Serving Clovis, Portales and the Surrounding Communities

Local speller ousted

Staff and wire reports

WASHINGTON — One by one they strolled to the microphone, all 251 youngsters in the 76th Scripps Howard National Spelling Bee. Each got a word in the one-and-done mistake format; 175 got them right.

The rest drew a single clang of the bell, signifying it was time to be escorted to a comfort room of snacks and consolation. Some — including Tucumcari Middle School student Michael Martinez — missed their word by a single vowel. Others knew they had guessed badly but they still walked off with grace.

By noon, the audience was asked to leave the room as survivors scurried off stage to rows of tables, where they were given a test of 25 words.

The results, announced hours later, cut the field to 84. Survivors made errors on no more than 10 words.

Bee officials introduced the test last year as a way to speed up the contest but ensure that every student got at least one chance at the microphone. The bee is larger than ever, and spellers now tend to spend more time before offering answers.

The pressure may well rise today, with national coverage of the final round planned by ESPN, the cable sports network. All spellers win some cash depending upon performance. The winner gets $12,000 and other prizes.

Martinez, representing eastern New Mexico, was the first speller eliminated on Wednesday.

He was stumped by the word “borborygmus,” which means a rumbling in the bowels. He tossed in an extra “o” near the end.

“I’m sorta disappointed; I wanted to make it to at least the written test part,” Martinez said in a telephone interview late Wednesday morning.

“But I feel alright with what I did. I know I tried my hardest.”

Martinez, 13, was one of three New Mexico students competing in the bee. Brenna Cobb, 11, of Gallup was eliminated immediately after Martinez. But Ronald Shaw, 14, of Albuquerque, remained in the title hunt today.

Martinez said he visited briefly with Shaw prior to Wednesday’s competition and now he’s rooting for Shaw to win.

“He’s pretty cool; a nice kid,” Martinez said. “And he’s representing the state of New Mexico.”

In the initial round, some students took advantage of every clue they could seek from the pronouncer. Others spelled their words and learned their fate in 10 seconds.

Marshall Winchester, a sixth-grader in Waxhaw, N.C., repeated his word loudly in a Southern accent: ‘‘harmattan.’’ It means a dry dust-laden wind blowing from the interior on the Atlantic coast of Africa in some seasons. To Marshall, it meant another shot at glory, as he offered the correct spelling.

Students prepared for the finals in various ways. Some studied nightly for more than a year while others seemed content just making it this far.

On stage, the spellers applauded each other’s efforts. From their seats, some exchanged perplexed looks as the words were read, thankful that they were not handed something so baffling.

The group featured almost an even number of boys and girls, most on the older end of an age range that stretched from 8 to 15.

Two spellers took part in the finals for the fourth time: Dallas eighth-grader Sai Gunturi and Kelsey Swaim, an eighth-grader in Berkeley Springs, W.Va. Both got their first words right.

So did Catherine Miller, an eighth-grader in Niskayuna, N.Y. When she nailed ‘‘moulage,’’ which means molding, Miller smiled, twirled her hair and jumped back into her front-row seat.

Last year, it took 11 rounds to declare a winner, but that number has varied widely over the past decade. In 1997, victory came in the 23rd round.