Dearly beloved, in heat 5 we had an
Oxbridge match up, which is usually enough to get the adrenaline flowing.
Representing Clare of Cambridge we had Anish Naik, Matt Nixon, Elijah Granet
and captain Andrew Gurr. Batting for Hertford of Oxford were Steffi Woodgate,
Pat Taylor, Chris Page and skipper Richard Tudor.
Elijah Granet came in very early to
answer the first starter, knowing that a TV series – we didn’t hear all the
details but I’m guessing it was The Wire – was set in Baltimore. Bonuses on
words with the suffix -ist brought 10 points. I thought that both teams rather
sat on their buzzers for the next starter. Asked for three letters starting a
series of words, the first definitions obviously belonged to carburettor and
cartilage. Richard Tudor was the first to buzz in, and earned bonuses on
Physics. Now, I guessed argon for the first, but hung on to hear the second,
when I actually knew about James Chadwick and the neutron. Knowing that there
was no point in pushing my luck and hanging on for a hattrick, I set off
chugging around the living room on my lap of honour. As it turned out, the last
of the set was an absolute gimme, which gave me a full house on Physics. Which
may have happened before, but not often. Hertford managed just the last. I’ll
be honest, though. I couldn’t dredge up the title of T.S.Eliot’s The Dry
Salvages for the next starter. Neither could either team. Now, I didn’t
actually know that Henry II was ever called Fitzempress – but it was an
educated guess that the term referred to him, especially when given other clues
that made it a certainty. Richard Tudor took that one, earning a set on
hedonism. Again, they took one bonus. For the picture starter we were given
three Old English kennings. I did study Old English as part of my degree, over
3 decades ago now. Basically a kenning is a metaphorical compound. So we were
given hwæl-weg, swan-rad, and fisces bæÞ. The first is literally ‘whale – way’
(Gweat Western Whale Way? Bwitish Whale Ways?), the second, swan road and the
last fishes’ bath. Which obviously suggests the Sea. Honestly, old English poetry
has loads of these. Chris Page was in for that one, earning the coveted Paxman
well done. Three more of the same followed, of which they managed two. Anish
Naik took an incorrect interruption for the next starter, allowing both Pat
Taylor and me to answer that Einstein’s first scientific paper was about
capillarity. To be fair, the extra details in the question gave me a decent shy
at that one. The 1990s gave Hertford no more points. Nonetheless they led by 60
– 10 at the ten minute mark. At this stage of the contest it seemed like pretty
plain sailing for Hertford. However I did wonder at this stage whether they
might rue all of those missed bonuses.
A great early buzz by Matt Nixon to
identify “What Happened” by Hilary Clinton began the Clare fightback. We
returned t Old English poetry with a set of bonuses on the Exeter Book.
Typical. You wait ages for a question on the subject, and then two sets turn up
one after another. With the first question about a specific poet – usually if
the question asks about a hymn it’s Caedmon, and anything else, then it’s
Cynewulf. It was Cynewulf. The last question asked about the Lament for the
Rohirrim, and which volume of the Lord of the Rings it appears in. Skipper
Andrew Gurr offered The Return of the King, while it was the Two Towers, and
Elijah Granet extended his arms beseechingly in the universal gesture of ‘you
idiot!’. A little mutiny in the ranks there. Now, ‘Bunthorne’s Bride’ is one of
those hardy perennials which surfaces from time to time in the rugby club,
which wasn’t enough to give the teams the word Patience. Other clues though
were enough to allow Matt Nixon to take a double. Western Australia brought
Clare another 5 points, but they, like Hertford, seemed rather profligate with
their bonuses at this stage of the game. Elijah Granet took Clare’s third
consecutive starter, knowing the term McDonaldisation. Agglutination bonuses
followed. No, me neither. Again, Clare took just the one bonus. This brought us
to the joys of the music round. Playing Elton John’s Rocket Man and asking for
the title, we were always going to be in for a buzzer race. The two skippers
looked to go for their shooting irons first, and the quicker on the draw was Andrew
Gurr. Other tracks on Major Tim Peake’s playlist saw Clare take. . . well, yes,
they took one bonus. Which was enough to give them the lead. Paul Erdos – who
wins the accolade of being this week’s otherwise known as Paul Who in LAM
Towers – gave Richard Tudor a chance to stop the rot, and earned Hertford a set
on the deaths of Roman Emperors. Which brought them a full house – yippee! They
weren’t all gimmes either. Chris Page stretched the restored Hertford lead,
knowing about earthquakes in Tokyo. Indie rock bands were a nice UC set, which
meant that even someone with little or no knowledge of the bands themselves could
achieve a full set with a little lateral thinking. This gave Hertford their
second consecutive full house. Elijah Granet took an exceptionally fast flier
to supply the correct name of Elena Ferrante when hardly any of the next
question had been asked. It was a fabulous buzz, although I’m not too sure that
extending the arms and inviting the applause from the audience was called for
at this stage. Meera Bai gave Clare 2 bonuses. A rush of blood to the head saw
Anish Naik hear ‘Swedish anatomist’ and buzz in too early with Linnaeus. The
answer actually involved the teeth, and Hertford couldn’t take it. This meant
that as we neared the 20 minute mark, Hertford led by 110 to 80. Alright, up to
this point it hadn’t exactly been a match of the highest quality, but it was at
least an interesting contest.
For the next starter Matt Nixon
hesitated before giving the correct answer of Nunavut. Names in the Solar
system associated with heaven or paradise saw Clare only take one of a very
gettable set. This brought us to the second picture starter. I didn’t recognise
the work of Edouard Manet, but Chris Page did. This brought a set of bonuses on
Manet paintings inspired by original Spanish works, which gave them a timely
full house. With a lead of 40 and just over 5 minutes to go, Hertford looked
most likely winners at this stage. Nobody knew that, among other clues, the M1
runs by Leicester and Leeds. Elijah Granet took the next starter, recognising
poems from Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass. Questions linked to giga- brought
them, well, it brought them one bonus, but crucially put them withina full set
of catching Hertford. Andrew Gurr made the classic mistake of giving the Greek
god, Dionysus, when asked for the Roman god. Chris Page made no mistake with
Bacchus. (Bacchus was the Roman God of Wine, while his brother, Tobacchus, was
the Roman God of cigarettes. Boom boom . That one came from my A Level English
teacher, decades ago. John Browning, take a bow.) Literary oxymorons were the
bonuses. Last time this came up I expected darkness visible and it didn’t come.
This time it kicked us off. Hertford couldn’t get it, but did take the second
bonus on Alexander Pope. With the gap at 40 and the ref already looking at his
watch, you could probably have named your own price on Clare. Andrew Gurr won
the buzzer race to identify red and roe as species of deer. They needed a full
house on events of 1918, but only took two. Still, this brought the gap down to
20. With a full house, they could just snatch victory. The next question, on
trignonometry, was one of those inscrutable what is the value questions.
Whenever I hear one I always say either 1 or 0, and I was delighted to see
Richard Tudor answer 1, and Andrew Gurr answer 0. Sadly, it was a half. The
next starter really became a buzzer race when it became obvious that the
question was looking for Grand Canal, and it was a race won by the Cambridge skipper.
Flight ofs gave them the two bonuses they needed to draw level with Hertford.
Squeaky bum time, as there quite possibly would only be time for one more set. Various
Robinsons gave Elijah Granet the next starter. Now, if I told you that I’ve
never fist pumped after a speculative punt answer has come off you’d know I was
lying, so I can’t criticise Elijah Granet for that show of emotion. It
literally was the moment that separated the two teams, since we were gonged
immediately. Which meant that Clare had won with 160 – 150.
I’ll be honest, I don’t know if 150
will give Hertford a realistic chance of a repechage slot. It was an oddly
polarised performance. As their bonus conversion rate seemed to improve, their
buzzer form seemed worsen. As for Clare, well they won on the buzzer. I don’t
know what their bonus conversion rate was, but I would imagine it was some way
south of 50%, and that has to improve to give them any realistic chance of
winning their next match. Thanks to both teams for a match which was exciting
to watch, if not out of the top drawer in terms of quality.
Jeremy Paxman Watch
Matt Nixon hesitated almost too long
before giving the answer Nunavut. Now, JP’s words might have said “I’ll accept
that but only because I’m being kind’, but the tone of his voice and the
pointing finger said ‘do it again and I’ll smash yer face in’.
Interesting Fact That I Didn’t Already Know Of The Week
Nunavut actually means ‘Our Land’.
2 comments:
An odd match, neither side really got into gear but nonetheless gave us a very close match up. Your analysis that Clare were better on the buzzers and Hertford on the bonuses is reasonably accurate: Clare answered three starters more, but with 13/30 bonuses to Hertford's 14/24. Hertford's score might be enough for a play-off place, but with them only being joint second at the moment, it'll be a close call.
Welcome back from your travels!
I'm in full agreement with your view of this match. Personally I'm unsure the better team won, and I even think Paxo was overly generous with the Nunavut question.
Golfinos was interesting, a stunning individual performance but I don't really have a feel for the team and the collection wasn't as good as some matches this season...
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