Difference between revisions of "2021 MSHSAA State Championship"

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==Questions and format==
 
==Questions and format==
As [[NAQT]] was not licensing its questions for in-person use (due to the ongoing pandemic), MSHSAA instead opted for questions from [[Academic Hallmarks]]. Though the questions were meant to be "[[pyramidal]]," in practice they were filled with obscure [[biographical clues]], [[hose|hoses]], and other [[bad quizbowl]] features that frustrated many participants. Content overlap between packets was also rampant, with some answerlines being asked about three times in the space of a few rounds.
+
As [[NAQT]] was not licensing its questions for in-person use due to the ongoing pandemic, MSHSAA instead opted for questions from [[Academic Hallmarks]]. Though the questions were meant to be "[[pyramidal]]," in practice they were filled with obscure [[biographical clues]], [[hose|hoses]], and other [[bad quizbowl]] features that frustrated many participants. Content overlap between packets was also rampant, with some answerlines being asked about three times in the space of a few rounds.
  
A particularly notorious bonus that became memetic on the Missouri Quizbowl Circuit Student [[Discord]] Server simply asked players to answer the question "When you go to the store to buy mussels, what should you look for?" The set also featured a number of very bad common links, including a number of tossups on two unrelated cities that happen to have the same name, as well as consistently poor difficulty control. The Stanislaw Lem novel [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solaris_(novel) Solaris] was tossed up at sectionals after never having previously been tossed up below hard college difficulty.  
+
A particularly notorious bonus that became memetic on the Missouri Quizbowl Circuit Student [[Discord]] Server simply asked players to answer the question "When you go to the store to buy mussels, what should you look for?" The set also featured a number of very bad common links, including multiple tossups on two unrelated cities that happen to have the same name, as well as consistently poor difficulty control. The Stanislaw Lem novel [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solaris_(novel) Solaris] was tossed up at sectionals after never having previously been tossed up below hard college difficulty.  
  
 
According to [[Clever]] coach and MSHSAA committee member [[Scott Walker]], the subject distribution was "4/4/4/4/4. 4 math, 4 English, 4 History, 4 Science. The last 4 [were] a Miscellaneous catch-all of everything else."  
 
According to [[Clever]] coach and MSHSAA committee member [[Scott Walker]], the subject distribution was "4/4/4/4/4. 4 math, 4 English, 4 History, 4 Science. The last 4 [were] a Miscellaneous catch-all of everything else."  
  
Like in previous years, all questions were worth 10 points each with no [[power]]s or [[neg]]s, and bonuses were played with [[bounceback]]s.
+
With a limited number of questions available and the finals spread over three days instead of two, the format was shortened from 26 to 20 tossup/bonus cycles, and overtime was decided by only one correctly answered tossup instead of three. Like in previous years, all questions were worth 10 points each with no [[power]]s or [[neg]]s, and bonuses were played with [[bounceback]]s.
  
 
==Districts==
 
==Districts==
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==Sectionals==
 
==Sectionals==
Sectionals were the first round of the state championship and took place on April 27. Due to a lack of available [[packet]]s from Academic Hallmarks, Sectionals consisted of only one game between the two adjacent Districts winners. The winner of each sectional advanced to the state finals.
+
Sectionals were the first round of the state championship and took place on April 27. Due to a lack of available [[packet]]s from Academic Hallmarks, Sectionals was reduced from the usual best of three format to a single game between the two adjacent Districts winners. The winner of each sectional advanced to the state finals.
  
 
===Class 1===
 
===Class 1===
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===Class 2===
 
===Class 2===
 +
None of the district winners in Class 2 had previously won a state championship.
 +
 +
* '''[[Summersville]] 220''', [[Valley]] 50
 +
* '''[[Greenwood]] 210''', [[Osceola]] 160
 +
* '''[[Van-Far]] 260''', [[Westran]] 140
 +
* '''[[North Platte]] 220''', [[Rock Port]] 170
  
 
===Class 3===
 
===Class 3===
 +
None of the district winners in Class 3 had previously won a state championship.
 +
 +
* '''[[Houston]] 300''', [[South Callaway]] 180
 +
* '''[[Fair Grove]] 280''', [[Clever]] 80
 +
* '''[[Palmyra]] 300''', [[Father Tolton]] 180
 +
* '''[[Cole Camp]] 220''', [[Lathrop]] 90
  
 
===Class 4===
 
===Class 4===
 +
* '''[[St. James]] 350''', [[Central (New Madrid County, Missouri High School)|Central (New Madrid County)]] 80
 +
* '''[[Cor Jesu Academy]] 180''', [[St. Francis Borgia]] 150
 +
* '''[[College Heights Christian]] 390''', [[Calvary Lutheran]] 150
 +
* '''[[Savannah]] 290''', [[Hallsville]] 190
  
 
===Class 5===
 
===Class 5===
 +
* '''[[Ladue Horton Watkins|Ladue]] 280''', [[Notre Dame (Cape Girardeau, Missouri High School)|Notre Dame (Cape Girardeau)]] 240
 +
* '''[[Kirksville]] 420''', [[Springfield Catholic]] 180
 +
* '''[[Warrensburg]] 110''', [[McDonald County]] 100
 +
* '''[[Smithville]] 400''', [[St. Pius X (Kansas City, MO)|St. Pius X (Kansas City)]] 120
  
 
===Class 6===
 
===Class 6===
 +
* '''[[Washington]] 300''', [[Oakville]] 140
 +
* '''[[Fort Zumwalt North]] 350''', [[Rock Bridge]] 230
 +
* '''[[Raymore-Peculiar]] 360''', [[Kickapoo]] 200
 +
* '''[[Central (St. Joseph, MO)|Central (St. Joseph)]] 370''', [[North Kansas City]] 230
  
 
==State finals==
 
==State finals==
 
Again, a lack of packets meant the state finals could not offer preliminary rounds. Instead, teams were placed directly into a [[single-elimination]] playoff bracket, with seeding predetermined based on which sectional teams were from. This led to several lopsided championship matches, as the two best teams in a class often played each other in the semifinals.
 
Again, a lack of packets meant the state finals could not offer preliminary rounds. Instead, teams were placed directly into a [[single-elimination]] playoff bracket, with seeding predetermined based on which sectional teams were from. This led to several lopsided championship matches, as the two best teams in a class often played each other in the semifinals.
 +
 +
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the state finals were held at the MSHSAA office in Columbia. The limited number of game rooms required spreading the competition over three days instead of two. Games were streamed online on MSHSAA.TV.
  
 
===Class 1===
 
===Class 1===
Line 72: Line 98:
  
 
===Class 5===
 
===Class 5===
 +
Semifinals:
 +
* '''Ladue 380''', Kirksville 350
 +
* '''Smithville 300''', Warrensburg 210
 +
Consolation:
 +
* '''Kirksville 610''', Warrensburg 60
 +
Championship game:
 +
* '''Ladue 490''', Smithville 190
  
 
===Class 6===
 
===Class 6===
 +
Semifinals:
 +
* '''Washington 410''', Fort Zumwalt North 170
 +
* '''Raymore-Peculiar 371''', Central (St. Joseph) 370
 +
Consolation:
 +
* '''Central (St. Joseph) 410''', Fort Zumwalt North 230
 +
Championship game:
 +
* '''Raymore-Peculiar 440''', Washington 210
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
 
*As a result of MSHSAA rules disqualifying teams with fewer than 4 players present, and the state championship taking place during a pandemic, many schools were unable to participate at Districts.
 
*As a result of MSHSAA rules disqualifying teams with fewer than 4 players present, and the state championship taking place during a pandemic, many schools were unable to participate at Districts.
 
*Due to the nonexistent seeding at State, both Class 5 and Class 6 had semifinal matchups between two teams that were ranked [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=385094#p385094 top 5 in the state] by community poll.
 
*Due to the nonexistent seeding at State, both Class 5 and Class 6 had semifinal matchups between two teams that were ranked [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=385094#p385094 top 5 in the state] by community poll.
 +
* In Class 1, North Shelby won their first state championship after seventeen previous appearances at MSHSAA State, the most times a school has advanced to MSHSAA State without winning any championships. Classes 2, 3, and 6 also had first time champions.
  
 
==External References==
 
==External References==

Latest revision as of 19:39, 6 May 2022

The 2021 MSHSAA State Championship was held on May 6-8, 2021. It was the first state championship held after the 2021 MSHSAA Realignment, with schools split into six enrollment-based classes instead of four. Classes 1 and 2 competed on Thursday, classes 3 and 4 played on Friday, and classes 5 and 6 played on Saturday.

Questions and format

As NAQT was not licensing its questions for in-person use due to the ongoing pandemic, MSHSAA instead opted for questions from Academic Hallmarks. Though the questions were meant to be "pyramidal," in practice they were filled with obscure biographical clues, hoses, and other bad quizbowl features that frustrated many participants. Content overlap between packets was also rampant, with some answerlines being asked about three times in the space of a few rounds.

A particularly notorious bonus that became memetic on the Missouri Quizbowl Circuit Student Discord Server simply asked players to answer the question "When you go to the store to buy mussels, what should you look for?" The set also featured a number of very bad common links, including multiple tossups on two unrelated cities that happen to have the same name, as well as consistently poor difficulty control. The Stanislaw Lem novel Solaris was tossed up at sectionals after never having previously been tossed up below hard college difficulty.

According to Clever coach and MSHSAA committee member Scott Walker, the subject distribution was "4/4/4/4/4. 4 math, 4 English, 4 History, 4 Science. The last 4 [were] a Miscellaneous catch-all of everything else."

With a limited number of questions available and the finals spread over three days instead of two, the format was shortened from 26 to 20 tossup/bonus cycles, and overtime was decided by only one correctly answered tossup instead of three. Like in previous years, all questions were worth 10 points each with no powers or negs, and bonuses were played with bouncebacks.

Districts

Eight district tournaments in each of the six classes were held on April 17. District matchups are available on MSHSAA's website.

Sectionals

Sectionals were the first round of the state championship and took place on April 27. Due to a lack of available packets from Academic Hallmarks, Sectionals was reduced from the usual best of three format to a single game between the two adjacent Districts winners. The winner of each sectional advanced to the state finals.

Class 1

Class 2

None of the district winners in Class 2 had previously won a state championship.

Class 3

None of the district winners in Class 3 had previously won a state championship.

Class 4

Class 5

Class 6

State finals

Again, a lack of packets meant the state finals could not offer preliminary rounds. Instead, teams were placed directly into a single-elimination playoff bracket, with seeding predetermined based on which sectional teams were from. This led to several lopsided championship matches, as the two best teams in a class often played each other in the semifinals.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the state finals were held at the MSHSAA office in Columbia. The limited number of game rooms required spreading the competition over three days instead of two. Games were streamed online on MSHSAA.TV.

Class 1

Semifinals:

  • Lutheran 220, Hume 60
  • North Shelby 130, Tarkio 60

Consolation:

  • Hume 130, Tarkio 90

Championship game:

  • North Shelby 250, Lutheran 200

Class 2

Semifinals:

  • Greenwood 270, Summersville 100
  • North Platte 300, Van-Far 120

Consolation:

  • Van-Far 310, Summersville 110

Championship game:

  • North Platte 250, Greenwood 170

Class 3

Semifinals:

  • Fair Grove 440, Houston 170
  • Palmyra 280, Cole Camp 200

Consolation:

  • Houston 340, Cole Camp 130

Championship game:

  • Fair Grove 340, Palmyra 230

Class 4

Semifinals:

  • St. James 260, Cor Jesu Academy 230
  • College Heights Christian 410, Savannah 230

Consolation:

  • Savannah 270, Cor Jesu Academy 120

Championship game:

  • College Heights Christian 360, St. James 190

Class 5

Semifinals:

  • Ladue 380, Kirksville 350
  • Smithville 300, Warrensburg 210

Consolation:

  • Kirksville 610, Warrensburg 60

Championship game:

  • Ladue 490, Smithville 190

Class 6

Semifinals:

  • Washington 410, Fort Zumwalt North 170
  • Raymore-Peculiar 371, Central (St. Joseph) 370

Consolation:

  • Central (St. Joseph) 410, Fort Zumwalt North 230

Championship game:

  • Raymore-Peculiar 440, Washington 210

Notes

  • As a result of MSHSAA rules disqualifying teams with fewer than 4 players present, and the state championship taking place during a pandemic, many schools were unable to participate at Districts.
  • Due to the nonexistent seeding at State, both Class 5 and Class 6 had semifinal matchups between two teams that were ranked top 5 in the state by community poll.
  • In Class 1, North Shelby won their first state championship after seventeen previous appearances at MSHSAA State, the most times a school has advanced to MSHSAA State without winning any championships. Classes 2, 3, and 6 also had first time champions.

External References

2021 MSHSAA State Championship
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2019 MSHSAA State Championship
2022 MSHSAA State Championship