Preparation Craig prepared for
Jeopardy! by studying the online archive of past questions maintained on the J! Archive website. Using
data-mining and text-clustering, he identified the topics most likely to occur in game questions, then used the
spaced repetition program
Anki for memorization and tested himself using his own program. Craig played
quiz bowl as a student at both Virginia Tech and the University of Delaware. Before his
Jeopardy! appearances, he played numerous Jeopardy scrimmage matches against his friends with quiz bowl experience.
Appearances Original run Craig set his record of $77,000 on the second day of the 2010–2011
Jeopardy! season on the episode airing September 14, 2010. In his seven-day run, Craig earned $231,200, all but $1,000 of which was from winning episodes. On April 9, 2019, professional sports gambler
James Holzhauer broke Craig's single-day record, surpassing it 15 more times during his own run; the record now stands at $131,127 as of April 17, 2019. Holzhauer, like Craig, relied on aggressive Daily Double and Final Jeopardy! wagers to amass his totals. Holzhauer also surpassed Craig's records for most earnings won in a player's first five games and the largest successful bet on a Daily Double.
Tournament play In 2011, Craig returned for the Tournament of Champions, which aired in November. In the quarter-final match, he had $200 shy of $40,000 going into Final Jeopardy! and won despite losing $20,200 after getting Final Jeopardy! wrong. In the semi-final match, described as "a bloody, epic, inter-planetary death match... the Jeopardy! equivalent of a title-unification fight", Craig beat college physics professor Joon Pahk and student and waiter Mark Runsvold, the sixth and tenth regular-play all-time money winners on the show at the time. On the first night of the two-day finals, Craig became the first player in the history of the show to uncover two Daily Double items in succession, wager all of his money on both, and win both times. When Craig hit the first of his back-to-back Daily Doubles, he wagered his entire pot of $9,000, and won when he correctly identified
Anne Brontë as the author who wrote the 1847 book
Agnes Grey under the pseudonym 'Acton Bell'. After switching categories and uncovering the second Daily Double, Craig wagered his entire pot of $18,000, winning when he correctly answered, "What is
Suriname?" after being given the clue "Although Dutch is the official language,
Sranan Tongo is spoken by most people in this South American country." At the time, his $18,000 win was the largest successful Daily Double wager in the show's history. Craig won the Tournament of Champions. In the finals, he defeated systems engineer Buddy Wright and writer Tom Nissley (the latter being the show's fourth highest all-time non-tournament money winner), to win the grand prize of $250,000. Craig returned for the
Jeopardy! Battle of the Decades tournament on April 1, 2014, as part of the 2000s Week. Facing chemical engineer Vijay Balse (2010 Tournament of Champions winner) and history professor Stephanie Jass, he defeated Balse by $1 and advanced to the quarterfinals. Craig won in the quarterfinals on May 5, facing off against instructional designer and curriculum developer Robin Carroll (2000 Tournament of Champions winner) and "shovel bum" Leszek Pawlowicz (1992 Tournament of Champions winner). Craig then defeated then-world history teacher
Colby Burnett (Fall 2012 Teachers Tournament and 2013 Tournament of Champions winner) and graduate student Pam Mueller (Fall 2000 College Championship winner) in the semifinals and advanced to the finals where he placed third. Craig was hurt in the finals by two "True Daily Double" wagers, one on each day of the two-day final, in which he risked $10,200 and responded incorrectly both times. Craig later appeared in the 2019 All-Star Games with team captain Austin Rogers and 2013 Teen Tournament winner Leonard Cooper. His team went home with $75,000 after losing in the wild card match.
Records During his
Jeopardy! appearances, Craig set the following records: ==References==