ACUI Collegiate Pocket Billiards National Championship: Difference between revisions
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:'''First place:''' Briana Miller of Lindenwood University (defending 2014 division champion; 2010 [[Super Billiards Expo]] Nine-ball Champion (women's); former multi-year BEF Junior National Champion and 2010 [[WPA World Nine-ball |
:'''First place:''' Briana Miller of Lindenwood University (defending 2014 division champion; 2010 [[Super Billiards Expo]] Nine-ball Champion (women's); former multi-year BEF Junior National Champion and 2010 [[WPA World Nine-ball Championship|WPA World Juniors]] runner-up; [[pro-am]] competitor in the [[Women's Professional Billiard Association|WPBA]] since age 13)<ref>http://billiardeducation.org/briana-miller/ <!--Archived: https://web.archive.org/web/20160204155202/http://billiardeducation.org/briana-miller/ --></ref> |
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:'''Second place:''' Alex Bayless of [[Southern Illinois University–Edwardsville]] |
:'''Second place:''' Alex Bayless of [[Southern Illinois University–Edwardsville]] |
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:'''Third place:''' Rachny Soun of [[James Madison University]], Virginia |
:'''Third place:''' Rachny Soun of [[James Madison University]], Virginia |
Revision as of 15:29, 18 February 2016
The ACUI Collegiate Pocket Billiards National Championship, in recent years known more specifically as the ACUI Collegiate Nine-ball National Championship, is an amateur United States annual pool competition for university and college students, organized by the Association of College Unions International (ACUI). It was founded in 1937,[1] and is one of ACUI's longest-running programs.[2]
Format and other event details
The championship has featured separate men's and women's divisions and champions since 1939.[1] The event and its regional qualifying tournaments follow Billiard Congress of America (BCA) / World Pool-Billiard Association (WPA) world-standardized rules, and are double-elmiination in format. The championship is a BCA-sanctioned event, with champions listed as such in BCA's Billiards: The Official Rules and Records Book. BCA has been involved in the events' promotion to varying degrees over the years, as has the Billiard Education Foundation (which operates the Junior National Nine-ball Championships, sometimes held jointly with the ACUI event since 2005[3]). First- through fourth-place prizes are scholarship funds, ranging from US$1,000 down to $100 as of 2007.[3][update]
The championships are usually held in May or June, with qualifying local tournaments held at individual educational institution campuses (or nearby facilities) during the fall and spring semesters.[4] Regional, multi-state playoffs are held toward the end of the spring semester over a weekend, alongside other ACUI competitions, including table tennis, and College Bowl-style trivia.
Name
The name of the ACUI championship has changed over time, reflecting the particular pool discipline featured in the event. It is presently known as the ACUI Collegiate Nine-ball National Championship (among various shorter formulations).[2] Collectively, the events are known as the ACUI Collegiate Pocket Billiards National Championships (among shorter formulations).[1][5] The event is sometimes referred to as international,[6] owing to ACUI's name, but is a US national title.
Champions and records
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (February 2016) |
The 2015 winners and runners-up:
- Women's division
- First place: Briana Miller of Lindenwood University (defending 2014 division champion; 2010 Super Billiards Expo Nine-ball Champion (women's); former multi-year BEF Junior National Champion and 2010 WPA World Juniors runner-up; pro-am competitor in the WPBA since age 13)[7]
- Second place: Alex Bayless of Southern Illinois University–Edwardsville
- Third place: Rachny Soun of James Madison University, Virginia
- Men's division
- First place: Landon Shuffett of Lindenwood University, Missouri (defending 2014 division champion; Kentucky State Men's Nine-ball Champion; and former multi-year BEF Junior National Champion[8])
- Second place: Sharik Sayed of Lindenwood University
- Third place: Touy Bouapha of Madison Area Technical College, Wisconsin
As of 2007,[update] the player with the record number of first-place titles was Eleanor Callado, then of San Francisco State University, California, winning the women's division four times, in 2003 and 2005–2007 (taking second place in 2004).[3]
References
- ^ a b c https://www.acui.org/content.aspx?menu_id=14&id=13181
- ^ a b https://www.acui.org/billiards/
- ^ a b c https://web.archive.org/web/20110919135920/http://www.poolmag.com/acui.cfm
- ^ https://uunions.umich.edu/billiards/article/acui-intercollegiate-recreation
- ^ http://billiardeducation.org/acui-announces-collegiate-national-contestants/
- ^ http://www.insidepoolmag.com/201206/billiard-news/national-collegiate-billiards-championships-underway.html
- ^ http://billiardeducation.org/briana-miller/
- ^ http://billiardeducation.org/landon-shuffett/
External links
- ACUI Billiards official homepage