World Scrabble Championship 1999
Encyclopedia
The World Scrabble Championship 1999 was the fifth World Scrabble Championship and was held at the Carlton Crest Hotel, Melbourne, Australia.
The winner was Joel Wapnick
of Canada. This was the second time a player representing Canada has won, the first being when David Boys
won in 1995
. The 1991
champion, Peter Morris, was also a Canadian but represented the United States.
Eight games were played on each of the first three days with the top two players advancing to a best-of-five finals.
In the first game, Wapnick opened with the bingo
CHAPLET and took a 249-60 lead three turns later with the double -double FILTHIER then cruised to a 624-307 victory. Nyman took the second game and Wapnick took the third then got off to an early lead in the fourth before losing a turn when he tried the phony FUROUR. The game remained tight, with both players getting down two bingos, until Wapnick drew the X and DEOXY for 50 to take a one -point lead and take the last tile out of the bag. With Wapnick having multiple places to go out, Nyman was unable to catch him and lost by a single point. Joel Wapnick could now add a world title to his US national title and Canadian title
, one of only two players to have won the big three.
The winner was Joel Wapnick
Joel Wapnick
Joel Wapnick is a Scrabble player from Montreal, Canada, best known for winning the 1999 World Scrabble Championship .Wapnick reached the WSC finals in 1993 and 2001...
of Canada. This was the second time a player representing Canada has won, the first being when David Boys
David Boys
David Boys is a top Canadian Scrabble expert. He won the World Scrabble Championship in London, UK, in 1995, and the Canadian Scrabble Championship in 2003. He also finished third in the WSC in both 1991 and 1999. In 2007, he lost a match to a computer. His competitive career began in 1986...
won in 1995
World Scrabble Championship 1995
The World Scrabble Championship 1995 was the third World Scrabble Championship. The winner was David Boys of Canada.A fifteen round, Swiss-paired preliminary event was used to determine initial placement...
. The 1991
World Scrabble Championship 1991
The World Scrabble Championship 1991 was the first World Scrabble Championship. The winner was Peter Morris, a Canadian, representing the United States....
champion, Peter Morris, was also a Canadian but represented the United States.
Eight games were played on each of the first three days with the top two players advancing to a best-of-five finals.
In the first game, Wapnick opened with the bingo
Bingo (Scrabble)
Bingo is a slang term used in Scrabble when a player uses all seven of their own letters in one play. This also applies to use 8 or 9 tiles in a turn of 9-tile scrabble. Any player who does this receives an extra 50 points on top of what the word would normally score...
CHAPLET and took a 249-60 lead three turns later with the double -double FILTHIER then cruised to a 624-307 victory. Nyman took the second game and Wapnick took the third then got off to an early lead in the fourth before losing a turn when he tried the phony FUROUR. The game remained tight, with both players getting down two bingos, until Wapnick drew the X and DEOXY for 50 to take a one -point lead and take the last tile out of the bag. With Wapnick having multiple places to go out, Nyman was unable to catch him and lost by a single point. Joel Wapnick could now add a world title to his US national title and Canadian title
Canadian Scrabble Championship
The Canadian National Scrabble Championship is the Canadian national Scrabble competition in the English language, open by invitation and special qualification only to the top rank of Canadian players. All CNSC events have been held in Toronto....
, one of only two players to have won the big three.
Complete Results
Position | Name | Country | Win-Loss | Spread | Prize (USD United States dollar The United States dollar , also referred to as the American dollar, is the official currency of the United States of America. It is divided into 100 smaller units called cents or pennies.... ) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Wapnick, Joel | Canada | 18-6 | +1068 | 15,000 |
2 | Nyman, Mark | England | 17-7 | +808 | 7,500 |
3 | Boys, David | Canada | 17-7 | +693 | 3,000 |
4 | Logan, Adam | Canada | 16-8 | +886 | 2,000 |
5 | Fisher, Andrew | England | 16-8 | +797 | 1,500 |
6 | Byers, Russell | England | 16-8 | +647 | 1,250 |
7 | Tiekert, Ron | United States | 16-8 | +366 | 1,000 |
8 | Richards, Nigel | New Zealand | 15-9 | +1616 | 750 |
9 | Cook, Andrew | England | 15-9 | +983 | 400 |
10 | Holgate, John | Australia | 15-9 | +782 | 400 |
11 | Cappelletto, Brian | United States | 15-9 | +711 | 300 |
12 | Boyd, Kendall | New Zealand | 15-9 | +603 | 300 |
13 | Fernando, Naween Tharanga | Sri Lanka | 15-9 | +217 | 200 |
14 | Appleby, Phil | England | 15-9 | +191 | 200 |
15 | Sherman, Joel | World Champion | 15-9 | +73 | 200 |
16 | Chinnaiyah, Suresh | Sri Lanka | 14-10 | +910 | 200 |
17 | Wiegand, David | United States | 14-10 | +820 | |
18 | Klaphajone, Jakkrit | Thailand | 14-10 | +635 | |
19 | Quiballo, Virgilio | Philippines | 14-10 | +566 | |
20 | Luebkemann, John | United States | 14-10 | +309 | |
21 | Chunkath, Mohan Verghese | India | 14-10 | +292 | |
22 | Awowade, Femi | England | 14-10 | +203 | |
23 | Odom, Lisa | United States | 14-10 | +151 | |
24 | Ndungu, Stanley Njoroge | Kenya | 14-10 | +102 | |
25 | Epstein, Paul | United States | 14-10 | +88 | |
26 | Jackman, Bob | Australia | 13½-10½ | +166 | |
27 | Webb, David | England | 13-11 | +602 | |
28 | Edley, Joe | United States | 13-11 | +447 | |
29 | Credo, Ronald | Philippines | 13-11 | +439 | |
30 | Gongolo, Michael | Kenya | 13-11 | +255 | |
31 | Gruzd, Steven | South Africa | 13-11 | +222 | |
32 | Rosenthal, Joan | Australia | 13-11 | +214 | |
33 | Warner, Howard | New Zealand | 13-11 | +194 | |
34 | Williams, Gareth | Wales | 13-11 | +178 | |
35 | Hersom, Randy | United States | 13-11 | +106 | |
36 | Thobani, Shafique | Kenya | 13-11 | +14 | |
37 | Ploysangngam, Amnuay | Thailand | 13-11 | -16 | |
38 | Cherry, James | Canada | 13-11 | -27 | |
39 | Pra, Michael | Oman | 13-11 | -369 | |
40 | Nemitrmansuk, Pakorn | Thailand | 13-11 | -382 | |
41 | Grant, Jeff | New Zealand | 13-11 | -588 | |
42 | Chishty, Ishtiaq | Saudi Arabia | 12½-114½ | +399 | |
43 | Rio, Odette Carmina | Philippines | 12-12 | +569 | |
44 | Smitheram, Brett | England | 12-12 | +555 | |
45 | Felt, Robert | United States | 12-12 | +360 | |
46 | Geary, Jim | United States | 12-12 | +358 | |
47 | Filio, Roland | Philippines | 12-12 | +285 | |
48 | Schonbrun, Lester | United States | 12-12 | +100 | |
49 | Gipson, Helen | England | 12-12 | +37 | |
50 | Pui, Cheng Wui | Malaysia | 12-12 | +6 | |
51 | Jimoh, Saheed | Nigeria | 12-12 | -22 | |
52 | Bwire, Matayo | Kenya | 12-12 | -31 | |
53 | Hahn, Albert | Canada | 12-12 | -48 | |
54 | Bondin, Owen | Malta | 12-12 | -293 | |
55 | Asirvatham, Ganesh | Malaysia | 12-12 | -293 | |
56 | Warwick, Wilma | Scotland | 11½-12½ | -514 | |
57 | Bhandarkar, Akshay | Bahrain | 11½-12½ | +156 | |
58 | Cleary, Paul Stephen | Australia | 11½-12½ | +59 | |
59 | Sutthasin, Taewan | Thailand | 11½-12½ | -728 | |
60 | Sim, Tony | Singapore | 11-13 | +247 | |
61 | Early, Dylan | South Africa | 11-13 | +115 | |
62 | Gonzalez, Ricardo V | Gulf Champion | 11-13 | +112 | |
63 | Lipton, Bob | United States | 11-13 | -8 | |
64 | Polatnick, Steve | United States | 11-13 | -130 | |
65 | Tang, Michael | Malaysia | 11-13 | -172 | |
66 | Sinton, Peter | New Zealand | 11-13 | -197 | |
67 | Elbourne, Peter | Malta | 11-13 | -319 | |
68 | Abraham, Arvind | United Arab Emirates | 11-13 | -359 | |
69 | Khan, Rashid Ateeq | Pakistan | 11-13 | -427 | |
70 | Berlin, Barbara | Australia | 11-13 | -487 | |
71 | Gan, Cher Siong | Singapore | 11-13 | -726 | |
72 | Hirai, Keiichiro | Japan | 10½-13½ | +188 | |
73 | Hovelmeier, Trevor Mark | South Africa | 10-14 | +197 | |
74 | McDonnell, Brendan | Ireland | 10-14 | +75 | |
75 | Webb, Alice | England | 10-14 | -33 | |
76 | Lobo, Selwyn | United Arab Emirates | 10-14 | -83 | |
77 | Kong, Chock Heng | Malaysia | 10-14 | -210 | |
78 | Judd, Rodney | Pakistan | 10-14 | -366 | |
79 | Assesa, Dixon | Kenya | 10-14 | -398 | |
80 | Penaflor, Vivian | Bahrain | 10-14 | -476 | |
81 | Pray, Linda Hazel | Oman | 10-14 | -591 | |
82 | Kuroda, Kunihiko | Japan | 10-14 | -614 | |
83 | Eburu, Gold | Nigeria | 10-14 | -740 | |
84 | Usakiewicz, Wojciech | Poland | 10-14 | -876 | |
85 | Costello, Catherine | Ireland | 9½-14½ | -237 | |
86 | Charles, Leslie | Trinidad and Tobago | 9½-14½ | -603 | |
87 | Blom, Roger | Australia | 9-15 | +215 | |
88 | Metivier, Edward | Trinidad and Tobago | 9-15 | -164 | |
89 | Kane, Alistair | Australia | 9-15 | -353 | |
90 | Goh, Eugene | Singapore | 9-15 | -498 | |
91 | Sandu, Dan Laurentiu | Romania | 9-15 | -2008 | |
92 | Nanavati, Jim | Canada | 8-16 | +6 | |
93 | Fasuba, Johnson | Seychelles | 8-16 | -491 | |
94 | Wanniarachchi, Lakshan | Sri Lanka | 8-16 | -519 | |
95 | Michel, Antonin | France | 8-16 | -951 | |
96 | Silva, Dhanpala | Seychelles | 8-16 | -1187 | |
97 | Saliba, Mario | Malta | 7-17 | -868 | |
98 | Caba, Catalin-Eugen | Romania | 3-21 | -2991 |
- Finals
- Game 1: Wapnick 624 - Nyman 307
- Game 2: Nyman 444 - Wapnick 330
- Game 3: Wapnick 462 - Nyman 339
- Game 4: Wapnick 403 - Nyman 402