Difference between revisions of "Oxford"

From QBWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(→‎History: the 2010-11 series of University Challenge can no longer be described as "currently airing")
 
(19 intermediate revisions by 6 users not shown)
Line 2: Line 2:
 
|Image = Oxford.jpg
 
|Image = Oxford.jpg
 
|citystate = Oxford, England
 
|citystate = Oxford, England
|president = [[Maris Rowe-McCulloch]]
+
|president = [[Ella Warde]]
|nats = British Student Quiz Championships (as Balliol College, Oxford) 1998, 1999, 2000; (as University of Oxford) 2001, 2003, 2011, 2012.
+
|nats = [[British Student Quiz Championships]] (as Balliol College, Oxford) 1998, 1999, 2000; (as University of Oxford) 2001, 2003, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2019, 2021
| }}
+
}}
 
+
The '''Oxford University Quiz Society''' is a student organization at the University of Oxford in Oxford, England.  Among the members of OUQS is a squad of some 40 people who attend weekly practices and occasional tournaments.
The Oxford University Quiz Society is a student organization at the University of Oxford in Oxford, England.  Among the members of OUQS is a squad of some 40 people who attend weekly practices and occasional tournaments.
 
  
 
==History==
 
==History==
Line 14: Line 13:
 
Oxford competed in the first six incarnations of the [[British Student Quiz Championships]] (although Oxford and Cambridge competed as individual colleges rather than as universities before 2001, meaning that Balliol College, Oxford was technically the British national champion every year from 1998 to 2000).  Oxford also hosted the first-ever regular-season tournament in the United Kingdom, an invitational in 2000 that drew thirteen teams, including [[McMaster University]] from Hamilton, Ontario.  In 2001, Oxford attended the [[NAQT]] [[ICT]] and finished ninth overall.  After Oxford won the 2003 British Student Quiz Championships, however, the British quizbowl circuit fell apart, with no further inter-university tossup-bonus tournaments being run until 2010.
 
Oxford competed in the first six incarnations of the [[British Student Quiz Championships]] (although Oxford and Cambridge competed as individual colleges rather than as universities before 2001, meaning that Balliol College, Oxford was technically the British national champion every year from 1998 to 2000).  Oxford also hosted the first-ever regular-season tournament in the United Kingdom, an invitational in 2000 that drew thirteen teams, including [[McMaster University]] from Hamilton, Ontario.  In 2001, Oxford attended the [[NAQT]] [[ICT]] and finished ninth overall.  After Oxford won the 2003 British Student Quiz Championships, however, the British quizbowl circuit fell apart, with no further inter-university tossup-bonus tournaments being run until 2010.
  
In February 2010, Oxford hosted an SCT, which was won by [[Manchester]].  Both Oxford and Manchester attended the [[2010 ICT]] in Chicago, Illinois, heralding both the revitalization of quizbowl in the United Kingdom and the increasing integration of the British and American quizbowl circuits.  In November 2010, Oxford hosted [[ACF Fall]], a tournament that it staffed while simultaneously fielding seven teams.  In February 2011, Oxford hosted another SCT, which it won. Oxford will send a four-person team to the [[2011 ICT]] in Chicago for the second year in a row.  In addition, Oxford will participate in the first regular-season tournament held outside of Oxford for many years, a [[MUT]] mirror at Manchester in April.  Oxford will also compete in the revived British Student Quiz Championships, which will be heavily "Briticized" from the NAQT [[HSNCT]] by an editing team led by Oxford player and former Harvard player [[Kyle Haddad-Fonda]].
+
In February 2010, Oxford hosted an SCT, which was won by [[Manchester]].  Both Oxford and Manchester attended the [[2010 ICT]] in Chicago, Illinois, heralding both the revitalization of quizbowl in the United Kingdom and the increasing integration of the British and American quizbowl circuits.  In November 2010, Oxford hosted [[ACF Fall]], a tournament that it staffed while simultaneously fielding seven teams.  In February 2011, Oxford hosted another SCT, which it won. Oxford competed in the [[2011 ICT]], held in Chicago, for the second year in a row.  In addition, Oxford won the [[MUT]] mirror at Manchester in April, the first regular season tournament that had been held outside of Oxford for many years, then won the first edition of the revived British Student Quiz Championships, which ran on the NAQT [[HSNCT]] questions, [[Briticised]] by an editing team led by Oxford player and former Harvard player [[Kyle Haddad-Fonda]].
  
Despite the lull in inter-university quizbowl in Britain between 2003 and 2010, OUQS continued to compete annually against Cambridge in the Varsity Match, a competition that Oxford has never lost.  The June 2010 Varsity Match, which was based on the [[HSNCT]] set, saw a team of [[Edmund Dickinson]], [[Katie McGettigan]], Kyle Haddad-Fonda, and [[Gail Trimble]] defeat Cambridge.
+
Despite the lull in inter-university quizbowl in Britain between 2003 and 2010, OUQS continued to compete annually against Cambridge in the Varsity Match.  The June 2010 Varsity Match, which was based on the [[HSNCT]] set, saw a team of [[Edmund Dickinson]], [[Katie McGettigan]], Kyle Haddad-Fonda, and [[Gail Trimble]] defeat Cambridge.
  
Every year, OUQS also organizes the Oxford Intercollegiate Quiz, a competition among Oxford colleges run on Briticized NAQT IS sets that draws participants from many colleges.  In February and March 2010, OUQS organized the twentieth ICQ, which featured 44 teams and which was won for the second consecutive year by Magdalen College.
+
Every year, OUQS also organizes the Oxford Intercollegiate Quiz, a competition among Oxford colleges run on Briticised NAQT IS sets that draws participants from many colleges.  In February and March 2010, OUQS organized the twentieth ICQ, which featured 44 teams and which was won for the second consecutive year by Magdalen College.
  
OUQS members, competing on behalf of their individual colleges, have also seen great success in recent years in University Challenge, a program based on and affiliated with College Bowl.  In the 2008-2009 series, OUQS member Gail Trimble led Corpus Christi College to the championship, although her team was subsequently disqualified for fielding an ineligible player.  In the 2009-2010 series, OUQS members [[George Woudhuysen]] and [[Oliver Chen]] powered St. John's College to a second place finish.  In the 2010-2011 series, which is currently airing, OUQS members Kyle Haddad-Fonda and [[Matthew Chan]], as well as former OUQS member [[Will Cudmore]], are all members of the Magdalen College team, which has so far reached the semifinals.
+
OUQS members, competing on behalf of their individual colleges, have also seen great success in recent years in University Challenge, a program based on and affiliated with College Bowl.  In the 2008-2009 series, OUQS member Gail Trimble led Corpus Christi College to the championship, although her team was subsequently disqualified for fielding an ineligible player.  In the 2009-2010 series, OUQS members [[George Woudhuysen]] and [[Oliver Chen]] powered St. John's College to a second place finish.  In the 2010-2011 series, OUQS members Kyle Haddad-Fonda and [[Matthew Chan]], as well as former OUQS member [[Will Cudmore]], are all members of the Magdalen College team, which won the tournament for a record fourth time.
  
 
While OUQS cannot participate in as many tournaments as American universities because of the embryonic nature of the student-run quizbowl circuit in the United Kingdom, it is nonetheless noted for having one of the largest teams in the world.  Its weekly practices routinely draw over thirty players, and it contributed seven teams to the 2010 ACF Fall.
 
While OUQS cannot participate in as many tournaments as American universities because of the embryonic nature of the student-run quizbowl circuit in the United Kingdom, it is nonetheless noted for having one of the largest teams in the world.  Its weekly practices routinely draw over thirty players, and it contributed seven teams to the 2010 ACF Fall.
  
 
==Former Players==
 
==Former Players==
 +
{{Columns-list|colwidth=200px|
 +
* [[Konstantinos Adamopoulos]]
 +
* [[Sam Baker]]
 
* [[Ian Bayley]]
 
* [[Ian Bayley]]
* [[Will Cudmore]]
 
* [[Roman Garnett]]
 
* [[Rob Linham]]
 
* [[Katie McGettigan]]
 
* [[Kate Morris]]
 
* [[Luke Pitcher]]
 
* [[Gail Trimble]]
 
* [[Ewan MacAulay]]
 
 
==Current Players==
 
 
* [[Peter Berry]]
 
* [[Peter Berry]]
 +
* [[Ben Biggs]]
 
* [[Hugh Binnie]]
 
* [[Hugh Binnie]]
 +
* [[Sue Brearley]]
 +
* [[Isaac Brown]]
 +
* [[George Braid]]
 
* [[Alex Bubb]]
 
* [[Alex Bubb]]
 
* [[Thomas Catterall]]
 
* [[Thomas Catterall]]
 
* [[Matthew Chan]]
 
* [[Matthew Chan]]
 +
* [[George Charlson]]
 
* [[Oliver Chen]]
 
* [[Oliver Chen]]
 +
* [[Charlie Clegg]]
 +
* [[Frances Clark-Murray]]
 +
* [[Oliver Clarke]]
 +
* [[Laura Cooper]]
 +
* [[George Corfield]]
 +
* [[Will Cudmore]]
 +
* [[Eli Cugini]]
 +
* [[Daniel Dalland]]
 +
* [[Thomas De Bock]]
 +
* [[Peter Devlin]]
 
* [[Edmund Dickinson]]
 
* [[Edmund Dickinson]]
 
* [[Kara Fleming]]
 
* [[Kara Fleming]]
 
* [[Paul Glenton]]
 
* [[Paul Glenton]]
 +
* [[Joey Goldman]]
 
* [[John Gwin]]
 
* [[John Gwin]]
 +
* [[Roman Garnett]]
 
* [[Kyle Haddad-Fonda]]
 
* [[Kyle Haddad-Fonda]]
 +
* [[Alex Hardwick]]
 +
* [[Oliver Hargrave]]
 
* [[Tim Hele]]
 
* [[Tim Hele]]
 
* [[Robert Hickman]]
 
* [[Robert Hickman]]
Line 54: Line 65:
 
* [[Alison Hudson]]
 
* [[Alison Hudson]]
 
* [[Colin Hui]]
 
* [[Colin Hui]]
 +
* [[Ali Izzatdust]]
 +
* [[Daoud Jackson]]
 +
* [[Claire Jones]]
 
* [[Hasneen Karbalai]]
 
* [[Hasneen Karbalai]]
 
* [[Nathan Kenny]]
 
* [[Nathan Kenny]]
 
* [[David Knapp]]
 
* [[David Knapp]]
 
* [[Jonathan Lane]]
 
* [[Jonathan Lane]]
 +
* [[Elisabeth Le Maistre]]
 +
* [[Aidan Leahy]]
 +
* [[Freddy Leo]]
 +
* [[Rob Linham]]
 +
* [[Matthew Lloyd]]
 +
* [[Colin Lyman]]
 +
* [[Ewan MacAulay]]
 
* [[Mahdi Malik]]
 
* [[Mahdi Malik]]
 +
* [[Katie McGettigan]]
 +
* [[Adam Millard]]
 +
* [[Kate Morris]]
 
* [[Joanna Munro]]
 
* [[Joanna Munro]]
 +
* [[Michael O'Connor]]
 +
* [[Jack O'Hara]]
 +
* [[Lucy Oswald]]
 +
* [[Barney Pite]]
 +
* [[Alex Peplow]]
 
* [[Eve Phillips]]
 
* [[Eve Phillips]]
 +
* [[Freddy Potts]]
 +
* [[Luke Pitcher]]
 
* [[Cameron Quinn]]
 
* [[Cameron Quinn]]
 
* [[Maris Rowe-McCulloch]]
 
* [[Maris Rowe-McCulloch]]
 +
* [[Solenne Scholefield]]
 
* [[George Scratcherd]]
 
* [[George Scratcherd]]
 +
* [[Eric Sheng]]
 +
* [[Jeremy Sontchi]]
 
* [[Peter Sloman]]
 
* [[Peter Sloman]]
 +
* [[Laura Smith]]
 
* [[Tom Speller]]
 
* [[Tom Speller]]
 +
* [[Chlo Spinks]]
 
* [[Simon Spiro]]
 
* [[Simon Spiro]]
 
* [[Sam Swift]]
 
* [[Sam Swift]]
 +
* [[Gail Trimble]]
 
* [[Zachary Vermeer]]
 
* [[Zachary Vermeer]]
 
* [[Daniel Wilson]]
 
* [[Daniel Wilson]]
 +
* [[Leonie Woodland]]
 
* [[George Woudhuysen]]
 
* [[George Woudhuysen]]
 +
* [[Spencer Weinreich]]
 +
}}
 +
 +
==Current Players==
 +
{{Columns-list|colwidth=200px|
 +
* [[Alex Baker]]
 +
* [[Elliot Cosnett]]
 +
* [[Paige Crawley]]
 +
* [[Delia Cropper]]
 +
* [[Josh Cruice]]
 +
* [[Eliza Dean]]
 +
* [[Alexander Gunasekera]]
 +
* [[Ömer Keskin]]
 +
* [[Madeleine Lay]]
 +
* [[Jacob Robertson]]
 +
* [[George Rowe]]
 +
* [[Matt Sheldon]]
 +
* [[Mehmet Tatoğlu]]
 +
* [[Ella Warde]]
 +
* [[Harry Wheeler]]
 +
}}
  
 
==Trivia==
 
==Trivia==
 
Richard Dawkins, the author of ''The God Delusion'', was once the patron of OUQS, a fact that delighted many American quizbowlers at the time.
 
Richard Dawkins, the author of ''The God Delusion'', was once the patron of OUQS, a fact that delighted many American quizbowlers at the time.
 +
 +
OUQS is 'approved of, in principle' by the popular YouTube channel Map Men.
  
 
==External Links==
 
==External Links==

Latest revision as of 15:35, 3 January 2024

Oxford
Oxford.jpg
Location:
Oxford, England
Current President or Coach Ella Warde
National championships British Student Quiz Championships (as Balliol College, Oxford) 1998, 1999, 2000; (as University of Oxford) 2001, 2003, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2019, 2021
NAQT Page link

The Oxford University Quiz Society is a student organization at the University of Oxford in Oxford, England. Among the members of OUQS is a squad of some 40 people who attend weekly practices and occasional tournaments.

History

The Oxford University Quiz Society was founded in the 1980s, during which time it organized an intercollegiate competition called the Oxford Inter-Collegiate Challenge Quiz. By the early 1990s, however, the society was defunct. It was refounded in the late 1990s after the consecutive victories of Magdalen College in the revived BBC2 television series University Challenge.

Oxford competed in the first six incarnations of the British Student Quiz Championships (although Oxford and Cambridge competed as individual colleges rather than as universities before 2001, meaning that Balliol College, Oxford was technically the British national champion every year from 1998 to 2000). Oxford also hosted the first-ever regular-season tournament in the United Kingdom, an invitational in 2000 that drew thirteen teams, including McMaster University from Hamilton, Ontario. In 2001, Oxford attended the NAQT ICT and finished ninth overall. After Oxford won the 2003 British Student Quiz Championships, however, the British quizbowl circuit fell apart, with no further inter-university tossup-bonus tournaments being run until 2010.

In February 2010, Oxford hosted an SCT, which was won by Manchester. Both Oxford and Manchester attended the 2010 ICT in Chicago, Illinois, heralding both the revitalization of quizbowl in the United Kingdom and the increasing integration of the British and American quizbowl circuits. In November 2010, Oxford hosted ACF Fall, a tournament that it staffed while simultaneously fielding seven teams. In February 2011, Oxford hosted another SCT, which it won. Oxford competed in the 2011 ICT, held in Chicago, for the second year in a row. In addition, Oxford won the MUT mirror at Manchester in April, the first regular season tournament that had been held outside of Oxford for many years, then won the first edition of the revived British Student Quiz Championships, which ran on the NAQT HSNCT questions, Briticised by an editing team led by Oxford player and former Harvard player Kyle Haddad-Fonda.

Despite the lull in inter-university quizbowl in Britain between 2003 and 2010, OUQS continued to compete annually against Cambridge in the Varsity Match. The June 2010 Varsity Match, which was based on the HSNCT set, saw a team of Edmund Dickinson, Katie McGettigan, Kyle Haddad-Fonda, and Gail Trimble defeat Cambridge.

Every year, OUQS also organizes the Oxford Intercollegiate Quiz, a competition among Oxford colleges run on Briticised NAQT IS sets that draws participants from many colleges. In February and March 2010, OUQS organized the twentieth ICQ, which featured 44 teams and which was won for the second consecutive year by Magdalen College.

OUQS members, competing on behalf of their individual colleges, have also seen great success in recent years in University Challenge, a program based on and affiliated with College Bowl. In the 2008-2009 series, OUQS member Gail Trimble led Corpus Christi College to the championship, although her team was subsequently disqualified for fielding an ineligible player. In the 2009-2010 series, OUQS members George Woudhuysen and Oliver Chen powered St. John's College to a second place finish. In the 2010-2011 series, OUQS members Kyle Haddad-Fonda and Matthew Chan, as well as former OUQS member Will Cudmore, are all members of the Magdalen College team, which won the tournament for a record fourth time.

While OUQS cannot participate in as many tournaments as American universities because of the embryonic nature of the student-run quizbowl circuit in the United Kingdom, it is nonetheless noted for having one of the largest teams in the world. Its weekly practices routinely draw over thirty players, and it contributed seven teams to the 2010 ACF Fall.

Former Players

Current Players

Trivia

Richard Dawkins, the author of The God Delusion, was once the patron of OUQS, a fact that delighted many American quizbowlers at the time.

OUQS is 'approved of, in principle' by the popular YouTube channel Map Men.

External Links

Official Website