Difference between revisions of "1999 ACF Nationals"
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− | The '''1999 ACF Nationals''' was a national championship held at [[Chicago|the University of Chicago]]. | + | {{Tourneybox|Tournament Name = 1999 [[ACF Nationals]] |
+ | |champion = [[1999 Chicago|Chicago]] | ||
+ | |second = [[1999 Maryland|Maryland]] | ||
+ | |third = [[1999 Berkeley|Berkeley]] | ||
+ | |fourth = [[1999 Illinois|Illinois]] | ||
+ | |scorer = [[Andrew Yaphe]], [[Chicago|Chicago]] | ||
+ | |editors = [[Al Whited]] and [[Brian Rostron]] (head) with [[Mike Zarren]], [[Alice Chou]], and [[Rick Grimes]] [http://web.archive.org/web/20060913064221fw_/http://www.dpo.uab.edu/~paik/acf/results.html] | ||
+ | |site = [[Chicago]] | ||
+ | |field=22 teams | ||
+ | |stats = [http://www.ocf.berkeley.edu/~quizbowl/tournaments/Old/98-99/acfnatnls99.txt] }} | ||
+ | |||
+ | The '''1999 ACF Nationals''' was a national championship held at [[Chicago|the University of Chicago]] on April 29. | ||
It was won by [[Chicago|Chicago A]], consisting of [[Andrew Yaphe]], Samuel Bennett, [[Ryan Scranton]], and [[Sarah Bagby]], which finished with an 18-0 record. Second place went to [[Maryland]], which went 14-4, while [[Illinois|Illinois A]] and [[Berkeley]] finished third and fourth. | It was won by [[Chicago|Chicago A]], consisting of [[Andrew Yaphe]], Samuel Bennett, [[Ryan Scranton]], and [[Sarah Bagby]], which finished with an 18-0 record. Second place went to [[Maryland]], which went 14-4, while [[Illinois|Illinois A]] and [[Berkeley]] finished third and fourth. | ||
− | The tournament featured perhaps the only All-Star Game in the history of ACF Nationals play. In it, a team consisting of [[Andrew Yaphe]], [[Robert Trent]], [[Subash Maddipoti]], and [[Dave Goodman]] defeated a team of [[Mike Wehrman]], [[Dave Hamilton]], [[Jason Hong]], and [[Seth Kendall]]. Seth led his team in scoring, going 4-0, while Andrew led his team, going 10-2. | + | The tournament featured perhaps the only All-Star Game in the history of ACF Nationals play. In it, a team consisting of [[Andrew Yaphe]], [[Robert Trent]], [[Subash Maddipoti]], and [[Dave Goodman]] defeated a team of [[Mike Wehrman]], [[Dave Hamilton]], [[Jason Hong (Georgia Tech)|Jason Hong]], and [[Seth Kendall]]. Seth led his team in scoring, going 4-0, while Andrew led his team, going 10-2. |
[[Andrew Yaphe]] led the tournament in scoring at 89.7 ppg, while [[Robert Trent]] was second, at 54.7 ppg. A young [[Subash Maddipoti]], in his last year at Quincy, finished fourth in scoring at 44.2 ppg. | [[Andrew Yaphe]] led the tournament in scoring at 89.7 ppg, while [[Robert Trent]] was second, at 54.7 ppg. A young [[Subash Maddipoti]], in his last year at Quincy, finished fourth in scoring at 44.2 ppg. | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | {{Navbox ACF Nationals}} | |
− | [[Category:National championships]] | + | [[Category: National championships]] |
− | + | {{c|1999 Tournaments}} |
Latest revision as of 14:50, 18 May 2024
1999 ACF Nationals | |
---|---|
Edited by | Al Whited and Brian Rostron (head) with Mike Zarren, Alice Chou, and Rick Grimes [1] |
Champion | Chicago |
Runner-up | Maryland |
Third | Berkeley |
Fourth | Illinois |
High scorer | Andrew Yaphe, Chicago |
Site | Chicago |
Field | 22 teams |
Stats | [2] |
The 1999 ACF Nationals was a national championship held at the University of Chicago on April 29.
It was won by Chicago A, consisting of Andrew Yaphe, Samuel Bennett, Ryan Scranton, and Sarah Bagby, which finished with an 18-0 record. Second place went to Maryland, which went 14-4, while Illinois A and Berkeley finished third and fourth.
The tournament featured perhaps the only All-Star Game in the history of ACF Nationals play. In it, a team consisting of Andrew Yaphe, Robert Trent, Subash Maddipoti, and Dave Goodman defeated a team of Mike Wehrman, Dave Hamilton, Jason Hong, and Seth Kendall. Seth led his team in scoring, going 4-0, while Andrew led his team, going 10-2.
Andrew Yaphe led the tournament in scoring at 89.7 ppg, while Robert Trent was second, at 54.7 ppg. A young Subash Maddipoti, in his last year at Quincy, finished fourth in scoring at 44.2 ppg.
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