Difference between revisions of "SWATA"
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Teams in the SWATA footprint are continually faced with drives of 4.5 and 5+ hours to reach Virginia's "quiz bowl center", stretching from Northern Virginia down to Charlottesville and Richmond. To put it in perspective, any given team from the SWATA footprint is closer to at least ''four'' state capitals than they are to Richmond; most SWATA schools are closer to six or more. Furthermore, the westernmost portion of Virginia's Lee County is the only place in the U.S. where one is closer to ''nine'' other state capitals than to their own. | Teams in the SWATA footprint are continually faced with drives of 4.5 and 5+ hours to reach Virginia's "quiz bowl center", stretching from Northern Virginia down to Charlottesville and Richmond. To put it in perspective, any given team from the SWATA footprint is closer to at least ''four'' state capitals than they are to Richmond; most SWATA schools are closer to six or more. Furthermore, the westernmost portion of Virginia's Lee County is the only place in the U.S. where one is closer to ''nine'' other state capitals than to their own. | ||
− | Exacerbating that issue is a lack of funding for quiz bowl from school systems in SWVA; the region's schools have continually received far less funding than the remainder of the state, meaning that schools in SWVA tend to focus on athletics and simply "staying afloat". Many teams in the area are self-sustaining, i.e. operating with no financial contributions from their school or county school board. Thus, many SWATA tournaments feature significant discounts for new teams in their 20-20 circuit, including free entry for first-time teams (beginning in 2018-2019). SWATA's efforts to improve accessibility, team skill, and public awareness about the game have led VHSL Scholastic Bowl Commissioner Fred Campbell to dub SWVA a "hotbed of quiz bowl". | + | Exacerbating that issue is a lack of funding for quiz bowl from school systems in SWVA; the region's schools have continually received far less funding than the remainder of the state, meaning that schools in SWVA tend to focus on athletics and simply "staying afloat". Many teams in the area are self-sustaining, i.e. operating with no financial contributions from their school or county school board. Thus, many SWATA tournaments feature significant discounts for new teams in their 20-20 circuit, including free entry for first-time teams (beginning in 2018-2019). SWATA's efforts to improve accessibility, team skill, and public awareness about the game have led VHSL Scholastic Bowl Commissioner [[Fred Campbell]] to dub SWVA a "hotbed of quiz bowl". |
==2016-2017== | ==2016-2017== |
Revision as of 12:21, 1 October 2019
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President or CEO | None | |||
Location: | Virginia | |||
Status | Closed Circuit |
SWATA is a deliberately-erroneous acronym for the Southwest Virginia Academic Team Alliance, a loose organization of Scholastic Bowl and quiz bowl teams in the westernmost 13 of Virginia's counties. SWATA tournaments are currently open to schools from the counties of Lee, Scott, Wise, Dickenson, Russell, Washington, Buchanan, Smyth, Tazewell, Bland, Wythe, Grayson, and Carroll Counties, as well as the independent cities of Norton and Galax.
Founding
SWATA started as a Facebook group founded by Honaker alum Jacob Mitchell in November of 2014 as a means for schools to trade news and scores from matches, and for alumni to follow along. Quickly the group turned into an organization hub for efforts to improve the game in the region, efforts that came to fruition over the course of the 2016-2017 school year.
The first SWATA event held was an NAQT-based round robin competition between Honaker, Gate City, and Ridgeview. Despite being the only team of the three classified as a VHSL 1A school, Honaker took top prize over Gate City. The event's rules varied from the future format that SWATA would use in its NAQT events-- while later tournaments followed the straight 20/20 format with powers but no bouncebacks, the initial round robin featured no powers and bouncebacks on bonuses. SWATA tournaments are also unique in that even though games are untimed, coaches are still allowed one timeout per game.
Purpose
In Fall 2016, SWATA organized its first tournaments with the goal of alleviating a number of issues that local teams had-- primarily travel time and entry fees. While these tournaments were unable to combat the region's primary issue-- a general lack of administrative support and understanding of quiz bowl-- reducing drive times and entry fees opened the door to several local teams that were interested in playing, but were unable to take lengthy road trips.
Southwest Virginia's primary barrier to the remainder of Virginia's quiz bowl circuit is lack of reasonable access. Prior to 2007, virtually no ACF-style quiz bowl tournaments were played in the region-- even when including "Greater SWVA" (the New River Valley and Roanoke). Once tournaments did begin to appear in Greater SWVA, teams with the fiscal means and administrative support were able to travel 2-2.5 hours to the New River Valley and compete, but usually no more than twice per year.
Teams in the SWATA footprint are continually faced with drives of 4.5 and 5+ hours to reach Virginia's "quiz bowl center", stretching from Northern Virginia down to Charlottesville and Richmond. To put it in perspective, any given team from the SWATA footprint is closer to at least four state capitals than they are to Richmond; most SWATA schools are closer to six or more. Furthermore, the westernmost portion of Virginia's Lee County is the only place in the U.S. where one is closer to nine other state capitals than to their own.
Exacerbating that issue is a lack of funding for quiz bowl from school systems in SWVA; the region's schools have continually received far less funding than the remainder of the state, meaning that schools in SWVA tend to focus on athletics and simply "staying afloat". Many teams in the area are self-sustaining, i.e. operating with no financial contributions from their school or county school board. Thus, many SWATA tournaments feature significant discounts for new teams in their 20-20 circuit, including free entry for first-time teams (beginning in 2018-2019). SWATA's efforts to improve accessibility, team skill, and public awareness about the game have led VHSL Scholastic Bowl Commissioner Fred Campbell to dub SWVA a "hotbed of quiz bowl".
2016-2017
SWATA’s primary business in 2016-2017 has been the organization of a series of Saturday 20/20-formatted quiz bowl tournaments that were run at Honaker, Gate City, Richlands, and Tazewell. A fifth Trash tournament was run at Virginia High School (Bristol), and was opened to teams from outside of the Alliance as well as competitors of all ages.
The 2016-17 SWATA series produced nine NAQT national-level qualifying teams as well as six PACE NSC qualifiers. Four teams attended national-level tournaments as a result, with Honaker, Tazewell, and George Wythe attending NAQT SSNCT, and Gate City attending HSNCT. Tazewell would finish 12th at SSNCT, with a truncated Honaker lineup tying for 41st (T-19th in very small schools), and George Wythe finishing just outside the playoffs at 49th. Gate City's trip to HSNCT, also with a truncated lineup, resulted in a 3-7 record, good for 273rd.
Honaker's Caleb Perkins would finish as the #19 scorer at the 2017 SSNCT, making him the first player from Virginia's 12 westernmost counties to ever post a Top-20 individual finish at the national level. He also finished as the #12 individual among NAQT's new Very Small School-classified teams.
2017-2018
SWATA continued its 20/20 NAQT tournament circuit, albeit with some changes in the schedule. With an excellent location at Bristol and the added experience of hosting the first-ever SWATA Trash tournament, Virginia High volunteered to host the annual November tournament. With Richlands unable to host again, Honaker opted to take the December hosting slot, with Gate City hosting the second Legion Memorial Invitational Tournament in October, and Tazewell retaining January for its Bulldog Invitational Tournament.
Some SWATA schools continued to play outside events, with Gate City and Central (Wise) traveling to Oak Ridge, TN for the Secret City Classic. Gate City's Dylan Cox was named an NAQT High School Player of the Week for his performance at the tournament, a first for any SWATA player. Tazewell and Honaker played in the annual Cave Spring Invitational (Honaker's 10th straight appearance at CSI), where Tazewell finished 4th place under the leadership of John Brown, the second SWATA player to be named an NAQT High School Player of the Week, and 2018's SWATA Player of the Year.
Both Tazewell and Gate City competed at the 2018 HSNCT; Gate City finished with a record of 4-6, while Tazewell finished 3-7.
2018-2019
At the start of 2018-19, more than half of the schools in SWVA had participated in at least one SWATA event-- a sign of significant progress since only a handful of schools in the region had played 20/20 format prior to SWATA's creation. The third year of circuit play brought Richlands back into the hosting rotation as Tazewell ceased SWATA participation. Honaker took top honors in each of the three events (the 4th being their own Steele Memorial Invitational), making them the second team to capture the SWATA "triple crown"; Honaker's Aidan Cook-- the eventual 2019 SWATA Player of the Year-- was also honored by being the third NAQT High School Player of the Week to come from a school in the circuit.
Three SWATA schools participated in national tournaments: Castlewood and Lebanon played at the PACE 2019 NSC, and Gate City played in NAQT's 2019 HSNCT.
Circuit History
Date | Tournament Name | Champion | Runner-Up | 3rd | 4th |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jan. 14, 2016 | SWATA NAQT Round Robin | Honaker (2-0) | Gate City (1-1) | Ridgeview (0-2) | None |
Oct. 15, 2016 | The Redbud Invitational (Honaker) | Tazewell (9-1) | Gate City A (9-2) | Ridgeview A (8-3) | George Wythe (7-3) |
Nov. 12, 2016 | Legion Memorial Invitational (Gate City) | Tazewell (9-0) | Honaker A (8-1) | Ridgeview A (7-2) | Virginia High (6-3) |
Dec. 3, 2016 | Tornado Invitational (Richlands) | Tazewell (9-0) | Gate City B (7-1) | Ridgeview A (6-3) | Gate City A (5-3), Honaker (5-4), Grundy A (5-4) |
Jan. 14, 2017 | Bulldog Invitational (Tazewell) | Honaker A (10-0) | Central A (9-1) | Gate City A (8-2) | Grundy A (7-3) |
Oct. 28, 2017 | Legion Memorial Invitational II (Gate City) | Tazewell A (9-0) | Grundy A (8-1) | Honaker A (5-4) | Lebanon A (4-5) (tiebreak by PPG) |
Nov. 11, 2017 | B.E.A.R.C.A.T. (Virginia High) | Tazewell A (9-0) | Gate City A (8-1) | Grundy A (7-2) | Honaker A (6-3) |
Dec. 16, 2017 | Steele Memorial Invitational (Honaker) | Tazewell (7-0) | Richlands A (5-2) | Honaker (4-3) | Virginia High (3-4) |
Jan. 6, 2018 | Bulldog Invitational Tournament II (Tazewell) | Gate City A (8-1) | Grundy A (8-1) | Honaker A (7-2) | Gate City B (7-2) |
Oct. 13, 2018 | Steele Memorial Invitational II (Honaker) | Grundy A (9-1) | Lebanon A (8-2) | Grundy C (7-2) | Castlewood A (6-3) |
Nov. 10, 2018 | Legion Memorial Invitational III (Gate City) | Honaker A (8-0) | Castlewood A (5-3) | Abingdon A (6-2) | Lebanon A (4-4) |
Dec. 15, 2018 | State Line Showdown (Virginia High) | Honaker A (9-1) | Gate City A (7-3) | Grundy A (8-2) | Richlands A (5-5) |
Jan. 5, 2019 | Tornado Invitational II (Richlands) | Honaker A (9-0) | Honaker B (8-2) | Gate City (7-3) | Lebanon (5-4) |
Oct. 12, 2019 | Steele Memorial Invitational III (Honaker) | ||||
Nov. 9, 2019 | Legion Memorial Invitational IV (Gate City) | ||||
Dec. 14, 2019 | State Line Showdown II (Virginia High) | ||||
Jan. 4, 2020 | Tornado Invitational III (Richlands) |
All-SWATA Awards
Beginning with the 2018-2019 season, SWATA required players to participate in a minimum of two SWATA circuit events; previous years had allowed for players to be included on All-SWATA Teams based on either VHSL or SWATA circuit performances.
Superlatives
Year | Player of the Year | Top Senior | Top Junior | Top Sophomore | Top Freshman | Top 8th Grade |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2017 | Dylan Cox (Gate City) | Not awarded | Not awarded | Not awarded | Not awarded | Not awarded |
2018 | John Brown (Tazewell) | John Brown (Tazewell) | McKenna Jordan (Castlewood) | Aidan Cook (Honaker) | Ross Stokes (Gate City) | McKenzie Sykes (Honaker) |
2019 | Aidan Cook (Honaker) | Not awarded | Not awarded | Not awarded | Not awarded | Not awarded |
SWATA 1st Team
Year | 1st Team All-SWATA |
---|---|
2017 | Dylan Cox (Gate City), Ali Qureshi (Central), Lindsay Barton (Honaker), Dakota Hill (Ridgeview) |
2018 | John Brown (Tazewell), Dylan Cox (Gate City), Aidan Cook (Honaker), Malcolm Huguenin (Central) |
2019 | Aidan Cook (Honaker), Ross Stokes (Gate City), Christa Potter (Lebanon), McKenna Jordan (Castlewood) |
SWATA 2nd Team
Year | 2nd Team All-SWATA |
---|---|
2017 | Caleb Perkins (Honaker), John Brown (Tazewell), Griffin McAvoy (Tazewell), Elizabeth Shelton (VA High) |
2018 | Michael Church (Grundy), Andrew Helton (Gate City), McKenna Jordan (Castlewood), Sean Simmons (Richlands) |
2019 | John Frazier (Abingdon), McKenzie Sykes (Honaker), Caleb Bales (Richlands), Lucy Heffinger (Virginia) |
"Member" Schools
- Honaker (founder)
- Gate City (founder)
- Richlands (founder)
- Tazewell (founder)
- Ridgeview (founder)
- Virginia High School
- Castlewood
- Lebanon
- Grundy
- Abingdon
- Chilhowie
- Central (Wise)
- Lee
- Holston
- Carroll County
- Union (one SWATA appearance)
- George Wythe (one SWATA appearance)
- Eastside (one SWATA appearance)
Key People
- Jacob Mitchell
- Chuck Pearson
- Charlie Perkins
- Sarah Whisenhunt
- Alex Tabor
- Noah Ashbrook
- Adrian White
- Alex Zachwieja
- Dustin Keith
- Brittany Hale
- Caleb Perkins
- Carrie Deel