Difference between revisions of "TRASHionals"
Matt Weiner (talk | contribs) (→Notes) |
Matt Weiner (talk | contribs) (→Notes) |
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*1998, 2003, and 2005 results appear to be wrong on the old Maize Pages list (flipping the order of various adjacent non-first places). The order of finish listed in contemporary communication linked above is used here. | *1998, 2003, and 2005 results appear to be wrong on the old Maize Pages list (flipping the order of various adjacent non-first places). The order of finish listed in contemporary communication linked above is used here. | ||
*Due to a paucity of stats, it is unclear which if any TRASHionals winners went undefeated. | *Due to a paucity of stats, it is unclear which if any TRASHionals winners went undefeated. | ||
− | *The following players were on a TRASHionals championship team and an [[ACF Nationals]] championship team: [[Robert Trent]] and [[Charlie Steinhice]] (played together on both 1991 ACF Nationals & 2004 TRASHionals champions), and [[Jon Pennington]] (2001 TRASHionals & 2003 ACF Nationals) | + | *The following players were on a TRASHionals championship team and an [[ACF Nationals]] championship team: [[Robert Trent]] and [[Charlie Steinhice]] (played together on both 1991 ACF Nationals & 2004 TRASHionals champions), and [[Jon Pennington]] (2001 TRASHionals & 2003 ACF Nationals). Pennington is also the only person to win both TRASHionals and [[2004 ICT|NAQT ICT]] in a career. |
*Other notable trash/academic two-way players based on same-year TRASHionals performance: | *Other notable trash/academic two-way players based on same-year TRASHionals performance: | ||
**[[Dave Goodman]] and [[Dave Hamilton]] played for Maryland on both the fourth-place TRASHionals team and the third-place ACF Nationals team in 1998. | **[[Dave Goodman]] and [[Dave Hamilton]] played for Maryland on both the fourth-place TRASHionals team and the third-place ACF Nationals team in 1998. |
Latest revision as of 16:31, 16 September 2023
TRASHionals was a tournament organized by TRASH to declare their national champion. It was a tournament for open teams, for which one had to qualify at TRASH Regionals, and was held from 1998 to 2010. Interest declined over the years as the social group which formed the trash circuit in the mid-1990s gradually lost interest in quizbowl, and the quality of questions, logistics, and the atmosphere at the tournament continued to turn off new teams. After the 2010 edition, in which only 14 teams were interested in attending a "national championship tournament" held at a rural high school 80 miles from the nearest airport that was announced less than two months before it took place, the event and the TRASH organization both folded.
Top Finishers of TRASHionals
The listed school is the school or alma mater of the predominant number of team members or, if the members were split 2-2 or 1-1-1-1-1 among different schools, of the highest scorer. Note that TRASHionals results are rarely if ever counted among a team's history due to open/alum participation.
TRASH recordkeeping was often haphazard. Complete stats do not exist for most years, and oftentimes the stats that were posted do not clearly label which teams actually finished in the top four spots in the tournament. The use of pseudonyms making it unclear who was on certain teams is a constant issue. The below is the best that can be reconstructed from the information available. Like other Wiki pages, you are encouraged to add to it if you have knowledge of something that is missing.