Sorry - I should probably have said before. I'm off on holiday tomorrow - taking Mrs. Londinius and some of the family off for a cruise. I'll be back this time next week and I'll catch up as soon as possible after that. TTFN.
Friday, 31 October 2025
Tuesday, 28 October 2025
University Challenge 2026 - Repechage 2 - Sheffield v. New College
The Teams
Sheffield
Rhys Lewis
Abdelrahman Elsisi
Jacob Price (Capt)
Isobel Dobbie
New College, Oxford
Benji Stimpson
Paige Crawley
Jonah Poulard (Capt.)
Daan Timmers
Last of the two repechage matches, then. The form book said
Sheffield, but then the form book should always be treated with a little
scepticism.
For the first starter we had to wait and wait until it
became obvious the answer required was Lost World. New College miscued with
Lost City which allowed Abdelrahman Elsisi in with the right answer. National
flags on which stars represent islands brought a great full house – it’s one
thing when you can see the flags but when they are just described to you it's
quite another. Paige Crawley came in too early for the second starter in a row,
allowing Isobel Dobbie to identify a description of the word propaganda. Listed
buildings used as locations in Avengers films revealed that one of the
locations was Sainsburys, although it didn’t say which branch. Sheffield only
took one of this set. Benji Stimpson wiped out the New College deficit with the
answer ‘steady state’ for the next starter. A full house on the absurd was
swiftly taken. Jonah Poulard capitalised by recognising the location of Naples for
the first picture starter. Three more locations recognised by Unesco for
culinary heritage saw a welcome name check for famous Argentinian born
revolutionary Fray Bentos (see The Office) but only 1 was correctly answered. After
a Sheffield miscue, Jonah Poulard identified Charles Rennie Mackintosh being associated
with Glasgow. Responses to war by female artists yielded one correct answer.
This meant that they had come back after a shaky start and led by 45-35 on 10
minutes.
A lead which grew after Jonah Poulard buzzed in very early
to identify the word hero linking the titles of several works. New College
rather threw away a correct answer on muscles by giving the answer trapezoid
rather than trapezius which was actually required. It’s a shame because they
did have the other two. However on the next starter the New College skipper
came in too early and lost five, allowing opposite number Jacob Price in with
the answer of Schengen. I’m not familiar with the work of Paul Auster nor, I
think, are Sheffield. However they guessed one of them. Sheffield now incurred
their second penalty for an early buzz allowing Paige Crawley in to identify Greece.
Confucius proved a bit confucing to New College, who managed just the one
bonus. For the music starter Benji Stimpson was in very early to identify the
tones of Pete Seeger. Other artists who regularly appeared on some musicologist’s
1940s radio show saw some interesting guesses from New College, but they were
at least right with Woody Guthrie. Abdelrahman Elsisi was first to identify the
Nicobar pigeon as one of the closest living relatives of the dodo. Winners at
the 2024 Peabody Awards which celebrate outstanding public service – no, I’m
surprised I wasn’t nominated too, now you mention it – yielded one bonus. Rhys
Lewis took his first starter identifying the Gregorian chant Dies Irae.
Whatever lights your candle. Lev Landau’s genius scale – beats working for a
living, I spose – brought me a lap of honour for knowing Paul Dirac which could
have become two laps when I identified Heisenberg for the third. Sheffield also
took a pair. Abdelrahman Elsisi knew a group of Roman Emperors whose names all
began with G-A -L. Gallopingourmus was apparently not one of them. Sheffield
managed one of a set of gettable bonuses on the openings of Dickens novels,
which was enough to give them a narrow lead of 95 – 90 on 20 minutes.
Isobel Dobbie was in very quickly for the second picture
starter to identify the work of one of my favourite artists, Caravaggio. Other
depictions of the story of Echo and Narcissus brought a timely full house. All
8 contenders were too young to have heard of the Gleneagles agreement for the
next starter. Jonah Poulard knew that Trignav is the tallest mountain in Slovenia
and the subsequent bonuses on dumplings brought their own full house. The match
was still too close to call. Paige Crawley restored her team’s lead with Jibril
of the angel Gabriel. 2 bonuses on dentistry were taken. Isobel Dobbie
identified the artist John Singer Sargent . Two bonuses on Greek mythology
restored the lead to Sheffield. Benji Stimpson’s twitchy buzzer finger cost
five points for the next starter which was compounded as Jacob Price correctly
identified Diego Garcia. Smaller locations in England whose names include –
burgh – brought one bonus. This meant New College needed an unanswered full
house to draw level. Jonah Poulard took a flier but couldn’t make it stick with
the next starter which penalty meant that New College were going to need at
least 2 visits to the table. Abdelrahman Elsisi more or less sealed the deal
knowing the Afro-Asian language family. Bonuses on the old Bafta or most
promising newcomer. I loved Abdelrahman Elsisi suggestion that Judi Dench might
have received the Best Newcomer BAFTA for Bugsy Malone. Didn’t matter. There
was daylight between the teams and little time left. Jacob Price knew the word ‘cometh’
– as in The Iceman Cometh – an early play about the X Men, I believe. Words
only used once in Shakespeare yielded nowt. That was that. Sheffield won by 175
– 125.
For the record Sheffield earned a BCR of 45% while New
College looked better with 58%, but that was on top of 5 penalties, which helped
keep Sheffield in the game until their power charge kicked in.
Amol Watch
When New College managed to get the last of the music
bonuses right, “Thank goodness you got that one!” responded Amol. Gotta be
honest, that’s not the nicest reaction, Amol. Smacks of saying – I can’t
believe you didn’t get the others. We can do without that.
Interesting Fact That I Didn’t Already Know Of
The Week
Joe Pesci won the best newcomer BAFTA for Raging Bull. To
be honest I thought he might have been around for longer.
Baby Elephant Walk Moment
Well done setters! Nothing provoked the internal orchestra
this week. Keep it up!
Mastermind 2026 - First round heat 15
Another week, another first round heat. To be honest, the series has fallen a little into the doldrums in recent weeks, with much honest endeavour but little real quality. Apologies to every contender in the last few weeks. You’ve all given it a lash – this is just how I feel and please feel free to disagree. It’s been a little while since any of the contenders really blew my socks off. Could last night’s manage to do this?
Rachel Sambrooks started us off with the short fiction of
George Saunders. This was not the same George Saunders who voiced Shere Khan in
the Jungle Book, I hasten to add. No, this was the Booker Prize winner who
wrote my current read, “Lincoln in the Bardo”. I guessed the ‘I Am Spartacus’
question, but that was all I could manage in this round. Rachel did better, but
the questions persisted in going into areas she maybe hadn’t considered during
her preparation, and the round ended with Rachel having scored 5.
Like the previous round, Beth Younge’s round on the musical
“Les Miserables” brought me just the one point – Bring Him Home, if you must
know. For the second round in a row I think we saw a contender having to face
up to the fact that the setters took a wider view of the subject than the
contender had. Beth too scored 5.
I didn’t really expect that I was going to do that much
better with our third specialist, Florence Nightingale. Well, I was right about
that. At the start of the round I was on zero and I was still there by the end
of it. Terry Edwards managed a respectable 8 on the subject – which is pretty
decent considering that our Flo did live a long time. My grandmother Florence
was named after Florence Nightingale. Well, sort of. She was actually named
after her father’s sister, Florence. Now she was the one who was actually named
after Florence Nightingale. There you go.
Submariner Tomas Stevenson brought the specialist round to
a close with the O.C., a popular television series from the United States. Which
I have never watched. So it was cue another zero points round and an aggregate
of a measly 2 points. Tomas stumbled here and there – well, that seemed to be a
bit of a linking theme tonight, but he pushed on and like Terry before him he
put together a decent round worth 8 points.
An interesting contrast in styles between the two contenders
tied in third place actually brought about similar results in the subsequent
general knowledge round. Rachel seemed very tense but was snapping out the
answers – not always correctly but she really gave it a good go. A respectable
8 points took her up to 13. Beth, on the other hand, seemed a lot calmer, but
consequently never really built up a head of steam, either. She too scored 8
for 13, but was behind on pass countback.
Terry, then, had two clear goals. One was to score the 6
points he needed for an outright lead. These he managed. His second objective
was to push on to set the most daunting target that he could for Tomas. In this
I’d say he was less successful. The questions just seemed to refuse to fall his
way, and despite a fair amount of time left in the round he ground to a halt
with a total of 7 for 15 overall. Judging by the look on his face he must have
known that it wouldn’t be enough.
Still, there’s many a slip twixt cup and list. Alright,
Tomas only needed 8 but he still needed to find those 8 correct answers. Well,
despite a wobbly first half of the round he settled enough to find nine which
gave hm a won with 17. Maybe not the highest winning score we’ve ever seen –
well, there’s no maybe about it – but a win is a win is a win. Well done and
good luck in the semi finals.
The Details
|
Rachel Sambrooks |
The Short Fiction of
George Saunders |
5 |
0 |
8 |
0 |
13 |
0 |
|
Beth Younge |
“Les Miserables” The
Musical |
5 |
1 |
8 |
1 |
13 |
2 |
|
Terry Edwards |
Florence Nightingale |
8 |
1 |
7 |
4 |
15 |
5 |
|
Tomas Stevenson |
The O.C. |
8 |
0 |
9 |
3 |
17 |
3 |
Tuesday, 21 October 2025
University CHallenge 2026 - Repechage 1 - SOAS v. Imperial
The Teams
SOAS
Hatau Mozayen
V Davis-Aladren
Andrew Graham (capt)
Matthew O’Regan
Imperial
Rahim Dina
Eugenia Tong
Oscar O’Flanagan (capt)
Justin Keung
So to the repechage round. Last night was an all-London
affair with SOAS taking on Imperial. Rahim Dina came in early for the first
starter and correctly identified meanings of the word rust. Works in the
National Portrait Gallery did not sadly mention my ancestor George Dawes’ work –
he has a couple of portraits of Royalty there, don’t you know – but despite
this oversight they took one bonus on King ‘Make Me An’ Offa of Mercia. An
early buzz saw Imperial lose five, allowing Andrew Graham to answer that the
name of Pakistan first appeared in print in 1933. 3 questions on Wheelers –
none of them namechecking Geoffrey, sadly – brought one correct answer. Andrew
Graham took his second starter in a row, recognising a quote referring to logic.
You know, it’s a funny thing, but I still think of Mr. Spock every time I hear
that word. Umbrellas in British novels, a subject about which we just don’t
hear enough these days, brought two correct answers. Imperial’s star buzzer, skipper
Oscar Flanagan, opened his account recognising that a graph related to a fuel
source used in electricity generation was pertaining to coal. More graphs
brought us both a full house. The next starter about an order of mammals took a
long time to get where it was going but when it mentioned navigating around a
room at night it was obviously bats, and Oscar Flanagan took his second
starter. Darleane ‘Who?’ Hoffman brought me last night’s lap of honour for
correctly guessing plutonium for the first bonus. Imperial took that and the
second into the bargain. This ensured that they led by 55 – 35 at just after
the 10 minute mark.
V Davis-Aladren knew various works linked by the word
adventure for the next starter. Spanish food items beginning e and ending ada brought
two bonuses and put the teams level again. Matthew O’Regan was first in to
answer a question about the late, great Benjamin Zephania for the next starter
and biographers of Richard III proved my point about needing someone familiar
with Tudor history in your team – even if Andrew Graham earned brownie points
for daring to give Young Ones’ University Challenge answer Toxteth O’Grady for
the archbishop of Canterbury in whose household the young Thomas More lived.
SOAS did not score on a really rather gentle set. I think Eugenia Tong was
thinking of the right answer to the next starter when she gave Bevin instead of
Beveridge – which is a shame because she didn’t get any points for it. Rahim
Dina worked out from the question that American artist Harvey Littleton
specialised in glass – must have been when he wasn’t recording I’m Sorry I
haven’t A Clue (and don’t pretend you didn’t see that one coming). A full house
on creatures and people described as infelix in the Aeneid followed. Music,
maestro please. Nobody recognised the work of Brahms. (insert Are You Being
Served reference here please.). Neither team dredged up coeliac disease for the
next starter. Justin Keung recognised tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow from
Shakespeare’s Scottish play to earn the music bonuses. Other composers of
classical works used in Civilisation IV – no, me neither – brought a lot of
discussion and one correct answer. And an apology from Oscar O’Flanagan for
saying ‘I bloody hope so’. The momentum was with Imperial and their skipper who
knew Guy of Lusignan was the meat of a question to which the answer would be
The 3rd Crusade. Computing vocabulary in French were surprisingly
easy, and Imperial took two while the word repertoire went begging. Justin
Keung knew that Rossini wrote The Thieving Magpie. Two bonuses on a tricky set
on literature meant that Imperial led by 135 – 55 at 20 minutes and SOAS were
in the do do.
Oscar Flanagan knew that Saskatchewan is the only Canadian
province not bordered by – well, a lot of stuff frankly. The Shah Jahan Mosque
in Woking brought just the one bonus – I was surprised they didn’t recognise
the War of the Worlds for the last. For the picture starter Matthew O’Regan
buzzed but couldn’t answer allowing Imperial to identify senator Joseph
McCarthy. Notable people testifying before HUAC brought Imperial 2 bonuses as
they marched onwards towards round 2. Now Andrew Graham finally managed to get
his team a word in edgeways identifying a description of the velociraptor
dinosaurs. People who died on their birthdays I felt sure would include
Shakespeare but I was wrong, Nonetheless SOAS had two of the three who were described.
Seretse Khama saw Eugenia Tong strike like a coiled cobra to give the answer of
Botswana. A full house on Olympic Water Polo (do the gold medals for the event
have holes in the middle? I think we should be told.) followed. Oscar Flanagan
is very effective on what I think of as ‘penny dropping’ questions – the sort
which suddenly become clear and launch a buzzer race and he had mutation for
the next. Waterways of London brought just one correct answer, but hey,
Imperial had already won, even if there were still a couple of minutes on the
clock. Hatau Moyazen correctly answered that Gibraltar Point is in
Lincolnshire. Best International Feature Film Oscars brought a good full house
and at least put SOAS into triple figures. Andrew Graham identified the Mekong
Delta (named for the little green fellow in Dan Dare) for the next starter and
the team took two bonuses on ancient Mesopotamia. Oscar Flanagan knew about
someone or other’s law, At this point sounded the gong, giving Imperial a win
by 220 – 115.
As for the stats, SOAS BCR fell from 80% in round 1 to
round about 50 in this match. Imperial managed 64%. Thanks SOAS and hard lines.
Amol Watch
I’m always pleased to see Amol namechecking the BCR. It’s
fine Amol, you don’t have to confess that you’re really a LAM reader, we’re just
happy to have you.
Interesting Fact That I Didn’t Already Know Of
The Week
The first portrait acquired by the National Portrait
Gallery in London is a portrait of Shakespeare.
Baby Elephant Walk Moment
Congratulations setters! Nothing soporific in this show.
Monday, 20 October 2025
Mastermind 2026 - First Round Heat 14
Good morning, dearly beloved. I’m just starting to emerge from my head cold which mucked me up last week, and so if I sound a bit curmudgeonly in this review I hope that you’ll accept my apologies. For the fact is that I found last night’s episode a bit of a slog. You know me, I love the show and I have empathy for all of the competitors, but for me last night’s show never caught fire.
Not that the specialists didn’t show endeavour and
knowledge, for the most part. The first of them, Jonathan Bartley’s round on
Richard Nixon certainly did. Jonathan had prepared thoroughly and this brought
him just desserts in the form of a double figure round of 10. I had 2 and
frankly that was all I was ever going to get on this set, but I know enough
about the subject to think that this was a testing set.
Matthew Patenall offered us the first of last night’s
subjects on which I would fail to score, Nirvana. Incidentally I saw a
newspaper feature the other day about the baby on the cover of Nevermind. He’s a
grandfather now (slight exaggeration). Matthew was well up to the size of the
challenge and his deep knowledge of the subject took him past Jonathan’s score
to set the target at 11.
Jane Kendrick offered us a subject I knew nothing about ,
the architect George Skipper. I’ve never listened to any of his albums either.
Normally I’m not bad on architecture, but my Skipper’s career had certainly
skipped past me. Jane did respectably well, but ah, in just not quite getting
an answer or two for not quite remembering them correctly she missed out on
double figures, scoring 8.
What have we said so often in the past about rounds on TV
series? They should come with a government health warning. In all honesty, you
had to feel for Savannah Phillips. I would imagine that you’d only opt to take
a TV show as a specialist subject because you absolutely love it, so then to
find out that you don’t know as much about it as you probably thought you did,
that’s tough. There’s no sugar coating this, Savannah scored 5.
Off the top of my head I’m not sure if 2 is my lowest
aggregate of the series on specialist so far – come to think of it I believe
there might have been a 1 in there somewhere. Still, that was behind me as we began
the GK. Savannah did a bit better with her GK questions, and scored 7 to end
with 12. All I can say, Savannah, is that you gave it a lash which few enough people have ever
done. Stuff the begrudgers.
Jane Kendrick sat down, composed herself, and delivered a
double figure round of 10. Normally ‘d say that 18 was never going to be enough
to win a heat, but, I don’t know, there seemed to be something in the air
during this particular heat and so at this stage I wasn’t ruling anything out.
Jonathan couldn’t beat it. He matched Savannah’s round, but
having incurred a pass in round 1 he needed to beat Jane’s total – he couldn’t
force a tie break, and in the end he just couldn’t summon up enough correct
answers to make his way through the corridor of doubt and emerge victorious the
other side.
Finally, then, Matthew Patenall. He would incur no passes,
just as Jane had done before him. So a tie break was certainly a possibility,
and with only a couple of questions to go that seemed to be where we were
heading. Matthew managed an 8th correct answer to take him to a
winning score of 19, though. Well done.
So, as I said, this wasn’t the greatest heat we’ve seen all
series. It didn't blow my socks off but then it wasn’t totally without interest. And what you have to
acknowledge is that I think that for all the contestants, in a first round heat
you’re honestly not thinking about the Grand Final and the glass bowl. You’re
thinking about doing your best and, if possible, winning the heat. End of. And
that’s exactly what Matthew managed to do. Well done! Best of luck in the
semis.
The Details
|
Jonathan Bartley |
Richard Nixon |
10 |
1 |
7 |
1 |
17 |
2 |
|
Matthew Patenall |
Nirvana |
11 |
0 |
8 |
0 |
19 |
0 |
|
Jane Kendrick |
The Architect George
Skipper |
8 |
0 |
10 |
0 |
18 |
0 |
|
Savannah Phillips |
Derry Girls |
5 |
1 |
7 |
2 |
12 |
3 |
Sunday, 19 October 2025
University Challenge First round - Magdalen, Oxford v. Robinson, Cambridge
The Teams
Magdalen, Oxford
Aidan Woo
Lily Costa-Ferreira
Benjamin Sharkey (Capt)
Sasha Walker
Robinson College,
Cambridge
Michael Shipman
Jessica Cronin
Eve Temmink (Capt)
Otis Moran
I shan’t lie to you.
Last week’s Quizzy Monday being on Tuesday messed up my schedule for the whole
week, and being ill on Wednesday onwards didn’t help a great deal either. Okay,
enough of my problems.
Jessica Cronin took the
first starter for Robinson recognizing two works with jungle in the title. They
rode their luck a little with the second of a set of bonuses on cities named
after Roman Emperors but still took two. Skipper Eve Temmink was the first to
buzz for the next starter which seemed all the way along to be pointing to
Mondrian, as indeed it was. I only knew one of the botanicals used to flavour
gin for the next set and so did Robinson. The next starter showed that it often
pays to have someone with a good working knowledge of Tudor history on your
team as neither recognized fairly obvious clues to the surname Seymour for the
next starter. Sasha Walker recognized references to perennial crowd pleaser
Kurt Godel in the next starter. It was nice to see the Trolley Problem, known
to all of us used to doing a big shop in Tescos on a wet Tuesday getting namechecked
in a bonus set on double effect thinking. Magdalen had one of these. Sasha
Walker took her double with the picture starter identifying the sites of Agra
and Petra. More maps showing locations of two world heritage sites brought a well
earned full house to Magdalen. The splendidly titled To Pimp a Butterfly
(sequel to the album why The Hell Would You Want To - ) brought Aidan Woo his
first starter. Diseases named after places brought just one correct answer on a
gettable set. So, after a lively first period the score on 10 minutes stood at
55 – 35 to Magdalen.
Michael Shipman took
his first starter on Archimedes of Syracuse and Robinson faced three bonuses on
Romanesque architecture in England. One of which they answered correctly. They
weren’t all easy to be fair. Michael Shipman then came in too early for the
next starter allowing Magdalen to identify the dessert Charlotte. Captain
Benjamin Sharkey took that one. US Secretary of State William Henry Seward provided
two bonuses. Seward was badly injured by the conspirators who murdered Abraham
Lincoln. A very interesting figure. For the next starter Lily Costa-Ferreira
knew the word horror - surprised that
nobody had it after the Heart of Darkness clue but there we are. Fandom in
fiction was a really interesting bonus theme for the next set but only the last
question on Turning Red proved gettable for any of us. So to the music starter
and Lily Costa-Ferreira took her double with The Stooges. Sadly I don’t think
that they ever had a line up where they were just a trio. Other 60s songs with
titles mentioning dogs brought two bonuses. Our second baby elephant walk
inducing starter passed me by completely but Sasha Walker said the answer was
insulator and I ain’t about to argue with that. French chemist Henri Braconnot and
his discoveries gave me a lap of honour for knowing chitin. Magdalen took two
and let’s be honest, they seemed to be bossing this stage of the match. This continued
when Benjamin Sharkey knew that Henry II was married to Eleanor of Aquitaine. He
seemed awfully pleased to get a set of bonuses on places commemorating battles
of the Napoleonic Wars. They took two. Various places with words for Cross in
their name fell to Sasha Walker. The poems of Elizabeth Bishop – written before
she was a character in Corrie? – brought a single bonus. Aidan Woo knew that
the work referenced in the next starter focuses on Indonesia. Memorial or
Ceremonial Gates provided one bonus – a rush of blood to the head from the
skipper prevented it being two. Didn’t matter. It looked to me as if they were
already over the event horizon by 20 minutes as Magdalen led 180 – 45.
Finally Eve Temmink
managed to elbow her team back into the game recognizing the picture starter, a
terracotta warrior and the dynasty during which it was created. More pictures
of artifacts followed and Robinson identified two of the dynasties in which
they were created. Nobody in either team seemed to know that as well as the
Floor, the Vault is the only other discipline to feature in both women’s and
men’s gymnastics. Eve Temmink knew that a malar rash is a sign of Lupus. Insects
brought couple of bonuses. The skipper was quite rightly throwing caution to
the wind with her buzzing, but sadly lost five with the next which allowed Aidan
Woo in with Guyana. Cattle deities in world mythology promised something
interesting and delivered, but only one of them was answered correctly by
Magdalen. Sasha Walker won the buzzer race to give the term protectionism. The
ballet Swan Lake gave another two bonuses. The excellent Sasha Walker won
another buzzer race to identify Lombardy for the next starter. A full house on
velodromes followed. The next starter was an old quiz chestnut about the
gemstone that was believed to prevent a drinker from becoming drunk – yeah,
hope springs eternal was correctly answered by Jessica Cronin. Geological terms
derived from Celtic languages yielded one bonus. Benjamin Sharkey knew the
Abbasid empire for the next starter. Trilogies named after a city didn’t add to
the Magdalen total, but it would have just been gilding anyway. I’ve never drunk
Kombucha and frankly having listened to its description I don’t plan to do so
any time soon. Eve Temmink took her team into triple figures with it. They took
one bonus on departments of France and the contest ended during the next
starter. Magdalen won by 245 to 105. And that, ladies and gents, is the first
round done.
Curiously there was next
to nothing between both teams’ BCRs – Magdalen was the slightly better with 50%
while Robinson’s was 48%. However, Magdalen had earned almost twice as many
bonus to attempt.
Amol Watch
Sorry Amol, but 19
minutes in is just too late to say there’s plenty of time left. There isn’t.
Say – still enough time to get going - if you’re this far into the show. Mind
you, it’s better than saying – Robinson, are your buzzers still working? - so fair play to you.
Interesting Fact
That I Didn’t Already Know Of The Week
Orleans was named after
the Roman Emperor Aurelian.
Baby Elephant Walk
Moment
Including an early
example of exponentiation to express very large numbers, the Sand Reckoner is a
work by which ancient thinker, in which he attempts to estimate how many grains
of sand could fit into the universe? It was written as a letter to Gelon II,
the King of Syracuse. Yes, the mention of Syracuse made it obvious it had to be
Archimedes, but goodness me we had to wade through so much dum de dumdum dum
dum dum dum dumdum to get there.
Repechage
qualifiers
|
Sheffield |
170 |
|
SOAS |
170 |
|
Imperial |
160 |
|
New College, Oxford |
150 |
Mastermind 2026 First Round Heat 13
Welcome to Quizzy Tuesday, folks. Yes, blessed be the name of international football, and even quizzy Monday must make way. Still, at least this week’s Mastermind had probably my biggest banker subject of the whole series so far. I’ll come to that.
First of all though we
had Paddy Moore, answering on the films of Billy Wilder. Now, don’t get me
wrong, I think that Billy Wilder was great and “Some Like It Hot” is still one
of my favourite films. But this didn’t bring me many points though. 1 to be precise.
I didn’t think they were any easy set at all. Paddy struggled manfully with it,
but a relatively modest 6 meant that there was going to be a substantia hill
for him to climb in the second half. David Niven told a wonderful story about
Billy Wilder. On a trip to Europe his wife had asked him to obtain a bidet.
Unable to do so he telegrammed her saying ‘Unable to obtain bidet stop. Suggest
handstand in shower stop. “
If you’d suggested to
me before the start of the show that I’d earn more points on Neil Diamond than
on Billy Wilder then I would have been surprised. But that’s exactly what
happened, with me taking 2. Davina Keby-Beck had obviously prepared thoroughly and
she sailed through to a double figure score of 10.I took 2 on this and to be
honest that’s two more than I had expected. Cracklin’ Rosie, a song apparently about
a girl’s unhealthy love of pork scratchings, was one of them.
Yes, my banker for the
night – and possibly for the whole of this series, was the Apollo Space
Program, which was offered by Anjaneya Bapat. I scored 9 on this round, which
incidentally is the same score that Anjaneya achieved. We didn’t get all of the
same questions mind you. I had that Ed White, killed in the tragic Apollo 1 capsule
fire, was the first American to walk in space – and if I’m honest I thought
that was one of the easier questions. But then Anjaneya got a hard one I didn’t
so fair’s fair.
Richard Carr brought
the round to an end with his specialist set on the Battle of Normandy. Fair
play, he knew his stuff. I used to take parties of schoolchildren to Normandy
every year, and learned a fair bit about the Normandy campaign during these
trips. People think that once D Day had happened the war in Europe was
virtually all over bar the shouting, but this wasn’t the case at all, and the
Battle of Normandy saw some of the hardest fighting at any time in any theatre
of the war. Richard’s knowledge was certainly up to the demands of the task and
he top scored with an excellent 11.
So to Paddy Moore fell
the daunting task of returning to the chair after seeing the lead set at a
score five points higher than what he had achieved in his specialist. And fair
play, he really gave it a good old lash. Paddy added 12 to his score for a
total of 18. In my heart of hearts I did not think it would quite be enough,
but nonetheless it was a great effort.
Anjaneya could not
match it. Mind you, he didn’t have to match it exactly. He was three points to
the good after the specialists and thus needed 9 and 2 passes for the outright
lead. Well, he did only take two passes. Sadly though he only managed a
perfectly respectable 8 correct answers.
Davina Kesby-Beck was a
further point ahead with 10 on the specialist round, and this meant that if she
could match Anjaneya’s GK performance then she would go into the lead. Well,
shebettered Anjaneya in one way, managing to answer every question and thus not
incur any passes. Sadly though only 7 of these answers were correct. This meant
that she too finished with 17, a respectable score but not a winning one.
So, only Richard
remained. I think that either he had decided beforehand that passin rather than
guessing was his preferred option. Either that or he opted for the tactic on
the hoof as the round progressed. It was getting pretty late on and he still
hadn’t reached the target. A late rally, though was enough to see him over the
line and to put daylight between himself and the trailing pack.
Well, done Richard,
best of luck to you in the semi finals. As for Mastermind, well, I’ll see you
on Monday, where you belong.
The Details
|
Paddy Moore |
The Films of Billy Wilder |
6 |
2 |
12 |
1 |
18 |
3 |
|
Davina Kesby-Beck |
Neil Diamond |
10 |
0 |
7 |
0 |
17 |
0 |
|
Anjaneya Bapat |
The Apollo Space Program |
9 |
0 |
8 |
2 |
17 |
2 |
|
Richard Carr |
The Battle of Normandy |
11 |
0 |
9 |
6 |
20 |
6 |