Difference between revisions of "NAQT Illinois State Championship"

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==Results==
 
==Results==
{| border="0" cellspacing="3" cellpadding="3"
+
{|class=wikitable style=text-align:center;
|-style="background: #e3e3e3;"
 
!width="75"|Date||width="150"|Champion||width="150"|Runner-Up||width="150"|Third Place||width="50"|Attendance||width="150"|Host
 
 
|-
 
|-
|2/2005||[[Stevenson]]||[[Wheaton North]]||[[New Trier]]||9||[[Loyola Academy]]
+
!width=50|DATE
|-style="background: #e3e3e3;"
+
!width=150|CHAMPION
|2/2006||[[Stevenson]]||[[New Trier]]||[[Loyola Academy]]||12||[[Loyola Academy]]
+
!width=150|RUNNER-UP
 +
!width=150|3rd PLACE
 +
!width=150|SMALL SCHOOL
 +
!width=150|TOP SCORER (PP20TH)
 +
!width=90|ATTENDANCE
 +
!width=130|HOST
 +
!width=50|STATS
 
|-
 
|-
|3/2007||[[New Trier]]||[[Maine South]]||[[Carbondale]]||8||[[Loyola Academy]]
+
|2/2005
|-style="background: #e3e3e3;"
+
|[[Stevenson]]
|2/2008||[[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Auburn]]||[[Loyola Academy]]||[[Carbondale]]||9||[[Illinois|UIUC]]
+
|[[Wheaton North]]
 +
|[[New Trier]]
 +
|
 +
|
 +
|9
 +
|[[Loyola Academy|Loyola]]
 +
|
 
|-
 
|-
|3/2009||[[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Auburn]]||[[Carbondale]]||[[New Trier]]||12||[[Fenton]]
+
|2/2006
|-style="background: #e3e3e3;"
+
|Stevenson
|3/2010||[[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Auburn]]||[[Carbondale]]||[[OPRF]]||18||[[Fenton]]
+
|New Trier
 +
|Loyola
 +
|
 +
|
 +
|12
 +
|Loyola
 +
|
 
|-
 
|-
|2/2011||[[Stevenson]]||[[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Auburn]]||[[Loyola Academy]]||17||[[Fenton]]
+
|3/2007
|-style="background: #e3e3e3;"
+
|New Trier
|2/2012||[[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois high school)|Auburn A]]||[[IMSA|IMSA A]]||[[Carbondale|Carbondale]] ([[Ben Chametzky]] solo)||24||[[Fenton]]
+
|[[Maine South]]
 +
|Carbondale
 +
|
 +
|[[Nick Matchen]] (56.89)
 +
|8
 +
|Loyola
 +
|[https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament-teams.jsp?tournament_id=2238]
 +
|-
 +
|2/2008
 +
|[[Rockford Auburn|Auburn]]
 +
|Loyola
 +
|Carbondale
 +
|
 +
|[[Ben Cohen]] (74.87)
 +
|9
 +
|[[Illinois|UIUC]]
 +
|[https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament-teams.jsp?tournament_id=2416]
 +
|-
 +
|3/2009
 +
|Auburn
 +
|Carbondale
 +
|New Trier
 +
|
 +
|Ben Cohen (89.09)
 +
|12
 +
|[[Fenton]]
 +
|[https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament-teams.jsp?tournament_id=2754]
 +
|-
 +
|3/2010
 +
|Auburn
 +
|Carbondale
 +
|[[OPRF]]
 +
|
 +
|[[Andrew Deveau]] (104.5)
 +
|18
 +
|Fenton
 +
|[https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament-teams.jsp?tournament_id=3204]
 +
|-
 +
|2/2011
 +
|Stevenson
 +
|Auburn
 +
|Loyola
 +
|
 +
|[[Ben Carberry]] (133.63)
 +
|17
 +
|Fenton
 +
|[https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament-teams.jsp?tournament_id=3634]
 +
|-
 +
|2/2012
 +
|Auburn
 +
|[[IMSA|IMSA A]]
 +
|Carbondale[[#Notes|<sup>1</sup>]]
 +
|
 +
|[[Ben Chametzky]] (165.22)
 +
|24
 +
|Fenton
 +
|[https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament-teams.jsp?tournament_id=4122]
 +
|-
 +
|2/2013
 +
|IMSA
 +
|Auburn
 +
|[[Belvidere North]]
 +
|[[Peoria Christian]]
 +
|[[Dylan Minarik]] (148.15)
 +
|28
 +
|[[Bloomington]]
 +
|[https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament-teams.jsp?tournament_id=4727]
 +
|-
 +
|2/2014
 +
|IMSA A
 +
|Stevenson
 +
|Bloomington A
 +
|[[Litchfield]]
 +
|[[Jackson Myers]] (113.39)
 +
|40
 +
|UIUC
 +
|[https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament-teams.jsp?tournament_id=5415]
 +
|-
 +
|2/2015
 +
|Auburn
 +
|[[Hinsdale Central|Hinsdale Central A]]
 +
|IMSA A
 +
|[[Macomb|Macomb A]]
 +
|[[Adam Fine]] (123.76)
 +
|36
 +
|UIUC
 +
|[https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament-teams.jsp?tournament_id=6271]
 +
|-
 +
|2/2016
 +
|Auburn
 +
|Hinsdale Central A
 +
|IMSA A
 +
|Macomb A
 +
|[[Jakob Myers]] (149.04)
 +
|40
 +
|UIUC
 +
|[https://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament-teams.jsp?tournament_id=6561]
 +
|-
 +
|2/11/2017
 +
|Stevenson A
 +
|[[Barrington]]
 +
|[[Naperville North]]
 +
|[[Southwestern|Southwestern A]]
 +
|Jakob Myers (156.79)
 +
|30
 +
|UIUC
 +
|[https://neg5.org/t/NJls-qpdDf/stats/team?phase=1]
 +
|-
 +
|2/10/2018
 +
|[[University of Illinois Lab|Urbana Uni High A]][[#Notes|<sup>2</sup>]]
 +
|Auburn
 +
|[[Fremd|Fremd A]]
 +
|Urbana Uni High A
 +
|[[Ethan Strombeck]] (102.31)
 +
|30
 +
|UIUC
 +
|[https://stats.neg5.org/t/B1lIQNc8f/2018-naqt-state]
 +
|-
 +
|2/23/2019
 +
|Auburn
 +
|Stevenson A
 +
|Urbana Uni High A
 +
|Urbana Uni High A
 +
|Ethan Strombeck (118.57)
 +
|30
 +
|UIUC
 +
|[https://stats.neg5.org/t/YlRoPHyAu/2019-naqt-illinois-state-championship/team-standings]
 +
|-
 +
|2/29/2020
 +
|Urbana Uni High A
 +
|Stevenson A
 +
|Barrington A
 +
|Urbana Uni High A
 +
|[[Ben Fry]] (105.45)
 +
|32
 +
|UIUC
 +
|[https://stats.neg5.org/t/SIMijfu0j/2020-ihssbca-naqt-illinois-state-championship/team-standings]
 +
|-
 +
|2021[[#Notes|<sup>3</sup>]]
 +
|-
 +
|2/26/2022
 +
|[[Buffalo Grove]]
 +
|Barrington A
 +
|Stevenson
 +
|Urbana Uni High
 +
|[[Rohan Ganeshan]] (131.36)
 +
|20
 +
|[[Centennial (IL)|Centennial]]
 +
|[https://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/7418/stats/absolutely_everything/]
 +
|-
 +
|2/25/2023
 +
|Buffalo Grove
 +
|Barrington A
 +
|Rockford Auburn
 +
|Urbana Uni High
 +
|Rohan Ganeshan (152.14)
 +
|30
 +
|Centennial
 +
|[https://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/8083/stats/complete/]
 +
|-
 +
|2/24/2024
 +
|Buffalo Grove
 +
|Barrington A
 +
|Fremd A
 +
|Urbana Uni High
 +
|Rohan Ganeshan (154.0)
 +
|32
 +
|Centennial
 +
|[https://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/8685/]
 
|-
 
|-
|2/2013||[[IMSA]]||[[Auburn (Rockford, Illinois High School)|Auburn]]||[[Belvidere North]]||28||[[Bloomington]]
 
|-style="background: #e3e3e3;"
 
|2/2014||[[IMSA|IMSA A]]||[[Stevenson]]||[[Bloomington|Bloomington A]]||40||[[UIUC]]
 
 
|}
 
|}
 +
 +
==Notes==
 +
# [[Ben Chametzky]] played solo in 2012.
 +
# With only around 320 students in regular attendance, University of Illinois Lab became the smallest known school to win any open or large division state championship (there may have been smaller schools that won a Masonic State Title in the early years before it was a true state-wide contest).
 +
#Tournament cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic.
  
 
==History==
 
==History==
''The following is wildly out-of-date, but has some interesting historical information.''
+
[[Northwestern]] began hosting an annual high school NAQT tournament in 1999, which was the first tournament to consistently use NAQT questions in Illinois. While the tournament started drawing as many as 41 teams in 2001 (with teams coming from Michigan, Missouri, Iowa, and Wisconsin), the tournament has seen a significant decline in attendance since. Northwestern no longer hosts a tournament with NAQT questions, though they still host high school and middle school tournaments.
 
 
===Context===
 
Despite Illinois' long history of quizbowl, most of that history has been dominated by poorly written, one-line questions. Thus, while Illinois was absorbed in developing its own style and format, it largely was ignorant to the changes that were taking place to the east.
 
 
 
[[Northwestern]] began hosting an annual high school NAQT tournament in 1999. While the tournament started drawing as many as 41 teams in 2001 (with teams coming from Michigan, Missouri, Iowa, and Wisconsin), the tournament has seen a significant decline in attendance since. Northwestern no longer hosts a tournament with NAQT questions, though they still host high school and middle school tournaments.
 
 
 
A few Illinois teams attended NAQT tournaments outside of Illinois.  Perhaps, most notoriously, [[Loyola Academy]] attended and won the Iowa State Championship in 2004, a year in which it did not even advance from its own regional in the [[2004 IHSA State Championship Tournament|IHSA State Series]].
 
  
While Illinois quizbowl questions have been gradually improving over that time, it was not until the 2004-05 season that Illinois would get its own regular state championship and qualifier for the [[HSNCT]].  This came largely at the request of [[Loyola Academy]] coach [[David Riley]].
+
Prior to 2005 few Illinois teams attended NAQT tournaments outside of Illinois.  Perhaps, most notoriously, [[Loyola Academy]] attended and won the Iowa State Championship in 2004, a year in which it did not even advance from its own regional in the [[2004 IHSA State Championship Tournament|IHSA State Series]].  People such as [[David Riley]], [[Linda Greene]], and [[David Reinstein]] began pushing for more tournaments to be run on good questions like NAQT, which led to a gradual increase in the number of tournaments using the questions, and the number of teams coming out to the NAQT State Tournament.
  
===Attendance Issues===
+
While Illinois quizbowl questions had been gradually improving during the early 2000s, it was not until the 2004-05 season that Illinois would get its own regular state championship and qualifier for the [[HSNCT]]. This came largely at the request of [[Loyola Academy]] coach [[David Riley]]. In the years that followed, question quality saw a gradual improvement.  Local tournament and match formats are now largely in line with national standards.
While the quality of the questions is known, the low turnout for the tournament has led to debate about whether it can be considered  a "state championship" in Illinois.
+
[[File:Egan trophy.png|200px|thumb|right|William and Janet Egan Memorial Trophy]]
  
With the general improvement in questions, and the greater acceptance of pyramidal questions in the state, the low turnout remains a great mystery.  One possible reason for the low turnout in 2007 was the date in March, which followed the IHSA State Series.  The end of the State Series generally marks the end of the season for most teams in Illinois.
+
Starting in 2013, the tournament started recognizing a small school champion.
  
There has been some suggestion that with this tournament being single-tiered (that is, it does not require qualification), many teams who know they do not stand a chance to win anything will not participate. Since 2013, the tournament has in fact had a qualification procedure implemented by the [[IHSSBCA]], similar to but looser than the qualification system for the [[HSNCT]].
+
Starting in 2015, the winner of the tournament receives the William and Janet Egan Memorial Trophy, a perpetual trophy which the winner keeps only so long as they continue winning the tournament.  The trophy was donated by the family of William and Janet Egan, and largely consists of a crystal bowl that was William's retirement gift.  Even though the trophy was not awarded until 2015, it records the names of the tournament champions dating to the inception of the tournament in 2005. The [[IHSSBCA]] officially oversees the trophy and its awarding.
  
The final reason that occasionally comes up for not attending the tournament is that it is (necessarily) held close to the end of the season in Illinois, and very close to the start of the IHSA State Series. The distribution of subjects in NAQT is quite different than in Illinois (NAQT offers more pop culture and geography, while offering a great deal less [[computational math]] than one would see in the IHSA state series).  Thus it is the belief of some coaches that NAQT is a poor way to prepare for the impending state series.  There is certainly no direct evidence to support this, though it has been cited by a few coaches as a reason for not attending.
+
The tournament was not held in 2021 due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Since 2022, the tournament has been hosted by [[Centennial (IL)|Centennial High School]] in Champaign, marking the first time since 2014 that the tournament was not hosted by the University of [[Illinois]].
  
 +
==See Also==
 +
*[[NAQT Illinois State Tournament Record Book]]
 +
*[[Masonic tournament]] - State Tournament hosted by the Illinois Masons
 +
*[[IHSA|Illinois High School Association Tournament]]
  
 +
{{Navbox HS Quizbowl in Illinois}}
  
 
[[Category: High school tournaments]]
 
[[Category: High school tournaments]]

Latest revision as of 12:38, 26 February 2024

The NAQT Illinois State Tournament is one of three state championships held in Illinois.

Results

DATE CHAMPION RUNNER-UP 3rd PLACE SMALL SCHOOL TOP SCORER (PP20TH) ATTENDANCE HOST STATS
2/2005 Stevenson Wheaton North New Trier 9 Loyola
2/2006 Stevenson New Trier Loyola 12 Loyola
3/2007 New Trier Maine South Carbondale Nick Matchen (56.89) 8 Loyola [1]
2/2008 Auburn Loyola Carbondale Ben Cohen (74.87) 9 UIUC [2]
3/2009 Auburn Carbondale New Trier Ben Cohen (89.09) 12 Fenton [3]
3/2010 Auburn Carbondale OPRF Andrew Deveau (104.5) 18 Fenton [4]
2/2011 Stevenson Auburn Loyola Ben Carberry (133.63) 17 Fenton [5]
2/2012 Auburn IMSA A Carbondale1 Ben Chametzky (165.22) 24 Fenton [6]
2/2013 IMSA Auburn Belvidere North Peoria Christian Dylan Minarik (148.15) 28 Bloomington [7]
2/2014 IMSA A Stevenson Bloomington A Litchfield Jackson Myers (113.39) 40 UIUC [8]
2/2015 Auburn Hinsdale Central A IMSA A Macomb A Adam Fine (123.76) 36 UIUC [9]
2/2016 Auburn Hinsdale Central A IMSA A Macomb A Jakob Myers (149.04) 40 UIUC [10]
2/11/2017 Stevenson A Barrington Naperville North Southwestern A Jakob Myers (156.79) 30 UIUC [11]
2/10/2018 Urbana Uni High A2 Auburn Fremd A Urbana Uni High A Ethan Strombeck (102.31) 30 UIUC [12]
2/23/2019 Auburn Stevenson A Urbana Uni High A Urbana Uni High A Ethan Strombeck (118.57) 30 UIUC [13]
2/29/2020 Urbana Uni High A Stevenson A Barrington A Urbana Uni High A Ben Fry (105.45) 32 UIUC [14]
20213
2/26/2022 Buffalo Grove Barrington A Stevenson Urbana Uni High Rohan Ganeshan (131.36) 20 Centennial [15]
2/25/2023 Buffalo Grove Barrington A Rockford Auburn Urbana Uni High Rohan Ganeshan (152.14) 30 Centennial [16]
2/24/2024 Buffalo Grove Barrington A Fremd A Urbana Uni High Rohan Ganeshan (154.0) 32 Centennial [17]

Notes

  1. Ben Chametzky played solo in 2012.
  2. With only around 320 students in regular attendance, University of Illinois Lab became the smallest known school to win any open or large division state championship (there may have been smaller schools that won a Masonic State Title in the early years before it was a true state-wide contest).
  3. Tournament cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic.

History

Northwestern began hosting an annual high school NAQT tournament in 1999, which was the first tournament to consistently use NAQT questions in Illinois. While the tournament started drawing as many as 41 teams in 2001 (with teams coming from Michigan, Missouri, Iowa, and Wisconsin), the tournament has seen a significant decline in attendance since. Northwestern no longer hosts a tournament with NAQT questions, though they still host high school and middle school tournaments.

Prior to 2005 few Illinois teams attended NAQT tournaments outside of Illinois. Perhaps, most notoriously, Loyola Academy attended and won the Iowa State Championship in 2004, a year in which it did not even advance from its own regional in the IHSA State Series. People such as David Riley, Linda Greene, and David Reinstein began pushing for more tournaments to be run on good questions like NAQT, which led to a gradual increase in the number of tournaments using the questions, and the number of teams coming out to the NAQT State Tournament.

While Illinois quizbowl questions had been gradually improving during the early 2000s, it was not until the 2004-05 season that Illinois would get its own regular state championship and qualifier for the HSNCT. This came largely at the request of Loyola Academy coach David Riley. In the years that followed, question quality saw a gradual improvement. Local tournament and match formats are now largely in line with national standards.

William and Janet Egan Memorial Trophy

Starting in 2013, the tournament started recognizing a small school champion.

Starting in 2015, the winner of the tournament receives the William and Janet Egan Memorial Trophy, a perpetual trophy which the winner keeps only so long as they continue winning the tournament. The trophy was donated by the family of William and Janet Egan, and largely consists of a crystal bowl that was William's retirement gift. Even though the trophy was not awarded until 2015, it records the names of the tournament champions dating to the inception of the tournament in 2005. The IHSSBCA officially oversees the trophy and its awarding.

The tournament was not held in 2021 due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Since 2022, the tournament has been hosted by Centennial High School in Champaign, marking the first time since 2014 that the tournament was not hosted by the University of Illinois.

See Also