Leicester v. Fitzwilliam, Cambridge
Yes, you’re right. The big question
about this contest was – were we going to get a real contest, or was one of the
two teams going to win easily again? Leicester, determined not do be easily
pushed to one side, were Graham Aldred, Stan French, Jamie Byrne and their
captain, Pip Brown. Equally resolved not to serve as cannon fodder were
Fitzwilliam’s team of Theo Tindall, Theo Howe, Jack Maloney and their own
skipper, Hugh Oxlade. Chiswickians? Not a one.
As soon as he heard the first
question wanted the word used for an early spiritual leader of Sikhism, Theo
Tindall slammed the buzzer and gave the correct answer of guru. Internet
company names gave both of us two gimmes. Both teams dwelt on the buzzer a
little bit before Stan French answered that Chris Boardman was the man on the
lotus bike who won the 1992 Olympic Pursuit gold. Shrinking lakes in Asia were
by no means easy, and Leicester took one of this set of bonuses. I thought that
Redox was bubble bath, but apparantly it’s some chemical thing, and Stan French
identified it for his double. Notable people with names of 4 syllables provided
Leicester with two correct answer, and me with a lap of honour around the
living room for knowing Torricelli, which was the one that they missed. Jamie
Byrne was in too early for the next starter, and this one was one where it
really paid dividends to wait until it became obvious that the answer required
was Death Valley. That’s what Theo Tindall did. Famous women and their famous
husbands provided me with one and Fitzwilliam with 2. The first picture starter
was a UC special – which showed umbers and weights of 4 elements. Teams had to
take their symbols and say which word they spelled out. I worked out cook. Theo
Howe came close, as did Jamie Byrne, but both were one letter away. There was a
great buzzer race when the next starter became clear – blah blah blah, the same
gallery houses a version of “The Scream”
- bang! Theo Tindall won the race to say Oslo. The picture bonuses gave
us more of the same, with words from elements and Fitzwilliam took a good full
house. At the ten minute mark they led by 65 – 30.
The impressive Mr. Tindall continued
his good form recognising a description of the island of Sulawesi for the next
starter. A lovely UC set on smelling salts in Victorian novels (apparently there
was a law requiring smelling salts to be mentioned in novels between 1837 and
1901 ) did not enable them to increase the lead. Theo Tindall completed a
hattrick, knowing that when you hear ‘Aeneid’ and ’Mythical Queen’, then Dido
is usually the answer. Early 20th century industry gave us both a
full house, and took Fitzwilliam to triple figures. Nobody knew about a British
and French attack on Beijing in 1860, so we rolled on to the next starter.
Simon Aldred recognised the Adam/Venerable Bede connection for the nest
starter. The Peterloo Massacre provided two correct answers for Leicester, and
the fightback was under way. Pip Brown recognised a wee bit of Ravel for the
music starter. Works with the name of another composer in their titles, and
they managed 1. Simon Aldred was first to buzz in with the title of Chaplin’s
1940 film “The Great Dictator”. Organisms that thrive in extreme environments
sadly did not include one about English teachers, but gave Leicester enough to
cut the deficit to 10 points. For the next starter Theo Howe buzzed in early
with the only titel of a James Baldwin novel that I knew as well, and lost five
for his pains. Leicester did not know ‘Giovanni’s Room’, the title required,
either. Thus, just before the 20 minute mark the scores stood at 85 – 90, and
joy of joys, we had a real contest.
Jack Maloney took his first starter,
knowing the Kattegat and Kaliningrad both start with K. 2 bonuses on banana cultivation
followed. The second picture showed us the great former England cricket captain
Mike Brearley, allowing Hugh Oxlade to take his first starter. The team also
recognised Andrew Strauss to take a further 5 points. Right, if you ever hear
the word ‘Astapovo’ in a question, slam the buzzer through the desk and answer ‘Tolstoy’.
It’s the location of the railway station where he died. Theo Tindall picked
that particular piece of low hanging fruit. 2 correct answers on courtiers and
favourites of the Virgin Queen took the lead to 60, and you fancied that the
winning post was in sight for Fitzwilliam now. Pip Brown knew several books
which coupled capitalism with something else in their titles. Two bonuses put
Leicester through the 100 point barrier, and there have been too few times this
series when both teams have managed triple figure scores. I took a second lap
of honour after guessing that fat is stored in the elaioplast of plants. Fitzwilliam
took that, and a couple of bonuses on humanism put more gloss on their score. The
Cambridge skipper took the next starter, identifying Maximilian as the ill
fated Habsburg appointed Emperor of Mexico. . . briefly. The four corner US
states which all meet at the same point provided a full house. Taking
Fitzwilliam to 200, Theo Howe identified witch-hazel for the next starter, but
there was no time for them to add to their score as we were gonged after one
passed bonus.
The score – 200 – 105, looks like a
bit of a walkover. Nonsense. All bar 5 points of that gap were achieved in the
last few minutes, when Fitzwilliam were simply too strong on buzzer and bonuses
for a good Leicester team. Well done to Fitzwilliam. This series being what it
is, though, Leicester are, I think, still in with a chance of a repechage slot,
and I wish them good luck.
Thanks for giving us a contest, both.
Jeremy Paxman Watch
JP got really sniffy when Leicester
missed the last music bonus. “No, it’s Rachmaninov. I thought that was the
easiest of the lot actually.” Well, Jez, answer me this one, then. Who recorded
“Ozzie’s Dream” with the Tottenham Hotspur FA Cup final squad in 1981? No? It
was Chas and Dave. Not so smart now, are you?
“Who’d have thought that you’d know so
much about banana cultivation?” he scoffed after the banana bonuses. God knows
what he’d have said if they’d had a full house on that set.
Interesting Fact That I Didn’t Already Know Of The Week
The E in Ebay originally stood for
Echo
3 comments:
Yeah, this was a good match, not as one sided as it sounds until the final minutes when Fitzwilliam ran away. Shame we probably won't see Leicester again, they were a decent enough team, 10/18 bonuses, suspect they'd have beaten another team. Fitzwilliam therefore earned their score against one of the better runners-up, plus a decent 20/32, could be one to watch in the second round with a favourable draw.
On Monday, Imperial College play Strathclyde, week after, an Oxbridge derby with Emmanuel for Cambridge and St Hugh's for Oxford.
Hi Jack - not surprised about the bonuses. At least we have an idea what Fitzwilliam are all about now - it has been difficult to tell with some of the other winning teams this year.
Never mind Chiswick - I think Mr Oxlade is probably the first UC contestant from South Woodford since yours truly, way back in 1987. A good omen for Fitzwilliam, perhaps?
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