World Scrabble Championship 2016
The MSI World Scrabble Championship 2016 was a Scrabble tournament organised by Mattel and Mindsports International (MSI) to determine the world champion in English Scrabble. It was held from 31 August to 4 September 2016 in Lille, France.
World Scrabble Championship 2016 | |
---|---|
31 August 2016 — 4 September 2016 | |
Winner | Brett Smitheram |
Number of players | 72 |
Location | Lille, France |
The event was split into two divisions based on players' World English-Language Scrabble Players' Association (WESPA) ratings. The top division comprised some 72 players. 24 games were played on the first three days, after which the top eight proceeded to a 3-game quarterfinals, with the winners advancing to a 5-game semifinals on the same day; the top two players, Brett Smitheram and Mark Nyman, played a best-of-five final the day after for the top prize of €7,000. Smitheram beat Nyman 3–0. The World Championship was held in conjunction with that of Scrabble in other languages.
Background
The MSI World Scrabble Championship 2016 was held from 31 August to 4 September 2016 under the auspices of Mindsports International and sponsored by Mattel and HarperCollins (the publisher of the official lexicon used in play), as part of the Mindsports International 2016 Championships.[1] The playing venue was the Lille Grand Palais. There were two divisions based on players' WESPA ratings: A (1700 and above, or by invitation by WESPA or the World Mind Sports Federation) and B (below 1700 or unrated).[1] MSI also hosted World Championships in other languages, including French, German, Spanish and Catalan, alongside the French Duplicate Championship.[1]
Participants
The top division comprised a total of 72 players, as listed below alphabetically.[2]
Adam Logan (CAN), 2107 Allan Simmons (SCO), 2094 Austin Shin (ENG), 2025 Barry Grossman (ENG), 1709 Bob Jackman (AUS), 1736 Brett Smitheram (ENG), 2170 Charles Micallef (MLT), 1520 Charles Tachie (GHA), 1985 Chris Lipe (USA), 1869 Chris Vicary (ENG), 1812 Craig Beevers (ENG), 2157 Dan Sandu (ROU), 1511 David Delicata (MLT), 1795 David Eldar (AUS), 2220 David Koenig (USA), 2013 David Webb (ENG), 2002 Dave Wiegand (USA), 2168 Dennis Ikekeregor (NGA), 2048 Elie Dangoor (ENG), 1767 Eta Karo (NGA), 2015 Evan Berofsky (CAN), 2053 Evan Cohen (ISR), 1969 Evans Clinchy (USA), 2061 Femi Awowade (ENG), 1837 Gerry Carter (THA), 1781 Gunnar Andersson (SWE), 1573 Hasham Hadi Khan (PAK), 1093 Herve Bohbot (FRA), 1500 Jack Durand (ENG), 1437 Jakkrit Klaphajone (THA), 2012 Jason Broersma (CAN), 1565 Jason Keller (USA), 1869 Jason Tsang (HKG), 1047 Jason Ubeika (CAN), 1632 Jesse Day (USA), 1986 Joel Wapnick (CAN), 1990 Karen Richards (AUS), 1528 Komol Panyasoponlert (THA), 2145 Kunihiko Kuroda (JPN), 1140 Leslie Charles (TTO), 1717 Lewis McKay (ENG), 2115 Lucas Freeman (USA), 1817 Mark Nyman (ENG), 2065 Marlon Prudencio (SGP), 1870 Martin Teo (MYS), 1804 Michael Tang (SGP), 1730 Mohan Chunkath (IND), 1702 Moiz Ullah Baig (PAK), 1792 Natalie Zolty (ENG), 1705 Neil Scott (SCO), 1923 Nigel Richards (MYS), 2258 Omri Rosenkrantz (ISR), 1539 Orlet Bullock (BAR), 1770 Paul Allan (SCO), 2015 Peter Armstrong (USA), 2053 Puneet Sharma (USA), 1571 Rafal Dominiczak (POL), 1828 Rik Kennedy (NIR), 1816 Robert Linn (USA), 1808 Rob Robinsky (USA), 2024 Scott Jackson (USA), 1661 Shan Abbasi (CAN), 1588 Stefan Rau (USA), 1821 Stephen Hunt (ENG), 1797 Steve Perry (ENG), 1655 Terry Kirk (ENG), 1851 Trevor Halsall (AUS), 1933 Vincent Boyle (ENG), 1747 Waseem Khatri (PAK), 1928 Wayne Kelly (ENG), 1873 Wellington Jighere (NGA), 2132 Winter (USA), 1774
Results
Preliminary
After 24 preliminary rounds, the top eight advanced to the quarterfinals. Three-time World Champion Nigel Richards (2007, 2011, and 2013) failed to qualify for the knockout rounds, as did 2015 and 2014 World Champions Wellington Jighere and Craig Beevers.[3]
Position | Name | Number of wins | Cumulative spread |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Mark Nyman | 19 | +1262 |
2 | David Webb | 19 | +1152 |
3 | Allan Simmons | 18 | +974 |
4 | Robert Robinsky | 17 | +1216 |
5 | Brett Smitheram | 16 | +1424 |
6 | Adam Logan | 16 | +854 |
7 | Lewis MacKay | 16 | +771 |
8 | Joel Wapnick | 16 | +676 |
9 | David Koenig | 15 | +334 |
10 | Paul Allan | 15 | +175 |
11 | Dennis Ikekeregor | 15 | −50 |
12 | Terry Kirk | 14½ | +155 |
13 | Nigel Richards | 14 | +987 |
14 | Peter Armstrong | 14 | +985 |
15 | Moiz Ullah Baig | 14 | +924 |
16 | Evans Clinchy | 14 | +649 |
17 | Winter | 14 | +393 |
18 | David Eldar | 14 | +312 |
19 | Scott Jackson | 14 | +224 |
20 | Jason Keller | 14 | +93 |
Source:[3]
Knockout
Quarterfinals (best of 3) | Semifinals (best of 5) | Final (best of 5) | ||||||||||||
1 | Allan Simmons | 0 | ||||||||||||
8 | Adam Logan | 2 | ||||||||||||
Lewis MacKay | 2 | |||||||||||||
Brett Smitheram | 3 | |||||||||||||
5 | Robert Robinsky | 0 | ||||||||||||
4 | Brett Smitheram | 2 | ||||||||||||
Brett Smitheram | 3 | |||||||||||||
Mark Nyman | 0 | |||||||||||||
3 | David Webb | 1 | ||||||||||||
6 | Lewis MacKay | 2 | ||||||||||||
Adam Logan | 2 | |||||||||||||
Mark Nyman | 3 | |||||||||||||
7 | Mark Nyman | 2 | ||||||||||||
2 | Joel Wapnick | 1 | ||||||||||||
Semi-finals losers Lewis MacKay and 2005 World Champion Adam Logan were scheduled to play a best-of-three third-place playoff, but Logan forfeited and MacKay automatically clinched the title of second runner-up.[6]
Finals
3 | 0 |
Born 8 March 1979 37 years old |
Born 14 October 1966 50 years old |
Finalist | Finalist and winner of the World Scrabble Championship 1993 |
WESPA Rating: 2170 (World No. 3)[7] | WESPA Rating: 2065 (World No. 20)[8] |
Round | Brett Smitheram | Mark Nyman |
---|---|---|
1 | 583 | 323 |
2 | 451 | 403 |
3 | 638 | 351 |
4 | – | – |
5 | – | – |
Source:[9]
UK-based recruitment consultant Brett Smitheram beat fellow Englishman and writer Mark Nyman, the 1993 World Scrabble Champion, 3–0 in the best-of-five finals, and became the 2016 World Scrabble Champion and won €7,000.[10] Notable plays by Smitheram included BRACONID for 181 points[11] (176 points plus 5 points for an unsuccessful challenge by Nyman), GYNAECIA (95) and PERIAGUA (76).[12] Incidentally, Smitheram was a former contestant on the television programme Countdown, and Nyman was one of its producers.[12] In the second division, Jack Mpakaboari beat Sandy Nang 3–0 in a best-of-five finals.[13]
References
- "Mindsports International 2016 Championships". Mind Sports International. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
- "02.09.2016 MSI WSC Lille: Ratings". WESPA. Retrieved June 25, 2017.
- "02.09.2016 MSI WSC Lille: A". WESPA. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
- "MSI World Scrabble Championships Semi Finals – Top 8". Mind Sports Academy. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
- Duncan, Natalie. "MSI World Scrabble Championships Semi Finals – Division A". Mind Sports Academy. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
- "It's 3rd and 4th Play Off". Mind Sports Academy. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
- "02.09.2016 MSI WSC Lille: Brett Smitheram". WESPA. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
- "02.09.2016 MSI WSC Lille: Mark Nyman". WESPA. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
- "It's The Final, Who Will Be World Scrabble Champion 2016?". Mind Sports Academy. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
- Willgress, Lydia. "Parasitic wasp wins British recruitment consultant World Scrabble Championship". The Telegraph.
- "Braconid: Briton wins Scrabble world title with 181-point word". The Guardian. 5 September 2016.
- "Brett Smitheram wins World Scrabble Championship". BBC.
- "Division B Finalists". Mind Sports Academy. Retrieved 22 November 2016.