Difference between revisions of "1999 ACF Nationals"
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+ | {{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]] | ||
+ | |site = [[Chicago]] | ||
+ | | }} | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
The '''1999 ACF Nationals''' was a national championship held at [[Chicago|the University of Chicago]]. | The '''1999 ACF Nationals''' was a national championship held at [[Chicago|the University of Chicago]]. | ||
Revision as of 22:48, 2 August 2011
1999 ACF Nationals | |
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Edited by | |
Champion | Chicago |
Runner-up | Maryland |
Third | Berkeley |
Fourth | Illinois |
High scorer | Andrew Yaphe, Chicago |
Site | Chicago |
Field | |
Stats |
The 1999 ACF Nationals was a national championship held at the University of Chicago.
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.