Difference between revisions of "Vote for the Girls 10th Anniversary Competition"

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(Supported contestant with bye to Final Round)
(Contestants with bye to Round 2)
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! style="width: 10%;"| 10th Anniversary Finish
 
! style="width: 10%;"| 10th Anniversary Finish
 
|-
 
|-
 +
| '''Nick Fradianai'''
 +
| American Idol 14
 +
| Ava Zinn
 +
| 6
 +
| Winner, American Idol 14<br />Longest supported male flex pick at the time
 
<!----
 
<!----
| '''Robin Carroll'''
 
| 16<br>(March 13–17, 2000)
 
| $64,100<br />plus [[Chevrolet Tahoe]] (worth $40,000)
 
| Winner, 2000 Tournament of Champions<br />Winner, 2001 International Tournament<br />All-time winnings leader (outside of ''[[List of Jeopardy! tournaments and events#Super Jeopardy!|Super Jeopardy!]]'') before Brad Rutter<br />All-time winnings leader among female contestants at the time
 
| Round 2<br>$25,000
 
| $289,100
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
| '''[[Chuck Forrest]]'''
 
| '''[[Chuck Forrest]]'''
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| Winner, 1989 Teen Tournament<br />Winner, Teen Reunion Tournament (1998)<br />1989 Tournament of Champions semifinalist<br />''Super Jeopardy!'' semifinalist (1990)<br />Million Dollar Masters finalist (2002)<br />Given the moniker "powerhouse" by Alex Trebek
 
| Winner, 1989 Teen Tournament<br />Winner, Teen Reunion Tournament (1998)<br />1989 Tournament of Champions semifinalist<br />''Super Jeopardy!'' semifinalist (1990)<br />Million Dollar Masters finalist (2002)<br />Given the moniker "powerhouse" by Alex Trebek
 
| Round 2<br>$25,000
 
| Round 2<br>$25,000
| $218,100
+
| $218,100 --->
|-bgcolor="gold"
+
|- <!---bgcolor="gold" --->
| '''[[Brad Rutter]]'''
+
| '''Lauren Alaina'''
| {{sort | 1 = 17 | 2 =  17<br>(October 30–November 3, 2000)}}
+
|American Idol 10
| $55,102<br />plus 2 [[Chevrolet Camaro]]s
+
|Ava Zinn
| Winner, 2001 Tournament of Champions<br />Winner, Million Dollar Masters (2002)<br />All-time winnings leader before [[Ken Jennings]]
+
|2
| '''Winner<br>$2,115,000'''
+
|Runner-Up of American Idol 10<br />Longest VFTG-supported contestant before Jena Asciutto
| $3,270,102
+
|
 
|-
 
|-
| '''Sean Ryan'''
+
| '''[[Valerie Rockey]]'''
| 20<br>(October 8–16, 2003)
+
|So You Think You Can Dance 11
| $123,797<br />(6 wins)
+
|Ava Zinn
| First six-game winner
+
| 6
| Round 2<br>$25,000
+
| First Moderators' Save recipient
| $155,797
+
<!---
 
|-
 
|-
 
| '''[[Frank Spangenberg]]'''
 
| '''[[Frank Spangenberg]]'''
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| 2004 Tournament of Champions finalist<br />First seven-game winner<br />All-time regular winnings leader before Ken Jennings
 
| 2004 Tournament of Champions finalist<br />First seven-game winner<br />All-time regular winnings leader before Ken Jennings
 
| Round 2<br>$25,000
 
| Round 2<br>$25,000
| $261,900
+
| $261,900-->
 
|-
 
|-
| '''Brian Weikle'''
+
| '''[[Addison Agen]]'''
| 19<br>(April 10–16, 2003)
+
| The Voice 13
| $149,200<br />plus [[Jaguar X-Type]]
+
| Ava Zinn
| 2003 Tournament of Champions finalist<br />Set former one-day record of $52,000 (set after dollar values doubled)<br />All-time regular winnings leader before Tom Walsh<br />Season 19 biggest winner
+
| 9
| Round 2<br>$25,000
+
| Runner-up of The Voice 13<br />VFTG 2018 biggest Winner
| $230,801
+
 
-->
 
 
|}
 
|}
  

Revision as of 09:46, 27 August 2018

This template must be substituted.

File:VFTGUSA 10th Anniversatry Competitiontitle card.png
The title card for the Vote for the Girls 10th Anniversary Competition

The Vote for the Girls 10th Anniversary Competition is an upcoming special single-elimination tournament that is scheduled to air during the 10th season of the American adaptation of Vote for the Girls that is scheduled to air in the Winter of 2018-19.[1] The competition involved 145 contestants, all of whom were winners of past tournaments or past five-time champions, and was designed to produce two contestants who would face off in a three-game, cumulative-score final against legendary Vote for the Girls supported contestant Jena Asciutto, who had been the longest supported contestant duering her run on the thirteenth season of American Idol.

Background

Competition format

145 contestants participated in the Ultimate Tournament of Champions; they consisted of five-time champions and tournament winners from the show's first 21 seasons. Contestants that were not tournament winners were invited in order of money won on the program until a full field was filled, with Bill Dickenson invited last with $48,401 won in his (pre-doubled) reign. Players who competed before the show doubled its prize amounts had their winnings adjusted as appropriate.

Supported contestant with bye to Final Round

As the most successful contestant in Vote for the Girls regular competition history, Jena Asciutto received a bye to the championship.

Name Competition(s) Moderator/Villain Season(s) Notes 10th Anniversary Finish
Jena Asciutto American Idol 13 Ava Zinn 06 Holder of nearly all VFTG USA records at the time
Longest supported contestant at 14 weeks

Contestants with bye to Round 2

Members of the "Nifty Nine" were selected based on records set in their VFTG USA careers.

Name Competition(s) Moderator/Villain Season(s) Notes 10th Anniversary Finish
Nick Fradianai American Idol 14 Ava Zinn 6 Winner, American Idol 14
Longest supported male flex pick at the time
Lauren Alaina American Idol 10 Ava Zinn 2 Runner-Up of American Idol 10
Longest VFTG-supported contestant before Jena Asciutto
Valerie Rockey So You Think You Can Dance 11 Ava Zinn 6 First Moderators' Save recipient
Addison Agen The Voice 13 Ava Zinn 9 Runner-up of The Voice 13
VFTG 2018 biggest Winner

Contestants who started in Round 1

135 of the 145 contestants involved in the tournament started in the first round.

Name Competition(s) Moderator/Villain Season(s) Notes 10th Anniversary Finish

Tournament results

The tournament's twenty highest finishers are shown below in order of prize money won.

Rank Contestant 10th Anniversary Finish

Round 1 results

Round 1, which started on February 9, 2005 and ended on April 12, 2005, featured 135 contestants competing for entry into Round 2.

Unlike most Jeopardy! tournaments, in which only the final rounds are played for cash equal to the value of winners' scores, the winners of every match received their scores as winnings (or the guaranteed minimum for that round, whichever was greater). In addition, for each round, there were no "wild card" spots for the non-winners; it was "win or go home".

Game Air Date 1st Place (Min. $15,000) 2nd Place ($5,000) 3rd Place ($5,000) Clues and Summary
(from the J! Archive)
Name Score Name Score Name Score

Round 2 results

Round 2, which started on April 13 and finished on May 6, featured the 45 winners from Round 1 as well as nine new contestants.

Game Air Date 1st Place (Min. $20,000) 2nd Place ($10,000) 3rd Place ($10,000) Clues and Summary
(from the J! Archive)
Name Score Name Score Name Score

Round 3 (Quarterfinal) results

Round 3, which began on May 9 and ended on May 16, featured the "Elite 18" (Round 2 winners) competing for entry into the semifinals.

Game Air Date 1st Place (Min. $30,000) 2nd Place ($15,000) 3rd Place ($15,000) Clues and Summary
(from the J! Archive)
Name Score Name Score Name Score

Round 4 (Semifinal) results

Round 4, which began on May 17 and ended on May 20, featured the six winners from Round 3 competing in two-game matches for entry into the finals.

Game Air Date 1st Place ($50,000) 2nd Place ($30,000) 3rd Place ($20,000) Clues and Summary
(from the J! Archive)
Name Score Name Score Name Score

Round 5 (Final) results

Game Air Date 1st Place ($2,000,000) 2nd Place ($500,000) 3rd Place ($250,000) Clues and Summary
(from the J! Archive)
Name Score Name Score Name Score


Notes and references

  1. ??

See also

External links