Eric Mukherjee
Eric Mukherjee | |
Noted subjects | General, History, Science, Japan, World Mythology, and Comic Books |
Current college | University of Pennsylvania (2010-) |
Past colleges | Brown |
High school | Washburn Rural High School |
Stats | HDWhite • NAQT |
Eric Mukherjee is a multiple-choice genius, political dissident, and Grand Guru of Science. Eric is the best biology and chemistry player in the history of the game and is often considered the best overall science player ever [1]. Eric played as an undergraduate at Brown helping them to several second place finishes at ACF Nationals and is currently an MD-PhD student at the University of Pennsylvania. After nine years of serious play and individual distinction without any national titles (including close 2nd-place finishes every year from 2007 through 2010), Eric finally led the winning team at 2015 ACF Nationals. Eric has also been acknowledged as "the single most sought-after CO teammate," having been a key player on the winning teams in 2008, 2012, 2014, and 2016 (having edited in 2015 and not played in 2011 or 2017), taking second place in 2009.
Undergraduate Career
Eric was previously a student at Brown, where he served as vice president of the club after randomly running into Jerry Vinokurov in the mailroom. Despite invariably getting dragged into Jerry's crazy transportation schemes, he respectfully referred/refers to him as "fearless leader"; the pair formed a solid one-two punch. He helped the team to two 2nd place finishes at ACF nationals and high finishes elsewhere.
He is known for maintaining his good humor under most circumstances; notable exceptions include the Boston mirror of Moon Pie 2007, where he and teammate Dennis Jang, a model of level-headedness, almost spontaneously combusted due to the sheer amount of funn. The experience gave him a burning desire to not only get revenge on MIT A, but also write a good tournament to erase the memory. He accomplished both at Deep Bench 2007 at Brandeis and with EFT2, respectively.
His junior and senior year also saw several notable victories (mainly a 2nd place finish at ACF Nationals 2008), though he was forced to miss both nationals his senior year due to interviews. During that time, he managed to win Chicago Open 2008 on a team with Matt Weiner, Jerry Vinokurov, and Jonathan Magin and placed 2nd in CO 2009 with Ted Gioia, Dallas Simons, and Jerry Vinokurov while tying Vinokurov in scoring in the latter instance.
Graduate Career
His time at Penn has seen somewhat of a decrease in his playing time, but he managed to chock up some impressive wins while leading Penn to a third place finish at the 2010 ICT. After spending the 2011 nationals season within the death grip of a hospital ward (as a student, not a patient), he returned to active competition in 2012, leading a team of Saajid Moyen, Patrick Liao, and James Lasker - two freshmen and a sophomore - to a 4th place finish at 2012 ACF Nationals.
The intervening years saw several high-top-bracket finishes for Penn A, with no finals appearances. The acquisition of Dallas Simons led Penn to more high finishes over the next two years, though Simons was later replaced by geography/CE specialist Chris Chiego for the 2014-15 season. After much focused studying and with key contributions from all four players, Penn A managed to make it to the finals of both national tournaments in 2015, winning ACF Nationals against strong teams from Chicago, UVA, Stanford, Maryland, and Michigan.
Apart from his leadership of Penn A, Eric also contributed to winning teams at Chicago Open 2012 and 2014, the latter helping UVA complete their Triple Crown.
While his proficiency in science and Asia is universally acknowledged, he has developed into an dangerous generalist who is especially knowledgeable about visual art, mythology, and history.
Writing
Eric is one of the best--and most sought after--science writers in contemporary quizbowl. He served as the head editor for the Lederberg Memorial Science and its sequel, was a co-editor of the 2009 ACF Regionals, and edited science for the 2007 Chicago Open, Gaddis II, The Emergency, several iterations of Penn Bowl and PACE NSC, and 2015 Chicago Open. He's currently working on MSTP, a tournament inspired by his time in medical school
His writing outside of science has often been overlooked, but he has been one of the most important writers of accessible tournaments; he edited several successful incarnations of the Early Fall Tournament by nitpicking every question to death, was the driving force behind the second iteration of THUNDER, and several editions of Penn Bowl, despite his best efforts to try to hand Penn Bowl off to the next generation of Penn students. However, his writing has also often featured vanity trash questions on comic books, deep cuts from the Star Wars expanded universe, and similar "geek trash" interests.
Eric was also the central figure in the 5th of March Incident, and subsequently (with Matt Jackson) helped edit NHBB's national tournaments in 2015. He has occasionally contributed to NHBB, PACE, and HSAPQ since then.
Nicknames/Appellations
- DE
- Dark Eric
- Mukherjee
- Lord Eric Mukherjee
- Mukherjesus
Writing/Editing Work
College
- Chicago Open 2007 - Biology and Chemistry
- EFT2
- Titanomachy - Biology and Chemistry
- TIT 2008 - Biology and Chemistry
- 2008 Wallace Stevens Memorial Literature Singles
- 2008 Chicago Open Literature Singles
- EFT3
- The Emergency - Biology and Chemistry
- 2009 ACF Regionals - Co-head editor
- Gaddis II - Science
- Lederberg Memorial Science 1 and 2 - Head Editor
- EFT4 - Contributor
- THUNDER - Science, Visual Art, Mythology
- EFT5 - Contributor
- THUNDER II - Science, Visual Art, Mythology, World History
- 2010 ACF Winter - Science
- 2010 Penn Bowl - Oversight
- 2011 Minnesota Open - Science
- Penn-ance - Head Editor
- VCU Closed - Science editor
- Penn Bowl 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2017 -- Head Editor
- 3M History Tournament
- Chicago Open 2015
High School
- PACE NSC - Head Editor 2012, 2013, contributor, 2014, 2015, 2016
- HSAPQ
- NHBB Regional A-Set and Nationals sets, 2015
Notable Tournaments
- AVOGADROS NUMBER - 1st place (with James Bradbury, Austin Brownlow, and Sam Bailey)
- 2015 ACF Nationals - 1st place (with Saajid Moyen, Chris Chiego, and Patrick Liao)
- 2013 ACF Regionals - 1st place (with Saajid Moyen, Dallas Simons, and Patrick Liao)
- 2013 SCT - 2nd place (with Saajid Moyen, Dallas Simons, and Patrick Liao)
- 2012 QUARK - 1st place (with Saajid Moyen, Dallas Simons, and Patrick Liao)
- 2012 KABO - 1st place (with Matt Weiner, Ted Gioia, and Cody Voight)
- 2012 Chicago Open - 1st place (with Matt Bollinger, John Lawrence, and Chris Ray)
- 2012 ACF Nationals - 4th place (with Saajid Moyen, Patrick Liao, James Lasker, and Samuel Passaglia), 3rd scorer
- 2012 ICT - 11th place (with Saajid Moyen, Patrick Liao, James Lasker, and Samuel Passaglia), 3rd scorer
- 2012 ACF Regionals - 3rd place (with Saajid Moyen, Patrick Liao, James Lasker, and Samuel Passaglia), 1st scorer
- 2012 SCT Mid-Atlantic - 2nd place (with Saajid Moyen, Patrick Liao, Samuel Passaglia, and Jon Moller)
- 2011 MAGNI - 3rd place (with Saajid Moyen, Patrick Liao, and James Lasker)
- 2011 TIT Northeast Mirror - 1st place (with Linna Duan and rotating Yale freshmen)
- 2011 VCU Open - 1st place (with Ted Gioia, Chris Ray, and Ike Jose)
- 2010 Chicago Open - 4th place (with Rob Carson, Trevor Davis, and John Lawrence)
- 2010 ACF Nationals - Tied for 5th place (with Sam Brown, Sid Chandrasekar, Chris White, and Mehdi Razvi)
- 2010 ICT - 2nd place (with Sam Brown, Sid Chandrasekar, and Chris White)
- 2010 Harvard International - 2nd place (with Chris Ray, Hannah Kirsch, and Andrew Lim)
- 2010 ACF Regionals at Maryland - 1st place (with Sam Brown, Sid Chandrasekar, and Chris White)
- 2010 SCT at Maryland - 2nd place (with Sam Brown, Sid Chandrasekar, and Chris White)
- 2009 TIT 2.0 - 2nd place (with Sam Brown, Sid Chandrasekar, and Chris White)
- 2009 FIST Harvard Mirror - 2nd place (with Ted Gioia, Bruce Arthur, and Dallas Simons)
- 2009 Minnesota Open - 1st place (with Jerry Vinokurov, Guy Tabachnick)
- 2009 VCU Open - 2nd place (with Chris Ray, Ike Jose, and sometimes Evan Adams), 3rd scorer
- 2009 Chicago Open - 2nd place (with Jerry Vinokurov, Ted Gioia, and Dallas Simons), 8th scorer
- 2009 Missouri Open Maryland mirror - 1st place (with Ted Gioia, Dan Puma, and Dallas Simons), 3rd scorer
- 2009 SCT northeast - 1st place (with Jerry Vinokurov, Dennis Jang, and Daniel Klein), 3rd scorer
- HIPPIE (2009 MUT mirror at Hampshire College) - 1st place (with Linna Duan)
- 2009 TIT - 1st place (with Jerry Vinokurov)
- 2008 Minnesota Open MIT Mirror - 1st place (with Jerry Vinokurov), 3rd scorer
- 2009 ACF Winter Northeast - 1st place (with Aaron Rosenberg), 1st scorer
- 2009 Penn Bowl - 2nd place (with Jerry Vinokurov, Daniel Klein, Aaron Rosenberg, and Dennis Jang)
- 2009 ACF Fall Northeast - 1st place (with Aaron Rosenberg, Dennis Jang, and Daniel Klein), 1st scorer
- 2008 Chicago Open - 1st place (with Jonathan Magin, Matt Weiner, and Jerry Vinokurov), tied for 6th scorer
- 2008 ACF Nationals at Brandeis - 2nd place (with Jerry Vinokurov, Dennis Jang, and Aaron Rosenberg), 12th scorer
- 2008 ICT at WashU - 4th place (with Jerry Vinokurov, Dennis Jang, and Aaron Rosenberg)
- FICHTE 2008 at Maryland - 2nd place (with Ted Gioia, Shantanu Jha, and Adam Marshall), 2nd individual
- Harvard Novice - 1st place in solo/duo division (with Linna Duan)
- ACF Regionals 2008 - 1st place (with Jerry Vinokurov, Dennis Jang, and Aaron Rosenberg)
- BoB 2007 - 1st place (with Jerry Vinokurov, Jonathan Magin, and Charles Meigs), 6th individual
- PARFAIT III - 2nd place, aneurysm (with Jerry Vinokurov, Dennis Jang, and Lisa Qing)
- Illinois Open 2007 - 1st place (As part of "Another Victim of the Maleocentric Maleocracy") Stats
- ACF Fall 2007 - 1st or 2nd place (with Aaron Rosenberg, Lisa Qing, special playoff guest Jerry Vinokurov), 1st Individual Stats
- Deep Bench 2007 Brandeis Mirror - 2nd place, 3rd Individual in Quads A Stats
- ACF Nationals 2007 - 2nd place (with Jerry Vinokurov, Dennis Jang) Stats
- ACF Regionals 2007 - 1st place (with Micha Elsner, Dennis Jang, Marko Djuric)
- ACF Fall 2006 - 3rd place (with Sofia Pellon, Phil Grice, Marko Djuric)