Difference between revisions of "Hoppes-Mikanowski limit"

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m (Updated with a notable high school performance that broke the Hoppes-Mikanowski Limit)
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*2015 [[Missouri Open]] [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/3304/stats/full/teamdetail/#t2 Minnesota mirror]: [[Rob Carson]] (128.5 PPG) and [[Andrew Hart]] (82.86 PPG) (open team; Andrew played 5.25 rounds of ten)
 
*2015 [[Missouri Open]] [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/3304/stats/full/teamdetail/#t2 Minnesota mirror]: [[Rob Carson]] (128.5 PPG) and [[Andrew Hart]] (82.86 PPG) (open team; Andrew played 5.25 rounds of ten)
 
*2015 [[Missouri Open]] [http://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=310634#p310634 Michigan State mirror]: [[Auroni Gupta]] (86 PPG) and [[Will Nediger]] (71 PPG) ([[Michigan]])
 
*2015 [[Missouri Open]] [http://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=310634#p310634 Michigan State mirror]: [[Auroni Gupta]] (86 PPG) and [[Will Nediger]] (71 PPG) ([[Michigan]])
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*2016 [[MIT Winter Academic Tournament]] [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/3486/stats/combined/teamdetail/#t14]: [[Devin Shang]] (70.77 PPG) and [[Colin Cantwell]] (71.92 PPG) ([[Lexington]])
  
 
===Near misses===
 
===Near misses===

Revision as of 18:21, 29 February 2016

The Hoppes-Mikanowski limit is broken when two players on the same team each score above 70 ppg in any format. It was first broken at the 2000 NAQT IFT at Yale, by its namesakes Jeff Hoppes and Jacob Mikanowski. (Stats from this performance are sadly lost to the sands of time.) Their accomplishment remained unmatched until Emory's 2013 mirror of VCU Closed, where Will Butler and Adam Silverman[1] became the second pair of players to do so.

Further investigation reveals that the stat in question may have been a pre-modern stat called PATH rather than PPG, and the original "limit" may not have been set at all; regardless, its power to inspire has remained.

Performances exceeding the Hoppes-Mikanowski limit

Near misses