Merton, Oxford v. King’s College,
London
Well, here it is, dearly beloved, the
last heat of the first round. Once this is over, we’ll have definitely seen the
winning team. Not necessarily in this heat, but then again, possibly.
Merton were represented by Edward
Thomas, Alexander Peplow, Akira Wiberg and their captain Leonie Woodland.
King’s in their turn drew on the services of Marta Varela, Richard Senior,
Lochlan Pryer and their skipper Caroline Spearing.
Now, the fact that we were dealing
with a revolution of 1959 should possibly have alerted both teams a little bit
earlier to the fact that the first starter was looking for Fidel Castro. Edward
Thomas was first in for that one. This brought Merton a set on World Religions.
These weren’t all gimmes by any standard, and the way that Merton dispatched
them to the boundary was a serious statement of intent. Look out King’s. Akira
Wiberg came in quickly when asked to identify the order in which the Genus Homo
is placed. The Fifa World Cup proved somewhat trickier than world religions,
and we both only took the one, although not the same one. Alexander Peplow gave
us Alexander Hamilton as the first US Secretary of the Treasury. When JP
announced bonuses on diseases named after the location they were first identified,
I immediately shouted that Lassa fever would be one. Don’t know why, since the
room was empty. Neither of us had heard of the Rift Valley Fever, but we both
took the other two. The picture starter showed us the first few lines of
Shakespeare’s Sonnet 116. Marta Varela opened King’s account knowing the two
missing words. More mistreated sonnets provided ten more points. Alexander
Peplow won the buzzer race to tell us that the Famous Five reappeared in a new
set of books in 2016. Events of 1907 provided Merton with 2 more correct
answers, and meant that they led by 80 – 20 at the 10 minute mark.
Captain Leonie Woodland knew the
Pigeonhole Principle for the next starter. The phrase – by the skin of our
teeth – provided them with a further two correct answers. Akira Wiberg knew
that the southernmost point of the Asian continent is on the Malay peninsula.
Serial publications of the 19th century provided a full house which
took Merton into treble figures. Various scientific things all linked or
symbolised by the letter C gave Merton’s skipper another starter – and you have
to say, poor old King’s looked to have been flattened by the Merton juggernaut
by this stage of the proceedings. Merton only managed the one correct answer on
comets, but I set off upon my lap of honour around the living room for taking a
full house. For the music starter we were treated to a good slice of Edwin
Starr’s War . And I can’t resist saying that both teams scored absolutely
nothing (say it again, y’all). Caroline Spearing earned the music bonuses for
her team by knowing that Blanche’s Chair was an early draft title for A
Streetcar Named Desire. (or as my Nan once charmingly called it, A Streetcar
named Desiree). Three other songs banned from BBC radio during the Gulf War
provided a full house, which narrowed the gap – although this still stood at
more than 90 points. Marta Varela knew that in Futsal each team can have a
maximum of 5 players on the field at any one time. British physicist Hertha
Ayrton promised me little since I’ve never heard of her, and yet it provided
both me and King’s with a full house. Akira Wiberg shut down King’s mini
revival when he knew that Cowper’s lines “I am monarch of all I survey” refer
to Alexander Selkirk. The Cold War saw Merton pick up two bonuses, as was their
wont, but miss out on the term Ostpolitik. Leonie Woodland either knew or
guessed that the two longest rivers in European Russia are the Volga and the
Don. ISO codes for languages almost inevitably saw Merton give two correct
answers. Caroline Spearing held her hands to her face when she realised that,
when asked for a Biblically named character from Moby Dick she’d zigged with
Ahab when she should have zagged with Ishmael. Alexander Peplow took that one.
The cavalier poets provided, well, no, not 2 answers, only the one. It didn’t
matter. As a contest the game was over, as Merton led by 195 to 65 at the 20
minute mark, and frankly looked pretty decent value for their score at that.
There was no mercy for King’s either
as Akira Wiberg was very quickly in to identify a photograph of Mata Hai for
the second picture starter. Three more figures known for their involvement in
spycraft provided just the one correct answer. Leoni Woodland knew that 2 pi
radians is 360 degrees. Fair enough. Playing the violin brought another 10
points. Edward Thomas knew that Gower is an area of outstanding natural beauty.
It is, too. Income tax brought a full house. Alexander Peplow knew Judith Weir
was once appointed Master of the King’s Music, as the agony continued for King’s.
Stately Homes added 10 more points to their burgeoning total. Fair play to
Marta Varela for finding an early buzz at this stage of the game to give the
correct answer of Magellanic clouds to the next starter. Taglines of British
films were an appropriately gettable set, and the full house King’s achieved
pushed the towards respectability. They achieved triple figure respectability
with the next starter, knowing that Jacob and Bob were two famous Marleys.
Little bit of trivia – in the Muppet’s Christmas Carol – Mrs. Londinius’
favourite film – Marley’s Ghosts are played by Stadler and Waldorf, and their
names are Jacob and Robert Marley. Bonuses on tea provided another two correct
answers. Leonie Woodland knew that Fermions have half integer spin. No, me
neither. A UC special set of titles differing only by the final word – eg Life
of Pi and Life of Brian sounded good, but we didn’t have time for them, as the
gong stopped the contest with the score at 285 – 110 in Merton’s favour.
Hard lines, King’s. We really never
got a chance to see how good you were since you were comprehensively outbuzzed,
although I suspect your bonus conversion rate was pretty decent. Well played
Merton. Strong contenders in the second round, I fancy.
Jeremy Paxman Watch
A rather good example of precision
biting of the hands that feed him saw JP moan “What a ridiculous organisation
it is!” after it was revealed that Roberta Flacks Killing Me Softly was kept
off the national radios stations during the Gulf War. Rather sensitive and
sensible, I would have said.
JP also demonstrated an interesting
way of pronouncing Woburn Abbey. I’ve always heard it pronounced WOE-burn, but
Jez called it WOO-burn. Hmm.
Interesting Fact that I Didn’t Already Know Of The Week
“The Skin of My Teeth” is a phrase
first coined in the Book of Job
2 comments:
Yeah, unlucky for King's being drawn against such a quick team on the buzzer so early. Given their impressive bonus work when they did get it, a very impressive 13/15, they'd easily have beaten another team. I know it's only the first round, and first round form can be unreliable, but Merton look like a serious team to look out for in the next round, though it will be interesting to see how they fare against a more evenly matched buzzer team. Their bonus rate finished a decent but not spectacular 27/43.
So, we have our four play-off teams; on Monday, Ulster play St Anne's, the week after St Hugh's vs UCL.
Just goes to show, Jack - bonuses for show, starters for dough.
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