This year's Scripps National Spelling Bee has been canceled after organizers concluded there was “no clear path to safely set a new date in 2020” because of the coronavirus pandemic
By
BEN NUCKOLS Associated Press
April 21, 2020, 4:35 PM
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Share to FacebookShare to TwitterEmail this articleThere will be no fidgeting at the National Spelling Bee microphone, no banter with pronouncer Jacques Bailly, no pointed questions about definitions or languages of origin, no dreaded bell that signals a misspelled word.
This year's Scripps National Spelling Bee was canceled Tuesday, the latest beloved public event to be scrapped because of the coronavirus pandemic.
The bee will return next year, Scripps said, but that's little comfort to the eighth-graders who are missing out on their last shot at the national stage. Scripps will not change eligibility requirements for the next bee, which is scheduled for June 1-3, 2021. The bee, which began in 1925 and was last canceled from 1943-45 because of World War II, has always been restricted to elementary and middle-schoolers.
“My heart goes out to every one of those kids affected. As a former speller, all I can say is I can only imagine, and my heart breaks for them,” said Paige Kimble, the bee's longtime executive director and the 1981 champion. “Our eighth-grade spellers are much like the class of 2020 high school seniors, in the ranks of many enduring heartbreak as a result of these pandemic circumstances.”
One of those eighth-graders is 13-year-old Hepzibah Sujoe of Fort Worth, Texas, who made the prime-time finals last year and whose brother, Ansun Sujoe, was a 2014 co-champion.
“I really wanted to enjoy Bee Week this year — my last chance at it. My journey started in first grade whenever I went to watch my brother compete,” Hepzibah told The Associated Press. “I really wanted to win because I saw that I did have the potential to win and I really pushed for it this year. Now that I can't do that, that's probably the toughest thing.”
Scripps had announced last month that the bee would not be held as scheduled the week of May 24 at its longtime venue, a convention center outside Washington. Hundreds of kids compete every year in the national finals, which are televised by ESPN, and Scripps was aiming this year for a field of around 400.
“The Bee has determined there is no clear path to safely set a new date in 2020,” Scripps said in a statement, noting “uncertainty around when public gatherings will be possible or advisable.”
Kimble and the bee staff had left open the possibility of holding a virtual bee, but they concluded it would be too difficult logistically and would not be true to the spirit of the competition.
“We came to the determination that the Scripps National Spelling Bee is an in-person live event, the same way that a basketball game is or a football game or a soccer game or a tennis match,” Kimble said. “It's just not something that can be effectively transferred to the virtual world.”
Last year's bee ended in an unprecedented eight-way tie after Scripps ran out of words tough enough to challenge the best spellers. This year's competition would have included Simone Kaplan, the last speller eliminated before the so-called “octo-champs” were declared.
Simone, a 14-year-old from Davie, Florida, was still studying for hours each day after the postponement was announced. She said she was in tears at Tuesday's news.
“I didn't want ‘tettigoniid’ to be the end of the story,” Simone said, referring to the word she misspelled last year.
Simone's mother, Alana Kaplan, said Scripps ought to find a way to invite a small group of ninth-graders who fared well last year and were sure to return.
“In a world where eight first-place champions were awarded the trophy, I think they could make a small concession to allow in a group of a dozen kids who were really affected by this,” she said.
In the meantime, Simone will compete in an online bee conducted by SpellPundit on the same dates as the vacated Scripps bee. It offers a $2,500 cash prize to the winner — a pittance compared to the Scripps prize of $50,000 — but it may be the closest this year's eighth-graders get to a national title.
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