Difference between revisions of "Multi-editing achievements"

From QBWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 59: Line 59:
 
===In any role===
 
===In any role===
 
* [[Matt Weiner]]: Fall (2005, 2006<ref>It appears that documentation of the 2005 and 2006 Fall editor teams does not exist, but the ACF qbwiki pages appears to suggest that [[Eric Kwartler]] served as the head editor of those tournaments.</ref>), Regionals (2008*, 2010), Nationals (2008, 2009*)
 
* [[Matt Weiner]]: Fall (2005, 2006<ref>It appears that documentation of the 2005 and 2006 Fall editor teams does not exist, but the ACF qbwiki pages appears to suggest that [[Eric Kwartler]] served as the head editor of those tournaments.</ref>), Regionals (2008*, 2010), Nationals (2008, 2009*)
 +
* [[Mike Sorice]]: Fall (2007*), Regionals (2005*, 2006*), Nationals (2013)
 
* [[Auroni Gupta]]: Fall (2009), Regionals (2012, 2018*), Nationals (2014, 2019*)
 
* [[Auroni Gupta]]: Fall (2009), Regionals (2012, 2018*), Nationals (2014, 2019*)
 
* [[Ted Gioia]]: Fall (2008), Regionals (2010, 2011), Nationals (2014)
 
* [[Ted Gioia]]: Fall (2008), Regionals (2010, 2011), Nationals (2014)

Revision as of 17:30, 5 September 2021

Analogous to Multi-championship achievements, it is possible to recognize multi-editing achievements for editors who have worked on several major events. This page originally marked Andrew Hart's attempt to categorize and recognize these multi-editing achievements for posterity, although others are welcome to coin their own multi-editing achievements (or add/update to the lists of people who have accomplished the existing ones).

Unless otherwise stated, each list is presented in the order in which the accomplishment was achieved.

Triple Crown of Editing

The Triple Crown of Editing refers to editing each of the tournaments that make up quizbowl's Modern Triple Crown: ACF Nationals, NAQT ICT (DI), and Chicago Open. Five editors are known to have completed the Triple Crown of Editing.

As head editor[1]

  • Subash Maddipoti: Nationals (2001), ICT, Chicago Open (2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005)
  • Andrew Yaphe: Nationals (2001, 2005, 2006, 2007), ICT (10+ times), Chicago Open (1997, 1998, 1999, 2000)
  • Matt Bollinger: Nationals (2017, 2019*[2], 2021), ICT (2016, 2018), Chicago Open (2013)
  • Ike Jose: Nationals (2015*, 2016, 2017*, 2019*), ICT (2015*, 2016*, 2017), Chicago Open (2014*, 2017, 2021*)
  • Andrew Hart: Nationals (2018, 2019*, 2021*), ICT (2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2021), Chicago Open (2014)

In any role

  • Billy Busse: Nationals (2015, 2016), ICT (2016, 2017, 2019, 2021), Chicago Open (2017)

Near misses

  • John Lawrence will complete the Triple Crown by editing 2022 ACF Nationals
  • Many others have completed two of the three legs of the Triple Crown

In a single year

Grand Slam of Editing

The Grand Slam of Editing refers to editing each of the four overall championships in quizbowl, which make up the Grand Slam: ACF Nationals, ICT (DI), HSNCT, and NSC. Because a comprehensive list of NSC editors does not appear to be publicly available, the lists of those who have achieved this accomplishment are likely not comprehensive and may be inaccurate.

As head editor

In any role

Near misses

  • John Lawrence will complete the Grand Slam by editing 2022 ACF Nationals
  • Many others have completed three of the four legs of the Grand Slam

ACF Editing Triple Crown

The ACF Editing Triple Crown refers to editing each of ACF's three flagship events ACF Fall, ACF Regionals, and ACF Nationals. It does not include ACF Winter, which ACF ran in 2009-10 before canceling and has resumed running in 2020 (see ACF Editing Quadruple Crown below).

As head editor

  • Subash Maddipoti: Fall (2004), Regionals (2001, 2003), Nationals (2001)
  • Andrew Yaphe: Fall (2005[3]), Regionals (2000, 2005), Nationals (2001, 2005, 2006, 2007)
  • Jonathan Magin: Fall (2007*, 2017), Regionals (2009), Nationals (2009*, 2011*, 2012, 2013)
  • Andrew Hart: Fall (2007*, 2008, 2013*), Regionals (2017), Nationals (2018, 2019*, 2021*)

In any role

  • Matt Weiner: Fall (2005, 2006[4]), Regionals (2008*, 2010), Nationals (2008, 2009*)
  • Mike Sorice: Fall (2007*), Regionals (2005*, 2006*), Nationals (2013)
  • Auroni Gupta: Fall (2009), Regionals (2012, 2018*), Nationals (2014, 2019*)
  • Ted Gioia: Fall (2008), Regionals (2010, 2011), Nationals (2014)
  • Rob Carson: Fall (2008), Regionals (2011*, 2013, 2019), Nationals (2015, 2016*)
  • Evan Adams: Fall (2009, 2010*), Regionals (2014*), Nationals (2017)
  • Stephen Liu: Fall (2012, 2013*), Regionals (2015, 2017), Nationals (2018)

Near Misses

  • Carsten Gehring has edited Fall and Regionals and served as Nationals proofreader
  • John Lawrence will complete the ACF Triple Crown by editing 2022 ACF Nationals
  • Many others have edited two of the three legs of the Triple Crown

ACF Editing Quadruple Crown

The ACF Editing Quadruple Crown refers to editing each of ACF's four tournaments: ACF Fall, ACF Winter, ACF Regionals, and ACF Nationals. Because ACF Winter has only run three times, and had not run before 2009, the ACF Quadruple Crown is less attainable than the ACF Triple Crown.

As head editor

  • Andrew Hart: Fall (2007, 2008*, 2013), Winter (2010), Regionals (2017), Nationals (2018, 2019*, 2021)

In any role

  • Rob Carson: Fall (2008), Regionals (2011*, 2013, 2019), Winter (2010), Nationals (2015, 2016*)

Near misses

In addition to the ACF Triple Crown winners listed above, the following people have edited three of the four legs of the ACF Quadruple Crown (missing leg in parentheses):

College Championship Four-Pack

The College Championship Four-Pack refers to editing each of the four annual DI qualifying and championship tournaments: ACF Regionals, ACF Nationals, SCT, and ICT.

As head editor

  • Subash Maddipoti: Regionals (2001, 2003), Nationals (2001), SCT, ICT
  • Andrew Yaphe: Regionals (2000, 2005), Nationals (2001, 2005, 2006, 2007), SCT, ICT
  • Andrew Hart: Regionals (2017), Nationals (2018, 2019*, 2021*), SCT (2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020), ICT (2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2021)
  • Rob Carson: Regionals (2011, 2013*, 2019*), Nationals (2015*, 2016), SCT (2020), ICT (2021)

In the same year

No one has edited each Four-Pack event in the same year, but two editors have completed three of the four legs in a single year.

Near misses[5]

NAQT Championship Bingo

An NAQT Championship Bingo consists of editing each of NAQT's five annual spring championship sets: MSNCT, SSNCT, HSNCT, ICT (DII), and ICT (DI). (The remaining NAQT championships are based on existing sets and do not involve significant independent editorial work.)

Jeff Hoppes, Seth Teitler, and Samer Ismail are the only people to have completed an NAQT Bingo.

High School Championship Double

The High School Championship Double consists of editing both major overall high school championship sets: HSNCT and NSC. Listings are in alphabetical order and may not be comprehensive, especially for NSC, for which a comprehensive list of editors is not available.

As head editor

In any role

Most times editing marquee college circuit events

These are possibly non-comprehensive attempts to list the people who have edited each marquee collegiate or open event 3+ times. Head editorships are denoted with an asterisk.

ACF Nationals[6]

The editors with multiple Nationals head editorships are Yaphe (4), Berdichevsky (3), Magin (2), Bollinger (2), and Westbrook (2).

Chicago Open

The editors with multiple CO head editorships are: Maddipoti (6), Yaphe (4), Westbrook (3), and Jerry Vinokurov (2) (2010 and 2015).

ACF Regionals

The editors with multiple Regionals head editorships are Subash Maddipoti (2) (2001 and 2003), Andrew Yaphe (2) (2000 and 2005).

ACF Winter

No one has edited ACF Winter 3+ times. Dennis Jang (2009 and 2010) is the only person to edit Winter more than once.

Notes

  1. NAQT has two levels of set editing that, for most sets, are each equivalent to a circuit "head editor"; the head editor notations for NAQT events represent a best effort at determining which editorial positions are equivalent to full-set head-editor jobs, although they err on the side of crediting a person for head editor work. For circuit editing teams of three or fewer without a specified head editor, each editor was considered a head editor. Because NAQT does not publicly display editing information, years have not been included, pending permission, for the years before 2011. Although it may have sometimes done so before, after 2011, NAQT has generally recognized its SCT and ICT editors publicly following the events.
  2. * For sections specifying head editors, the asterisk denotes that this role was as an associate editor; for sections specifying "any role," the asterisk denotes that this role was as a head editor. For the sections about "most times editing marquee events," the asterisk also denotes that this role was as a head editor.
  3. The ACF website lists Andrew as the head editor of Fall 2007, but this appears to be in error; it appears that Andrew worked on Fall 2005
  4. It appears that documentation of the 2005 and 2006 Fall editor teams does not exist, but the ACF qbwiki pages appears to suggest that Eric Kwartler served as the head editor of those tournaments.
  5. This list is probably not comprehensive
  6. This stretches back to 1999-2000, the first year listed on the ACF qbwiki page. It may not be comprehensive for editors who are not listed on ACF's member page (due to resigning) or on ACF's qbwiki page (which stops listing editors at 2014-15), or whose details are inaccurate on either source.