Pembroke College, Oxford v. Downing College,
Cambridge
Ding dang dong, dingee dingee dang
dong, dingee dang DINgee dong. Great lyrics to the theme, don’t you think? Yes,
already we’ve reached the third heat of the first round, and the first Oxford
v. Cambridge match up. Representing Pembroke College we had Connor McGurk, Tom
Lambert, Louis Morris and their captain Catherine Perry. In the light blue
corner, representing Downing College, were Fergus O’Dowd, Jane O’Connor, Felix
Prutton and their own skipper, Yanbo Yin.
So far we’d had two great matches, in
which both teams looked good for another outing in the series. Were we about to
see this continue? Well, it was Jane O’Connor who struck first, knowing that a
musical performer born in Minneapolis, a political treatise of 1513, and a
Canadian maritime province were all good matches for the word Prince. Cities
which have hosted the Grand Depart of the Tour de France in recent years
provided a full house, and it was fairly clear that Downing meant business. ‘Transverse
and longitudinal’ is the prelude to one of those UC chestnuts which pops up to
say hello every couple of years, but Felix Prutton lost five for an early buzz
with waves, allowing in Connor McGurk, who gave the correct answer of dunes after
the helpful word barchans was mentioned. A tricky set on agriculture followed,
of which Pembroke managed the one. Nonetheless, two starters and both teams
were off the mark. That’s how I like to see it. On a disease of the oral
cavities Tom Prutton came in too early for the second question running. On the
one hand this may have been frustrating to his team, but on the other, at least
he wasn’t going to allow one early buzz to put him off slinging buzzer for the
rest of the competition, and this is an attitude I can appreciate. The Oxford
skipper, Catherine Perry, had a shy at it with plaque, but it was caries, or
tooth decay. Nathan Zuckerman is the narrator of several novels by Philip Roth,
and I was a little surprised at the way both teams sat on the buzzer before Louis
Morris offered the correct answer in tones which seemed to suggest that he
thought that he couldn’t possibly be right. He was, though. Architectural
styles and movements again saw Pembroke pick up one point. We moved to the
picture starter, which showed us just a European country’s road major road
network, without the outline of the country. I’ll be honest, looking at it, it
shouted Portugal to me, and obviously to Fergus O’Dowd as well, for he buzzed
in very quickly. More of the same followed, and Downing took their second full
house of the evening. I did nothing like as well, only seeing the Netherlands
for the last one. None of us knew that treacle is derived from Greek words
meaning antidote to venom. This meant that just about on the 10 minute mark the
game was nicely poised, with Downing leading by 40 – 30.
Now, as soon as you hear “The Father
of the Symphony” you should slam the buzzer through the desk and answer Haydn.
To be fair to Yanbo Yin he did the slamming, but did wait for the epithet ‘Father
of the string quartet’ before doing so. The album “The Number of the Beast” by
Iron Maiden, who I believe were a popular musical combo of years gone by, provided
Downing with nothing. This was a little surprising considering that two were
gettable without any knowledge of the band or album itself. I’ll be honest, I
know nowt about Captcha – but Connor McGurk was in early for it. The set of
bonuses on biology gave us both two correct answers, and knowing enough to get
while the going is good, I set off puffing my way around the living room for
the traditional lap of honour. Both the teams were tied at this stage, and it
looked as if it was developing into another good contest. I understand why Tom
Lambert came in early with the philosopher Epicurus for the next starter, but
he lost five and allowed Yanbo Yin in with the correct answer of Democritus.
The (main) River Avon provided a timely full house. I felt sorry for Louis
Morris on the next starter. When you hear dates in the 19th century,
then the words ‘a notable nurse’ and you’re 30 points behind, of course you’re
going to sling buzzer and answer Florence Nightingale. She died considerably
later than 1881, though. This allowed Downing to hear the rest of the question,
with the Downing skipper nodding as ‘the battlefields of the Crimea’ were
mentioned. Realistically this narrowed down the possible answers to one, Mary
Seacole, which was the answer he gave.Unpaired words, those which are negative
in form but whose positive forms are non existent or rare, for example unkempt,
provided a full house. In the space of a couple of minutes Downing had taken a
60 point lead, and Pembroke really needed a starter to keep themselves within
touching distance. The music starter saw both teams reluctant to chance their
arm, even though it was a relatively well known bit of Ludwig Van. The
impressive Downing skipper finally took that piece of low lying fruit. They
failed to get any of the bonuses. Yanbo Yin was again in very quickly to tell
us that the Self Strengthening Movement in China occurred during the Qing
dynasty. Now, Robert Grosseteste ( yes, Robert Who?) promised very little, but
amazingly delivered me a lapworthy full house. It would have given Downing the
same, had they not given Francis rather than Roger Bacon as Doctor Mirabilis.
Didn’t matter – they now had a 90 point lead, and the invisible elastic joining
the two teams must have been at breaking point. I would imagine that however
determined you are, once the opposition have carved out a significant lead like
this it must be very hard to find the mental toughness to tell yourself that
you can still beat them on the buzzer for the next starter, and the next, and
the next . . . Especially when Yanbo Yin was knocking them in from all angles.
He recognised a description of bilharzia for the next starter. Rock types
provided us both with a single bonus. At the 20 minute mark Downing looked to
be in cruise control with 145, while Pembroke really needed to start slinging
some serious buzzer if they were to have any chance of reaching a repechage score.
Neither team could recognise the city
of Kiev from a description for the next starter. Tom Lambert struggled to get
out the fact that Abraham Lincoln was the first Republican party president of
the USA, but get it out he did, and Pembroke were moving again. When JP
announced a set of bonuses on literary oxymorons, I felt sure that Milton/Golding’s
‘Darkness Visible’ would be one. It wasn’t, but that didn’t stop Pembroke from
taking a full set. So to the second picture starter. Holman Hunt’s The
Scapegoat did nothing for either of the teams. A UC special question which was,
in my opinion, too bloody hard, and involved symbols for amino acids and major
currencies, hardly surprisingly proved a bit of a waste of time for everyone. Right
– if you hear ‘given name’ and ‘hominid’ then you have to buzz. The answer
almost invariably will be Lucy. Jane O’Connor took that one. Finally we got a
shy at the picture bonuses, which were more of the works of the Pre Raphaelites.
One bonus ensued. Yanbo Yin, piling Pelion upon Ossa, knew the chemistry
starter which followed. Oh good – more flipping Science bonuses – I thought as
JP announced them – and them promptly took back the criticism as I took a full
house on Huygens. So did Downing for that matter. With only just over 3 minutes
to go everything looked fairly cut and dried. The irrepressible Downing skipper
recognised a series of words ending with zzle. Two bonuses on latin – modus –
phrases took them through the 200 point barrier. The excellent Yanbo Yin took
yet another starter, recognising stages of the Thirty Years War. Downing helped
themselves to another full house on glaciers. I’ll be interested to see what their
bonus conversion rate was for this show – Jack? – but it looked like a pretty
good evening’s work to me. Surprisingly, the Downing skipper got a starter
wrong for once, allowing his Oxford counterpart in with the femur. Right,
slightly controversial moment. JP announced a set of bonuses on films whose
titles all contained the same short adjective. Now, when asked for a 1970
Francois Truffault film, skipper Catherine Perry offered ‘The Savage Child’.
Now when released in the UK it was given the title “The Wild Child”, and wild
was the connecting adjective. However, the original French title was “L’Enfant
Sauvage”, so you can maybe see why I thought that they were a little hard done
by. It didn’t affect the result, or Pembroke’s chances of progression. That was
it, anyway. We were gonged before the end of the set, which meant that Downing
had won by 230 – 75.
Yes, if you look at the scores it looks as if this game was a mismatch of the kind that we had last year. Yet it really never quite felt like that. Pembroke were giving as good as they got for the first half of the contest, and the real difference after that was the magnificent buzzing of Yanbo Yin, Downing’s brilliant skipper. Very hard lines, but when you come up against that there’s little that you can do other than take it on the chin. As for Downing, this was impressive. It’s early days yet, but it may well be worth keeping an eye on their progress throughout the series.
Jeremy Paxman Watch
When Downing were unable to dredge up
Iron Maiden, JP scoffed “Ever heard of them?” Had the words of their answer ‘We
don’t know’ not already given you a clue on that one, Jez?
To be fair, our man was thoroughly
enjoying this contest. On a couple of occasions he laughed with the teams,
whereas ten years ago he’d have growled or uttered a put down. He’s mellowed,
you know. There’s no doubt about it, but he’s mellowed.
Interesting Fact That I Didn’t Already Know Of The Week
The word treacle ultimately derives
from the Greek for Antidote to Venom.
7 comments:
Yeah, Downing's bonus rate was pretty strong, 24/36 (with two penalties), but it was Mr Yin's NINE starters that won them the match. Unlucky to Pembroke, a perfectly good team (7/14 bonuses, also with two penalties), I suspect they would've beaten another team. Downing certainly a team worth looking out for in the second round, but we'll just have to wait and see.
No match this coming Monday due to coverage of the European Championships; we resume on the 13th with SOAS of London vs Darwin of Cambridge, the latter, AFAIK, making its UC debut.
Another good one! Not knowing the Prisoner one though....
I think this is going to be another Cambridge year . Yin channeling McKeown and Krol?
Displeased no match this week. Darwin is one of the postgrad only colleges I believe so could be interesting.
Interesting/random Tolkien connections to the captains in this match: Pembroke's Perry was (I am told by a Pembrokian friend) the president of the Oxford Tolkien Society. And Downing's Yin went to Tolkien's alma mater, King Edward's School in Birmingham, where he was part of a School Challenge winning side, aged 13.
Tolkien was, of course, a fellow of Pembroke for twenty years, during which time he wrote The Hobbit and much of Lord of the Rings. A Tolkien starter would have made for a fun buzzer race.
Hi all, and thanks for your comments. I'm actually away for the next three Mondays, so I can't say I'm sad about no match on Monday. If I can post from Spain I will, but I may have to keep back the reviews until I get back in a few weeks.
You may know nowt about Captcha, Dave, but we all have to deal with it every time we comment on this blog!!
Have a good holiday dave
Excellent performance by Downing. When watching I expected that when Yanbo Yin got started that Downing would pull away and so it proved, since Mr Yin is on the Cambridge A University-level quizbowl team. I note that he is often joined there by Mr Krol, captain of last years Corpus Christi Cambridge UC team where like Mr Yin, Mr Krol also got nine starters in his first round UC match (but then lost to eventual winners St. John’s in the second round).
As Athelstan mentions, this week is Darwin which is postgraduate only (not even mature undergraduate students I believe - unlike Wolfson). I’m looking forward to seeing Mr Golfinos on the Darwin team who is a very highly rated US quiz player and has been another member of the Cambridge A University-level quiz team this year.
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