The 22-year-old Sikh studying at the University of Texas at Austin on Tuesday beat 35 other students selected from about the 26,000 who competed for a chance to be on the tournament held over two weeks.
In a three-contest winning streak by Indian-American students, Jaskaran Singh has won the premiere quiz tournament for students, the National College Championship Jeopardy with a prize of $250,000, a report in The Tribune, Chandigarh, said
The 22-year-old Sikh studying at the University of Texas at Austin on Tuesday beat 35 other students selected from about the 26,000 who competed for a chance to be on the tournament held over two weeks.
After winning the championship, Singh was modest about his success.
“I just sort of just buzzed fast and know things, pretty much. I don’t think there’s much more,” he told an interviewer from the show.
The prize money will pay for his college fees “and a lot more”, he said.
The tournament is an offshoot of Jeopardy, the most popular daily quiz show, which uses the unusual format of the quizmaster or host stating an answer for which the contestant has to frame the right question.
The puzzle given by the host, TV actor Mayim Bialik, in the final round of the contest was, “An 1873 book title gave us this phrase for the period in the late 1800s of growth & prosperity & also greed & corruption”.
Singh gave the correct answer in the form of a question: “What is the gilded age”?
Nibir Sharma from the University of Minnesota won the 2019 tournament and was a semi-finalist in the Jeopardy Tournament of Champions going again the big winners in the main Jeopardy programme next year.
The tournament is an offshoot of Jeopardy, the most popular daily quiz show, which uses the unusual format of the quizmaster or host stating an answer for which the contestant has to frame the right question.
Dhruv Gaur from Brown University bagged the championship in 2018 and there were no collegiate contests in the last two years because of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Before them, Vinita Kailasanath had won the championship in 2001.
This time four of the students contesting against Singh were of Indian origin and one was of Sri Lankan heritage.
Singh, a final year studying finance and economics said on the show that he had worked for a civil rights organisation in Washington after his first year of college.
He credited his parents for his victory, telling the Austin Statesman newspaper that they “are really amazing, They supported me throughout the whole thing”.
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