2023 ACF Nationals
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Champion | Georgia Tech A | |
Runner-up | Chicago A | |
Third | Cornell A | |
Fourth | WUSTL A | |
High scorer | Matt Jackson | |
Undergrad Champion | Yale | |
Undergrad Runner-up | Brown | |
Undergrad High scorer | Hari Parameswaran | |
Site | MIT | |
Field | 48 | |
Stats | [1] |
The 2023 ACF Nationals was hosted by ACF at MIT.
It was head-edited by Taylor Harvey, with Caroline Mao, Will Nediger, William Golden, Grant Peet, Michael Kearney, Hasna Karim, Adam Silverman, Jonathen Settle, Vivian Malouf, Sameer Apte, and Ganon Evans subject-editing.
After winning a play-in game against Cornell, Georgia Tech A, led by Matt Bollinger, won two games in a disadvantaged final against Chicago A to take the title. In doing so, they became the most recent back-to-back ACF champion, ending an eleven-year period in which no team successfully defended its ACF title (which Yale did in 2012).
In another repeat, Yale defeated Brown to take the undergraduate title. WUSTL B took the DII championship.
Trivia
- Due to unanticipated "travel hell" [2], Bollinger was unable to arrive at the tournament until Georgia Tech A had already played five rounds of prelims. The team went 6-1 in the prelims, taking a loss to Duke (which ultimately carried over into playoff standings) while Bollinger was absent.
- Chicago A and Chicago B both went undefeated in their respective prelim brackets. This is the first time a single school has fielded two teams that went undefeated in the prelims at a collegiate national championship. [citation needed]
- Cornell, which ultimately finished 3rd; went 5-2 and won a tiebreaker against North Carolina (also 5-2) to advance. North Carolina went 5-2 after tying Chicago B in the regular game and losing on the tiebreaker tossup; if North Carolina had won, they would have gone 6-1, which would have pushed Cornell into the second playoff bracket (and a maximum potential finish of 13th place).