The late-night duel twice saw Nihar, 11, fail to capitalize
on mistakes by Jairam, 13, and claim the title outright.
They ended co-winners when Jairam nailed "feldenkrais," a method
of education, and Nihar aced "gesellschaft," a type of social
relationship.
"I'm just speechless," Jairam told reporters after the contest
that was televised on cable network ESPN and repeatedly saw the
audience in a hotel ballroom burst into cheers.
Nihar, the youngest champion since 2002, thanked his mother and
added: "I can't say anything. I'm just in fifth grade."
Jairam and Nihar will each receive a $40,000 cash prize. The tie
is the third in a row in the Bee, a U.S. institution since 1925.
The contest had instituted a 25-round spell-off to try and avoid
just such a deadlock.
Nihar dazzled the audience by his grasp of words. When given "biniou,"
he asked pronouncer Jacques Bailly, "Is that a Breton bagpipe?"
then whizzed through it with head down, hands at side and
shifting slightly foot to foot.
Given "taoiseach," he said, "Is that an Irish word for prime
minister?" and nailed it, bringing cheers from the crowd.
Jairam created an opening for Nihar when he stumbled on "draathaar,"
a king of dog, wincing when he realized his mistake. Nihar then
bobbled "ayacohuite," a Mexican tree, giving Jairam new life.
"Hello again," Jairam said to Bailly when he stepped up to the
microphone. Even as the boys battled head to head, they gave
each other encouraging hand slaps as they returned from the
microphone.
After several more rounds, Jairam misspelled "mischsprache," a
fused language. Nihar failed again to knock him out by missing
on "tetradrahm," a kind of coin.
One more round, and Bailly said, "This is a beautiful moment. If
you both spell the next word correctly, you will be declared
co-champions." They did, and the room erupted in confetti and
cheers.
Jairam and Nihar are the ninth consecutive spellers of South
Asian ancestry, and the 12th in 16 years, to win the Bee.
Jairam's brother Sriram was the 2014 co-champion.
The finalists were winnowed from more than 280 spelling whizzes
after two days of written and oral tests in a Washington suburb.
(Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe, Peter Cooney and Michael Perry)
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