Ladies and gentleman, welcome to the presentation of the 1999 Grand Anagrammy Awards.
This is the culmination of a very successful year's anagramming by the members of alt.anagrams. The entrants in the first ten categories were the monthly winners of the Anagrammy Awards.
Five additional awards will be made, including the Best Overall Anagram of the Year, the Best Aanagram Software, the Best Anagram Website, the Most Decorated Anagrammatist of the Year and the coveted Awardsmaster's Choice Award for the Best Anagrammatist of the Year. A special award has also been made for the Anagram of the Millenium.
This Grand Anagrammy is the second to be held since the inaugral Anagrammy Award in March 1998. This was the first Anagrammy to use a new format of scoring with points being allotted for 1st, 2nd, and 3rd places. This has been well-received with positive comments by several members. This has given us an excellent competition with frequent changes of leaders throughout the contest.
To keep up with the rapid position changes in the various categories, a Leader Board has been estabished and updated once or twice a day.
These two innovations will be added to the monthly Aanagrammy Awards.
So, without further ado, here are the Grand Anagrammy Awards for 1999.
Well, no surprises here! William Tunstall-Pedoe's masterpiece, Anagram Genius, won with 10 of the 14 votes cast (8 voters did not use any software). It was the second year running that AG (as it is affectionately known) won and it is hard to see that it will ever be usurped from this position.
The size of the field in this category doubled in the last 12 months and the competion was much fiercer. Last year's winner, my Anagrammy Website was strongly challenged by William's AG Archive and Janet Muggeridge's new website.
1st. Anagrammy Awards by Larry Brash 6 votes
2nd. Anagram Genius Archive by William Tunstall-Pedoe 5 votes
3rd. Janet's Word Play by Janet Muggeridge. 4 votes
These anagrams were selected from a number nominated and contain a mixture of old and new anagrams, but excluded any in the current Grand Anagrammy. I regret not having allowed 3 choices here as I had done in the other categories.
Eventually, one of the simplest, but cleverest, anagrams won very
easily. Many have tried to match its mathemical simpleness without the
same success.
Martin GardnerÊwith: 8 votes
Eleven plus two. =
Twelve plus one.
This went to Mey Kraus with 18 wins in the monthly Anagrammy Awards,
including an amazing 5 wins in June, the month that he began his
military service. He has won in nearly every category and is equally
skilled with short and very long anagrams. A close 2nd was Richard
Brodie with 17 wins and Tom Myers 3rd with 15.
I had to give this a lot of thought to select the winner of this award.
Would it be Mey with his huge number of wins despite his time spent
doing his milatry service? Would it be last year's winner Richard
Brodie who had 17 wins this year? Would it be any one of a host of
other brilliant anagrammatists who frequent alt.anagrams?
In the end, I decided that the winner would have to shine in the Grand
Aanagrammy, as well as having an impressive record throughout the year.
With that in mind, the final choice was easy.
To that Grandmaster of the Special Category, the man who brought us the
Raven Two, the Doubly True Elements, the many literary versions of
Sonnet #60 and other unforgettable long gems and even some short ones,
the Award goes to Mike Keith.
Updated: May 10, 2016
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