Difference between revisions of "Jake Sundberg"
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|Image = jake.jpg | |Image = jake.jpg | ||
|Subjects = Math, Physics, Sports, Video Games, Japan, General | |Subjects = Math, Physics, Sports, Video Games, Japan, General | ||
− | |schoolcur = [[University of | + | |schoolcur = [[University of Louisiana at Lafayette]] (2014-) |
− | |schoolpast = [[University of Louisiana at Lafayette]] (2004-2010) | + | |schoolpast = [[University of Louisiana at Lafayette]] (2004-2010), [[Alabama]] (2010-2014) |
|highschool = Westgate (2000-2004) | |highschool = Westgate (2000-2004) | ||
|}} | |}} | ||
− | [[Jake Sundberg]] is | + | [[Jake Sundberg]] is a 2008 graduate of [[Louisiana]] with a BS in mathematics and a 2014 graduate of [[Alabama]] with an MA in mathematics. He was the president of the [[University of Louisiana at Lafayette]] Club for Academic Competition from 2005 to 2010, where he was also the club's leader in nearly all statistical areas. He is consistently a top scorer in competitions in the southeast and southwest regions. He served as Vice President of Internal Affairs of Alabama Academic Quizbowl Team during the 2012-13 season and the President during the 2013-14 season. He currently plays for Louisiana where he is a club officer. |
== University of Louisiana == | == University of Louisiana == | ||
− | In his first term as president, Louisiana's DII team won the 2006 Southwest | + | In his first term as president, Louisiana's DII team won the 2006 Southwest DII SCT and advanced to [[ICT]], held at the [[University of Maryland]]. They defeated [[Tulane]] 330-210 in the championship game to advance to [[ICT]], where they unfortunately finished tied for 26th. Also, in his first campaign as president, the team consisting of [[Jake Sundberg]], [[Scott Broussard]], [[Sumedh Deoras]], and [[German Acuna]] won the 2006 [[Sword Bowl]] mirror held at the [[Oklahoma|University of Oklahoma]]. |
− | Louisiana did not play in very many regular difficulty tournaments during Jake's | + | Louisiana did not play in very many regular difficulty tournaments during Jake's first stint with the team but results were always relatively decent in most tournaments Louisiana played, except for SCT where Jake's DI teams did not do so hot. |
− | His strengths as a player are math, physics, sports, literature, Japan, and general knowledge, as well as buzzer fakes. His scoring abilities don't diminish with respect to difficulty level, either. He also adjusts very well to new teammates, given that his team has had a different lineup at almost every tournament he has attended since 2004. Fascinatingly, this | + | His strengths as a player are math, physics, sports, literature, Japan, and general knowledge, as well as buzzer fakes. His scoring abilities don't diminish with respect to difficulty level, either. He also adjusts very well to new teammates, given that his team has had a different lineup at almost every tournament he has attended since 2004. Fascinatingly, this continued to be the case for quite some time, although his current Louisiana squad seems to participate as the same quartet more often than not. |
== Move to Alabama == | == Move to Alabama == | ||
− | Jake and [[Jonathan Thompson]] | + | Jake and [[Jonathan Thompson]] were rivals from 2006-2010. There were been so many games that have gone down to the last tossup between [[ULL]] and [[Alabama]] over the last five years that Jake basically loathed playing against [[Alabama]] and hence joined them. The rivalry between [[ULL]] and [[Alabama]] is most easily explained as follows: it is the quizbowl equivalent of what Saints/Falcons was before the 2000's. Jake decided to join [[Alabama]] because they were the only team that took any interest in him. |
− | The first tournament he played at as a Crimson Tide was [[EFT]] at [[Georgia Tech]] -- his team finished 5th after faltering in the playoffs, notably losing by 425 points to [[Walton]] which many forum members held against him. He called this "an event of little importance" and proceeded to play better for most of the rest of the season. | + | The first tournament he played at as a member of the Crimson Tide was [[EFT]] at [[Georgia Tech]] -- his team finished 5th after faltering in the playoffs, notably losing by 425 points to [[Walton]] which many forum members held against him. He called this "an event of little importance" and proceeded to play better for most of the rest of the season. |
[[ACF Fall]] 2010 saw [[Alabama]] finish 3rd after losing their opening match to noted community college player [[Dallin Kelson]] by quite a few and then later they dropped a close one to [[Georgia Tech]]. | [[ACF Fall]] 2010 saw [[Alabama]] finish 3rd after losing their opening match to noted community college player [[Dallin Kelson]] by quite a few and then later they dropped a close one to [[Georgia Tech]]. | ||
− | In the spring, | + | In the spring, Alabama played and won a mirror of [[Terrapin]] at [[ULL]] and Jake won the scoring title. |
− | [[Alabama]] proceeded to win the | + | [[Alabama]] proceeded to win the DI Region 6 [[SCT]] title and [[ACF Regionals]] without [[Dargan Ware]] as he was interviewing for summer jobs. Instead, noted sophomore [[Giacomo Baggiani]] played [[ACF Regionals]] at Tulane, and his alterego, the [[empty chair]], played on the team that won SCT. Jake also won the scoring title at [[ACF Regionals]] after being told to buzz in at least 7 times per game by [[Dargan Ware]]. |
− | [[Alabama]] participated at [[Penn Bowl]] in 2011. His team finished 8th in the 18-team field, a disappointment, with teammates [[Jonathan Thompson]], [[Rob Palmer]], and [[Kyle LeRoy]]. Later, a team of Jake, [[Jonathan Thompson]], Rob Palmer, and Giacomo Baggiani won ACF Regionals at [[Tulane]] | + | [[Alabama]] participated at [[Penn Bowl]] in 2011. His team finished 8th in the 18-team field, a disappointment, with teammates [[Jonathan Thompson]], [[Rob Palmer]], and [[Kyle LeRoy]]. Later, a team of Jake, [[Jonathan Thompson]], Rob Palmer, and Giacomo Baggiani won ACF Regionals at [[Tulane]]. |
At the 2011 [[ICT]], [[Alabama]] finished 12th with an overall record of 8-6 (after changing forfeits from Watkins-gate to wins). They defeated [[Jordan Palmer]]'s Toronto team in a tiebreaker match for second bracket after losing to them earlier in the day. Alabama did not play ACF Nationals this year. | At the 2011 [[ICT]], [[Alabama]] finished 12th with an overall record of 8-6 (after changing forfeits from Watkins-gate to wins). They defeated [[Jordan Palmer]]'s Toronto team in a tiebreaker match for second bracket after losing to them earlier in the day. Alabama did not play ACF Nationals this year. | ||
− | The 2011-12 season saw Alabama acquire [[Harrison Brown]], which paid dividends. He was magically a superstar, although Sundberg often refers to him as a "statistical diva." With Brown's superior knowledge of analytical things and random things like Maastricht, Alabama became a force. Jake played ACF Nationals solo, finishing 25th. Jake and Harrison played [[Penn Bowl]] and [[BARGE]] mirrors as a duo. Jake's Alabama team defeated Harrison's DII-eligible team in an advantaged final. An Alabama team of Jake, Harrison, and Jonathan later won 2012 ACF Regionals. The community forecast them finishing 20th at ICT, but they finished 12th again. | + | The 2011-12 season saw Alabama acquire [[Harrison Brown]], which paid dividends. He was magically a superstar, although Sundberg often refers to him as a "statistical diva." With Brown's superior knowledge of analytical things and random things like Maastricht, Alabama became a force. Jake played ACF Nationals solo, finishing 25th. Jake and Harrison played [[Penn Bowl]] and [[BARGE]] mirrors as a duo. At SCT, Jake's Alabama team defeated Harrison's DII-eligible team in an advantaged final. An Alabama team of Jake, Harrison, and Jonathan later won 2012 ACF Regionals. The community forecast them finishing 20th at ICT, but they finished 12th again. |
− | The 2012-13 season saw Alabama play many tournaments as a fragmented team. Harrison Brown forced Jake and the rest of Alabama to adopt a quizbowl version of "Ubuntu" because they were, as it would happen to be, dysfunctional. Jake and Harrison played a mirror of [[Penn-ance]] together, finishing second behind [[Georgia Tech]], a trend. Jake played [[ACF Fall 2013]] at [[Vanderbilt]] on a two-man team with Dargan, where they finished 6-6. In the Spring, Alabama played in the Region 5 SCT at [[Tennessee]], finishing with a 10-2 record and 21.34 ppb. Later, Jake, Dargan, and Harrison lost two close games to Georgia Tech at Regionals, a trend. Alabama once again had its full lineup at ICT again and started 7-3, but as the law dictates, they finished 12th after losing their last three matches. Alabama played [[ACF Nationals]], falling to 16th after losing an early morning match against [[Andrew Hart]] by 10 points. A win would have put them in the top bracket. Instead, Alabama | + | The 2012-13 season saw Alabama play many tournaments as a fragmented team. Harrison Brown forced Jake and the rest of Alabama to adopt a quizbowl version of "Ubuntu" because they were, as it would happen to be, dysfunctional. Jake and Harrison played a mirror of [[Penn-ance]] together, finishing second behind [[Georgia Tech]], a trend. Jake played [[ACF Fall 2013]] at [[Vanderbilt]] on a two-man team with Dargan, where they finished 6-6. In the Spring, Alabama played in the Region 5 SCT at [[Tennessee]], finishing with a 10-2 record and 21.34 ppb. Later, Jake, Dargan, and Harrison lost two close games to Georgia Tech at Regionals, a trend. Alabama once again had its full lineup at ICT again and started 7-3, but as the law dictates, they finished 12th after losing their last three matches. Alabama played [[ACF Nationals]], falling to 16th after losing an early morning match against [[Andrew Hart]] by 10 points. A win would have put them in the top bracket. Instead, Alabama lost to Andrew Hart in a tiebreaker. A trend. |
− | The 2013-14 season saw Alabama lose Harrison and Dargan to graduation. Enter the brave sophomore [[Nathaniel Oehl]] and the ever-valiant freshman [[Forrest Walker]]. | + | The 2013-14 season saw Alabama lose Harrison and Dargan to graduation. Enter the brave sophomore [[Nathaniel Oehl]] and the ever-valiant freshman [[Forrest Walker]]. This team never actually played full strength outside of practice, and although they have placed well, they never actually won a tournament. Jake, Nathaniel and Forrest finished tied for 3rd at [[Michigan Fall Tournament]], and at the home mirror of [[DRAGOON]], which featured Canadians, Alabama A finished 6-4. In the Spring semester, Alabama (Jake, Forrest, Nathaniel, [[Mark Blanton]]) played [[SUBMIT]] at Southeast Missouri State University, starting the day an abysmal 3-5 before winning the last two. Two close losses to [[Truman State]] cost Alabama second place at that tournament. SCT saw Alabama split their starting four into two, with Jake, Jonathan, [[Mark Morris]] and [[Meredith Rickard]] finishing tied for second in the competition. The Division II team also finished second. Both teams qualified for ICT. At [[ACF Regionals 2014]], Jake, Jonathan, Forrest, and [[Patrick Rickert]] finished second after heading into the last match of the round robin undefeated, only to lose to [[Louisville]]. They lost to Louisville again in the final. The team finished 28th at both ICT and ACF Nationals. |
− | == | + | == Back in Louisiana, 2014-present == |
− | + | After a failed attempt to join Georgia Tech, Jake ended up back at [[ULL]] where he is currently the captain of the team. His team ended up going 7-1 to win the 2014 [[Louisiana Open]], a tournament played on the 2013 [[Penn Bowl]] set that wasn't cleared until the Fall of 2014. He also won the scoring title at that event. At the 2014 Penn Bowl mirror, Jake's team went 6-3 to grab second place, with Jake winning another scoring title. Louisiana finished 3rd at [[ACF Fall]] at [[Alabama]]. To begin the Spring semester, Louisiana went to the [[DEES]] mirror at Rice, which they went 9-2 to win, outlasting [[Texas A&M]] and [[Carlo De Guzman]] in the final. The next week, they went 6-4 at [[ACF Regionals]], ultimately finishing third in the event. Jake won the scoring title at that event. Louisiana finished 6-3 at SCT after falling to Rice on the last tossup of the last game of a triple round-robin. A win would have forced a final. At the [[STIMPY]] mirror at [[Louisiana Tech]], a very similar fate befell the team as they lost by 5 points to Louisiana Tech in the last match of the day when a win would have given the team a 7-2 record and forced an advantaged final with the 8-1 Rice squad. | |
+ | |||
+ | A team of Jake, [[Billy Beyer]], Thomas Credeur and [[Lelia Saucier]] finished 9-1 at Rice's summer mirror of [[NASAT]]. | ||
== High School Career == | == High School Career == | ||
− | Jake played for Westgate in New Iberia, Louisiana from 2001-2004, where the team underwent three coaching changes. Despite this fact, Jake matured into a decent player over time and contributed lots of science | + | Jake played for Westgate in New Iberia, Louisiana from 2001-2004, where the team underwent three coaching changes. Despite this fact, Jake matured into a decent player over time and contributed lots of science questions to his team which was lacking in that area. His general knowledge base began to grow when he began losing teammates due to retirements. The team had a winning record in all four seasons during Jake's tenure. |
== Recent Individual Results == | == Recent Individual Results == | ||
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− | + | 12th at [[EFT]] Mirror at [[Georgia Tech]] | |
− | 2nd at [[ | + | 2nd at [[LSU Invitational]] |
− | + | 5th at [[ACF Fall]] Southeast | |
− | 1st at [[ | + | 1st at [[Terrapin]] Mirror at [[ULL]] |
− | + | 5th at [[NAQT]] Region 6 DI [[SCT]] | |
− | + | 20th at [[Penn Bowl]] | |
− | + | 1st at [[ACF Regionals]] at [[Tulane]] | |
− | + | 59th at [[ICT]] | |
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== 2011 - 2012 Season == | == 2011 - 2012 Season == | ||
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6th at [[SCT]] | 6th at [[SCT]] | ||
− | 5th at [[ | + | 5th at [[ACF Regionals]] |
4th at [[Western Invitational Tournament|WIT]] | 4th at [[Western Invitational Tournament|WIT]] | ||
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69th at [[ICT]] | 69th at [[ICT]] | ||
− | 32nd at [[ | + | 32nd at [[ACF Nationals]] |
== 2013 - 2014 Season == | == 2013 - 2014 Season == | ||
− | + | 4th at [[Michigan Fall]] mirror | |
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+ | 4th at [[DRAGOON]] mirror | ||
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+ | 4th at [[SUBMIT]] mirror | ||
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+ | 3rd at [[SCT]] | ||
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+ | 3rd at [[ACF Regionals]] | ||
− | + | == 2014 - 2015 Season == | |
− | + | 1st at [[Louisiana Open]] | |
− | + | 1st at [[Penn Bowl]] mirror | |
− | + | 3rd at [[ACF Fall]] | |
− | + | 2nd at [[DEES]] mirror | |
− | + | T-1st at [[ACF Regionals]] | |
[[Category:People]] [[Category:Louisiana-Lafayette]] | [[Category:People]] [[Category:Louisiana-Lafayette]] | ||
[[Category:Original QBWiki Page]] | [[Category:Original QBWiki Page]] |
Latest revision as of 13:19, 14 August 2018
Jake Sundberg | |
Noted subjects | Math, Physics, Sports, Video Games, Japan, General |
Current college | University of Louisiana at Lafayette (2014-) |
Past colleges | University of Louisiana at Lafayette (2004-2010), Alabama (2010-2014) |
High school | Westgate (2000-2004) |
Stats | HDWhite • NAQT |
Jake Sundberg is a 2008 graduate of Louisiana with a BS in mathematics and a 2014 graduate of Alabama with an MA in mathematics. He was the president of the University of Louisiana at Lafayette Club for Academic Competition from 2005 to 2010, where he was also the club's leader in nearly all statistical areas. He is consistently a top scorer in competitions in the southeast and southwest regions. He served as Vice President of Internal Affairs of Alabama Academic Quizbowl Team during the 2012-13 season and the President during the 2013-14 season. He currently plays for Louisiana where he is a club officer.
University of Louisiana
In his first term as president, Louisiana's DII team won the 2006 Southwest DII SCT and advanced to ICT, held at the University of Maryland. They defeated Tulane 330-210 in the championship game to advance to ICT, where they unfortunately finished tied for 26th. Also, in his first campaign as president, the team consisting of Jake Sundberg, Scott Broussard, Sumedh Deoras, and German Acuna won the 2006 Sword Bowl mirror held at the University of Oklahoma.
Louisiana did not play in very many regular difficulty tournaments during Jake's first stint with the team but results were always relatively decent in most tournaments Louisiana played, except for SCT where Jake's DI teams did not do so hot.
His strengths as a player are math, physics, sports, literature, Japan, and general knowledge, as well as buzzer fakes. His scoring abilities don't diminish with respect to difficulty level, either. He also adjusts very well to new teammates, given that his team has had a different lineup at almost every tournament he has attended since 2004. Fascinatingly, this continued to be the case for quite some time, although his current Louisiana squad seems to participate as the same quartet more often than not.
Move to Alabama
Jake and Jonathan Thompson were rivals from 2006-2010. There were been so many games that have gone down to the last tossup between ULL and Alabama over the last five years that Jake basically loathed playing against Alabama and hence joined them. The rivalry between ULL and Alabama is most easily explained as follows: it is the quizbowl equivalent of what Saints/Falcons was before the 2000's. Jake decided to join Alabama because they were the only team that took any interest in him.
The first tournament he played at as a member of the Crimson Tide was EFT at Georgia Tech -- his team finished 5th after faltering in the playoffs, notably losing by 425 points to Walton which many forum members held against him. He called this "an event of little importance" and proceeded to play better for most of the rest of the season.
ACF Fall 2010 saw Alabama finish 3rd after losing their opening match to noted community college player Dallin Kelson by quite a few and then later they dropped a close one to Georgia Tech.
In the spring, Alabama played and won a mirror of Terrapin at ULL and Jake won the scoring title.
Alabama proceeded to win the DI Region 6 SCT title and ACF Regionals without Dargan Ware as he was interviewing for summer jobs. Instead, noted sophomore Giacomo Baggiani played ACF Regionals at Tulane, and his alterego, the empty chair, played on the team that won SCT. Jake also won the scoring title at ACF Regionals after being told to buzz in at least 7 times per game by Dargan Ware.
Alabama participated at Penn Bowl in 2011. His team finished 8th in the 18-team field, a disappointment, with teammates Jonathan Thompson, Rob Palmer, and Kyle LeRoy. Later, a team of Jake, Jonathan Thompson, Rob Palmer, and Giacomo Baggiani won ACF Regionals at Tulane.
At the 2011 ICT, Alabama finished 12th with an overall record of 8-6 (after changing forfeits from Watkins-gate to wins). They defeated Jordan Palmer's Toronto team in a tiebreaker match for second bracket after losing to them earlier in the day. Alabama did not play ACF Nationals this year.
The 2011-12 season saw Alabama acquire Harrison Brown, which paid dividends. He was magically a superstar, although Sundberg often refers to him as a "statistical diva." With Brown's superior knowledge of analytical things and random things like Maastricht, Alabama became a force. Jake played ACF Nationals solo, finishing 25th. Jake and Harrison played Penn Bowl and BARGE mirrors as a duo. At SCT, Jake's Alabama team defeated Harrison's DII-eligible team in an advantaged final. An Alabama team of Jake, Harrison, and Jonathan later won 2012 ACF Regionals. The community forecast them finishing 20th at ICT, but they finished 12th again.
The 2012-13 season saw Alabama play many tournaments as a fragmented team. Harrison Brown forced Jake and the rest of Alabama to adopt a quizbowl version of "Ubuntu" because they were, as it would happen to be, dysfunctional. Jake and Harrison played a mirror of Penn-ance together, finishing second behind Georgia Tech, a trend. Jake played ACF Fall 2013 at Vanderbilt on a two-man team with Dargan, where they finished 6-6. In the Spring, Alabama played in the Region 5 SCT at Tennessee, finishing with a 10-2 record and 21.34 ppb. Later, Jake, Dargan, and Harrison lost two close games to Georgia Tech at Regionals, a trend. Alabama once again had its full lineup at ICT again and started 7-3, but as the law dictates, they finished 12th after losing their last three matches. Alabama played ACF Nationals, falling to 16th after losing an early morning match against Andrew Hart by 10 points. A win would have put them in the top bracket. Instead, Alabama lost to Andrew Hart in a tiebreaker. A trend.
The 2013-14 season saw Alabama lose Harrison and Dargan to graduation. Enter the brave sophomore Nathaniel Oehl and the ever-valiant freshman Forrest Walker. This team never actually played full strength outside of practice, and although they have placed well, they never actually won a tournament. Jake, Nathaniel and Forrest finished tied for 3rd at Michigan Fall Tournament, and at the home mirror of DRAGOON, which featured Canadians, Alabama A finished 6-4. In the Spring semester, Alabama (Jake, Forrest, Nathaniel, Mark Blanton) played SUBMIT at Southeast Missouri State University, starting the day an abysmal 3-5 before winning the last two. Two close losses to Truman State cost Alabama second place at that tournament. SCT saw Alabama split their starting four into two, with Jake, Jonathan, Mark Morris and Meredith Rickard finishing tied for second in the competition. The Division II team also finished second. Both teams qualified for ICT. At ACF Regionals 2014, Jake, Jonathan, Forrest, and Patrick Rickert finished second after heading into the last match of the round robin undefeated, only to lose to Louisville. They lost to Louisville again in the final. The team finished 28th at both ICT and ACF Nationals.
Back in Louisiana, 2014-present
After a failed attempt to join Georgia Tech, Jake ended up back at ULL where he is currently the captain of the team. His team ended up going 7-1 to win the 2014 Louisiana Open, a tournament played on the 2013 Penn Bowl set that wasn't cleared until the Fall of 2014. He also won the scoring title at that event. At the 2014 Penn Bowl mirror, Jake's team went 6-3 to grab second place, with Jake winning another scoring title. Louisiana finished 3rd at ACF Fall at Alabama. To begin the Spring semester, Louisiana went to the DEES mirror at Rice, which they went 9-2 to win, outlasting Texas A&M and Carlo De Guzman in the final. The next week, they went 6-4 at ACF Regionals, ultimately finishing third in the event. Jake won the scoring title at that event. Louisiana finished 6-3 at SCT after falling to Rice on the last tossup of the last game of a triple round-robin. A win would have forced a final. At the STIMPY mirror at Louisiana Tech, a very similar fate befell the team as they lost by 5 points to Louisiana Tech in the last match of the day when a win would have given the team a 7-2 record and forced an advantaged final with the 8-1 Rice squad.
A team of Jake, Billy Beyer, Thomas Credeur and Lelia Saucier finished 9-1 at Rice's summer mirror of NASAT.
High School Career
Jake played for Westgate in New Iberia, Louisiana from 2001-2004, where the team underwent three coaching changes. Despite this fact, Jake matured into a decent player over time and contributed lots of science questions to his team which was lacking in that area. His general knowledge base began to grow when he began losing teammates due to retirements. The team had a winning record in all four seasons during Jake's tenure.
Recent Individual Results
2010 - 2011 Season
12th at EFT Mirror at Georgia Tech
2nd at LSU Invitational
5th at ACF Fall Southeast
20th at Penn Bowl
1st at ACF Regionals at Tulane
59th at ICT
2011 - 2012 Season
10th at SCT
10th at ACF Regionals
6th at Penn Bowl Mirror
6th in ACF Nationals playoffs, less fortunate earlier in the day.
8th at BARGE Mirror
71st at ICT
2012 - 2013 Season
6th at ACF Fall
5th at Penn-ance
6th at SCT
5th at ACF Regionals
4th at WIT
T-1st at Terrapin
69th at ICT
32nd at ACF Nationals
2013 - 2014 Season
4th at Michigan Fall mirror
4th at DRAGOON mirror
4th at SUBMIT mirror
3rd at SCT
3rd at ACF Regionals
2014 - 2015 Season
1st at Louisiana Open
1st at Penn Bowl mirror
3rd at ACF Fall
2nd at DEES mirror
T-1st at ACF Regionals