Difference between revisions of "2010 ICT"

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[[2010 Harvard|Harvard]] ([[Andy Watkins]], [[Dallas Simons]], [[Bruce Arthur]] and [[Dennis Sun]]) defeated [[2010 Chicago|Chicago A]] ([[Seth Teitler]], [[Michael Arnold]], [[Selene Koo]], and [[Marshall Steinbaum]]) in a one-game final to win the 2010 ICT.  [[Penn]] ([[Eric Mukherjee]], [[Chris White]], [[Sam Brown]] and [[Sid Chandrasekar]]) finished third, having lost to Harvard in a play-in game.
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The '''2010 NAQT Intercollegiate Championship Tournament''' was held at the Hyatt Regency O'Hare in Rosemont, Illinois, on April 11, 2010.
  
 
==Results==
 
==Results==
===Overall===
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===Division 1===
The playoff bracket ended with three teams tied with 2 losses each: Penn (having lost to [[Illinois]] and [[2010 Minnesota|Minnesota]]), Harvard (losing to Penn and Minnesota) and Chicago (losing to Penn in the prelims and Harvard in the playoffs). After seeding by PPTUH, Harvard first defeated Penn for the right to play Chicago in a one-game final, a game won by Harvard.
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[[2010 Harvard|Harvard]] ([[Andy Watkins]], [[Dallas Simons]], [[Bruce Arthur]] and [[Dennis Sun]]) beat [[2010 Chicago|Chicago]] ([[Seth Teitler]], [[Michael Arnold]], [[Selene Koo]], and [[Marshall Steinbaum]]) in a one-game final. Third place went to [[Penn]] ([[Eric Mukherjee]], [[Chris White]], [[Sam Brown]] and [[Sid Chandrasekar]]), who had lost to Harvard in a play-in game.
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The playoffs had ended with three teams having two losses each: Penn (having lost to [[Illinois]] and [[2010 Minnesota|Minnesota]]), Harvard (having lost to Penn and Minnesota) and Chicago (having lost to Penn in the prelims and Harvard in the playoffs). The teams were seeded by PPTUH, with Chicago getting the highest and a direct route to the final, and Harvard and Penn playing a play-in game for that final.
  
===Undergraduate===
 
 
[[2010 Minnesota|Minnesota]] ([[Brendan Byrne]], [[Rob Carson]], [[Andrew Hart]], and [[Gautam Kandlikar]]) defeated Michigan to win the undergraduate title.   
 
[[2010 Minnesota|Minnesota]] ([[Brendan Byrne]], [[Rob Carson]], [[Andrew Hart]], and [[Gautam Kandlikar]]) defeated Michigan to win the undergraduate title.   
  
===Division II===
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The top individual scorers in D1 were:
[[Brown]] ([[Guy Tabachnick]], [[Ian Eppler]], and [[Ben Cohen]]) defeated [[Clemson]] in a final decided on the last question to win Division II.
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* [[Evan Adams]], [[VCU]]
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* [[Brendan Byrne]], [[Minnesota|Minnesota A]]
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* [[Mike Sorice]], [[Illinois|Illinois A]]
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The Division 1 Undergraduate championship went to [[2010 Minnesota|Minnesota A]], who beat [[2010 Michigan|Michigan]] in the final.
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===Division 2===
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[[Brown]] ([[Guy Tabachnick]], [[Ian Eppler]], and [[Ben Cohen]]) took the D2 crown after beating [[Clemson]] on the last question of the final.
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The top individual scorers in D2 were:
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* [[Henry Gorman]], [[Rice]]
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* [[Guy Tabachnick]], [[Brown]]
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* [[Charles Hang]], [[St. Charles Community College]]
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The community college champion was [[St. Charles Community College|St. Charles]], who finished 12th overall.
  
 
==Stats==
 
==Stats==
[http://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament-teams.jsp?tournament_id=3180 Stats]
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Stats can be found [http://naqt.com/stats/tournament-teams.jsp?tournament_id=3180 here].
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[[Category: Tournaments]][[Category: National championships]]

Revision as of 18:00, 19 April 2010

The 2010 NAQT Intercollegiate Championship Tournament was held at the Hyatt Regency O'Hare in Rosemont, Illinois, on April 11, 2010.

Results

Division 1

Harvard (Andy Watkins, Dallas Simons, Bruce Arthur and Dennis Sun) beat Chicago (Seth Teitler, Michael Arnold, Selene Koo, and Marshall Steinbaum) in a one-game final. Third place went to Penn (Eric Mukherjee, Chris White, Sam Brown and Sid Chandrasekar), who had lost to Harvard in a play-in game.

The playoffs had ended with three teams having two losses each: Penn (having lost to Illinois and Minnesota), Harvard (having lost to Penn and Minnesota) and Chicago (having lost to Penn in the prelims and Harvard in the playoffs). The teams were seeded by PPTUH, with Chicago getting the highest and a direct route to the final, and Harvard and Penn playing a play-in game for that final.

Minnesota (Brendan Byrne, Rob Carson, Andrew Hart, and Gautam Kandlikar) defeated Michigan to win the undergraduate title.

The top individual scorers in D1 were:

The Division 1 Undergraduate championship went to Minnesota A, who beat Michigan in the final.

Division 2

Brown (Guy Tabachnick, Ian Eppler, and Ben Cohen) took the D2 crown after beating Clemson on the last question of the final.

The top individual scorers in D2 were:

The community college champion was St. Charles, who finished 12th overall.

Stats

Stats can be found here.