]<br />
| [http://www.hsapq.com/downloads/tournament52/]<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=16019&p=286204 Discussion]<br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=16798&p=298691 2015]<br />
| [[Team California|California]] ([[Arcadia]], [[Rancho Bernardo]], [[Saratoga]])<br />
| [[Team Virginia|Virginia]] ([[Loudoun County]], [[Maggie Walker]], [[Thomas Jefferson (VA)|Thomas Jefferson]], [[Western Albemarle]])<br />
| [[Team Illinois|Illinois]] ([[Rockford Auburn]], [[IMSA]], [[University of Chicago Lab]])<br />
| [[Team Michigan|Michigan]] ([[Detroit Catholic Central]])<br />
| [[Ohio State]]<br />
| 12<br />
| [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/3081]<br />
| [http://www.hsapq.com/downloads/tournament55/]<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=197&t=17463&p=308401 Errata] [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=197&t=17464&p=304569 General Discussion] [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=197&t=17465&p=304579 Specific Question Discussion]<br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=17902 2016]<br />
| '''[[Team Illinois|Illinois]] ([[Rockford Auburn]], [[Barrington]], [[Hinsdale Central]], [[Naperville North]])'''†<br />
| [[Team California|California]] ([[Rancho Bernardo]], [[La Jolla]], [[Westview (CA)|Westview]])<br />
| [[Team Ohio|Ohio A]] ([[Fisher Catholic]], [[Dublin Scioto]], [[Solon]], [[Dublin Jerome]]<br />
| [[Team Georgia|Georgia A]] ([[Marist]], [[Lakeside (GA)|Lakeside]], [[Johns Creek]], [[River Ridge]], [[Chattahoochee]])<br />
| [[Kentucky]]<br />
| 15<br />
| [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/3772/]<br />
| [http://www.quizbowlpackets.com/1834/]<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=18741&p=318210 Science] [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=18735&p=318105 Visual Arts] [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=18734&p=318104 General Discussion] [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=18733&p=318103 Specific Question Discussion]<br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=19239 2017]<br />
| '''[[Team Illinois|Illinois A]] ([[Rockford Auburn]], [[Barrington]], [[Naperville North]], [[IMSA]])'''†<br />
| [[Team New York|New York]] ([[Hunter]], [[Ithaca]])<br />
| [[Team Texas|Texas A]] ([[James E. Taylor]], [[LASA]], [[St. John's]], [[St. Mark's]])<br />
| [[Team California|California]] ([[La Jolla]], [[Los Alamitos]], [[Crystal Springs Upland]], [[Homestead]], [[Cathedral Catholic]], [[Mission San Jose]])<br />
| [[Kentucky]]<br />
| 25<br />
| [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/4414/]<br />
| [http://www.quizbowlpackets.com/1975/]<br />
| <br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=21031 2018]<br />
| [[Team Illinois|Illinois A]] ([[Rockford Auburn]], [[IMSA]], [[Stevenson]], [[Williamsville]])<br />
| [[Team Virginia|Virginia]] ([[Thomas Jefferson (VA)]], [[McLean]])<br />
| [[Team Ohio|Ohio]] ([[Beavercreek]], [[Dublin Scioto]], [[Miami Valley School|Miami Valley]], [[Solon]])<br />
| [[Team California|California]] ([[Canyon Crest]], [[Crystal Springs Upland]])<br />
| [[Kentucky]]<br />
| 29<br />
| [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/5108/]<br />
| [http://hsquizbowl.org/db/questionsets/2158/]<br />
| <br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=22189&p=352700 2019]<br />
| [[Team Illinois|Illinois A]] ([[Rockford Auburn]], [[IMSA]], [[Stevenson]], [[University of Illinois Lab]])<br />
| [[Team Ohio|Ohio A]] ([[Beavercreek]], [[Miami Valley School|Miami Valley]], [[Ottawa Hills]], [[Solon]])<br />
| [[Team Texas|Texas]] ([[LASA]], [[Ronald_Reagan|San Antonio Reagan]], [[Strake Jesuit]], [[Katy Taylor]])<br />
| [[Team New Jersey|New Jersey]] ([[High Tech]], [[Millburn]])<br />
| [[Kentucky]]<br />
| 23<br />
| [http://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/5812/]<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/db/questionsets/2319/]<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=366148#p366148 2020]<br />
| Canceled<br />
| Canceled<br />
| Canceled<br />
| Canceled<br />
| Canceled<br />
| Canceled<br />
| Canceled<br />
| Canceled<br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=383145#p383145 2021]<br />
| [[Team Illinois|Illinois Blue]] ([[Barrington]], [[Buffalo Grove]], [[Naperville North]], [[Stevenson]])<br />
| [[Team Georgia|Georgia]] (Lambert, [[Chattahoochee]])<br />
| [[Team Ohio|Ohio]] ([[Beavercreek]], [[Solon]], [[Northmont]], [[Miami Valley]])<br />
| [[Team Texas|Texas Vermillion]] (Saint Mark's, [[TAG Magnet]])<br />
| Online<br />
| 32<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/6822/]<br />
| <br />
|<br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=387557#p387557 2022]<br />
| [[Team New Jersey|New Jersey A]] ([[High Tech]], [[J.P. Stevens]], [[Millburn]], [[Ridgewood]]) <br />
| [[Team Illinois|Illinois Blue]] ([[Barrington]], [[Buffalo Grove]], [[Stevenson]], [[Rockford Auburn]])<br />
| [[Team Missouri|Missouri A]] ([[College Heights Christian]], [[Ladue]], [[Parkway West]], [[St. Joseph Central]])<br />
| [[Team Maryland|Maryland Gold]] ([[Richard Montgomery]], [[Montgomery Blair]], [[Winston Churchill (MD)|Winston Churchill]])<br />
| Online<br />
| 23<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/7549/]<br />
|-<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?t=26766 2023]<br />
| '''[[Team Illinois|Illinois Blue]]'''† ([[Barrington]], [[Buffalo Grove]], [[Rockford Auburn]])<br />
| [[Team California|California]] ([[Bellarmine]] or [[Westview]], [[Canyon Crest]], [[Del Norte]], [[Rancho Bernardo]])<br />
| [[Team Illinois|Illinois White]] ([[IMSA]], [[Metro-East Lutheran]], [[Northside Prep]], [[Winnebago]])<br />
| [[Team Illinois|Illinois Orange]] ([[Benet Academy]], [[Fremd]], [[Lisle]], [[University of Illinois Lab]], [[Waubonsie Valley]])<br />
| Online<br />
| 19<br />
| [https://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/8234/]<br />
|}<br />
teams marked in '''bold''' with a † symbol were undefeated<br />
<br />
==Results by team==<br />
:''Main page: [[NASAT results by state]]''<!--<br />
<br />
Hello, it appears you are interested in editing this table.<br />
<br />
The contents of this table are transcluded from the "NASAT results by state" page indicated as the "Main page" for this section. That table is compiled from the pages of "NASAT results by state by year" by various arcane formulae.<br />
<br />
Visit that page and use the navigation above the table to visit the year you wish to edit or create a page for.<br />
--><br />
{{:NASAT results by state}}<br />
<br />
[[Category:High school national championships]]<br />
[[Category:High school tournaments]]<br />
[[Category:HSAPQ]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Multi-championship_achievements&diff=61473Multi-championship achievements2023-06-18T21:49:42Z<p>David Reinstein: /* High School */</p>
<hr />
<div>Because quizbowl players enjoy analyzing things of this nature, there have been several attempts to recognize possible unique or milestone types of combinations of national championships that players or teams could win.<br />
<br />
==Classic Triple Crown==<br />
The term "'''Triple Crown'''" was popular circa the year 2000 to describe a set of three tournament titles: the [[NAQT ICT]] overall championship, the [[ACF Nationals]] championship, and the [[College Bowl]] national championship. Teams or players might be described as winning a "Triple Crown" in a career or a single year. As the NAQT ICT was only created in 1997, and College Bowl lost its relevance to quizbowl by the mid-2000s and ceased operating its namesake tournament entirely after 2008, the term had a limited window of currency.<br />
<br />
The 1999 [[Chicago]] and 2002 [[Michigan]] teams won the single-year Triple Crown. Three other programs won the all-time Triple Crown: [[Stanford]], by winning College Bowl in 1978, ICT in 1998, and ACF in 2010; [[Virginia]], which won the 2012 ICT, adding to their multiple 1990s College Bowl and ACF Nationals titles; and [[Maryland]], which won the 1981 College Bowl NCT, 2008 NAQT ICT, and 2017 ACF Nationals. Any team that won College Bowl before it went defunct could theoretically complete an all-time Triple Crown by winning ICT and ACF in the future. It is unlikely that any individual player will win a Triple Crown again, barring a former College Bowl champion returning to play in the modern age; [[Rob Carson]], who played on the 2007 College Bowl and 2011 ICT championship teams with Minnesota, presumably stands the best chance as he need only win ACF Nationals as a graduate student.<br />
<br />
In 2021 [[Columbia]], which won ACF Nationals in 2019, won both the [[2021 ICT|ICT]] and the first season of the revived [[College Bowl]] TV show. The three winning teams had three entirely distinct lineups. For several months in summer 2021, until Florida won [[2021 ACF Nationals]], Columbia became the third school to hold all three championships at once.<br />
<br />
Due to the variant styles from College Bowl to ACF Nationals with NAQT in the middle, those teams which had success at all three usually did so by fielding drastically different lineups at the various tournaments. Thus, [[Adam Kemezis]], on the 2002 Michigan team, was the only individual player to win a Triple Crown in a single year.<br />
<br />
At least eight other players, [[Jeff Bennett]], [[Ed Cohn]], [[Alice Chou]], [[Mike Davidson]], [[Susan Ferrari]], [[Matt Lafer]], [[John Sheahan]], and [[Andrew Yaphe]], have won a career Triple Crown. Bennett, Cohn, Ferrari, and Sheahan won all the relevant tournaments with Chicago, Lafer and Davidson did so with Michigan, and Yaphe and Chou each won the College Bowl and ACF legs at Virginia before winning an ICT (and additional ACF titles) with Chicago.<br />
<br />
==Modern Triple Crown==<br />
<onlyinclude><br />
A modern interpretation of the Triple Crown might refer to winning the NAQT ICT, ACF Nationals, and [[Chicago Open]] in the same year, as those are clearly the three most prestigious and popular hard tournaments. No single school's team has done this (nor has any team composed of players from a single school ever won Chicago Open at all). The individual players to have accomplished a single-year Triple Crown are:<br />
* [[Ezequiel Berdichevsky]] (2005)<br />
* [[Matt Bollinger]] (2014)<br />
* [[Evan Adams]] (2014)<br />
* [[Tommy Casalaspi]] (2014)</onlyinclude><br />
<br />
In 2014, those three [[Virginia]] players all won the Triple Crown, joining forces with [[Dennis Loo]] at ICT and ACF, and [[Eric Mukherjee]] at Chicago Open; moreover, Bollinger was the leading scorer at all three tournaments. [[Seth Teitler]] managed the lesser but admirable achievement of finishing ''second'', to teams containing Ezequiel, at all three tournaments in 2005; [[Matt Jackson]] did the same in 2014.<br />
<br />
Seven times, a player has finished first in two of the Triple Crown events and second in the third: <br />
* Ezequiel Berdichevsky (2001, 2nd at ICT)<br />
* Ezequiel Berdichevsky (2002, 2nd at Chicago Open)<br />
* [[Jeff Hoppes]] (2004, 2nd at Nationals)<br />
* Seth Teitler (2004, 2nd at Nationals)<br />
* [[Adam Kemezis]] (2005, 2nd at Chicago Open)<br />
* [[Andrew Hart]] (2011, 2nd at Nationals)<br />
* [[Matt Bollinger]] (2012, 2nd at Nationals)<br />
<br />
===Career Triple Crown===<br />
<br />
Career winners of the Modern Triple Crown, i.e. people who have won at least one ICT, ACF Nationals, and CO across their entire quizbowl playing careers, in addition to the four above, are (first win of each title listed after each name):<br />
* [[Andrew Yaphe]] (1997 ACF, 1999 ICT, 2001 CO)<br />
* [[Jeff Hoppes]] (2003 ACF, 2004 ICT, 2004 CO) <br />
* [[Seth Teitler]] (2003 ACF, 2004 ICT, 2004 CO) <br />
* [[Matt Lafer]] (2005 ICT, 2005 ACF, 2006 CO) <br />
* [[Selene Koo]] (2007 ICT, 2007 ACF, 2011 CO)<br />
* [[Kevin Koai]] (2010 CO, 2011 ACF, 2013 ICT)<br />
* [[Matt Jackson]] (2011 ACF, 2013 ICT, 2015 CO)<br />
* [[John Lawrence]] (2011 ACF, 2012 CO, 2016 ICT)<br />
* [[Auroni Gupta]] (2015 CO, 2016 ACF, 2017 ICT)<br />
* [[Will Nediger]] (2016 ACF, 2016 CO, 2017 ICT)<br />
<br />
Additionally, [[Jeff Hoppes]], [[Kevin Koai]], and [[Matt Jackson]] won Division II ICT in their freshman years.<br />
<br />
==Grand Slam==<br />
<br />
This term was coined during [[ACF Nationals 2012]] for a single player winning all four major overall championships in quizbowl--the high school [[PACE NSC]] and [[NAQT HSNCT]] and the top [[ACF Nationals]] and [[NAQT ICT]] titles--in a career.<br />
<br />
It would also have been theoretically possible, but exceedingly difficult and unlikely, for a high school student with dual-enrollment college player status to win these all in one year. As of 2019, NAQT no longer permits players to participate in both high school and college championships in the same year even if otherwise eligible. Changes to ACF eligibility around the same time period have also made almost all formerly eligible dual-enrolled high school students ineligible to participate in ACF for college teams, though this eligibility status is not completely impossible to achieve, and does not depend on what high school tournaments the student plays.<br />
<br />
The only known player to have won the Grand Slam is [[Evan Adams]] ([[2007 HSNCT]], [[2007 NSC]], [[2012 ICT|2012 (and 2014) ICT]], [[2014 ACF Nationals]]). The only players to have won three of the four legs are [[Shantanu Jha]] (all but HSNCT) and Tommy Casalaspi (all but NSC). Adams is also the only player to win at five different nationals in his career (the Grand Slam plus College History Bowl), or six if Chicago Open is counted.<br />
<br />
==NAQT Levels==<br />
<br />
No name has yet been coined for the accumulation of different levels of NAQT championship. Theoretically there are nine national NAQT titles that any player could win over the course of their education ([[MSNCT]], [[IPNCT|IPNCT Middle School]], [[SSNCT]], [[HSNCT]], [[IPNCT|IPNCT High School]], [[CCCT]], [[ICT|ICT Division II]], [[ICT|ICT Division I Undergraduate]], and [[ICT|ICT Division I Overall]]). Some of these titles are relatively young, making it impossible or virtually impossible for a player to have won certain combinations of them.<br />
<br />
The most of these titles earned by anyone player is three, done by [[Jeff Hoppes]] (ICT Division II, ICT Division I Undergraduate, and ICT Division I Overall); [[Chris Ray]] (HSNCT, ICT Division II, and ICT Division I Overall); [[Evan Adams]] (HSNCT, ICT Division I Undergraduate, ICT Division I Overall); [[Tommy Casalaspi]] (HSNCT, ICT Division I Undergraduate, and ICT Division I Overall), [[Matt Jackson]] (ICT Division II, ICT Division I Overall, and <br />
ICT Division I Undergraduate, in that order), and [[Ashvin Srivatsa]] (ICT Division II, ICT Division I Overall, and ICT Division I Undergraduate). Both Ray and Casalaspi won their three levels in three consecutive years. None of the six players are eligible to win any of the titles they have not won, nor can they become eligible to do so unless NAQT makes absurd changes to its eligibility rules.<br />
<br />
In addition to Hoppes, Jackson, Ray, and Srivatsa, six other players have won ICT Division II and later won ICT Division I Overall: [[David Farris]], [[Paul Lujan]], [[Brendan Shapiro]], [[Charles Meigs]], [[Seth Samelson]], and [[Kevin Koai]]. Berkeley's 2006 ICT Division I Overall championship team consisted entirely of former ICT Division II winners, who had won those titles with three different undergraduate schools.<br />
<br />
[[J.R. Roach]] has won both HSNCT (2010) and ICT Division I Overall (2015) titles.<br />
<br />
==Double Undefeated==<br />
<br />
The next tier above winning both ICT and ACF Nationals in one year is for a team to do so without losing a game at either tournament. [[1999 Chicago]], [[2002 Michigan]], and [[2007 Chicago]] are the only teams who have ever accomplished this. The high school equivalent, winning both HSNCT and PACE NSC without losing a game, has only been accomplished by [[2005 Thomas Jefferson (VA)|Thomas Jefferson]].<br />
<br />
==High School==<br />
<br />
Since the creation of HSAPQ's [[NASAT]] in 2010, it has been possible for one high school (or, more realistically, a player from one high school) to win three high school national championships in one year, or three throughout one's high school career ([[HSNCT]], [[NSC]], and NASAT). This could be considered a high school Triple Crown. <br />
<br />
In 2014, [[Ben Jones]] and [[Arnav Sastry]] of [[LASA]] became the first players to win all of NSC, HSNCT, and NASAT in a single year. Jones had also been on LASA's national-championship [[NHBB]] team earlier in the year. Their feat was repeated in 2023 by [[Rohan Kher]] and [[Charles Young]] of [[Barrington]]. Some students from Thomas Jefferson won HSNCT, NSC, and NTAE in 2005.<br />
<br />
[[State College]] (played NASAT as Team Pennsylvania in 2010) and [[Ladue]] (played NASAT as Team Missouri in 2013) have won two of the three titles and finished second at the third event, during a year in which they attended all three. The only schools to unify the three titles across multiple years have been State College, which did so upon winning HSNCT in 2011, and LASA, which did so upon winning NSC in 2014.<br />
<br />
In 1991 [[1991 Dorman|Dorman]] entered all four high school national championships that existed at the time. They won the [[1991 NAC|National Academic Championship]], [[1991 Stars 2000|Stars 2000 National Academic Tournament]], and [[1991 PAC|Panasonic Academic Challenge]] and finished second at the [[1991 TOC|ASCN Tournament of Champions]]. Jim Paluszak, of this team, also played on Dorman's [[1989 NAC]] team, making him the only known 4-title player from before the modern era.<br />
<br />
The record for career high school titles considering only NSC, HSNCT, and NASAT is 5, held by [[Charles Young]] of [[Barrington]]. His titles are the 2021 HSNCT, 2021 NASAT, 2023 HSNCT, 2023 NSC, and 2023 NASAT. Several people have won 4 ([[Ben Jones]], [[Jacob Mikanowski]], [[Martin Devecka]], [[Sam Lederer]], [[Jacob Oppenheim]], [[Will Sullivan]], [[Graham Moyer]], [[Christoph Schlom]], [[David Liu]], and [[Rohan Kher]]). When considering all national championships including NHBB and non-pyramidal events, Lederer has 7 total titles (3 HSNCTs, 3 NTAEs, and 1 NSC), Mikanowski has 5 (3 NSCs, 1 HSNCT, and 1 NAC), and Jones has 5 (2 HSNCTs, 1 NSC, 1 NASAT, 1 NHBB). These are believed to be the only players other than Young with more than 4 titles under the more inclusive definition.<br />
<br />
==History Bowl==<br />
<br />
Several players have won at both the JV and Varsity levels of the high school [[NHBB]] competition. Two players, [[J.R. Roach]] and [[Tommy Casalaspi]], have played on the overall winning team at both the high school History Bowl national championship and the College History Bowl national championship. History Bowl awards titles from the elementary school level upwards, so future multi-level achievements are possible.<br />
<br />
==Four In One Year==<br />
<br />
In 2014, [[Ben Jones]] of [[LASA]] became the first player to win four national titles of any kind in one year, playing on the winning teams at National History Bowl, HSNCT, NSC, and NASAT.<br />
<br />
== External Links ==<br />
[http://chronicle.uchicago.edu/990429/quizbowl.shtml The University of Chicago describes the 1999 team's Triple Crown]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Quizbowl lingo]]<br />
[[Category:Original QBWiki Page]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Multi-championship_achievements&diff=61472Multi-championship achievements2023-06-18T21:45:17Z<p>David Reinstein: /* High School */</p>
<hr />
<div>Because quizbowl players enjoy analyzing things of this nature, there have been several attempts to recognize possible unique or milestone types of combinations of national championships that players or teams could win.<br />
<br />
==Classic Triple Crown==<br />
The term "'''Triple Crown'''" was popular circa the year 2000 to describe a set of three tournament titles: the [[NAQT ICT]] overall championship, the [[ACF Nationals]] championship, and the [[College Bowl]] national championship. Teams or players might be described as winning a "Triple Crown" in a career or a single year. As the NAQT ICT was only created in 1997, and College Bowl lost its relevance to quizbowl by the mid-2000s and ceased operating its namesake tournament entirely after 2008, the term had a limited window of currency.<br />
<br />
The 1999 [[Chicago]] and 2002 [[Michigan]] teams won the single-year Triple Crown. Three other programs won the all-time Triple Crown: [[Stanford]], by winning College Bowl in 1978, ICT in 1998, and ACF in 2010; [[Virginia]], which won the 2012 ICT, adding to their multiple 1990s College Bowl and ACF Nationals titles; and [[Maryland]], which won the 1981 College Bowl NCT, 2008 NAQT ICT, and 2017 ACF Nationals. Any team that won College Bowl before it went defunct could theoretically complete an all-time Triple Crown by winning ICT and ACF in the future. It is unlikely that any individual player will win a Triple Crown again, barring a former College Bowl champion returning to play in the modern age; [[Rob Carson]], who played on the 2007 College Bowl and 2011 ICT championship teams with Minnesota, presumably stands the best chance as he need only win ACF Nationals as a graduate student.<br />
<br />
In 2021 [[Columbia]], which won ACF Nationals in 2019, won both the [[2021 ICT|ICT]] and the first season of the revived [[College Bowl]] TV show. The three winning teams had three entirely distinct lineups. For several months in summer 2021, until Florida won [[2021 ACF Nationals]], Columbia became the third school to hold all three championships at once.<br />
<br />
Due to the variant styles from College Bowl to ACF Nationals with NAQT in the middle, those teams which had success at all three usually did so by fielding drastically different lineups at the various tournaments. Thus, [[Adam Kemezis]], on the 2002 Michigan team, was the only individual player to win a Triple Crown in a single year.<br />
<br />
At least eight other players, [[Jeff Bennett]], [[Ed Cohn]], [[Alice Chou]], [[Mike Davidson]], [[Susan Ferrari]], [[Matt Lafer]], [[John Sheahan]], and [[Andrew Yaphe]], have won a career Triple Crown. Bennett, Cohn, Ferrari, and Sheahan won all the relevant tournaments with Chicago, Lafer and Davidson did so with Michigan, and Yaphe and Chou each won the College Bowl and ACF legs at Virginia before winning an ICT (and additional ACF titles) with Chicago.<br />
<br />
==Modern Triple Crown==<br />
<onlyinclude><br />
A modern interpretation of the Triple Crown might refer to winning the NAQT ICT, ACF Nationals, and [[Chicago Open]] in the same year, as those are clearly the three most prestigious and popular hard tournaments. No single school's team has done this (nor has any team composed of players from a single school ever won Chicago Open at all). The individual players to have accomplished a single-year Triple Crown are:<br />
* [[Ezequiel Berdichevsky]] (2005)<br />
* [[Matt Bollinger]] (2014)<br />
* [[Evan Adams]] (2014)<br />
* [[Tommy Casalaspi]] (2014)</onlyinclude><br />
<br />
In 2014, those three [[Virginia]] players all won the Triple Crown, joining forces with [[Dennis Loo]] at ICT and ACF, and [[Eric Mukherjee]] at Chicago Open; moreover, Bollinger was the leading scorer at all three tournaments. [[Seth Teitler]] managed the lesser but admirable achievement of finishing ''second'', to teams containing Ezequiel, at all three tournaments in 2005; [[Matt Jackson]] did the same in 2014.<br />
<br />
Seven times, a player has finished first in two of the Triple Crown events and second in the third: <br />
* Ezequiel Berdichevsky (2001, 2nd at ICT)<br />
* Ezequiel Berdichevsky (2002, 2nd at Chicago Open)<br />
* [[Jeff Hoppes]] (2004, 2nd at Nationals)<br />
* Seth Teitler (2004, 2nd at Nationals)<br />
* [[Adam Kemezis]] (2005, 2nd at Chicago Open)<br />
* [[Andrew Hart]] (2011, 2nd at Nationals)<br />
* [[Matt Bollinger]] (2012, 2nd at Nationals)<br />
<br />
===Career Triple Crown===<br />
<br />
Career winners of the Modern Triple Crown, i.e. people who have won at least one ICT, ACF Nationals, and CO across their entire quizbowl playing careers, in addition to the four above, are (first win of each title listed after each name):<br />
* [[Andrew Yaphe]] (1997 ACF, 1999 ICT, 2001 CO)<br />
* [[Jeff Hoppes]] (2003 ACF, 2004 ICT, 2004 CO) <br />
* [[Seth Teitler]] (2003 ACF, 2004 ICT, 2004 CO) <br />
* [[Matt Lafer]] (2005 ICT, 2005 ACF, 2006 CO) <br />
* [[Selene Koo]] (2007 ICT, 2007 ACF, 2011 CO)<br />
* [[Kevin Koai]] (2010 CO, 2011 ACF, 2013 ICT)<br />
* [[Matt Jackson]] (2011 ACF, 2013 ICT, 2015 CO)<br />
* [[John Lawrence]] (2011 ACF, 2012 CO, 2016 ICT)<br />
* [[Auroni Gupta]] (2015 CO, 2016 ACF, 2017 ICT)<br />
* [[Will Nediger]] (2016 ACF, 2016 CO, 2017 ICT)<br />
<br />
Additionally, [[Jeff Hoppes]], [[Kevin Koai]], and [[Matt Jackson]] won Division II ICT in their freshman years.<br />
<br />
==Grand Slam==<br />
<br />
This term was coined during [[ACF Nationals 2012]] for a single player winning all four major overall championships in quizbowl--the high school [[PACE NSC]] and [[NAQT HSNCT]] and the top [[ACF Nationals]] and [[NAQT ICT]] titles--in a career.<br />
<br />
It would also have been theoretically possible, but exceedingly difficult and unlikely, for a high school student with dual-enrollment college player status to win these all in one year. As of 2019, NAQT no longer permits players to participate in both high school and college championships in the same year even if otherwise eligible. Changes to ACF eligibility around the same time period have also made almost all formerly eligible dual-enrolled high school students ineligible to participate in ACF for college teams, though this eligibility status is not completely impossible to achieve, and does not depend on what high school tournaments the student plays.<br />
<br />
The only known player to have won the Grand Slam is [[Evan Adams]] ([[2007 HSNCT]], [[2007 NSC]], [[2012 ICT|2012 (and 2014) ICT]], [[2014 ACF Nationals]]). The only players to have won three of the four legs are [[Shantanu Jha]] (all but HSNCT) and Tommy Casalaspi (all but NSC). Adams is also the only player to win at five different nationals in his career (the Grand Slam plus College History Bowl), or six if Chicago Open is counted.<br />
<br />
==NAQT Levels==<br />
<br />
No name has yet been coined for the accumulation of different levels of NAQT championship. Theoretically there are nine national NAQT titles that any player could win over the course of their education ([[MSNCT]], [[IPNCT|IPNCT Middle School]], [[SSNCT]], [[HSNCT]], [[IPNCT|IPNCT High School]], [[CCCT]], [[ICT|ICT Division II]], [[ICT|ICT Division I Undergraduate]], and [[ICT|ICT Division I Overall]]). Some of these titles are relatively young, making it impossible or virtually impossible for a player to have won certain combinations of them.<br />
<br />
The most of these titles earned by anyone player is three, done by [[Jeff Hoppes]] (ICT Division II, ICT Division I Undergraduate, and ICT Division I Overall); [[Chris Ray]] (HSNCT, ICT Division II, and ICT Division I Overall); [[Evan Adams]] (HSNCT, ICT Division I Undergraduate, ICT Division I Overall); [[Tommy Casalaspi]] (HSNCT, ICT Division I Undergraduate, and ICT Division I Overall), [[Matt Jackson]] (ICT Division II, ICT Division I Overall, and <br />
ICT Division I Undergraduate, in that order), and [[Ashvin Srivatsa]] (ICT Division II, ICT Division I Overall, and ICT Division I Undergraduate). Both Ray and Casalaspi won their three levels in three consecutive years. None of the six players are eligible to win any of the titles they have not won, nor can they become eligible to do so unless NAQT makes absurd changes to its eligibility rules.<br />
<br />
In addition to Hoppes, Jackson, Ray, and Srivatsa, six other players have won ICT Division II and later won ICT Division I Overall: [[David Farris]], [[Paul Lujan]], [[Brendan Shapiro]], [[Charles Meigs]], [[Seth Samelson]], and [[Kevin Koai]]. Berkeley's 2006 ICT Division I Overall championship team consisted entirely of former ICT Division II winners, who had won those titles with three different undergraduate schools.<br />
<br />
[[J.R. Roach]] has won both HSNCT (2010) and ICT Division I Overall (2015) titles.<br />
<br />
==Double Undefeated==<br />
<br />
The next tier above winning both ICT and ACF Nationals in one year is for a team to do so without losing a game at either tournament. [[1999 Chicago]], [[2002 Michigan]], and [[2007 Chicago]] are the only teams who have ever accomplished this. The high school equivalent, winning both HSNCT and PACE NSC without losing a game, has only been accomplished by [[2005 Thomas Jefferson (VA)|Thomas Jefferson]].<br />
<br />
==High School==<br />
<br />
Since the creation of HSAPQ's [[NASAT]] in 2010, it has been possible for one high school (or, more realistically, a player from one high school) to win three high school national championships in one year, or three throughout one's high school career ([[HSNCT]], [[NSC]], and NASAT). This could be considered a high school Triple Crown. <br />
<br />
In 2014, [[Ben Jones]] and [[Arnav Sastry]] of [[LASA]] became the first players to win all of NSC, HSNCT, and NASAT in a single year. Jones had also been on LASA's national-championship [[NHBB]] team earlier in the year. Their feat was repeated in 2023 by [[Rohan Kher]] and [[Charles Young]] of [[Barrington]].<br />
<br />
[[State College]] (played NASAT as Team Pennsylvania in 2010) and [[Ladue]] (played NASAT as Team Missouri in 2013) have won two of the three titles and finished second at the third event, during a year in which they attended all three. The only schools to unify the three titles across multiple years have been State College, which did so upon winning HSNCT in 2011, and LASA, which did so upon winning NSC in 2014.<br />
<br />
In 1991 [[1991 Dorman|Dorman]] entered all four high school national championships that existed at the time. They won the [[1991 NAC|National Academic Championship]], [[1991 Stars 2000|Stars 2000 National Academic Tournament]], and [[1991 PAC|Panasonic Academic Challenge]] and finished second at the [[1991 TOC|ASCN Tournament of Champions]]. Jim Paluszak, of this team, also played on Dorman's [[1989 NAC]] team, making him the only known 4-title player from before the modern era.<br />
<br />
The record for career high school titles considering only NSC, HSNCT, and NASAT is 5, held by [[Charles Young]] of [[Barrington]]. His titles are the 2021 HSNCT, 2021 NASAT, 2023 HSNCT, 2023 NSC, and 2023 NASAT. Several people have won 4 ([[Ben Jones]], [[Jacob Mikanowski]], [[Martin Devecka]], [[Sam Lederer]], [[Jacob Oppenheim]], [[Will Sullivan]], [[Graham Moyer]], [[Christoph Schlom]], [[David Liu]], and [[Rohan Kher]]). When considering all national championships including NHBB and non-pyramidal events, Lederer has 7 total titles (3 HSNCTs, 3 NTAEs, and 1 NSC), Mikanowski has 5 (3 NSCs, 1 HSNCT, and 1 NAC), and Jones has 5 (2 HSNCTs, 1 NSC, 1 NASAT, 1 NHBB). These are believed to be the only players other than Young with more than 4 titles under the more inclusive definition.<br />
<br />
==History Bowl==<br />
<br />
Several players have won at both the JV and Varsity levels of the high school [[NHBB]] competition. Two players, [[J.R. Roach]] and [[Tommy Casalaspi]], have played on the overall winning team at both the high school History Bowl national championship and the College History Bowl national championship. History Bowl awards titles from the elementary school level upwards, so future multi-level achievements are possible.<br />
<br />
==Four In One Year==<br />
<br />
In 2014, [[Ben Jones]] of [[LASA]] became the first player to win four national titles of any kind in one year, playing on the winning teams at National History Bowl, HSNCT, NSC, and NASAT.<br />
<br />
== External Links ==<br />
[http://chronicle.uchicago.edu/990429/quizbowl.shtml The University of Chicago describes the 1999 team's Triple Crown]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Quizbowl lingo]]<br />
[[Category:Original QBWiki Page]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Canyon_Crest&diff=61470Canyon Crest2023-06-18T11:50:55Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Highschoolteam|Name = Canyon Crest Academy<br />
|image = ccaqblogo.png<br />
|citystate = San Diego, CA<br />
|currentcoach = Brian Shay (2016-)<br />
|currentpres = Chris Jung, Claire Wang, Yaj Jhajhria<br />
|state = NAQT: 2012, 2017, 2018<br />
|nats = none<br />
|nats appearances = HSNCT: 2012, 2013, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023 <br>NSC: 2016-2019, 2021, 2022, 2023<br />
|status = Active<br />
|size = Unknown<br />
| }}<br />
'''Canyon Crest Academy''', often known simply as '''Canyon Crest''' or '''CCA''' is a prestigious public school in San Diego, California. They are active in the Southern California (SoCal) high school circuit and have consistently ranked as one of the premier teams in the region, along with prestigious programs [[Del Norte]], [[Arcadia]], and [[Westview (CA)|Westview]]. They have consistently fielded teams at both [[HSNCT]] and [[NSC]] national tournaments. Canyon Crest notably placed 6th at the [[2016 NSC]] and 12th at the [[2018 HSNCT]].<br />
<br />
CCA's annual high school tournament, [[PPT]], is usually held in the fall and on NAQT questions. In 2023 CCA hosted '''VALORANT''', a middle school tournament.<br />
<br />
==2023-24 players==<br />
<br />
* Claire Wang<br />
* Yaj Jhajhria<br />
* Andrew Tsui<br />
* Alex Xu<br />
* Shail Bhatmuley<br />
* Lorenzo Lesmes<br />
* Ishank Kadadi<br />
* Austin Xu<br />
...et al.<br />
<br />
==Former players==<br />
<br />
* [[Wesley Zhang]] (captain)<br />
* Raymond Song (co-pres.)<br />
* Shreyank Kadadi (co-pres.)<br />
* [[Alan Zhu]]<br />
* Jasper Chen<br />
* Paul Mola<br />
* Jonathan Hsieh<br />
* Cade McAllister<br />
* Leo Gu<br />
* Andrew Gao<br />
* Chris Jung<br />
...et al.<br />
<br />
==2020-21 Season==<br />
<br />
* Presidents: Cade McAllister (11), Andrew Gao (11), and Chris Jung (10)<br />
* Secretary: Leo Gu (11)<br />
* Treasurer: Yaj Jhajhria (9)<br />
<br />
Canyon Crest Academy's 2020-21 Season, like most teams, marked the first fully online QuizBowl season. In addition, this season marked the arrival of freshmen Yaj Jhajhria (Carmel Valley), Andrew Tsui (Hong Kong), Hans Yang (Carmel Valley), Aaron Combs (New Jersey), Inchara J. (Carmel Valley), and Alex Xu (Carmel Valley - Note: Alex did not attend any tournaments until the 2022-23 season). CCAQB also hosted two school events, titled "Raven Jeopardy" and "Teachers v. Students" which helped to draw further participation and member registration.<br />
<br />
The team participated in three online tournaments in the fall. Two teams comprising novice players were registered for the [[2020 California Novice]] tournament, played on [[TAILS]], a novice question set. Canyon Crest A finished 6-2 overall with a narrow 405-420 loss to [[Gunn]] in the single-elimination formatted playoffs, led by an impressive 88.75 PPG (43/11/9) performance from freshman Aaron Combs (3rd Overall). Canyon Crest B finished 2-6, with Andrew Tsui (9) finished with 65 PPG. At [[Triton Fall]], the first SoCal and two-division circuit tournament (Varsity: LONE-STAR, JV: IS-194A), Canyon Crest A finished 5-5 in an extremely competitive Varsity Division. The team was led by Andrew Gao's 65.38 PPG and 3.54P/G (23/11/6) in 6.5 games, whilst Leo Gu (38.95 PPG), Chris Jung (20.53 PPG), and Kevin Luo (12.11 PPG) made solid contributions. Freshman Aaron Combs also appeared in 6 games, netting a 10 PPG with 2 powers. Canyon Crest B and C appeared in the JV Division, with B going 9-3 behind 52.17 PPG (20/35/10) and 43 PPG (7/35/5) performances from Yaj Jhajhria and Ethan Gross respectively whilst C went 5-6. At '''ACE IV''' (played on RAFT II, a Regs-level Set - single division), Canyon Crest A finished 6-3 and T-3rd OVR (2-1 playoffs, tie with Santa Monica B) with 52.57 PPG (20/23/14) and 44.57 PPG (15/18/3) performances by Leo Gu and Chris Jung respectively. This marked CCA's first tournament appearance that season without Andrew Gao and Cade McAllister's entry into the Canyon Crest A roster. Canyon Crest B and C finished 9th and 7th respectively, with Aaron Combs finishing with 85.45 PPG on Canyon Crest C, 2nd overall in the tournament and the team's year-high individual PPG. The tournament was unfortunately marred by the disqualification of [[St. Margaret's]] and Del Norte A.<br />
<br />
At [[Triton Winter]] IX (Varsity: IS-197, JV: IS-196A), a depleted Canyon Crest A team finished 5-5 although Leo Gu recorded 48 PPG (21/26/19) with a significant number of negs. The absences of starters Chris Jung and Andrew Gao contributed to this performance, although the tournament gave opportunity to freshmen Aaron Combs and Yaj Jhajhria to participate in team A. Canyon Crest B finished 6-2 in the JV Division, with Ethan Gross (11) narrowly falling short of the JV-ban cut with a 49.38 PPG (7/34/10). Internally, it was elucidated and confirmed that Aaron Combs participated in dishonest and ilicit activities during circuit tournaments, including at Triton Winter. Canyon Crest A continued to disappoint in their second tournament of 2021 at '''DNE IV''' (Varsity: MCMT, JV: Eris), finishing 4-5 albeit with absences from Andrew Gao and Leo Gu. However, CCA B finished 6-3 in the JV Division with Andrew Tsui getting JV-banned with a 53.89 PPG (21/19/4) and Ethan Gross narrowly missing the cut once again with a 48.46 PPG (16/12/9). <br />
<br />
'''SRIRACHA!''' ([[DART I]], a Regs+ Set) was arguably Canyon Crest's most important circuit tournament of the 2020-21 season, with the team vying to qualify a second team for the [[2021 NSC]]. Once again shorthanded in a top-heavy Southern California circuit, Canyon Crest A finished 6th in a single-bracket, 14-team tournament. Leo Gu and Chris Jung both impressed with 47.5 (18/31/21) and 38.5 (11/24/4) PPG respectively. Despite Andrew Gao appearing for two games with Ethan Gross, Andrew Sun, and Yaj Jhajhria all being assembled in an attempt to qualify, the team fell to 3-7, with Yaj's 9 powers being the team's only positive from the tournament. Meanwhile, on Canyon Crest C, Andrew Tsui recorded his career-high thus far with a 7th overall, 61.11 PPG performance (20/27/4) or 2.22 powers per game. <br />
<br />
The remaining months leading up to nationals saw Canyon Crest participate in three tournaments. Canyon Crest first participated in the '''West Coast Championships''', the defacto state-wide tournament for the 2020-21 season. On April 10th, Canyon Crest Appeared in [[ReKT]], finishing 4th behind nationally ranked [[Kinkaid]], [[Arcadia]], and [[Santa Monica]] A. This tournament was Leo Gu's most impressive of the season, with the junior recording a 63.33 PPG (30/22/20) record. This also marked Andrew Tsui's first Team A appearance. A B team was also submitted, although they finished in last place with no victories as the team was comprised fully of inexperienced seniors. Finally, at '''CHASE''', Canyon Crest finished 4th (5-5) in a tournament missing top teams and CCA fielding a full team. Leo Gu notched 42.45 PPG (17/23/21) with Chris Jung close behind with 42.13 PPG (13/16/4) but significantly less negs. CCA also hosted [[PPT]] IV, the fourth iteration of the school's tournament (the first edition online)<br />
<br />
At [[2021 HSNCT]], Canyon Crest finished with a 5-3 preliminary record, enough to earn a berth in the double-elimination playoffs bracket. However, they were consecutively defeated by [[Adlai E. Stevenson]] and [[La Jolla]] to end the tournament T-72nd. The La Jolla match in particular, responsible for Canyon Crest's exit at the tournament, was particularly controversial due to La Jolla player Andrew Park's later-exposed cheating. The team faced a severe drop in scoring, failing to scale well to nationals-level packets despite ample preparation at circuit-level tournaments, with Chris Jung and Leo Gu both earning 24.5 PPGs (3/22/4 and 5/31/28) respectively. The team also featured Kevin Luo (whose dormitory room unfortunately caught on fire) and Cade McAllister, with Andrew Gao failing to appear. Leo Gu's 28 negs in 10 rounds were also the tournament's high and potentially a record. <br />
<br />
At [[2021 NSC]], Canyon Crest finished 53rd out of 80 with a 5-8 overall record, losing 6 out of their opening 8 games although their opponents included [[Detroit Catholic Central]], [[Solon]], and [[St. Mark's]]. The tournament was marked by a low PPB of 15.36, further indicating the team's lack of coverage and depth at the nationals-level, with lead-scorer (for most of the year) Leo Gu 3rd on his team with a 27.5 PPG (5/23). This tournament marked Chris Jung's ascendency to the role as CCA's top scorer with a 44.62 PPG performance (16/26). Andrew Gao's 11 powers and Cade McAllister's appearance rounded off the roster and CCA's 2020-21 season. <br />
<br />
==2021-22 Season==<br />
<br />
* Presidents: Chris Jung (11), Andrew Gao (12), and Ethan Gross (12)<br />
* Secretary: Leo Gu (12)<br />
* Treasurer: Cade McAllister (12)<br />
<br />
Canyon Crest Academy's 2021-22 Season was characterized by a return to in-person tournaments and masking during tourneys (until around March). In addition, this season marked the arrival of freshman Claire Wang (Maryland) who would greatly improve the team's literature and fine arts coverage, and later become CCA's lead scorer. The club's officers remained largely unchained, with the exception of Ethan Gross' (12) election to Co-President, Cade McAllister's (12) move to Treasurer, and the absence of Yaj Jhajhria (10) although he would be crucial towards PPT V's logistics. CCA hosted the fifth iteration of [[PPT]] to open the 2021-22 Southern California QuizBowl circuit season. <br />
<br />
There would not be any tournaments hosted at Canyon Crest Academy until [[DNE]] V (Varsity: [[DART]] II, JV: IS-203A) where a new look Canyon Crest A participated, represented by Chris Jung (11 - the only remnant from the 2020-21 A team roster), Yaj Jhajhria (10), Claire Wang (9), and Andrew Tsui (10). Despite the team being almost fully underclassmen, fully during rounds 7-10, the team finished 7-3 and 2nd overall behind the undefeated [[Arcadia]]. This included two victories over [[Westview]] A and a win over [[Santa Monica]] A. Chris Jung's 50 PPG (7/20/1) indicated a new era of stability and (temporarily) conservative buzzing, whilst freshman Claire Wang's 43 PPG debut (4/37/0) demonstrated extreme promise for the program's future (Author's note: Such a high volume of buzzing without a single neg is almost impossible for CCAQB's players). Yaj Jhajhria's 5 powers and Andrew Tsui's 4 powers rounded off the team's overachieving performance at the tournament. <br />
<br />
[[Category: Stubs]]<br />
[[Category: High school teams]]<br />
[[Category: California high school teams]]<br />
[[Category:Canyon Crest]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Multi-championship_achievements&diff=61394Multi-championship achievements2023-06-11T22:59:08Z<p>David Reinstein: /* High School */</p>
<hr />
<div>Because quizbowl players enjoy analyzing things of this nature, there have been several attempts to recognize possible unique or milestone types of combinations of national championships that players or teams could win.<br />
<br />
==Classic Triple Crown==<br />
The term "'''Triple Crown'''" was popular circa the year 2000 to describe a set of three tournament titles: the [[NAQT ICT]] overall championship, the [[ACF Nationals]] championship, and the [[College Bowl]] national championship. Teams or players might be described as winning a "Triple Crown" in a career or a single year. As the NAQT ICT was only created in 1997, and College Bowl lost its relevance to quizbowl by the mid-2000s and ceased operating its namesake tournament entirely after 2008, the term had a limited window of currency.<br />
<br />
The 1999 [[Chicago]] and 2002 [[Michigan]] teams won the single-year Triple Crown. Three other programs won the all-time Triple Crown: [[Stanford]], by winning College Bowl in 1978, ICT in 1998, and ACF in 2010; [[Virginia]], which won the 2012 ICT, adding to their multiple 1990s College Bowl and ACF Nationals titles; and [[Maryland]], which won the 1981 College Bowl NCT, 2008 NAQT ICT, and 2017 ACF Nationals. Any team that won College Bowl before it went defunct could theoretically complete an all-time Triple Crown by winning ICT and ACF in the future. It is unlikely that any individual player will win a Triple Crown again, barring a former College Bowl champion returning to play in the modern age; [[Rob Carson]], who played on the 2007 College Bowl and 2011 ICT championship teams with Minnesota, presumably stands the best chance as he need only win ACF Nationals as a graduate student.<br />
<br />
In 2021 [[Columbia]], which won ACF Nationals in 2019, won both the [[2021 ICT|ICT]] and the first season of the revived [[College Bowl]] TV show. The three winning teams had three entirely distinct lineups. For several months in summer 2021, until Florida won [[2021 ACF Nationals]], Columbia became the third school to hold all three championships at once.<br />
<br />
Due to the variant styles from College Bowl to ACF Nationals with NAQT in the middle, those teams which had success at all three usually did so by fielding drastically different lineups at the various tournaments. Thus, [[Adam Kemezis]], on the 2002 Michigan team, was the only individual player to win a Triple Crown in a single year.<br />
<br />
At least eight other players, [[Jeff Bennett]], [[Ed Cohn]], [[Alice Chou]], [[Mike Davidson]], [[Susan Ferrari]], [[Matt Lafer]], [[John Sheahan]], and [[Andrew Yaphe]], have won a career Triple Crown. Bennett, Cohn, Ferrari, and Sheahan won all the relevant tournaments with Chicago, Lafer and Davidson did so with Michigan, and Yaphe and Chou each won the College Bowl and ACF legs at Virginia before winning an ICT (and additional ACF titles) with Chicago.<br />
<br />
==Modern Triple Crown==<br />
<onlyinclude><br />
A modern interpretation of the Triple Crown might refer to winning the NAQT ICT, ACF Nationals, and [[Chicago Open]] in the same year, as those are clearly the three most prestigious and popular hard tournaments. No single school's team has done this (nor has any team composed of players from a single school ever won Chicago Open at all). The individual players to have accomplished a single-year Triple Crown are:<br />
* [[Ezequiel Berdichevsky]] (2005)<br />
* [[Matt Bollinger]] (2014)<br />
* [[Evan Adams]] (2014)<br />
* [[Tommy Casalaspi]] (2014)</onlyinclude><br />
<br />
In 2014, those three [[Virginia]] players all won the Triple Crown, joining forces with [[Dennis Loo]] at ICT and ACF, and [[Eric Mukherjee]] at Chicago Open; moreover, Bollinger was the leading scorer at all three tournaments. [[Seth Teitler]] managed the lesser but admirable achievement of finishing ''second'', to teams containing Ezequiel, at all three tournaments in 2005; [[Matt Jackson]] did the same in 2014.<br />
<br />
Seven times, a player has finished first in two of the Triple Crown events and second in the third: <br />
* Ezequiel Berdichevsky (2001, 2nd at ICT)<br />
* Ezequiel Berdichevsky (2002, 2nd at Chicago Open)<br />
* [[Jeff Hoppes]] (2004, 2nd at Nationals)<br />
* Seth Teitler (2004, 2nd at Nationals)<br />
* [[Adam Kemezis]] (2005, 2nd at Chicago Open)<br />
* [[Andrew Hart]] (2011, 2nd at Nationals)<br />
* [[Matt Bollinger]] (2012, 2nd at Nationals)<br />
<br />
===Career Triple Crown===<br />
<br />
Career winners of the Modern Triple Crown, i.e. people who have won at least one ICT, ACF Nationals, and CO across their entire quizbowl playing careers, in addition to the four above, are (first win of each title listed after each name):<br />
* [[Andrew Yaphe]] (1997 ACF, 1999 ICT, 2001 CO)<br />
* [[Jeff Hoppes]] (2003 ACF, 2004 ICT, 2004 CO) <br />
* [[Seth Teitler]] (2003 ACF, 2004 ICT, 2004 CO) <br />
* [[Matt Lafer]] (2005 ICT, 2005 ACF, 2006 CO) <br />
* [[Selene Koo]] (2007 ICT, 2007 ACF, 2011 CO)<br />
* [[Kevin Koai]] (2010 CO, 2011 ACF, 2013 ICT)<br />
* [[Matt Jackson]] (2011 ACF, 2013 ICT, 2015 CO)<br />
* [[John Lawrence]] (2011 ACF, 2012 CO, 2016 ICT)<br />
* [[Auroni Gupta]] (2015 CO, 2016 ACF, 2017 ICT)<br />
* [[Will Nediger]] (2016 ACF, 2016 CO, 2017 ICT)<br />
<br />
Additionally, [[Jeff Hoppes]], [[Kevin Koai]], and [[Matt Jackson]] won Division II ICT in their freshman years.<br />
<br />
==Grand Slam==<br />
<br />
This term was coined during [[ACF Nationals 2012]] for a single player winning all four major overall championships in quizbowl--the high school [[PACE NSC]] and [[NAQT HSNCT]] and the top [[ACF Nationals]] and [[NAQT ICT]] titles--in a career.<br />
<br />
It would also have been theoretically possible, but exceedingly difficult and unlikely, for a high school student with dual-enrollment college player status to win these all in one year. As of 2019, NAQT no longer permits players to participate in both high school and college championships in the same year even if otherwise eligible. Changes to ACF eligibility around the same time period have also made almost all formerly eligible dual-enrolled high school students ineligible to participate in ACF for college teams, though this eligibility status is not completely impossible to achieve, and does not depend on what high school tournaments the student plays.<br />
<br />
The only known player to have won the Grand Slam is [[Evan Adams]] ([[2007 HSNCT]], [[2007 NSC]], [[2012 ICT|2012 (and 2014) ICT]], [[2014 ACF Nationals]]). The only players to have won three of the four legs are [[Shantanu Jha]] (all but HSNCT) and Tommy Casalaspi (all but NSC). Adams is also the only player to win at five different nationals in his career (the Grand Slam plus College History Bowl), or six if Chicago Open is counted.<br />
<br />
==NAQT Levels==<br />
<br />
No name has yet been coined for the accumulation of different levels of NAQT championship. Theoretically there are nine national NAQT titles that any player could win over the course of their education ([[MSNCT]], [[IPNCT|IPNCT Middle School]], [[SSNCT]], [[HSNCT]], [[IPNCT|IPNCT High School]], [[CCCT]], [[ICT|ICT Division II]], [[ICT|ICT Division I Undergraduate]], and [[ICT|ICT Division I Overall]]). Some of these titles are relatively young, making it impossible or virtually impossible for a player to have won certain combinations of them.<br />
<br />
The most of these titles earned by anyone player is three, done by [[Jeff Hoppes]] (ICT Division II, ICT Division I Undergraduate, and ICT Division I Overall); [[Chris Ray]] (HSNCT, ICT Division II, and ICT Division I Overall); [[Evan Adams]] (HSNCT, ICT Division I Undergraduate, ICT Division I Overall); [[Tommy Casalaspi]] (HSNCT, ICT Division I Undergraduate, and ICT Division I Overall), [[Matt Jackson]] (ICT Division II, ICT Division I Overall, and <br />
ICT Division I Undergraduate, in that order), and [[Ashvin Srivatsa]] (ICT Division II, ICT Division I Overall, and ICT Division I Undergraduate). Both Ray and Casalaspi won their three levels in three consecutive years. None of the six players are eligible to win any of the titles they have not won, nor can they become eligible to do so unless NAQT makes absurd changes to its eligibility rules.<br />
<br />
In addition to Hoppes, Jackson, Ray, and Srivatsa, six other players have won ICT Division II and later won ICT Division I Overall: [[David Farris]], [[Paul Lujan]], [[Brendan Shapiro]], [[Charles Meigs]], [[Seth Samelson]], and [[Kevin Koai]]. Berkeley's 2006 ICT Division I Overall championship team consisted entirely of former ICT Division II winners, who had won those titles with three different undergraduate schools.<br />
<br />
[[J.R. Roach]] has won both HSNCT (2010) and ICT Division I Overall (2015) titles.<br />
<br />
==Double Undefeated==<br />
<br />
The next tier above winning both ICT and ACF Nationals in one year is for a team to do so without losing a game at either tournament. [[1999 Chicago]], [[2002 Michigan]], and [[2007 Chicago]] are the only teams who have ever accomplished this. The high school equivalent, winning both HSNCT and PACE NSC without losing a game, has only been accomplished by [[2005 Thomas Jefferson (VA)|Thomas Jefferson]].<br />
<br />
==High School==<br />
<br />
Since the creation of HSAPQ's [[NASAT]] in 2010, it has been possible for one high school (or, more realistically, a player from one high school) to win three high school national championships in one year, or three throughout one's high school career ([[HSNCT]], [[NSC]], and NASAT). This could be considered a high school Triple Crown. <br />
<br />
In 2014, [[Ben Jones]] and [[Arnav Sastry]] of [[LASA]] became the first players to win all of NSC, HSNCT, and NASAT in a single year. Jones had also been on LASA's national-championship [[NHBB]] team earlier in the year.<br />
<br />
[[State College]] (played NASAT as Team Pennsylvania in 2010) and [[Ladue]] (played NASAT as Team Missouri in 2013) have won two of the three titles and finished second at the third event, during a year in which they attended all three. The only schools to unify the three titles across multiple years have been State College, which did so upon winning HSNCT in 2011, and LASA, which did so upon winning NSC in 2014.<br />
<br />
In 1991 [[1991 Dorman|Dorman]] entered all four high school national championships that existed at the time. They won the [[1991 NAC|National Academic Championship]], [[1991 Stars 2000|Stars 2000 National Academic Tournament]], and [[1991 PAC|Panasonic Academic Challenge]] and finished second at the [[1991 TOC|ASCN Tournament of Champions]]. Jim Paluszak, of this team, also played on Dorman's [[1989 NAC]] team, making him the only known 4-title player from before the modern era.<br />
<br />
The record for career high school titles considering only NSC, HSNCT, and NASAT is 4, held by several people ([[Ben Jones]], [[Jacob Mikanowski]], [[Martin Devecka]], [[Sam Lederer]], [[Jacob Oppenheim]], [[Will Sullivan]], [[Graham Moyer]], [[Christoph Schlom]], [[David Liu]], and [[Charles Young]].) When considering all national championships including NHBB and non-pyramidal events, Lederer has 7 total titles (3 HSNCTs, 3 NTAEs, and 1 NSC), Mikanowski has 5 (3 NSCs, 1 HSNCT, and 1 NAC), and Jones has 5 (2 HSNCTs, 1 NSC, 1 NASAT, 1 NHBB). These are believed to be the only players with more than 4 titles under the more inclusive definition.<br />
<br />
==History Bowl==<br />
<br />
Several players have won at both the JV and Varsity levels of the high school [[NHBB]] competition. Two players, [[J.R. Roach]] and [[Tommy Casalaspi]], have played on the overall winning team at both the high school History Bowl national championship and the College History Bowl national championship. History Bowl awards titles from the elementary school level upwards, so future multi-level achievements are possible.<br />
<br />
==Four In One Year==<br />
<br />
In 2014, [[Ben Jones]] of [[LASA]] became the first player to win four national titles of any kind in one year, playing on the winning teams at National History Bowl, HSNCT, NSC, and NASAT.<br />
<br />
== External Links ==<br />
[http://chronicle.uchicago.edu/990429/quizbowl.shtml The University of Chicago describes the 1999 team's Triple Crown]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Quizbowl lingo]]<br />
[[Category:Original QBWiki Page]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Talk:Sandburg&diff=61130Talk:Sandburg2023-05-25T15:57:52Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div>To the best of my knowledge and understanding (having worked with them but not explicitly talked about roles), Mike Woolley and Jeff Brigham are co-coaches and have been for a long time. Also, I may be biased, but I think it's worth noting that they've hosted [[Scobol Solo]] since 2021 (and I think they are likely to continue doing so, though I have no special knowledge here). [[User:Jonah Greenthal|—Jonah]] ([[User talk:Jonah Greenthal|talk]]) 22:16, 24 May 2023 (CDT)<br />
:Updated [[User:David Reinstein|David Reinstein]] ([[User talk:David Reinstein|talk]]) 10:57, 25 May 2023 (CDT)</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Sandburg&diff=61129Sandburg2023-05-25T15:56:48Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Highschoolteam|Name = Carl Sandburg Eagles<br />
|image = <br />
|citystate = Orland Park, Illinois<br />
|currentcoach = Jeff Brigham<br />
|state = none<br />
|size = 2831<br />
|status = active}}<br />
<br />
'''Carl Sandburg High School''' is a public school in Orland Park, Illinois, which is a southwest suburb of Chicago. It competes in Class AA, the "big school" division, of the [[Illinois High School Association]]'s State Championship series. The Eagles also compete in the [[Southwestern Suburban Conference]]. They have also been participants on [[Bergstrom Stateline]].<br />
<br />
Starting in 2016, they made the IHSA State Finals four years in a row after entering many invitationals, and they also started competing at National tournaments. The team is coached by Jeff Brigham. Mike Woolley, who won the first [[IHSSBCA Coach of the Year]] Tom Durbin Award in 2018, continues to play a role with the team even though he is retired from teaching. The strong teams were paced by the Vainikos triplets, who graduated in 2019. <br />
<br />
Sandburg became the main site for [[Scobol Solo]] starting in 2021.<br />
<br />
==Notable Team Accomplishments==<br />
*IHSA State Tournament: 2018 - 4th Place (2A)<br />
*IHSA Sectional titles: (8) 2023-2A, 2022-2A, 2021-2A, 2019-2A, 2018-2A, 2017-2A, 2016-2A, 2008-2A<br />
*IHSA Regional titles: (10) 2023-2A, 2022-2A, 2021-2A, 2019-2A, 2018-2A, 2017-2A, 2016-2A, 2015-2A, 2013-2A, 2008-2A<br />
*Masonic Sectional titles: 2022-3A, 2020-3A, 2018-3A <br />
*Southwestern Conference Champions: 2023, 2022, 2020, 2019, 2018, 2017<br />
*IHSSBCA NAQT Illinois State Championship: 2023 - 17th, 2020 - 15th, 2019 - 19th, 2018 - 13th<br />
<br />
==Individual Honors==<br />
===IHSSBCA All-Sectional Honorees===<br />
*2023: Matt Mokrzycki, Brandon Torres, Joseph Geovanes (2A)<br />
*2022: Kaitlyn Kenney, Armin Pazooki (2A)<br />
*2020: Eric Webb, Anthony Malysz, Kevin Lyvers (2A)<br />
*2019: Anthony Vainikos, Sofia Vainikos, Ben Walter (2A)<br />
*2018: Aristotle Vainikos, Claudia Danowski (2A)<br />
*2017: Aristotle Vainikos, Chirag Shah (2A)<br />
*2016: Yaseen Mozaffar, Helena Shaheen (2A)<br />
*2015: Alex Sandoval, Helena Shaheen (2A)<br />
*2014: Alex Sandoval (2A)<br />
<br />
===IHSSBCA All-State Honorees===<br />
*2023: Brandon Torres (Second Team) Class 2A<br />
*2019: Aristotle Vainikos (First Team) Class 2A<br />
*2018: Aristotle Vainikos (First Team) Class 2A<br />
*2017: Aristotle Vainikos (First Team) Class 2A<br />
<br />
===NAQT Individual National Player National Championship===<br />
*2019 - Aristotle Vainikos - 33rd<br />
*2018 - Aristotle Vainikos - 17th<br />
<br />
[[Category: High school teams]]<br />
[[Category: Illinois high school teams]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Sandburg&diff=61128Sandburg2023-05-25T15:55:17Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Highschoolteam|Name = Carl Sandburg Eagles<br />
|image = <br />
|citystate = Orland Park, Illinois<br />
|currentcoach = Jeff Brigham<br />
|state = none<br />
|size = 2831<br />
|status = active}}<br />
<br />
'''Carl Sandburg High School''' is a public school in Orland Park, Illinois, which is a southwest suburb of Chicago. It competes in Class AA, the "big school" division, of the [[Illinois High School Association]]'s State Championship series. The Eagles also compete in the [[Southwestern Suburban Conference]]. They have also been participants on [[Bergstrom Stateline]].<br />
<br />
Starting in 2016, they made the IHSA State Finals four years in a row after entering many invitationals, and they also started competing at National tournaments. The team is coached by Jeff Brigham. Mike Woolley, who won the first [[IHSSBCA Coach of the Year]] Tom Durbin Award in 2018, continues to play a role with the team even though he is retired from teaching. The strong teams were paced by the Vainikos triplets, who graduated in 2019. <br />
<br />
==Notable Team Accomplishments==<br />
*IHSA State Tournament: 2018 - 4th Place (2A)<br />
*IHSA Sectional titles: (8) 2023-2A, 2022-2A, 2021-2A, 2019-2A, 2018-2A, 2017-2A, 2016-2A, 2008-2A<br />
*IHSA Regional titles: (10) 2023-2A, 2022-2A, 2021-2A, 2019-2A, 2018-2A, 2017-2A, 2016-2A, 2015-2A, 2013-2A, 2008-2A<br />
*Masonic Sectional titles: 2022-3A, 2020-3A, 2018-3A <br />
*Southwestern Conference Champions: 2023, 2022, 2020, 2019, 2018, 2017<br />
*IHSSBCA NAQT Illinois State Championship: 2023 - 17th, 2020 - 15th, 2019 - 19th, 2018 - 13th<br />
<br />
==Individual Honors==<br />
===IHSSBCA All-Sectional Honorees===<br />
*2023: Matt Mokrzycki, Brandon Torres, Joseph Geovanes (2A)<br />
*2022: Kaitlyn Kenney, Armin Pazooki (2A)<br />
*2020: Eric Webb, Anthony Malysz, Kevin Lyvers (2A)<br />
*2019: Anthony Vainikos, Sofia Vainikos, Ben Walter (2A)<br />
*2018: Aristotle Vainikos, Claudia Danowski (2A)<br />
*2017: Aristotle Vainikos, Chirag Shah (2A)<br />
*2016: Yaseen Mozaffar, Helena Shaheen (2A)<br />
*2015: Alex Sandoval, Helena Shaheen (2A)<br />
*2014: Alex Sandoval (2A)<br />
<br />
===IHSSBCA All-State Honorees===<br />
*2023: Brandon Torres (Second Team) Class 2A<br />
*2019: Aristotle Vainikos (First Team) Class 2A<br />
*2018: Aristotle Vainikos (First Team) Class 2A<br />
*2017: Aristotle Vainikos (First Team) Class 2A<br />
<br />
===NAQT Individual National Player National Championship===<br />
*2019 - Aristotle Vainikos - 33rd<br />
*2018 - Aristotle Vainikos - 17th<br />
<br />
[[Category: High school teams]]<br />
[[Category: Illinois high school teams]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Illinois_Scholastic_Bowl&diff=60954Illinois Scholastic Bowl2023-05-18T17:26:16Z<p>David Reinstein: /* Famous/Infamous collegiate players */</p>
<hr />
<div>'''Scholastic Bowl''' in Illinois is played by over 500 high schools and 400 middle schools. It traditionally has been governed by the Illinois High School Association ([[IHSA]]) and Illinois Elementary School Association ([[IESA]]), and from roughly 1986-2006 most of its high school tournaments were played under IHSA Rules. The history of quizbowl in Illinois is very confusing, since it includes many mistakes at the same time as genuine progress.<br />
<br />
==History==<br />
===Little Quizbowl on the Prairie (1960s-1985)===<br />
Quizbowl in Illinois can be traced back at least as far back as the 1960s, and was originally more popular in Downstate Illinois than in the Chicago area. One of the first tournaments in the state to gain notability was the Senior Challenge held in Streator, which was open only to high school seniors. Questions were written by locals, and lockout systems were homemade. Local businesses sponsored the tournament, which was organized by the local Rotary Club.<br />
<br />
Certainly, there were other tournaments, with each tournament having a unique twist to their format. This became the key thread running through Illinois quizbowl throughout the 60s, 70s, and 80s: there was no universal set of rules.<br />
<br />
===IHSA Consensus Years (1986-2007)===<br />
By 1985, the popularity of the activity was notable enough for numerous coaches and school administrators to petition the [[IHSA]] for formal recognition as a competitive activity. With recognition came a codification of the rules, and the recognition of a state champion. All teams competed in one class until 1991, and were placed into 16 geographic sectional tournaments. The 16 winners of those tournaments advanced to a single elimination tournament.<br />
<br />
During the late 1980s and early 1990s, IHSA Scholastic Bowl grew tremendously, with new teams, conferences, and tournaments forming every year. From the mid 1980s through the early 2000s, though there was some disagreement as to whether or not tossups should be [[pyramidal]], there generally was agreement that matches should follow [[IHSA]] format and that tournaments should use morning pools with single-elimination afternoons, though occasionally tournaments did experiment with other formats.<br />
<br />
===The Schism Years (2007-2017)===<br />
As some of Illinois' better teams became more exposed to "[[good quizbowl]]" through [[hsquizbowl.org]] and tournaments hosted by the University of [[Illinois]], [[NAQT]], and [[PACE]], they became vocal proponents for change. The changes sought included improved question quality, bonus parts being read one at a time, increases in the number of matches guaranteed to teams entering tournaments, the elimination of single-elimination tournament formats, and the reduction or elimination of computation, grammar, and most miscellaneous topics. While [[IHSSBCA]] generally supported these changes, many coaches, including a majority on the IHSA Advisory Committee generally did not, leading several top teams to put a higher value on national tournaments and invitationals than Illinois' state tournaments (though the teams that did not value the State Tournaments were dominant at them because they learned more by playing tournaments in other formats). During this time, several Illinois invitationals became a [[mirror]] of tournaments from out of state, starting with [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Auburn's]] mirror of [[HFT]]. By 2010, a majority of invitationals in Illinois did not use IHSA format, with [[mACF]] becoming more popular. By about 2014, almost all Illinois tournaments followed the major elements of "good quizbowl". Some people believed that this schism pitted the Chicago suburbs against downstate, though in reality opinions varied throughout the state. For its 2013 tournament, IHSA switched to reading one bonus part at a time.<br />
<br />
===The End of History (2017-)===<br />
In 2017, the IHSA engaged [[Brad Fischer]] as their new head editor, which all but assured a permanent transition to pyramidal questions and an acceptable distribution. By this point, very many high school matches in Illinois used high-quality pyramidal questions and reasonable rules, and tournaments used formats appropriate for their size.<br />
<br />
As with many activities, the impact of the [[COVID-19]] pandemic was greatly felt across Illinois scholastic bowl. However, unlike many sports that were left to severely reduce seasons or opt-out altogether, scholastic bowl remained viable in a virtual or hybrid setting. Albeit, in various formats, Illinois did see quiz bowl tournaments & some local competition successfully take place online during the 2020-21 season. During this time some programs in fact saw increases in recruitment and involvement they would not have otherwise seen given the limited number of extracurricular activities available for students that normally had competed with their programs for interest. Another benefit of the virtual format was the ability for teams to get exposure to other teams that they may not otherwise compete with due to travel limitations. The success and enthusiasm of Illinois programs to stay active during this time led to the [[IHSA]] permitting an altered State series and became all the more evident when many Illinois teams were ranked going into national competition or made up the field compared to other states. This carried over to the playoffs, where both 2021 [[HSNCT]] & [[SSNCT]] championships featured all-Illinois matchups. Perhaps those most impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic however were middle school teams who in 2020 were still only halfway through their seasons and had the next two state tournaments canceled with many teams opting out of competing altogether in 2021.<br />
<br />
Despite having seen steady growth in the activity before the pandemic, involvement in scholastic bowl has seemed to wane. This a trend that has been felt across quiz bowl and is not unique to Illinois with both iterations of the IESA, IHSA, & Masonic State tournaments after the pandemic seeing less participation than before ([https://www.cbsnews.com/news/high-school-quiz-bowl-competitions-budget-cuts/]).<br />
<br />
==Notable annual tournaments==<br />
A complete list of tournaments in Illinois can be found [http://www.ihssbca.org/tournaments.html on the IHSSBCA's site]. Notable recurring tournaments include the following:<br />
*[[Earlybird]] - October - Formerly a housewrite by [[Illinois|UIUC]] and more recently using questions from different sources each year, this tournament is usually the first tournament of the season, though it has been on hiatus since the pandemic.<br />
*[[IHSSBCA Novice]] - October - hosted in several locations across the state, this tournament allows students who did not achieve certain levels of success to compete against each other. It uses the [[SCOP]] set.<br />
*mirror of [[ACF Fall]] - October - usually hosted in northern Illinois, such as at Rockford Auburn<br />
*[[Scobol Solo]] - October or November - it is a solo contest attracting over 100 top players each year.<br />
*[[IHSSBCA Kickoff]] - mid-November - hosted in several locations across the state, this tournament used to mark the "start" of the season, but several tournaments have arisen prior to its usual date. Combined across sites, it has the largest turnout of any tournament except for the IHSA and Masonic series.<br />
*[[Pretzel Tournament]] at New Berlin - December<br />
*[[Reinstein Varsity]] - last Saturday before Winter Break - Started in 2005 by [[Carlo Angiuli]] and [[Nick Matchen]] at New Trier, this was a housewrite but is now a mirror<br />
*[[Macomb Rotary]] - January<br />
*[[Ultima]] at [[Loyola Academy]] - formerly held in October and then moved to January, which used to use the format of the [[Panasonic Academic Challenge]] before switching to [[mACF]] format<br />
*[[Knights' Challenge]] at Auburn - former housewrite with Frosh/Soph and middle school divisions<br />
*[[Piasa Bird Invitational]] at Southwestern<br />
*[[Springfield Tournament|Barron Robinson Tournament at Springfield]] - January tournament with varsity and JV divisions<br />
*[[FROSTBITE]] at Granite City - late January<br />
*[[Winnebago Invitational]] - late January or early February<br />
*[[Masonic]] tournament - mid-February - many sectionals are held across the state, followed two weeks later by the state finals. This used to be in IHSA format, but now uses a format unique to itself featuring bonuses that are not bonuses.<br />
*[[NAQT Illinois State Tournament|NAQT State]] - late February - moved from [[Fenton]] to [[Bloomington]] in 2013 and then to Champaign<br />
*[[IHSA]] - early to mid March. Single-elimination regionals are held at 32 sites per class across the state, with the winners advancing to round-robin sectionals at 8 sites per class, the winners of which go on to State.<br />
<br />
Many people traditionally considered the IHSA State Series to crown the state champion, though the tournament's use of geographic sectionals with one team advancing, random pools at State, and a single-elimination final makes it more reasonable to consider the IHSA Champion to be a state champion rather than the state champion. The [[Masonic tournament]], while older than the IHSA Tournament (starting in 1983), has been regarded as a lesser championship due to the smaller pool of teams playing (about 300 teams, compared to about 500 in the IHSA tournaments). Masonics also uses a match format of 6 tossups, 8 alternating team questions, 6 tossups, 8 alternating team questions, and 4 tossups, which is not used by any other tournament in the world. (The team questions are structured like bonus questions usually are structured, with the exception that control of them is not earned.) NAQT State draws fewer teams than several invitationals. When you put it all together, nobody knows who the Illinois State Champion is.<br />
<br />
==Famous/Infamous collegiate players==<br />
{{Columns-list|colwidth=320px|<br />
*[[Pericles Abbasi]] - [[Fenwick]]; [[Chicago]]<br />
*[[Joe Ahmad]] - [[Loyola Academy]]; [[Notre Dame]]<br />
*[[Waleed Ali]] - [[IMSA]]; [[Columbia]]<br />
*[[Carlo Angiuli]] - [[New Trier]]; [[Indiana]]<br />
*[[Bruce Arthur]] - [[Roycemore]]; [[Chicago]], [[Harvard]]<br />
*[[Jason Asher]] - [[Stevenson]]; [[Minnesota]]<br />
*[[Greg Baboukis]] - [[Normal Community West]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Parag Bhayani]] - [[Homewood-Flossmoor]]; [[Caltech]]<br />
*[[Michael Bilow]] - [[Deerfield]]; [[Yale]]<br />
*[[Alston Boyd]] - [[Bloomington]]; [[Chicago]]<br />
*[[Colby Burnett]] - [[Fenwick]]; [[Northwestern]]<br />
*[[Steven Canning]] - [[Libertyville]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Ben Cohen]] - [[New Trier]]; [[Brown]]<br />
*[[Kevin Costello]] - [[IMSA]]; [[Rutgers]]<br />
*[[Dan Donohue]] - [[St. Viator]]; [[Northwestern]]<br />
*[[Michael Etzkorn]] - [[IMSA]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Adam Fine]] - [[University of Chicago Lab]]; [[Yale]]; [[Chicago]]<br />
*[[Brad Fischer]] - [[Winnebago]]; [[Rock Valley College]], [[NIU]]<br />
*[[David Garb]] - [[Buffalo Grove]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Greg Gauthier]] - [[Wheaton North]]; [[Vanderbilt]]<br />
*[[Paul Gauthier]] - [[Wheaton North]]; [[Vanderbilt]], [[Chicago]]<br />
*[[Joel Gluskin]] - [[Stevenson]]; [[Wash U]]; [[NAQT]]<br />
*[[Scott Green]] - [[Stevenson]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Jonah Greenthal]] - [[New Trier]]; [[Illinois]], [[Chicago]]; [[NAQT]]<br />
*[[Lily Hamer]] - [[Homewood-Flossmoor]]; [[WUSTL]]<br />
*[[Abid Haseeb]] - [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Rockford Auburn]]; [[Brown]]<br />
*[[Brad Houston]] - [[Stevenson]]; [[Grinnell]], [[Maryland]]<br />
*[[Brian Kalathiveetil]] - [[Waubonsie Valley]]; [[Minnesota]]<br />
*[[Maia Karpovich]] - [[IMSA]]; [[Oklahoma]]<br />
*[[Clare Keenan]] - [[University of Chicago Lab]]; [[MIT]]<br />
*[[Young Fenimore Lee]] - [[Stevenson]]; [[Stanford]]<br />
*[[Matthew Lehmann]] - [[Barrington]]; [[Chicago]]<br />
*[[Alejandro Lopez-Lago]] - [[Naperville Central]]; [[Claremont]]<br />
*[[Lyon|The Lyons]] - [[IMSA]]<br />
*[[Subash Maddipoti]] - [[Quincy]]; [[Northwestern]], [[Quincy]], [[Illinois]], [[Chicago]]<br />
*[[Mitch McCullar]] - [[Williamsville]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Trygve Meade]] - [[Canton]]; [[Illinois]]; [[PACE]]<br />
*[[Stan Melkumian]] - [[Macomb]]; [[Purdue]]<br />
*[[Craig Messner]] - [[Lakes]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Mark Messner]] - [[Antioch]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Dylan Minarik]] - [[Belvidere North]]; [[Northwestern]]<br />
*[[Jonathan Mishory]] - [[Stevenson]]; [[WUSTL]]<br />
*[[Jakob Myers]] - [[Naperville North]]; [[Michigan State]]<br />
*[[Arjun Nageswaran]] - [[Stevenson]]; [[Harvard]]<br />
*[[Evan Pandya]] - [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Rockford Auburn]]; [[Brown]]<br />
*[[Greg Peterson]] - [[Maine South]]; [[Lawrence]], [[Northwestern]]<br />
*[[Emily Pike]] - [[DeKalb]]; [[Carleton College]]; [[NAQT]]<br />
*[[Nick Poulos]] - [[New Trier]]; [[Chicago]]<br />
*[[Yogesh Raut]] - [[IMSA]]; [[Stanford]], [[USC]], [[Berkeley]], [[Texas]], [[NYU]], [[New Mexico State]]<br />
*[[Garrett Ryan]] - [[Lincoln-Way East]]; [[Carleton College]]<br />
*[[Ali Saeed]] - [[Stevenson]]; [[Stanford]]<br />
*[[James Sanner]] - [[Decatur Eisenhower]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Pranav Sivakumar]] - [[IMSA]]; [[California]]<br />
*[[Mike Sorice]] - [[Fenwick]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Justin Stoncius]] - [[Carbondale]]; [[Stanford]]<br />
*[[Christopher Stone]] - [[Glenwood]]; [[Truman State]]<br />
*[[Kristin Strey]] - [[Winnebago]]; [[Rock Valley College]], [[NIU]]<br />
*[[Ethan Strombeck]] - [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Rockford Auburn]]; [[Stanford]]<br />
*[[Martin Stroup]] - [[MacArthur]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Ashish Subramanian]] - [[Hoffman Estates]]; [[Duke]]<br />
*[[Jonathan Suh]] - [[Wheaton Warrenville South]]; [[Harvard]]<br />
*[[Siva Sundaram]] - [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Rockford Auburn]]; [[Harvard]]<br />
*[[Lloyd Sy]] - [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Rockford Auburn]]; [[Brown]]<br />
*[[Donald Taylor]] - [[MacArthur]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Cole Timmerwilke]] - [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Rockford Auburn]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Kelly Tourdot]] - [[Stillman Valley]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Andrew Ullsperger]] - [[Bloomington]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Andrew Uzzell]] - [[Evanston]]; [[Yale]]<br />
*[[Tyler Vaughan]] - [[Stillman Valley]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Shreyas Vissapragada]] - [[Metea Valley]]; [[Columbia]]<br />
*[[Steven Vo]] - [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Rockford Auburn]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Andrew Wang]] - [[New Trier]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Tristan Willey]] - [[Macomb]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Justin Wytmar]] - [[Buffalo Grove]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Jennie Yang]] - [[Fremd]]; [[Stanford]]<br />
*[[Jan Zasowski]] - [[New Trier]]; [[Northwestern]]<br />
}}<br />
<br />
==Notable former players who are famous for something else==<br />
*Kristin Castillo - Macomb - Miss Illinois, 2001[http://www.ihsa.org/initiatives/allstate/2001.htm], [http://www.missamerica.org/scholarships/recipients-2001.asp], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miss_Illinois]<br />
*[[Hillary Clinton]] (nee Rodham) - [[Maine South]]<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
*IHSSBCA Web Site[http://www.ihssbca.org/]<br />
*IHSA Scholastic Bowl page[http://www.ihsa.org/activity/scb/index.htm]<br />
*IHSA Scholastic Bowl Champions and Tournament Results [http://www.ihsa.org/activity/scb/records/index.htm]<br />
*For an example of why people make fun of Illinois Scholastic Bowl, try [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ND7I2GxAq54]<br />
<br />
{{Navbox HS Quizbowl in Illinois}}<br />
<br />
[[Category:High school quizbowl in Illinois]]<br />
[[Category:Original QBWiki Page]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Illinois_Scholastic_Bowl&diff=60941Illinois Scholastic Bowl2023-05-17T23:10:45Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Scholastic Bowl''' in Illinois is played by over 500 high schools and 400 middle schools. It traditionally has been governed by the Illinois High School Association ([[IHSA]]) and Illinois Elementary School Association ([[IESA]]), and from roughly 1986-2006 most of its high school tournaments were played under IHSA Rules. The history of quizbowl in Illinois is very confusing, since it includes many mistakes at the same time as genuine progress.<br />
<br />
==History==<br />
===Little Quizbowl on the Prairie (1960s-1985)===<br />
Quizbowl in Illinois can be traced back at least as far back as the 1960s, and was originally more popular in Downstate Illinois than in the Chicago area. One of the first tournaments in the state to gain notability was the Senior Challenge held in Streator, which was open only to high school seniors. Questions were written by locals, and lockout systems were homemade. Local businesses sponsored the tournament, which was organized by the local Rotary Club.<br />
<br />
Certainly, there were other tournaments, with each tournament having a unique twist to their format. This became the key thread running through Illinois quizbowl throughout the 60s, 70s, and 80s: there was no universal set of rules.<br />
<br />
===IHSA Consensus Years (1986-2007)===<br />
By 1985, the popularity of the activity was notable enough for numerous coaches and school administrators to petition the [[IHSA]] for formal recognition as a competitive activity. With recognition came a codification of the rules, and the recognition of a state champion. All teams competed in one class until 1991, and were placed into 16 geographic sectional tournaments. The 16 winners of those tournaments advanced to a single elimination tournament.<br />
<br />
During the late 1980s and early 1990s, IHSA Scholastic Bowl grew tremendously, with new teams, conferences, and tournaments forming every year. From the mid 1980s through the early 2000s, though there was some disagreement as to whether or not tossups should be [[pyramidal]], there generally was agreement that matches should follow [[IHSA]] format and that tournaments should use morning pools with single-elimination afternoons, though occasionally tournaments did experiment with other formats.<br />
<br />
===The Schism Years (2007-2017)===<br />
As some of Illinois' better teams became more exposed to "[[good quizbowl]]" through [[hsquizbowl.org]] and tournaments hosted by the University of [[Illinois]], [[NAQT]], and [[PACE]], they became vocal proponents for change. The changes sought included improved question quality, bonus parts being read one at a time, increases in the number of matches guaranteed to teams entering tournaments, the elimination of single-elimination tournament formats, and the reduction or elimination of computation, grammar, and most miscellaneous topics. While [[IHSSBCA]] generally supported these changes, many coaches, including a majority on the IHSA Advisory Committee generally did not, leading several top teams to put a higher value on national tournaments and invitationals than Illinois' state tournaments (though the teams that did not value the State Tournaments were dominant at them because they learned more by playing tournaments in other formats). During this time, several Illinois invitationals became a [[mirror]] of tournaments from out of state, starting with [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Auburn's]] mirror of [[HFT]]. By 2010, a majority of invitationals in Illinois did not use IHSA format, with [[mACF]] becoming more popular. By about 2014, almost all Illinois tournaments followed the major elements of "good quizbowl". Some people believed that this schism pitted the Chicago suburbs against downstate, though in reality opinions varied throughout the state. For its 2013 tournament, IHSA switched to reading one bonus part at a time.<br />
<br />
===The End of History (2017-)===<br />
In 2017, the IHSA engaged [[Brad Fischer]] as their new head editor, which all but assured a permanent transition to pyramidal questions and an acceptable distribution. By this point, very many high school matches in Illinois used high-quality pyramidal questions and reasonable rules, and tournaments used formats appropriate for their size.<br />
<br />
As with many activities, the impact of the [[COVID-19]] pandemic was greatly felt across Illinois scholastic bowl. However, unlike many sports that were left to severely reduce seasons or opt-out altogether, scholastic bowl remained viable in a virtual or hybrid setting. Albeit, in various formats, Illinois did see quiz bowl tournaments & some local competition successfully take place online during the 2020-21 season. During this time some programs in fact saw increases in recruitment and involvement they would not have otherwise seen given the limited number of extracurricular activities available for students that normally had competed with their programs for interest. Another benefit of the virtual format was the ability for teams to get exposure to other teams that they may not otherwise compete with due to travel limitations. The success and enthusiasm of Illinois programs to stay active during this time led to the [[IHSA]] permitting an altered State series and became all the more evident when many Illinois teams were ranked going into national competition or made up the field compared to other states. This carried over to the playoffs, where both 2021 [[HSNCT]] & [[SSNCT]] championships featured all-Illinois matchups. Perhaps those most impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic however were middle school teams who in 2020 were still only halfway through their seasons and had the next two state tournaments canceled with many teams opting out of competing altogether in 2021.<br />
<br />
Despite having seen steady growth in the activity before the pandemic, involvement in scholastic bowl has seemed to wain. This a trend that has been felt across quiz bowl and is not unique to Illinois with both iterations of the IESA, IHSA, & Masonic State tournaments after the pandemic seeing less participation than before ([https://www.cbsnews.com/news/high-school-quiz-bowl-competitions-budget-cuts/]).<br />
<br />
==Notable annual tournaments==<br />
A complete list of tournaments in Illinois can be found [http://www.ihssbca.org/tournaments.html on the IHSSBCA's site]. Notable recurring tournaments include the following:<br />
*[[Earlybird]] - October - Formerly a housewrite by [[Illinois|UIUC]] and more recently using questions from different sources each year, this tournament is usually the first tournament of the season, though it has been on hiatus since the pandemic.<br />
*[[IHSSBCA Novice]] - October - hosted in several locations across the state, this tournament allows students who did not achieve certain levels of success to compete against each other. It uses the [[SCOP]] set.<br />
*mirror of [[ACF Fall]] - October - usually hosted in northern Illinois, such as at Rockford Auburn<br />
*[[Scobol Solo]] - October or November - it is a solo contest attracting over 100 top players each year.<br />
*[[IHSSBCA Kickoff]] - mid-November - hosted in several locations across the state, this tournament used to mark the "start" of the season, but several tournaments have arisen prior to its usual date. Combined across sites, it has the largest turnout of any tournament except for the IHSA and Masonic series.<br />
*[[Pretzel Tournament]] at New Berlin - December<br />
*[[Reinstein Varsity]] - last Saturday before Winter Break - Started in 2005 by [[Carlo Angiuli]] and [[Nick Matchen]] at New Trier, this was a housewrite but is now a mirror<br />
*[[Macomb Rotary]] - January<br />
*[[Ultima]] at [[Loyola Academy]] - formerly held in October and then moved to January, which used to use the format of the [[Panasonic Academic Challenge]] before switching to [[mACF]] format<br />
*[[Knights' Challenge]] at Auburn - former housewrite with Frosh/Soph and middle school divisions<br />
*[[Piasa Bird Invitational]] at Southwestern<br />
*[[Springfield Tournament|Barron Robinson Tournament at Springfield]] - January tournament with varsity and JV divisions<br />
*[[FROSTBITE]] at Granite City - late January<br />
*[[Winnebago Invitational]] - late January or early February<br />
*[[Masonic]] tournament - mid-February - many sectionals are held across the state, followed two weeks later by the state finals. This used to be in IHSA format, but now uses a format unique to itself featuring bonuses that are not bonuses.<br />
*[[NAQT Illinois State Tournament|NAQT State]] - late February - moved from [[Fenton]] to [[Bloomington]] in 2013 and then to Champaign<br />
*[[IHSA]] - early to mid March. Single-elimination regionals are held at 32 sites per class across the state, with the winners advancing to round-robin sectionals at 8 sites per class, the winners of which go on to State.<br />
<br />
Many people traditionally considered the IHSA State Series to crown the state champion, though the tournament's use of geographic sectionals with one team advancing, random pools at State, and a single-elimination final makes it more reasonable to consider the IHSA Champion to be a state champion rather than the state champion. The [[Masonic tournament]], while older than the IHSA Tournament (starting in 1983), has been regarded as a lesser championship due to the smaller pool of teams playing (about 300 teams, compared to about 500 in the IHSA tournaments). Masonics also uses a match format of 6 tossups, 8 alternating team questions, 6 tossups, 8 alternating team questions, and 4 tossups, which is not used by any other tournament in the world. (The team questions are structured like bonus questions usually are structured, with the exception that control of them is not earned.) NAQT State draws fewer teams than several invitationals. When you put it all together, nobody knows who the Illinois State Champion is.<br />
<br />
==Famous/Infamous collegiate players==<br />
{{Columns-list|colwidth=320px|<br />
*[[Pericles Abbasi]] - [[Fenwick]]; [[Chicago]]<br />
*[[Joe Ahmad]] - [[Loyola Academy]]; [[Notre Dame]]<br />
*[[Waleed Ali]] - [[IMSA]]; [[Columbia]]<br />
*[[Carlo Angiuli]] - [[New Trier]]; [[Indiana]]<br />
*[[Bruce Arthur]] - [[Roycemore]]; [[Chicago]], [[Harvard]]<br />
*[[Jason Asher]] - [[Stevenson]]; [[Minnesota]]<br />
*[[Greg Baboukis]] - [[Normal Community West]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Parag Bhayani]] - [[Homewood-Flossmoor]]; [[Caltech]]<br />
*[[Michael Bilow]] - [[Deerfield]]; [[Yale]]<br />
*[[Alston Boyd]] - [[Bloomington]]; [[Chicago]]<br />
*[[Colby Burnett]] - [[Fenwick]]; [[Northwestern]]<br />
*[[Steven Canning]] - [[Libertyville]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Ben Cohen]] - [[New Trier]]; [[Brown]]<br />
*[[Kevin Costello]] - [[IMSA]]; [[Rutgers]]<br />
*[[Dan Donohue]] - [[St. Viator]]; [[Northwestern]]<br />
*[[Michael Etzkorn]] - [[IMSA]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Adam Fine]] - [[University of Chicago Lab]]; [[Yale]]; [[Chicago]]<br />
*[[Brad Fischer]] - [[Winnebago]]; [[Rock Valley College]], [[NIU]]<br />
*[[David Garb]] - [[Buffalo Grove]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Greg Gauthier]] - [[Wheaton North]]; [[Vanderbilt]]<br />
*[[Paul Gauthier]] - [[Wheaton North]]; [[Vanderbilt]], [[Chicago]]<br />
*[[Joel Gluskin]] - [[Stevenson]]; [[Wash U]]; [[NAQT]]<br />
*[[Scott Green]] - [[Stevenson]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Jonah Greenthal]] - [[New Trier]]; [[Illinois]], [[Chicago]]; [[NAQT]]<br />
*[[Lily Hamer]] - [[Homewood-Flossmoor]]; [[WUSTL]]<br />
*[[Abid Haseeb]] - [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Rockford Auburn]]; [[Brown]]<br />
*[[Brad Houston]] - [[Stevenson]]; [[Grinnell]], [[Maryland]]<br />
*[[Brian Kalathiveetil]] - [[Waubonsie Valley]]; [[Minnesota]]<br />
*[[Maia Karpovich]] - [[IMSA]]; [[Oklahoma]]<br />
*[[Clare Keenan]] - [[University of Chicago Lab]]; [[MIT]]<br />
*[[Young Fenimore Lee]] - [[Stevenson]]; [[Stanford]]<br />
*[[Matthew Lehmann]] - [[Barrington]]; [[Chicago]]<br />
*[[Alejandro Lopez-Lago]] - [[Naperville Central]]; [[Claremont]]<br />
*[[Lyon|The Lyons]] - [[IMSA]]<br />
*[[Subash Maddipoti]] - [[Quincy]]; [[Northwestern]], [[Quincy]], [[Illinois]], [[Chicago]]<br />
*[[Mitch McCullar]] - [[Williamsville]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Trygve Meade]] - [[Canton]]; [[Illinois]]; [[PACE]]<br />
*[[Stan Melkumian]] - [[Macomb]]; [[Purdue]]<br />
*[[Craig Messner]] - [[Lakes]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Mark Messner]] - [[Antioch]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Dylan Minarik]] - [[Belvidere North]]; [[Northwestern]]<br />
*[[Jonathan Mishory]] - [[Stevenson]]; [[WUSTL]]<br />
*[[Jakob Myers]] - [[Naperville North]]; [[Michigan State]]<br />
*[[Arjun Nageswaran]] - [[Stevenson]]; [[Harvard]]<br />
*[[Evan Pandya]] - [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Rockford Auburn]]; [[Brown]]<br />
*[[Greg Peterson]] - [[Maine South]]; [[Lawrence]], [[Northwestern]]<br />
*[[Nick Poulos]] - [[New Trier]]; [[Chicago]]<br />
*[[Yogesh Raut]] - [[IMSA]]; [[Stanford]], [[USC]], [[Berkeley]], [[Texas]], [[NYU]], [[New Mexico State]]<br />
*[[Garrett Ryan]] - [[Lincoln-Way East]]; [[Carleton College]]<br />
*[[Ali Saeed]] - [[Stevenson]]; [[Stanford]]<br />
*[[James Sanner]] - [[Decatur Eisenhower]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Pranav Sivakumar]] - [[IMSA]]; [[California]]<br />
*[[Mike Sorice]] - [[Fenwick]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Justin Stoncius]] - [[Carbondale]]; [[Stanford]]<br />
*[[Christopher Stone]] - [[Glenwood]]; [[Truman State]]<br />
*[[Kristin Strey]] - [[Winnebago]]; [[Rock Valley College]], [[NIU]]<br />
*[[Ethan Strombeck]] - [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Rockford Auburn]]; [[Stanford]]<br />
*[[Martin Stroup]] - [[MacArthur]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Ashish Subramanian]] - [[Hoffman Estates]]; [[Duke]]<br />
*[[Jonathan Suh]] - [[Wheaton Warrenville South]]; [[Harvard]]<br />
*[[Siva Sundaram]] - [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Rockford Auburn]]; [[Harvard]]<br />
*[[Lloyd Sy]] - [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Rockford Auburn]]; [[Brown]]<br />
*[[Donald Taylor]] - [[MacArthur]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Cole Timmerwilke]] - [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Rockford Auburn]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Kelly Tourdot]] - [[Stillman Valley]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Andrew Ullsperger]] - [[Bloomington]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Andrew Uzzell]] - [[Evanston]]; [[Yale]]<br />
*[[Tyler Vaughan]] - [[Stillman Valley]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Shreyas Vissapragada]] - [[Metea Valley]]; [[Columbia]]<br />
*[[Steven Vo]] - [[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Rockford Auburn]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Andrew Wang]] - [[New Trier]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Tristan Willey]] - [[Macomb]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Justin Wytmar]] - [[Buffalo Grove]]; [[Illinois]]<br />
*[[Jennie Yang]] - [[Fremd]]; [[Stanford]]<br />
*[[Jan Zasowski]] - [[New Trier]]; [[Northwestern]]<br />
}}<br />
<br />
==Notable former players who are famous for something else==<br />
*Kristin Castillo - Macomb - Miss Illinois, 2001[http://www.ihsa.org/initiatives/allstate/2001.htm], [http://www.missamerica.org/scholarships/recipients-2001.asp], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miss_Illinois]<br />
*[[Hillary Clinton]] (nee Rodham) - [[Maine South]]<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
*IHSSBCA Web Site[http://www.ihssbca.org/]<br />
*IHSA Scholastic Bowl page[http://www.ihsa.org/activity/scb/index.htm]<br />
*IHSA Scholastic Bowl Champions and Tournament Results [http://www.ihsa.org/activity/scb/records/index.htm]<br />
*For an example of why people make fun of Illinois Scholastic Bowl, try [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ND7I2GxAq54]<br />
<br />
{{Navbox HS Quizbowl in Illinois}}<br />
<br />
[[Category:High school quizbowl in Illinois]]<br />
[[Category:Original QBWiki Page]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Illinois_High_School_Scholastic_Bowl_Coaches_Association&diff=60512Illinois High School Scholastic Bowl Coaches Association2023-04-26T00:27:21Z<p>David Reinstein: /* History */</p>
<hr />
<div>The '''Illinois High School Scholastic Bowl Coaches Association''' or '''IHSSBCA''' is an organization primarily of coaches who support improvements in [[Illinois Scholastic Bowl|Illinois Quizbowl]]. The current president of the organization is [[Brad Fischer]]. Annual membership in the organization is typically around 300.<br />
<br />
==Mission Statement==<br />
From the IHSSBCA website:<br />
<br />
:''The IHSSBCA exists to improve the quality of Scholastic Bowl competition and foster greater opportunities for collaboration, participation, and recognition.''<br />
<br />
Additionally<br />
<br />
:''The purpose of the IHSSBCA is to increase awareness and support of the public, school leaders, and parents for high school Scholastic Bowl competition in Illinois; to provide opportunities for Scholastic Bowl coaches to meet and cooperate in the development and communication of coaching techniques, tournament formats, and other ways of improving the quality of competition with integrity and the highest possible standards; and to promote recognition of participants, coaches, and programs.''[http://www.ihssbca.org/about.php]<br />
<br />
==History==<br />
The Association was started after an [[IHSA]] Administrator suggested in 1994 that such an organization would give coaches more credence with the IHSA. [[Rob Grierson]] of [[Latin]] did much of the organizing, including sending out the first newsletter in September 1995 to 440 coaches, one at each school known to have a team.<br />
<br />
The first meeting was held March 30, 1996, and the first elected officers were Chairman Tom Durbin of [[Decatur MacArthur]], Secretary Cathy Groesch of [[Springfield Southeast]], Treasurer John Rathbun of [[Woodruff]], and Ombudsman Beth Young of [[Quincy]].<br />
<br />
Durbin stepped down as Chair after two years and was replaced by [[David Riley]]. After six years, Riley did not run for re-election and was replaced by [[David Reinstein]]. After ten years, Reinstein did not run for re-election and was replaced by [[Sharon Lorinskas]]. More recent chairs have been [[Matt Hasquin]] and [[Brad Fischer]]. All elected officers serve two-year terms.<br />
<br />
==Initiatives==<br />
Here is a non-exhaustive list of the projects which the Association has taken on over its history.<br />
<br />
* '''The quarterly newsletter ''Scholastic Visions'''''[http://www.ihssbca.org/schovisions.php]<br />
:Perhaps the earliest project to pay immediate dividends was the publication of an annual newsletter that included articles about happenings across the state, information that connected coaches to the often monolithic IHSA, and editorials on everything from rules to questions. Advertising from lockout and question vendors came later, as well as polls ranking the top teams. Throughout its entire run, [[Rob Grierson]] has been the editor of the newsletter.<br />
<br />
*'''ihssbca.org'''[http://www.ihssbca.org]<br />
:As the digital age arrived, the association branched out onto the world wide web to speed up communication across the vast geographic divide of the state. The website keeps an up-to-date listing of tournaments in the state, as well as some in other states which may be of interest to Illinois teams. Around 2008, a Members Only Section was added to the website, allowing members to access all newsletters and a Handbook which essentially contains the best newsletter articles organized by topic.<br />
<br />
*'''SchoBowlFest'''<br />
:Back in 2007 after several years hiatus, it is an annual workshop and meetings for coaches across the state where coaches meet to discuss topics ranging from player recruitment, running practices, and organizing tournaments. Vendors also attend to advertise their wares.<br />
<br />
*'''[[Robert Grierson Friend of Scholastic Bowl Award|The Robert Grierson Friend of Scholastic Bowl Award]]'''[http://www.ihssbca.org/awards/rgfosb.php]<br />
:Presented originally in 1996 at the first meeting, it is presented to an individual or group for their support of Scholastic Bowl in Illinois. The award was renamed in honor of Rob Grierson when he was elected to receive the award in 2003, two years after Grierson had received the [[Benjamin Cooper Academic Ambassador Award]].<br />
<br />
*'''[[Illinois Panasonic Team|Team Illinois]]'''[http://www.ihssbca.org/awards/teamillinois.php]<br />
:The IHSSBCA assembles an all-star team to represent the state. It participated at the [[Panasonic Academic Challenge]] in Orlando from 1997-2008 and has participated annually at [[NASAT]] since 2010. Team Illinois won PAC in 2007 and 2008.<br />
<br />
*'''[[IHSSBCA David Riley Memorial Kickoff|Kickoff Tournaments]]'''<br />
:The annual IHSSBCA Kickoffs are mirrored at several sites around the state in November, annually drawing over 100 teams. While no longer the earliest tournament in Illinois, for many teams, it is still the beginning of the competition season. For many years, the Kickoffs were in IHSA Format, though that changed when they used [[Aegis]] in 2008, and they have used [[NAQT]] [[IS]] since then.<br />
<br />
*'''[[IHSSBCA Turnabout|Turnabout Tournaments]]'''<br />
:In response to the need for tournaments where teams in need of improvement could find a competitive level of their own, while giving them a greater probability for success (which would hopefully translate into their program's expansion, and later improvement among other great teams), the Turnabout Tournaments were born in the late 1990s. Mirrored at several sites across the state, invitations are sent to all members except for approximately fifty teams that were very successful the previous season. Since 2010, these tournaments have used an [[NAQT]] A Set.<br />
<br />
*'''[[IHSSBCA Novice|Novice Tournaments]]'''<br />
:To give upcoming students an additional chance to compete early in the season, IHSSBCA started sponsoring Novice Tournaments in 2012. Mirrored at several sites across the state in October, invitations are sent at the beginning of the school year to all teams. Students who meet any of several measurements of previous levels of success are not eligible to compete.<br />
<br />
*'''[[IHSSBCA All State Program|All-Sectional/All-State Teams]]'''[http://www.ihssbca.org/awards/]<br />
:Since 2002, this has been the official recognition program for the state's best players. The All-Sectional Teams were chosen at IHSA Seeding Meetings until 2014, when the process was moved online. Coaches from each of the 16 Sectionals (8 Class A small school, 8 Class AA large school) select the best 12 players as being "All-Sectional". The top 4-5 players are then advanced to a committee who select the best 20 players in each class to be named "All-State".<br />
<br />
*'''[[IHSSBCA Hall of Fame|Coaches Hall-of-Fame]]'''[http://www.ihssbca.org/awards/halloffame.php]<br />
:2005 saw a long standing project finally get under way as the first class of the Illinois Coaches Hall-of-Fame was inducted to recognize outstanding coaching careers. Seven coaches were inducted the first year, and four coaches are now inducted annually.<br />
<br />
*'''Annual Banquet'''<br />
:The annual banquet is usually held in April on the campus of Illinois State University. In addition to being an annual celebration of quizbowl in Illinois, it is here where Team Illinois is introduced, the All-State honorees receive their awards, The Grierson Award is presented, and the Hall-of-Fame class is inducted.<br />
<br />
*'''Moderator Certification'''[http://www.ihssbca.org/moderators.html]<br />
:This is an attempt to improve the quality of game officials. Based off of the system used to certify athletic officials, moderators can become Performance Certified based on the input from coaches or other moderators who see them officiate in matches. The moderator certification program is managed by Marshall Mullins.<br />
<br />
*'''Rule Proposals'''<br />
:Though the IHSSBCA role with the IHSA is unofficial, the vast majority of rule proposals come from members of the IHSSBCA Steering Committee, and the IHSSBCA Chair is usually welcome as a non-voting participant at the IHSA Advisory Committee meeting.<br />
<br />
*'''Scorebooks'''<br />
:IHSSBCA sells bound books of scoresheets. The scoresheets are designed for the IHSA format, but are easy to use for [[mACF]] formats as well.<br />
<br />
*'''Social Media'''<br />
:Starting in 2012, IHSSBCA has a presence on Facebook and Twitter.<br />
<br />
==See Also==<br />
* [[Illinois Scholastic Bowl Coaches' Poll]]<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
* [http://www.ihssbca.org/ IHSSBCA Homepage]<br />
* [https://www.facebook.com/IHSSBCA/ IHSSBCA on Facebook]<br />
* [https://twitter.com/IHSSBCA IHSSBCA on Twitter]<br />
<br />
{{Navbox HS Quizbowl in Illinois}}<br />
<br />
[[Category: High school quizbowl in Illinois]]<br />
[[Category:Original QBWiki Page]]<br />
[[Category: IHSSBCA]]<br />
[[Category:State Quizbowl Organizations]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=IHSA&diff=60177IHSA2023-03-19T15:53:39Z<p>David Reinstein: /* State Championship Results */</p>
<hr />
<div>The '''Illinois High School Association''' governs many sports and activities in Illinois, including [[Illinois Scholastic Bowl]].<br />
<br />
==History==<br />
The IHSA was founded in 1900, and is the second oldest (Wisconsin) state high school athletic/activities governing organization.<br />
<br />
The IHSA started sponsoring a Scholastic Bowl State Tournament in 1986-7, with [[Quincy]] beating Salem in the first ever Championship Match. In 1991-92, IHSA split into two classes, with [[Rockridge]] winning the first Class A (small school) Championship.<br />
<br />
==Governance==<br />
The IHSA claims that it is a private organization, with almost 800 member schools, and a small number of affiliate and approved schools who do not hold full membership.<br />
<br />
The highest authority of the IHSA is the Board of Directors. The Board consists of ten principals, one each from the seven geographical districts determined long ago by the IHSA, and three "at-large" positions which are voted statewide and reserved for a woman, an underrepresented ethnic minority, and a private school. The Board also appoints a principal to a non-voting Treasurer position.<br />
<br />
The operation of the IHSA is charged to an Executive Director and a team of (currently nine) Assistant Executive Directors (AED). Each assistant executive director is given direct oversight of a number of sports and activities (in addition to other responsibilities). In 2017, Scholastic Bowl was given a new AED, [[Kraig Garber]].<br />
<br />
Each sport and activity has its own Advisory Committee (AdCo). The committee is chaired by the sport/activity's respective AED, and includes a representative from each of the IHSA's seven districts. While most of the representatives are head coaches, one is always an athletic or activities director. In sports, one seat is usually reserved for an official. The IHSA Scholastic Bowl AdCo does not have a seat reserved for an official, however, some time after 2010, the chief question editor, and the supervisor of officials for the State Tournament were elevated to voting positions on the AdCo, after being non-voting invitees for many years. The Scholastic Bowl AdCo meets once each year in closed session, usually in late April or early May.<br />
<br />
The AdCo meets and debates changes to rules (which govern the game) and terms and conditions (which govern state tournament structure). The committee can vote on changes, which the AED then brings to the Board of Directors. In general, the Board of Directors will rubber stamp the recommendations, but since this is a closed session, it is difficult to determine what happens in these approval meetings. In both 2012 and 2013, the Board of Directors rejected the elimination of language arts questions despite that having been approved by the committee in both years.<br />
<br />
While most sports have case manuals to assist coaches and officials to interpret rules published by that sport's respective national federation, the lack of an organization for quiz bowl means non existed for Scholastic Bowl. Around 2002, a Case Manual was assembled by a handful of officials, and is published by the IHSA. The AdCo also oversees changes to that book.<br />
<br />
==Match Format==<br />
From its inception, and into the 21st century, IHSA State matches (and thus many local tournament and conference matches) used the "IHSA Format". This can be summed up as:<br />
:10 point tossups (no negs or powers)<br />
:Bonuses could bounceback to the other team.<br />
:Teams got ten seconds to answer after a tossup was done being read (30 seconds for computational questions).<br />
:Bonuses were worth a maximum of 20 points. Bonuses could be four parts (5 points each), five parts (4 points each), or three parts (6 points for a team getting any one part right, 13 for getting any two parts right, and 20 for all three<br />
:Bonus parts were read all at once, with teams getting up to 30 seconds to confer on all of the parts.<br />
<br />
Additionally, there were other strange behavior rules that included the requirement that players put pencils down when time was called on a bonus (a rule that persists in Illinois Middle School competition). The only remaining odd behavior rule is the requirement that teams appearing in IHSA competitions must wear matching shirts that also must adhere to certain requirements of decorum. If a team fields a player lacking a proper matching top, their opponent is given 30 points to start the match.<br />
<br />
Over time, due to concerted efforts by players, coaches, and former players, these rules were changed to become somewhat more aligned with national rules. In 2012-13, IHSA switched to a bonus format similar to [[NSC]] in which bonus parts are read one part at a time, and each bonus has three parts worth ten points each, with bouncebacks.<br />
<br />
==Distribution==<br />
For most of its history, IHSA questions have been distributed according to six categories: Math, Science, Language Arts, Social Studies, Fine Arts, and Miscellaneous. For most of the 1990s and into the early 2000s, Math, Science, Language Arts, and Social Studies were considered "major categories", with Fine Arts and Miscellaneous being considered "minor categories". When Illinois used a 30/30 match length, major categories each had 6/6 questions, with minor categories being 3/3 questions. When Illinois used 24/24 matches, major categories were each represented by 5/5, and minor categories were represented by 2/2. Each of these six categories had sub-categories which were used as guides for writers to draw questions from, though the head editor had full control of how many questions would come from each sub-category, if at all.<br />
<br />
The IHSA distribution has traditionally had more math and computation than most other distributions in the US. For much of that time, computation was not limited to math, and at one time there was no limit at all on the number of possible computation questions. Since 2005, the amount of math and computation has been gradually curtailed, and a push to increase the amount of literature and Social Studies has brought the distribution more in line with good practice (though the math requirement remains high compared to most states).<br />
<br />
The Language Arts category traditionally had a much larger distribution of grammar, spelling, and speech. These sub-categories was also eventually whittled away, leaving a stronger "Literature" category in use today.<br />
<br />
The Miscellaneous questions are known for very quirky sub-categories, including "Agriculture", "Drivers Ed", "Health", "Home Economics", "Pop Culture", and "Industrial Arts". The set editor has complete control over which sub-categories are written about. In the past, there was a concerted effort to represent all areas, which led to poor questions in order to satisfy a sub-distribution. The "Interdisciplinary" subcategory under Miscellaneous allows for more academic content to be represented.<br />
<br />
The current distribution of 24/24 (and sub-distributions):<br />
:4/4 Social Studies (1/1 Geography, 1/1 Religion, 1/1 Mythology, and 1/1 Social Sciences)<br />
:4/4 History<br />
:4/4 Literature (2/2 US Lit, 2/2 from Language Arts, Brit Lit, World Lit)<br />
:4/4 Science (3/3 Bio, Chem, Physics, 1/1 other science)<br />
:4/4 Math (No computational tossups)<br />
:3/3 Fine Arts (at least 1/1 Visual Arts and 1/1 Music)<br />
:1/1 Miscellaneous (primarily Interdisciplinary and Pop Culture)<br />
<br />
While the head editor does not have control over the mandated distribution as shown, they have greater discretion over the sub-distribution. The editor can decide to include no Language Arts and have that part of the sub-distribution cover only British and/or World Lit, for example.<br />
<br />
==State Series Format==<br />
The IHSA State Series uses a Regional-Sectional-State format, and in two classes (AA for large schools, A for smaller schools).<br />
<br />
Schools are assigned, geographically to one of eight sectionals in their class (usually in January). Each sectional consists of approximately 24-40 schools. This means that despite roughly 70% of Illinois' population being from Chicago and the collar counties while a vast majority of schools are small schools located in central, western, or southern Illinois, only 5 of the 16 sectionals (1 Class A and 4 Class AA) represent the greater Chicago area. This follows from the IHSA's philosophy on all of their state series ([http://www.ihsa.org/documents/forms/current/IHSA_Policies.pdf p. 101]) which states ''The State Series is designed to determine a State Champion. The State Series is not intended to necessarily advance the best teams in the state to the State Final.'' This philosophy has created a degree of concern between players, coaches, officials, and the IHSA as they are specifically against the advancement of top teams, and that teams advancing to the IHSA state tournament become frustrated when they have advanced, but that advancement does not translate into further recognition or respect in polls or All-State awards. It has also led to issues where teams which are not considered near the "top 8" in their class are blown out in state level competition, and then complain that the questions or opponents were too tough. The IHSA has generally refused to address this in the past, though writers and editors, and the [[IHSSBCA]] have tinkered with the question writing process at various times to allow for better accessibility of answerlines to teams that are competing at the state level, but may not truly be state level teams.<br />
<br />
After sectional assignments are made, the coaches then meet (usually in mid-February) and seed the top 8 teams in the sectional. Afterwards, the IHSA will place each team in the sectional into one of four regional tournaments, with an effort made to separate the top 8 seeds (1-8, 2-7, 3-6, 4-5), and arranging so that seeds only meet in the Regional finals. Other teams are placed in the single-elimination bracket at random. The Regional tournament is usually held after school on a Monday in early March.<br />
<br />
The four regional winners meet at the sectional tournament the next Saturday. The sectional is a four-team round robin. If there is a tie between two teams, it is broken based on head-to-head results, with a three-way tie broken based on the total scores of the teams scored against the other tied teams. While this is far from ideal, until 2003, the Sectionals were three rounds of single-elimination (both the regional champions and runners-up advanced to sectionals). Because all IHSA team sports use single-elimination, the IHSA has been very uneasy about Scholastic Bowl playing in a round robin format, and at least one administrator claimed that he needed to constantly explain to sports coaches why Scholastic Bowl was allowed a rare dispensation to allow for a round-robin Sectional Tournament, this despite team chess having abandoned single elimination back in the 1970s.<br />
<br />
The State Championship Tournament is held on the next Friday at the Peoria Civic Center (since 1997). Since 2001, the winners of the 8 sectionals in each class are randomly assigned to one of two pools of four teams. Each team plays the three other teams in their pool, with the winners of the two pools meeting for the state championship, and the runner-up in each of the pools playing a third place match. Ties in each pool are broken according to the same rules in the Sectional. Prior to 2001, the State Finals were a single-elimination tournament.<br />
<br />
==Writing & Editing==<br />
Since 2001 the IHSA has hired a secret cabal to write its questions. In 2001 and 2002 the editor was [[Tom Egan]], who proposed that system. From 2003-2017 the editor was [[Sister John Baricevic]]. In 2017, [[Brad Fischer]] became the new head editor, and is the first head editor with practical playing experience.<br />
<br />
In 2013 the set contained several [[plagiarism|plagiarized]] questions, which was the subject of the [[IHSA plagiarism scandal]]. For about a decade prior to 2001, the questions were provided by [[Answers Plus]].<br />
<br />
Writers who have admitted their involvement with the IHSA writing process include the following:<br />
*[[Sister John Baricevic]] (editor, 2003–17)<br />
*[[Tom Egan]] (editor, 2001–02; writer in some other years)<br />
*[[Brad Fischer]] (editor beginning 2018)<br />
*[[Jonah Greenthal]] (2010–12)<br />
*[[Matt Laird]] (2010–11)<br />
*[[Greg Peterson]] (2013)<br />
*[[Shawn Pickrell]] (several years, specifics unknown)<br />
*[[David Reinstein]] (2012-13; [[IHSA plagiarism scandal|fired for reporting plagiarism in 2013]])<br />
*[[Kristin Strey]] (2011)<br />
*[[Donald Taylor]] (several years, specifics unknown)<br />
*[[Kelly Tourdot]] (several years, specifics unknown)<br />
*[[Andrew Ullsperger]] (several years, specifics unknown)<br />
*[[Matt Weiner]] (2006–07)<br />
*[[Noah Prince]] (subject editor, 2016, 2018-19, 2021-22)<br />
<br />
==Top Teams from the IHSA State Championship Tournament==<br />
Clicking on the year brings you to the article showing the full results for each year's State Championship Tournament. (NOTE: The information below only goes up to 2009.)<br />
<br />
==State Championship Results==<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0"<br />
! Years<br />
! AA Champion<br />
! AA Second Place<br />
! A Champion<br />
! A Second Place<br />
|- <br />
| [[1987 IHSA State Championship Tournament|1986-87]]<br />
| [[Quincy|Quincy Senior]]<br />
| Salem<br />
| <br />
| <br />
|-<br />
| [[1988 IHSA State Championship Tournament|1987-88]]<br />
| Quincy Senior<br />
| [[Wheaton Warrenville South|Wheaton Central]]<br />
| <br />
| <br />
|- <br />
| [[1989 IHSA State Championship Tournament|1988-89]]<br />
| [[IMSA]]<br />
| Breese Central<br />
| <br />
| <br />
|-<br />
| [[1990 IHSA State Championship Tournament|1989-90]]<br />
| IMSA<br />
| Joliet Catholic Academy<br />
| <br />
| <br />
|- <br />
| [[1991 IHSA State Championship Tournament|1990-91]]<br />
| Centralia<br />
| Cary-Grove<br />
| <br />
| <br />
|-<br />
| [[1992 IHSA State Championship Tournament|1991-92]]<br />
| [[Hinsdale Central]]<br />
| [[Bradley-Bourbonnais]]<br />
| Rockridge<br />
| Harrisburg<br />
|-<br />
| [[1993 IHSA State Championship Tournament|1992-93]]<br />
| Quincy Senior<br />
| IMSA<br />
| [[Winnebago]]<br />
| [[Latin School (IL)|Latin School]]<br />
|-<br />
| [[1994 IHSA State Championship Tournament|1993-94]]<br />
| IMSA<br />
| Bradley-Bourbonnais<br />
| Latin School<br />
| Brimfield<br />
|-<br />
| [[1995 IHSA State Championship Tournament|1994-95]]<br />
| Richwoods<br />
| [[New Trier]]<br />
| Winnebago<br />
| Latin School<br />
|-<br />
| [[1996 IHSA State Championship Tournament|1995-96]]<br />
| IMSA<br />
| [[MacArthur]]<br />
| Niantic-Harristown<br />
| Beardstown<br />
|-<br />
| [[1997 IHSA State Championship Tournament|1996-97]]<br />
| IMSA<br />
| [[Carbondale]]<br />
| St. Teresa<br />
| Byron<br />
|-<br />
| [[1998 IHSA State Championship Tournament|1997-98]]<br />
| IMSA<br />
| Hinsdale Central<br />
| Latin School<br />
| St. Teresa<br />
|-<br />
| [[1999 IHSA State Championship Tournament|1998-99]]<br />
| IMSA<br />
| MacArthur<br />
| University (Normal)<br />
| [[PORTA]]<br />
|-<br />
| [[2000 IHSA State Championship Tournament|1999-2000]]<br />
| [[Stevenson]]<br />
| [[Naperville Central]]<br />
| Byron<br />
| University (Normal)<br />
|-<br />
| [[2001 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2000-01]]<br />
| IMSA<br />
| [[Wheaton North]]<br />
| Warrensburg-Latham<br />
| Carlinville<br />
|-<br />
| [[2002 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2001-02]]<br />
| Wheaton North<br />
| Hinsdale Central<br />
| Latin School<br />
| Carterville<br />
|-<br />
| [[2003 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2002-03]]<br />
| Wheaton North<br />
| [[Auburn High School (IL)|Auburn (Rockford)]]<br />
| Stillman Valley<br />
| Carlinville<br />
|-<br />
| [[2004 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2003-04]]<br />
| Wheaton North<br />
| Stevenson<br />
| Latin School<br />
| Carterville<br />
|-<br />
| [[2005 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2004-05]]<br />
| Stevenson<br />
| Wheaton North<br />
| Latin School<br />
| Eureka<br />
|-<br />
| [[2006 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2005-06]]<br />
| [[Fremd]]<br />
| Carbondale<br />
| Latin School<br />
| Illinois Valley Central<br />
|-<br />
| [[2007 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2006-07]]<br />
| [[New Trier]]<br />
| Wheaton North<br />
| Lutheran Schools Association (Decatur)<br />
| Columbia<br />
|-<br />
| [[2008 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2007-08]]<br />
| Auburn<br />
| Stevenson<br />
| PORTA<br />
| Byron<br />
|-<br />
|| [[2009 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2008-09]]<br />
| Carbondale<br />
| Auburn<br />
| Latin<br />
| Litchfield<br />
|-<br />
|| [[2010 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2009-10]]<br />
| Stevenson<br />
| Auburn<br />
| [[Lisle]]<br />
| New Berlin<br />
|-<br />
|| [[2011 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2010-11]]<br />
| IMSA<br />
| Auburn<br />
| Lisle<br />
| Macomb<br />
|-<br />
|| [[2012 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2011-12]]<br />
| IMSA<br />
| Macomb<br />
| Peoria Christian<br />
| Chicago Christian<br />
|-<br />
|| [[2013 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2012-13]]<br />
| IMSA<br />
| Loyola<br />
| Peoria Christian<br />
| Carterville<br />
|-<br />
|| [[2014 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2013-14]]<br />
| IMSA<br />
| Stevenson<br />
| Litchfield<br />
| Lisle<br />
|-<br />
|| [[2015 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2014-15]]<br />
| Auburn<br />
| Hinsdale Central<br />
| [[University of Illinois Lab]]<br />
| Newman Catholic Central<br />
|-<br />
|| [[2016 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2015-16]]<br />
| Hinsdale Central<br />
| Auburn<br />
| Latin<br />
| St. Teresa<br />
|-<br />
|| [[2017 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2016-17]]<br />
|IMSA<br />
|University of Illinois Lab<br />
|[[Timothy Christian]]<br />
|[[Williamsville]]<br />
|-<br />
|| [[2018 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2017-18]]<br />
|Stevenson<br />
|Auburn<br />
|Williamsville<br />
|Byron<br />
|-<br />
|| [[2019 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2018-19]]<br />
|University of Illinois Lab<br />
|Auburn<br />
|Chicago Christian<br />
|Williamsville<br />
|-<br />
|| [[2022 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2021-22]]<br />
|IMSA<br />
|Springfield<br />
|University of Illinois Lab<br />
|Westmont<br />
|-<br />
|| [[2023 IHSA State Championship Tournament|2022-23]]<br />
|Rockford Auburn<br />
|Barrington<br />
|University of Illinois Lab<br />
|Piasa Southwestern<br />
|-<br />
{|<br />
<br />
The 2019-20 tournament was cancelled due to the coronavirus pandemic. Regionals were played, but not Sectionals or State.<br />
The 2020-21 tournament featured in-person regional and sectional sites, but did not hold the state championship. Many teams declined to attend due to safety concerns about the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.<br />
<br />
<br />
===Three or More Top 4 Finishes===<br />
*19 - Illinois Math & Science Academy<br />
*18 - Auburn<br />
*16 - The Latin School of Chicago<br />
*11 - Stevenson<br />
*9 - Wheaton North<br />
*8 - Carbondale<br />
*6 - Quincy Senior<br />
*5 - New Trier<br />
*5 - Hinsdale Central<br />
*5 - Byron<br />
*5 - Winnebago<br />
*4 - MacArthur<br />
*4 - Carlinville<br />
*4 - Piasa Southwestern<br />
*4 - University of Illinois Lab<br />
*3 - Joliet Catholic Academy<br />
*3 - Streator Township<br />
*3 - St. Teresa<br />
<br />
===Three or More Consecutive Top 4 Finishes===<br />
*18 - Auburn (2002-19)<br />
*8 - Wheaton North (2001-08)<br />
*8 - The Latin School of Chicago (2002-09)<br />
*5 - Illinois Math & Science Academy (2010-14)<br />
*4 - The Latin School of Chicago (1992-95)<br />
*4 - Illinois Math & Science Academy (1996-2000)<br />
*4 - Illinois Math & Science Academy (2016-19)<br />
*3 - Joliet Catholic Academy (1988-90)<br />
*3 - Illinois Math & Science Academy (1992-94)<br />
*3 - Winnebago (1993-95)<br />
*3 - Streator Township (1998-2000)<br />
*3 - Piasa Southwestern (2017-19)<br />
<br />
==See Also==<br />
*[[Masonic tournament]] - State Tournament hosted by the Illinois Masons<br />
*[[NAQT Illinois State Championship]]<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
[http://www.ihsa.org/activity/scb/index.htm IHSA Scholastic Bowl website]<br />
<br />
{{IHSA state championship tournament}}<br />
{{Navbox HS Quizbowl in Illinois}}<br />
<br />
[[Category: High school formats]]<br />
[[Category: High school quizbowl in Illinois]]<br />
[[Category: State championships]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Masonic_tournament&diff=59862Masonic tournament2023-03-06T18:41:30Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div>The '''Illinois Masonic Tournament''' is an annual tournament sponsored by the Illinois Freemasons. It is a statewide tournament, and is generally regarded as one of the three state championship tournaments in Illinois (with [[IHSA State Championship|IHSA State]] and the newer [[Illinois NAQT State]] being the other two). While the tournament began as a regional tournament in 1983, it did not develop a statewide draw until 1990, so while older than the IHSA Tournament, it did not become a state tournament until after the IHSA Tournament had been established.<br />
<br />
In recent years, the Masonic Tournament attracts over 300 Illinois high schools each year. The schools are divided into three classes based on school size, and each class has twelve Sectionals. The winner of each Sectional advances to the State Tournament. The State Tournament and most Sectionals have 10-12 teams, which are split into two pools and play round robin. The top two teams in each pool advance to a single-elimination semifinal, starting with the 1st place team in one pool playing the 2nd place team in the other pool.<br />
<br />
The Masonic Tournament uses a unique match format. Instead of bonus questions, the tournament uses team questions that are just like bonuses, but control over the team questions alternates so that each team is guaranteed to control half of the team questions. Each match consists of six tossups, eight team questions, six tossups, eight team questions, and then four tossups. This format tends to make scores closer.<br />
<br />
The Masons give money to schools that place highly at Sectionals and State. The total amount of money given each year is over $100,000. The tournament has no entry fee.<br />
<br />
==History==<br />
The roots of the tournament can be traced to 1982 when the principals of [[Byron]], [[Stillman Valley]], and [[Winnebago]] High Schools met with a representative of the Winnebago Masonic Lodge to create the ''Northern Illinois Academic Bowl'' (the first invitational tournament in northern Illinois). The first tournament, with 16 teams taken from Boone, Carroll, Ogle, Stephenson, and Winnebago counties, was held in the Spring of 1983. Stillman Valley defeated Winnebago in the finals to win the first tournament. Hosting duties rotated between Byron, Stillman Valley, and Winnebago for the first five years, though the field of invited teams began to expand beyond the initial counties. By 1987, the tournament was expanded to all teams in northern Illinois, and in 1988, it was renamed the ''Illinois Masonic Academic Bowl''. 1988 was also the first time that the tournament was not held at a single site, with the winners of the western and eastern sites meeting for a championship. In 1989, two southern Illinois sectionals were added, though downstate teams were not permitted to play for the championship until 1990.<br />
<br />
1990 saw the tournament become a state tournament for the first time, with the state finals held at Illinois Wesleyan University. The top four teams from each of four Sectional Tournaments (two in the southern part of the state and two in the north) came to Bloomington to compete for the state title. [[Rockridge]] defeated [[Sullivan]] for the first Masonic State Title (and doing so by 5 points).<br />
<br />
The State Tournament then moved to [[Eureka]] High School for four years, before moving to Eureka College for the 1995 and 1996 iterations.<br />
<br />
For many years, the winner of the tournament, in addition to significant money, earned the right to keep the Charles W. Spatz Memorial Trophy. The trophy was a ''large'' traveling trophy. Charles Spatz was an officer and newsletter editor with the Grand Lodge in Winnebago, who was largely responsible for expanding the original tournament to a state tournament.<br />
<br />
The [[Robert Grierson Friend of Scholastic Bowl Award]] has four times been awarded to individuals involved in the Masonic Tournament:<br />
* Garrie Burr, Senior Grand Warden of the Masonic Grand Lodge of the state of Illinois (1996 - the first FoSB award).<br />
* Wendell Walch, for his running the Masonic Tournament (1998-2004), and increasing the number of regional sites all of which helped promote Scholastic Bowl (2006).<br />
* Frank Conry, Neil Pavlus, and Nelson Pyle; the former principals at Byron, Stillman Valley, and Winnebago who first encouraged a Masonic Lodge to sponsor a Scholastic Bowl Tournament, greatly promoting and spreading Scholastic Bowl (2012).<br />
* Dale Thayer, for running the tournament after Wendell Walch left the job in 2004.<br />
<br />
==Questions==<br />
The questions for the tournament were written locally by volunteers. Later they were provided by [[Answers Plus]]. After Answers Plus lost the contract around the year 2000, the tournament went through a number of vendors including [[Academic Hallmarks]] through at least 2006-07, but perhaps longer), [[Aegis Questions]] (2008-09), and [[Questions Galore]] (2010-11) until David Reinstein took over as editor starting in 2012.<br />
<br />
==Match Format==<br />
The Masonic Tournament used approximately the [[IHSA]] format and distribution through 2009, including what was then all-at-once, 3-5 part 20 point bonuses, then switched to its unique format for 2010.<br />
<br />
==Tournament Format==<br />
For the first 25 years or so, it used what was called a double-elimination format at Sectionals and State, though it was actually a single-elimination tournament with a consolation bracket. Around 2010, they switched to a tournament format that has two pools of 6 teams each play round robin, followed by the top two teams in each pool moving on to a single-elimination playoff.<br />
<br />
==Results==<br />
{| class="wikitable"<br />
! Year<br />
! Host<br />
! Class<br />
! Champion <br />
! Runner-up<br />
! Third Place<br />
! Fourth Place<br />
! Consolation <br />
|-<br />
|1983<br />
|colspan=2|[[Winnebago]]<br />
|[[Stillman Valley]]<br />
|[[Winnebago]]<br />
|colspan=3 style="text-align:center;background: #eee;"|<br />
|-<br />
|1984<br />
|colspan=7 style="text-align:center;background: #eee;"|<br />
|-<br />
|1985<br />
|colspan=7 style="text-align:center;background: #eee;"|<br />
|-<br />
|1986<br />
|colspan=7 style="text-align:center;background: #eee;"|<br />
|-<br />
|1987<br />
|colspan=7 style="text-align:center;background: #eee;"|<br />
|-<br />
|1988<br />
|colspan=7 style="text-align:center;background: #eee;"|<br />
|-<br />
|1989<br />
|colspan=7 style="text-align:center;background: #eee;"|<br />
|-<br />
|1990<br />
|colspan=2|[[Illinois Wesleyan University]]<br />
|[[Rockridge]]<br />
|[[Sullivan]]<br />
|colspan=3 style="text-align:center;background: #eee;"|<br />
|-<br />
|1991<br />
|colspan=2|[[Eureka]]<br />
|colspan=5 style="text-align:center;background: #eee;"|<br />
|-<br />
|1992<br />
|colspan=2|[[Eureka]]<br />
|colspan=5 style="text-align:center;background: #eee;"|<br />
|-<br />
|1993<br />
|colspan=2|[[Eureka]]<br />
|[[Maine East]]<br />
|colspan=4 style="text-align:center;background: #eee;"|<br />
|-<br />
|1994<br />
|colspan=2|[[Eureka]]<br />
|[[Winnebago]]<br />
|colspan=4 style="text-align:center;background: #eee;"|<br />
|-<br />
|1995<br />
|colspan=2|[[Eureka College]]<br />
|colspan=5 style="text-align:center;background: #eee;"|<br />
|-<br />
|1996<br />
|colspan=2|[[Eureka College]]<br />
|[[MacArthur]]<br />
|[[Belvidere]]<br />
|[[Princeton]]<br />
|[[Dixon]]<br />
|[[Niantic-Harristown]]<br />
|-<br />
|1997<br />
|colspan=2 style="background: #eee;"|<br />
|[[Woodruff]]<br />
|[[Streator]]<br />
|[[Princeton]]<br />
|[[MacArthur]]<br />
|[[Edwards County]]<br />
|-<br />
|1998<br />
|colspan=2 style="background: #eee;"|<br />
|[[MacArthur]]<br />
|[[Sterling]]<br />
|[[Streator]]<br />
|[[Centralia (Illinois High School)|Centralia]]<br />
|[[Auburn]]<br />
|-<br />
|1999<br />
|colspan=2 style="background: #eee;"|<br />
|[[Moline]]<br />
|[[New Trier]]<br />
|[[Carlinville]]<br />
|[[PORTA]]<br />
|[[IMSA]]<br />
|-<br />
|2000<br />
|colspan=2 style="background: #eee;"|<br />
|[[Stevenson]]<br />
|[[Streator]]<br />
|[[New Trier]]<br />
|[[Eureka]]<br />
|[[Auburn]]<br />
|-<br />
|2001<br />
|colspan=2 style="background: #eee;"|<br />
|[[Salem]]<br />
|[[Fenwick]]<br />
|[[Moline]]<br />
|[[Stillman Valley]]<br />
|style="background: #eee;"|<br />
|-<br />
|2002<br />
|colspan=2 style="background: #eee;"|<br />
|[[Springfield Southeast]]<br />
|[[Limestone]]<br />
|[[Guilford]]<br />
|[[Auburn]]<br />
|[[Danville]]<br />
|-<br />
|2003<br />
|colspan=2|[[Springfield Southeast]]<br />
|[[Wheaton North]]<br />
|[[Sterling]]<br />
|[[Stillman Valley]]<br />
|[[Pleasant Plains]]<br />
|[[Auburn]]<br />
|-<br />
|2004<br />
|colspan=2|[[Springfield Southeast]]<br />
|Wheaton North<br />
|[[Morton]]<br />
|[[Auburn]]<br />
|[[Galena]]<br />
|[[Bradley-Bourbonnais]]<br />
|-<br />
|2005<br />
|colspan=2|[[Springfield Southeast]]<br />
|[[Fremd]]<br />
|[[Auburn]]<br />
|[[Morton]]<br />
|[[Pittsfield]]<br />
|[[IMSA]]<br />
|-<br />
|2006<br />
|colspan=2|[[Springfield Southeast]]<br />
|[[Fremd]]<br />
|[[Peoria Heights]]<br />
|[[Bloomington]]<br />
|[[Elmwood]]<br />
|[[Auburn]]<br />
|-<br />
|2007<br />
|colspan=2|[[Springfield Southeast]]<br />
|[[Maine South]]<br />
|[[New Trier]]<br />
|[[Springfield]]<br />
|[[Moline]]<br />
|Auburn<br />
|-<br />
|2008<br />
|colspan=2|[[Glenwood]]<br />
|[[Auburn]]<br />
|[[Carbondale]]<br />
|[[Sterling]]<br />
|[[PORTA]]<br />
|[[Springfield (IL)|Springfield]]<br />
|-<br />
|2009<br />
|colspan=2|[[Glenwood]]<br />
|[[Carbondale]]<br />
|[[Auburn]]<br />
|[[Peoria Christian]]<br />
|[[Warrensburg-Latham]]<br />
|[[New Trier]]<br />
|-<br />
|rowspan=2|2010<br />
|rowspan=2|[[Riverton]]<br />
|Class A<br />
|[[Litchfield]]<br />
|[[Latin School]]<br />
|[[Macomb]]<br />
|[[St. Joseph-Ogden]]<br />
|rowspan=200 style="background: #eee;"|<br />
|-<br />
|Class AA<br />
|[[St. Ignatius]]<br />
|[[Stevenson]]<br />
|[[Auburn]]<br />
|[[IMSA]]<br />
|-<br />
|rowspan=2|2011<br />
|rowspan=2|Riverton<br />
|Class A<br />
|[[Lisle]]<br />
|[[Macomb]]<br />
|[[PORTA]]<br />
|[[Peoria Christian]]<br />
|-<br />
|Class AA<br />
|[[Stevenson]]<br />
|[[Carbondale]]<br />
|[[IMSA]]<br />
|[[Fremd]]<br />
|-<br />
|rowspan=2|2012<br />
|rowspan=2|[[Springfield]]<br />
|Class A<br />
|[[Peoria Christian]]<br />
|[[Peoria Heights]]<br />
|[[Carlinville]]<br />
|[[Keith Country Day]]<br />
|-<br />
|Class AA<br />
|[[IMSA]]<br />
|[[Auburn]]<br />
|[[Carbondale]]<br />
|[[Latin School]]<br />
|-<br />
|rowspan=2|2013<br />
|rowspan=2|[[Springfield]]<br />
|Class A<br />
|[[Litchfield]]<br />
|[[Peoria Christian]]<br />
|[[Cumberland]]<br />
|[[Elmwood]]<br />
|-<br />
|Class AA<br />
|[[Loyola Academy]]<br />
|[[Macomb]]<br />
|[[IMSA]]<br />
|[[Carbondale]]<br />
|-<br />
|rowspan=2|2014<br />
|rowspan=2|[[Springfield]]<br />
|Class A<br />
|[[Newman Central Catholic]]<br />
|[[Carterfield]]<br />
|[[Litchfield]]<br />
|[[Cumberland]]<br />
|-<br />
|Class AA<br />
|[[IMSA]]<br />
|[[Fremd]]<br />
|[[Stevenson]]<br />
|[[Auburn]]<br />
|-<br />
|rowspan=3|2015<br />
|rowspan=3|[[Bloomington]]<br />
|Class A<br />
| [[Casey-Westfield]]<br />
| [[Riverdale]]<br />
| [[Keith Country Day]]<br />
| [[Blue Ridge]]<br />
|-<br />
|Class AA<br />
| [[Newman Central Catholic]]<br />
| [[Macomb]]<br />
| Latin School<br />
| [[University of Illinois Lab|University Lab (Urbana)]]<br />
|-<br />
|Class AAA<br />
| [[IMSA]]<br />
| [[Bloomington]]<br />
| [[Fremd]]<br />
| [[Stevenson]]<br />
|-<br />
|rowspan=3|2016<br />
|rowspan=3|[[Bloomington]]<br />
|Class A<br />
| [[Keith Country Day]]<br />
| [[Warrensburg-Latham]]<br />
| [[Carrollton]]<br />
| [[Cumberland]]<br />
|-<br />
|Class AA<br />
| [[Latin School]]<br />
| [[University of Illinois Lab|University Lab (Urbana)]]<br />
| [[Macomb]]<br />
| [[St. Teresa]]<br />
|-<br />
|Class AAA<br />
| [[Hinsdale Central]]<br />
| [[Stevenson]]<br />
| [[IMSA]]<br />
| [[Fremd]]<br />
|-<br />
|rowspan=3|2017<br />
|rowspan=3|[[Bloomington]]<br />
|Class A<br />
| [[Riverdale]]<br />
| [[Keith Country Day]]<br />
| [[Blue Ridge]]<br />
| [[Athens]]<br />
|-<br />
|Class AA<br />
| [[Latin School]]<br />
| [[University of Illinois Lab|University Lab (Urbana)]]<br />
| [[Southwestern]]<br />
| [[Byron]]<br />
|-<br />
|Class AAA<br />
| [[Stevenson]]<br />
| [[Barrington]]<br />
| [[IMSA]]<br />
| [[Hinsdale Central]]<br />
|-<br />
|rowspan=3|2018<br />
|rowspan=3|[[Bloomington]]<br />
|Class A<br />
| [[Athens]]<br />
| [[Elgin Academy]]<br />
| [[Cumberland]]<br />
| [[Warrensburg-Latham]]<br />
|-<br />
|Class AA<br />
| [[UIUC Lab]]<br />
| [[Latin]]<br />
| [[Williamsville]]<br />
| [[Southwestern]]<br />
|-<br />
|Class AAA<br />
| [[Auburn]]<br />
| [[Stevenson]]<br />
| [[IMSA]]<br />
| [[Fremd]]<br />
|-<br />
|rowspan=3|2019<br />
|rowspan=3|[[Bloomington]]<br />
|Class A<br />
| [[New Berlin]]<br />
| [[Elgin Academy]]<br />
| [[Edwards County]]<br />
| [[Galena]]<br />
|-<br />
|Class AA<br />
| [[UIUC Lab]]<br />
| [[Chicago Christian]]<br />
| [[Latin]]<br />
| [[Williamsville]]<br />
|-<br />
|Class AAA<br />
| [[IMSA]]<br />
| [[Oak Park-River Forest]]<br />
| [[Auburn]]<br />
| [[Barrington]]<br />
|-<br />
|rowspan=3|2020<br />
|rowspan=3|[[Bloomington]]<br />
|Class A<br />
| [[Villa Grove]]<br />
| [[Edwards County]]<br />
| [[Keith Country Day]]<br />
| [[Galena]]<br />
|-<br />
|Class AA<br />
| [[UIUC Lab]]<br />
| [[Chicago Christian]]<br />
| [[Latin]]<br />
| [[Williamsville]]<br />
|-<br />
|Class AAA<br />
| [[Stevenson]]<br />
| [[IMSA]]<br />
| [[Hinsdale Central]]<br />
| [[Barrington]]<br />
|-<br />
|2021<br />
|colspan=7|Canceled due to the [[COVID-19 pandemic]].<br />
|-<br />
|rowspan=3|2022<br />
|rowspan=3|[[Bloomington]]<br />
|Class A<br />
| [[Elgin Academy]]<br />
| [[Roanoke-Benson]]<br />
| [[Cumberland]]<br />
| [[New Berlin]]<br />
|-<br />
|Class AA<br />
| [[Herscher]]<br />
| [[Southwestern]]<br />
| [[Timothy Christian]]<br />
| [[Williamsville]]<br />
|-<br />
|Class AAA<br />
| [[University of Illinois Lab|University Lab (Urbana)]]<br />
| [[IMSA]]<br />
| [[Fremd]]<br />
| [[Auburn]]<br />
|-<br />
|rowspan=3|2023<br />
|rowspan=3|[[Bloomington]]<br />
|Class A<br />
| [[Metro-East Lutheran]]<br />
| [[Keith Country Day]]<br />
| [[Cumberland]]<br />
| [[Roanoke-Benson]]<br />
|-<br />
|Class AA<br />
| [[Southwestern]]<br />
| [[Latin School of Chicago]]<br />
| [[Johnston City]]<br />
| [[Rochester]]<br />
|-<br />
|Class AAA<br />
| [[Barrington]]<br />
| [[IMSA]]<br />
| [[Auburn]]<br />
| [[Bloomington]]<br />
|}<br />
Grayed out boxes indicate that the information is missing or not applicable.<br />
<br />
==See Also==<br />
*[[IHSA|IHSA State Championship]] - Illinois High School Association State Tournament<br />
*[[NAQT Illinois State Championship]]<br />
<br />
==Links==<br />
*[http://www.masonicbowl.org/ official site]<br />
*[http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/questionsets/search/?name=Masonic&season=&archived=y questions]<br />
<br />
{{Navbox HS Quizbowl in Illinois}}<br />
<br />
[[Category:High school tournaments]]<br />
[[Category:High school quizbowl in Illinois]]<br />
[[Category:State championships]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Category_talk:Current_ACF_Members&diff=59437Category talk:Current ACF Members2023-01-24T12:58:50Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div>I hereby nominate this category for deletion because it will not be kept updated. [[User:David Reinstein|David Reinstein]] ([[User talk:David Reinstein|talk]]) 18:57, 8 January 2023 (CST)<br />
:How often does a category need to become out of date for it to justify deletion? Once a year? Once every two years?<br />
:I don't think there's necessarily a problem with deleting this page, but I do think there is some value in listing ACF members (even if they're not divided into past/present) and any plan should consider that. -[[User:Kevin Wang|Kevin Wang]] ([[User talk:Kevin Wang|talk]]) 17:12, 23 January 2023 (CST)<br />
::I wouldn't mind having ACF Members as a category. This category becomes out of date each year, but my expectation is that it would then stay out of date for an average of about five years, which is why we would be better off without it. [[User:David Reinstein|David Reinstein]] ([[User talk:David Reinstein|talk]]) 06:58, 24 January 2023 (CST)</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Varun_Wadhwa&diff=59394Varun Wadhwa2023-01-18T03:55:20Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox|Name = Varun Wadhwa<br />
|Image = Varun.jpg<br />
|Subjects = Geography, History, Current Events, Trash, general<br />
|highschool = [[Wilmington Charter]] (2011-2015) <br />
|middleschool = The [[Independence|Independence School]] (2005-2011) }}<br />
Varun was a player and captain of the team at [[Wilmington Charter|The Charter School of Wilmington]].<br />
<br />
<br />
== Early Years ==<br />
<br />
<br />
From a young age, Varun Wadhwa had a strong natural gift for geography. His love of the subject led to him claiming school titles in 6th through 8th grade for the geography bee and being runner up for the school title in 4th and 5th grade. Varun took the state championship in the geography bee as a 6th and 7th grader and came in second in his 8th grade year. It was also during these middle school years that Varun discovered quiz bowl through the local tournament - [[Charter Challenge]]. After being crushed by future teammate at [[Wilmington Charter]] Grace Kim at the tournament, Varun quit quiz bowl and vowed to never play again claiming, "why would I take part in a competition with so few geography questions?"<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
== High School Years ==<br />
<br />
<br />
'''High School: Pre-Quiz Bowl<br />
<br />
It was during a pick-up basketball game that a fateful meeting occurred. Varun met Naman Agrawal (at the time a specialist in all questions related to rap and not a science player yet). Naman instantly realized the potential Varun had and the difference he could make on Charter's D team which was then captained by Agrawal himself. Naman told Varun that he must join the team if he lost to Naman in a one-on-one match. In a desperate game to avoid returning to the activity he so loathed, Varun fought with all his might, but the years of donuts and soda caught up to him and he lost. It was then that he was forced to make his return.<br />
<br />
'''High School: Freshmen Year'''<br />
<br />
Varun quickly established himself as the team's number one geography player, soon becoming the top scorer on the D team with 28 ppg. Despite this, he was never able to crack the C team rotation and remained a low-level player.<br />
<br />
'''High School: Sophomore Year'''<br />
<br />
At the beginning of his sophomore year, Varun's talent in geography and sports was noticed by team captain Ravi Suba who placed Varun on A team for several NAQT tournaments to give the A team a boost in those categories. Later in the year, Varun started to build a formidable knowledge in history as well and learned enough literature to score on mid-level teams. This sudden rise in skill led to a 3rd place finish at the National History Bowl for in the JV division for Charter's team, which was captained by Varun (who scored 90% of the points). Around the same time, he began to build a B team to complement his skills and selected Naman Agrawal to learn science, Shrayus Sortur to learn literature, and Mohan Malhotra to learn Fine Arts and RMP. This team would go on to play many tournaments together and would lead to the following year's Charter B, led by Sortur and Malhotra, to play with great skill and confidence due to Varun's awe-inspiring mentoring abilities. This team ended up going 5-5 at NAQT HSNCT and missing the playoffs just barely. Wadhwa vowed to return an even stronger player the following year.<br />
<br />
'''High School: Junior Year'''<br />
<br />
Junior year marked a complete change in Varun's abilities as teammate Jaimie Carlson and him became one of the most fearsome duos in the east. As the year progressed so did his playing skill eventually leading to his becoming the top scorer on the team at NAQT HSNCT. His abilities in history reached new heights and he began to expand to many other subjects. A 9th place finish for Charter at PACE NSC and an 8-2 prelim record at HSNCT were the highlights of a fantastic year for him.<br />
<br />
'''High School: Senior Year'''<br />
<br />
Despite losing partners in crime Jaimie Carlson and Naman Agrawal, Varun remains optimistic about the team's future and works extremely hard to train his teammates and bring out their talent. His unselfishness was highlighted at a tournament at Princeton where he chose to play on B team to let four of his teammates who still needed time to improve without being stuck in his shadow the opportunity to play on A team. Varun led a CSW team to the round of 32 in the 2015 National History Bowl. Varun ragequit the 2015 National History Bee because he needed to do his chemistry homework. <br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
== Fun Trivia about Varun ==<br />
<br />
-He founded DEQBA with Naman Agarwal, Mohan Malhotra, and Vineet Thakur in order to conduct outreach to middle schools in Delaware. The organization was an overwhelming success, with the Charter Challenge MS field reaching 54 teams.<br />
<br />
-He has gone a weight loss campaign since the end of Junior year by quitting junk food and soda. He has lost 30 pounds so far.<br />
<br />
-He prefers to be called Supreme Leader of Charter QuBo by the freshmen and Sorcerer Supreme of Buzzing Abilities by the sophomores.<br />
<br />
-In his free time, Varun can be found volunteering or tutoring (for free) underclassmen in history and geography.<br />
[[Category:High school players active in 2012]]<br />
|[[Category:High school players active in 2013]]<br />
[[Category:High school players active in 2014]]<br />
[[Category:High school players active in 2015]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Ken_Jennings&diff=59393Ken Jennings2023-01-18T03:54:42Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox|Name = Ken Jennings<br />
|Image = Kenjennings.jpg<br />
|Subjects = Jeopardy!<br />
|schoolpast = [[BYU]] (1996-2000)<br />
|firstname = Ken<br />
|lastname = Jennings<br />
}}<br />
'''Ken Jennings''' is a former player for [[BYU]] and [[NAQT]] member and editor who is best known for his record-setting run on [[Jeopardy!]] in the summer of 2004. Jennings won a still-record 74 consecutive games and defeated numerous other quizbowl personalities, including [[Leo Wolpert]] and [[Jeff Hoppes]], in the process. He and Mayim Bialik became the hosts of the show in 2021.<br />
<br />
==Playing career==<br />
Jennings was part of of the [[BYU]] team from fall 1996 until 1999-2000. In 1998, [[Adam Fine]] ranked him as the 81st best quizbowl player he had seen play.<br />
<br />
==Involvement with quiz bowl==<br />
===NAQT vs ACF===<br />
Shortly after his win streak, Jennings and other NAQT diehards of the mid-'00s attempted to use their success on Jeopardy! to settle a "format war" between [[ACF]] and NAQT - the details of this feud are not well-established. This tactic blew up in NAQT's face when Jennings repeatedly lost on Jeopardy to [[Chip Beall]]-acolyte [[Brad Rutter]].<br />
<br />
===Why Does Ken Jennings Play Quiz Bowl?===<br />
In 2018, NAQT put out a video featuring Jennings titled [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y5ku181Zm8I "Why Does Ken Jennings Play Quiz Bowl?"], in which he describes the advantages that playing quiz bowl has. Like many of his public mentions of quiz bowl, this video features Jennings describing how one can improve at ''Jeopardy!'' by participating in the activity.<br />
<br />
===Slate article===<br />
On April 9, 2019, Jennings wrote an article for Slate magazine discussing the relationship between quiz bowl and Jeopardy titled "The Jeopardy! Minor Leagues", in which he stated "quiz bowl—and NAQT in particular—has become a de facto farm system for the brains you see on Jeopardy! every night"[https://slate.com/culture/2019/04/jeopardy-quiz-bowl-connection-ken-jennings.html]. A short forum discussion followed to discuss the choice of the phrase "minor leagues" and more generally the presentation of quiz bowl to the public.[https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=22606]<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
*[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ken_Jennings Wikipedia article]<br />
*[http://ken-jennings.com/ Ken Jennings' website]<br />
<br />
{{Navbox NAQT}}<br />
<br />
[[Category: People]]<br />
[[Category: BYU]]<br />
[[Category: Players active in 1999]]<br />
[[Category: Players active in 1998]]<br />
[[Category: Players active in 1997]]<br />
[[Category: Celebrity quizbowl alums]]<br />
[[Category:Original QBWiki Page]]<br />
[[Category: Jeopardy contestants]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Sharath_Narayan&diff=59392Sharath Narayan2023-01-18T03:50:52Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox|Name = Sharath Narayan<br />
|Subjects = Generalist, Literature<br />
|schoolcur = [[Vanderbilt]]<br />
|schoolpast = None<br />
|highschool =[[James Clemens]] (2014-2018)<br />
|middleschool=[[Liberty Middle (AL)|Liberty]] (2012-2014)<br />
| }}<br />
'''Sharath Narayan''' was a player for [[James Clemens]] and [[Vanderbilt]]. In middle school, he played for [[Liberty Middle (AL)|Liberty]]. <br />
==Career==<br />
===Middle School===<br />
Narayan began his quizbowl career by playing for [[Liberty Middle (AL)|Liberty]] in middle school. He enabled Liberty to finished 15th at the 2014 [[ASCA Middle School State Championship]] and improved to lead Liberty to second place in the next year. As a result of this performance Liberty qualified and attended the [[2015 MSNCT]], where the team tied for 29th place. Narayan was 15th in overall PPG at the tournament. <br />
===High School===<br />
Narayan went to James Clemens for high school and began by finishing 3rd in PPG and enabling a 5th place finish for James Clemens at the 2014 [[Hoover Invitational Tournament]] (JV Division). Narayan gained 2nd place PPG at the 2015 [[Covenant Christian Invitational]], at which James Clemens finished 6th. At the 2015 [[ASCA Junior Varsity State Championship]], Narayan tied for 3rd in PPG and James Clemens finished 6th. He led James Clemens to a 4th place finish at the 2015 [[ASCA High School State Championship]]. Narayan led James Clemens to win the 2016 ASCA Junior Varsity State Championship. At the 2016 ASCA High School State Championship, James Clemens finished 5th and Narayan was top scorer. Sharath played on the first-ever Team Alabama at the 2016 [[NASAT]].<br />
<br />
He won the Jeopardy! Teen Tournament in 2016.<br />
<br />
Sharath was the MVP of the 2018 [[ASCA High School State Championship]], leading James Clemens to second place overall.<br />
==Writing==<br />
Narayan is a freelance writer for Spring Academic Games for Elementary Students (SAGES).<br />
==External Links==<br />
*[https://www.naqt.com/stats/player.jsp?contact_id=172708 NAQT Stats page]<br />
[[Category:High school players active in 2017]]<br />
[[Category:High school players active in 2016]]<br />
[[Category:High school players active in 2015]]<br />
[[Category:High school players active in 2014]]<br />
[[Category:High school players active in 2013]]<br />
[[Category:Middle school players active in 2014]]<br />
[[Category:Middle school players active in 2013]]<br />
[[Category:Question writers]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Bergen_County_Academies&diff=59391Bergen County Academies2023-01-18T03:49:47Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Highschoolteam|Name = Bergen County Academies<br />
|image = Bergen.png<br />
|citystate = Hackensack, NJ<br />
|currentcoach = Jon Pinyan<br />
|state = NAQT: 2007<br />
|nats = None<br />
|nats appearances = HSNCT: 2001, 2005, 2007-2011, 2016<br>NSC: 2013-2015<br />
|status = Active<br />
|size = 1060<br />
| }}<br />
The Bergen County Academies quiz bowl team competes at both the state and national level. It was the [[NJ NAQT State Championship|New Jersey State Champion]] in the 2006-2007 season and finished tied for 11th at the 2008 [[NAQT]] [[2008 HSNCT|HSNCT]].<br />
<br />
==History==<br />
The team was founded in the 2000-01 season and received a wild card invitation to play at the 2001 HSNCT, where they finished 3-7. In the 2002 NJ state championship, they went undefeated in the round-robin, but lost a one-game final to Millburn. The program's first victory came in a Jeopardy-style tournament at Columbia High School in November 2002. Amusingly, said tournament was won by Bergen Academy B, which had defeated Bergen Academy A in the semifinals. Later that season, the team (synecdochically playing as "AAST") won the regional Science Bowl tournament.<br />
<br />
They made the playoffs in the 2005 [[NAQT]] [[2005 HSNCT|HSNCT]], led by senior Harry Altman. The team ran into some trouble in the 2005-2006 season as their long time coach, Mr. Jason Sayres, left. Throughout the year they were more or less without a coach. Nevertheless, the team itself showed promise, beating [[Wilmington Charter]] A to win the 2005 [[Long Island Fall Tournament]], along with several other tournaments in the area. Unfortunately, the logistic issues created by a lack of a coach caused them to be unable to participate in the 2006 [[NAQT]] [[2006 HSNCT|HSNCT]]. Finally, at the end of the year, they gained Robert Scarpone, a former Jeopardy champion, as a coach. The 2006-2007 was a bit of a rebuilding year, after the loss of several talented seniors. Nevertheless, the team won the 2007 State Championship (which may be due to several New Jersey teams boycotting it) and finished tied for 33rd at the 2007 [[NAQT]] [[2007 HSNCT|HSNCT]].<br />
<br />
==2007-2008 Season==<br />
The 2007-2008 season started under yet another coach, Mr. Richard Wasek, and once again saw the loss of several talented seniors. Nevertheless, the team improved greatly throughout the season, winning several tournaments including the Fall KMO and the first ever experimental Goldfish tournament. Entering the 2008 [[NAQT]] [[2008 HSNCT|HSNCT]], [[2008 Bergen County Academies|the team]] had gotten a resounding zero votes in the pre-nationals poll and shocked many (including themselves) by finishing tied for 11th with 6 other teams, by far their best finish at a [[HSNCT]].<br />
<br />
==2008-2009 Season==<br />
In 2008, the team started with another coach, Dr. Michael Abramson, who previously coached the team in 2005. Losing some talented seniors, but seeing some potent players become seniors, Bergen prepared themselves for a big season. They started on the right path with a win at the [[Princeton High School Tournament]] with three players, earning the season's first trophy to be displayed proudly under Dr. Abramson's laptop cart. Late in the year, Dr. Abramson informed the team he no longer wished to be coach, and the team then worked with Mr. Dan Baker, as well as Jon Pinyan, an alumnus of the team who was student-teaching at the time. The team continued to thrive, winning a tournament at Livingston in March. At the [[2009 HSNCT|HSNCT]], the team went 8-2 in the preliminary rounds and defeated [[2009 Francis Howell Central|Francis Howell Central]] and [[Thomas Jefferson (VA)]] in close playoff games before losing to eventual champion [[Wilmington Charter]] and [[LASA]] to finish tied for 17th.<br />
<br />
In April 2009, after two previous false starts, the program hosted its first tournament, the Bergen Open Academic Tournament ([[BOAT]]). Hunter defeated Kellenberg in a two-game final, after the latter survived a circle of death with Hunter B and Charter B. Three weeks later, the school was the site (although Stephen Fineman of [[Chatham]] was the tournament director) for the state championship, won by [[St. Joseph]].<br />
<br />
==2009-2010 Season==<br />
With the graduation of leading scorer Watson Ladd, the BCA team was ranked 30th in Fred Morlan's preseason list and only on 2 of 11 preseason top-25 ballots. Nevertheless, the team had a number of strong performances. Bergen finished runner-up at PHSAT, losing 235-360 to Charter; 4th and 6th at LIFT, with the B team defeating Charter in a playoff round; 2nd at Delaware Open, losing the final 230-255 to Richard Montgomery; 3rd at Half Hollow Hills; 2nd at the state championship, losing the final 280-335 to St. Joseph.<br />
<br />
The team also hosted a mirror of Dunbar's DAFT in December. After a late start due to a no-show team, the tournament ran smoothly and was won by Hunter over St. Joseph.<br />
<br />
==Questions about Bergen==<br />
With several somewhat notable alumni, occasionally a tossup or bonus will be about a former student of the school. Harry Altman, a memorable subject in the documentary Spellbound appears from time to time (oddly enough, Harry himself played quizbowl for several seasons, meaning he could have potentially answered a tossup or bonus about himself, though he claims this never came to fruition). George Hotz, the first person to unlock the iPhone, appeared in a bonus in the [[NAQT]] packet IS-70.<br />
<br />
==Former Members==<br />
*[[Jon Pinyan]], 2003<br />
*[[Harry Altman]]<br />
*[[Chris Kennedy]]<br />
*[[Damon Wang]]<br />
*[[Matt Tobin]]<br />
*[[Molly Fitzpatrick]]<br />
*[[Val Karpov]]<br />
*[[Aaron Cohen]], 2008<br />
*[[Sang Park]], 2008<br />
*[[Watson Ladd]], 2009<br />
*[[Jake Reid]], 2009<br />
*[[Janine Balekdijan]], 2009<br />
*[[Sibjeet Mahapatra]], 2009<br />
*[[Gabriel Johnson]], 2010<br />
*[[Chris Corbo]], 2010<br />
*[[Ian Osborn]], 2010<br />
*[[Dennis London]], 2010<br />
*[[Rebecca Rosenthal]], 2016<br />
*Zachary Stier, 2016<br />
*Ryan Murphy, 2017<br />
*Simon Seal, 2017<br />
*David Song, 2017<br />
<br />
==Curiosities==<br />
A running theme of BCAQB has been its inability to keep a coach. Admittance to its first tournament was based on a student submitting the entry form, posing as the faculty advisor. The coach who took over for the remainder of the 2000-01 year quit the school. All in all, through a decade of existence, the team has had 7 official coaches (including one with two non-consecutive terms), with only Mr. Sayres running the team for longer than one year at a time, plus unofficial assistant/tournament director Mr. Pinyan. Since January 2010, the team has fallen under the jurisdiction of the two Academic Decathlon coaches.<br />
<br />
The team also likes to use pseudonyms at tournaments; NAQT's team database likely has more fake names than real ones.<br />
<br />
[[Category:High school teams]] [[Category:New Jersey high school teams]][[Category:Bergen County Academies]]<br />
[[Category:Original QBWiki Page]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Woburn_CI&diff=59390Woburn CI2023-01-18T03:49:06Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Highschoolteam|Name = Woburn Collegiate Institue<br />
|image = wc151s1.png<br />
|citystate = Scarborough, ON<br />
|currentcoach = Douglas Langdon<br />
|state = [[2006 Woburn|2006]]<br />
|nats =Reach for the Top: [[2006 Woburn|2006]]<br />
|status = Active<br />
|size = 1071<br />
| }}<br />
<br />
'''Woburn Collegiate Institute''', also known as '''East Scarborough''', is a public secondary school in Scarborough, Toronto, Ontario. In [[2006 Woburn|2006]], the team won their first national [[Reach for the Top]] title. They compete in the [[Scarborough Schoolreach League]]<br />
<br />
==History==<br />
<br />
===Reach for the Top===<br />
First reaching prominence in the 1990s, Woburn's Reach for the Top team's most notable early result was placing runners-up in the 1990 Ontario Provincials, a harbinger of the success they would achieve in later years. As of 2015, Woburn has won their local schoolreach league 20 years consecutively, an span of glory that can only be termed as dynastic. <br />
<br />
In recent years, the team has had success on both the provincial and national levels. Their 2006 team, led by captain [[Sinan Ulusoy]], the team won both the provincial championships and the national championships. Woburn consistently placed in the top 10s in the Ontario Provincial since then, reaching or breaking the threshold every year since 2012. <br />
<br />
The only serious threat to Woburn's reign over their regional league occurred towards the end of the 2015 season. In a haphazard and ill conceived attempt to prevent a dominant and almost undefeated Woburn from entering the provincial tournament, the organizer for the regional league (not-so-coincidentally also the coach of a competing and habitually unsuccessful school, Sir. John A. MacDonald CI) changed the one-day final for the Scarborough championship (and subsequently qualification into the Provincial level) from the usual last-day knockout format between school teams with a winning round-robin record in previous league matches done every year prior to 2015, to a series of 3 matches where combined aggregate scoring would determine the champion and eventual qualifying school (disregarding win/loss entirely). This action was done without the consent of the other schools participating in the league and no prior notice (an incredible feat as universal widespread access to telecommunications existed in the year 2015) was given indicating that there would be a change in formats for the finals. It became clear that the format was rigged against Woburn as not only did Woburn face the second seeded Agincourt first, but as the highest seeded winning school of each of their games Woburn would face the stronger winning school of another match, while highly seeded schools that lost against Woburn where allowed to face lowly seeded losing schools in their next match, thus ensuring Woburn would be hindered in the points accumulation process while rival schools were given an favourable advantage to proceed, despite losing their matches to Woburn.<br />
<br />
Despite this farce, Woburn prevailed and accumulated 100 points over their closest competitors to claim their 20th Scarborough title in a row. What would have been joy and celebration towards an unprecedented feat was overshadowed by the undercurrents of acrimony felt within the team, driven from the fact that they were almost denied their spot in the Provincials championship not because they were bested, but because of the whims of the organizer of the tournament.<br />
<br />
==Quizbowl==<br />
Woburn is one of few teams in Ontario to have competed in quizbowl competition. In the 2006 season, they competed in the inaugural [[Ottawa Quizbowl Tournament]].<br />
In 2010, they competed at the [[2010 NAQT Ontario Provincials]], finishing third after [[2010 Lisgar|Lisgar]] came from behind from 265 points down to defeat Woburn in a round match. <br />
<br />
The next year at [[2011 NAQT Ontario Provincials]], Woburn A came in 5th. <br />
<br />
Woburn came to [[Lisgar]] to play in it's mirror of 2011 ACF Novice and came in second. Woburn sent a team to the 2012 HSNCT that placed 117th out of 240 schools with a 5-5 record.<br />
<br />
===Renaissance (2015-present)===<br />
<br />
Due to various factors, among them disorganization, logistical insufficiency, costs, the provincial teacher's strike that occurred in the 2012-2013 school year, restrictive school policies and disinterest, Woburn was inactive and did not participate in any Quizbowl tournaments or even practice Quizbowl from the end of 2012 to the start of 2015. Although Woburn was still achieving success in reach at a local and provincial level, there was a perception of despair at the failure to firmly plant a foundation towards quizbowl in the trivia club and envy at the ability and strength of the Quizbowl teams of the Ottawa circuit.<br />
<br />
In February 2015 senior members of the school team decided to take matters into their own hands and attended their first ever Quizbowl tournament at McMaster University as the new Woburn team, under the honorific "East Scarborough", achieving a result of second place. This reignited club interest in Quizbowl, and Woburn began to once again see Quizbowl as the prestige academic competitive format, re-establishing Quizbowl practice and youth indoctrination. The following season, despite their relative inexperience, the new-look Woburn achieved their first victories at tournaments hosted by McMaster (October 2015) and Toronto (December 2015). Not only did doing Quizbowl again work, but it lead some to regard Woburn as a serious contender for the 2016 NAQT Ontario Provincial Championship. <br />
<br />
Unfortunately, due to some absences from two first team players Woburn settled for fourth, and a mere 30 points separated them from a victory against Merivale in their final game, which would have triggered a playoff for second-place; which was an exemplary feat considering Woburn played shorthanded with 3 players and substituted two of their quizbowl regular squad players for an inexperienced novice was only playing her second tournament. The first Woburn match versus Lisgar was considered the game of the tournament, with both teams sharing the lead or tying at multiple points throughout the game, no tossups went dead. Jacky Li finished the tournament as top scorer by an untouchable margin and delivered perhaps what was the single finest NAQT Ontario Provincials performance ever.<br />
<br />
Then 22/40 happened.<br />
<br />
==Rivalries==<br />
<br />
===Major===<br />
<br />
*[[Lisgar]] (El Clásico)<br />
*[[UTS]] (Reach for the Top)<br />
*[[Waterloo CI]] (Reach for the Top, Quizbowl)<br />
*[[Martingrove]] (The Banterbowl)<br />
*[[Colonel By]] <br />
*[[UCC]] (Reach, and hopefully Quizbowl soon)<br />
*The school administration<br />
<br />
===Attempted===<br />
*[[Agincourt CI]] (You can't have a rivalry with someone if they can't even score 10 points against you)<br />
*[[Sir John A. MacDonald CI]] (Corruption)<br />
*[[Neil McNeil]] <br />
*[[Westmount SS]] (Quizbowl)<br />
<br />
==Alumni== <br />
<br />
*Fayaz Ahmed <br />
*Sherwin Xu<br />
*Cynthia Zhao<br />
*Thomas Wentz<br />
*Sinan Shariff<br />
*Literally everyone who quit PEG<br />
*So basically PEG<br />
*[[Sinan Ulusoy]]<br />
*[[Brian Bi]]<br />
*[[Cam MacInnis]]<br />
*[[Bosco Leung]]<br />
*[[Peter Liu]]<br />
*[[Sunanthan Sivakumar]]<br />
*[[Faheem Pahlwan]]<br />
*[[Jacky Li]]<br />
*[[Teddy Kassa]]<br />
*[[Jin Kwon]]<br />
{{-}}<br />
{{Succession_box|Tournament = [[Reach for the Top]]<br />
|year = 2006<br />
|previous = [[2005 Cobequid|Cobequid]]<br />
|next = [[2007 London Central|London Central]]<br />
| }}<br />
<br />
[[Category:High school teams]]<br />
[[Category:Ontario high school teams]]<br />
[[Category:Original QBWiki Page]]<br />
[[Category: Woburn]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Kansas_State&diff=59389Kansas State2023-01-18T03:47:12Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Collegebox|College Name = Kansas State<br />
|Image = <br />
|citystate = Manhattan, KS<br />
|president = Trevor Steiner<br />
|nats = <br />
| }}<br />
'''Kansas State University''' is a public state university in Manhattan, Kansas.<br />
<br />
=Former Players=<br />
* [[Ben Detrixhe]]<br />
* [[Trevor Steiner]]<br />
* [[Zach Arnberger]]<br />
* [[Katie Gentry]]<br />
* [[Brian Hampel]]<br />
* [[Jason Beets]]<br />
* [[Rachel Zimmerman]]<br />
* [[Jessica McCall]]<br />
* [[Wyle Yeager]]<br />
* [[Peter Bebzeh]]<br />
* [[Kenny Uphoff]]<br />
* [[Mike Uphoff]] (advises/coaches the team and helps out as a volunteer at tournaments)<br />
<br />
=Competition Results=<br />
==2013-2014==<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0"<br />
! Tournament<br />
! Host Location<br />
! Finish<br />
! Team Members<br />
! Statistics<br />
|- <br />
| [http://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=14837 2013 Early Autumn Collegiate Novice]<br />
| [[Missouri]]<br />
| A Team (5th), B Team (6th)<br />
| A Team (Zach Arnberger, Katie Gentry and Wyle Yeager); B Team (Peter Bebzeh, Rachel Zimmerman and Jessica McCall)<br />
| [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/1649/stats/all_games/ Stats]<br />
|-<br />
| [http://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=14639 2013 ACF Fall]<br />
| [[Truman State]]<br />
| A Team (5th); B Team (7th)<br />
| A Team (Ben Detrixhe, Brian Hampel, Trevor Steiner and Jason Beets); B Team (Zach Arnberger, Wyle Yeager, Jessica McCall and Rachel Zimmerman)<br />
| [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/1511/stats/prelims/ Prelims] [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/1511/stats/playoffs_plus_finals/ Playoffs] [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/1511/stats/combined/ Combined] <br />
|-<br />
| [http://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=14972 DRAGOON]<br />
| Kansas State<br />
| A Team (2nd); B Team (6th)<br />
| A Team (Brian Hampel, Shannon Orth); B Team (Wyle Yeager, Jessica McCall)<br />
| [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/1729/stats/all_games/standings/ Stats]<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<br />
==2012-2013==<br />
{| border="1" cellspacing="0"<br />
! Tournament<br />
! Host Location<br />
! Finish<br />
! Team Members<br />
! Statistics<br />
|-<br />
| [http://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=13242 QUARK]<br />
| [[Truman State]]<br />
| A Team (4th); B Team (9th)<br />
| A Team (Ben Detrixhe, Trevor Steiner, Jason Beets, Katie Gentry); B Team (Brian Hampel, Aaron Heil, Zach Arnberger)<br />
| [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/1005/stats/quark-all_games/ Stats]<br />
|-<br />
| [http://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=13624 2012 ACF Fall]<br />
| [[Minnesota]]<br />
| A Team (6th); B Team (9th)<br />
| A Team (Kenny Uphoff, Trevor Steiner, Jason Beets, Ben Detrixhe); B Team (Brian Hampel, Zach Arnberger, Katie Gentry, Sam)<br />
| [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/1151/stats/all_games/ Stats]<br />
|-<br />
| [http://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=13894 2013 Region 11 SCT]<br />
| [[Truman State]]<br />
| A Team (2nd in Division II); B Team (9th in Division II)<br />
| A Team in Division II (Ben Detrixhe, Kenny Uphoff, Trevor Steiner, Zach Arnberger); B Team in Division II (Jason Beets, Katie Gentry)<br />
| [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/1272/stats/division_ii/ Division II]<br />
|-<br />
| [http://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=13752 2013 Western Invitational Tournament]<br />
| [[Truman State]]<br />
| T-5th<br />
| Trevor Steiner, Zach Arnberger<br />
| [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/1283/stats/all_games/ Stats]<br />
|-<br />
|}</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Peter_Torres&diff=59388Peter Torres2023-01-18T03:46:08Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox<br />
|Name = Peter Torres<br />
|Subjects = History, Geography<br />
|schoolcur = {{nowrap|[[UCF]] (2014-present)}} <BR> <br />
|schoolpast = n/a<br />
|highschool = Gulf Coast High School (2010-2014)<br />
}}<br />
<br />
'''Peter Torres''' is a former player at Gulf Coast High School and [[UCF]]. <br />
<br />
== High School ==<br />
<br />
Peter played at Gulf Coast High, winning the county championship twice during his time there. He was chosen for Team Collier for the [[ Commissioner's Academic Challenge]] both his junior and senior year. The competition, while an example of [[bad quizbowl]], introduced Peter to his first experience to tough competition. <br />
<br />
== College ==<br />
Joining UCF quizbowl in 2014, his first tournament was a win at 2014 [[Delta Burke]]. From there, he hasn't stopped playing. He was able to play with [[Jay Misuk]] at the Bainbridge run tournament [[SUMO]], finishing fifth. Riding on the coattails of [[Rob Fernandez]] and [[Billy Beyer]], he won [[Will Alston Open]] in January 2017. As of late, he has been writing a spring novice known as [[SUN]] along with members of the University of [[Florida]] and [[New College]] to be played in 2017.<br />
<br />
== Writing/Editing Work ==<br />
*2015 [[Delta Burke]]- Contributor<br />
*2016 [[Delta Burke]]- Contributor<br />
*2017 [[SUN]]- Head Writer and Editor<br />
<br />
== Notable Tournaments==<br />
*1st place at 2014 [[Delta Burke]] on UCF A with [[Alex Eliott]], [[Cassidy Beaulieu]], and [[Aaron Jablon]]<br />
*4th highest scorer at [[2015 ACF Fall]] University of Florida Site<br />
*3rd highest scorer at [[2016 ACF Regionals]] New College Site<br />
*1st place at DII [[2016 SCT]] along with [[Daniel Golisch]] and [[Austin Shipley]]<br />
*2nd place at the 2016 [[MUT]] Valencia mirror along with [[Daniel Golisch]], [[Cassandra Logan]], and [[Austin Shipley]]<br />
[[Category:Question writers]]</div>David Reinsteinhttps://www.qbwiki.com/w/index.php?title=Case_Western&diff=59387Case Western2023-01-18T03:44:05Z<p>David Reinstein: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Collegebox|College Name = Case Western Reserve University <br />
|Image = 2006ish.png<br />
|citystate = Cleveland, OH<br />
|president = Andrew Halza<br />
|nats = 1999 [[TRASHionals]]<br />
| }}<br />
<br />
The '''Case Western Reserve University Trivia Team''' is a club at Case Western Reserve University. They host an annual high school trash quiz bowl tournament and compete in several collegiate tournaments each semester.<br />
<br />
==History/Tournaments==<br />
Case Western Reserve University's College Trivia Club has been in existence since at least 1991. The club began to grow in stature when Emil Thomas Chuck was accepted into CWRU's Biomedical Scientists Training Program in 1994 and became the Trivia Club's advisor. Under his tenure, the CWRU team increased its participation in college invitational, regional, and national competitions, for which Dr. Chuck also moderated. With the Club, he founded 3 high school tournaments which Case continued to host for many years: [[High School Celebrity Shootout]] starting in 1995, [[Buzzerpalooza]] in 1996, and the [[Great Lakes Regional Academic Championship]], or GLRAC, in 1997. In 1998, CWRU hosted the inaugural PACE [[National Scholastics Championship]], with Dr. Chuck serving as Tournament Organizer and Host. Dr. Chuck also helped host many collegiate competitions, including [[College Bowl]] Intramurals through 1998 and [[TRASH Regionals]] in 1998.<br />
<br />
When Dr. Chuck received his Ph.D. in 1998, he continued to help organize and direct tournaments, both high school and collegiate, while other students on the CWRU Trivia Team took up more leadership roles. From 1999-2003, Allison Manzuk, Brandon Eilertson, and Josh Levit defined Case Quiz Bowl, bringing the team to new heights. Allison quickly became the Tournament Director after the departure of Dr. Chuck and gave the local high schools and colleges efficiently-run tournaments that have been universally praised by those attended. Brandon and Josh helped Case continue its tradition of competitive excellence in both academic and TRASH, as Case was represented respectably all four of their years at NAQT's [[ICT]] and [[TRASHionals]] (in 1999, Case's team became the TRASHionals National Champions). As Tournament Director, Allison Manzuk with the help of the rest of the Case Trivia Club hosted many collegiate tournaments, including the Buzz-à-Trois Singles Academic/Trash Tournaments 1999-2001, the 2000 TRASHionals, the Bachelors/Don King Undergraduate Tournaments in October of 2001, ACF Fall in 2001 and 2003, and the NAQT Great Lakes SCT in 2003. Allison was also the Tournament Director when CWRU hosted the PACE NSC again in 2003.<br />
<br />
After the class of 2003 graduated, Case's team had lost some of its most valued players, but the remaining students kept the team alive, continuing to host the three annual high school tournaments as well as collegiate tournaments such as the 2005 NAQT SCT. By 2007, the team had begun to fall apart, and halfway through the season, the President Kristin Cameron mysteriously disappeared, leaving high school teams wondering if tournaments like Buzzerpalooza would still be happening. At this point, the entering first-year [[Steven Wellstead]] picked up the broken pieces and assumed the position of President for the remainder of the 2007-08 season. Though the Buzzerpalooza ended up being hosted by [[Solon]] High School at the last minute that year, Steven was able to successfully direct the 2008 Great Lakes Regional Academic Championship (GLRAC). In 2008, Case became the host of [[Bob Kilner]]'s high school trash tournament, attracting a field of 32 teams. During the 2008-09 season, Case hosted Buzzerpalooza one final time as a part of a two-day tournament with the GLRAC. That same season, Case also hosted the High School Celebrity Shootout for the last time, though the tournament, which had been mirrored by Duke University, still lived on in North Carolina high schools (though with waning interest). The next year, Case only hosted the GLRAC, which continued on for yet another year until Steven Wellstead graduated in 2011.<br />
<br />
After Steven Wellstead's departure, the third-year Drew Scheeler assumed the role as President, and the team remained in existence for the next couple years under his leadership. However, without a strong underclassmen base, the team dwindled in size, and in the 2013-14 season after the last of the strong seniors had graduated, the second-year Ethan Huang became President and tried to keep the club alive as best he could. In the fall of 2013, the trivia club hosted a disorganized trash tournament, and in the spring, with the help of [[Greg Bossick]], Ethan Huang successfully hosted the 2014 NAQT Great Lakes SCT.<br />
<br />
The next year, the entering first-year Tyler McMaken joined the team and, with the help of the remaining few CWRU College Trivia Team members, worked hard to bring back the annual high school trash tournament tradition in the 2015-16 season, under the new name "Rock and Roll Hall of Shame." That year, the team completely swept the Great Lakes NAQT Novice tournament at the University of Michigan, winning 1st place overall and boasting the top two individual scorers. The team continued to grow, and in the fall of 2017, the third iteration of Rock and Roll Hall of Shame was successfully run, with the house-written questions being mirrored in both central and southern Ohio locations.<br />
<br />
==Past Team Members==<br />
*Andrew Halza - President (2017-2021)<br />
*Shawn Yoshida - Vice President (2017-2021)<br />
*Hunter Stecko - Treasurer (2017-2021)<br />
*Tim Jin - Secretary (2017-2021)<br />
*Yash Kumar - Risk Manager (2017-2021)<br />
*Aparna Paul - Risk Manager (2017-2021)<br />
*Caleb Branton (2015-2019)<br />
*Nicolas Leberer (2016-2020)<br />
*Matt York (2016-2020)<br />
*Todd Cheng (2017-2021)<br />
*Andreas Kowald (2017-2021)<br />
*Norman Luc (grad student)<br />
*Sid Nanda (grad student)<br />
*[[User:Tyler McMaken|Tyler McMaken]] - ''President 2016-2018'' (2014-2018)<br />
*Sam Llaneta (2014-2018)<br />
*Kelsey Bean (2014-2018)<br />
*Tyler Powell (2015-2019)<br />
*Esther Sun (2014-2018)<br />
*Michael Oei (2014-2018)<br />
*James Sullivan - ''President 2015-2016'' (2013-2016)<br />
*James Ullett (2013-2017)<br />
*Nathaniel Sharer (2013-2017)<br />
*Ethan Huang - ''President 2013-2015'' (2012-2016)<br />
*Campbell Fitzhugh (2013-2014)<br />
*Caleb Welsh (2013-2014)<br />
*Lucas Vroege (2013-2014)<br />
*Drew Scheeler - ''President 2011-2013'' (2009-2013)<br />
*[[Matthew Hayes]] (Graduate Student) (2008-2013)<br />
*Steven Oppenheim (2006-2013)<br />
*Nick Reymann (2008-2012)<br />
*[[Steven Wellstead]] - ''President 2008-2011'' (2007-2011)<br />
*Rob Fraser (2007-2011)<br />
*Michael Steward (2007-2011)<br />
*Ethan Yanyo (2007-2011)<br />
*Tyler Babcock (2007-2011)<br />
*Chris Hernandez (2006-2010)<br />
*Kristin Cameron - ''President 2007 ''(2005-2009)<br />
*Jon Geisinger (2005-2009)<br />
*Siddharth Venkatachalam (2005-2009)<br />
*David Johnson (2004-2008)<br />
*Roger Cheng - ''President 2005-2007'' (2003-2007)<br />
*Shaan Gandhi (2003-2007)<br />
*Erin Salter (2003-2007)<br />
*Scott McMichael (2002-2007)<br />
*Jeff Hanson - ''President 2004-2005''<br />
*Josh Levit (1999-2003)<br />
*Brandon Eilertson (1999-2003)<br />
*Allison Manzuk - ''President'' (1999-2003)<br />
*[[Anthony de Jesus]] (1996-2000)<br />
*Michael Hake (1994-1998)<br />
*Bill Nottingham (1993-1997)<br />
*Jessica McGeary (1992-1996)<br />
<br />
==Archived Team Pages and Other Links==<br />
*Notable Team Members pre-2000: [https://wayback.archive-it.org/6477/20000309042226/http://www.cwru.edu/orgs/trivia/fame.html]<br />
*Pictures pre-2000: [https://wayback.archive-it.org/6477/20000608111938/http://www.cwru.edu/orgs/trivia/members/unbuzzed.html]<br />
*Team Website 1996-2000: [https://wayback.archive-it.org/6477/20000226134218/http://www.cwru.edu/orgs/trivia/index.html]<br />
*Team Members 1999-2000: [https://wayback.archive-it.org/6477/20000606102256/http://www.cwru.edu/orgs/trivia/members.html]<br />
*Tournament Calendar 2001-02: [https://wayback.archive-it.org/6477/20080705174041/http://www.cwru.edu/orgs/trivia/events.html]<br />
*Class of 2003 History/Diary: [https://wayback.archive-it.org/6477/20020130174707/http://home.cwru.edu/~jel16/cwru2003.html]<br />
*Team Website 2008: [https://wayback.archive-it.org/6477/20080520111507/http://www.case.edu/orgs/trivia]<br />
*Team Website 2013-14: [http://usg.case.edu/show_profile/90341-cwru-college-trivia-club]<br />
*Team Website (within OrgSync - must log in to see events): [https://orgsync.com/90341/chapter]<br />
<br />
*Team Stats at all NAQT Events (1996-Present): [https://www.naqt.com/stats/school-results.jsp?org_id=1094]<br />
<br />
(Broken links):<br />
*Hall of Fame 1996-2007: [http://www.case.edu/orgs/trivia/hof.html?nw_view=1435075541]<br />
*Team Website 2002-05: [http://www.case.edu/orgs/trivia/index_old.html?nw_view=1435073651]<br />
*Team Members 2005-06: [http://www.case.edu/orgs/trivia/members.html?nw_view=1435074364]<br />
*Team Members 2006-07: [http://www.case.edu/orgs/trivia/about_members.html?nw_view=1435073491]<br />
*Team Website 2007-08: [http://www.cwru.edu/orgs/trivia/index.html?nw_view=1435073818]<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category: College clubs]]<br />
[[Category:Original QBWiki Page]]<br />
[[Category:Case Western]]</div>David Reinstein