Difference between revisions of "2019 Chicago Open"

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(Created page with "{{Tourneybox|Tournament Name = 2019 Chicago Open |champion = Zazu in the Petco (Adam S. Fine, Auroni Gupta, Jakob Myers, and Clark Smith), |second = Fianna...")
 
 
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{{Tourneybox|Tournament Name = 2019 [[Chicago Open]]
 
{{Tourneybox|Tournament Name = 2019 [[Chicago Open]]
|champion = Zazu in the Petco ([[Adam S. Fine]], [[Auroni Gupta]], [[Jakob Myers]], and [[Clark Smith]]),
+
|champion = Zazu in the Petco ([[Adam Fine (Yale)|Adam S. Fine]], [[Auroni Gupta]], [[Jakob Myers]], and [[Clark Smith]]),
 
|second = Fianna Failsons ([[Mike Bentley]], [[Matt Bollinger]], [[Mike Cheyne]], and [[Shan Kothari]])
 
|second = Fianna Failsons ([[Mike Bentley]], [[Matt Bollinger]], [[Mike Cheyne]], and [[Shan Kothari]])
|third = Hackers and Slackers ([[Jordan Brownstein]], [[Jaimie Carlson]], [[Ophir Lifschitz]], and [[Eric Mukherjee]])  
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|third = Hackers and Slackers ([[Jordan Brownstein]], [[Jaimie Carlson]], [[Ophir Lifshitz]], and [[Eric Mukherjee]])  
|fourth =  
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|fourth = Old, British, Both, or Neither ([[Joey Goldman]], [[Jason Golfinos]], [[John Lawrence]], and [[Mike Sorice]])
 
|scorer = [[Jordan Brownstein]], Hackers and Slackers
 
|scorer = [[Jordan Brownstein]], Hackers and Slackers
 
|editors = [[Chris Ray]] and [[Jacob Reed]], with [[Alston Boyd]], [[Will Holub-Moorman]], [[Wonyoung Jang]], [[Michael Kearney]], [[Jonathan Magin]], and [[Sriram Pendyala]]
 
|editors = [[Chris Ray]] and [[Jacob Reed]], with [[Alston Boyd]], [[Will Holub-Moorman]], [[Wonyoung Jang]], [[Michael Kearney]], [[Jonathan Magin]], and [[Sriram Pendyala]]
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|stats = [https://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/5853/stats/ stats]}}
 
|stats = [https://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/5853/stats/ stats]}}
  
The '''2019 Chicago Open''' was won by Zazu in the Petco ([[Adam S. Fine]], [[Auroni Gupta]], [[Jakob Myers]], and [[Clark Smith]]), who defeated Fianna Failsons ([[Mike Bentley]], [[Matt Bollinger]], [[Mike Cheyne]], and [[Shan Kothari]]) in the first game of an advantaged final. Hackers and Slackers ([[Jordan Brownstein]], [[Jaimie Carlson]], [[Ophir Lifschitz]], and [[Eric Mukherjee]]) took third place.
+
The '''2019 Chicago Open''' was won by Zazu in the Petco ([[Adam Fine (Yale)|Adam S. Fine]], [[Auroni Gupta]], [[Jakob Myers]], and [[Clark Smith]]), who defeated Fianna Failsons ([[Mike Bentley]], [[Matt Bollinger]], [[Mike Cheyne]], and [[Shan Kothari]]) in the first game of an advantaged final. Hackers and Slackers ([[Jordan Brownstein]], [[Jaimie Carlson]], [[Ophir Lifshitz]], and [[Eric Mukherjee]]) took third place.
  
 
As usual, [[Jordan Brownstein]] led the field in scoring and powers. Somewhat unusually, the winning team featured two undergraduates (Myers and Smith) and three players who had never won a CO before.
 
As usual, [[Jordan Brownstein]] led the field in scoring and powers. Somewhat unusually, the winning team featured two undergraduates (Myers and Smith) and three players who had never won a CO before.
  
The tournament was edited by [[Chris Ray]] and [[Jacob Reed]], with [[Alston Boyd]], [[Will Holub-Moorman]], [[Wonyoung Jang]], [[Michael Kearney]], [[Jonathan Magin]], and [[Sriram Pendyala]].
+
The tournament was edited by [[Chris Ray]] and [[Jacob Reed]], with [[Alston Boyd]], [[Will Holub-Moorman]], [[Wonyoung Jang]], [[Michael Kearney]], [[Jonathan Magin]], and [[Sriram Pendyala]]. [[Jacob O'Rourke]] served as the TD.
  
Like the [[2018 Chicago Open|Previous Iteration]], the tournament was held in Evanston.
+
Like the [[2018 Chicago Open|previous iteration]], the tournament was held in Evanston.
  
 
==Question Reception==
 
==Question Reception==
 +
The set was generally well-received, in particular for its substantially lower difficulty than in previous years. The experiment with a "Modern World" distribution was particularly praised, while some of the science history questions (another experiment) had a more mixed reception.
  
 
==Side Events==
 
==Side Events==
*  
+
* [[Scattegories]] 3, written by [[Will Nediger]]. [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=21987 Announcement] and [https://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/5768/ Stats]
 +
* [[Age of Empires]], written by [[Will Alston]]. [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=21514#p347751 Announcement] and [https://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/5856/ Stats].
  
 
==External Links==
 
==External Links==
* [http://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=20783 Tournament announcement]
+
* [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=21&t=22524 Tournament announcement]
* [https://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/5853/stats/prelims/ Prelims]  
+
* [https://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/5853/stats/ Stats]  
*
+
* [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=9&t=23044 Discussion thread]
 
[[Category:MACF events]]
 
[[Category:MACF events]]

Latest revision as of 15:35, 6 February 2022

2019 Chicago Open
Edited by Chris Ray and Jacob Reed, with Alston Boyd, Will Holub-Moorman, Wonyoung Jang, Michael Kearney, Jonathan Magin, and Sriram Pendyala
Champion Zazu in the Petco (Adam S. Fine, Auroni Gupta, Jakob Myers, and Clark Smith),
Runner-up Fianna Failsons (Mike Bentley, Matt Bollinger, Mike Cheyne, and Shan Kothari)
Third Hackers and Slackers (Jordan Brownstein, Jaimie Carlson, Ophir Lifshitz, and Eric Mukherjee)
Fourth Old, British, Both, or Neither (Joey Goldman, Jason Golfinos, John Lawrence, and Mike Sorice)
High scorer Jordan Brownstein, Hackers and Slackers
Site Northwestern
Field 20
Stats stats

The 2019 Chicago Open was won by Zazu in the Petco (Adam S. Fine, Auroni Gupta, Jakob Myers, and Clark Smith), who defeated Fianna Failsons (Mike Bentley, Matt Bollinger, Mike Cheyne, and Shan Kothari) in the first game of an advantaged final. Hackers and Slackers (Jordan Brownstein, Jaimie Carlson, Ophir Lifshitz, and Eric Mukherjee) took third place.

As usual, Jordan Brownstein led the field in scoring and powers. Somewhat unusually, the winning team featured two undergraduates (Myers and Smith) and three players who had never won a CO before.

The tournament was edited by Chris Ray and Jacob Reed, with Alston Boyd, Will Holub-Moorman, Wonyoung Jang, Michael Kearney, Jonathan Magin, and Sriram Pendyala. Jacob O'Rourke served as the TD.

Like the previous iteration, the tournament was held in Evanston.

Question Reception

The set was generally well-received, in particular for its substantially lower difficulty than in previous years. The experiment with a "Modern World" distribution was particularly praised, while some of the science history questions (another experiment) had a more mixed reception.

Side Events

External Links