Difference between revisions of "2010 NSC"

From QBWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(About new/old PACE format.)
Line 10: Line 10:
 
}}
 
}}
  
The 2010 [[PACE NSC]] was held on June 5-6th at [[George Mason University]] in Fairfax, Virginia. The tournament was won by [[State College]], with [[Maggie Walker]] taking second. The top scorer was [[Matt Jackson]] from [[Georgetown Day School]].
+
The 2010 [[PACE NSC]] was held on June 5-6th at [[George Mason University]] in Fairfax, Virginia. It was the first NSC where a 20/20 tossup-bonus format was used, abandoning the [[old PACE format]] that had been used since 1998. The tournament was won by [[State College]], with [[Maggie Walker]] taking second. The top scorer was [[Matt Jackson]] from [[Georgetown Day School]].
  
 
The 2010 NSC was the first high school national championship to use "[[superplayoff]]" crossover games, such that the top four teams in each of the two playoff brackets had to play four more games across brackets to determine a complete order of finish among the top 8 teams at the tournament.  
 
The 2010 NSC was the first high school national championship to use "[[superplayoff]]" crossover games, such that the top four teams in each of the two playoff brackets had to play four more games across brackets to determine a complete order of finish among the top 8 teams at the tournament.  

Revision as of 20:09, 10 November 2013

2010 PACE NSC
Edited by PACE
Champion State College
Runner-up Maggie Walker
Third LASA
Fourth St. Anselm's
High scorer Matt Jackson
Site George Mason University, VA
Field
Stats [1]


The 2010 PACE NSC was held on June 5-6th at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia. It was the first NSC where a 20/20 tossup-bonus format was used, abandoning the old PACE format that had been used since 1998. The tournament was won by State College, with Maggie Walker taking second. The top scorer was Matt Jackson from Georgetown Day School.

The 2010 NSC was the first high school national championship to use "superplayoff" crossover games, such that the top four teams in each of the two playoff brackets had to play four more games across brackets to determine a complete order of finish among the top 8 teams at the tournament.

See Amit Bilgi for more information on the cheating incident at the 2010 NSC.

External Links

2010 PACE NSC
Previous
Next
2009 NSC
2011 NSC