Difference between revisions of "2006 NSC"
Matt Weiner (talk | contribs) |
|||
(4 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | {{Tourneybox|Tournament Name = 2006 | + | {{Tourneybox|Tournament Name = 2006 [[PACE]] NSC |
|champion = [[2006 Raleigh Charter|Raleigh Charter]] | |champion = [[2006 Raleigh Charter|Raleigh Charter]] | ||
|second = [[2006 Richard Montgomery|Richard Montgomery]] | |second = [[2006 Richard Montgomery|Richard Montgomery]] | ||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
|fourth = | |fourth = | ||
|scorer = [[Chris Ray]], [[2006 Richard Montgomery|Richard Montgomery]] | |scorer = [[Chris Ray]], [[2006 Richard Montgomery|Richard Montgomery]] | ||
− | |editors = [[ | + | |editors = [[Matt Weiner]] (head editor), [[Leo Wolpert]] (science editor) |
|site = [[NCSSM]] | |site = [[NCSSM]] | ||
|field = 29 | |field = 29 | ||
Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
The '''2006 National Scholastic Championship''' was won by [[2006 Raleigh Charter|Raleigh Charter]], consisting of [[Will Schultz]], [[Andrew Zonderman]], [[Katie Huddleston]], and [[Chris Hoersting]]. The tournament was held at the [[NCSSM|North Carolina School of Science and Math]] in Durham, NC. | The '''2006 National Scholastic Championship''' was won by [[2006 Raleigh Charter|Raleigh Charter]], consisting of [[Will Schultz]], [[Andrew Zonderman]], [[Katie Huddleston]], and [[Chris Hoersting]]. The tournament was held at the [[NCSSM|North Carolina School of Science and Math]] in Durham, NC. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The [[2000 NSC|2000]] and 2006 NSCs are the only known national championship tournaments held at a high school campus since the end of the [[National Academic Super Bowl]]. All other nationals have been held at college campuses, hotels, or TV studios. | ||
==Tournament results== | ==Tournament results== | ||
− | Raleigh Charter defeated [[2006 Richard Montgomery|Richard Montgomery]] 400-240 in the finals. The second-place Richard Montgomery beat [[2006 Maggie Walker|Maggie Walker]] in the semifinals, while Raleigh Charter advanced by defeating [[2006 State College|State College]]. | + | Raleigh Charter defeated [[2006 Richard Montgomery|Richard Montgomery]] 400-240 in the finals. The second-place Richard Montgomery beat [[2006 Maggie Walker|Maggie Walker]] in the semifinals, while Raleigh Charter advanced by defeating [[2006 State College|State College]]. |
+ | |||
+ | The tournament used the [[old PACE NSC tournament format]]. For the first time, the consolation playoffs were based on tiered pools (all fourth-place prelim teams in one group, all fifth-place teams in another, etc) and it was no longer possible for a team which, e.g., finished 0-9 on Saturday to win the consolation title by winning all of their Sunday games. | ||
==Individual results== | ==Individual results== |
Latest revision as of 18:53, 5 May 2022
2006 PACE NSC | |
---|---|
Edited by | Matt Weiner (head editor), Leo Wolpert (science editor) |
Champion | Raleigh Charter |
Runner-up | Richard Montgomery |
Third | Maggie Walker and State College |
High scorer | Chris Ray, Richard Montgomery |
Site | NCSSM |
Field | 29 |
Stats |
The 2006 National Scholastic Championship was won by Raleigh Charter, consisting of Will Schultz, Andrew Zonderman, Katie Huddleston, and Chris Hoersting. The tournament was held at the North Carolina School of Science and Math in Durham, NC.
The 2000 and 2006 NSCs are the only known national championship tournaments held at a high school campus since the end of the National Academic Super Bowl. All other nationals have been held at college campuses, hotels, or TV studios.
Tournament results
Raleigh Charter defeated Richard Montgomery 400-240 in the finals. The second-place Richard Montgomery beat Maggie Walker in the semifinals, while Raleigh Charter advanced by defeating State College.
The tournament used the old PACE NSC tournament format. For the first time, the consolation playoffs were based on tiered pools (all fourth-place prelim teams in one group, all fifth-place teams in another, etc) and it was no longer possible for a team which, e.g., finished 0-9 on Saturday to win the consolation title by winning all of their Sunday games.
Individual results
The top five scorers at the tournament (through the prelim rounds) were Chris Ray of Richard Montgomery, Will Schultz of Raleigh Charter, Joel Knight of DCC, Bobby Gibbs of Walton, and Ted Gioia of Gonzaga, respectively.
The All-Stars:
External Links
|