Tournament of Champions (debate)
The Tournament of Champions is a high school debate tournament held annually at the University of Kentucky on the first weekend of May. It is the most prestigious tournament on the "national circuit," representing some of the most competitively successful debaters from the nation's most prestigious individual debate tournaments. The tournament was founded by J.W. Patterson, former director of debate at the University of Kentucky.
Since its inception in 1972, the Tournament of Champions has emerged as the premier championship for high school debaters who frequently compete nationally in policy debate, Lincoln–Douglas debate, public forum debate, and Student Congress.
The Tournament of Champions functions as an independent tournament rather than an overarching organization governing high school debate, like the National Forensic League or National Catholic Forensic League. As such, the Tournament of Champions does not directly control the dozens of other national tournaments which occur weekly across the United States. Rather, the Tournament of Champions (or T.O.C.) uses the results of other tournaments to provide the criteria for qualifying to its own event.
History
Origins
The Tournament of Champions was developed by J.W. Patterson, who has since performed the duties of tournament host. Patterson explained the idea, "When I became Director of Debate at the University of Kentucky in 1971, I raised the possibility of hosting a high school debate tournament. Thus, I spent several months exploring this possibility. I asked several questions. First, was there a need for another high school tournament and, if so, what kind? What time of year should it be held and how big should it be?".[1] Indeed, Patterson's experience in coaching high school policy debate at Muskogee Central High School in Oklahoma prior to accepting a position in the Communications Department at the University of Kentucky provoked Patterson to consider creating a new national championship.[1] However, when considering the need for another national championship tournament, he came to the conclusion that the major national tournaments in the early 1970s had three major problems. Patterson explains, "First, debaters overwhelmingly were crying out for flow-sheet judges. Many of them were being trained at institutes to argue before flow judges but most of them said they received very few such judges, either at Catholic or NFL Nationals and almost never at invitational tournaments. Second, both teachers and debaters complained overwhelmingly about the politics involved in high school tournaments. Many said that up to 75% of the time they were either judged by incompetent people or people with a strong political bias.Third, I heard a major complaint from those going to Catholic and NFL Nationals that there was much too much lag time between their district tournaments and NFL".[1] Thus, Patterson created the tournament with the hope that his competition would redress the major flaws with other national championships like those administered by the National Catholic Forensic League and the National Forensic League.
In its first competition, the 1972 Tournament of Champions was received by highly regarded policy debate teams positively. Patterson explains, "The first TOC was received very well. We had teams from coast to coast. As far as I could tell, there were a few qualified teams who refused to come but most did attend. At that time, most people in the know seemed to think that the top two teams in the country were from Toledo, Ohio, and Milwaukee. These two teams met at the TOC as well as the NFL final the same year".[1]
Advisory Committee
The Tournament of Champions continued to host the nation's best in policy debate following the 1972 tournament. However, after the first eight tournaments, Patterson recognized that the "national circuit" influence of the tournament required that the event adapt. Consequently, Patterson began to formalize a system of "Tournament of Champions Advisory Committees." Patterson said, "After the first few years, I began to realize the importance of seeking high school coaches’ advice on the TOC. Although it was, and still is, a Kentucky invitational tournament, I obviously recognized the importance coaches and debaters place on the TOC. I, therefore, leaned heavily on coaches advice in helping me keep the TOC as a major culminating event".[1] However, while the influence of the committee in making decisions regarding the administration of the TOC did begin in 1980, official formal committees were not established until 1990.[1]
Addition of Lincoln-Douglas Debate
Another major development in the Tournament of Champions' structure was the addition of Lincoln Douglas Debate. "LD" first appeared at the National Forensic League National Championship in 1980, but was not included in the T.O.C. until 1986. Despite Patterson's efforts to include the event as early as 1983, strong opposition from the Advisory Committee prevented Patterson from adding Lincoln-Douglas.[1]
Addition of Public Forum Debate
The next event added to annual Tournament of Champions competition was Public Forum Debate. However, unlike Lincoln-Douglas Debate which boasted support by its proponents for inclusion into the Tournament of Champions, Public Forum Debate faced strong opposition against joining T.O.C. competition from supporters and opponents of the event alike. On one hand, Public Forum structurally was created to rectify the "national circuit" idiosyncrasies like jargon and the extreme workload necessary to compete effectively that plagued Lincoln-Douglas and, on a greater scale, policy debate. Thus, as an event meant to be engaging for laypersons and experts on the event alike, the Tournament of Champions, an event celebrating the national circuit culture, seemed incompatible. Despite this argument, Public Forum was included in Tournament of Champions competition in 2004, but took place as a round robin unlike its peer events. In 2007, Public Forum debuted as a full fledged event with a full field and non-round robin pairings. To aid in eliminating the "national circuit" qualities of the competition in Public Forum, the Tournament of Champions utilized lay judges from the University of Kentucky to adjudicate rounds at the 2008.[1]
Addition of Congressional Debate
Beginning with the 2004-2005 school year, Student Congress Debate was added to the T.O.C. after three years as an independent event
Tournament procedure
Elimination procedure
In Lincoln-Douglas debate and policy debate, the TOC employs seven preliminary rounds and clears to octafinals. All entries with a 5-2 record have the opportunity to advance into the outrounds; as such, when more than sixteen entries have at least a 5-2 record, the Tournament of Champions holds the appropriate number of run-off rounds to determine which of the lower-seeded debaters will advance. For the first three years of its existence, the Public Forum division of the TOC was conducted in a Round Robin format.
In the 2011 TOC, a change was made such that LD employed 8 preliminary rounds. All entries with a 4-3 record can advance into outrounds; runoff rounds are held. This change was made because that way, each debater can debate on each side 4 times.
Lincoln-Douglas Debate debates the January–February National Forensic League topic. Public Forum Debate debates the April National Forensic League topic. Policy Debate teams debate that season's national high school topic.
Location
Since its inception, the Tournament of Champions has been held on the campus of the University of Kentucky and at other locations in Lexington, Kentucky near the campus. Currently, preliminary rounds of Lincoln-Douglas, Policy, Public Forum, and Congress are held directly at the University of Kentucky. However, after competition on Saturday and Sunday, the tournament moves to a central location to conduct its annual "Breakfast of Champions" ceremony as well as the elimination rounds. Since the 2007 Tournament of Champions, the final day of competition has taken place in conference rooms at the Downtown Hilton in Lexington, Kentucky.
Tournament of Champions Qualifying Tournaments
In order to qualify to the Tournament of Champions, competitors in Lincoln-Douglas Debate, Policy debate, Public Forum Debate, or Student Congress must earn two "bids" at designated qualifying tournaments. "Bids" may be attained by reaching the "bid round" at certain tournaments (for instance, a quarterfinal bid gives bids to the top eight competitors, a finals bid gives bid to the top two competitors), which are given different bid statuses based on the strength, size, and geographic diversity of the tournament.[2] All competitors who have received two bids to the Tournament of Champions may apply using the regular application. Historically, every competitor with at least two bids has been accepted. However, the Tournament of Champions only guarantees that debaters receiving three or more bids will be accepted as it would be mathematically possible for the bid distribution to be so diverse that more debaters with two bids exist than spots available.
In the event that there are fewer than 70 fully qualified entries in an event, the Tournament of Champions then proceeds to admit "at-large applicants." A debater is entitled to consideration as an at-large applicant if he or she has acquired one bid during the season. Following the at-large application process, the T.O.C. Advisory Committee in given the responsibility of ranking the applications, which are then combined to fill the remaining slots for the T.O.C.
2010-2011 Qualifying Tournaments
Public Forum Debate Qualifying Tournaments
AUTOMATIC QUALIFIERS
- 2010 TOC Octofinalist
- 2010 NFL Nationals Octofinalist
- 2010 NCFL Nationals Octofinalist
OCTAFINALS
- Apple Valley (MN)
- Berkeley (CA)
- Dowling Catholic (IA)
- Emory (GA)
- Florida Blue Key (FL)
- Glenbrooks (IL)
- Harvard (MA)
- Myers Park (NC)
- Princeton (NJ)
- Stanford (CA)
- Yale (CT)
QUARTERFINALS
- Alta (UT)
- Arizona State (AZ)
- Bronx Science (NY)
- Columbia (NY)
- Desert Vista (AZ)
- Pine Crest (FL)
- George Mason (VA)
- Golden Desert (NV)
- James Logan (CA)
- Lexington (MA)
- Manchester-By-The-Sea (MA)
- Millard West (NE)
- University of Pennsylvania (PA)
- Villager (PA)
- Wake Forest (NC)
SEMIFINALS
- Harker (CA)
- Hudson (NY)
- La Costa Canyon (CA)
- Lincoln-East (NE)
- Nova Titan (FL)
- Ohio Valley (KY)
- St. Mark's School of Texas (TX)
- University School Sunvitational (FL)
- Valley (IA)
- Victory Briefs (Archer) (CA)
FINALS
- Blake (MN)
- Cheyenne East (WY)
- Fremont (NE)
- Grapevine (TX)
- Indianola (IA)
- Lincoln-Southwest (NE)
- Mountain Brook's (AL)
- Ridge (NJ)
- Scarsdale (NY)
- Springfield Parkview (MO)
- Topeka (KS)
- Whitman (WA)
Lincoln Douglas Debate Qualifying Tournaments (Current as of 2012)
AUTOMATIC QUALIFIERS
OCTAFINALS
- Apple Valley (MN)
- Berkeley (CA)
- Bronx Science (NY)
- Emory (GA)
- Glenbrooks (IL)
- Greenhill (TX)
- Harvard (MA)
- St. Mark's School of Texas(TX)
- Valley (IA)
- Victory Briefs (Archer) (CA)
QUARTERFINALS
- Alta (UT)
- Blake (MN)
- Pine Crest (FL)
- Lexington (MA)
- Meadows (NV)
- Stanford (CA)
- Yale (CT)
SEMIFINALS
- College Prep (CA)
- Columbia (NY)
- Dowling Catholic (IA)
- Golden Desert (NV)
- Grapevine (TX)
- Harker (CA)
- Hendrick Hudson (NY)
- Iowa Caucus (IA)
- Ohio Valley (KY)
- Sunvitational (University School) (FL)
- University of Puget Sound (WA)
- USC (CA)
- UT (TX)
- Walt Whitman (MD)
FINALS
- Colleyville Heritage (TX)
- Desert Vista (AZ)
- Federal Way (WA)
- Florida Blue Key (FL)
- Houston-Memorial (TX)
- Isidore Newman (LA)
- Myers Park (NC)
- Monticello (NY)
- Newark (NJ)
- Omaha Westside (NE)
- Princeton (NJ)
- Ridge (NJ)
- Saint James (AL)
- Scarsdale (NY)
- Vestavia Hills (AL)
- Wake Forest (NC)
- Whitman (WA)
- Winston Churchill (TX)
Policy Debate Qualifying Tournaments' (Current as of 2011)
OCTAFINALS
QUARTERFINALS
- Alta (UT)
- Georgetown Day (DC)
- Golden Desert (NV)
- Grapevine (TX)
- Lexington (MA)
- New Trier (IL)
- Ohio Valley (KY)
- Stanford (CA)
- University of Southern California (CA)
- University of Texas at Austin (TX)
- Wake Forest University (NC)
SEMIFINALS
- Bronx Science (NY)
- Colleyville (TX)
- Dowling Catholic (IA)
- University of Georgia (GA)
- Gonzaga (WA)
- Houston-Memorial (TX)
- Iowa Caucus (IA)
- Kansas City Community College (KS)
- Lakeland (NY)
- Meadows (NV)
- Valley (IA)
FINALS
- Arizona (AZ)
- Auburn (WA)
- Florida Blue Key (FL)
- Fullerton (CA)
- La Costa Canyon (CA)
- Long Beach (CA)
- Omaha-Westside (NE)
- Pennsbury (PA)
- Samford University (AL)
- Vestavia Hills (AL)
- Tournament of Champions (KY)
- Whitman College (WA)
Results
Past Policy Debate Championship champions and runners up
- 1972 Marquette University High School - Jeff Clark & Mark Foley; Marquette University High School - Mark Miner & David Dries
- 1973 Hillsboro - Mary Thomson & Kather Zickert; Upper Arlington - Peter Koeniz & Doug Dougherty
- 1974 Walter Panas - Denise Gilbert & Larry Falkin; Wilkinsburg - John Tumazos & David Snowball
- 1975 Cardinal Spellman - Leo Gagion & John Bredehoft; Lakeland - Amy Davidoff & Virginia Raymond
- 1976 Cardinal Spellman - Leo Gagion & John Bredehoft; Soquel - Ron Aitken & Jeff Lorenzen
- 1977 Lake Forest (IL) - Karen Albrecht & Hugh Abrams; Robinson - Michael Laurence & Shelly Coleman
- 1978 Walter Panas - Donna Gilbert & Patrick O'Neill; Bronx High School of Science (NY) - Eric Raps & Matthew Mandell
- 1979 Bronx High School of Science (NY) - Andrew Berman & Herschel Goldfield; Marquette University High School - Jim Boehner & John Barrett
- 1980 Glenbrook North (IL) - Jeff Wagner & Brad Malis; Bronx High School of Science (NY) - Stuart Weich & Andrew Berman
- 1981 Glenbrook South (IL) - Jeffrey Wortman & Mark Koulogeorge; Firestone - Alan Gerber & Steve Dist
- 1982 Oak Park & River Forest (IL) - Todd Martin & Eric Brackett; Glenbrook North (IL) - Peter Braverman & Ken Karas
- 1983 Oak Park & River Forest (IL) - Macklin Trimnell & C.V. Doherty ;Creighton Prep - Wally Mullin & Don Erftmier, Jr.
- 1984 Lake Braddock - Shaun Martin & Mike Green; New Trier (IL) - Laura Michaelis & Moria McDermott
- 1985 Lake Braddock - Joe Pettit & Mike Green; Marquette University High School - Ed Lynch & Kevin Roe
- 1986 Albany - Peter Gross & Andrew Schrank; Bishop Guertin (NH) - Pete Klamka & Tim Pramas
- 1987 Manchester - Sarah Gannett & Zach Leber; Stuyvesant (NY) - Hanna Rosin & David Coleman
- 1988 Downers Grove South (IL) - Karrie Schwartz & Bill Fick; Bronx High School of Science (NY) - Josh Brumberg & Noah Millman
- 1989 St. Mark's School of Texas (TX) - Steven Sklaver & Jack Stroubie; Richmond Kennedy - Colin Kahl & Todd Cort
- 1990 Oak Park & River Forest (IL) - Eric Truett & Brian Ruder; Harvard School - Ara Lovitt & Ahilan Arulanantham
- 1991 Omaha Westside (NE) - Paul Skiermont & Jason Patil; Georgetown Day School (DC) - Dan Nexon & Rebecca Tushnet
- 1992 Edgemont (NY) - Jason Feldman & Derek Schaffer; Albuquerque Academy (NM) - Jeremy Pena & Mark Kutny
- 1993 Isidore Newman School (LA) - Ben Norwood & Taavi Reiss; Brookfield Central (WI) - David Frank & Joshua Heling
- 1994 Lexington (MA) - Li-Cheng Wang & Steve Lehotsky; Edgemont (NY) - Sanket Bulsara & Chris Lennon
- 1995 Niles West (IL) - Armands Revelins & George Kouros; Lexington (MA) - Steve Lehotsky & Matt Nichols
- 1996 Glenbrook North (IL) - Larry Heftman & Adam Hurder; Katy-Taylor (TX)- Jeff McNabb & Kim Sikora
- 1997 Caddo Magnet (LA) - Andy Ryan & Kamal Ghali; Greenhill (TX) - Josh Goldberg & Rashad Hussain
- 1998 Glenbrook South (IL) - Adam Goldstein & Todd Fine; Greenhill (TX) - Caitlin Talmadge & Andrew Bradt
- 1999: Montgomery Bell Academy (TN) - Raja Gaddipati/Robbie Quinn; Lexington (MA) - Josh Lynn & Yoni Cohen
- 2000: Greenhill School (TX) - Asher Haig/Jordan Pietzsch; Centerville (OH) - Caleb Liang & Henry Liu
- 2001: Glenbrook North (IL) - Michael Klinger/Stacey Nathan; Woodward Academy (GA) - Avery Dale and Peter Miller
- 2002: Pace Academy (GA) - Bob Allen/Brian Smith; St. Mark's School of Texas (TX) Josh Branson/Michael Martin
- 2003: The College Preparatory School (CA) - Michael Burshteyn/Eli Anders; Greenhill School (TX) - Maggie Ahn & Saad Hussain
- 2004: Glenbrook North (IL) - Jake Ziering/Michael Rosecrans; College Preparatory School (CA) - Michael Burshteyn/Eli Anders
- 2005: The Westminster Schools (GA) - Anusha Deshpande/Stephen Weil; Chattahoochee (GA) - Garrett Abelkop/John Warden
- 2006: Greenhill School (TX) - Mathew Andrews/Stephen Polley; Glenbrook South (IL) - Abe Corrigan/Mima Lazarevic
- 2007: Glenbrook North (IL) - Matt Fisher/Stephanie Spies; The Westminster Schools (GA) - Stephen Weil/Sanjena Anshu Sathian
- 2008: Greenhill School (TX) - Nicholas Rogan and Olivia Rogan; Colleyville Heritage(TX) - James Hamraie and Evan Defillipis
- 2009: The Westminster Schools (GA) - Sanjena Anshu Sathian/Rajesh Jegadeesh; Bellarmine College Prep (CA) - Will Rafey/Sagar Vijay
- 2010: The Westminster Schools (GA) - Ellis Allen/Daniel Taylor; St. Mark's School of Texas (TX) - Alex Miles/Rishee Batra
- 2011: The Westminster Schools (GA) - Ellis Allen/Daniel Taylor; Lexington (MA) - Arjun Vellayappan/Tyler Engler
Past Policy Debate Top Speakers
Past LD Debate Championship champions and Runner Ups
- 1986: Hee-Sun Hong - The Bronx High School of Science (NY) ; Greg Hewett - Jenks High School (OK)
- 1987: Scott Tucker - Twin Lakes High School (FL) ; Craig Tinsky - Miami Palmetto High School (FL)
- 1988: Jonathan Koppell and Peter Colavito - The Bronx High School of Science (NY) - Close-out
- 1989: David Kennedy - Regis High School (NY) ; Amy Forsee - Homewood High School
- 1990: Chris Kellner - Tampa Jesuit High School (FL) ; Arthur Chu - Albuquerque Academy (NM)
- 1991: Jeff Marcus - Miami Palmetto High School (FL) ; Bill Harrington - Regis High School (NY)
- 1992: Michael Erickson - La Cueva High School (NM);Jason Baldwin - Vestavia Hills High School (AL)
- 1993: Jason Baldwin - Vestavia Hills High School (AL) ; Carlos Gonzales - Christopher Columbus High School (FL)
- 1994: Ann Miura - Palo Alto High School (CA) ; Claire Carman - Vestavia Hills High School (AL)
- 1995: Greg Goldfarb - Miami Palmetto High School (FL) ; Tyrenda Williams - Vestavia Hills High School (AL)
- 1996: Courtney Balentine - Valley High School (IA) ; David Singh - Apple Valley High School (MN)
- 1997: Hetal Doshi - Vestavia Hills High School (AL) ; Brian Fletcher - Valley High School (IA)
- 1998: Ari Simon - Valley High School (IA); Anna Manasco - St. James School (AL)
- 1999: Tom Zimpleman - Valley High School (IA); Ben Davison - Vestavia Hills High School (AL)
- 2000: Seamus Donovan - Edmond North High School (OK); James Scott - Katy High School (TX)
- 2001: Tom Pryor - Hopkins High School (MN); Tommy Clancy - Westwood High School (TX)
- 2002: Jenn Larson - Millard West High School (NE); Kelsey Olson - Apple Valley High School (MN)
- 2003: Andrew Garvin - Mission San Jose High School (CA); Tom Evnen - Lincoln Southeast High School (NE)
- 2004: John McNeil - Edina High School (MN); Tim Hogan - Apple Valley High School (MN)
- 2005: David Wolfish - Greenhill School (TX); Hirsh Jain - Mission San Jose (CA)
- 2006: Stephen Hess - Mountain View High School (CA); David Weeks, Highland Park High School (TX)
- 2007: Patrick Diehl - Lynbrook High School (CA); David McGough - Greenhill School (TX)
- 2008: Chris Theis - Apple Valley High School (MN); Becca Traber Kinkaid HS (TX)
- 2009: Chris Theis - Apple Valley High School (MN); Daniel Moerner, Mountain View / Los Altos (CA)
- 2010: Catherine Tarsney - St. Louis Park High School (MN); Ross Brown, Valley High School (IA)
- 2011: Larry Liu and Jeffrey Liu - Indian Springs School (AL) - Close-out
Past Lincoln Douglas Debate Top Speakers
Since 1992, the top speaker in Lincoln Douglas Debate has received the Walter Alan Ulrich award. The perpetual trophy is named in the memory of a past director of debate at Northern Iowa University and member of the TOC Hall of Distinguished Service who helped shape the theory and practice of value debate.
- 1992: Josh Sheptow - South Plantation High School (FL)
- 1993: Jason Baldwin - Vestavia Hills High School (AL)
- 1995: Jonathan Carr - Saint James School (AL)
- 1996: Jonathan Carr - Saint James School (AL)
- 1997: Hetal Doshi - Vestavia Hills High School (AL)
- 1998: Alex Gomez - Miami Palmetto High School (FL)
- 1999: Tom Zimpleman - Valley High School (IA)
- 2000: Noah Grabowitz - Hendrick Hudson High School (NY)
- 2001: Tom Pryor - Hopkins High School (MN)
- 2002: Josh Anderson - Sehome High School (WA)
- 2003: Satyan Gajwani - Miami Palmetto High School (FL)
- 2004: Eric Palmer - Howland High School (OH)
- 2005: David Wolfish - Greenhill School (TX)
- 2006: Jacob Levi - Berkeley Carroll (NY)
- 2007: Patrick Diehl - Lynbrook High School (CA)
- 2008: Daniel Moerner - Los Altos High School (Los Altos, California) (CA)
- 2009: Jake Nebel - Trinity Preparatory School (FL)
- 2010: Pat Donovan - Glenbrook North High School (IL)
- 2011: Dylan Scher - Berkeley Carroll School (NY)
Past Student Congress Debate Champions and Runner Ups
- 2002: Kristen Soltis - Cypress Creek (FL)
- 2003: Josh Swartsel - Lake Highland Prep (FL)
- 2004: Matt Turetzky - Nova High School (FL)
- 2005: Matt Cynamon - Nova High School (FL)
- 2006: Cameron Secord - Brookwood High School (GA); Jared Sonnenklar - Western High School (FL)
- 2007: Michael Educate - Lake Forest High School (IL); Herschel Patel - Myers Park High School (NC)
- 2008: Ben Berkman - Nova High School (FL); Kevin Eaton - Duncanville High School (TX)
- 2009: Joseph Perretta - Christopher Columbus High School (FL); Robert Colonel - Winter Springs HS (FL)
- 2010: Alex Smyk - Ridge High School (NJ); Anna Tsiotsias - Nova High School (FL)
- 2011: Rylan Schaeffer - Mountain View High School (CA)
Past PF Debate Championship champions and runners up
- 2004: Jay M. Robinson HS (NC) - Erin Lopez/Jordan Myers; Nova HS (FL) - Alexandra Wall/Natalia Rigol
- 2005: Albuquerque Academy (NM) - Hollie Putnam/Heather Campbell; Torrey Pines (CA) - Eric Carino/Ian Hampton
- 2006: Manchester-Essex (MA) - James Pates/Dan Cellucci; Manchester-Essex (MA) - Ross Cowman/Ryan Swanzey (Co-Champions)
- 2007: Lexington (MA) - Chrissy Kugel/Garth Goldwater (commonly referred to as "Team Scorpion"); Durham Academy (NC) - Patrick Toomey/Katherine Buse
- 2008: North Allegheny (PA) - Naz El-Khatib/Claire Kairys; The Collegiate School (NY) - Charles Giardina/Jonathan Yip
- 2009: Harker School (CA) - Kelsey Hilbrich/Kaavya Gowda; Walt Whitman High School (MD) - Alex Edelman/Aaron Schifrin
- 2010: George Washington High School (CO) - Gabe Rusk/Brendan Patrick; Ridge High School (NJ) - Brian Moore/Tejus Pradeep
- 2011: The Harker School (CA) - Aakash Jagadeesh/Frederic Enea ; Lake Highland Preparatory School (FL) - Grant Sinnot/Jake Bayer
Past Public Forum Debate Top Speakers
- 2010: Zaki Aizaz - Desert Vista High School (AZ)
- 2011: David Walchak - New Trier High School (IL)
Other awards
Julia Burke award
The Julia Burke Award is presented each year, in memory of Julia Burke, a debater at The College Preparatory School who was killed in a car crash in 1998. The purpose of this award is to recognize a "policy debater who achieves competitive excellence in high school policy debate on the national circuit, and who demonstrates goodness of heart despite the pressures of competition at the highest level." The award is accompanied by a $1000 scholarship and $1000 to donate to the charity of the recipient's choice. Nominations can be submitted by any debater attending the TOC. They are then narrowed to a list of three or four debaters by a selection committee chosen by the Julia Burke foundation. The winner is chosen by a vote of all the attendees and coaches at the TOC.
Past Julia Burke winners
- 2000: Centerville - Henry Liu
- 2001: Blake - Maggie Berthiaume
- 2002: Marquette University High School - Manav Bhatnagar
- 2003: Tampa Prep - Noah Chestnut
- 2004: Glenbrook North - Michael Rosecrans
- 2005: Glenbrook South - Elizabeth Kim
- 2006: Lexington - Will Sears
- 2007: Centerville - Eli Jacobs
- 2008: Colleyville - James Hamraie
- 2009: Bishop Guertin - Katryna Cadle
- 2010: Whitney Young - Misael Gonzalez
- 2011: Damien - Nadeem Farooqi
Coaches Hall of Fame
The coaches inducted into the Tournament of Champions Coaches Hall of Fame are selected from those program directors who have given of their time and energies in helping to maintain the high competitive standards of the TOC and whose students have distinguished themselves in competition at the TOC. This award, awarded irregularly, does not necessarily mean "Coach of the Year."[3]
Tournament of Champions in popular culture
- The Tournament of Champions was both a prominent subject and setting for the 2007 HBO documentary Resolved. Director Greg Whiteley initially followed the Policy debate team of Sam Iola and Matt Andrews of Highland Park High School throughout their season until their loss in semifinals of the 2005 Tournament of Champions. After the defeat, Whiteley focuses the film's attention on the pursuit of qualifying to the tournament by the Long Beach Jordan team, which presents a kritik in an attempt to be successful and reform debate practices. While the film shifts focus to the Long Beach Jordan pair, it still makes mention near the end of the film that Matt Andrews (then with Greenhill School) won the 2006 TOC without losing a ballot, taking first place with a ballot record of 22-0 (the second team to do so, Pace Academy (Allen/Smith) being the first in 2002).[4]
See also
External links
References