Difference between revisions of "Hoppes-Mikanowski limit"

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[[Ned Tagtmeier]] and [[Aayush Goodapaty]] ([[St. Mark's School of Texas|St. Mark's A]]) broke the limit at the [[2021 Small School National Championship Tournament]]<ref>https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament/team.jsp?team_id=309015</ref> - as of 2021, this is the only time this has been done at a high school national tournament.
 
[[Ned Tagtmeier]] and [[Aayush Goodapaty]] ([[St. Mark's School of Texas|St. Mark's A]]) broke the limit at the [[2021 Small School National Championship Tournament]]<ref>https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament/team.jsp?team_id=309015</ref> - as of 2021, this is the only time this has been done at a high school national tournament.
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[[Arjun Kala]] and [[Lawrence Zhao]] broke H-M at the [[David Riley Memorial Kickoff Tournament|2021 David Riley Memorial Kickoff Tournament]].
  
 
===College===
 
===College===

Revision as of 12:13, 29 November 2021

The Hoppes-Mikanowski limit (or H-M limit) is broken when two players on the same team each score above 70 PPG in any format. It was first broken at the tournament 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[1]). Their accomplishment remained unmatched until the 2011 NAQT Illinois State Tournament, where Kevin Malis and Zach Blumenfeld of Stevenson[2] 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

Players good enough to break the limit have become increasingly common over time as overall skill has improved, especially at the high school and middle school levels of the game. As a result, it has gone from a rare and exceptional event to something that happens several times a year.

Additionally, breaking the H-M limit shares many things in common with other achievements like grails in that they are typically very dependent on the field and thus are much more common when there is a large mismatch between the best team in a tournament and their competitors. It is consequently of primary interest to provide as much context of the events as possible.

Middle School

Corin Wagen and Ethan Russo (Kealing) broke the H-M limit at the 2012 TQBA Middle School State Championship[3] on the way to doing the same at the 2012 MSNCT.[4] Corin and Ethan were lead scorers on the Kealing teams that won the 2012 and 2011 MSNCT, and would go on to be top scorers for LASA alongside Alex Denko and Forrest Hammel.

Brothers John John and William Groger (Miami Valley) broke the limit the first of several times while in middle school at 2015 Give Thanks for Quizbowl II.[5] Several years later, Arshaan Kahlon and Andrew Holzinger again broke the limit for Miami Valley at the 2019 Northmont Middle School Invitational.[6]

Mihir Tadeparti and Thomas Catuosco (John Adams) broke the limit at the 2021 New Jersey Middle School State Championship.[7]

High School

Kevin Malis and Zach Blumenfeld (Stevenson A) became the second duo to ever break the limit at the 2011 NAQT Illinois State Tournament.[8]

Mohan Malhotra (Wilmington Charter) was able to break the H-M limit at the Delaware Fall tournament in both 2013 and 2015 with Jaimie Carlson and Rohan Narayan respectively.[9][10]

Devin Shang and Colin Cantwell (Lexington) broke the limit at the 2016 MIT Winter Academic Tournament.[11]

Eliot Williams and Ethan Skinner (Davis) broke the limit together at 2016 Sacramento Fall Tournament,[12] 2016 California Cup #2,[13] 2017 California Cup #4,[14] and 2017 Sacramento Spring Tournament #4.[15]

Richard Chen and Jacob Shapiro (Friends Select) broke the limit at 2018 Philadelphia City-Wide Quiz Bowl Championship.[16]

While in high school, John John and William Groger (Miami Valley) broke the limit at 2018 MSU Harvard Fall,[17] the 2018 Thirteenth Annual Rowdy Raider Invitational,[18] and 2019 Comet Winter Clash Invitational.[19]

Ned Tagtmeier and Aayush Goodapaty (St. Mark's A) broke the limit at the 2021 Small School National Championship Tournament[20] - as of 2021, this is the only time this has been done at a high school national tournament.

Arjun Kala and Lawrence Zhao broke H-M at the 2021 David Riley Memorial Kickoff Tournament.

College

Adam Silverman and Will Butler (Georgia Tech) broke the limit at the Emory mirror of the 2013 VCU Closed.[21]

Sinan Ulusoy and Trevor Davis (Alberta) broke the limit at the Ottawa mirror of 2013 Penn Bowl.[22]

Matt Bollinger and Tommy Casalaspi (Virginia) broke the limit while playing short-handed at 2015 STIMPY.[23] Matt and Tommy were part of the Virginia teams which had won 2012 ICT, swept the two nationals in 2014, and would go on to win the 2015 ICT.

Taylor Harvey and Tracy Mirkin (Florida) broke the limit while playing 22-tossup rounds at the 2020 Michigan Winter[24] (note that there is a potentially-irreversible statistical input error in these stats). Taylor and Tracy would play together on the Florida team which won the 2021 ACF Nationals.

Open

The H-M limit is rarely broken at the open level, due to tendency for such tournaments to be harder and have stiffer competition. As a result, many instances of the limit being broken are at single-subject side events by teams of strong specialists in the category at hand.

References

  1. http://www.hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=7127#p7127
  2. https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament-individuals.jsp?tournament_id=3634&playoffs=true
  3. https://www.naqt.com/stats/team-performance.jsp?team_id=42584]
  4. https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament-teams.jsp?tournament_id=3924
  5. https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament/standings.jsp?tournament_id=6740
  6. http://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/5152/stats/combined_final_stats/standings/
  7. https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament/team.jsp?team_id=307824
  8. https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament-individuals.jsp?tournament_id=3634&playoffs=true
  9. https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament/standings.jsp?tournament_id=5174
  10. https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament/team.jsp?team_id=89341
  11. http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/3486/stats/combined/teamdetail/#t14
  12. http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/3864/stats/all_games/teamdetail/#t0
  13. http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/4027/stats/varsity_finals/teamdetail/#t6
  14. http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/4316/stats/varsity_finals/teamdetail/#t6
  15. http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/4378/stats/all_games/teamdetail/#t1
  16. https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament/team.jsp?team_id=140521
  17. https://stats.neg5.org/t/4rPn3QFqD/msu-harvard-fall-2018/team-standings
  18. https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament/standings.jsp?tournament_id=9575
  19. https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament/standings.jsp?tournament_id=9617
  20. https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament/team.jsp?team_id=309015
  21. http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/1271/stats/all_games/teamdetail/#t1
  22. http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/1650/stats/all_games/
  23. http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/2940/stats/final_stats/
  24. https://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/6300/stats/full_rr/teamdetail/#FloridaA