OXON HILL, Md. — When Achyut Ethiraj's final appearance in the Scripps National Spelling Bee ended far earlier than he anticipated, the 14-year-old grimaced at the microphone, walked off the stage quietly and exited the ballroom with his mother's arm draped around his back.
Achyut had plenty of company among the 140 spellers eliminated on Wednesday, spelling's saddest day.
''I didn't expect to get out, but I did, and I guess I have to accept the truth now,'' said Achyut, an eighth-grader from Fort Wayne, Indiana. ''I'm happy to do high school and do other things, but I'm kind of confused what to do now that I'm done with spelling."
''It's my last year, and I expected to do better, but I guess it is what it is," he said. "And I have to move on.''
The structure of the spelling bee has undergone plenty of changes over time, but over the past three years under executive director Corrie Loeffler, the competition has gotten very hard, very fast for spellers who make it past the preliminary rounds.
The morning began with 148 spellers. By the end of the first quarterfinal round, there were 59 left, and 46 of those got through a vocabulary round to reach the semifinals. By the end of the day, eight finalists remained. They will return Thursday night, when the winner will receive a trophy and more than $50,000 in cash and prizes.
The champion won't be Shradha Rachamreddy, who finished third last year and was a consensus favorite to go all the way. She was eliminated on exactly the sort of ''super short, tricky word'' she said she concentrated on studying after misspelling ''orle'' last year. This year it was ''varan,'' a type of lizard. She added an extra ''r,'' and former spellers in the audience gasped at her mistake.
''I am in shock and despair,'' said Dev Shah, the 2023 champion.