by Matt Weiner » Sat Nov 28, 2009 8:48 am
In the first of many responses to requests for lists, here are my top 10 tournaments of the past 10 years. This is a ranking of packet set quality, not the experience of playing a particular event.
#10) ACF Regionals 2006 - A really solid exemplar of ACF style from the last days of the "ACF-playing vs. non-ACF playing teams" divide. Provided some great games for some VCU players at their first collegiate tournament ever but was still pretty accessible. Lots of work went into this set from Matt Lafer, Chris Romero, and Mike Sorice, and it showed.
#9) The July Crisis 2008 - After a pretty crappy 2007 history tournament, I didn't know what to expect from Bruce the following year, but he clearly upped his game in the intervening months and wrote a really great set that fruitfully explored all sorts of new areas (loved the well-done tossup on "indigo") and foreshadowed the great RMPfests to come; consider this ranking a shared spot with those two tournaments.
#8) Minnesota Undergraduate Tournament 2008 - The solo debut of the core Minnesota editing team to rave reviews, save for that unfortunate meta question. This was one of the more interesting events to see people play on and fulfilled the purpose of the "undergraduate" tournament, which is neither a novice nor a regular event, quite well. The people responsible for this tournament went on to produce the very fun 2008 and 2009 Minnesota Opens, though I'm reluctant to list too many super-hard tournaments here.
#7) Michigan MLK 2006 - Ryan Westbrook's coming-out party as an editor, and the first MLK to emerge from the timed-tournament ghetto. A super-solid general-audience tournament.
#6) Chicago Open 2005 - Subash's swan song as a writer, and probably the most polished hard event I've ever participated on. Lots of good games at this tournament from top to bottom, lots of fun questions. Unlike some subsequent COs, this tournament always seemed to have a consistent sense of what it was trying to do.
#5) ACF Fall 2007 - We still use a packet from this to show how quizbowl works at the VCU activities fair. An excellent rebound from the 2006 ACF Fall that I worked on, which kind of lost its way with question length. I think this was also the first widely played tournament that Jonathan Magin edited, after providing solid efforts on the Terrapin and lit singles tournaments earlier in the same year.
#4) ACF Nationals 2007 - I think this tournament was the most consistent and appropriate-difficulty Nationals of the modern era, and I really enjoyed playing some tight games on it. It was also the last ACF tournament edited by the second generation of ACF editors before handing the baton off, and they went out on a high note.
#3) Teitler Myth Tournament 2005 - The birth of the modern single-subject tournament, and Seth Teitler's statement that he can indeed fill 13 rounds of myth with answerable tossups. I can imagine how much work went into that. I think a lot of what Jonathan and Bruce have achieved with successive side tournaments can be traced to the example set here.
#2 ) ACF Fall 2008 - Looking back, I'm still as amazed at what this tournament achieved as I was at the time. The note-perfect difficulty modulation over 136 teams, including many first-time players, that the nationwide stats for this event showed is baffling and leads me to conclude that Andrew Hart has some sort of esoteric superpower that lets him sense how a bonus will be converted. This tournament was also the birth of the "supervisory editor" model that is about to sweep quizbowl.
#1) ACF Regionals 2001 - That's right, a tournament from 2001, two full years before where I usually put the birth of good quizbowl, is the best of all time. What Subash accomplished with this event was the singlehanded redefinition of ACF Regionals from "that tournament with the hard questions and all the birthday and Nobel Prize clues" to a tournament that set the standard for the most up-to-date expression of good quizbowl practices. This tournament would be playable even today; set in the context of other events being produced in the 2000-2001 academic year, it was the equivalent of Michelangelo popping up among cavemen. Developments such as the creation of ACF Fall later in the same calendar year and the erosion of the "ACF IS IMPOSSIBLE" meme, and the incalculable effects that this opening-up has had on the present state of the game, are all directly traceable to Subash's visionary editing of Regionals 2001.
Honorable mentions: Chicago Open 2006, ACF Regionals 2008 (which I think was the best tournament I've ever worked on, though I will leave the judging of my output to others), NAQT SCT 2007, ACF Nationals 2002 (also ahead of its time in a lot of ways), the January 2009 edition of Terrapin, ACF Fall 2009, ACF Fall 2004
Matt Weiner
Founder, Quizbowl at VCU / Player, VCU, 2003-2007 / Advisor and tournament director, VCU, 2008-present / ACF editor, 2005-present / Owner & founder of hsquizbowl.org / Chief administrator of hsquizbowl.org message boards, 2003-2006, 2011-2012 / Administrator of hsquizbowl.org message boards, 2003-present / NAQT writer, 2009-present / HSAPQ writer and editor, 2008-present / PACE NSC chief editor, 2002-2008 / PACE NSC tournament director, 2009, 2012, 2013