Difference between revisions of "ACF Nationals"
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| [[2000 Princeton|Princeton B]] | | [[2000 Princeton|Princeton B]] | ||
| [[Maryland|College Park, MD]] | | [[Maryland|College Park, MD]] | ||
− | | [ Stats] | + | | [http://pastie.org/private/5ytuhiehtnqyvreh0jwfw Stats] |
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| [[2001 ACF Nationals|2001]] | | [[2001 ACF Nationals|2001]] | ||
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| [[2002 Texas A&M|Texas A&M B]] | | [[2002 Texas A&M|Texas A&M B]] | ||
| [[Maryland|College Park, MD]] | | [[Maryland|College Park, MD]] | ||
− | | [ Stats] | + | | [https://web.archive.org/web/20020705062324/http://www.gwu.edu/~trivia/acfnatsstats.html Stats] |
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| [[2003 ACF Nationals|2003]] | | [[2003 ACF Nationals|2003]] |
Revision as of 12:30, 15 April 2014
ACF Nationals is the national championship of ACF format. It is roughly equal in difficulty to the other national tournament, NAQT ICT, but differs by using the ACF distribution and format. Like other ACF events, it is packet-submission.
More information on editors and circumstances of ACF Nationals can be found at the ACF page.
Beginning in 2008, ACF Nationals crowned Undergraduate and Division II champions in addition to overall champions. Unlike at NAQT ICT, the Division II title is awarded to the highest-finishing Division II team in the overall field, rather than being played in a separate tournament. Unofficial winners by the current criteria are noted for pre-2008 tournaments, when known.