Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Players who participate in Final Jeopardy! will participate in the standard tie-breaker, regardless of the score being zero or a positive score. Similarly, if all three players have a zero score at the end of a two-game match, a normal tournament finals format will proceed to a tie-breaker.
In the event of match point ties, they are broken by the following criteria in this order: the number of games won, the total number of correct responses for that stage of the competition (including Final Jeopardy!), the cumulative total score excluding Final Jeopardy! and Daily Double wagers, and the cumulative total score excluding only Final ...
Jeopardy! fans got their money's worth Wednesday as Final Jeopardy! ended in a rare tie. It all started when contestant Christine Whelchel oddly wagered only enough to match returning-champion ...
Wednesday, as contestants Christine Whelchel and returning champion Henry Rozycki finished Final Jeopardy! in a rare tiebreaker. “I’m going to reveal a category and then read you a single clue ...
Rutter entered the tournament having never lost a match against a human, only coming up short in an exhibition match featuring him and Jennings taking on Watson in Jeopardy!: The IBM Challenge in 2011. [11] [7] [8] [12] [4] James Holzhauer: Holzhauer entered the tournament the third-highest-earning Jeopardy! contestant of all time, behind ...
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Reached third-place on all-time Jeopardy! regular play winnings list 18 August 13: $27,201* $574,801 Season 37 finale of Jeopardy!. Amodio was in a "lock-tie" situation headed to Final Jeopardy!, which since season 34 rule change meant he had to wager as least $1 to prevent a tie-breaker, win or lose.
As Jennings noted, under new rules for the Tournament of Champions, the winner of the $250,000 prize is the first player in the finals to win three games, so it'll continue through at least Wednesday.