Ultima
The Loyola Ultima is an annual tournament held in mid- to late-October at Loyola Academy in Wilmette, Illinois.
In the Days of Team Illinois
Colonel David Riley, the head coach at Loyola, started the tournament as a early-in-the-year way of discovering potential candidates for Team Illinois, especially so that he could recommend to coaches that certain outstanding players be nominated in the event that they might not be nominated otherwise. Until 2008, when the IHSSBCA ceased sponsorship of Team Illinois, the round format was based on the format of the Panasonic Academic Challenge.
Each team played three rounds, with each room having either three or four teams. Each round consisted of two periods of twenty tossup questions, and a third period of twenty-five tossup questions. After each period there was a written, themed team handout worth a total of 10, 20, and 30 points, respectively. The tossups were worth five points each in the first period, ten points each in the second, and fifteen points each in the third. There were no rebounds, and any incorrect answer results in a deduction of the full value of the question.
After each round, teams were reshuffled based on their score, with the top teams meeting in the final round to determine place.
Questions were strictly academic in nature. There were no questions on sports, pop culture, or notorious IHSA topics like agriculture, drivers ed, industrial arts, or agriculture.
Riley devised a points system which he uses in determining the teams to be issued invitations to the tournament. Points were awarded based on how well a school's varsity and frosh-soph team did the previous season. Riley then invited the top twelve schools (with the exception that Loyola Academy is automatically invited every year), and moved down the list if teams rejected their invitations. With strong demand to get in, Riley rarely had to go past 15 on his list of invitees to fill the field.
Post-Team Illinois
When in 2008 the IHSSBCA decided to stop sponsoring a team for the PAC beginning in 2009, Riley announced that Ultima would continue in mACF style. The 2009 incarnation was a mirror of the Dunbar Academic Fall Tournament.
Criticisms
The general criticisms that apply to the PAC can be applied here for the tournaments held in 2008 and earlier. Notably, with 3-4 teams competing at once, it is more likely that a weak team can influence the outcome by buzzing in (even if they are incorrect), and stealing the opportunity to answer questions from a team in contention to win.
Another criticism prior to 2009 was the inclusion of Rileyisms, questions that deal with arcane, bizarre, or truly obscure material for any high school player, but which David Riley, defender of medieval Hungarian lore and proto-classical music, thinks is "common knowledge". It can be assumed that each tournament will have at least one music theory question that no one can answer, causing Col. Riley to criticize everyone present.
Results
Number | Date | Champion | Runner-Up | Third Place | Fourth Place |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
10/1998 | Loyola Academy | ||||
10/1999 | Loyola Academy | ||||
10/24/2000 | Loyola Academy | New Trier | St. Ignatius | Stevenson1 | |
10/20/2001 | Latin School | Stevenson | St. Ignatius | ||
10/19/2002 | New Trier | Loyola A | St. Ignatius | Fremd "A" | |
10/18/2003 | Loyola Academy | Auburn | Latin School | New Trier | |
10/16/2004 | New Trier | Stevenson | Auburn | Fremd | |
10/22/20052 | Auburn | Fremd | New Trier | Loyola Academy | |
10/21/2006 | Maine South | Bloomington | Maine East | St. Ignatius | |
10/20/2007 | Auburn | Stevenson | Loyola | IMSA | |
10/18/2008 | Carbondale | Loyola Academy | Fremd | New Trier | |
10/17/2009 | Carbondale | St. Ignatius | Loyola A | Lisle A |
Notes
- Both Stevenson and St. Ignatius were tied for third place.
- Winnebago was the consolation champion.