Archive
BibleQuizzer.net Poll
This is the first poll of the 2011-12 Bible Quiz season.
| 1 | Woodside (3) | 45 |
| 2 | Falls WI | 37 |
| 3 | Hillsdale (2) | 36 |
| 4 | Temple TN | 30 |
| 5 | Scripture | 29 |
| 6 | New York | 24 |
| 7 | Pleasant View KY | 18 |
| 8 | Calvary FL | 17 |
| 9 | Open Door | 12 |
| 10 | Mukwonago | 10 |
Others receiving votes:
Kettle Moraine 9, Calvary SC 3, Faith MI 2, Northside 2, Faith SC 1
Season Ending Coaches’ Poll
| 1 | Woodside | CO |
| 2 | Falls | WI |
| 3 | Hillsdale | FL |
| 3 | Temple | TN |
| 5 | Scripture | NM |
| 6 | Heritage Mission | NY |
| 7 | Calvary | FL |
| 8 | Pleasant View | KY |
| 8 | Mukwonago | WI |
| 10 | Kettle Moraine | WI |
| Others receiving votes: Faith MI and Hampton Park SC | ||
Elementary Final Review
by Matt West
The elementary finals began with an array of teams from multiple states. The interesting thing about this tournament is that there have been 8 years of this tournament. This year would complete our first run through the 9-year cycle. As I look back at all the great quizzers we’ve had, some have gone on to great things at the high school level, some have been decent quizzers in the upper levels, some have stories that are not yet completed, and some fell off into anonymity. But two things have been constant. First, they have all learned verses! Second, a team from Florida has always managed to pull it out in the Finals. Could it be that we could go through an entire 9-year cycle of Bible Quiz without another state pulling a champion?
As we entered the day, there were two teams from Florida. Both were coming in as underdogs to the Tennessee state champion and the Pennsylvania state champion. As we went through the round robin, Old Paths and Temple seemed to be the best two teams, but Open Door showed flashes of being able to beat anyone in a particular quiz. The Faith team from Florida was clearly the youngest team and they did not look like they could challenge either of the top two teams in their round robin quizzes. But, in the last quiz for the Round Robin, they came down to the final question against Open Door and maybe, just maybe they would be there.
Now, for a quick scouting report on each of the top four teams.
Old Paths Pennsylvania was an extraordinarily accurate team. The team had 5 errors in 5 quizzes in the morning. They had two quizzers (the Cler brother-sister tandem) who were capable of quizzing out in any quiz and their other two quizzers, Bethy and Michaela, were both outstanding quoters who could also answer questions. This team was beatable, but they would not beat themselves.
Temple Tennessee is almost the polar opposite of Old Paths. They were exceedingly dynamic, beating the two Florida teams by an average of over 200 points. They had four quizzers who attempted to get up on seemingly every question. While they could score in bunches, they also would take chances and make errors. Nathaniel Miljeonvic, Abraham Black, and Grant Balka were all capable of getting several questions in a row and I’m confident that Carson and Mikeala could have done well had they not been with the dynamic three.
Open Door Florida has never reached the level of success they had with Grace D’Amico, but they finally had a team capable of competing on every question. They were similar to Temple stylistically, but they were a step slower. They were fast enough to encourage the teams ahead of them to jump faster, increasing the chances of those teams getting errors. Coleman Bernal and Joseph Young were great, but I wonder what would have happened if Joshua Singh would have joined them. Cami Bernal and Hannah Allen were exceedingly accurate, but they were dominated by the boys.
Faith Florida was, by far, the youngest team here. Their top quizzer for the year, Meigan Kacir, had broken her foot and was forced to use the handicap buzzer. She was not up to her normal standards. Emily Thomas is a steady captain for this otherwise young team, and she did her job well. Joshy Curtiss is a quoting machine, and he was very good on finish this verse questions. Jacob West tried in a few quizzes and when he did, he answered questions. This team was substantially slower than the others, and other than the chapters Caleb Arguna (who had out of country family coming to stay at his house) had specialized in, the team was really accurate.
The semifinals were a pair of best two-out-of-three series.
In the Temple-Open Door series, both quizzes were similar. Temple got an early lead, Open Door got a few questions to tighten the gap, but Temple made a run from questions 13-17 to pull away for good. Open Door felt like they could have won if Temple had just missed a 50-50 or two, but in the end, Temple won.
The Faith-Old Paths series took a little different tenor. Old Paths slowed down dramatically, knowing that Faith, being so young, was slower to jump. Joshy Curtiss got a couple of early finishes, Emily Thomas and Meigan Kacir both got a few questions, and by the time Old Paths decided to speed up again, Jacob West decided it was time for him to get two questions in a row. Improbably, Faith was able to get a win in one quiz. However, it was close, and Old Paths was confident they were they better team. While the scores looked close in the two quizzes, Old Paths never really was concerned and won both pretty handily. They were impressed that the Faith team might be a team to reckon with in years to come.
That set up the championship quiz between Old Paths and Temple. This was certainly a tale of three completely different quizzes. Quiz One, Temple dominated from the start. They made but one error in the first ten questions and led by over 100 going into question 11. Old Paths did not panic, but did not challenge either. Temple won handily. In the second quiz, the exact opposite happened. Temple made 7 errors early and was down by over 100 by question 12. Old Paths won handily and never really looked challenged.
That brought us to the all-decisive quiz three. In this quiz, Old Paths fell behind early. Behind Nathaniel and Grant, Temple went ahead 80-0. Then Tim Cler decided it was his time to shine. He got two questions in a row, and Temple sped up and made three errors in the next four questions to leave the quiz tied after ten questions. From question 11-15, Charity Cler proved why she was the highest quizzer of the day, as she got three questions. Old Paths led 180-110 going into the error zone. A key error on question 17 by Temple won the quiz for Old Paths, who hung on despite Temple having all five quizzers answer a question in the final.
Temple Tennessee seems to have turned into a team that always gets second place. If anyone can understand that situation, it is the Old Paths team, whose coach Daniel Keenan was on at least ten teams that finished second or third and never seemed to win a national-level tournament. Daniel said he was very happy to trade roles with the Temple and move into a winning tradition as a coach.
It was an incredible event and we hope that everyone can come next year. Please contact anyone at this website if you have any interest in fielding an elementary team next year.
Bible Quizzing is so Predictable
by David Poston
In Bible Quiz, some things are predictable. The Colorado Invitational will put on an amazing tournament. SCQANIT will boast the best field of any tournament. There will be errors, fouls, defeats, and tears. There will be upsets, comebacks, quiz outs, victories, and cheers. These predictions are practically guarantees: you can take them to the bank. After the first grand slam (Athens-New Year’s Classic), I stepped up to the plate with a strong prediction. This would be the year of Woodside! They had always been a solid program with a winning pedigree, but the national championship had shifted to the Southeast for several years. Looking back to mid-January, I don’t think my prediction was that far off base. February made my prediction look golden. Woodside came from behind to force a deciding game in the finals of the Colorado Invitational against Temple TN then displayed the most dominating performance I have ever seen in a final quiz by locking up their second grand slam of the year by question 12 or so.
First grand slam tournament in Athens-New Year’s Classic? Check. Second grand slam tournament in Denver-Colorado Invitational? Check. Ok, the prediction is looking good. Fast forward—Nationals week ushers in the final two grand slams. Early Monday, Woodside faced a tough matchup against Temple and Calvary FL. In the 5th round with 15 teams remaining in the tournament, Woodside posted 100 points but found themselves one question short of securing the middle and took their first loss. After a strong run of quizzing throughout the afternoon rounds, Woodside skirted elimination until only three teams remained. In yet another tight quiz that resembled so many others that day, Woodside found 100 points to be insufficient for the second time. Falls and Temple would square off for the SCQANIT championship.
Yes, some things in Bible Quiz are predictable. Let me tell you what is not predictable: Falls Baptist WI winning SCQANIT (at least before this year anyway.) About the time we had learned how to correctly spell and pronounce Mukwonago, another Wisconsin program bursts onto the scene. While we do not publish our individual ballots, I will admit that I left Falls out of my pre-Nationals week top 10. WHOOPS! After their impressive showing Monday, I couldn’t help but wonder how well this team could do if they were able to compete at Nationals the next day. Their calm, steady approach would be perfect at a Nationals tournament. But 2011 yielded no such possibility for Falls (Mukwonago proudly represented Wisconsin on Tuesday.)
Yes, some things in Bible Quiz are predictable. Let me tell you what is not predictable: A team that can’t crack SCQANIT’s top ten on Monday wins Nationals on Thursday. In a tournament that lived up to its reputation, teams fighting to make the finals found every quiz to be a nail biter Tuesday afternoon. In fact, the final 5 quizzes on Tuesday saw the high team be separated from the losing team by an average right at only 50 points. Both two team quizzes in Thursday’s finals held that average. Temple struggled to adjust to the Nationals style reference questions. Double digit errors proved to be too much to overcome as the up and coming Tennessee program finished in 4th place. With 3 teams remaining, Woodside posted 100 points against Hillsdale and Heritage Mission. Have you learned anything from this article yet about Woodside scoring 100 points? In a three team quiz, 100 points quite often secures the middle. Unfortunately for Woodside, this week’s quizzing was just too good for that. Woodside finished 3rd leaving Heritage Mission with no losses to face off against Hillsdale (with one loss.)
You that know me well may think I have legitimate reasons to root for Heritage Mission in such a quiz as this. You’re right-I do. But my reason is the same as every other person’s in Bible Quiz. As much as Michael Jordan deserved an NBA championship…as much as Ronald Reagan deserved a second term…Nada Rogers deserved a National Championship. Don’t get me wrong—it’s easy to love Hillsdale! The Barbers have been loved by the Quiz world since I can remember. The Hillsdale kids embraced quiz so quickly and came to their first tournaments a few years back with such great excitement and great attitudes. Hillsdale’s involvement has enhanced Bible Quiz. As far as I’m concerned, their quizzers are incredible young people and fun to be around. Just a month ago at the Blue Ridge Invitational, Bobby Smith (after having quizzed out) watched from the sideline as his teammates had several chances to get one question to secure a win. After Temple raced to a comeback and a tournament victory, Bobby was the first person to the stage to congratulate the Temple quizzers. This team is easy to root for.
But after several finals appearances at Nationals without a championship, the quiz world had to hope these Heritage kids could bring a championship to a lady that has done so much for Bible Quiz. This team had no star quizzers. They had no Erica Olsens, no Grace Borkerts, no Bobby Smiths, and no Kelton Balkas. They had no stellar previous tournament finishes to draw confidence from. What they did have was the scripture memorized, an understanding of how to quiz, valuable experience on the coaching staff, and the perfect quizzing style to succeed at Nationals. Glory Lofgren, Josh Brown, Stephanie Ludlow, Abigail Albert, Jessica Phillips, and Catherine Ludlow proved to be the perfect mix to complete this job. And what would a Biblequizzer.net article about Heritage Mission be without mentioning the amazing depth of the Heritage coaching staff. Congratulations to Nada Rogers, Mikel Brown, John Ludlow, and Paul Lofgren! From 12th (or something close to it) on Monday to securing their first National Championship (with no losses!), it was simply put—Unpredictable!