WorldDipCon
WorldDipCon
During the 1970s, there were very few Diplomacy tournaments outside North America. At that time, the winner of the tournament held at American DipCon was considered by the North American players as a world champion of Diplomacy.
The WorldDipCon (World Diplomacy Convention) was created in 1988 and the winner of the tournament held at this convention becomes the world champion of Diplomacy.
The players taking the top three places in each WorldDipCon tournament are listed below:
North America
DipCon
The winner of the DipCon (Diplomacy Convention) tournament is the North American champion. The title of North American champion was not given at the beginning, but since 1972 has been awarded to each winner of the convention tournament. DipCon was created in 1966 and occurred each year (except in 1967 and 1968). There was no tournament in 1966<ref>DipCon I held in Youngstown, OH, and hosted by John Koning in his home, 31 August, 1666.</ref>, 1969<ref>DipCon II held in Youngstown, OH, because "...we had so much fun last time, let's do it again."</ref> and 1971.
The winner of each DipCon North American Championship tournament:
North American Grand Prix
The winner of each Grand Prix:
Year | Nbr of steps | Nbr of players | Winner |
---|---|---|---|
1999 | 7 | 58 | Template:Flagicon Chris Martin |
2000 | 14 | 125 | Template:Flagicon Matt Shields |
2001 | 34 | 166 | Template:Flagicon Jerry Fest |
2002 | 17 | 171 | Template:Flagicon Andy Bartalone |
2003 | 16 | 213 | Template:Flagicon Edward Hawthorne |
2004 | 14 | 305 | Template:Flagicon Doug Moore |
2005 | 13 | 234 | Template:Flagicon Andrew Neumann |
2006 | 12 | 200 | Template:Flagicon Jim O'Kelley |
2007 | 12 | 270 | Template:Flagicon Doug Moore |
2008 | 15 | 275 | Template:Flagicon Thomas Haver |
Europe
European DipCon
The winner of each European DipCon tournament:
European Grand Prix
The winner of each Grand Prix:
Year | Nb of steps | Nb of players | Winner |
---|---|---|---|
2002 | 10 | 283 | Template:Flagicon William Attia |
2003 | 11 | 349 | Template:Flagicon Yann Clouet |
2004 | 15 | 472 | Template:Flagicon Yann Clouet |
2005 | 13 | 364 | Template:Flagicon Gwen Maggi |
2006 | 14 | 340 | Template:Flagicon Gwen Maggi |
2007 | 14 | 272 | Template:Flagicon Gwen Maggi |
2008 | 11 | 207 | Template:Flagicon Emmanuel du Pontavice |
Australia and New Zealand
Bismark Cup
The National Tournaments Championship - comprising the perpetual trophy known as the Bismark Cup - is awarded for the best aggregate tournament results at Diplomacy tournaments held during the calendar year. It is an annual (short term) ranking. The exact number of points depends on the size of the tournament and the person's placing in that tournament.
The winner of each Bismark Cup:
Year | Nbr of steps | Nbr of players | Winner |
---|---|---|---|
1989 | Template:Flagicon Robert Wessels | ||
1990 | Template:Flagicon Harry Kolotas | ||
1991 | 3 | 75 | Template:Flagicon Robert Wessels |
1992 | 5 | 123 | Template:Flagicon Steve Gould |
1993 | 6 | 93 | Template:Flagicon Harry Kolotas |
1994 | Template:Flagicon Craig Sedgwick | ||
1995 | Template:Flagicon Rob Stephenson | ||
1996 | 5 | 65 | Template:Flagicon Craig Sedgwick |
1997 | 5 | 74 | Template:Flagicon Bill Brown |
1998 | 7 | 92 | Template:Flagicon Rob Stephenson |
1999 | 8 | 117 | Template:Flagicon Brandon Clarke |
2000 | 9 | 111 | Template:Flagicon Rob Stephenson |
2001 | 10 | 104 | Template:Flagicon Tristan Lee |
2002 | 7 | 84 | Template:Flagicon Rob Schone |
2003 | 6 | 52 | Template:Flagicon Geoff Kerr |
2004 | 8 | 56 | Template:Flagicon Grant Steel |
2005 | 8 | 65 | Template:Flagicon Tony Collins |
2006 | 10 | 76 | Template:Flagicon Sean Colman |
2007 | - | - | Not organised |
2008 | 7 | 58 | Template:Flagicon Andrew Goff |
Origins of the Bismark Cup
In the early 1980's the Diplomacy scene in Australia was built around several PBM Diplomacy magazines, of which the most significant titles were Rumplestiltskin, The Go Between, Beowulf, Victoriana, The Journal of Australian Diplomacy, and The Envoy. Most of the torunament players were subscribers, players and editors of these magazines. The Envoy, which was published between 1986 and 1991, ran a series of articles which were both popular and influential. Purportedly written by Arthur von Bismark and styled as lecture transcripts, the character of Arthur von Bismark became celebrated among the contemporary Diplomacy subculture in Australia.
The aricles were popular at a time when tournament play in Australia had become more organized, with well-attended tournaments in Adelaide, Canberra, Melbourne and Sydney. Rating systems at the time were being hotly debated and many players desired a way to assess the best player in the torunament scene for a calendar year, as a way of overcoming the perceived inconsistencies of rating systems within one event. The annual trophy concept was accepted among the then-principle organizers of these tournaments and the title Arthur Bismark Cup was suggested by The Envoy's then-editor Mathew Gibson.
The real author of these Arthur von Bismark articles was never announced publicly, but was suspected as being either Harry Kolotas, Marion Ashworth, Neil Ashworth or Luke Clutterbuck.
External links
- Template:En EDA - The World Diplomacy Database stored all the results known of competition in face-to-face.
- Template:En The international calendar of tournaments in face-to-face.