The North American City Flags Tournament started two days ago, on November 16, 2022.
After participating in the NAVA City Flag Survey and its 312 new city flags AND the start of the World Cup of Flags 2022 by the Flag Institute, I thought that combining the greatness of North America’s best flags AND a tournament would be great fun.
The line ups for the North American City Flags Tournament are from USA and Canada, and are all adopted to the best of my knowledge from 2000 to present. There’s one from 1999 in one division, but I make the rules, so I can allow exceptions. (One entry is from 1999, but that’s ok, there are always exceptions, plus 2-3 have unknown adoption dates.)
I’ve selected 80 of the best and pretty good flags since 2000 (with the one from 1999). An 80 flag full elimination setup means a lot of good flags may get eliminated too early, so I’m using a bit of the World Cup process with round-robins and elimination rounds.
- West
- Great Plains
- Midwest
- Atlantic
Because there are so many very good, good, and some decent flags – all 80, I’ve put 4 flags in each division automatically. All 16 other flags in the division have to fight it out in different round robins and eliminations to get to 4 more to make the final 8 division flags.
Shown here is the Midwest Division. Prequalified flags are:
You may agree or disagree, but I had to make a call and elevate these.
That means the lower 16 will compete for the 4 competitive slots to make the final Division 8 teams
Animals, trains, airplane inspirations, stars, crossroads, rivers, anchors, boats and the letter “E” are included in the 16 competing flags. Thanks to folks who shared Slater and Peoria which didn’t appear in the NAVA survey.
The Atlantic Division below includes the Premier Flags of: Coral Springs, Madison GA, Old Town and Burlington, who get an effecitive “bye”.
Competing in Rounds 1 and 2, are flags with stars, moons, boats, lighthouses, a castle, fountain, and crossing stripes.
Thanks to @KeystoneFlag who shared Gettysburg which didn’t appear in the NAVA survey due to its adoption in 2000. Yes and we’ve added Kingston ON because:
1. Castles are cool
2. Frankly the east has fewer great flags
Salt Lake City ranks as one of the largest cities with a new city design- will that factor in? or will small Seward Alaska pull out a surprise? Or will the silhouette of an elk muscle into the top 4 over the tight knot of Palouse WA?
I wouldn’t be surprised to see 2-3 of these are in the semi finals.
#vexillology #vexillologie #cityflag #flag #CityFlagsTourney22
That means we’ll first have Altona, Corpus Christi, Augusta, and Ashland in competition.
The two flags with most and second most votes move on to Round 2 against the other top 2 votes of each column
#CityFlagsTourney22
See the tournament diagram below: