Difference between revisions of "2019 ACF Nationals"
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The question set was head-edited by [[Auroni Gupta]] and edited by [[Jordan Brownstein]], [[Matt Bollinger]], [[JinAh Kim]], [[Alex Damisch]], [[Ike Jose]], [[Andrew Hart]], [[Andrew Wang]], [[Athena Kern]], [[Aaron Rosenberg]], and [[Jason Cheng]]. | The question set was head-edited by [[Auroni Gupta]] and edited by [[Jordan Brownstein]], [[Matt Bollinger]], [[JinAh Kim]], [[Alex Damisch]], [[Ike Jose]], [[Andrew Hart]], [[Andrew Wang]], [[Athena Kern]], [[Aaron Rosenberg]], and [[Jason Cheng]]. | ||
− | [[Columbia]] defeated [[Chicago]] A in a one-game final, which featured [[Kevin Koai]] (who briefly unretired after being inactive since 2013) beating his former teammate [[John Lawrence]] to a controversial hard music tossup on [[wikipedia:Afro-American Symphony|William Grant Still's ''Afro-American Symphony'']] by buzzing in several seconds after the end of the question, despite them being two of the all-time best music players.<ref>https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=357049#p357049</ref><ref>https://aseemsdb.me/static/packet_archive/Collegiate/2019_ACF_Nationals/Finals_1.pdf#page=2</ref> [[Berkeley]] A defeated [[Michigan State]] to take the undergraduate title. [[Jakob Myers]] led the tournament in scoring. [[Charlie Dees]] (also a relatively inactive player in previous years) was dressed up as Miss Havisham from Great Expectations on the first day of the tournament. | + | [[Columbia]] defeated [[Chicago]] A in a one-game final, which featured [[Kevin Koai]] (who briefly unretired after being inactive since 2013) beating his former teammate [[John Lawrence]] to a controversial [[Watkins Pole|hard]] music tossup on [[wikipedia:Afro-American Symphony|William Grant Still's ''Afro-American Symphony'']] by buzzing in several seconds after the end of the question, despite them being two of the all-time best music players.<ref>https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=357049#p357049</ref><ref>https://aseemsdb.me/static/packet_archive/Collegiate/2019_ACF_Nationals/Finals_1.pdf#page=2</ref> [[Berkeley]] A defeated [[Michigan State]] to take the undergraduate title. [[Jakob Myers]] led the tournament in scoring. [[Charlie Dees]] (also a relatively inactive player in previous years) was dressed up as Miss Havisham from Great Expectations on the first day of the tournament. |
==Results== | ==Results== |
Revision as of 18:24, 13 May 2021
2019 ACF Nationals | |
---|---|
Edited by | Auroni Gupta, Jordan Brownstein, Matt Bollinger, JinAh Kim, Alex Damisch, Ike Jose, Andrew Hart, Andrew Wang, Athena Kern, Aaron Rosenberg, and Jason Cheng |
Champion | Columbia |
Runner-up | Chicago A |
Third | Minnesota A |
Fourth | Maryland A |
High scorer | Jakob Myers, Michigan State |
Site | Penn |
Field | 48 teams |
Stats | Stats |
The 2019 ACF Nationals was held at Penn on April 14 and 15. It was the last ACF Nationals held before the COVID-19 pandemic.
The question set was head-edited by Auroni Gupta and edited by Jordan Brownstein, Matt Bollinger, JinAh Kim, Alex Damisch, Ike Jose, Andrew Hart, Andrew Wang, Athena Kern, Aaron Rosenberg, and Jason Cheng.
Columbia defeated Chicago A in a one-game final, which featured Kevin Koai (who briefly unretired after being inactive since 2013) beating his former teammate John Lawrence to a controversial hard music tossup on William Grant Still's Afro-American Symphony by buzzing in several seconds after the end of the question, despite them being two of the all-time best music players.[1][2] Berkeley A defeated Michigan State to take the undergraduate title. Jakob Myers led the tournament in scoring. Charlie Dees (also a relatively inactive player in previous years) was dressed up as Miss Havisham from Great Expectations on the first day of the tournament.
Results
Division I Championship
- Columbia (Charlie Dees, Kevin Koai, Rafael Krichevsky, Ben Zhang)
- Chicago A (Alston Boyd, John Lawrence, Matthew Lehmann, Kai Smith)
- Minnesota A (Sam Bailey, Evan Brown, Geoffrey Chen, Shan Kothari)
- Maryland A (Weijia Cheng, Justin Hawkins, Caleb Kendrick, Graham Reid)
Division I Undergraduate
- Berkeley A (Eric Chen, Rohin Devanathan, Rahul Keyal, James Malouf)
- Michigan State (Erik Bubolz, Harris Bunker, Jakob Myers, Evan Suttell)
- Illinois A (Mike Etzkorn, Bradley McLain, Mitch McCullar, Cole Timmerwilke)
Division II Championship
Harvard B defeated Minnesota B 170–155 in the first game of an advantaged final to win Division II.
All-Stars
- Jakob Myers, Michigan State
- Chris Ray, Ohio State
- Charles Hang, WUSTL
- Derek So, McGill
- Natan Holtzman, Stanford
- Caleb Kendrick, Maryland
- Eric Xu, Virginia
- Justin French, UCLA
- Rafael Krichevsky, Columbia
- John Lawrence, Chicago
Field
- Amherst
- Auburn
- Berkeley (2 teams)
- Caltech
- Carnegie Mellon
- Chicago (3 teams)
- Columbia
- Delaware
- Duke
- Florida (2 teams)
- Gettysburg
- Harvard (2 teams)
- Johns Hopkins
- Maryland (2 teams)
- McGill
- Michigan
- Michigan State
- Minnesota (2 teams)
- MIT
- New College
- NYU
- Ohio State
- Oklahoma
- Oxford
- Penn
- Penn State
- Rutgers
- Stanford (2 teams)
- Texas
- Toronto
- UCF
- UCLA
- North Carolina
- Virginia
- Wright State
- WUSTL
- Yale (2 teams)
48 teams
External links
- Original announcement
- Charles Dees recounting his time leading up to and dressed up as Miss Havisham
References
- ↑ https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=357049#p357049
- ↑ https://aseemsdb.me/static/packet_archive/Collegiate/2019_ACF_Nationals/Finals_1.pdf#page=2
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