Bristol v. Edinburgh
To use the vernacular, dearly beloved,
it was another bacchanal in the Last Chance Saloon. Who would get to stay for
the lock in, and who would be ejected before last orders? Ollie Bowes, Kirsty
Biggs, Dom Hewett and captain Sam Hosegood of Bristol were beaten by Newcastle
last time out, while John Heaton-Armstrong, Stanley Wang, Philippa Stone and
captain Innes Carson of Edinburgh lost out to the might of Merton. Most likely
winners? The coin was very much in the air as far as I was concerned.
“This great island lay over against
the pillars of Hercules . . . “ “Atlantis!” said I, and after a few more
seconds, so did Ollie Bowes. Descriptions of deities from Virgil’s Aeneid were
by no means easy, and Bristol failed to improve their score. I loved the next
starter which gave several definitions of chestnut, as in old quiz chestnut,
and Innes Carson won that particular buzzer race. Historical periodisation was
a bit of a mouthful for the bonuses, and Edinburgh managed 1, although they had
a close but no cigar answer for the year of the Great Reform Act. A fine buzz
from John Heaton-Armstrong saw him identify the term Aryan from a long
description – I was out with the washing with this one. Smaller and larger
physical units – eg – how many millipascals to one bar – promised me but little
and delivered one answer, just as it did for Edinburgh. Now, time was that the
picture round would usually arrive around the ten minute mark. In recent shows
it’s been a wee bit earlier. This time we saw a photo in which I recognised
Einstein and what looked like Marie Curie. Innes Carson identified the conference
where it was taken as being held in the 1920s, and the subject quantum physics.
For the bonuses we were shown significant equations by specific participants. I
answered Einstein for each and got my point for the last. Edinburgh managed
their first full house of the contest. Stanley Wang came in too early for the
next starter and lost 5. Bristol couldn’t capitalise either. I’ve never heard
of the Kruskal trick myself. Right. You hear “Greek mythological figure” , “complex”
and “Carl Jung” then you slam the buzzer through the desk and answer Electra.
Innes Carson did just that. Bonuses on UNESCO World Heritage sites in China
supplied one correct answer, but it still meant that Edinburgh had opened up a
healthy lead of 65 – 10 by the 10 minute mark. It looked like they certainly
had Bristol’s measure on the buzzer.
The next starter was an edible
reddish brown seed of Castanea sativa. (A chestnut. Oh, do pay attention,
Bond!) If you ask a majority of regular quizzers to link the words “test
cricketer” “FA Cup finalist” “world long jump record” and “throne of Albania”,
then I guarantee that a huge majority will say CB Fry, and say it very quickly,
at that. Yet that particular piece of low hanging fruit went unpicked. Nobody
knew the body louse for the next starter – me neither. A wonderful UC special
for the next starter asked which Old Testament Prophet’s name is a reversal of
the 4 letter recreational drug in Brave New World. Stanley Wang beat me to the
correct answer of Amos. This earned a set of bonuses on winners of the Kate
Greenaway medal. None of us had a Scooby about the first two, but I was a bit
surprised that nobody else knew Raymond Briggs from the details given for the
third. Right, if the Earth is a basketball and the moon a tennis ball, how many
metres apart are they? Why I shouted out 7 I have no idea. But it was right! I
set off on my lap of honour while JP announced the next starter, neither team
having won a cigar on that one. It was over 10 minutes since Bristol had added
to their score, so I was pleased when Ollie Bowes buzzed in to identify several
figures as rulers of the Byzantine Empire. Now, as did Bristol, I answered
Pasteurisation to more than one of the bonuses on heat sterilisation, and was
very upset when it proved to be the answer to none of them. No bonuses for
Bristol either. This brought up the music starter, and one of the easier opera
starters. Philippa Stone won the buzzer race to identify an aria from Madame
Butterfly. Other operas also centred around women who die provided two bonuses.
Ollie Bowes got Bristol moving again knowing that Drake singed the King of
Spain’s Beard in Cadiz. Hindu deities and the animals they use for
transportation provided an interesting set of bonuses. We both managed two of
these. Another good buzz from Philippa Stone saw her identify the marsh mallow
plant. This took Edinburgh into triple figures, and a bonus on Henry VIII’s
divorce of Katherine of Aragon and marriage to Anne Boleyn supplied a further 5
points. At 110- 40 at the 20 minute mark a Bristol win was not totally out of
the question, but the odds against it were lengthening, and the bartender was measuring
the shortest path from their table to the door.
Animal lairs are another of those
recurring quiz staples, so I was surprised that it took a long time before John
Heaton-Armstrong buzzed in with the answer form for the next starter, after
being given hare’s den and other definitions. A nice UC special set invited
Edinburgh to identify countries participating in the 6 Nations rugby tournament
by comparing their area with another country of similar size. We both took a
full house there. I’ll be honest, I didn’t identify the work of Goya for the
second picture starter, but then neither did the two teams. Kirsty Biggs identified
Occitanie from the next starter, and earned the picture bonuses, identifying
one of series of characters from the Commedia del’Arte, but not the artist who
painted him. Tough set that. Now, if a question mentions Walter Raleigh’s
History of the World, it’s pounds to pennies that the question hinges on the
fact that it was written while he was imprisoned. The next starter certainly
did. John Heaton-Armstrong sounded uncertain when he suggested this, but he was
right. The 2004 work “The Plot Against America” is unfamiliar to me, as apparently
it was to Edinburgh, but we still both managed 2 bonuses. The lead was now more
than 100, and the bartender was making gestures with his watch, and thumb
cocked towards the door to Bristol. Innes Carson won the buzzer race for the
next starter to identify the Scottish place name element – strath. 2 bonuses on
volcanism added a little more gloss to the scoreline. Now, usually, if a question
asks for a subatomic particle I’ll answer neutrino. I did for the next starter,
and earned myself another lap of honour. Captain Carson took hat one. Again,
more gilding to the score was applied. A great buzz from Sam Hosegood saw him
work out that in a list of countries bordering Sudan, Chad was missing.
American cities in the works of Arthur Conan Doyle looked set to boost their
score, but sadly they were gonged after the first bonus. Edinburgh were clear
winners by 195 – 60.
Put simply there was just too much
buzzing in the Edinburgh team for Bristol to cope with tonight. Never mind, no
shame in getting to the quarters. Well played Edinburgh.
Jeremy Paxman Watch
Jez had a chuckle when it was
suggested that Dennis Compton might once have been offered the throne of Albania.
It wasn’t a daft suggestion though – he had some of the sporting credentials
which were also part of the question.
He seemed genuinely impressed when
Innes Carson dredged up Tristan and Isolde for the second music bonus – and well
he should have been – hell of a shout, that one.
Interesting Fact That I Didn’t Already Know Of The Week
Yama, Hindu God of Death, is
sometimes depicted as travelling on a buffalo
5 comments:
Good win for Edinburgh, who despite some close scrapes earlier in the series have proved themselves worthy semi-finalists overall. Bristol well beaten here, on both fronts, just 2/14 bonuses to Edinburgh's 18/33, but no shame in going out at this stage. Edinburgh now face St John's in the semis, another match that will be most interesting given the two teams' respective run-ins.
First up though, on Monday, we have another interesting match up, Newcastle vs Fitzwilliam in the final quarter-final, should hopefully be another good one.
Hello! -- I've been following your blog with huge enjoyment for a while. Just to say, you're right about those first starters, on Virgil's 'Aeneid', being tough, and I speak as a long-time Virgil obsessive who studied Latin at uni. In particular, I'm inclined to say that the first one was just plain wrong: it's part of an extended simile which compares Queen Dido (which is what Paxo gave as the answer) to the goddess Diana, and all the characteristics in the lines quoted apply specifically to Diana, not Dido (Dido doesn't have a quiver, and has nothing to do with Latona, mentioned in the lines, who is Diana's mother); so it's a bit of a stretch to say that Dido is really the character being directly referred to... (as I say, slightly obsessive... but it's rare to catch out the UC question-setters in what looks like an error).
That was another one I enjoyed the questions. I throughly enjoyed Mastermind tonight as well, thanks for yout thoughts!
I'm pleased with the way this UC match turned out, well deserved team Edinburgh. If we get Newcastle monday we have Oxon, fen poly and two others including a Scottish team, which I regard as fair. Well, whoever wins monday gets Merton, hard lines indeed!
Thanks Jack, Steve and Aethelstan. I'm glad that it wasn't just me who felt that about the Aeneid questions, Steve. I always enjoy a UC match - even some of the walkovers that we had in round one were still very watchable. Let's face it, even a lacklustre UC match is still miles better than almost any other quiz.
The 'Tristan' clip, like all those opera extracts, was very straightforward for anyone who knows a bit of opera. Much easier than some of the rather weird and obscure classical music bonuses we've had this season.
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