ASU forensics team wins 3rd national title in 4 years; senior wins impromptu speaking championship


ASU forensics champions

ASU junior Abbey Toye, senior Kohinoor Gill center) and sophomore Sachin Kumar won first place in the President's Division II Sweepstakes contest at last weekend's National Forensics Association Nationals. Photo by Adam Symonds

It was a strong weekend for Sun Devils at the National Forensics Association Nationals last weekend: Arizona State University senior Kohinoor Singh Gill placed first in the Impromptu Speaking competition, and an ASU team won first place in the President's Division II Sweepstakes contest.

The team featured Gill, junior Abbey Toye and sophomore Sachin Kumar. It was the forensics team's third national title in four years.

Gill bested 175 other competitors over seven rounds of competition to claim the Impromptu title. He also placed third in Extemporaneous Speaking (151 entries), tied for seventh in Informative Speaking (146 entries) and tied for 13th in Rhetorical Criticism (105 entries). Finally, he competed in two events that did not reach elimination rounds: Duo Interpretation and After Dinner Speaking.All told, his performances in six separate events earned him 10th place out of more than 504 students competing at the tournament.

Toye qualified three events to the tournament: Prose Interpretation, Persuasion and Dramatic Interpretation. She qualified her Prose Interpretation to the Octafinal round, finishing tied for 25th (198 entries).

Kumar rounded out the three-person team at NFA, having qualified five events to the tournament: Duo Interpretation (with Gill), Informative, Impromptu, Extemporaneous and After Dinner Speaking. While none of these performances qualified Kumar for the elimination rounds, they were good enough to earn him 93rd place overall.

Finally, the team placed 12th in the Overall Sweepstakes award, quite the feat for a team of just three students. While the President’s Division II Sweepstakes Award earned by the team marks the highest overall quality performance from a team with less than 25 speech entries at the tournament, in the Overall Sweepstakes division there is no cap on entries. In this division, ASU’s 14 events were competing for cumulative scores with schools that had hundreds of speech entries. 

NFA Nationals is hosted each year by the National Forensics Association. The tournament lasted five days, with rounds beginning April 13 and ending April 17. This year’s tournament was held at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, and 102 colleges and universities competed.

Written by Adam Symonds, ASU Forensics Team director 

More University news

 

A person's graduation cap is decorated with a pitchfork and ASU.

Year in review: ASU's top stories for 2024

As the year draws to a close, ASU News is revisiting some of the university's biggest stories in 2024 — from big announcements to…

Palo Verde Blooms

ASU earns 'Gold' in inaugural Times Higher Education Online Learning Ranking

Arizona State University continues to set the standard in online learning, having earned a Gold rating in the inaugural Times…

Closeup of awards presented on table

2024 President's Awards honor ASU projects for real-world impact

Ten Arizona State University programs were honored for their real-world solutions during the annual President’s Awards ceremony…