Difference between revisions of "Maryland"
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|president = Sarang Yeola | |president = Sarang Yeola | ||
|nats = [[2017 ACF Nationals]]; [[2015 NAQT ICT| 2015 NAQT Undergraduate]]; [[2008 NAQT ICT|2008 NAQT Division I]]; [[2019 NAQT ICT|2019 NAQT Division II]], [[2007 NAQT ICT|2007 NAQT Division II]]; [[1981 College Bowl Nationals|1981 College Bowl]] | |nats = [[2017 ACF Nationals]]; [[2015 NAQT ICT| 2015 NAQT Undergraduate]]; [[2008 NAQT ICT|2008 NAQT Division I]]; [[2019 NAQT ICT|2019 NAQT Division II]], [[2007 NAQT ICT|2007 NAQT Division II]]; [[1981 College Bowl Nationals|1981 College Bowl]] | ||
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The '''University of Maryland''' is a large public university located in College Park, Maryland. | The '''University of Maryland''' is a large public university located in College Park, Maryland. | ||
+ | Its quizbowl team is officially called the '''Maryland Academic Quiz Team (MAQT)'''. | ||
==Origins== | ==Origins== | ||
− | The program was founded in the Fall of 1978. [[Gary Stolovy]] wrote all the questions for an It's Academic-style intramural tournament in | + | The program was founded in the Fall of 1978. [[Gary Stolovy]] wrote all the questions for an [[It's Academic]]-style intramural tournament in spring 1978 whose final match was hosted by [[Mac McGarry]]. This sparked interest for intercollegiate competition. Student Union program coordinator Stephanie Bowers and committee members [[Paul Tannenbaum]], [[Bob Maranto]], [[Brick Barrientos]], and Stolovy were among those instrumental in founding the program. |
− | The team, featuring [[Brick Barrientos]], Townsend Reese, [[Robert Whaples]], and Robert Saltzberg, won the 1981 College Bowl National Championship in Huntington, WV. | + | The team, featuring [[Brick Barrientos]], Townsend Reese, [[Robert Whaples]], and Robert Saltzberg, won the 1981 College Bowl National Championship in Huntington, WV. |
==History== | ==History== | ||
Line 23: | Line 23: | ||
The team has been successful regionally and nationally since Magin's graduation, as [[Chris Ray]]'s playing career continued unabated. Maryland's many top-bracket finishes since have included 4th place at the [[2011 ICT]]. | The team has been successful regionally and nationally since Magin's graduation, as [[Chris Ray]]'s playing career continued unabated. Maryland's many top-bracket finishes since have included 4th place at the [[2011 ICT]]. | ||
− | For much of its history, the Maryland team | + | For much of its history, the Maryland team used an ancient 16-player buzzer system affectionately dubbed "[[The Knot]]," replacing it in full when it broke in the late 2000s. It then broke a second time around spring 2013 and was not repaired thereafter. |
− | In | + | In 2014–15, the year after Ray's departure to Chicago, the team won the Undergraduate National Championship at the [[2015 ICT]] and finished third at [[2015 ACF Nationals]]. The latter finish was Maryland's highest at a national tournament since 2008. |
A Maryland team consisting of [[Jordan Brownstein]], [[Weijia Cheng]], [[Ophir Lifshitz]] and [[Sam Rombro]] won the [[2017 ACF Nationals]]. | A Maryland team consisting of [[Jordan Brownstein]], [[Weijia Cheng]], [[Ophir Lifshitz]] and [[Sam Rombro]] won the [[2017 ACF Nationals]]. | ||
− | ==Hosting | + | ==Hosting== |
Being something of a nexus of [[quizbowl]] on the East Coast, Maryland typically hosts a large number of tournaments during the year for multiple difficulty levels and audiences. | Being something of a nexus of [[quizbowl]] on the East Coast, Maryland typically hosts a large number of tournaments during the year for multiple difficulty levels and audiences. | ||
− | Traditionally, Maryland hosts one college tournament each year, [[TIT]] or the Terrapin Invitational Tournament, which in recent years has been called different names like [[SUBMIT]] and [[STIMPY]]. The 2020 iteration of Terrapin was spun into [[Terrapin Open]], a Nats-minus tournament | + | Traditionally, Maryland hosts one college tournament each year, [[TIT]] or the Terrapin Invitational Tournament, which in recent years has been called different names like [[SUBMIT]] and [[STIMPY]]. The 2020 iteration of Terrapin was spun into [[Terrapin Open]], a Nats-minus tournament. |
Maryland traditionally hosts two high school tournaments in the fall and spring. The [[Maryland Fall Classic]] tournament traditionally was a variation of the [[It's Academic]] format, although it has recently switched to pyramidal questions (from [[HSAPQ]] at first, then [[NAQT]]). The [[Maryland Spring]] Classic tournament has been an [[mACF]] style tournament for many years. | Maryland traditionally hosts two high school tournaments in the fall and spring. The [[Maryland Fall Classic]] tournament traditionally was a variation of the [[It's Academic]] format, although it has recently switched to pyramidal questions (from [[HSAPQ]] at first, then [[NAQT]]). The [[Maryland Spring]] Classic tournament has been an [[mACF]] style tournament for many years. | ||
In the past, Maryland used to host a novice tournament called [[DSHIT]]. This was discontinued in 2005 due to a lack of interest. | In the past, Maryland used to host a novice tournament called [[DSHIT]]. This was discontinued in 2005 due to a lack of interest. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Maryland has hosted many national tournaments on both the high school and college circuits: [[2004 NSC]], [[2006 ICT]], 2007 [[TRASHionals]], [[2010 ACF Nationals]], 2011 [[NASAT]], [[2012 ACF Nationals]], an [[2013 NSC]]. It was scheduled to host [[2008 ACF Nationals]] before the [[Maryland Scheduling Department]] mucked things up. | ||
==Nationals Results== | ==Nationals Results== | ||
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*[[JJ Tsai]] | *[[JJ Tsai]] | ||
*[[Jakobi Deslouches]] | *[[Jakobi Deslouches]] | ||
+ | *[[Mahta Gooya]] | ||
+ | *[[David Wang]] | ||
==Former Members== | ==Former Members== | ||
+ | {{Columns-list|colwidth=200px| | ||
*[[Sarang Yeola]] | *[[Sarang Yeola]] | ||
*[[Ani Perumalla]] | *[[Ani Perumalla]] | ||
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*[[Adam Hussain]] | *[[Adam Hussain]] | ||
*[[Naveed Chowdhury]] | *[[Naveed Chowdhury]] | ||
+ | *[[Gaurav Kandlikar]] | ||
+ | *[[Chris Manners]] | ||
+ | *[[Brian McPeak]] | ||
+ | *[[Sohan Vartak]] | ||
+ | *[[Dan Puma]] | ||
*[[Chris Ray]] | *[[Chris Ray]] | ||
*[[Isaac Hirsch]] | *[[Isaac Hirsch]] | ||
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*[[Robert Whaples]] | *[[Robert Whaples]] | ||
*[[Lauren Woolsey]] | *[[Lauren Woolsey]] | ||
− | + | }} | |
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Many former Maryland players still play at [[trash]] tournaments on the [[College Park Retirement Castle]] team. | Many former Maryland players still play at [[trash]] tournaments on the [[College Park Retirement Castle]] team. | ||
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| }} | | }} | ||
− | + | ==Website== | |
+ | MAQT's website existed for more than 15 years until the university discontinued web hosting for student organizations shortly after being redesigned in 2013.<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20140119093716/http://www.studentorg.umd.edu/maqt/</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | In July 2020, the 1999 website archived by [[Dave Hamilton]] was rehosted by [[ACF]] | ||
+ | to exhibit a snapshot of a bygone era of college quizbowl.<ref>https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=63&t=24257</ref><ref>https://acf-quizbowl.com/maqt-archive/</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==References== | ||
+ | <references /> | ||
{{College champions}} | {{College champions}} |
Revision as of 23:10, 15 April 2021
Maryland | |
Location: "Scenic" College Park, MD | |
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Current President or Coach | Sarang Yeola |
National championships | 2017 ACF Nationals; 2015 NAQT Undergraduate; 2008 NAQT Division I; 2019 NAQT Division II, 2007 NAQT Division II; 1981 College Bowl |
NAQT Page | link |
The University of Maryland is a large public university located in College Park, Maryland. Its quizbowl team is officially called the Maryland Academic Quiz Team (MAQT).
Origins
The program was founded in the Fall of 1978. Gary Stolovy wrote all the questions for an It's Academic-style intramural tournament in spring 1978 whose final match was hosted by Mac McGarry. This sparked interest for intercollegiate competition. Student Union program coordinator Stephanie Bowers and committee members Paul Tannenbaum, Bob Maranto, Brick Barrientos, and Stolovy were among those instrumental in founding the program.
The team, featuring Brick Barrientos, Townsend Reese, Robert Whaples, and Robert Saltzberg, won the 1981 College Bowl National Championship in Huntington, WV.
History
Maryland was one of the original schools to de-affiliate from CBI and form ACF.
In 2007, Maryland won the 2007 ICT Division II title. The team also won ACF Fall that year hosted at UNC.
In 2008, Maryland won the Division I ICT. That year, Maryland won a series of regular season events including FICHTE, ACF Regionals, two different NAQT Sectionals, the VCU mirror of MUT, the UNC mirror of Illinois Novice, Cardinal Classic, Penn Bowl, PARFAIT, Titanomachy, ACF Fall and EFT. The general A Team present at these tournaments includes Jonathan Magin, Charles Meigs, Chris Ray and Jeremy Eaton, although Mike Bentley and Dan Suzman have occasionally played on the A Team at these tournaments. Jonathan Magin was also on a team that won Illinois Open and the Chicago Open.
The team has been successful regionally and nationally since Magin's graduation, as Chris Ray's playing career continued unabated. Maryland's many top-bracket finishes since have included 4th place at the 2011 ICT.
For much of its history, the Maryland team used an ancient 16-player buzzer system affectionately dubbed "The Knot," replacing it in full when it broke in the late 2000s. It then broke a second time around spring 2013 and was not repaired thereafter.
In 2014–15, the year after Ray's departure to Chicago, the team won the Undergraduate National Championship at the 2015 ICT and finished third at 2015 ACF Nationals. The latter finish was Maryland's highest at a national tournament since 2008.
A Maryland team consisting of Jordan Brownstein, Weijia Cheng, Ophir Lifshitz and Sam Rombro won the 2017 ACF Nationals.
Hosting
Being something of a nexus of quizbowl on the East Coast, Maryland typically hosts a large number of tournaments during the year for multiple difficulty levels and audiences.
Traditionally, Maryland hosts one college tournament each year, TIT or the Terrapin Invitational Tournament, which in recent years has been called different names like SUBMIT and STIMPY. The 2020 iteration of Terrapin was spun into Terrapin Open, a Nats-minus tournament.
Maryland traditionally hosts two high school tournaments in the fall and spring. The Maryland Fall Classic tournament traditionally was a variation of the It's Academic format, although it has recently switched to pyramidal questions (from HSAPQ at first, then NAQT). The Maryland Spring Classic tournament has been an mACF style tournament for many years.
In the past, Maryland used to host a novice tournament called DSHIT. This was discontinued in 2005 due to a lack of interest.
Maryland has hosted many national tournaments on both the high school and college circuits: 2004 NSC, 2006 ICT, 2007 TRASHionals, 2010 ACF Nationals, 2011 NASAT, 2012 ACF Nationals, an 2013 NSC. It was scheduled to host 2008 ACF Nationals before the Maryland Scheduling Department mucked things up.
Nationals Results
ACF Nationals (2005–) | Division I ICT | Division II ICT | |
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1997 | A: 5th B: 24th C: 62nd |
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1998 | 13th | ||
1999 | A: 5th B:12th |
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2000 | 9th | ||
2001 | 12th | ||
2002 | 15th | 13th | |
2003 | 3rd | 15th | |
2004 | 4th | 11th | |
2005 | 22nd | 7th | |
2006 | 16th | 20th | |
2007 | 12th | 1st | |
2008 | 3rd | 1st | |
2009 | 9th | 8th | 17th |
2010 | A: 4th B: 28th |
8th | 20th |
2011 | 9th | 8th | 17th |
2012 | 10th | 4th | 10th |
2013 | 6th | 7th | |
2014 | A: 7th B: 13th |
A: 5th B: 15th |
|
2015 | 3rd | A: 4th (1st UG) B: 29th |
12th |
2016 | A: 4th B: 28th |
4th | 13th |
2017 | 1st | A: 4th B: 29th |
11th |
2018 | 12th | 8th | 27th |
2019 | A: 4th B: 26th |
5th | 1st |
Current Members
- Vishwa Shanmugam
- Jack Lewis
- Caleb Kendrick
- Graham Reid
- Alex Echikson
- JJ Tsai
- Jakobi Deslouches
- Mahta Gooya
- David Wang
Former Members
- Sarang Yeola
- Ani Perumalla
- Jason Shi
- Tanay Wakhare
- Shayan Sadegh
- Alex Echikson
- Jack Nolan
- Yu Lu
- Nathan Fredman
- Sam Rombro
- Weijia Cheng
- Justin Hawkins
- Dash Yeatts-Lonske
- Will Kunkel
- Ophir Lifshitz
- Jordan Brownstein
- Emma Stevens
- Arun Chonai
- Stephen Meyer
- Adam Hussain
- Naveed Chowdhury
- Gaurav Kandlikar
- Chris Manners
- Brian McPeak
- Sohan Vartak
- Dan Puma
- Chris Ray
- Isaac Hirsch
- Jeff Amoros
- Logan Anbinder
- Brick Barrientos
- Mike Bentley
- Zeke Berdichevsky
- Marc Berman
- Robby Blum
- Jessie Bykowski
- Brittany Clark
- Phil Durkos
- Jeremy Eaton
- Adam Fine
- Arthur Fleming
- Roman Garnett
- Dan Goff
- Dan Greenstein
- Stevejon Guth
- Dave Hamilton
- Glenn Hogie
- Zach Hommer
- Brad Houston
- Bekah Kass
- Jack Kennedy
- Daniel M. Maggin
- Jonathan Magin
- Bob Maranto
- Charles Meigs
- John Nam
- Eric Newman
- Townsend Reese
- Casey Retterer
- Robert Saltzberg
- Tricia Southard
- Mike Starsinic
- Gary Stolovy
- Paul Tannenbaum
- Sandeep Vaheesan
- Robert Whaples
- Lauren Woolsey
Many former Maryland players still play at trash tournaments on the College Park Retirement Castle team.
Title Succession
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College Bowl Title Succession
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Unofficial title succession
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Website
MAQT's website existed for more than 15 years until the university discontinued web hosting for student organizations shortly after being redesigned in 2013.[1]
In July 2020, the 1999 website archived by Dave Hamilton was rehosted by ACF to exhibit a snapshot of a bygone era of college quizbowl.[2][3]
References
- ↑ https://web.archive.org/web/20140119093716/http://www.studentorg.umd.edu/maqt/
- ↑ https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=63&t=24257
- ↑ https://acf-quizbowl.com/maqt-archive/