Lesson 14 min 20 XP
Winning as a Closing Team
The art of the extension — how closing teams bring new material that wins the debate without contradicting their opening half.
What Counts as an Extension?
An extension is the new material a closing team brings to the debate. It must be:
- Genuinely new — not a repackaged version of opening team arguments
- Substantively significant — important enough to change the debate, not just a minor addition
- Consistent — it cannot contradict the opening team on your side
Strong extensions typically take one of these forms:
- New stakeholder analysis — examining an actor or group the debate has ignored (e.g., on drug legalization, shifting focus from users to pharmaceutical companies or developing nations)
- New mechanism or consequence — showing an outcome no one has discussed (e.g., on banning private schools, arguing about the brain drain of teachers from public to private)
- New principled lens — reframing the debate through a philosophical framework (e.g., shifting from utilitarian welfare arguments to rights-based reasoning)
- Deeper causal analysis — explaining why something is true at a level of depth the opening team did not reach