CALEB Richmond schooled his fellow Jeopardy! contestants on Thursday's High School Reunion Tournament episode.
He found all three Daily Doubles and despite losing $10K on one, won the special's last quarter-finals game in a blowout.

Mayim, 47, is hosting the 14-episode High School Reunion Tournament featuring 27 former Teen Tournament contestants who first duked it out in 2018 and 2019.
Now in its second week, the eventual winner will get $100,000 and a slot in the 2023 Tournament of Champions.
Caleb, a sophomore at Georgetown University from Bedford, New Hampshire, faced Maggie Brown, a sophomore at the University of West Florida from Pensacola, Florida, and Hannah Nekritz, a senior at Brandeis University from Stamford, Connecticut.
This was the last quarter-finals episode so there are no new players left, and Caleb's performance convinced Jeopardy! fans that he's the one to beat.
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The polite power player found all three Daily Doubles and got the majority of the clues, his other two contestants barely got in edge-wise.
After he nearly doubled up on the first Daily Double, he had over $12,400 and Hannah and Maggie were both barely on the board - just in by the first commercial.
Caleb then found the second Daily Double and bet $10,018 on it, soaring to $30K while his fellow students were in the red.
He then found the last Daily Double, bet another $10,018 on it, but he missed it.
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Yet, the young gun still had $23,618 by Final Jeopardy while Hannah wound up with $9,000 for Hannah and Maggie with -$1,600.
The was also a rare zero out of five correct responses on a sports category, to which Caleb joked: "the internet is gonna love that."
'CALEB IS SWEEPING'
Final Jeopardy under "Non-Fiction" read: "It has the line, 'The discovery of America... opened up fresh ground for the rising bourgeoisie.'"
Caleb got it correct with "The Communist Manifesto" while Hannah didn't finish writing it in time - since Maggie was in the red she did not compete.
Caleb added a swell $5,617 to advance with $29,235 - a huge score especially since he dropped $10,0018 earlier on.
One Twitter user wrote: "Caleb is sweeping if I were one of the other contestants I’d be crying rn.
"Caleb is just dunking on everyone…Jeeeezzzz," wrote another.
"Caleb is the exact name for someone who would wager $10,000 when everyone else is in the negatives," joked a third on his third big bet when the other players were just crumbling.
Reddit users watching the special tournament did not mince words over the show of force after Caleb wound up with the highest score of the quarter finals.
One wrote: "Caleb was a force to be reckoned with. I predict we’re gonna see him in the finals."
"Caleb was extremely dominant. Very impressive to say the least," wrote another.
A third joked on the fumble with the sports category: "Caleb said 'The internet's gonna love that', which it undoubtedly will."
Caleb then buzzed in on the thread to write: "Hi all, Caleb here. Obviously this game went well for me, but what the audience doesn’t see is the 2 days of waiting through 8 other quarterfinals that Hannah, Maggie, and I went through and how all that waiting really gives nerves time to fester."
He joked: "Yeah, I’ve spent the last month since filming wondering what exactly was going through my head when I made that third Daily Double bet. I think the answer is something around ‘hubris that comes from being in the zone’ and ‘why not’."
Caleb - who was a semifinalist in his first teen tournament then defended host Mayim: "I’m pretty sick of all this anti-Mayim talk.
"Of course, one can have favorites or express criticism, but disliking the game can be a self-fulfilling prophecy for people who excessively hating on Mayim.
I found her lovely, calming, and professional. I’m sure any of the other High School Reunion Tournament contestants would say the same. Once again, thanks for loving this show that I grew up with."
The 'chai'-scorer also posted that he wagered with 18's since it's a "symbolic number in Judaism, in case you were wondering."
WHAT IS: THE SCHEDULE?
The other semi-finalists of Mayim's tournament are Tim Cho, Lucas Miner, 2018 Teen Tournament winner Claire Sattler, Jackson Jones, Stephanie Pierson, 2019 Teen Tournament winner Avi Gupta, Justin Bolsen, and Maya Wright.
The semi-finals will begin tomorrow, as Mayim read from her cue card at the end of the episode.
There will be three semi-finals until the 6 of the remaining students are dismissed, then there will be a two-day total point affair finals ending on March 9th.
On Monday, longtime producer Sarah Foss cleared the board on the hosting schedule for the rest of the season on the show's podcast.
It was announced that Ken Jennings, 48, will be back after Mayim's three-week tournament, but not for very long.
"Ken Jennings will be back on March 10th and then he will continue the rest of his syndicated run which will take us through April 28th.
"Then Mayim will take over on May 1st and she’ll take us all the way through the summer."
Fans were left in a frenzy since after May 1st, we won't see Ken on the regular show until Season 40, or September 2023.
The internet has not been shy in begging the game show to just let him host the syndicated series, making their host preference cruelly crystal clear.
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Fans aren't alone - last year, Amy Schneider and Mattea Roach stated in interviews they prefer Ken given he went from its winningest contestant (74 victories in 2004) to host, as did recent divisive three-day champ Jake Dearruda slamming Mayim as "inconsistent."
The energy in the room seems to be that the sitcom star with no notable past ties to Jeopardy is doing perfectly well on specials like Celebrity Jeopardy!, a former champion recently told The U.S. Sun she should stick to that.

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