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News / Northwest

Washington teen places fourth in revamped National Spelling Bee

By Orion Donovan-Smith, The Spokesman-Review
Published: June 4, 2022, 8:43pm
2 Photos
Saharsh Vuppala, 13, from Bellevue, reacts during the finals of the Scripps National Spelling Bee on Thursday in Oxon Hill, Md.
Saharsh Vuppala, 13, from Bellevue, reacts during the finals of the Scripps National Spelling Bee on Thursday in Oxon Hill, Md. (alex brandon/Associated Press) Photo Gallery

NATIONAL HARBOR, Md. — A 13-year-old from Bellevue placed fourth in the 2022 Scripps National Spelling Bee on Thursday, the best performance by a speller from Washington in more than three decades, on a night that ended with the competition’s first “spell-off.”

Saharsh Vuppala, an eighth grader at Annie Wright Middle School in Tacoma, correctly spelled “Clitocybe” — a genus of mushrooms — in the first round of the finals to advance to a multiple-choice stage that required spellers to identify a word’s meaning. That vocabulary round, which knocked out half of the eight contestants still standing, was part of an increased emphasis on not only spelling words, but defining them.

His coach, Scott Remer, said before the finals that he expected the vocabulary round to be the biggest challenge for Vuppala, but the teenager correctly identified the meaning of “encomium” — a formal expression of high praise — to advance to another spelling round before missing the final “L” at the end of “phenocoll,” a chemical used as a painkiller.

Harini Logan of San Antonio emerged victorious after correctly spelling 21 words in the spell-off, a 90-second lightning round, breaking a tie after Logan and runner-up Vikram Raju of Denver each misspelled words in the final four rounds.

The top two finishers’ unexpected struggles began when Raju misspelled “Senijextee,” one of several alternate spellings of Sinixt, an Indigenous people from modern-day Washington and British Columbia who are one of the 12 bands of the Colville Confederated Tribes. Spellers rely on a word’s origin to discern its spelling, but the Bee’s pronouncers told Raju the Merriam-Webster Dictionary listed no origin for Senijextee, which comes from a Salish dialect.

Shelly Boyd, an activist who along with other Sinixt people successfully fought to gain recognition in Canada after the Canadian government declared them extinct, explained that Senijextee is just one of numerous ways her people’s name has been transliterated into English.

“That poor kid,” Boyd said after the Bee ended. “They can’t win on that. There are about 12 ways to spell our name.”

Vuppala, who finished in a tie for 51st place as a fifth grader in the 2019 Bee, placed higher than any Washingtonian since Amy Marie Dimak of Seattle triumphed in 1990 by spelling “fibranne,” a type of fabric made from rayon.

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According to Bee organizers, no speller from Washington had made it to the finals since at least 2016.

The Bee’s winner earns $50,000. The runner-up receives $25,000. Vuppala will win $10,000 for finishing fourth.

Thirteen finalists began the night’s competition, but the vocabulary round — added in 2021 to test increasingly sophisticated spellers — tripped up some of the favorites to win the event.

Remer — who coached three of the 13 finalists, including Raju — said the new emphasis on word meanings makes it harder to give contestants a balanced set of questions and gives an advantage to older spellers who have been exposed to more words in context over time.

“It’s sort of a spelling and vocab bee now; it’s not really a spelling bee,” said Remer, who was a finalist in the 2008 Bee and has since authored multiple books on the competition. “I just think that it sort of does the competition a disservice.”

Another downside to the vocabulary round was exposed when Logan was initially eliminated for misidentifying the meaning of “pullulation” — meaning either “to swarm” or “to breed” — before the judges determined the answer she gave could also be correct.

Vuppala’s twin sister, Deetya, was also eliminated by a vocabulary round in Thursday’s semifinals without misspelling a single word.

In a taped segment shown during the program, Vuppala said it was hard not having her in the finals with him.

“It feels really great to be in the finals of the Bee, but I’m also really sad my sister isn’t there,” he said. “I’m representing Washington, and I’m also representing me and my sister.”

Their mother, Mayura Vuchuru, said Saharsh and Deetya supported and challenged each other to become two of the nation’s most elite spellers.

“It’s hard for Deetya, because she worked hard and she is equally capable,” Vuchuru said. “Sometimes it’s just luck, too, in the word you get.”

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