Harini Logan, a 14-year-old from Texas, wins  the Scripps National Spelling Bee

Harini Logan, a 14-year-old from Texas, wins  the Scripps National Spelling Bee

The Scripps National Spelling Bee is won by Harini Logan, a 14-year-old from Texas.

Harini Logan, 14, of San Antonio, has won the Scripps National Spelling Bee in 2022, after the competition was so close that the winner had to be determined by a first-ever’spell-off.’

She beat Vikram Raju, 12, of Denver, in the Bee on Thursday night, after a neck-and-neck competition prompted a tiebreaking lightning round to declare the winner, a first in the show’s history.

“It was really just getting into that attitude where I could have that, just tranquility where I could focus on the words rather than being stressed out,” Harini told GMA after winning.

Harini receives $50,000 from Scripps, as well as other cash prizes and Merriam-Webster and Encyclopedia Britannica reference books.

Vikram will receive a prize of $25,000 for coming in second place.

The two kids won the 94th annual Scripps National Spelling Bee, which featured spellers ages 7 to 15 from all around the United States and as far away as Guam.

The tournament this year took place in National Harbor, Maryland, just outside of Washington, D.C.

Harini Logan, 14, of San Antonio won the 2022 Scripps National Spelling Bee on Thursday after a first-ever 'spell-off' was required for a champion to emergeLogan's family joins her on stage as she wins the Bee in the first-ever tiebreaker spell-offLogan (right) beat Vikram Raju, 12, (left) of Denver after their neck-and-neck competition required a 'spell-off' to decide the winner, a first in the history of the BeeLeVar Burton hosted the Bee, after recently expressing disappointment at being passed over as the new permanent host for Jeopardy

Each contender has 90 seconds to accurately spell as many words as possible in the spell-off. Vikram took the first turn and accurately spelt 15 of the 19 words he attempted.

Harini, who waited in a sound-proof room for her turn, emerged having properly spelled 22 of the 26 phrases she attempted.

In a tiebreaker spell-off, Harini’s winning words were

In the 90-second lightning round, Harini Logan successfully spelt the following 22 words:

Spealbone: the shoulder blade utilized in divination by magicians or medicine men.
phreatophyte: a plant having a deep root system that gets its water from the groundwater.

An Annamese ship with two or three masts and towering triangular sails is known as a gaydiang.

excimer: an unstable molecule that is formed in an excited state by the combination of two smaller molecules or atoms and rapidly dissociates with emission of radiation to form parison: a rounded mass of molten glass excimer: an unstable molecule that is formed in an excited state by the combination of two smaller molecules or atoms and rapidly dissociates with emission of radiation to form parison: a rounded mass of molten glass excimer: an
quilla:
native to South America, a palm-like tree

glochis: a barbed point or spine on an insect epaulement: a rough earthen fortification used mostly to protect against flanking fire
chara: a genus of plants found in limestone districts’ freshwater lakes.
maieutic: relating to or implying the Socratic method of investigation
extinct clade of herbivorous, horselike mammals known as chalicotheres
teosinte: a fodder-producing Mexican grass bouchal:
a cheifly young man or herdboy Irish saccharose is a synonym for sucrose, a sugar.

talisay: a large tropical tree in the leadwood tree family

vesicate: to raise blisters on

chorepiscopus: a bishop who is appointed to assist a diocesan bishop with the administration of a rural district

kniphofia: a genus of showy African herbs

malbrouck: a West African arboreal monkey

ornithorhynchus: genus of egg-laying mammals including only the platypus

nandubay: a type of South American tree or shrub with rough hard bark and durable wood

moorhen: a small aquatic bird of the rail family with mainly blackish plumage.

Both finalists were given the same set of words to read, with a bell sounding when they were ready to move on to the next word.

Actor LeVar Burton hosted the show, and he recently expressed his disappointment at not being chosen as the regular presenter of the game show Jeopardy.

In one of the most dramatic spelling competitions in recent memory, Thursday’s Bee was full with twists and turns.

During the Bee’s much-debated multiple-choice vocabulary round, the eventual winner Harini was removed, then reinstated.

She mispelled four times as Scripps’ most difficult words proved too much for her, as they did for Vikram, who also made four mistakes in the final stretch.

Then, in the bee’s first-ever lightning-round tiebreaker, she eventually defeated Vikram. The winning word in the competition was’moorhen,’ which is a small aquatic bird of the rail family.

After winning, Harini stated, “It’s my fourth time at the Bee, and this is just such a dream — and well, I’m just overwhelmed.”

‘With her spelling bee adventures, Harini has been to hell and back,’ said Grace Walters, her longtime coach.

Harini, who was always well-prepared, had been practicing for the prospect of a lightning round, a format she disliked.

To be honest, I was a little scared when it was first launched last year,’ Harini added. ‘I move slowly. That’s how I roll. I wasn’t sure how I’d do in that situation.’

Harini is the first-ever Scripps champion to be restored during the competition, and she is a crowd favorite for her poise and positivism. That was before she made her four late stumbles.

‘I think it would have been really easy for me to get deterred, to get sort of like, `Wow, why am I missing so much?´’ Harini said. ‘Really just focusing on the next word and knowing that I´m still in, I think was just a big relief for me.’

She is the fifth Scripps champion to be coached by Walters, a former speller, fellow Texan and student at Rice University who is considering bowing out of the coaching business.

Harini also got help from Navneeth Murali, who handed her one of those runner-ups in the 2020 SpellPundit online bee – a consolation prize for the Scripps bee that was canceled because of the pandemic.

It was Walters and Navneeth who rushed to the bee judges, along with Harini´s mom, Priya, as soon as Harini walked off the stage in the vocabulary round, seemingly her most crushing disappointment of all.

‘My heart stopped for a second,’ Harini said.

Harini defined the word ‘pullulation’ as the nesting of mating birds. Scripps said the correct answer was the swarming of bees. Her supporters made the case to the judges that she´d gotten it right. A few minutes later, head judge Mary Brooks announced the reversal.

‘We did a little sleuthing after you finished, which is what our job is, to make sure we´ve made the right decision,’ Brooks said. ‘We (did) a little deep dive in that word and actually the answer you gave to that word is considered correct, so we´re going to reinstate you.’

The twelve finalists of the Scripps National Spelling Bee stand on stage in MarylandVikram and Harini sit together during the finals, before eventually facing each other in the spell-off lightning roundHarini Logan, 14, from San Antonio, Texas, right, and Vikram Raju, 12, from Aurora, Colo., left, wait on stage with Scripps CEO Adam Symson for results to be tabulated during the finals of the Scripps National Spelling BeeHarini then cruised into the finals against Vikram. They each correctly spelt two words. Then Scripps said the night’s most vehement words.

Both of these words are misspelled. Vikram then missed again, but Harini got’sereh’ correct, putting her one word away from the title. The term was ‘drimys,’ and she mispronounced it.

After two more rounds, each of the finalists misspelled two more words, Scripps brought out the podium and buzzer for the lightning round, which all of the finalists had practiced in the mostly empty ballroom hours before.

Harini was faster and sharper throughout, and the judges’ final tally confirmed her victory.

‘I knew I just had to blurt off the spelling I could think of off the top of my head, and I just had to be a little faster,’ said Vikram, a 12-year-old seventh-grader from Aurora, Colorado, who hopes to return next year.

Vihaan Sibal, a 13-year-old from McGregor, Texas, finished third and also has another year of eligibility. Saharsh Vuppala, a 13-year-old eighth-grader from Bellevue, Washington, was fourth.

Most Bee contestants were middle-school age and all were required to test negative for COVID-19 to participate and were masked onstage except when actively competing.

Harini attends The Montessori School of San Antonio, where she is in eighth grade. She enjoys creative writing and hopes to publish a book during her senior year. She plays the piano, recorder, and is learning to play the ukulele when she is not spelling.

She was a Bee competitor for the fourth and last time.

Last year, Zaila Avant-garde, 14, of New Orleans, became the first African American to win the famous competition, which began in 1925, when she properly spelt ‘Murraya,’ a genus of plants.

In the lightning round, Vikram Raju went first and spelled 15 words correctly of the 19 he attemptedHarini Logan reacts after winning the 94th annual Scripps National Spelling BeeHarini is embraced by family after winning the Scripps National Spelling Bee on ThursdayThe Bee was shown live on television. As players wrack their brains to come up with the correct spellings for often obscure words, play-by-play commentary adds to the intensity.

This year’s live program was transferred to ION and Bounce, both owned by a Scripps subsidiary, after 27 years of being televised live on the cable sports channel ESPN.

‘erysipelas,’ a skin infection; ‘auslaut,’ the final sound in a word or syllable; ‘palama,’ webbing on the feet of aquatic birds; ‘pendeloque,’ a pear-shaped gemstone or glass pendant; ‘odylic,’ related to a hypothetical life force; ‘cernuous,’ drooping; ‘bougainvillea,’ a climbing plant; and ‘