International prize list of Diplomacy

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[edit] WorldDipCon

During the seventies, there were very few tournaments outside North America. At that time, the winner of the 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 this convention become the world champion of Diplomacy.

This is the top 3 of all the WorldDipCon played :

Year Town Country World Champion Second Third
1988 Birmingham Flag of the United Kingdom Great Britain Flag of the United Kingdom Phil Day Flag of the United Kingdom Matt MacVeigh Flag of the United Kingdom Jim Mills
1990 Chapel Hill Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Jason Bergmann Flag of the United States Jeff Bohner Flag of the United States Steve Cooley
1992 Canberra Flag of Australia Australia Flag of Australia Steve Gould Flag of Australia Eric Roche Flag of France Bruno-André Giraudon
1994 Birmingham Flag of the United Kingdom Great Britain Flag of France Pascal Montagna Flag of France Stéphane Gentric Flag of France Bruno-André Giraudon
1995 Paris Flag of France France Flag of France Bruno-André Giraudon Flag of Portugal Antonio Ribeiro da Silva Flag of France Thomas Sebeyran
1996 Columbus Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Pitt Crandlemire Flag of Sweden Leif Bergman Flag of Sweden Björn von Knorring
1997 Gothenburg Flag of Sweden Sweden Flag of France Cyrille Sevin Flag of Sweden Roger Edblom Flag of Norway Borger Borgersen
1998 Chapel Hill Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Chris Martin Flag of the United States John Quarto-von-Tivadar Flag of the United States Mark Fassio
1999 Namur Flag of Belgium Belgium Flag of Sweden Christian Dreyer Flag of Sweden Leif Bergman Flag of the United Kingdom Ivan Woodward
2000 Baltimore Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United Kingdom Simon Bouton Flag of Ireland Brian Dennehy Flag of the United States Matthew Shields
2001 Paris Flag of France France Flag of France Cyrille Sevin Flag of Ireland Brian Dennehy Flag of the United Kingdom Chetan Radia
2002 Canberra Flag of Australia Australia Flag of Australia Rob Stephenson Flag of New Zealand Grant Steel Flag of France Yann Clouet
2003 Denver Flag of the United States United States Flag of France Vincent Carry Flag of the United States Edward Hawthorne Flag of Norway Frank Johansen
2004 Birmingham Flag of the United Kingdom Great Britain Flag of France Yann Clouet Flag of the Netherlands André Kooy Flag of France Cyrille Sevin
2005 Washington Flag of the United States United States Flag of Norway Frank Johansen Flag of the United States Tom Kobrin Flag of the United States Edi Birsan
2006 Berlin Flag of Germany Germany Flag of France Nicolas Sahuguet Flag of France Cyrille Sevin Flag of France Yann Clouet
2007 Vancouver Flag of Canada Canada Flag of the United States Doug Moore Flag of the United States Jake Mannix Flag of the United States Mark Zoffel
2008 Lockenhaus Flag of Austria Austria
2009 Columbus Flag of the United States United States

[edit] North America

[edit] DipCon

The winner of the DipCon (Diplomacy Convention) 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. The DipCon was created in 1966 and occurred each year (except in 1967 and 1968). There was no tournament in 1966[1], 1969[2] and 1971.

The winner of each DipCon :

Year Town Country North American Champion Notes
1970 Oklahoma City Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States John Smythe
1972 Chicago Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Richard Ackerlay
1973 Chicago Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Conrad von Metzke et
Flag of the United States John Smythe ex æquo
1974 Chicago Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Mike Rocamora
1975 Chicago Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Bob Wartenberg et
Flag of the United States Walter ex æquo
[3]
1976 Baltimore Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Thomas Reape
1977 Lake Geneva Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Mike Rocamora
1978 Los Angeles Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States D. Parmeter
1979 Chester Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Ben Zablocki
1980 Detroit Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Carl Echelberger
1981 San Francisco Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Ron Brown
1982 Baltimore Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Konrad Baumeister
1983 Detroit Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Joyce Singer [4]
1984 Dallas Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Jeff Key
1985 Seattle Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States J.R. Baker
1986 Fredericksburg Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United Kingdom Malcolm Smith [5]
1987 Madison Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States David Hood
1988 San Antonio Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Dan Sellers
1989 San Diego Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Edi Birsan
1990 Chapel Hill Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Jason Bergmann [6]
1991 Scarborough Flag of Canada Canada Flag of the United States Gary Behnen
1992 Lenexa Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Marc Peters
1993 San Mateo Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Hohn Cho
1994 Chapel Hill Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Bruce Reiff
1995 Baltimore Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Sylvain Larose
1996 Columbus Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Pitt Crandlemire [6]
1997 Seattle Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Chris Mazza
1998 Chapel Hill Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Chris Martin [6]
1999 Columbus Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Chris Mazza
2000 Baltimore Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United Kingdom Simon Bouton [6][7]
2001 Denver Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States David Hood
2002 Chapel Hill Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Morgan Gurley
2003 Washington Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Edward Hawthorne
2004 Portland Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Ken Lemere
2005 Flag of the United States United States
Flag of Mexico Mexico
Flag of Belize Belize
Flag of the United States Richard Desper [8]
2006 Charlottesville Flag of the United States United States Flag of the United States Hohn Cho
2007 Vancouver Flag of Canada Canada Flag of the United States Doug Moore [6]
2008 Bangor Flag of the United States United States

[edit] North American Grand Prix

The winner of each Grand Prix :

Year Nb of step Nb of players Winner
1999 7 58 Flag of the United States Chris Martin
2000 14 125 Flag of the United States Matt Shields
2001 34 166 Flag of the United States Jerry Fest
2002 17 171 Flag of the United States Andy Bartalone
2003 16 213 Flag of the United States Edward Hawthorne
2004 14 305 Flag of the United States Doug Moore
2005 13 234 Flag of the United States Andrew Neumann
2006 12 200 Flag of the United States Jim O'Kelley
2007 12 270 Flag of the United States Doug Moore

[edit] Europe

[edit] European DipCon

[edit] European Grand Prix

The winner of each Grand Prix :

Year Nb of step Nb of players Winner
2002 10 283 Flag of France William Attia
2003 11 349 Flag of France Yann Clouet
2004 15 472 Flag of France Yann Clouet
2005 13 364 Flag of France Gwen Maggi
2006 14 340 Flag of France Gwen Maggi
2007 14 272 Flag of France Gwen Maggi

[edit] Australia and New Zealand

[edit] 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 Nb of step Nb of players Winner
1989 Flag of Australia Robert Wessels
1990 Flag of Australia Harry Kolotas
1991 3 75 Flag of Australia Robert Wessels
1992 5 123 Flag of Australia Steve Gould
1993 6 93 Flag of Australia Harry Kolotas
1994 Flag of Australia Craig Sedgwick
1995 Flag of Australia Rob Stephenson
1996 5 65 Flag of Australia Craig Sedgwick
1997 5 74 Flag of Australia Bill Brown
1998 7 92 Flag of Australia Rob Stephenson
1999 8 117 Flag of New Zealand Brandon Clarke
2000 9 111 Flag of Australia Rob Stephenson
2001 10 104 Flag of Australia Tristan Lee
2002 7 84 Flag of New Zealand Rob Schone
2003 6 52 Flag of Australia Geoff Kerr
2004 8 56 Flag of New Zealand Grant Steel
2005 8 65 Flag of Australia Tony Collins
2006 10 76 Flag of Australia Sean Colman
2007 - - Not organised

[edit] 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 Marion Ashworth, Neil Ashworth or Luke Clutterbuck.

[edit] External links

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ DipCon I held in Youngstown, OH, hosted by John Koning in his home, 31 August, 1666.
  2. ^ DipCon II held in Youngstown, OH, because "...we had so much fun last time, let's do it again."
  3. ^ We didn’t know the Name of Walter
  4. ^ We can see in Diplomacy World 35 that the name of the winner is Joyce Singer.
  5. ^ The best North American player, the American Marc Hurwitz, finished 2nd.
  6. ^ a b c d e This year, the DipCon was the WorldDipCon.
  7. ^ The best North American player, the American Matthew Shields, finished 3rd.
  8. ^ Played during a cruse from Galveston Flag of the United States and with several stops : Progreso Flag of Mexico, Cozumel Flag of Mexico et Belize City Flag of Belize.
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