[quote name=\'WilliamPorygon\' date=\'Jul 7 2004, 09:46 PM\'] [quote name=\'Frank15\' date=\'Jul 7 2004, 10:21 PM\'] What exactly is the system for accepting answers not in question form, anyway? It seems sometimes they count such answers as correct, and other times not. Is it just decided on a whim, or what, exactly? [/quote]
Alex will accept the response and remind the contestant about their phrasing if the contestant forgets in the first Jeopardy! round, except on the Daily Double. Once DJ! rolls around, the responses will always be called wrong if not phrased as a question . [/quote]
That is what essentially did in David Siegel during the 1995 Tournament of Champions. He forgot to phrase a Daily Double response in game one of that tournament's finals, which was ultimately costly, because he wagered $800 on that Daily Double, and he lost to Ryan Holznagel by $1301. (Mark Dawson might have joined Siegel in misery in the last Tournament of Champions had Brian Weikle not miscalculated his Final Jeopardy wager in game 2 of the finals.) More recent examples, as I said in an earlier thread, include those mistakes of Anthony Trufilio and Heather Mock (Trufilio forgot to put a "What is" in front of "99% perspiration" in Thomas Edison's famous saying, and Heather forgot to do the same in front of 1999, the year the New York Yankees won the World Series before 2000), as well as a contestant who didn't say "What is" before "Old English" the first day the clue values were raised to their present levels in 2001 (not only did that mistake cost the contestant the game, it also cost him the chance to win the game after Double Jeopardy). I wonder if these players (including the ones mentioned earlier) still get needled about their mistakes to this very day, either in jest or maliciously, like Bill Buckner continues to get needled about his infamous 1986 World Series error.