Ah, Mastermind. A good way to end a
rather fraught week – my school has had a visit from the Inspectors of Estyn.
First into the chair was journalist
Mic Wright. His specialist subject was Mark E Smith and The Fall. Now, I will
be honest, I thought that I knew nothing whatsoever about Mark E Smith and The
Fall, but it turned out I just knew next to nothing, since I scored one. Mic
knew his stuff alright. He had a couple wrong but still managed a total of 13
points for his round, which proved he must have been going like the clappers.
Through the portal of portent came
Tom Cappleman. Tom reached the semi finals of University Challenge with New
College , Oxford a few years ago, where he proved to be a bit of a star on the
buzzer for his team, so I expected good things from him last night. I certainly
got them from him in the specialist round. Answering on the letters of the New
Testament he scored another 13. I, on the other hand, obviously know a little
bit more about them than Mr. Smith and The Fall, since I managed 4.
Okay, without wishing to be at all
mean, I’d better start off Mary Breading’s round by stating that she scored 5.
I’ll be honest, judging from her reactions to some of the answers and the two
passes, I don’t think that this was all down to nerves. It just seemed that
there were certain areas of her subject, The History of the Wrens, she didn’t
know about from her preparation, and I’m afraid that Mastermind can be a cruel
old show, sometimes. If you’ve left gaps in your knowledge, it will find them
out, even if they’re tiny ones. I added 3, and needed a point on Isaac Newton
to take me into double figures.
As it happened I got 6, my highest
score of the night which took me to a very respectable specialist aggregate of 15.
Offering us the great – although seriously weird – Newton was Pat Lucas. She
did very well too, finding 13 of her own answers, with just the one pass. So
although behind Tom on pass countback, having the same number of correct answers
she would go last on the GK round.
There was a certain irony in the fact
that Mary Breading, first to return to the chair, would actually put on the
best GK round of the night. In fact, had she answered just a little more
quickly there was every good chance that she would have scored even more than
the 11 she produced. Trailing by 8 points there was no way she was going to
produce a big enough target to put any of the other three into the corridor of
doubt, nonetheless, it was a good performance.
The first of the contenders with a
realistic chance of winning to return to the chair was Mic Wright. He started
brightly too, but ah, what do we often say? The GK round is a marathon, not a
sprint, and the last 90 seconds or so looked to be something of a grim old
slog. It was kind of typified by his last question, an old 50 / 50 about the
animal name used to describe a falling market. Yes, it was going to be either
bull or bear, but which? He zagged with bull, and the answer was bear. On such
small margins. He finished with 9 for 22.
Tom Cappleman took his first two or
three questions comfortably. Based on his UC record I did think he’d make the
target comfortably. In fact another 4 questions would pass by before he added
another correct answer, and it was a while before he built up any momentum
after that. He finished just ahead of Mic with 23. His tactic had obviously
been to pass if the answer did not quickly occur. It’s a valid tactic, but a
risky one. He’d passed on 6 questions. Would he regret it?
Well, for much of Pat’s round, it
looked as if he might not. But what Pat was doing was giving herself valuable
thinking time for each question. It meant that while there were a significant
number of things she didn’t know, she took points for everything that she did
know, and for those questions which were guessable to her. She maximised her
performance that way, and took her own score to 23 and 1 pass. John Humphrys
did a rather strange thing next. Before she’d even had a chance to get her
breath back John told her she’d scored 21 points and 1 pass and had won.
Strange. The usual procedure is to let her the last contender go back and sit
down, announce there’s been a tie, say how many passes the contestants involved
in the tie had scored, and THEN announce the winner. Much more effective in my
opinion.
Well, there we are. Congratulations,
Pat. Not the highest scores we’ve seen so far this series, but enjoyable
nonetheless.
The Details
Mic Wright
|
Mark E Smith and The Fall
|
13
|
1
|
9
|
2
|
22
|
3
|
Tom Cappleman
|
The Letters of the New Testament
|
13
|
0
|
10
|
6
|
23
|
6
|
Mary Breading
|
The History of the Wrens
|
5
|
2
|
11
|
0
|
16
|
2
|
Pat Lucas
|
Isaac Newton
|
13
|
1
|
10
|
0
|
23
|
1
|
2 comments:
Did anyone else notice that she answered “amaretto” (the liqueur) for the last question, about the Italian biscuit and Humphries said “Amaretti ... is correct.” Had he pushed for the precise answer, she would only have got 22 points - and been runner up!
Amaretto is the singular of amaretti, as well as the name of the liqueur - they are both traditionally flavoured with bitter almonds. It would have been harsh to disallow the answer - like insisting on “hobnobs” but rejecting “hobnob”
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