Another Friday evening, and another
heat of new-look Mastermind. I have to be honest, I don’t think it makes any
difference to the show itself, but I think I rather like the way the contenders
enter now. The first of these then was Tara Martel. Her subject was Alan
Turing. I felt that she had a little bit of a shaky start, but we quite often
see rounds speed up as the blue line of doom starts to appear, and she took
her total to a very healthy 11. Incidentally, if I did an ‘interesting fact
that I didn’t already know’ for Mastermind each week, then this week’s would
definitely be that Turing had to agree to chemical castration. Absolutely
shocking.
Second through the portal of portent
(yes, I have spent all week thinking that one up) was Mark Hopes. Now, speaking
of portents, the last time someone took a bridge as a specialist subject was, I
believe, me, in the final of the 2008 Season of Blessed Memory. So I was
willing him on, and it seemed to work. Boy, did Mark know his stuff. In fact it
was a perfect round right up to the very last question, a fact which John
bemoaned as he announced Mark’s score of 13.
Coming next was Susan Murray, the
first teacher to feature in this year’s series. Now, I am still the last
schoolteacher to win a series. I’ve always said, and I mean it as well, that I
will be very happy when someone else takes the mantle from me. Still, I did
realise that this season I join my friend David Edwards as being the joint
longest reigning holder of the unofficial title of last schoolteacher to win.
David won in 1990, and I’m fairly sure that the next schoolteacher to win was
Michael Penrice in Discovery Mastermind in 2001. I only say fairly sure because
it’s been a little harder to find out the professions of a couple of the Radio
4 Mastermind champs. Still, even if a teacher wins this year, that will still
make it 11 years for me as well. Apologies for that pointless digression. Susan
was answering on the films of the brilliant Frank Capra. Films can be a really
tricky subject, and the whole oeuvre of one individual can offer question
setters plenty of opportunity to catch you out. No doubt at all that Susan knew
her stuff, but by the end of the round she hadn’t quite managed double figure
and a deficit of 4 points looked quite a large one to have to overcome.
Finally solicitor Andrew Brewer
offered us the third ‘traditional’ subject of the evening in the shape of the
Emperor Vespasian. This gave me my best SS round of the evening , but I still
only scored 4. So far on both shows I haven’t managed an aggregate of double
figures on specialist yet. I know enough about Vespasian to know that this was
a really testing set of questions, and so Andrew’s score of 11 was a pretty
good one. So well done to all of the contenders. I love it when everyone has
obviously done their preparation properly. I can’t help it – I’m a teacher, so
what else would you expect?
“They don’t know what the other
contenders have scored.” John announced again as we began the GK round. Yes,
fine John, but it really doesn’t make any difference. Trust me, it doesn’t.
First back was Susan Murray, and I fancy she may have left the show wondering
what might have happened had she picked a different specialist subject. I say
this, because she treated us to a fine GK round of 15 to take her total to 24.
Another couple of points on Specialist, and she may well have put herself into
contention for a repechage slot. As it was, though, it looked likely that at
least one of the other contenders would improve upon this score. It wouldn’t be
Tara Martel, though. She battled her way through the round, but never quite
established the kind of momentum that you need if you’re going to steer your
way through the round into a score in the teens. She did manage to get into
double figures, and finished with a very respectable 22.
Now, if Susan had provided us with a
very good round of 15 – and she had – then Andrew, in his turn, provided an
excellent one. He rattled his way through the first minute or so that well that
I did at one point think he might go through the whole round hardly dropping
any points and amassing a cricket score. Well, he didn’t quite do that in the
end, but it must be said that his score of 17 is a formidable one, and a significant
achievement. This meant that half time leader Mark Hopes would need at least 15
and no more than 3 passes just to take it to a tie break. To be fair to Mark it
never looked as if he was likely to come close to the required total. He missed
some fairly innocuous questions, and as behind the clock even before it reached
the one minute mark. Them’s the breaks. I was glad for him that he did make
double figures before the end of the round, finishing with a creditable 23.
This meant that all 4 of our contenders reached double figures, and all 4 of
our contenders ended with a score in the 20s. So even though Andrew was a clear
winner – and very well done, sir, for that – all 4 of our contenders had
acquitted themselves well, and could walk back through the portal of portent (
see, I did it again) with their heads held high. I like that.
The Details
Tara Martel
|
Alan Turing
|
11
|
0
|
11
|
2
|
22
|
2
|
Mark Hopes
|
The Golden Gate Bridge
|
13
|
0
|
10
|
4
|
23
|
4
|
Susan Murray
|
The Films of Frank Capra
|
9
|
0
|
15
|
0
|
24
|
0
|
Andrew Brewer
|
The Emperor Vespasian
|
11
|
2
|
17
|
1
|
28
|
3
|
3 comments:
Would anyone here agree that not knowing SS Round scores is proportionately more of a pressure factor for the lowest scorer.
S/he knows they are furthest behind, because they start GK Round first, but they don't know whether they are slightly behind, or need a minor miracle.
The high scorer - as in previous competitions - knows their own score and what they need to win.
I agree: it also means that they're still getting over the shock when they start their GK round, which hardly seems fair.
Interesting idea. Let me play devil's advocate, though. If you're last, let's say you go in knowing that you're 6 points behind, and so need a minor miracle to win. Maybe that's a demotivating factor. Whereas not knowing how far behind you are - maybe that might act as a spur - thinking that you might be really close, for example?
This is just speculation, since I haven't played Mastermind under these conditions.
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