International Collegiate Programming Contest

The International Collegiate Programming Contest (ICPC) is an annual multi-tiered competitive programming competition among the universities of the world.[1] Directed by ICPC Executive Director and Baylor Professor William B. Poucher, the ICPC operates autonomous regional contests covering six continents culminating in a global World Finals every year. In 2018, ICPC participation included 52,709 students from 3,233 universities in 110 countries.

The ICPC operates under the auspices of the ICPC Foundation and operates under agreements with host universities and non-profits, all in accordance with the ICPC Policies and Procedures.[2] From 1977 until 2017 ICPC was held under the auspices of ACM and was referred to as ACM-ICPC.[3]

History

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The ICPC traces its roots to a competition held at Texas A&M University in 1970 hosted by the Alpha chapter of the Upsilon Pi Epsilon Computer Science Honor Society (UPE). This initial programming competition was titled First Annual Texas Collegiate Programming Championship and each university was represented by a team of up to five members. The computer used was a IBM System/360 model 65 which was one of the first machines with a DAT (Dynamic Address Translator aka "paging") system for accessing memory. Teams that participated included Texas A&M, Texas Tech, University of Houston, and five or six other Texas University / Colleges. There were three problems that had to be completed and the cumulative time from "start" to "successful completion" determined first-, second-, and third-place winners. The programming language used was Fortran. The programs were written on coding sheets, keypunched on Hollerith cards, and submitted for execution. The University of Houston team won the competition completing all three problems successfully with time. The second- and third-place teams did not successfully complete all three problems. The contest evolved into its present form as a multi-tier competition in 1977, with the first finals held in conjunction with the ACM Computer Science Conference.

From 1977 to 1989, the contest included mainly teams of four from universities throughout the United States and Canada. ICPC Headquarters was hosted by Baylor University from 1989 until 2022, with regional contests established within the world's university community, the ICPC has grown into a worldwide competition. To increase access to the World Finals, teams were reduced to three students within their first five academic years.[citation needed]

From 1997 to 2017, International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) was the sponsor of ICPC. During that time contest participation has grown by more than 2000%. In 1997, 840 teams from 560 universities participated. In 2017, 46,381 students from 2,948 universities in 103 countries on six continents participated in regional competitions. Organized as a highly localized extra-curricular university mind sport and operating as a globally-coordinated unincorporated association operating under agreements with host universities and non-profits, the ICPC is open to qualified teams from every university in the world.[citation needed]

UPE has provided continuous support since 1970 and honored World Finalists since the first Finals in 1976. The ICPC is indebted to ACM member contributions and ACM assistance from 1976 to 2018. Baylor University served since 1985, hosting ICPC Headquarters from 1989 until 2022. The ICPC operates under the auspices of the ICPC Foundation which provides the ICPC Global Headquarters to service a globally-coordinated community whose events operate under agreements with host universities and non-profits to insure that participation in ICPC is open to qualified teams from every university in the world. See ICPC Policies and Procedures.[2]

The ICPC World Finals (The Annual World Finals of the International Collegiate Programming Contest) is the final round of competition. Over its history it has become a 4-day event held in the finest venues worldwide with 140 teams competing in the 2018 World Finals. Recent World Champion teams have been recognized by their country's head of state. In recent years, media impressions have hovered at the one billion mark.[citation needed]

From 2000 to 2022, only teams from Russia, China, and Poland have won the ICPC world finals.[4] Participation in North America is much smaller than in the rest of the world, which is partially attributed to the perceived low payoff of participating.[5]

Contest rules

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ICPC contests are team competitions. Current rules stipulate that each team consist of three students. Participants must be university students, who have had less than five years of university education before the contest. Students who have previously competed in two World Finals or five regional competitions are ineligible to compete again.[6][7]

During each contest, the teams of three are given 5 hours to solve between eight and fifteen programming problems (with eight typical for regionals and twelve for finals). They must submit solutions as programs in C, C++, Java, Ada,[8] Python[9][10] or Kotlin[11] (although it is not guaranteed every problem is solvable in any certain language, the ICPC website states that "the judges will have solved all problems in Java and C++" for both regional and world finals competitions). Programs are then run on test data. If a program fails to give a correct answer, the team is notified and can submit another program.

The winner is the team which correctly solves the most problems. If necessary to rank teams for medals or prizes among tying teams, the placement of teams is determined by the sum of the elapsed times at each point that they submitted correct solutions plus 20 minutes for each rejected submission of a problem ultimately solved. There is no time consumed for a problem that is not solved.[12]

Compared to other programming contests (for example, International Olympiad in Informatics), the ICPC is characterized by a large number of problems (eight or more problems in just 5 hours). Another feature is that each team can use only one computer, although teams have three students. This makes the time pressure even greater. Good teamwork and ability to withstand pressure is needed to win.

2004–2025 finals

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2004 World Finals

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The 2004 ACM-ICPC World Finals were hosted at the Obecni Dum, Prague, by Czech Technical University in Prague. 3,150 teams representing 1,411 universities from 75 countries competed in elimination rounds, with 73 of those teams proceeding to the world finals. St. Petersburg Institute of Fine Mechanics and Optics from Russia won, solving 7 of 10 problems.[13] Gold medalists were St. Petersburg Institute of Fine Mechanics and Optics, KTH Royal Institute of Technology (Sweden), Belarusian State University, and Perm State University (Russia).

2005 World Finals

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Opening Ceremony in 2005

The 2005 world finals were held at Pudong Shangri-La Hotel in Shanghai on April 6, 2005, hosted by Shanghai Jiao Tong University. 4,109 teams representing 1,582 universities from 71 countries competed in elimination rounds, with 78 of those teams proceeding to the world finals. Shanghai Jiao Tong University won its second world title, with 8 of 10 problems solved.[14] Gold medal winners were Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Moscow State University (Russia), St. Petersburg Institute of Fine Mechanics and Optics (Russia), and University of Waterloo (Canada).

2006 World Finals

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The 2006 ACM-ICPC World Finals were held in San Antonio, Texas, and hosted by Baylor University.[15] 5,606 teams representing 1,733 universities from 84 countries competed in elimination rounds, with 83 of those teams proceeding to the world finals. Saratov State University from Russia won, solving 6 of 10 problems.[16] Gold medal winners were Saratov, Jagiellonian University (Poland), Altai State Technical University (Russia), University of Twente (The Netherlands).

2007 World Finals

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The 2007 ACM-ICPC World Finals were held at the Tokyo Bay Hilton, in Tokyo, Japan, March 12–16, 2007. The World Finals was hosted by the ACM Japan Chapter and the IBM Tokyo Research Lab. Some 6,099 teams competed on six continents at the regional level. Eighty-eight teams advanced to the World Finals. Warsaw University won its second world championship, solving 8 of 10 problems. Gold Medal Winners were Warsaw University, Tsinghua University (China), St. Petersburg Institute of Fine Mechanics and Optics (Russia), and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (United States). Silver Medal Winners include Shanghai Jiao Tong University (China) and 3 other universities.

2008 World Finals

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The 2008 ACM-ICPC World Finals were held at the Fairmont Banff Springs Hotel, in Banff, Alberta, Canada, April 6–10, 2008.[17] The World Finals was hosted by the University of Alberta. There were 100 teams in the World finals, out of 6700 total teams competing in the earlier rounds.[18] The St. Petersburg Institute of Fine Mechanics and Optics won their second world championship. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Izhevsk State Technical University, and Lviv National University also received gold medals.

2009 World Finals

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The 2009 ACM-ICPC World Finals were held in Stockholm, Sweden, April 18–22, at the campus of the hosting institution, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, as well as at the Grand Hotel, the Radisson Strand, and the Diplomat Hotel. There were 100 teams from over 200 regional sites competing for the World Championship. The St. Petersburg Institute of Fine Mechanics and Optics defended their title, winning their third world championship. Tsinghua University, St. Petersburg State University, and Saratov State University also received gold medals.[19] The 2009 World Finals pioneered live video broadcasting of the entire contest, featuring elements such as expert commentary, live feeds of teams and their computer screens and interviews with judges, coaches and dignitaries. The event was broadcast online, as well as by Swedish television channel Axess TV.

2010 World Finals

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The 2010 ACM-ICPC World Finals were held in Harbin, China. The host is Harbin Engineering University. Shanghai Jiao Tong University won the world championship.[20] Moscow State University, National Taiwan University, and Taras Shevchenko Kyiv National University also received gold medals.

2011 World Finals

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The 2011 ACM-ICPC World Finals were held in Orlando, Florida and hosted by main sponsor IBM. The contest was initially scheduled to be held in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt in February, but was moved due to the political instability associated with the Arab Spring. Zhejiang University took first place with the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, Tsinghua University, and Saint Petersburg State University taking 2nd, 3rd, and 4th respectively each receiving gold medals.[21] China (2G) United States (1G) Russia (1G, 2S, 2B) Germany (1S) Ukraine (1S) Poland (1B) Canada (1B)

2012 World Finals

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The 2012 World Finals were held in Warsaw, Poland. They were inaugurated on 15 May and hosted by University of Warsaw.[22] St. Petersburg Institute of Fine Mechanics and Optics won their fourth world championship, the most by any University at the time. University of Warsaw, Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, and Shanghai Jiao Tong University took 2nd, 3rd, and 4th place respectively each receiving gold medals. Russia (2G, 1B) China (1G,1S) Poland (1G) United States (1S) Hong Kong (1S) Belarus (1S, 1B) Canada (1B) Japan (1B)

2013 World Finals

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The 2013 World Finals were held in Saint Petersburg, Russia. They were inaugurated on 3 July and were hosted by NRU ITMO.

2013 top thirteen teams that received medals are:

Japan (1G) Russia (1G, 1S, 2B) China (1G, 1B) Taiwan (1G) Poland (1S, 1B) Ukraine (1S) Belarus (1S) United States (1B)

2014 World Finals

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The 2014 World Finals were held in Ekaterinburg, Russia on June 21–25, hosted by Ural Federal University. The final competition was held on June 25.[25] 122 teams participated in the competition and St. Petersburg State University became the world champion.[26]

Following teams were awarded medals in ICPC 2014:[26]

Russia (2G, 2B) China (1G, 1S, 1B) Taiwan (1G) Japan (1S) Poland (1S) Croatia (1S) Slovakia (1B)

Gold

Silver

  • University of Warsaw
  • Shanghai Jiao Tong University
  • The University of Tokyo
  • University of Zagreb

Bronze

  • St. Petersburg National Research University of IT, Mechanics and Optics
  • National Research University Higher School of Economics
  • Tsinghua University
  • Comenius University

2015 World Finals

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ITMO team 2015

The 2015 World Finals were held in Marrakesh (Morocco) during May 16–21, hosted by Mohammed the Fifth University, Al Akhawayn University and Mundiapolis University. The final competition took place on May 20. 128 teams competed to be World Champion. Saint Petersburg ITMO emerged as the winner, having solved all problems (13) for the first time ever. Other medalists included teams from Russia (2G), China (1G, 1B, 1S), Japan (1G), the United States (1B, 1S), Croatia (1S), Czech Republic (1S), Korea (1B), and Poland (1B).

Gold

Silver

Bronze

2016 World Finals

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The 2016 World Finals were held in Phuket (Thailand) during May 16–21. The final competition was on May 19. 128 teams competed to be World Champion. The winners were Saint Petersburg State University, solving 11 out of 13 problems. The first runners-up were Shanghai Jiao Tong University, also solving 11 problems, but 7 minutes behind the winning team.

Gold

Silver

Bronze

2017 World Finals

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The 2017 World Finals were held in Rapid City, South Dakota (United States) during May 20–25, hosted by Excellence in Computer Programming. Due to visa issue, several teams were unable to present onsite, in which the affected schools are allowed direct qualifications for ICPC 2018 besides the usual qualification spots.

The winner was ITMO University. Teams of the following countries were awarded medals in ICPC 2017: Russia (2 Gold, 1 Silver, 1 Bronze), Poland (1 Gold), South Korea (1 Gold, 1 Bronze), China (3 Silver), Sweden (1 Bronze), Japan (1 Bronze).

Gold

Silver

Bronze

2018 World Finals

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The 2018 World Finals were held in Beijing (China), during April 15–20, hosted by Peking University.

Archived at the Wayback Machine (archived April 24, 2018)

Rank in FinalCountryInstitutionFirst to Solve Problem Number of solved problems
01 1 RussiaMoscow State UniversityPanda Preserve & Single Cut of Failure 9
02 2 RussiaMoscow Institute of Physics and TechnologyGetting a Jump on Crime8
03 3 ChinaPeking UniversityGem Island8
04 4 JapanThe University of Tokyo8
05 5 South KoreaSeoul National UniversityComma Sprinkler7
06 6 AustraliaUniversity of New South WalesWireless is the New Fiber7
07 7 ChinaTsinghua University7
08 8 ChinaShanghai Jiao Tong University7
09 9 RussiaITMO UniversityGo with the Flow7
10 10 United StatesUniversity of Central Florida7
11 11 United StatesMassachusetts Institute of Technology7
12 12 LithuaniaVilnius UniversityCatch the Plane 7
13 13 RussiaUral Federal University7

In 2018 World Final, problems "Conquer the World" and "Uncrossed Knight's Tour" were not solved.

2019 World Finals

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The 2019 World Finals were held in Porto (Portugal) from March 31 to April 5, 2019, hosted by the University of Porto and the City of Porto.[28] Archived at the Wayback Machine (archived April 24, 2018)

Rank in Final[29]CountryInstitution Number of solved problems
01 1 RussiaMoscow State University 10
02 2 United StatesMassachusetts Institute of Technology9
03 3 JapanUniversity of Tokyo9
04 4 PolandUniversity of Warsaw8
05 5 TaiwanNational Taiwan University8
06 6 PolandUniversity of Wroclaw8
07 7 South KoreaSeoul National University7
08 8 North KoreaKimChaek University of Technology7
09 9 IranSharif University of Technology7
10 10 RussiaMoscow Institute of Physics & Technology7
11 11 RussiaNational Research University Higher School of Economics7
12 12 ChinaThe Chinese University of Hong Kong 7

World Finals Moscow (2020)

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Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, the 2020 World Finals were postponed.[30] The finals took place in Moscow (Russia) from October 1 to October 5, 2021, hosted by Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology.[31] To avoid confusion with dates, in all official materials it was called "World Finals Moscow" instead of 2020 or 2021.

"ICPC World Finals Moscow final standings". ICPC World finals. Archived from the original on 2021-10-05. Retrieved 2021-10-16.

Rank in FinalCountryInstitutionFirst to Solve Problem[32] Number of solved problems
01 1 RussiaState University of Nizhny NovgorodB (The Cost of Speed Limits); H (QC QC) 12
02 2 South KoreaSeoul National UniversityF (Ley Lines)11
03 3 RussiaITMO UniversityI (Quests)11
04 4 RussiaMoscow Institute of Physics and Technology11
05 5 PolandUniversity of WroclawG (Opportunity Cost)11
06 6 United KingdomUniversity of CambridgeA (Cardiology)11
07 7 BelarusBelarusian State University11
08 8 RomaniaUniversity of BucharestD (Gene Folding); O (Which Planet is This?!)10
09 9 United StatesMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyE (Landscape Generator); J (’S No Problem)10
10 10 UkraineKharkiv National University of Radio Electronics10
11 11 United StatesUniversity of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign10
12 12 RussiaHigher School of Economics 9

In 2020–2021 World Final, problems K (Space Walls) and L (Sweep Stakes) were not solved.

World Finals Dhaka (2021)

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The 45-th World Finals initially scheduled for 2021, was held in Dhaka (Bangladesh) from November 6 to November 11, 2022, because of schedule changes due to COVID-19 pandemic, hosted by the University of Asia Pacific.[33] To avoid confusion about dates, it was called World Finals Dhaka in all official materials.

Source:[34]

Rank in FinalCountryInstitutionNumber of solved problems
01 1 United StatesMassachusetts Institute of Technology11
02 2 ChinaPeking University10
03 3 JapanThe University of Tokyo9
04 4 South KoreaSeoul National University9
05 5  SwitzerlandETH Zürich9
06 6 FranceÉcole Normale Supérieure de Paris9
07 7 United StatesCarnegie Mellon University9
08 8 PolandUniversity of Warsaw8
09 9 RussiaNational Research University Higher School of Economics8
10 10 RussiaSt. Petersburg State University8
11 11 United KingdomUniversity of Oxford8
12 12 VietnamUniversity of Engineering and Technology - VNU8

World Finals Luxor (2022 & 2023)

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To synchronize with the schedule after all rescheduling because of COVID-19 pandemic both 46-th and 47-th world finals were scheduled to take place in the same time in November 2023 in Sharm El Sheikh. Because of Gaza war and related safety concerns, it was rescheduled once again and finally happened in Luxor in April from 14th to 19 April 2024. To avoid confusion about dates, the event was referred to as World Finals Luxor (World Finals Sharm before rescheduling), with two competitions as 46th and 47th separately, if needed, in all official materials.

Two competitions were held in parallel, with intersecting problem sets. In 47-th finals, due to very close results (less than 40 penalty minutes difference between 12 and 16 place), additional bronze medals were awarded at the next finals in Astana.

Source:[35][36]

46th Finals medalists
Rank in FinalCountryInstitutionNumber of solved problems
01 1 ChinaPeking University10
02 2 USAMassachusetts Institute of Technology9
03 3 RussiaNational Research University Higher School of Economics9
04 4 UKUniversity of Oxford9
05 5 RussiaMoscow Institute of Physics and Technology9
06 6 South KoreaSeoul National University9
07 7 UkraineTaras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv9
08 8 USAUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison8
09 9 JapanThe University of Tokyo8
10 10 ChinaTsinghua University8
11 11 ChinaNanjing University of Posts and Telecommunications8
12 12 TaiwanNational Taiwan University8
47th Finals medalists
Rank in FinalCountryInstitutionNumber of solved problemsPenalty time
01 1 RussiaNational Research University Higher School of Economics9995
02 2 ChinaPeking University91068
03 3 RussiaMoscow Institute of Physics and Technology91143
04 4 SpainHarbour.Space University91304
05 5 ChinaTsinghua University91524
06 6 ChinaNanjing University81013
07 7 South KoreaSeoul National University81102
08 8 CanadaUniversity of Waterloo81120
09 9 JapanThe University of Tokyo81121
10 10 JapanTokyo Institute of Technology81424
11 11 USBrigham Young University7842
12 12 PolandUniversity of Warsaw7940
13 13 ArgentinaUniversidad de Buenos Aires7955
14 14 UKUniversity of Cambridge7962
15 15 TaiwanNational Taiwan University7962
16 16 ChinaXi'an Jiaotong University7980

World Finals Astana (2024)

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The 48th World Finals was held on 15–20 September 2024 in Astana, Kazakhstan hosted by The Kazakhstan Competitive Programming Federation.

Source:[37]

Rank in FinalCountryInstitutionNumber of solved problems Penalty time
01 1 ChinaPeking University9 935
02 2 RussiaMoscow Institute of Physics and Technology9 1212
03 3 ChinaTsinghua University9 1218
04 4 JapanTokyo Institute of Technology9 1322
05 5 South KoreaKAIST8 868
06 6 SingaporeNational University of Singapore8 934
07 7 ChinaBeijing Jiaotong University8 960
08 8 JapanThe University of Tokyo8 1031
09 9 South KoreaSeoul National University8 1112
10 10 ChinaZhejiang University8 1166
11 11 USAMassachusetts Institute of Technology8 1324
12 12 USASwarthmore College7 605

World Finals Baku (2025)

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The 49th ICPC World Championship was held in Baku, Azerbaijan, from August 31 to September 5, 2025, hosted by ADA University in partnership with the Central Bank of Azerbaijan.[38][39]

139 teams competed to be World Champion. The winners were Saint Petersburg State University team named Polar Bear Transform. They solved 11 out of 12 problems. With only two minutes left on the contest ending, the team submitted the final problem's solution that sealed their victory. Gold medals also went to the teams from Japan and China: The University of Tokyo, Beijing Jiaotong University, and Tsinghua University.

Final standings[40]
Rank in FinalCountryInstitutionNumber of solved problems Penalty time
01 1 RussiaSaint Petersburg State University11 1478
02 2 JapanThe University of Tokyo10 1116
03 3 ChinaBeijing Jiaotong University10 1425
04 4 ChinaTsinghua University9 865
05 5 ChinaPeking University9 887
06 6 USAHarvard University9 995
07 7 CroatiaUniversity of Zagreb9 1075
08 8 USAMassachusetts Institute of Technology9 1123
09 9 ChinaUniversity of Science and Technology of China9 1128
10 10 South KoreaSeoul National University9 1133
11 11 SerbiaUniversity of Novi Sad9 1175
12 12 RussiaSaratov State University9 1191

Summary

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Several time winners
WinsCountryInstitutionMost recent
7 RussiaITMO University2017
5 RussiaSaint Petersburg State University2025
3 ChinaShanghai Jiao Tong University2010
3 United StatesStanford University1991
2 ChinaPeking University2024
2 United StatesMassachusetts Institute of Technology2022
2 RussiaMoscow State University2019
2 PolandUniversity of Warsaw2007
2 CanadaUniversity of Waterloo1999
2 United StatesCalifornia Institute of Technology1988
2 United StatesWashington University in St. Louis1980
Winner by year
Year Country Institution Host country Host city
2025 Russia Saint Petersburg State University Azerbaijan Baku
2024 China Peking University Kazakhstan Astana
2023 Russia National Research University Higher School of Economics Egypt Luxor
2022 China Peking University Egypt Luxor
2021 United States Massachusetts Institute of Technology Bangladesh Dhaka
2020 Russia Nizhny Novgorod State University Russia Moscow
2019 Russia Moscow State University Portugal Porto
2018 Russia Moscow State University China Beijing
2017 Russia ITMO University United States Rapid City
2016 Russia Saint Petersburg State University Thailand Phuket
2015 Russia ITMO University Morocco Marrakesh
2014 Russia Saint Petersburg State University Russia Yekaterinburg
2013 Russia ITMO University Russia Saint Petersburg
2012 Russia ITMO University Poland Warsaw
2011 China Zhejiang University United States Orlando
2010 China Shanghai Jiao Tong University China Harbin
2009 Russia ITMO University Sweden Stockholm
2008 Russia ITMO University Canada Banff
2007 Poland University of Warsaw Japan Urayasu
2006 Russia Saratov State University United States San Antonio
2005 China Shanghai Jiao Tong University China Shanghai
2004 Russia ITMO University Czech Republic Prague
2003 Poland University of Warsaw United States Beverly Hills
2002 China Shanghai Jiao Tong University United States Honolulu
2001 Russia Saint Petersburg State University Canada Vancouver
2000 Russia Saint Petersburg State University United States Orlando
1999 Canada University of Waterloo Netherlands Eindhoven
1998 Czech Republic Charles University United States Atlanta
1997 United States Harvey Mudd College United States San Jose
1996 United States University of California, Berkeley United States Philadelphia
1995 Germany Albert-Ludwigs-Universität United States Nashville
1994 Canada University of Waterloo United States Phoenix
1993 United States Harvard University United States Indianapolis
1992 Australia University of Melbourne United States Kansas City
1991 United States Stanford University United States San Antonio
1990 New Zealand University of Otago United States Washington, D.C.
1989 United States University of California, Los Angeles United States Louisville
1988 United States California Institute of Technology United States Atlanta
1987 United States Stanford University United States St. Louis
1986 United States California Institute of Technology United States Cincinnati
1985 United States Stanford University United States New Orleans
1984 United States Johns Hopkins University United States Philadelphia
1983 United States University of Nebraska–Lincoln United States Melbourne
1982 United States Baylor University United States Indianapolis
1981 United States University of Missouri–Rolla United States St. Louis
1980 United States Washington University in St. Louis United States Kansas City
1979 United States Washington University in St. Louis United States Dayton
1978 United States Massachusetts Institute of Technology United States Detroit
1977 United States Michigan State University United States Atlanta
Country wins
WinsCountryMost Recent WinNo. of Years Participated
18 United States202147
17 Russia202529 (since 1996)
6 China2024
2 Poland2007
2 Canada1999
1 Czech Republic1998
1 Germany1995
1 Australia1992
1 New Zealand1990

See also

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References

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