USA TODAY International Edition

Greatest ever? ‘ Jeopardy’ wants the answer

James Holzhauer just won the “Jeopardy!” Tournament of Champions, but you haven’t seen the last of him. ❚ Holzhauer and the long- running quiz show’s two other biggest winners, Ken Jennings and Brad Rutter, will face off in a prime- time Greatest of All

- Gary Levin

The quintessen­tial quiz show’s top three champs square off in January; get host Alex Trebek’s exclusive take.

But the GOAT tournament will be anything but typical: It consists of a series of two back- to- back games, airing weeknights ( 8 EST/ PST) beginning Jan. 7. The player with the most combined winnings from the two games wins the “match,” and the play continues on successive nights ( except Monday) until one of them has won three matches and takes home a $ 1 million prize. ( The other finishers get $ 250,000 apiece). That means the tournament can last anywhere from three to seven days.

ABC reality programmin­g chief Rob Mills came up with the idea and calls it “my dream project” destined to succeed in an uncertain TV world. “I don’t know how this doesn’t become an event.”

Rutter and Jennings had faced off against IBM’s Watson computer in 2011 and in an All- Stars match in March. But it took Holzhauer’s impressive streak to provide a third, captivatin­g player and seal the deal. “The fact that it took somebody to play it like a riverboat gambler ... we had never seen anyone like this,” he says. “We had to make this happen.”

Holzhauer, 35, set the single- game winnings record on April 17, with more than $ 131,127, and amassed $ 2.46 million during his 32- game streak last spring. ( He added another $ 250,000 from last week’s tournament.) His quirky demeanor and aggressive betting style won fans and racked up winnings far more quickly than Jennings, 45, who won $ 2.52 million during 72 games in 2004. Rutter, 41, never cracked the top 10 in regular season play; he first appeared in 2000, when the show limited players to five consecutiv­e games. But he’s the biggest overall money winner on an American game show with $ 4.68 million, mostly from tournament­s.

Big winners are ratings magnets: “Jeopardy!” is averaging 8.8 million viewers this season ( well ahead of many prime- time shows), but spiked to 14 million at the peak of Holzhauer’s run.

Trebek, who’s bravely battling Stage 4 pancreatic cancer, won’t predict the outcome of the new tournament, scheduled to be taped early next month. But “you have to realize, I think, that Ken and Brad are going to be at a slight disadvanta­ge,” he says. “They won the majority of their monies 10, 15 years ago, so they’ve aged a bit. And are their reflexes going to be as good as James Holzhauer’s? Who knows? But we’re going to find out in this tournament. It’s going to be a blast, we’re all excited about it.”

One change – and a key to Holzhauer’s success – is his penchant for picking the highest- value clues first, a tactic mimicked by many players. “Ken and Brad are familiar with James’ strategy of picking the bottom clues first and picking up some funds to capitalize on the Daily Double if he hits it. Knowing that’s his strategy, they might preempt it by doing it themselves,” Trebek says. But “you have to be confident in your knowledge.”

The last time “Jeopardy!” aired on a major network in prime time? “Super Jeopardy!,” a special edition of the show that featured four players, aired on Saturday nights in the summer of 1990.

 ?? CAROL KAELSON ?? James Holzhauer, who set records earlier this year, won the 2019 “Jeopardy!” Tournament of Champions.
CAROL KAELSON James Holzhauer, who set records earlier this year, won the 2019 “Jeopardy!” Tournament of Champions.
 ?? CAROL KAELSON ?? “Jeopardy!” champs Ken Jennings and Brad Rutter have faced off against IBM’s Watson computer, but never against James Holzhauer.
CAROL KAELSON “Jeopardy!” champs Ken Jennings and Brad Rutter have faced off against IBM’s Watson computer, but never against James Holzhauer.

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