What an
interesting show that was, dearly beloved.
Now, the
first SS subject on offer was Sir Terry Pratchett’s Discworld novels. I kind of
feel the same way about the Discworld series as I feel about the work of
Anthony Trollope. Put the shotgun down and I’ll explain. Whenever I’ve read a
novel by Trollope I’ve never been really disappointed, but on the same hadn I’ve
never been moved to run down the street shouting – I’ve just read a fantastic
novel!, if you know what I mean. It’s the same with Discworld. I haven’t read
all of them, and of the ones I have read, while I have ones I prefer, I’ve
never read one and felt that it wasn’t up to scratch. Coming back to the show,
Michael Benbow put on a bravura performance to score 14 and only 1 pass. That’s
the kind of score which will put you in the lead when the half time oranges are
passed round in most heats.
Mahatma
Gandhi was last a specialist subject back in 2011, I believe. A great and
important subject, and Suraj Anad had obviously prepared well and knew his
stuff. I’ll be honest, he did look a little tense and nervous to me, and maybe
this meant that he jumped in on a couple of questions and possibly missed out
on a couple of points. Maybe. Whatever the case he scored a good 11. He was in
contention, but he was going to have to make up ground on the GK if he was to
win.
I love
watching athletics, so it is with some shame I admit that the round on which I
scored least was Tony Fleat’s round on the history of the Boston Marathon. The
Boston Marathon is the oldest and still one of the greatest and most
prestigious city marathons, and a very interesting subject. Tony did very well
to score 12 and 1 pass I thought, and I did think John’s comment on Tony’s last
answer ‘you’re right, and I can’t pronounce the name either’ was an unnecessary
attempt at a cheap laugh. John, I’ve seen you work an audience, and you’re
better than that.
Finally Pam
Poole. Now, her subject is the sort which can cause controversy. Top 10 singles
from 1963 – 1973 might seem like a relatively short period to have to learn,
nonetheless, I should imagine that there were many hundreds of questions you
could potentially be asked. Pam knew her stuff – although I prided myself that
I knew the Lemon Pipers’ Green Tambourine which she missed. We can gloss over
the many questions she knew which I missed. A decent 10 looked to me to have
put her pretty much out of contention being 4 behind the leader.
Now, before
I make any other comment, let me state for the record that it doesn’t matter
what questions you are asked, a score in the teens is a very good performance
on GK. Which is exactly what Pam achieved. I have to say that maybe it was just
me, but I did think that all the GK rounds in this heat were a little bit more
gentle than usual. With Pam’s round, I answered all of them correctly, and
never had more than 2 wrong in any of the other three rounds. Pam didn’t manage
that, but she took 6 correct answers on the bounce at the start of the round,
and crucially didn’t let any wrong answers affect her. She kept picking off
what she knew, and in the end had taken her total to 23. Incidentally that was
last week’s winning total. With that round Pam had just made this heat a lot
more interesting, by placing at least 2 of the following contenders within the
corridor of doubt.
I say that,
but obviously I don’t know what was going through any of the contenders’ minds.
Suraj did not look noticeably more nervous than he had in his SS round, and
like Pam he started confidently. There wasn’t a huge amount in it, but with
about 45 seconds to go it looked fairly clear that he wasn’t quite accumulating
points quickly enough to reach his target. He finished with 21. Tony Fleat’s
round never looked as good as either of the two rounds that preceded it. His
points tended to come in fits and starts, though. At one point he looked as if
he was going to fall quite some way short, and then a spurt of answers would
put him back on track. . . almost. In the last 20 seconds or so he needed a run
of correct answers again to put him across the line, and these didn’t come,
leaving him with a total of 21 and 4 points.
Now, it’s
not completely unknown for a contender to go from 4th place at the
end of the SS round, to first place at the end of the show. It is rare though,
but that’s the prospect we were still facing as Michael Benbow approached the
chair. He started his round, though, knowing that anything in double figures
would be good enough. 9 and no passes
would earn a tie break. There was no sign of panic for the first few questions,
however a pass signalled potential danger. As I said, I can’t read people’s
minds, so I don’t know for certain , but it looked for all the world as if the
pass started affecting Michael, and he rather froze. To be fair, he didn’t give
in, but was accruing passes at a fair old rate of knots. He did have that head
start, though, and he reached 23 with enough time, just to get over the line.
The questions didn’t fa;; for him though, and the 6 passes in the round were
the margin of defeat. Very hard lines – that’s a horrible thing to happen in
the chair and you have my total sympathy. As for Pam, many congratulations!
The Details
Michael Benbow
|
The Discworld novels of Terry Pratchett
|
14
|
1
|
9
|
6
|
23
|
7
|
Suraj Anand
|
Mahatma Gandhi
|
11
|
0
|
10
|
0
|
21
|
0
|
Tony Fleat
|
History of the Boston Marathon
|
12
|
1
|
9
|
4
|
21
|
4
|
Pam Poole
|
Top 10 singles 1963 - 1973
|
10
|
1
|
13
|
0
|
23
|
1
|
1 comment:
Question of the year (from Tony Fleat's GK round: 'In basketball, what term is used for a single hit that enables a better to make a complete circuit of the bases?' Think about it...
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