If you'd heard any of the speakers before, then knowing they were among the lineup could have allowed you to identify them (even if subconsciously) and so bias your judgements. What do the results look like if you remove these two (not fully blinded) listeners?
Only one listener had heard all 4 speakers (me). The other listener saw them, but had only heard one of the four 2-3 years prior. You are welcome to exclude my data--I was listener 1. (Though I was actually one of the last folks to take the blind test).
For my test data, I ranked the speakers in this order for every track but one: Revel, Kef, JBL, OSD.
For Just a Little Lovin, I ranked it as: JBL, Revel, Kef, OSD.
My scores were not identical, but they were pretty tightly grouped for each speaker on each track.
What I will say, is that my rating is likely biased, but not because I own the speakers or have listened to them. Trust me, once you blind it and you randomize it, good luck remembering exactly how they sound, especially when you normally listen in stereo.
It is because I knew what the spin data for the speakers looked like. As I was listening, if something stood out as off or different, I was immediately thinking, those highs sound terrible, that's the OSD. But that's the extreme case with a really terrible speaker. Between the Kef and the Revel it wasn't at all obvious. I even liked the JBL best on one track.