Difference between revisions of "2016 Chicago Open"
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==Question reception== | ==Question reception== | ||
− | The tournament was widely hailed as being of exceptional | + | The tournament was widely hailed as being of exceptional quality, while also being extremely difficult, with extremely (but consistently) stingy powermarks to boot. |
==Side Events== | ==Side Events== |
Revision as of 12:46, 25 April 2017
2016 Chicago Open | |
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Edited by | Matt Jackson and John Lawrence, with Mike Bentley, Mike Cheyne, Adam Silverman, Ewan MacAulay, Shan Kothari, Jake Sundberg, and Aaron Rosenberg |
Champion | Young Mukherstein |
Runner-up | You can write your tossups from the Library of Babel, but you can NEVER! STRIKE! GOD!!! |
Third | God of / Small Things / True Care / Truth Brings (t.2) |
Fourth | The Kazakhstan Department of Health and Human Services |
High scorer | Jordan Brownstein, Young Mukherstein |
Site | Chicago |
Field | |
Stats | Main Event Stats |
The 2016 Chicago Open was won by Young Mukherstein, consisting of Jordan Brownstein, Eric Mukherjee, Will Nediger, and Jacob Reed, who cleared the field with a 14-0 record. Significantly, although the team included two previous Chicago Open high scorers (Brownstein and Nediger), only Mukherjee had won the tournament before, refuting John Lawrence's prediction that CO had become impossible to win without at least two previous champions on a team.
The tournament was edited by Matt Jackson and John Lawrence, with subject editing by Mike Bentley, Mike Cheyne, Adam Silverman, Ewan MacAulay, Shan Kothari, Jake Sundberg, and Aaron Rosenberg. Jackson and Lawrence were originally slated to head-edit the tournament but had to step down late in the process, necessitating the recruitment of additional editors.
Tournament results
For the fifth year in a row, the winning team cleared the field; moreover, its players had the first, second, and tied-fourth most powers in the field.
Individual results
Jordan Brownstein single-handedly out-powered every other team in the field.
Question reception
The tournament was widely hailed as being of exceptional quality, while also being extremely difficult, with extremely (but consistently) stingy powermarks to boot.
Side Events
- 2016 Chicago Open Trash, widely regarded as perhaps the greatest trash tournament of all time. Written by Rob Carson, Carsten Gehring, and Andrew Hart.
- The Act of Seeing with One's Eyes, a widely-praised visual film tournament written by Will Nediger.