Morning Sun

Students win national debate

- By Andrea Mestdagh

Central Michigan University’s mastery of the 2021 Pi Kappa Delta National Comprehens­ive Tournament wasn’t even up for debate: Two members of Team CMU shared the championsh­ip when they met in the final eliminatio­n round of the virtual event March 21.

“Tyler Tobias and Natalie Brant are incredibly talented and hardworkin­g debaters,” said debate program coach

Joe Packer, a communicat­ion faculty member. “Winning a national championsh­ip is an enormous accomplish­ment, but for two teammates to close out the tournament is on another level.”

If debaters from the same school are set to compete in the eliminatio­n debates, no debate occurs, and the debater with the higher seed advances. Tobias, a

junior, and Brant, a freshman, were on opposite sides of the bracket and met in the final round.

“I felt very empowered when I found out I had won with Tyler,” Brant said. “Coming into this season, I just had the goal to do my best and get better. I like to think that this accomplish­ment fulfills and surpasses the standards I had originally set for myself.”

Brant, from Wichita, Kansas, is double majoring in internatio­nal relations and philosophy and minoring in communicat­ion. Tobias, from Natchez, Mississipp­i, is majoring in environmen­tal studies and philosophy with a minor in biology. He joined the team last year.

“I am ecstatic to have won a PKD national title,” Tobias said. “It’s been a goal of mine since I started competing, along with winning a National Forensic Associatio­n national title. Our team has worked extremely hard during what has been a tumultuous year for a lot of programs around the country.”

Brant said the beginning of the tournament looked rough for her: By the end of Day One her record was 1-2.

“The next day I didn’t lose a round, which helped boost me into the eliminatio­n rounds,” she said. “Everyone loves a good comeback.”

Brant said debate teaches her how to talk about difficult topics in informativ­e ways that help in classes, schoolwork and conversati­on. It also is an opportunit­y to network with other students and adults all over the country.

“Something about debate that is very important to me personally is that it reminds me that I have a voice and that I am heard,” she said.

In addition to winning their eliminatio­n rounds based on speaker points and ratings, Brant and Tobias earned top speaker awards, Brant as First Speaker and Tobias as Second. Tobias was undefeated in the preliminar­y rounds and throughout the tournament.

CMU’S Lucas Leodler, a junior, was Seventh Speaker and reached the quarterfin­als. Freshman Asia Robinson was Ninth Speaker and made it to the octo-finals.

Packer said CMU’S previous best in the national tournament was in 2016, when Audrey Weber, now Audrey Brown, won the competitio­n.

CMU debate currently has six members.

The team typically travels to around 12 competitio­ns a year but has done more this year because all are virtual. Packer has coached the team since he came to CMU in 2013.

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Tobias
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Brant

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