- High score Scrabble
High score Scrabble is a variant of the board game
Scrabble that was popular among tournament players in theUnited Kingdom in the 1970s and 1980s. The first National Scrabble Championship of the UK was played by high score rules in 1971, and was won by Steven Haskell.Rules
In modern "match play Scrabble" tournaments, players dispute a fixed number of games. In most major tournaments, for example the
World Scrabble Championship and theNational Scrabble Championship the players are sorted by number of games won and to break ties between players with the same number of wins, the total of the player's scores minus the total of his opponent's score (known as the spread) is calculated. For example a game won 500 - 350 would give a spread of +150.In high score Scrabble, wins are not counted. Instead only the total number of points is important. Whether the player wins or loses the game, or what his opponent's score is are not a factor. Thus a player could lose all of his games, could still finish in the top half of a tournament with above average scores.
Phil Appleby scored 1049 in a British high score Scrabble game in 1989 [ [http://observer.guardian.co.uk/review/story/0,6903,1664334,00.html Guardian online] ] . However the official
Association of British Scrabble Players website does not list this score as the highest ever, rather 705 by Jackie McLeod in 2002, long after high score Scrabble had been replaced by match play Scrabble in the UK [ [http://www.absp.org.uk/features/records.html ABSP website] ] .Notes
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