Oh ACPT 2023, so many ups and downs you had! So many twists and turns!
Overall, it was a great weekend. I made some new friends; caught up with old friends; enjoyed as always the pro-puzzling, positive, welcoming community spirit; was the fastest solver on one of the Friday night "fun puzzles" (and won a crossword book!); had a great time with my trivia team partners on Saturday night; and just overall had a mighty good time.
I felt a little cautious/nervous about being back in a crowded place post-COVID -- I've been traveling some, and eating out, but generally not going to big public events, especially in the post-masking phase. (I was glad when the BSO was requiring vaccines and masks, but now that's all gone.) I wore a mask most of the time, other than when I was actively solving. Especially since there were so many solvers this year, trying to avoid crowds and disease meant that I spent less time hanging out in the public spaces, and as a result, missed out on seeing some folks who were there but we never even ran into each other.
But that caution didn't pay off in the end -- COVID finally caught up with me; after two years of "novid" status, I tested positive on Monday night after the tournament. I'm fairly certain I caught it on Friday night or maybe Saturday morning; that's a bit short but not atypical for omicron, and I have barely been out of the house otherwise for the previous week or so. At least one other solver also tested positive after the weekend, but there doesn't seem to have been a big outbreak. (I'm doing fine now; thanks for asking! 😊 I spent Tuesday in bed with fever/chills, headache, pretty bad congestion, and fatigue, but was on the mend by Wednesday and completely symptom-free by Saturday.)
Now to the results.
tl;dr I came in 45th overall, out of the (largest ever) field of 770 solvers. #8 for solvers in their 50s, #4 in Other New England.
That's really pretty good -- top 6%. But it didn't meet my own expectations for myself. I was aiming for the top 20, or at least top 25. And my stretch goal, which I know I am theoretically capable of, is coming in the top 10, if I have a really good year. So I am disappointed but such is life, and I'm trying to avoid the pointlessness of regret.
Here's the blow-by-blow, together with my usual "if I hadn't screwed up..." commentary.
- P1 - under-4-minute solve, but I missed the 3-minute cutoff by literally 1 second. So bummed. Only 13 people solved this faster than I did, and nobody solved it in under 3 minutes, so I would have been tied for 1st if I had solved this puzzle 1 second faster.
- P2 - 8 minutes, again barely missing the 7-minute cutoff, this time by 4 seconds. At this point, I was tied for 22nd but would have been in a 6-way tie for 10th place if I had been just a few seconds faster on each of the first two puzzles. (See what I mean about the possibility that I could have a top-10 finish?) 24 people were faster than me, but only 11 people were 2 minutes faster.
- P3 - 7 minutes, a little slower than I would have liked but very respectable, pulling me up to 15th place. Only 8 people were faster than me.
- P4 - 4 minutes, blazingly fast (only 7 people were faster) and inching me up again, to 14th place.
- P5 - 21 minutes. Sigh. I'm glad I finished this puzzle cleanly -- it was a bit of a slog (and I didn't really think the theme worked as well as it could have) but mostly I just got bogged down, in a negative mind-set, and jumped around too much. I was very, very disappointed with my time. I should have been at least 8 minutes faster, and I think I could have solved it in 12 minutes in a good year. Now don't get me wrong, this is a very hard puzzle and most solvers don't finish it at all, much less finishing it cleanly. But 51 people were faster than me, and I know I could do way better. C'est la vie. This dropped my standing to 35th place. It was not going to be easy coming back from there.
- P6 - 6 minutes. Only 9 solvers were faster than this (and even the folks who were in the A finals were only 1 minute faster; there was just one person (David Plotkin; ended up 4th overall) who solved this puzzle in under 4 minutes). This really helped -- now I was 26th and in the top few in both 50s and New England. I had a good shot at those prize categories.
- P7 - 9 minutes. Only 10 people were faster than me on this puzzle. This is one of my fastest times ever, if not my very fastest time, on P7, which is Sunday-sized (21x21). I am damn proud of that time on this puzzle, since I have been working diligently to improve my speed and smoothness on these larger puzzles. I am damn proud of not making any actual mistakes -- I knew every single word in this puzzle with 100% certainty, and was careful enough throughout that I really didn't even need a final check, though I took a quick scan for empty squares.
But. Sigh. So disappointing. I had made a mistake very early on (written OAHU instead of MAUI). That was sloppy of me -- I don't normally write non-confirmed answers that have any ambiguity, and this was one of those cases. I quickly erased OAHU and wrote MAUI, but I failed to erase the right-hand part of the original U. So that box had two vertical lines in it, and they marked it wrong. I can't blame them -- it certainly doesn't look like a nice clean I; but it doesn't actually look like any other letter, either. (It's maybe closest to an N, but there's no connecting diagonal line.) Here it is for posterity:I did send a request for judge review, and they said they'd look at it, but I haven't heard anything. I don't really expect them to change the results but thought I'd regret it if I didn't at least ask. Anyway, what happens if you have one letter marked wrong is that you lose 195 points: 150 for the perfect-puzzle bonus; 25 points for the wrong letter [technically you lose 1 minute of time bonus]; and 20 points for the two incorrect words formed by that letter. That dropped my score on this puzzle from what would have been 2450 to 2255. At that point, I plummeted to 45th place.
2 comments:
One year I had written a “Y” in a somewhat ambiguous way, and it was judged as incorrect, even after I asked for review. It makes me more inclined now to erase and rewrite any letter that might be misinterpreted. I feel your pain.
Thanks for sharing that, Jenn, I'm guessing that's how my review will turn out as well. I generally am SO careful with how I write letters, often erasing and rewriting sloppy letters -- but I just didn't see that one somehow.
Another (unrelated) thing I was thinking as I was reading this is that normally when I do puzzles, I'm sitting on a couch or in a comfy chair and not at a table like I am at the tournament. In the next few months, leading up to the summer tournaments, I'm planning to make a point of table-based solving a little more often, since I think I have slightly different habits (especially since at a table, you don't have to *hold* the puzzle / book, so you have a whole extra hand free to do those fancy things like pointing...).
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