Difference between revisions of "Evan Adams"

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'''Evan Adams''' graduated from [[Maggie Walker]] in 2007, played for [[VCU]] for four years, and attended law school at the [[University of Virginia]]. Due to unparalleled dominance on architecture questions, the act of winning an architecture tournament is colloquially known as "pulling an Adams."
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'''Evan Adams''' graduated from [[Maggie Walker]] in 2007, played for [[VCU]] for four years, and attended law school at the [[University of Virginia]]. Due to his unparalleled dominance on architecture questions, the act of winning an architecture tournament is colloquially known as "pulling an Adams."
  
 
During his time as a writer for [[HSAPQ]], Evan broke the single-day question writing record by writing 121 questions for [[2011 NASAT]] on Sunday, May 29, 2011. (He had over 200 questions total in that set.) His other credentials include 2011 [[VCU Open]], the head editorship of 2010 [[ACF Fall]], and [[2014 ACF Regionals]].
 
During his time as a writer for [[HSAPQ]], Evan broke the single-day question writing record by writing 121 questions for [[2011 NASAT]] on Sunday, May 29, 2011. (He had over 200 questions total in that set.) His other credentials include 2011 [[VCU Open]], the head editorship of 2010 [[ACF Fall]], and [[2014 ACF Regionals]].

Revision as of 22:21, 4 August 2014

Evan Adams
Eadams.PNG
Noted subjects Literature, History, Architecture
Current college UVA
Past colleges VCU (2008-2011)
High school Maggie Walker (2004-2007)
Stats HDWhite • NAQT

Evan Adams graduated from Maggie Walker in 2007, played for VCU for four years, and attended law school at the University of Virginia. Due to his unparalleled dominance on architecture questions, the act of winning an architecture tournament is colloquially known as "pulling an Adams."

During his time as a writer for HSAPQ, Evan broke the single-day question writing record by writing 121 questions for 2011 NASAT on Sunday, May 29, 2011. (He had over 200 questions total in that set.) His other credentials include 2011 VCU Open, the head editorship of 2010 ACF Fall, and 2014 ACF Regionals.

After being part of the tournament winning Virginia team at 2014 ACF Nationals, Evan became the first player to ever complete the Grand Slam by winning HSNCT, PACE NSC, ICT, and ACF Nationals. He then followed it up by winning 2014 Chicago Open for good measure.