Difference between revisions of "Jordan Brownstein"

From QBWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 2: Line 2:
 
|Image = Jordan_Brownstein.JPG
 
|Image = Jordan_Brownstein.JPG
 
|Subjects = Literature, History, Dijkstra's algorithm
 
|Subjects = Literature, History, Dijkstra's algorithm
|schoolcur = [[Maryland]] (2013-2017)
+
|schoolpast = [[Maryland]] (2013-2017)
|schoolpast =
 
 
|highschool = [[Plymouth Regional]] (2013)
 
|highschool = [[Plymouth Regional]] (2013)
 
| }}
 
| }}
Line 13: Line 12:
  
 
Jordan has also been recognized for his prolific and high-quality question-writing, including for the 2014 [[NASAT]], 2016's [[MYSTERIUM]], 2016 [[PACE NSC]], 2016 [[Terrapin]], the [[2018 ACF Nationals]], [[2018 Chicago Open]], and the side events [[SHEIKH]] (history) and [[2017 Chicago Open|Jordaens Visual Arts]].
 
Jordan has also been recognized for his prolific and high-quality question-writing, including for the 2014 [[NASAT]], 2016's [[MYSTERIUM]], 2016 [[PACE NSC]], 2016 [[Terrapin]], the [[2018 ACF Nationals]], [[2018 Chicago Open]], and the side events [[SHEIKH]] (history) and [[2017 Chicago Open|Jordaens Visual Arts]].
 
==Tournaments played==
 
 
* [[2017 ACF Nationals]] - 1st place
 
* 2016 Chicago Open - 1st place
 
* [[2015 ACF Nationals]] - 3rd place (with [[Chris Manners]], [[Brian McPeak]], and [[Dan Puma]])
 
* 2015 [[Minnesota Undergraduate Tournament|MUT]] at VCU - 2nd place (solo)
 
* [[2015 ICT]] - 4th place (with [[Chris Manners]], [[Brian McPeak]], and [[Dan Puma]])
 
* 2015 [[SCT]] at Virginia - 1st place (with [[Brian McPeak]] and [[Stephen Meyer]])
 
* [[2015 ACF Regionals]] at Virginia - 1st place (with [[Chris Manners]], [[Brian McPeak]], and [[Dan Puma]])
 
* [[DEES|2014 DEES]] at Maryland - 3rd place (with [[Chris Manners]], [[Dan Puma]], and [[Sohan Vartak]])
 
* 2014 [[Penn Bowl]] - 2nd place (with [[Chris Manners]], [[Brian McPeak]], and [[Dan Puma]])
 
* [[PADAWAN|2014 PADAWAN]] at VCU - 1st place (with [[Chris Manners]], [[Brian McPeak]], and [[Dan Puma]])
 
* 2014 [[Chicago Open History Tournament|Chicago Open History]] - 4th place (with [[Matt Jackson]])
 
* 2014 [[Chicago Open]] - 4th place (with [[Mike Cheyne]], [[Aaron Rosenberg]], and [[Sinan Ulusoy]])
 
* [[2014 ACF Nationals]] - 7th place (with [[Chris Manners]], [[Brian McPeak]], and [[Chris Ray]])
 
* 2014 [[College History Bowl]] - 5th place (with [[Isaac Hirsch]], [[Chris Manners]], [[Dan Puma]], and [[Chris Ray]])
 
* [[2014 ICT]] - 5th place (with [[Brian McPeak]], [[Dan Puma]], and [[Chris Ray]])
 
* [[Cane Ridge Revival|2014 Cane Ridge Revival]] at Penn - 4th place (with [[Chris Manners]], [[Brian McPeak]], and [[Chris Ray]])
 
* [[2014 ACF Regionals]] at VCU - 1st place (with [[Chris Manners]], [[Brian McPeak]], and [[Chris Ray]])
 
* 2014 [[SCT]] at Maryland - 2nd place (with [[Chris Manners]], [[Brian McPeak]], and [[Chris Ray]])
 
* [[Fernando Arrabal Tournament of the Absurd|2013 Arrabal]] - 3rd place (with [[Arun Chonai]], [[Chris Manners]], and [[Brian McPeak]])
 
* [[DRAGOON|2013 DRAGOON]] at Virginia Tech - 2nd place (with [[Arun Chonai]], [[Brian McPeak]], and [[Chris Ray]])
 
* 2013 [[Delta Burke]] at Maryland - 1st place (with [[Isaac Hirsch]], [[Chris Manners]], and [[Dan Puma]])
 
* 2013 [[ACF Fall]] at Virginia - 1st place (with [[Brian McPeak]], [[Stephen Meyer]], and [[Gary Weiser]])
 
* 2013 [[Penn Bowl]] - 3rd place (with [[Isaac Hirsch]], Ophir Lifshitz, and [[Sohan Vartak]])
 
* [[Michigan Fall Tournament|2013 Michigan Fall]] at VCU - 3rd place (with [[Isaac Hirsch]], [[Dan Puma]], and [[Sohan Vartak]])
 
  
 
{{Succession_box_(Individual)|Individual Honor = [[ACF|ACF Nationals Leading Scorer]]
 
{{Succession_box_(Individual)|Individual Honor = [[ACF|ACF Nationals Leading Scorer]]
Line 57: Line 29:
 
[[Category: Players active in 2015]]
 
[[Category: Players active in 2015]]
 
[[Category: Players active in 2016]]
 
[[Category: Players active in 2016]]
 +
[[Category: Players active in 2017]]
 
[[Category:Players on ACF Nationals championship teams]]
 
[[Category:Players on ACF Nationals championship teams]]
 
[[Category:Question writers]]
 
[[Category:Question writers]]

Revision as of 17:50, 15 December 2020

Jordan Brownstein
Jordan Brownstein.JPG
Noted subjects Literature, History, Dijkstra's algorithm
Past colleges Maryland (2013-2017)
High school Plymouth Regional (2013)
Stats HDWhite • NAQT

Jordan Brownstein was a member of the Class of 2017 at the University of Maryland. During his undergraduate career, he was widely recognized as the best active player in quizbowl, and, after leading the field in scoring en route to winning the 2016 Chicago Open and 2017 ACF Nationals, as one of the greatest college quizbowl players of all time.

As early as his freshman year, Jordan was notable for his extremely deep specialty areas in literature and history (despite being a computer science major) and for coming out of relative nowhere—namely Plymouth, New Hampshire, where his only good quizbowl exposure was one or two History Bowl events—to establish himself nearly immediately as an elite collegiate player. After a year playing alongside (and sometimes outscoring) Chris Ray, Jordan became lead scorer of the Maryland team that finished 4th at ICT and 3rd at ACF Nationals in 2015. He was the lead scorer on the 2nd-place team at the 2015 Chicago Open, and high scorer overall at the main event, literature side event, and history side event.

Prior to teaming up at Chicago Open 2014, Mike Cheyne gave Jordan the nickname "The Viper", a reference to a particularly sadistic WWE wrestler. The name has stuck. Noted misanthrope Tommy Casalaspi has referred to Jordan as "the nicest person in quizbowl."

Jordan has also been recognized for his prolific and high-quality question-writing, including for the 2014 NASAT, 2016's MYSTERIUM, 2016 PACE NSC, 2016 Terrapin, the 2018 ACF Nationals, 2018 Chicago Open, and the side events SHEIKH (history) and Jordaens Visual Arts.

ACF Nationals Leading Scorer
Preceded by
Year
Succeeded by
Auroni Gupta
2016, 2017
Itamar Naveh-Benjamin
ICT DI Leading Scorer
Preceded by
Year
Succeeded by
Matt Bollinger
2016, 2017
Itamar Naveh-Benjamin