I think 99L will be a good candidate for reanalysis post season, since I personally believe this was briefly a tropical storm around August 20-21. First, we have the ASCAT pass at 12z on the 21st that showed a fairly defined circulation and gale force winds. Many other systems were designated with worse, and 99L looked better than Erin when Erin was first designated (and much of Erin's early lifetime across the MDR):

At that time 99L also had T2.5 support for Dvorak, and plenty of sites online had estimates of 35kt, which also supports TS designation (here's one from 12z on the 21st, when that ASCAT pass was taken). There were also several tweets from other mets in this thread that supported the classification of 99L as a TC.
TXNT27 KNES 211215
TCSNTL
A. TROPICAL DISTURBANCE (99L)
B. 21/1200Z
C. 11.2N
D. 33.8W
E. THREE/GOES-E
F. T2.5/2.5
G. IR/EIR/VIS
H. REMARKS...5/10 BANDING RESULTS IN A DT OF 2.5. THE MET IS 1.5. THE
PT IS 2.0. THE FT IS BASED ON THE DT.
I. ADDL POSITIONS
NIL
...MONAGHAN
And of course, there was the microwave image of 99L that looked quite interesting:

The main thing going against 99L was that models kept predicting that it would go poof, so I can understand the hesitancy the NHC may have had in naming a storm only to have it die 6 hours later, especially since it was no threat to land. However, models completely underestimated how persistent 99L was, and while 99L did end up victim to the Caribbean graveyard, it lasted way longer than its initial prognosis of poofing on the 20th, and then the 21st, and then the 22nd... with the formation area on the NHC map continuously extended as each model run realized that 99L was not fully dead. Given that we've had many named systems before that were similar to 99L as it tracked through the MDR (Wilfred 2020 is a perfect example), I think it's only fair for consistency that this system be analyzed as a potential candidate as a tropical storm, even if it was not given a name operationally.
