Asked for a precise form of weather,
Ben Murray needed no more than a mention of a 1971 track by The Doors to buzz
in with the answer Storm. The novels of Daniel Defoe brought two bonuses. Ben
Murray also took the next starter, knowing about the word gauge in particle
physics. A full house on cricket commentators followed, although not, sadly, a
reference to a great Two Ronnie sketch. Cameron Yule took his team’s third
successful early buzz, knowing that the Blue Mosque is one of the sights of
Istanbul. Atmosphere and space physics provided Durham with a further 10
points, and me with a lap of honour for guessing the term Heliopause based on
what had come before. Nobody knew Martha Lane Fox who became a crossbench peer
in 2013, but Jack Pollock lost 5 for chancing his arm before the end of the
question. He made amends with the next starter, buzzing in with Russian rocket
pioneer Tsiolkovsky. I had that as well, but had only just finished my previous
lap of honour, so sat this one out. Now, I’ve never heard of Existential
Comics, but it sounds like fun. Two bonuses on Captain Metaphysics brought a
more healthy hue to Strathclyde’s score, and took us to the picture starter.
This was a wonderful UC special, showing us the flags of the sequence of teams
beaten in a specific year of the FIFA World Cup finals. Thomas Callan had that
one, and a full house on three more of the same put Strathclyde within a full
set of Durham’s score. The score stood at 65 – 40 right on the cusp of the ten
minute mark.
Sian Round recognised the Venice
Bienniale for the next starter. Feminism in the 1970s brought two correct
answers. I didn’t understand about stuff smelling of garlic, but I did know that arsenic takes its name from a
Persian word, as did captain Matthew Toynbee. Now, I’m very sorry. But when I took
a full house on the bonuses on anti-coagulants, not only did I do another lap
of honour, I also accompanied it with a pursed lips fanfare. Durham managed
two. A UC special requiring the words either and differ saw Ben Murray being
far too quick on his buzzer to allow Strathclyde a sniff of the points. Deaths
in “The Lord of the Rings” proved to be meat and drink to Durham who took a
full house. That man Murray was in again for the next starter, recognising the
words of Schopenhauer. The domestic in 20th century art provided two
correct answers. So to the music starter, and both teams dwelt on the buzzer a
little before Matthew Toynbee buzzed in to tell us that the composer of what
was obviously the Can Can was Offenbach. Three more examples of operatic satire
or parody brought two more correct answer, and poor old Strathclyde just
couldn’t seem to get into the contest at this stage. They didn’t get in for the
next starter, when Matthew Toynbee recognised definitions of quartz and quasar
before JP had finished the question. Named experiments in Physics brought
another full house, and the game looked as good as over. Descriptions of other
characters’ relationship to the title character of a well known novel were more
than enough to give Cameron Yule “Lady Chatterley’s Lover”. Questions on
medicine whose answers all began with G only provided a single bonus, but
Durham had already gone beyond the 200 point barrier. Nobody knew the Han
Dynasty of China for the next starter, but sadly Catherine Ember gave an incorrect
early buzz and lost 5. That mean that not only had Durham shut Strathclyde out
for a whole ten minutes, but Strathclyde had actually seen their score
decrease. Durham led by 210 to 35.
Volume of a sphere yutta yutta.
Nobody had it. Cameron Yule knew that James II was defeated at the Battle of
the Boyne. Margaret Thatcher gave Durham a full house, and a lead of 200
points. At least JP had not administered the coup de grace by telling
Strathclyde that they had plenty of time to catch up, because they didn’t. The
second picture starter looked like Cezanne, and by golly it was Cezanne.
Cameron Yule knew that. Other works on show in the inaugural exhibition in the
Museum of Modern Art in New York brought another full house. Ben Murray buzzed
in immediately after being asked the decade in which Clyde Tombaugh discovered
Pluto. I actually knew that was 1930 too, but stuff it, no third lap of honour
for that. Statues brought two bonuses. With 4 minutes to go Durham were now
less than a full set away from the magical 300 point barrier. A good shout from
Billy Hogg saw him identify that, as California is the most populous state of
the USA, so New South Wales is the most populous state of Australia. Scientific
terms beginning with flu- added a further ten points to their score. Both teams
rather sat on their buzzers once we heard the word pipistrelle, with Matthew
Toynbee eventually buzzing in to pluck that particular piece of low hanging
fruit. Fish whose common names refer to other animals gave a full house which
took Durham to 305. And there was still time for more. Cameron Yule was just
too fast on the buzzer for Strathclyde when the teams were asked about the
director in 16 of whose films Toshiro Mifune starred. A full house on fictional
dogs followed. It was all too easy for Durham, whose Ben Murray buzzed in very
early to identify the term mole from the definition. People with the surname Ford
gave them the ten points they needed to reach 350. There was still no mercy shown
towards Strathclyde, as Cameron Yule buzzed in to identify an 1867 Abraham
Lincoln as a rare postage stamp. That was it, though, for the contest was gonged
halfway through the first bonus. The final score was 360 – 55.
For once, JP said the most
appropriate thing he could to Strathclyde, that they were beaten by a very good
team. Certainly were. As for Strathclyde, well, it’s difficult to comment on
how strong or otherwise they were, although they managed 7 out of their 9
bonuses. They lacked firepower on the buzzer, and that gave them no chance against
this Durham outfit. In my review of Heat 4 I criticised Downing for not
achieving a score of 300 + when they were dominating the buzzer so much. Well,
you certainly can’t make the same criticism of Durham. Their score – fantastic.
Their bonus conversion rate I would imagine was very high. Ben Murray and
Cameron Yule particularly caught the eye, but there was buzzing throughout the
team. We’ve only got this one performance to go on, but this Durham outfit
certainly seemed to have all of the attributes you’d expect from a team that
can do extremely well in UC. I shall watch their second round match with
interest.
Jeremy Paxman Watch
JP couldn’t quite bring himself to
say well done when Strathclyde took their full house on the first picture set.
“You watch a lot of football” he sniffed. Hmm. You never say “You read a lot of
Periodic Tables” when a team gets a full house on Chemistry, Jez.
Interesting Fact That I Didn’t Already Know Of The Week
Apologies. I certainly didn’t know
everything in this show, but I was so engrossed in the match that I didn’t jot
a standout gobbet of information in my notes.
6 comments:
Spectacular stuff from Durham; all four players pulled their weight on the buzzer, and a bonus rate of 38/48! The exact same bonus rate 2010/11 champions Magdalen managed in their first match. Good omens? We shall have to wait and see, but you'd have to say they're one to watch definitely.
Strathclyde definitely not a bad team; their bonus rate definitely shows that, and they'd have beaten another team I'd have thought. Credit to them for taking it nicely in their stride.
Tomorrow's match pits York against St Edmund Hall of Oxford, the week after, Edinburgh vs Sidney Sussex of Cambridge.
Thanks Jack.
I can definitely vouch for the strength of Strathclyde's captain, Jack Pollock. We've never met, but he participates in the international pub quiz that I run and has finished on the podium 6 times out of 7, alone, the only person with anywhere near such a record. My quiz is teams of up to 4, which frequently include more than one A-rundle Learned League player. Jack is himself an A-rundle player, and you don't get there without being a very good quizzer indeed.
Spectacularly bad luck of the draw and those all-important fractions on the buzzer won the day unfortunately for Strathclyde. Durham are definitely a team to watch in the next round, as that was an emphatic performance.
The Durham team, to me, epitomised a good UC team; sharing the workload with some good buzzing and an excellent conversion rate, and stands in interesting contrast to the Darwin match a few weeks back heavily dominated by the star player. There's been some discussion that Durham are not particularly significant on the university level quizzing circuit so it will be interesting to see how they fare further down the line, well I hope.
On another note, much UC discussion in the media and on twitter as regards gender balanced questions and team composition, with some worrying observations with respect to the number of ladies putting themselves forward for teams. Some articles feature anecdotes from Ms McKeown and Dr Woods.
It was 'either' and 'dither' - hence the one-letter difference mentioned in the question.
A bit late coming to this, but the existentialcomics.com website -- which got namechecked again in last night's match -- is indeed great fun (and it was thanks to it that I recognised two of the sexy philosophers last night). Updated every Monday!
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