Honda Campus All-Star Challenge

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Honda Campus All-Star Challenge is a quizbowl tournament administered by College Bowl for Historically Black colleges and universities. The sponsor of the program is Honda Motor Company.

Contents

[edit] History

The program started in 1989 when Honda, facing class action racial discrimination lawsuits, proposed a program to the College Bowl Company for Black colleges (HBCUs) as part of a public relations campaign to clean up its image and publicly appear to promote diversity. To that end, College Bowl created a separate program in which all 4-year degree granting HBCUs are eligible to enroll teams. From 1990 to 1995, the gameplay format consisted of sectional matches that led up to televised National Championship games on BET (all of them hosted by Clint Holmes). The current format was adopted in 1996, which abandoned the sectional games and the televising of games in favor of an all-encompassing 64-team National Championship Tournament held each year in March or April.

[edit] Game format

Gameplay takes place during two eight minute halves. Questions are split into toss-ups and bonus questions. The toss-up questions are always ten points in value, while bonuses have varying point values, no more than thirty possible points. The toss-up questions do not permit conferring with other team members, with buzzers (using a lockout system) being used to designate who rings in to answer a question. The signaling player must be designated by the announcer, or the question is thrown out. The players may interrupt the moderator, but if an incorrect answer is given, the team is given a five point deduction, and the question is completed for the other team (who may chose to interrupt it without a penalty). If the moderator has finished the question and a team member incorrectly answers it, the team is not given a penalty. If the player is correct, then the team has an opportunity for a bonus question, on which players a team may confer. If team members have conflicting answers, then the captain will speak on behalf of the team.

[edit] Personnel

  • A moderator, who reads questions
  • An announcer, who designates players and resets the lockout (buzzers) system as appropriate,
  • A scorekeeper
  • A timekeeper (1990-2002); new equipment made this position obsolete
  • A judge, who determines if given answers are correct, enforces procedural rules, and is in charge of the match
  • Two teams, each of up to four players and an alternate, and each team having one player designated captain
  • Coach for each team
  • A team liaison, who handles logistical issues between the teams and tournament headquarters

[edit] Playing the game

As part of a qualification process, each college/university must host a campus tournament to determine which players will represent the school's team. Afterwards, another set of documentation is processed by the school's team and coach. If the school wishes to, it may attend or host a Pre-NCT tournament. These tournaments do not affect how the schools will qualify for the NCT.

[edit] The NCT

After all of the pre-NCT tournaments are over, the final contest is the NCT. Sixty-four schools attend the NCT, and they are randomly placed into eight divisions. The divisions are named after famous Blacks, with two of the eight divisions renamed each year on recommendation from the HCASC Advisory Committee. Two days of the NCT consist of divisional play. The two teams from each division with the best win/loss record move onto the second round, which takes place on the same day that division play ends. From there, eight schools will advance to quarterfinals and then four schools will advance to the semifinals. The third day of play resumes with the semifinal games and the final game. The "sweet sixteen," "elite eight," quarterfinal, and semifinal matches are single elimination, with the final two teams playing a best two-of-three series of final matches on Sunday. Clint Holmes, who hosted the BET broadcasts, moderates the semifinal and final matches on Sunday.

The tournament begins with an opening banquet, and concludes with a closing banquet/awards ceremony. Both banquets include speakers and entertainers. Since 2004, the opening banquet has also introduced new members into the HCASC Hall of Fame.

[edit] Trivia

  • An episode of A Different World, entitled "Goodwill Games" revolves around the premise of Dwayne Wayne and Whitley Gilbert competing in Hillman College's Campus All-Star Challenge tournament.


[edit] Grants

For their efforts, the representative schools are awarded grants

  • The NCT Champion school is awarded $50,000
  • Runner-Up takes $25,000
  • Semifinalists take $15,000
  • Other schools take varying amounts, depending on placement. Currently, the minimum awarded to each participating school is $3,000.

[edit] HCASC NCT winners

Year Winners Runners-up
1990 West Virginia State College Alcorn State University
1991 Florida A&M University West Virginia State College
1992 Norfolk State University Langston University
1993 Tuskegee University Morehouse College
1994 Tuskegee University Morehouse College
1995 Jackson State University Howard University
1996 Florida A&M University South Carolina State University
1997 Alabama State University Elizabeth City State University
1998 Florida A&M University Tuskegee University
1999 Florida A&M University Clark Atlanta University
2000 Clark Atlanta University Southern University - Baton Rouge
2001 Morehouse College Howard University
2002 Morehouse College Howard University
2003 Florida A&M University South Carolina State University
2004 Morehouse College University of Maryland Eastern Shore
2005 Florida A&M University Morehouse College
2006 Morehouse College North Carolina Central University

[edit] External links