Panupol Sujjayakorn
Panupol Sujjayakorn (born 1984) is a Thai Scrabble player, an economics student at university and anlyst at Exxon Mobile.[1] He won the Thailand Matchplay Championship 2002, World Scrabble Championship 2003,[2] Thailand King's Cup 2005 and was runner-up in the American National Scrabble Championship 2005 to David Wiegand. He is known for his encyclopedic knowledge of words despite having only conversational English.[3]
In the World Scrabble Championship 2003, Sujjayakorn won his first 8 games and 18 of his first 21 before losing the final three games to finish with 18 wins, 6 losses, first place. He then played fellow countryman Pakorn Nemitrmansuk in the best-of-five final. The final was tied at two wins each before Sujjayakorn won the final game 444-387 to be crowned World Scrabble champion in his first appearance at the tournament. In the 2005 National Scrabble Championship Sujjayakorn won his first 9 consecutive games and 14 of his first 15, but won just 7 of his final 13 games. He qualified in second place for the final where he played David Wiegand, and led 2-0 in the final before Wiegand won all of the final three games to win the tournament.[4]
Achievements
- 2002 Thailand Match Play Champion
- 2003 World Scrabble champion
- 2005 US Scrabble Open runner up
External links
- Panupol Sujjayakorn Scrabble tournament results at cross-tables.com
References
- ↑ Thailand gets the last word in Scrabble newstraitstimes, 6 December 2010 Retrieved 30 April 2011
- ↑ http://www.wscgames.com/2003/ WSC 2003
- ↑ Scrabble Kings Vie for Linguistic Superiority, New York Times, Alan Cowell, 21 November 2005 Retrieved 30 April 2011
- ↑ Portland man spells his way to v-i-c-t-o-r-y The Seattle Times, Victor Greto, 26 August 2005 Retrieved 30 April 2011
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