Difference between revisions of "2015 ACF Nationals"
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+ | {{Tourneybox|Tournament Name = 2015 [[ACF Nationals]] | ||
+ | |champion = [[2015 Penn|Penn]] | ||
+ | |second = [[2015 Chicago|Chicago A]] | ||
+ | |third = [[2015 Maryland|Maryland]] | ||
+ | |fourth = Stanford, Virginia | ||
+ | |scorer = [[Auroni Gupta]], [[UCSD]] | ||
+ | |editors = [[Ryan Westbrook]], [[Ike Jose]], [[Billy Busse]], and [[Rob Carson]] | ||
+ | |site = [[Michigan]] | ||
+ | |field = 48 teams | ||
+ | |stats = http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/2976/ }} | ||
The '''2015 ACF Nationals''' was held between April 18 and 19 at [[Michigan]]. It was edited by [[Ryan Westbrook]], [[Ike Jose]], [[Billy Busse]], and [[Rob Carson]]. | The '''2015 ACF Nationals''' was held between April 18 and 19 at [[Michigan]]. It was edited by [[Ryan Westbrook]], [[Ike Jose]], [[Billy Busse]], and [[Rob Carson]]. | ||
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Penn's victory was the long-awaited first national title for [[Eric Mukherjee]], who had participated in his first national finals match seven years prior at [[2008 ACF Nationals]] and played at a consistently high level in the interim. | Penn's victory was the long-awaited first national title for [[Eric Mukherjee]], who had participated in his first national finals match seven years prior at [[2008 ACF Nationals]] and played at a consistently high level in the interim. | ||
+ | |||
+ | This was also the first year in which ACF used the [[A-value]] to invite qualified teams to compete based on their performance at [[ACF Regionals]], rather than maintaining unrestricted registration for any collegiate team as in years past. | ||
==Results== | ==Results== | ||
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[[Northwestern]] defeated [[MIT B]] to claim the Division II championship. | [[Northwestern]] defeated [[MIT B]] to claim the Division II championship. | ||
− | + | ==All-Stars== | |
Based on prelim scoring. | Based on prelim scoring. | ||
− | + | ==Field== | |
+ | {{Columns-list|colwidth=200px| | ||
*[[Alberta]] | *[[Alberta]] | ||
*[[Berkeley]] (2 teams) | *[[Berkeley]] (2 teams) | ||
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*[[WUSTL]] | *[[WUSTL]] | ||
*[[Yale]] | *[[Yale]] | ||
+ | }} | ||
''48 teams'' | ''48 teams'' | ||
− | + | {{-}} | |
+ | {{Navbox ACF Nationals}} | ||
[[Category: National championships]] | [[Category: National championships]] | ||
− | + | {{c|2015 Tournaments}} |
Latest revision as of 23:45, 7 April 2021
2015 ACF Nationals | |
---|---|
Edited by | Ryan Westbrook, Ike Jose, Billy Busse, and Rob Carson |
Champion | Penn |
Runner-up | Chicago A |
Third | Maryland |
Fourth | Stanford, Virginia |
High scorer | Auroni Gupta, UCSD |
Site | Michigan |
Field | 48 teams |
Stats | http://www.hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/2976/ |
The 2015 ACF Nationals was held between April 18 and 19 at Michigan. It was edited by Ryan Westbrook, Ike Jose, Billy Busse, and Rob Carson.
Penn defeated Chicago in a one-game final.
Penn's victory was the long-awaited first national title for Eric Mukherjee, who had participated in his first national finals match seven years prior at 2008 ACF Nationals and played at a consistently high level in the interim.
This was also the first year in which ACF used the A-value to invite qualified teams to compete based on their performance at ACF Regionals, rather than maintaining unrestricted registration for any collegiate team as in years past.
Results
Division I Championship
- Penn (Patrick Liao, Saajid Moyen, Eric Mukherjee, Chris Chiego)
- Chicago A (John Lawrence, Max Schindler, James Lasker, Chris Ray)
- Maryland (Jordan Brownstein, Chris Manners, Brian McPeak, Dan Puma)
- tie: Virginia (JR Roach, Matt Bollinger, Tommy Casalaspi, Daniel Hothem) and Stanford (Stephen Liu, Austin Brownlow, Nikhil Desai, Benji Nguyen)
Division I Undergraduate
Stanford B defeated Illinois to claim the Undergraduate championship in a 2-game series. Yale played a series of games to claim the 3rd Place Undergraduate trophy.
Division II Championship
Northwestern defeated MIT B to claim the Division II championship.
All-Stars
Based on prelim scoring.
Field
- Alberta
- Berkeley (2 teams)
- Carleton University
- Chicago (3 teams)
- Columbia
- Detroit Catholic Central
- Harvard
- Illinois
- Kenyon
- Liberty
- Maryland
- McGill
- McMaster
- Michigan (2 teams)
- Minnesota
- MIT (2 teams)
- Northwestern
- Notre Dame (2 teams)
- NYU
- Ohio State
- Ottawa
- Oxford
- Penn (3 teams)
- Rice
- RIT
- Rutgers
- South Carolina
- Stanford
- UCF
- UCLA
- UCSD (2 teams)
- VCU
- Virginia
- Washington
- William and Mary
- WUSTL
- Yale
48 teams
ACF tournaments | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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