World Scrabble Championships: PSA satisfied with second-place finish
National champion Khatri improves ranking from 142nd to 68th
KARACHI:
The Pakistan Scrabble Association (PSA) said it was pleased with Pakistan’s performance at the World Scrabble Championships as both the national and the youth teams amassed 2,400 international rating points, the most by any side, in the week-long event in Perth, Australia.
The success has earned Pakistan a berth in the World Championships in France next year.
Nigerian bags World Scrabble title, in first for Africa
National champion Waseem Khatri and Moizullah Baig finished in the top half of the World Championship which featured 136 players, while Quetta’s Abdullah Abbasi ended the tour in second at the World Youth Scrabble Championship.
According to Khatri, who improved his world ranking from 142nd to 68th, both teams played as a unit and managed to support each other during the championships.
World Youth Scrabble Championship: Abbasi finishes day two in second place
“Besides the World Championships, we also played the Perth International Open and Saturday and Sunday Open on the side, which was a great exposure for us,” Khatri told The Express Tribune. “I was able to defeat former world champion and the best player our time Nigel Richards twice in the worlds too.”
Despite their feat, Khatri believes the players need to improve their vocabulary even further in order to replicate their success next year.
Published in The Express Tribune, November 28th, 2015.
The Pakistan Scrabble Association (PSA) said it was pleased with Pakistan’s performance at the World Scrabble Championships as both the national and the youth teams amassed 2,400 international rating points, the most by any side, in the week-long event in Perth, Australia.
The success has earned Pakistan a berth in the World Championships in France next year.
Nigerian bags World Scrabble title, in first for Africa
National champion Waseem Khatri and Moizullah Baig finished in the top half of the World Championship which featured 136 players, while Quetta’s Abdullah Abbasi ended the tour in second at the World Youth Scrabble Championship.
According to Khatri, who improved his world ranking from 142nd to 68th, both teams played as a unit and managed to support each other during the championships.
World Youth Scrabble Championship: Abbasi finishes day two in second place
“Besides the World Championships, we also played the Perth International Open and Saturday and Sunday Open on the side, which was a great exposure for us,” Khatri told The Express Tribune. “I was able to defeat former world champion and the best player our time Nigel Richards twice in the worlds too.”
Despite their feat, Khatri believes the players need to improve their vocabulary even further in order to replicate their success next year.
Published in The Express Tribune, November 28th, 2015.