Difference between revisions of "1993 ACF Nationals"
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− | The '''1993 ACF Nationals''' was the second-ever [[ACF Nationals]]. [[Chicago]], consisting of [[Peter Freeman]], [[Josh Boorstein]], [[John Sheahan]], and [[Sendhil Revuluri]] defeated [[Maryland]] in the last game of the 12-team round robin to win the tournament undefeated. | + | The '''1993 ACF Nationals''' was the second-ever [[ACF Nationals]]. [[Chicago]], consisting of [[Peter Freeman]], [[Josh Boorstein]], [[John Sheahan]], and [[Sendhil Revuluri]] defeated [[Maryland]] in the last game of the 12-team round robin to win the tournament undefeated. |
Sheahan negged the first tossup of the finals six words in with "One Thousand [sic] Years of Solitude," but Chicago rallied to win the tournament.[https://bowl.uchicago.edu/hist.html] | Sheahan negged the first tossup of the finals six words in with "One Thousand [sic] Years of Solitude," but Chicago rallied to win the tournament.[https://bowl.uchicago.edu/hist.html] |
Revision as of 15:28, 18 December 2020
1993 ACF Nationals | |
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Edited by | |
Champion | Chicago A |
Runner-up | Maryland A |
High scorer | |
Site | Maryland |
Field | 12 teams |
Stats |
The 1993 ACF Nationals was the second-ever ACF Nationals. Chicago, consisting of Peter Freeman, Josh Boorstein, John Sheahan, and Sendhil Revuluri defeated Maryland in the last game of the 12-team round robin to win the tournament undefeated.
Sheahan negged the first tossup of the finals six words in with "One Thousand [sic] Years of Solitude," but Chicago rallied to win the tournament.[1]
Tournament Recap
Chicago won the tournament by going 11-0 in a twelve-team round-robin. There was no final. Maryland finished the tournament 10-1.
External Links
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