He solved the “Before & After” puzzle “Word of Wisdom Tooth,” adding $2,750 and giving himself momentum. The Prize Puzzle round then shifted the game again after Cohee lost control on the Express Train and Robinson also ran into trouble on the wheel.
Knapp took advantage by solving “Luxurious Getaway,” which earned him a trip to Punta Cana and brought his total above $15,000. For a contestant on a game show where one spin can change everything, the vacation prize became a key part of his final total.
The Triple Toss-Up round kept the match competitive. Knapp missed the first puzzle, Cohee collected that money, and Robinson solved the next two boards to make sure she was on the scoreboard late in the game.
But Knapp responded in the final regular puzzle with “Make It To the Super Bowl.” That solve added $20,400 to his winnings and secured his place in the Bonus Round.
The Bonus Round Puzzle That Started the Debate
For the final round, Knapp chose the category “What Are You Doing?” His wife and a childhood friend stood nearby as he faced the puzzle.
After the standard letters R, S, T, L, N, and E appeared, Knapp selected G, C, M, and A. The board then showed: “G_ _ NG AN A_T_GRA _.”
With time remaining, Knapp gave the answer that was accepted on air: “Giving an autograph.” Host Ryan Seacrest immediately confirmed the solve, and Knapp celebrated on the studio floor.
“Was that your foxtrot?” Seacrest asked.
“Something like that,” Knapp replied.
The celebration grew when Seacrest opened the prize envelope and revealed that Knapp had won a new Nissan. That pushed his total to $65,800, a memorable result made even more fitting by the fact that Knapp teaches driver’s education.
Why Viewers Questioned the Call
After the episode aired, some viewers said they believed Knapp’s answer sounded closer to “getting an autograph” than “giving an autograph.” That distinction mattered to those who argued that Bonus Round answers should match the puzzle exactly.
Other viewers defended the ruling. They pointed out that television audio can make certain sounds less clear than they are in the studio, and some felt Knapp’s mouth movement and timing lined up with the accepted phrase.
The show’s result stood, and Knapp left with his winnings, the tropical vacation, and the new vehicle. Still, the disagreement shows why Wheel of Fortune remains such a replayable show: a few seconds of pressure, pronunciation, and judgment can turn a straightforward win into a lasting conversation.
For Knapp, the final answer counted. For viewers, the clip became one more game-show moment worth watching closely.