Difference between revisions of "2009 ICT"
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[[2009 Chicago|Chicago]] defeated [[Illinois]] to win the tournament. After the playoff brackets, Illinois and [[Harvard]] played a "semifinal" tiebreaker for 2nd, which Illinois won, moving them into the a disadvantaged final. Chicago won the second game of the final to win the tournament. | [[2009 Chicago|Chicago]] defeated [[Illinois]] to win the tournament. After the playoff brackets, Illinois and [[Harvard]] played a "semifinal" tiebreaker for 2nd, which Illinois won, moving them into the a disadvantaged final. Chicago won the second game of the final to win the tournament. | ||
− | After losing the overall tiebreaker to Illinois, Harvard had an advantaged final against [[Minnesota]] for the Undergraduate title. Harvard won the second game of the final to repeat as Division 1 Undergraduate champions. | + | After losing the overall tiebreaker to Illinois, Harvard had an advantaged final against [[Minnesota]] for the Undergraduate title. Harvard won the second game of the final to repeat as Division 1 Undergraduate champions, however it was discovered in March 2013 that [[Andy Watkins]] had cheated resulting in the retroactive forfeiture of Harvard's title. |
The top [http://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament-individuals.jsp?tournament_id=2767 individual scorers] in D1 were: | The top [http://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament-individuals.jsp?tournament_id=2767 individual scorers] in D1 were: |
Revision as of 14:23, 22 March 2013
The 2009 NAQT Intercollegiate Championship Tournament was held at the Hyatt Regency at the Dallas-Fort Worth airport on April 3-4, 2009.
Results
Division 1
Chicago defeated Illinois to win the tournament. After the playoff brackets, Illinois and Harvard played a "semifinal" tiebreaker for 2nd, which Illinois won, moving them into the a disadvantaged final. Chicago won the second game of the final to win the tournament.
After losing the overall tiebreaker to Illinois, Harvard had an advantaged final against Minnesota for the Undergraduate title. Harvard won the second game of the final to repeat as Division 1 Undergraduate champions, however it was discovered in March 2013 that Andy Watkins had cheated resulting in the retroactive forfeiture of Harvard's title.
The top individual scorers in D1 were:
- Mike Sorice, Illinois
- Brendan Byrne, Minnesota
- Dwight Wynne, UCI
- Seth Teitler, Chicago
- Chris Ray, Maryland
Division 2
Chicago won the D2 title after beating Michigan in the first game of an advantaged final. Michigan emerged from a circle of death with RPI and Yale. Chicago's victory was the first time a school had won both Division 1 and Division 2 titles at the same ICT.
The top individual scorers in D2 were:
- Kurtis Droge, Michigan
- George Berry, J. Sargeant Reynolds Community College
- Aaron Cohen, RPI
- Jacob Durst, Ohio State
- Tyler Smith, Chicago
The community college champion was Northeast Alabama, who beat Valencia A in the final.
Stats
Stats can be found here.