National Scrabble Championship

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The National Scrabble Championship is the largest Scrabble competition in the United States. The event is held every one or two years, and from 2004 through 2006 the finals were aired on ESPN and ESPN2. The current National Scrabble Champion is Nigel Richards, who won Division 1 at the 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, and 2013 events.[1][2][3][4][5]

NSC history

The first officially sanctioned Scrabble tournaments in the U.S. were spearheaded, organized and run by Joel Skolnick in the mid-1970s. Skolnick was a recreation director for the New York City Parks and Recreation Department. He approached Selchow and Righter in late 1972, and the first tournament, open to Brooklyn residents only, commenced on March 18, 1973. The Funk and Wagnalls Collegiate Dictionary was used to rule on challenges, and the official word judge was Skolnick's then-wife Carol. Carol's sister, Shazzi Felstein, who would later finish in ninth place at the first North American Invitational tournament, won the first preliminary round with 1,321 points over three games. The final round took place on April 15, and Jonathan Hatch was the winner of the first official Scrabble tournament.

The summer of 1973 saw two more tournaments, held respectively at Grossingers (won by Minerva Kasowitz) and the Concord hotel (won by Harriet Zucker) in New York's Catskill region. Another two tournaments quickly followed in November that same year: in Baltimore, Gordon Shapiro topped approximately 400 contestants; and at the Brooklyn War Memorial approximately 2,000 people entered the nine weekly preliminary rounds of the first all–New York City Scrabble Championship. It was won by Bernie Wishengrad. The New York City Championship was thereafter held annually, jointly sponsored by Selchow and Righter and the NYC Department of Parks and Recreation.

The first national tournament was the North American Invitational, held May 1921, 1978, in the Presidential Suite of the Loews Summit Hotel in New York City. Joel Skolnick and Carol Felstein, as usual, served as the tournament director and word judge, respectively. David Prinz took the $1,500 first prize, followed by Dan Pratt and Mike Senkiewicz.

In 1980, soon after the publication of the first Official Scrabble Players Dictionary, control of the national tournament passed to the National Scrabble Association. They continued to organize the tournament until 2008.

The official name of the tournament has been National SCRABBLE Championship in recent years, except in 2006 when it was named US SCRABBLE Open.[6]

Starting in 2009, the tournament is organized annually by the newly formed North American SCRABBLE Players Association. The first event under NASPA was held in Dayton, Ohio in August, 2009. The 2010 and 2011 events were held in Dallas, Texas, and the 2012 Championship was held in Orlando, FL, where it had been held in 2008.[7][8] The 2013 event was held in Las Vegas.

Controversy of 2012

On August 14, 2012, a 13-year-old player was ejected from the event in Orlando after being caught hiding blank tiles in an attempt to gain an unfair advantage over his opponents.[9] The player admitted to cheating, and his prior year's divisional title was revoked after his case was reviewed by a NASPA committee.

Collins play

In 2012, a Collins division for international-English play was added for the first time, won by Sam Kantimathi with a 24-7 record.[10] In 2013, John O'Laughlin, creator of the Quackle software program, won the division with a 24-7 record, winning $2,500 and claiming his first NSC divisional title.[11]

Youth in the community

Bradley Robbins of New Hampshire became the first minor to win a division in 2008 with a 24-4 record in Division 6.[12] In 2012, Amalan Iyengar of North Carolina won Division 4 with a 22-9 record.[13] Also in 2012, Chris Canik of Texas won Division 3 with a 26-5 record, the best record in that division's history.[14] In 2013, Andy Hoang of North Carolina won Division 3 with a 23-8 record.[15] Bradley Robbins and Andy Hoang are the only people to have won both the National School Scrabble Championship (2010 for Robbins, 2009 & 2012 for Hoang) and a division in the National Scrabble Championship (2008, Division 6 for Robbins & 2013, Division 3 for Hoang).

NSC events and Division 1 winners

Year Winner Location Entrants Winner's Prize Total Prize Pool
2013 New Zealand Nigel Richards (5)[1] Las Vegas 521[16]

[17]

USD 10,000 USD 43,725[18]
2012 New Zealand Nigel Richards (4)[2] Orlando 339[19] USD 10,000 USD 36,150[20]
2011 New Zealand Nigel Richards (3)[3] Dallas 329[21] USD 10,000 USD 42,075[22]
2010 New Zealand Nigel Richards (2)[4] Dallas 408[23] USD 10,000 USD 42,075[24]
2009 Oregon Dave Wiegand (2)[25] Dayton 486 USD 10,000 USD 43,175[26]
2008 New Zealand Nigel Richards (1)[5] Orlando 662 USD 25,000 USD 85,385[27]
2006 Minnesota Jim Kramer Phoenix 625 USD 25,000 USD 85,385[28]
2005 Oregon Dave Wiegand (1) Reno 682 USD 25,000 USD 85,415[29]
2004 Texas Trey Wright New Orleans 837 USD 25,000 USD 92,805[30]
2002 New York Joel Sherman San Diego 696 USD 25,000 USD 89,290[31]
2000 Michigan Joe Edley (3) Providence 598 USD 25,000 USD 89,290[32]
1998 Illinois Brian Cappelletto Chicago 535 USD 25,000 USD 82,200[33]
1996 Ontario Adam Logan Dallas 412 USD 25,000 USD 75,485[34]
1994 South Carolina David Gibson Los Angeles 294 USD 15,000 USD 50,585[35]
1992 Michigan Joe Edley (2) Atlanta 315 USD 10,000 USD 35,910[36]
1990 Tennessee Robert Felt Washington 282 USD 10,000 USD 37,400[37]
1989 Michigan Peter Morris New York 221 USD 5,000 USD 24,425[38]
1988 Minnesota Robert Watson Reno 315 USD 5,000 USD 23,100[39]
1987 New York Rita Norr Las Vegas 327 USD 5,000 USD 16,850[40]
1985 Florida Ron Tiekert Boston 302 USD 10,000 USD 52,370[41]
1983 Quebec Joel Wapnick Chicago 32 USD 5,000 USD 13,600[42]
1980 Michigan Joe Edley (1) Santa Monica 32 USD 5,000 USD 10,100[43]
1978 New York David Prinz New York 65 (invitational) USD 1,500 USD 8,400[44]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 NSC 2013 Division 1 Standings: Round 31
  2. 2.0 2.1 NSC 2012 Division 1 Standings: Round 31
  3. 3.0 3.1 NSC 2011 Division 1 Standings: Round 31
  4. 4.0 4.1 NSC 2010 Division 1 Standings: Round 31
  5. 5.0 5.1 NSC 2008 Division 1 Standings: Round 28
  6. National SCRABBLE Association: Championship Archive
  7. North American SCRABBLE Players Association: NASPA
  8. North American SCRABBLE Players Association: National SCRABBLE Championship
  9. "C-H-E-A-T-E-R: Top youth player gets kicked out of national Scrabble tournament". NBC News. Retrieved 15 August 2012. 
  10. http://cross-tables.com/tourney.php?t=7720&div=1
  11. http://cross-tables.com/tourney.php?t=8164&div=1
  12. http://www.scrabbleplayers.org/tourneys/2008/nsc/build/player/6/069.html
  13. http://cross-tables.com/tourney.php?t=7717&div=4
  14. http://cross-tables.com/tourney.php?tourneyid=7717&div=3
  15. http://event.scrabbleplayers.org/2013/nsc/build/standing/3/31.html
  16. NSC 2013: Registered Players
  17. 2013 National SCRABBLE Championship prizes
  18. NSC 2012: Registered Players
  19. 2012 National SCRABBLE Championship prizes
  20. NSC 2011: Registered Players
  21. 2011 National SCRABBLE Championship prizes
  22. NSC 2010: Registered Players
  23. 2010 National SCRABBLE Championship prizes
  24. NSC 2009 Players: Alphabetical Listing
  25. 2009 National SCRABBLE Championship prizes
  26. 2008 NSC Prizes
  27. 2006 Prizes
  28. 2005 NSC Prizes
  29. 2004 NSC Prizes
  30. 2002 NSC Prizes
  31. 2000 NSC Prizes
  32. 1998 NSC Prizes
  33. NSC 1996 results at cross-tables.com
  34. NSC 1994 results at cross-tables.com
  35. NSC 1992 results at cross-tables.com
  36. NSC 1990 results at cross-tables.com
  37. NSC 1989 results at cross-tables.com
  38. NSC 1988 results at cross-tables.com
  39. NSC 1987 results at cross-tables.com
  40. NSC 1985 results at cross-tables.com
  41. NSC 1983 results at cross-tables.com
  42. NSC 1980 results at cross-tables.com
  43. NSC 1978 results at cross-tables.com

External links

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