Difference between revisions of "Savannah NAQT"
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The '''Savannah NAQT Invitational''' is a high school tournament hosted by [[Savannah|Savannah High School]]. | The '''Savannah NAQT Invitational''' is a high school tournament hosted by [[Savannah|Savannah High School]]. | ||
− | Savannah historically ran its Varsity tournament in a [[four quarter format]] on [[speed check|shorter]] questions. In 2011, Savannah held its traditional tournament along with its annual JV tournament in early February, and added its first NAQT tournament in the [[tossup-bonus format]] on the original varsity tournament's usual date of the second Saturday in March. In 2012, the tournament was run on IS-114A and permanently replaced the traditional varsity tournament. | + | Savannah historically ran its Varsity tournament in a [[four quarter format]] on [[speed check|shorter]] questions. In 2011, Savannah held its traditional tournament along with its annual JV tournament in early February, and added its first NAQT tournament in the [[tossup-bonus format]] on the original varsity tournament's usual date of the second Saturday in March. In 2012, the tournament was run on IS-114A and permanently replaced the traditional varsity tournament. |
The 2011 edition featured pooled preliminary rounds and rebracketing into a six team crossover championship bracket for a total of 9 rounds (with any ties broken by playoff points per game), which lasted until 5:00 and was not well-received by some participating teams. Subsequent editions of the tournament have returned to using the [[single-elimination]] playoffs previously used by the traditional tournament and most other area tournaments. | The 2011 edition featured pooled preliminary rounds and rebracketing into a six team crossover championship bracket for a total of 9 rounds (with any ties broken by playoff points per game), which lasted until 5:00 and was not well-received by some participating teams. Subsequent editions of the tournament have returned to using the [[single-elimination]] playoffs previously used by the traditional tournament and most other area tournaments. | ||
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! Fourth | ! Fourth | ||
− | |||
|- | |- | ||
− | | [ | + | | [https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament/standings.jsp?tournament_id=10729 2020] |
+ | | [[IS|IS-188]] | ||
+ | | 10 | ||
+ | | [[St. Joseph Central|St. Joseph Central B]] | ||
+ | | [[St. Joseph Central|St. Joseph Central A]] | ||
+ | | [[Smithville (MO)|Smithville]] | ||
+ | | [[North Andrew|North Andrew A]] | ||
+ | |colspan=5|''single division'' | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | [https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament/standings.jsp?tournament_id=9612 2019] | ||
+ | | [[IS|IS-179]] | ||
+ | | 18 | ||
+ | | [[Westside|Westside (NE)]] | ||
+ | | [[St. Joseph Central|St. Joseph Central A]] | ||
+ | | [[St. Joseph Central|St. Joseph Central B]] | ||
+ | | [[Smithville (MO)|Smithville]] | ||
+ | |colspan=5|''single division'' | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | [https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament/standings.jsp?tournament_id=8502 2018] | ||
| [[IS|IS-170]] | | [[IS|IS-170]] | ||
| 20 | | 20 | ||
| [[St. Joseph Central|St. Joseph Central A]] | | [[St. Joseph Central|St. Joseph Central A]] | ||
| [[St. Joseph Central|St. Joseph Central B]] | | [[St. Joseph Central|St. Joseph Central B]] | ||
− | | [[Creighton|Creighton B]] | + | | [[Creighton|Creighton B (NE)]] |
| [[Polo|Polo]] | | [[Polo|Polo]] | ||
|colspan=5|''single division'' | |colspan=5|''single division'' |
Latest revision as of 09:04, 29 January 2021
The Savannah NAQT Invitational is a high school tournament hosted by Savannah High School.
Savannah historically ran its Varsity tournament in a four quarter format on shorter questions. In 2011, Savannah held its traditional tournament along with its annual JV tournament in early February, and added its first NAQT tournament in the tossup-bonus format on the original varsity tournament's usual date of the second Saturday in March. In 2012, the tournament was run on IS-114A and permanently replaced the traditional varsity tournament.
The 2011 edition featured pooled preliminary rounds and rebracketing into a six team crossover championship bracket for a total of 9 rounds (with any ties broken by playoff points per game), which lasted until 5:00 and was not well-received by some participating teams. Subsequent editions of the tournament have returned to using the single-elimination playoffs previously used by the traditional tournament and most other area tournaments.