Difference between revisions of "Andrew Yaphe"

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{{Infobox|Name = Andrew Yaphe
 
{{Infobox|Name = Andrew Yaphe
 
|Image = yaphe.JPG
 
|Image = yaphe.JPG
|Subjects =
 
|schoolcur = None
 
 
|schoolpast = [[Virginia]] (1995-1998), [[Chicago]] (1999-2007), [[Stanford]] (2008-2010)
 
|schoolpast = [[Virginia]] (1995-1998), [[Chicago]] (1999-2007), [[Stanford]] (2008-2010)
 
|highschool = [[Thomas Jefferson (VA)|Thomas Jefferson]] (1991-1994)
 
|highschool = [[Thomas Jefferson (VA)|Thomas Jefferson]] (1991-1994)
| }}
+
|firstname = Andrew
 
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|lastname = Yaphe
'''Andrew Yaphe''' is a collegiate quiz bowl player. As an undergraduate student, he attended the University of Virginia and played for its quiz bowl team. Subsequently, he enrolled in a doctoral program in English at the University of Chicago and played for its team; he then went to Stanford for law school, receiving his J.D. in 2010.
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}}
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'''Andrew Yaphe''' was a collegiate quiz bowl player. As an undergraduate student, he attended the [[University of Virginia]] and played for its quiz bowl team. Subsequently, he enrolled in a doctoral program in English at the [[University of Chicago]] and played for its team; he then went to [[Stanford]] for law school, receiving his J.D. in 2010.
  
 
He is widely considered the best player in the history of collegiate quizbowl, being the leading scorer on 6 ACF Nationals championship teams, 2 NAQT ICT Division I championship teams, and two NAQT ICT Division I runner-up teams. He also won a College Bowl title and was reportedly a very good high school player, though a paucity of records on high school quizbowl from that time precludes any further judgment.
 
He is widely considered the best player in the history of collegiate quizbowl, being the leading scorer on 6 ACF Nationals championship teams, 2 NAQT ICT Division I championship teams, and two NAQT ICT Division I runner-up teams. He also won a College Bowl title and was reportedly a very good high school player, though a paucity of records on high school quizbowl from that time precludes any further judgment.

Revision as of 09:43, 25 February 2021

Andrew Yaphe
Yaphe.JPG
Past colleges Virginia (1995-1998), Chicago (1999-2007), Stanford (2008-2010)
High school Thomas Jefferson (1991-1994)
Stats HDWhite • NAQT

Andrew Yaphe was a collegiate quiz bowl player. As an undergraduate student, he attended the University of Virginia and played for its quiz bowl team. Subsequently, he enrolled in a doctoral program in English at the University of Chicago and played for its team; he then went to Stanford for law school, receiving his J.D. in 2010.

He is widely considered the best player in the history of collegiate quizbowl, being the leading scorer on 6 ACF Nationals championship teams, 2 NAQT ICT Division I championship teams, and two NAQT ICT Division I runner-up teams. He also won a College Bowl title and was reportedly a very good high school player, though a paucity of records on high school quizbowl from that time precludes any further judgment.

Yaphe's run at Stanford may perhaps be his most impressive. During a period of greatly reduced activity, Yaphe led a team to a third place finish at the 2009 ACF Nationals and then a first place finish at the 2010 Nationals.

Most importantly, Yaphe was the driving force in keeping ACF alive from 1997 onwards, and edited such tournaments as the 2000 Regionals and 2005 and 2006 Nationals. His recent role as NAQT editor has been a more complex phenomenon. Yaphe has been heavily involved in the writing and editing of NAQT's college tournaments (especially ICT) since 2010.

Finally, Yaphe was prominently featured in the 1999 New York Times "Total Recall" article, which included The University of Chicago's winning of the 1999 Midwest SCT.

Carper Award
Preceded by
Year
Succeeded by
R. Robert Hentzel
2007
Chris Sewell
ACF Nationals Leading Scorer
Preceded by
Year
Succeeded by
Tom Waters
1996
John Sheahan
ACF Nationals Leading Scorer
Preceded by
Year
Succeeded by
John Sheahan
1998, 1999, 2000
John Kenney
ACF Nationals Leading Scorer
Preceded by
Year
Succeeded by
Mike Sorice
2009, 2010
Matt Bollinger
ICT DI Leading Scorer
Preceded by
Year
Succeeded by
John Sheahan
2000, 2001
Matt Weiner

External Links