Misleading: They actually placed 3rd behind MIT in the actual challenge
Based on how this was hyped, it now appears incredibly controversial as to why the Carl Hayden High School won this competition. In the actual underwater challenge they finished 3rd behind MIT which completed the most challenges. So in effect MIT still had the best robot but since the competition also factored in their engineering interview and a review of each group's technical manual they somehow won the entire competition. I am incredibly suspicious that MIT did a worse job in the engineering interview or with their technical manual. Not buying this since at the end of the day the robot that can complete the most challenges should be the winning robot. Sorry but it seems like it was handed to them.
http://archive.wired.com/wired/archive/13.04/robot.html?pg=4
Further evidence this is misleading BS. If the Carl Hayden Team was really full of engineering geniuses they would be employed as such.
Carl Hayden Team (Luis Aranda, Lorenzo Santillan, Cristian Arcega, Oscar Vazquez)
Where are these engineering geniuses now?
Luis Aranda - Janitor
Lorenzo Santillan - Line Cook
Cristian Arcega - Worked at Home Depot
Oscar Vazquez - Railroad Foreman
MIT Team (Kurt Stiehl, Lauren Cooney, Jordan Stanway, Thaddeus Stefanov-Wagner)
Kurt Stiehl - Product Design Manager at Apple Inc.
Lauren Cooney - Embedded Software Engineer at Teledyne Webb Research
Jordan Stanway - Postdoctoral Fellow at Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute
Thaddeus Stefanov-Wagner - Mechanical Engineer at Bluefin Robotics