Difference between revisions of "Chicago Open"
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| [https://www.qbwiki.com/statistics/2018-chicanston-open/combined_standings.html Stats] | | [https://www.qbwiki.com/statistics/2018-chicanston-open/combined_standings.html Stats] | ||
| [[Auroni Gupta]] (head editor), [[Jacob Reed]], [[Will Holub-Moorman]], [[Jordan Brownstein]], [[Seth Teitler]], [[Eliza Grames]], [[Joey Goldman]] | | [[Auroni Gupta]] (head editor), [[Jacob Reed]], [[Will Holub-Moorman]], [[Jordan Brownstein]], [[Seth Teitler]], [[Eliza Grames]], [[Joey Goldman]] | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | [[2019 Chicago Open]]* | ||
+ | | [[Adam S. Fine]], [[Auroni Gupta]], [[Jakob Myers]], and [[Clark Smith]] | ||
+ | | [[Mike Bentley]], [[Matt Bollinger]], [[Mike Cheyne]], and [[Shan Kothari]] | ||
+ | | [https://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/5853/stats Stats] | ||
+ | | [[Chris Ray]] and [[Jacob Reed]], with [[Alston Boyd]], [[Will Holub-Moorman]], [[Wonyoung Jang]], [[Michael Kearney]], [[Jonathan Magin]], and [[Sriram Pendyala]] | ||
|} | |} | ||
Revision as of 20:42, 3 August 2019
Chicago Open (or CO) is a summer open tournament held annually at the University of Chicago, generally occurring in the last week of July or first week of August. Its most distinguishing feature is its extremely high difficulty (far more difficult than the year's ICT or ACF Nationals), which usually makes Chicago Open the most challenging all-subject set of the calendar year.
The first Chicago Open was held in 1999 as the successor to Virginia Open, a similar tournament held at Virginia in 1997 and 1998. After many years under the stewardship of first Andrew Yaphe and then Subash Maddipotti, its editorship has rotated based on the interest and availability of well-regarded editors and players, with each new editor or editing team approved by its predecessor. After some early house-written events, CO has established itself as a true packet-submission event, for which every participating team must write a packet.
A true open tournament, Chicago Open attracts current college players, retired or graduated players, and, occasionally, ambitious high school players. Participants generally play on mixed teams not limited by school affiliation. In most years, the tournament has been a full round-robin among all participating teams, which can last well into the evening. Since 2016, the event has run a shorter schedule using preliminary brackets and crossover games due to the demands of a growing field. (This did not, however, stop the 2018 iteration from going past 11PM.) The combination of the tournament's extreme difficulty and deep field makes the assembly of a winning CO team one of the most challenging accomplishments in quizbowl.
Chicago Open typically occurs alongside several side events; these have included a semi-regular trash tournament and subject tournaments in science, history, literature, and, more recently, a variety of arts events. Since 2011, the main tournament has stood alone on Saturday.
In 2014, Andrew Hart introduced a traveling trophy (pictured right), which some member of the winning team (hypothetically) gets to keep until the next year's CO is held.
Table of Champions
* Tournament held at Northwestern and therefore sometimes called the "Evanston Open" or portmanteaux like "Chicanston Open"
† Broken stats link
Victories by Player
Number of Victories | Players |
---|---|
One Win | Albert Whited (1999), Mike Angel (2001), Dave Hamilton (2001), Chris Borglum (2003), Raj Dhuwalia (2003), Seth Kendall (2003), Kelly McKenzie (2003), Paul Litvak (2004), Matt Lafer (2006), Dave Rappaport (2006), Will Turner (2006), Sudheer Potru (2007), Jonathan Magin (2008), Jerry Vinokurov (2008), Brendan Byrne (2009), Rob Carson (2009), Kevin Koai (2010), Richard Mason (2010), Dallas Simons (2010), Chris Ray (2012), Evan Adams (2014), Matt Jackson (2015), Jordan Brownstein (2016), Jacob Reed (2016), Will Alston (2017), Shan Kothari (2018), Adam Silverman (2018) |
Two Wins | Tom Waters (1998–99), R. Hentzel (2000, 2002), Emily Pike (2000, 2002), Ezequiel Berdichevsky (2001, 2005), Mike Sorice (2005, 2007), Andrew Ullsperger (2005, 2007), Andrew Hart (2009, 2011), Selene Koo (2011, 2013), John Lawrence (2012–13), Tommy Casalaspi (2014–15), Auroni Gupta (2015, 2017), Will Nediger (2016–17) |
Three Wins | Eric Hillemann (1998, 2000, 2002), Andrew Yaphe (2001, 2004, 2006), Jeff Hoppes (2004, 2011, 2013), Seth Teitler (2004, 2011, 2013) |
Four Wins | Eric Mukherjee (2008, 2012, 2014, 2016) |
Five Wins | Matt Bollinger (2012, 2014–15, 2017–18) |
Six Wins | Matt Weiner (2005, 2007–10, 2018) |
Trivia
To the dismay of editors who labored over finals packets, a team cleared the field at every Chicago Open from 2012 through 2017.