Difference between revisions of "FST"

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| AltNames    = FST
 
| AltNames    = FST
 
| Season      = 2018-19
 
| Season      = 2018-19
| School      = [[Florida]], [[UCF]], [[NCF]]
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| School      = [[Florida]], [[UCF]], [[New College]]
 
| HeadEd      = [[Taylor Harvey]]
 
| HeadEd      = [[Taylor Harvey]]
 
| Difficulty  = Collegiate novice
 
| Difficulty  = Collegiate novice
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| AltNames    = FST
 
| AltNames    = FST
 
| Season      = 2017-18
 
| Season      = 2017-18
| School      = [[Florida]], [[UCF]], [[NCF]]
+
| School      = [[Florida]], [[UCF]], [[New College]]
 
| HeadEd      =
 
| HeadEd      =
 
| Difficulty  = Collegiate novice
 
| Difficulty  = Collegiate novice

Revision as of 22:23, 30 March 2021

Florida Spring Tournament (FST) was a collegiate novice tournament organized by members of the Florida team as a spiritual successor to SUN. It was first run in the 2017-2018 season, and has had two iterations to date.

2019

Florida Spring Tournament
FST
Competition season 2018-19
School(s) Florida, UCF, New College
Head editor(s) Taylor Harvey
Difficulty Collegiate novice
First mirror March 23, 2019
Announcement link
Packets link

In the spring 2019 season, FST was head edited by Taylor Harvey. It had editors Jonathen Settle, Alex Shaw, and Tracy Mirkin and featured writers from Florida, UCF, NCF, Auburn, Reformed Theological Seminary Orlando, and Colorado. The tournament had 8 physical mirrors in the US and Canada, as well as one online mirror and a high school mirror.

The April 27, 2019 Amherst mirror of FST is likely the only college tournament ever hosted by Amherst College and certainly the only one since the club was revived in 2013.

2018

Florida Spring Tournament
FST
Competition season 2017-18
School(s) Florida, UCF, New College
Head editor(s)
Difficulty Collegiate novice
First mirror March 17, 2018
Announcement link
Packets link

In the spring 2018 season, FST had editors Taylor Harvey, Jonathen Settle, Alex Shaw, and Peter Torres and featured writers Tracy Mirkin, Yonathan Stone, Leo Law, Katia Diamond, Chandler West, Bradley Kirksey, and Zach Foster. The tournament had 7 physical mirrors in the US.