Difference between revisions of "Ottawa Hybrid Tournament"

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==2013==
 
==2013==
The hybrid returned to [[Ottawa]] and was led by [[Jordan Palmer]] and included an editing team of McKendy, Dennis Beeby, Shelby Robert, and Radu Popescu. The packet-submission tournament was announced only a month before the event, resulting in some very tight deadline for early submission discounts. A freelance team of students Rein Otsason from [[Toronto]], Huma Zafar from [[Waterloo]] and adults Eric Smith and Aaron Dos Remedios, and Eric Smith defeated a team officially entered as McGill with members from [[Carleton]], [[McGill]], and [[Lisgar]]. Eric Smith was the highest scorer.  
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The hybrid was edited by a team of Dennis Beeby, Melinda Mah, Brendan McKendy, [[Jordan Palmer]], Radu Popescu, and Shelby Robert,. The packet-submission tournament was announced only a month before the event, resulting in some very tight deadline for early submission discounts. A freelance team of students Rein Otsason from [[Toronto]], Huma Zafar from [[Waterloo]] and adults Eric Smith and Aaron Dos Remedios, and Eric Smith defeated a team of players from [[Carleton]], [[McGill]], and [[Lisgar]]. Eric Smith was the highest scorer.
  
 
[[Category:Ottawa]]
 
[[Category:Ottawa]]
 
[[Category:Tournaments]] [[Category:Hybrid tournaments]]
 
[[Category:Tournaments]] [[Category:Hybrid tournaments]]

Revision as of 18:30, 30 November 2013

The Ottawa Hybrid Tournament is open to the public, more or less, and is held every March at the University of Ottawa. It is a packet-submission tournament, but organizer Ben Smith usually ends up writing most of it. It began in 2005 as a quick cash grab for funds to travel to an ICT, but has steadily gone down in price and up in quality. It is sometimes mirrored by UBC and Georgia.

2005 OHT

"11-2" from Toronto won Division I. They beat Rochester, McGill, and professional player Paul Paquet. "Vexillologists Anonymous" from Rochester won Division II over teams from Ottawa, Carleton, and Waterloo. Fourteen teams attended.[1]

2006 OHT: The Broadbent Invitational

"McGill B" won. They beat teams from Carleton, Ottawa, Rochester, and Paul Paquet. Nine teams attended.[2]

2007 OHT

Paul Paquet's team, "TriviaHallofFame.com", tied a Toronto team for first. Other teams came from Carleton, McGill, Queen's, Rochester, and Lisgar.[3] Sixteen teams attended, which was then the record for an independent event in Ontario.

2008 OHT

"The Leafs Will Make the Playoffs" won the tournament. They were a mixed team of Jordan Palmer, Brock Stephenson, and Matt Trudgen. They beat teams from McGill, Lisgar, Carleton, and Ottawa. Eleven teams attended.[4] The tournament was mirrored at Western.

2009 OHT

"Jordan" won the tournament. They were "The Leafs Will Make the Playoffs" plus Neil Walford. The other teams were from McGill, Ottawa, and Lisgar[5]. The tournament was mirrored at Guelph, where it was won by "Playgirl Models of the 1990s," a team from McMaster. The tournament had notable toss-ups about April Wine, Wii Golf, and Wizards of the Coast.

2010 OHT

Partly in response to the 2009 VETO, the 2010 tournament was overhauled with an editing team of Smith, Aaron Dos Remedios, and Brendan McKendy. Jordan's unnamed team won again at the Ottawa site [6]. The tournament was mirrored at Waterloo, where it was won by a team from Toronto.

2011 BLASTOISE

Ottawa did not the Hybrid this year. The annual March hybrid tournament was intended to be be run jointly by two high schools named The Bell Lisgar Academic & Sexy Trash Open Inside the South-East (BLASTOISE). The same writing, editing, and fee structure was used. Ultimately, Bell gave up their editorial position and the tournament was run solely by Lisgar. Jordan Palmer won the tournament again. Ottawa was second. BLASTOISE was mirrored in several sites in the United States.

2012

No hybrid was held this year.

2013

The hybrid was edited by a team of Dennis Beeby, Melinda Mah, Brendan McKendy, Jordan Palmer, Radu Popescu, and Shelby Robert,. The packet-submission tournament was announced only a month before the event, resulting in some very tight deadline for early submission discounts. A freelance team of students Rein Otsason from Toronto, Huma Zafar from Waterloo and adults Eric Smith and Aaron Dos Remedios, and Eric Smith defeated a team of players from Carleton, McGill, and Lisgar. Eric Smith was the highest scorer.