Corpus Christi, Cambridge v. St. Anne’s
, Oxford
Unless I’m very much mistaken, Corpus
Christi have the unenviable distinction of having been disqualified after the brilliant
Gail Trimble-led team carried all before them in the 2009 series. I thought
that was harsh at the time. Procedures have been tightened up since, and this
year’s team were Tristan Roberts, Kripa Panchagnula, Benedict McDougall and
their skipper, Joseph Krol. Their opposition were St. Anne’s Oxford, represented
by Ramani Chandramohan, Cameron Royle, Andrew Jamieson and captain Kanta Dihal.
Both Cameron Royle and I spotted
definitions of the word mortar early for the first starter. Rebellions in
English history revealed a worrying lack of historical knowledge among the St.
Anne’s team as they managed none of a distinctly gettable set. I didn’t know
that the Islamic scholar Ibn Rushd wrote on the works of Aristotle, but I
guessed, as, so it appeared, did Benedict McDougall. A set on islands saw
Corpus post their intent with a full house. If you’re asked about an epic poem,
it won’t always be the Iliad or the Odyssey – but it will be a substantial
proportion of the time. This time it was the Iliad, ad it was Benedict
McDougall who buzzed in for his second. A lovely UC special set on SI units –
where the unit was given in first names rather than surnames – saw Corpus take
a great full house, and me take an early lap of honour for getting radioactivity
from Henri, as in Becquerel. Now, I guessed that NOMA might well be in
Manchester, but neither team managed to. Now – you hear ‘gold and silver’ in a
question, and you fly for the buzzer and answer ‘electrum’. That’s what Cameron
Royle did, to earn St. Anne’s a set on popinjays. Not easy, and they managed 1 bonus.
So to the picture starter. We saw a map with several countries highlighted, and
Joseph Krol was first to buzz in to correctly say that they all received full
independence as republics in the 1940s. More of the same for the bonuses again
saw Corpus make sure of a full house. Thus they led by 75 – 25 approaching the
10 minute mark.
The Corpus Christi juggernaut forged
on as Joseph Krol knew that the outermost ring of Neptune is named after
British astronomer John Couch Adams. Titles that differ only by their final
word were a hard set, and neither of us managed anything on them. I’ll be
honest, the only two ancient Greek physicians I could name are Galen and
Hippocrates – but since they were the answer to the next starter I’m not
complaining. This was taken by Joseph Krol – very much leading his team from
the front. Kings of the Belgians gave me a surprise full house, and Corpus
another 2 bonuses. Nobody knew that the remodelling of the Brighton Pavilion
was completed in the 1820s. Ramani Chandramohan knew that SDG stands for
Sustainable Development Goals, to get St. Anne’s going forward again. A timely
full house on chemistry saw another outing for Linus Pauling – beloved of question
setters for winning Nobel Prizes in 2 separate categories. So to the music
starter, and a real buzzer race to the familiar strains of Flight of the Bumble
Bee. Ramani Chandramohan took her second starter with Rimsky-Korsakov. It
sounded as if she said ‘Rimsy -Korsakov’, but rightly JP made no bones about
it. Three more Russian composers, with extracts from works they had based on
Pushkin (who once wrote a poem about my 4x great uncle) saw them add a further
5 points. Fair play to Cameron Royle, who came in very early to give the
Japanese Meiji era, and take his team’s third consecutive starter. 2 bonuses on
19th century US History followed. On a compass rose, how many
degrees separate west northwest from north northeast? It’s one of those questions
where your instant answer is more likely to be right than the one where you
take time to think about it. Joseph Krol ended St. Anne’s run of success by
supplying the correct answer of 90 degrees. Orders of mammals provided just the
one bonus. The impressive Joseph Krol knew that messrs Laud and Hershel were
both called William for the next starter. Leading ladies in Hitchcock films
took Corpus back to a 50 point lead at the 20 minute mark, with 135 – 85.
Ramani Chandramohan buzzed too early
for the next starter, allowing Joseph Krol to tell us that Wegener was the man
responsible for plate tectonics. Time zones brought Corpus another 10 points.
Nobody recognised the Temptation of St. Anthony for the second picture starter.
The bonuses rolled over to Corpus after Tristan Roberts had correctly announced
that 2 Australian states are smaller than the UK. 3 20th century
triptychs provided slim pickings, but even 5 points pushed Corpus closer to a
100 point lead. The impressive Cameron Royle knew something about cobalt to
take the next starter. I didn’t think that St. Anne’s could win at this stage,
but they could bag a repechage slot, and so they needed a full set on polar
bears, although they managed two. Joseph Krol halted their progress with a
superfast buzz to identify one of Wittgenstein’s greatest hits. Screenplay
writers saw them deliver another full house in fairly short order, and took
them to the brink of 200. Andrew Jamieson knew the prefix peta- and put his team
on 110. India gave them just 5 points. Cameron Royle knew that crude oil
(alright, he said petroleum, but close enough) is processed in various given
places. 125. CGS units brought them to 135. Joseph Krol correctly guessed that
the joker was the highest trump in the game of Euchre. The 16th
century took Corpus to 215. Time just remained for Joseph Krol to complete a
splendid evening by identifying W.H.Auden’s quote on the death of Yeats. This
capped a comprehensive victory by 225 – 135.
Corpus are definitely serious
contenders, and will be worth watching in the next round. As for St. Anne’s,
well, they are hanging onto a repechage slot by their fingertips. Hopefully
they won’t rue those missed bonuses.
Jeremy Paxman Watch
Not that much to report. I was
intrigued that we saw Corpus Christi provide 3 full houses early doors, none of
which earned much approval from JP – however St. Anne’s first full house on
chemistry received the coveted Paxman ‘well done’ – and he’s a Cambridge man
himself.
Interesting Fact That I Didn’t Already Know Of The Week
The outermost ring of Neptune is
named after British astronomer John Couch Adams.
3 comments:
Well, if St Anne's do miss out on the play-offs, hopefully it won't be by just five points, so that that penalty for buzzing wrongly just as Paxo was finishing talking won't make any difference.
A superb performance from Corpus Christi though, 21/33 bonuses with Mr Krol taking a very impressive nine starters; definitely one of the teams to watch in the second round, provided they don't get an unfortunate draw. If the second round is done as it has been the last three series, they'll be playing St John's, so hopefully not, as those two meeting in the second round would be highly unfortunate.
On Monday, Merton of Oxford play King's of London in the final first round match, at the earlier time of 7:30.
Gail’s team was Corpus Christi, Oxford, not Cambridge. Confusing, these Oxbridge colleges...
Just goes to show how ignorant I am. No surprise there.
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