Robert Felt
Robert Felt (1953–2002) was a computer programmer,[1] USCF-rated chess Expert, Tennessee Junior chess champion,[2] and champion Scrabble player.
Born in Memphis,[3] he entered the University of Chicago in 1971 and tested out of so many requirements that he was awarded Junior status. At the University of Chicago, he was a member of the chess team, at one point being first board on the university's second team for two Pan-American Intercollegiate national tournaments. He also competed for the university at the NCAA national contract bridge tournament.
In 1978, he left university without a degree and joined Banker's Life and Casualty as a computer programmer. At the TDM division of Rand McNally he enjoyed a reputation as one of the best CICS programmers in the world. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, he established 911 systems for police and fire dispatchers.[3] Much of the technology at most 911 call centers is derived from his early work.
In 1990, Felt won the US National Scrabble Championship.[4] He achieved a peak rating of 2155,[5] which in February 2011 would easily be the number one rating again.[6]
References
- ^ Christine Montgomery, "Scrambling for the Prize in Scrabble," Washington Times, November 25, 1997, p. C8.
- ^ Manny Fernandez, "Spellbound by Scrabble," San Francisco Chronicle, October 12, 1997, p. Z1.
- ^ a b Jon Anderson, "Chicagoan ready from the word 'go'; He'll be our man in London for Scrabble Championships, Chicago Tribune, September 26, 1991, Tempo section p. 1.
- ^ Rebecca Reinhardt, "Fighting Words," Village Voice, February 19, 2002, p. 193.
- ^ Robert Felt Scrabble tournament results at cross-tables.com
- ^ "cross-tables.com". www.cross-tables.com. Retrieved April 10, 2023.
External links
- Robert Felt Scrabble tournament results at cross-tables.com
- v
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- 1978: David Prinz
- 1980: Joe Edley
- 1983: Joel Wapnick
- 1985: Ron Tiekert
- 1987: Rita Norr
- 1988: Robert Watson
- 1989: Peter Morris
- 1990: Robert Felt
- 1992: Joe Edley
- 1994: David Gibson
- 1996: Adam Logan
- 1998: Brian Cappelletto
- 2000: Joe Edley
- 2002: Joel Sherman
- 2004: Roger Wright
- 2005: Dave Wiegand
- 2006: Jim Kramer
- 2008: Nigel Richards
- 2009: Dave Wiegand
- 2010: Nigel Richards
- 2011: Nigel Richards
- 2012: Nigel Richards
- 2013: Nigel Richards
- 2014: Conrad Bassett-Bouchard
- 2015: Matthew Tunnicliffe
- 2016: David Gibson
- 2017: Will Anderson
- 2018: Joel Sherman
- 2019: Alec Sjoholm
- 2022: Michael Fagen
- 2023: Josh Sokol
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