Attached are the GSSC placings. I included only the folks who got flights on the scoreboard. A bunch of others entered, but didn't get flights in because of weather, airplane trauma, or selflessly dropping out of the competition to judge.
How I got involved in co-CDing the GSSC is a peculiar story. My wife and I like to stop at Yosemite on the way home from GSSC. The lodging there requires reservations well in advance of one's stay-- usually in advance of when the GSSC date gets set. In order to get the date for the 2009 contest set early enough to reserve our 2009 Yosemite room, I goaded Jim Aron and Rich Walbridge into organizing the contest. I felt pretty smug about getting what I wanted with no work on my part. When I tried to repeat that process this year, somehow I got shamed into agreeing to help out as co-CD. I figured that I would fill out some AMA forms, Rich would do all the local legwork, then I would just breeze into town, fly stunt and give orders. I wasn't sure what is involved in putting on a stunt contest, but I knew that it requires a lot of clipboards. Fortunately, Doug Barton brought the equipment, Jerry Silver organized the banquet, and Jim Aron furnished the scoreboards, trophies, name tags, and classy coffee mugs. Rich did a dandy job of dealing with the hard-to-get-along-with school authorities, jumping through the many hoops required to get a beer-selling permit for the banquet, laying out and marking the circles, recruiting the many volunteers, weighing airplanes, and doing a zillion other tasks during the contest while I sat on my butt out of the rain.
I spent the contest sitting on the aforementioned butt because I didn't have enough confidence in my tabulation program to let anybody else enter data. Although it kept me frazzled, the program actually worked and did what I told it to do, although what I told it to do was in some cases kinda stupid. Some features were inflexible, and caused us to get a late start and to violate some of the contestants. I added to that inflexibility by insisting that there be no deviations from the randomly drawn flight order. A little intelligence would have helped. At least I can improve the program for future contests. Brett Buck summarized my involvement in the GSSC: "You are not suited for this kind of work."
Many thanks to all the folks who volunteered and brought stuff. Because of you we had a good contest.