This year, the top spellers will sit for a written tiebreaker test before they begin spelling words in the primetime finale. The results will be revealed only if two or three spellers get through the final rounds unscathed. The speller with the highest score would then be declared the champion. Only if the top spellers get exactly the same score will the competition end in a tie.
The bee has ended in a tie three years running. Last year's was the most improbable. The bee made the final rounds more than twice as long, with harder words, and two spellers still ended up hoisting the winner's trophy.
The new rules were shared with spellers and announced today by Scripps. Bee organizers made the change after considering feedback from spellers, sponsors, fans and ESPN, which televises the competition from its longtime venue at a convention center outside Washington. This year's bee will be May 30-June 1.
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Tejas Muthusamy, who'll be competing in the bee for the fourth and final time this year, told AP he likes the idea of the tiebreaker test, but he's not sure others will.
"I actually perform better on tests than on stage. For me specifically, the rule change is really good," Tejas said. "If I end up tied with someone else, I'll still have a good chance of winning."
In 2015, though, Vanya Shivashankar and Gokul Venkatachalam - veteran spellers and pre-bee favorites - shared the title after plowing through the final words with ease. They are two of the many Indian-American kids who've come to dominate the bee over the past two decades.