The Atlantic

How Eight Middle Schoolers Toppled the Scripps Spelling Bee

As the quality of the top contestants has ramped up dramatically in recent years, the national competition has struggled to keep up.
Source: Susan Walsh / AP

The sight of eight co-champions hoisting the ceramic trophy at the Scripps National Spelling Bee last night was a remarkable ending to a competition that the ESPN announcers kept referring to as “historic” and “unprecedented.” This year’s Bee was certainly one for the history books: There had never been more than two spellers sharing the top honor before this. Those elite eight—quickly dubbed the “Octochamps”—will be remembered for irrevocably altering the competition. A recent documentary on competitive spelling (particularly focusing on the dominance of Indian American kids in recent years) is titled Breaking the Bee. The Octochamps actually broke it this time.

As the quality of the top contestants at the national bee has, again allowing for co-champions. But contemplated only the possibility of up to three spellers still battling it out at the end, certainly not eight.

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