This weekend my brother and myself went to the 28th annual American Crossword Tournament in Stamford, Connecticut, to compete in the nation's biggest test of paper and pencil skills. Having been away from the tournament for health reasons for five years, it was a lot of fun for me to reconnect with a few names from game show lore, and the tournament finals (which has been considered for telecast by a start-up cable-TV gaming network) were especailly drama-worthy.
In the finals as he seems to be nearly every year was Norman "Trip" Payne, the Atlanta-based crossword contributor and defending champion. He was the first to break through the $32,000 barrier on "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire". This year he wound up second to first-time champ Tyler Hinman, who is only 20 years old.
Also top-tenning this year was the woman who is regarded as the Susan Lucci of the tournament, Ellen Ripstein. The former "Millionaire" staffer won a number of years back after being in the tournament a few dozen times.
And it was also a pleasure to bump into Merl Reagle again. One of the craftiest puzzle makers out there, Merl was the writer of the puzzles on "Crosswits" for the revival. This year one of his punning puzzles was used in the tourney, and it was the second-hardest of the batch. Reagle also provided color commentary for NPR alongside Neal Conan, making smart remarks about words like ASSIZE ("Who's got ass size now?").
The real drama of the tournament occurred when, during the finals, Al Sanders finished his puzzle well ahead of Trip and Tyler -- or at least he thought he did. He neglected to complete the initial Across word, ZOLAESQUE, leaving out the Z and A. When he realized his gaffe, he slammed his noise-blocking headphones down and sat behind the stage, hanging his head. This opened the door for Tyler and Trip, with Tyler finishing two minutes ahead of Trip. TV-worthy? You bet!
Would you have gotten this fifteen-letter phrase from the championship puzzle? "Subject of the 1959 Harris Committee Investigation".