History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
- Matt Weiner
- Sin
- Posts: 8148
- Joined: Fri Apr 11, 2003 8:34 pm
- Location: Richmond, VA
History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
In the first of many responses to requests for lists, here are my top 10 tournaments of the past 10 years. This is a ranking of packet set quality, not the experience of playing a particular event.
#10) ACF Regionals 2006 - A really solid exemplar of ACF style from the last days of the "ACF-playing vs. non-ACF playing teams" divide. Provided some great games for some VCU players at their first collegiate tournament ever but was still pretty accessible. Lots of work went into this set from Matt Lafer, Chris Romero, and Mike Sorice, and it showed.
#9) The July Crisis 2008 - After a pretty crappy 2007 history tournament, I didn't know what to expect from Bruce the following year, but he clearly upped his game in the intervening months and wrote a really great set that fruitfully explored all sorts of new areas (loved the well-done tossup on "indigo") and foreshadowed the great RMPfests to come; consider this ranking a shared spot with those two tournaments.
#8) Minnesota Undergraduate Tournament 2008 - The solo debut of the core Minnesota editing team to rave reviews, save for that unfortunate meta question. This was one of the more interesting events to see people play on and fulfilled the purpose of the "undergraduate" tournament, which is neither a novice nor a regular event, quite well. The people responsible for this tournament went on to produce the very fun 2008 and 2009 Minnesota Opens, though I'm reluctant to list too many super-hard tournaments here.
#7) Michigan MLK 2006 - Ryan Westbrook's coming-out party as an editor, and the first MLK to emerge from the timed-tournament ghetto. A super-solid general-audience tournament.
#6) Chicago Open 2005 - Subash's swan song as a writer, and probably the most polished hard event I've ever participated on. Lots of good games at this tournament from top to bottom, lots of fun questions. Unlike some subsequent COs, this tournament always seemed to have a consistent sense of what it was trying to do.
#5) ACF Fall 2007 - We still use a packet from this to show how quizbowl works at the VCU activities fair. An excellent rebound from the 2006 ACF Fall that I worked on, which kind of lost its way with question length. I think this was also the first widely played tournament that Jonathan Magin edited, after providing solid efforts on the Terrapin and lit singles tournaments earlier in the same year.
#4) ACF Nationals 2007 - I think this tournament was the most consistent and appropriate-difficulty Nationals of the modern era, and I really enjoyed playing some tight games on it. It was also the last ACF tournament edited by the second generation of ACF editors before handing the baton off, and they went out on a high note.
#3) Teitler Myth Tournament 2005 - The birth of the modern single-subject tournament, and Seth Teitler's statement that he can indeed fill 13 rounds of myth with answerable tossups. I can imagine how much work went into that. I think a lot of what Jonathan and Bruce have achieved with successive side tournaments can be traced to the example set here.
#2 ) ACF Fall 2008 - Looking back, I'm still as amazed at what this tournament achieved as I was at the time. The note-perfect difficulty modulation over 136 teams, including many first-time players, that the nationwide stats for this event showed is baffling and leads me to conclude that Andrew Hart has some sort of esoteric superpower that lets him sense how a bonus will be converted. This tournament was also the birth of the "supervisory editor" model that is about to sweep quizbowl.
#1) ACF Regionals 2001 - That's right, a tournament from 2001, two full years before where I usually put the birth of good quizbowl, is the best of all time. What Subash accomplished with this event was the singlehanded redefinition of ACF Regionals from "that tournament with the hard questions and all the birthday and Nobel Prize clues" to a tournament that set the standard for the most up-to-date expression of good quizbowl practices. This tournament would be playable even today; set in the context of other events being produced in the 2000-2001 academic year, it was the equivalent of Michelangelo popping up among cavemen. Developments such as the creation of ACF Fall later in the same calendar year and the erosion of the "ACF IS IMPOSSIBLE" meme, and the incalculable effects that this opening-up has had on the present state of the game, are all directly traceable to Subash's visionary editing of Regionals 2001.
Honorable mentions: Chicago Open 2006, ACF Regionals 2008 (which I think was the best tournament I've ever worked on, though I will leave the judging of my output to others), NAQT SCT 2007, ACF Nationals 2002 (also ahead of its time in a lot of ways), the January 2009 edition of Terrapin, ACF Fall 2009, ACF Fall 2004
#10) ACF Regionals 2006 - A really solid exemplar of ACF style from the last days of the "ACF-playing vs. non-ACF playing teams" divide. Provided some great games for some VCU players at their first collegiate tournament ever but was still pretty accessible. Lots of work went into this set from Matt Lafer, Chris Romero, and Mike Sorice, and it showed.
#9) The July Crisis 2008 - After a pretty crappy 2007 history tournament, I didn't know what to expect from Bruce the following year, but he clearly upped his game in the intervening months and wrote a really great set that fruitfully explored all sorts of new areas (loved the well-done tossup on "indigo") and foreshadowed the great RMPfests to come; consider this ranking a shared spot with those two tournaments.
#8) Minnesota Undergraduate Tournament 2008 - The solo debut of the core Minnesota editing team to rave reviews, save for that unfortunate meta question. This was one of the more interesting events to see people play on and fulfilled the purpose of the "undergraduate" tournament, which is neither a novice nor a regular event, quite well. The people responsible for this tournament went on to produce the very fun 2008 and 2009 Minnesota Opens, though I'm reluctant to list too many super-hard tournaments here.
#7) Michigan MLK 2006 - Ryan Westbrook's coming-out party as an editor, and the first MLK to emerge from the timed-tournament ghetto. A super-solid general-audience tournament.
#6) Chicago Open 2005 - Subash's swan song as a writer, and probably the most polished hard event I've ever participated on. Lots of good games at this tournament from top to bottom, lots of fun questions. Unlike some subsequent COs, this tournament always seemed to have a consistent sense of what it was trying to do.
#5) ACF Fall 2007 - We still use a packet from this to show how quizbowl works at the VCU activities fair. An excellent rebound from the 2006 ACF Fall that I worked on, which kind of lost its way with question length. I think this was also the first widely played tournament that Jonathan Magin edited, after providing solid efforts on the Terrapin and lit singles tournaments earlier in the same year.
#4) ACF Nationals 2007 - I think this tournament was the most consistent and appropriate-difficulty Nationals of the modern era, and I really enjoyed playing some tight games on it. It was also the last ACF tournament edited by the second generation of ACF editors before handing the baton off, and they went out on a high note.
#3) Teitler Myth Tournament 2005 - The birth of the modern single-subject tournament, and Seth Teitler's statement that he can indeed fill 13 rounds of myth with answerable tossups. I can imagine how much work went into that. I think a lot of what Jonathan and Bruce have achieved with successive side tournaments can be traced to the example set here.
#2 ) ACF Fall 2008 - Looking back, I'm still as amazed at what this tournament achieved as I was at the time. The note-perfect difficulty modulation over 136 teams, including many first-time players, that the nationwide stats for this event showed is baffling and leads me to conclude that Andrew Hart has some sort of esoteric superpower that lets him sense how a bonus will be converted. This tournament was also the birth of the "supervisory editor" model that is about to sweep quizbowl.
#1) ACF Regionals 2001 - That's right, a tournament from 2001, two full years before where I usually put the birth of good quizbowl, is the best of all time. What Subash accomplished with this event was the singlehanded redefinition of ACF Regionals from "that tournament with the hard questions and all the birthday and Nobel Prize clues" to a tournament that set the standard for the most up-to-date expression of good quizbowl practices. This tournament would be playable even today; set in the context of other events being produced in the 2000-2001 academic year, it was the equivalent of Michelangelo popping up among cavemen. Developments such as the creation of ACF Fall later in the same calendar year and the erosion of the "ACF IS IMPOSSIBLE" meme, and the incalculable effects that this opening-up has had on the present state of the game, are all directly traceable to Subash's visionary editing of Regionals 2001.
Honorable mentions: Chicago Open 2006, ACF Regionals 2008 (which I think was the best tournament I've ever worked on, though I will leave the judging of my output to others), NAQT SCT 2007, ACF Nationals 2002 (also ahead of its time in a lot of ways), the January 2009 edition of Terrapin, ACF Fall 2009, ACF Fall 2004
Matt Weiner
Advisor to Quizbowl at Virginia Commonwealth University / Founder of hsquizbowl.org
Advisor to Quizbowl at Virginia Commonwealth University / Founder of hsquizbowl.org
- Skepticism and Animal Feed
- Auron
- Posts: 3238
- Joined: Sat Oct 30, 2004 11:47 pm
- Location: Arlington, VA
Re: History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
This tournament really changed my quizbowl life forever. I credit it with starting the "tossups on easy answers" craze that I've been a partisan of ever since. And I've consciously looked for inspiration to it during my subsequent career as a purveyor of subject tournaments.Matt Weiner wrote: #3) Teitler Myth Tournament 2005 - The birth of the modern single-subject tournament, and Seth Teitler's statement that he can indeed fill 13 rounds of myth with answerable tossups. I can imagine how much work went into that. I think a lot of what Jonathan and Bruce have achieved with successive side tournaments can be traced to the example set here.
Bruce
Harvard '10 / UChicago '07 / Roycemore School '04
ACF Member emeritus
My guide to using Wikipedia as a question source
Harvard '10 / UChicago '07 / Roycemore School '04
ACF Member emeritus
My guide to using Wikipedia as a question source
Re: History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
Great list, and I hope to see a lot more. I'm working on a list of the best hard tournaments I've played in, which I'll add to the thread after some more discussion of Matt's post.
Andrew Hart
Minnesota alum
Minnesota alum
Re: History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
The 2009 SCT deserves an honorable mention, at least. It was a pretty damn well written tournament, with only one or two difficulty outliers (the tossup on Miklos Horthy comes to mind.) I also thought it was among the best copy-edited tournaments, and had few issues playing it while running a fever.
Gautam
Gautam
Gautam - ACF
Currently tending to the 'quizbowl hobo' persuasion.
Currently tending to the 'quizbowl hobo' persuasion.
- Frater Taciturnus
- Auron
- Posts: 2463
- Joined: Mon Dec 12, 2005 1:26 pm
- Location: Richmond, VA
Re: History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
I will say that the DII version of this was probably the best NAQT tournament I have ever playedgkandlikar wrote:The 2009 SCT deserves an honorable mention, at least. It was a pretty damn well written tournament, with only one or two difficulty outliers (the tossup on Miklos Horthy comes to mind.) I also thought it was among the best copy-edited tournaments, and had few issues playing it while running a fever.
Gautam
Janet Berry
[email protected]
she/they
--------------
J. Sargeant Reynolds CC 2008, 2009, 2014
Virginia Commonwealth 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013,
Douglas Freeman 2005, 2006, 2007
[email protected]
she/they
--------------
J. Sargeant Reynolds CC 2008, 2009, 2014
Virginia Commonwealth 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013,
Douglas Freeman 2005, 2006, 2007
-
- Rikku
- Posts: 293
- Joined: Tue Sep 18, 2007 12:56 am
- Location: Brindlee Mountain, Alabama
Re: History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
Aside from our match where something was the answer twice (gamma I think?) I feel the sameFrater Taciturnus wrote:I will say that the DII version of this was probably the best NAQT tournament I have ever playedgkandlikar wrote:The 2009 SCT deserves an honorable mention, at least. It was a pretty damn well written tournament, with only one or two difficulty outliers (the tossup on Miklos Horthy comes to mind.) I also thought it was among the best copy-edited tournaments, and had few issues playing it while running a fever.
Gautam
Mark Morris
University of Alabama-Huntsville '13
Auburn Pharmacy '19
University of Alabama-Huntsville '13
Auburn Pharmacy '19
- JackGlerum
- Tidus
- Posts: 660
- Joined: Wed Aug 15, 2007 9:20 pm
Re: History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
Glad to see last year's iteration of TIT on the honorable mention -- it struck regular difficulty gold, if I recall correctly.
- Broad-tailed Grassbird
- Tidus
- Posts: 712
- Joined: Sun Nov 23, 2008 10:27 pm
- Location: Somewhere nice.
Re: History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
Two Gamma tossups in the same match was the strangest thing ever.Mark wrote:Aside from our match where something was the answer twice (gamma I think?) I feel the sameFrater Taciturnus wrote:I will say that the DII version of this was probably the best NAQT tournament I have ever playedgkandlikar wrote:The 2009 SCT deserves an honorable mention, at least. It was a pretty damn well written tournament, with only one or two difficulty outliers (the tossup on Miklos Horthy comes to mind.) I also thought it was among the best copy-edited tournaments, and had few issues playing it while running a fever.
Gautam
Nalin
Scranton Middle School (2000-2003)
Brighton High School (2003-2007)
Michigan State University (2007-2011)
Semi-Retired (2012-present)
Scranton Middle School (2000-2003)
Brighton High School (2003-2007)
Michigan State University (2007-2011)
Semi-Retired (2012-present)
- Skepticism and Animal Feed
- Auron
- Posts: 3238
- Joined: Sat Oct 30, 2004 11:47 pm
- Location: Arlington, VA
Re: History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
Not even the strangest thing at the tournament. Gamma is at least a playsible SCT level answer, unlike Horthy. I'm not sure there was ever a Horthy tossup before.
Bruce
Harvard '10 / UChicago '07 / Roycemore School '04
ACF Member emeritus
My guide to using Wikipedia as a question source
Harvard '10 / UChicago '07 / Roycemore School '04
ACF Member emeritus
My guide to using Wikipedia as a question source
Re: History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
Regs 2008 has definitely been the best regular difficulty tournament I've played in my collegiate career (2007 Fall onwards.)Matt Weiner wrote: Honorable mentions: [...] ACF Regionals 2008 (which I think was the best tournament I've ever worked on, though I will leave the judging of my output to others)
Gautam - ACF
Currently tending to the 'quizbowl hobo' persuasion.
Currently tending to the 'quizbowl hobo' persuasion.
- Important Bird Area
- Forums Staff: Administrator
- Posts: 6136
- Joined: Thu Aug 28, 2003 3:33 pm
- Location: San Francisco Bay Area
- Contact:
Re: History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
That Horthy tossup was converted at an entirely decent rate, too: 3/8/4 in 17 rooms, which is something like the 20th percentile of SCT conversion numbers. (Just within the history, tossups like "Leander Jameson," "Bartolome de Las Casas," and "Francisco Madero" were answered at much lower rates.)
Anyway, let's get this back on topic (I'd be happy to deal with "top 10 NAQT packet-editing problems of the decade" in a new thread).
My selection of favorite tournaments is kind of idiosyncratic, I think primarily because on anything beyond ACF Fall I'm a specialist player. So this comes down to "did this tournament contain 8-10 European history answer selections that I, personally, consider awesome?" as much as anything else. (And note that there are a lot of high-quality tournaments in the past 3-4 years that I haven't played, so this also skews a bit old.)
In no particular order: the Manu Ginobili Open, Auspicious Incident, ACF Nationals 2005, Gaddis 2008. If I follow Matt's example to include subject tournaments, extra credit to Geography Monstrosity (well, it was my own experimental vanity tournament).
Anyway, let's get this back on topic (I'd be happy to deal with "top 10 NAQT packet-editing problems of the decade" in a new thread).
My selection of favorite tournaments is kind of idiosyncratic, I think primarily because on anything beyond ACF Fall I'm a specialist player. So this comes down to "did this tournament contain 8-10 European history answer selections that I, personally, consider awesome?" as much as anything else. (And note that there are a lot of high-quality tournaments in the past 3-4 years that I haven't played, so this also skews a bit old.)
In no particular order: the Manu Ginobili Open, Auspicious Incident, ACF Nationals 2005, Gaddis 2008. If I follow Matt's example to include subject tournaments, extra credit to Geography Monstrosity (well, it was my own experimental vanity tournament).
Jeff Hoppes
President, Northern California Quiz Bowl Alliance
former HSQB Chief Admin (2012-13)
VP for Communication and history subject editor, NAQT
Editor emeritus, ACF
"I wish to make some kind of joke about Jeff's love of birds, but I always fear he'll turn them on me Hitchcock-style." -Fred
President, Northern California Quiz Bowl Alliance
former HSQB Chief Admin (2012-13)
VP for Communication and history subject editor, NAQT
Editor emeritus, ACF
"I wish to make some kind of joke about Jeff's love of birds, but I always fear he'll turn them on me Hitchcock-style." -Fred
-
- Wakka
- Posts: 162
- Joined: Wed Jan 14, 2004 7:14 pm
- Location: Roswell, Georgia
Re: History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
My favorite tournament was the 2008 Terrapin/MLK. It was pretty well-received, if I remember right.
Steven Hanley
FSU (2004-2006)
UGA (2007-2009)
FSU (2004-2006)
UGA (2007-2009)
- Theory Of The Leisure Flask
- Yuna
- Posts: 761
- Joined: Fri Aug 29, 2003 11:04 am
- Location: Brooklyn
Re: History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
My three favorite tournaments since returning were ACF Fall 2008, Minnesota Open 2008, and the January 09 Terrapin, all of which seem to have been generally praised.
I'm hesitant to try and list good tournaments from my undergraduate days (2001-2005), because a) my memory is foggy, b) I'm certain to conflate "question quality" with "overall experience", and c) above all, standards were lower back then (though I could certainly pick out a few egregiously bad tournaments). That being said, ACF Fall tended to be our team's favorite tournament of the year, with Terrapin and Chris Frankel's various efforts at Princeton (both Buzzerfest and Kickboxer) close behind.
I'm hesitant to try and list good tournaments from my undergraduate days (2001-2005), because a) my memory is foggy, b) I'm certain to conflate "question quality" with "overall experience", and c) above all, standards were lower back then (though I could certainly pick out a few egregiously bad tournaments). That being said, ACF Fall tended to be our team's favorite tournament of the year, with Terrapin and Chris Frankel's various efforts at Princeton (both Buzzerfest and Kickboxer) close behind.
Chris White
Bloomfield HS (New Jersey) '01, Swarthmore College '05, University of Pennsylvania '10. Still writes questions occasionally.
Bloomfield HS (New Jersey) '01, Swarthmore College '05, University of Pennsylvania '10. Still writes questions occasionally.
- Mike Bentley
- Sin
- Posts: 6465
- Joined: Fri Mar 31, 2006 11:03 pm
- Location: Bellevue, WA
- Contact:
Re: History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
I really liked Deep Bench from 2007. I thought the questions were good and the format allowed for different kinds of contributions to a team's overall success than usual.
In regards to trash tournaments, I thought the CO Trash tournament from this year was the best of the lot of Yaphe edited trash tournaments. I also enjoyed the BU Trash Junior Bird tournament from a few years ago.
In regards to trash tournaments, I thought the CO Trash tournament from this year was the best of the lot of Yaphe edited trash tournaments. I also enjoyed the BU Trash Junior Bird tournament from a few years ago.
Mike Bentley
Treasurer, Partnership for Academic Competition Excellence
Adviser, Quizbowl Team at University of Washington
University of Maryland, Class of 2008
Treasurer, Partnership for Academic Competition Excellence
Adviser, Quizbowl Team at University of Washington
University of Maryland, Class of 2008
Re: History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
Could we please leave that for a different thread?Bentley Like Beckham wrote:In regards to trash tournaments
Gautam - ACF
Currently tending to the 'quizbowl hobo' persuasion.
Currently tending to the 'quizbowl hobo' persuasion.
- No Rules Westbrook
- Auron
- Posts: 1238
- Joined: Mon Nov 22, 2004 1:04 pm
Re: History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
For me, tournaments are like video games. It only takes about a half hour and you know the type of quality and polish you're getting, irrespective of difficulty and personal stylistic considerations.
When I think of high quality tournaments I've seen assembled (putting aside anything I've worked on) I think of: 2006 ACF Regs, 2008 Minny Open, Magin's debut literature tournament, JS Mill, 2008 ACF Fall, 2005 and 2006 ACF Nats, Manu Ginobili, Teitler's Mythology event, Jan 09 Terrapin.
When I think of high quality tournaments I've seen assembled (putting aside anything I've worked on) I think of: 2006 ACF Regs, 2008 Minny Open, Magin's debut literature tournament, JS Mill, 2008 ACF Fall, 2005 and 2006 ACF Nats, Manu Ginobili, Teitler's Mythology event, Jan 09 Terrapin.
Ryan Westbrook, no affiliation whatsoever.
I am pure energy...and as ancient as the cosmos. Feeble creatures, GO!
Left here since birth...forgotten in the river of time...I've had an eternity to...ponder the meaning of things...and now I have an answer!
I am pure energy...and as ancient as the cosmos. Feeble creatures, GO!
Left here since birth...forgotten in the river of time...I've had an eternity to...ponder the meaning of things...and now I have an answer!
-
- Auron
- Posts: 1000
- Joined: Tue Feb 17, 2004 12:50 am
- Location: Columbia, SC
Re: History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
One tournament from the 2000s that I enjoyed was the Kentucky Wildcat tournament in 2001. It struck me then as a good, moderate difficulty tournament with lots of interesting questions that successfully achieved the coveted "challenging-yet-accessible" label. It's been several years, and a lot of the questions and bonus forms haven't stood the test of time too well. Still, there's a lot of good stuff going on in that tournament. It's fitting that the writer of the Wildcat 2001, Kelly McKenzie, went on to invent ACF Fall. Not bad for a professional Scrabble player.
Eric D.
University of South Carolina Alum
University of South Carolina Alum
- nobthehobbit
- Rikku
- Posts: 293
- Joined: Sun Feb 19, 2006 1:18 am
Re: History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
It's hardly one of the ten best, but VETO 2009 sticks out in my mind as one of the most improved over previous editions (notwithstanding playing all three unedited packets at the Vancouver site).
Daniel Pareja, Waterloo, Canadian quizbowl iconoclast
Stats zombie.
Stats zombie.
William Lyon Mackenzie King wrote:There are few men in this Parliament for whom I have greater respect than the leader of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation. I admire him in my heart, because time and again he has had the courage to say what lays on his conscience, regardless of what the world might think of him. A man of that calibre is an ornament to any Parliament.
- Mike Bentley
- Sin
- Posts: 6465
- Joined: Fri Mar 31, 2006 11:03 pm
- Location: Bellevue, WA
- Contact:
Re: History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
I have a hunch what tournament is going to be "worst dropoff" for 2010.nobthehobbit wrote:It's hardly one of the ten best, but VETO 2009 sticks out in my mind as one of the most improved over previous editions (notwithstanding playing all three unedited packets at the Vancouver site).
Mike Bentley
Treasurer, Partnership for Academic Competition Excellence
Adviser, Quizbowl Team at University of Washington
University of Maryland, Class of 2008
Treasurer, Partnership for Academic Competition Excellence
Adviser, Quizbowl Team at University of Washington
University of Maryland, Class of 2008
- Captain Sinico
- Auron
- Posts: 2675
- Joined: Sun Sep 21, 2003 1:46 pm
- Location: Champaign, Illinois
Re: History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
I also very much liked the first two Wildcats and felt they were ahead of their times. I think there was a third one that I don't think I played in.
MaS
MaS
Mike Sorice
Former Coach, Centennial High School of Champaign, IL (2014-2020) & Team Illinois (2016-2018)
Alumnus, Illinois ABT (2000-2002; 2003-2009) & Fenwick Scholastic Bowl (1999-2000)
Member, ACF (Emeritus), IHSSBCA, & PACE
Former Coach, Centennial High School of Champaign, IL (2014-2020) & Team Illinois (2016-2018)
Alumnus, Illinois ABT (2000-2002; 2003-2009) & Fenwick Scholastic Bowl (1999-2000)
Member, ACF (Emeritus), IHSSBCA, & PACE
- No Rules Westbrook
- Auron
- Posts: 1238
- Joined: Mon Nov 22, 2004 1:04 pm
Re: History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
If we're talking older tourneys that did some positive things, the old St. Louis Opens of Raj Bhan come to mind. I have a strange affection for the Wahoo Wars too, given how old they are.
Ryan Westbrook, no affiliation whatsoever.
I am pure energy...and as ancient as the cosmos. Feeble creatures, GO!
Left here since birth...forgotten in the river of time...I've had an eternity to...ponder the meaning of things...and now I have an answer!
I am pure energy...and as ancient as the cosmos. Feeble creatures, GO!
Left here since birth...forgotten in the river of time...I've had an eternity to...ponder the meaning of things...and now I have an answer!
Re: History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
Oh man, the Wahoo Wars of the Minds! For some reason, when I was in high school, I loved studying off these things, and thus I learned some weird crap off of them that, of course, never came up in high school.
Mike Cheyne
Formerly U of Minnesota
"You killed HSAPQ"--Matt Bollinger
Formerly U of Minnesota
"You killed HSAPQ"--Matt Bollinger
- stevebahnaman
- Wakka
- Posts: 110
- Joined: Thu Sep 17, 2009 1:25 pm
Re: History project: Top 10 Tournaments of the Decade
I was in the midst of my QB bildungsroman at Wildcat 2001 or 2002, and when I look back on that set it was legitimately incredible and totally ahead of its time. So yknow, bump.
Steve Bahnaman, Campbell University
Commissioner, Online Quiz League USA (quizcentral.net)
NC Wesleyan College, Librarian and Quiz Bowl Advisor/Coach 2009-2011
Emory Academic Team, 1999-2004
Pretty trashy
Commissioner, Online Quiz League USA (quizcentral.net)
NC Wesleyan College, Librarian and Quiz Bowl Advisor/Coach 2009-2011
Emory Academic Team, 1999-2004
Pretty trashy