Connor Macdonald, Vedanth Nair,
Ben Harris and skipper Daniella Cugini, representing Emmanuel, Cambridge,
put on a very good performance narrowly missing out to Glasgow in their first
round heat while scoring 175. Their opponents, Kings, London, Liam Tsang, Rhianne
Jones, Katie Heath and their own skipper Anthony Chater, lost out in the Central London
derby against old rivals UCL. They’d scored 145. Advantage Emmanuel? Time would
tell.
Daniella Cugini, impressive in the first round
match, started much the same way in this one, recognising a quote from “To Kill
A Mockingbird” very early to take first blood for Emmanuel. Bonuses on the word
cosmos brought just the one correct answer. Both teams rather sat on the buzzer
for the next starter, with Connor Macdonald finally springing to life to answer
Golda Meir just before the question was finished. Composers in London brought a
full house. Liam Tsang hit back for UCL, recognising the definition of a
bacterial colony for a timely early buzz. Astronomy and Physics I thought maybe
offered me the chance of a lap of honour. Indeed, knowing that Chiron is a
centaur from Greek Mythology, that’s exactly what happened. By the time I returned
to the sofa, puffing and wheezing, (and it’s not even a big room) both King’s
and I had taken our own full houses. Anthony Chater narrowed the gap further,
knowing that Winchester Cathedral fitted the description given for the next
starter. Barbara Hepworth yielded nowt for the bonuses, in what was a reasonably
gettable set. So to the picture starter, and a map of part of the USA, with a
city marked out in California. Vedanth Nair recognised that it was the state
capital Sacramento. More American cities which were terminals of North American
railroads provided a far from easy full house. Connor Macdonald took his second
starter, recognising a description of sugar cane. Films of 2017 brought two
bonuses, which meant that Emmanuel, who’d had the better of the opening
exchanges, led by 85 to 35.
It was pretty obvious that the country in question,
neighbouring Switzerland, was Liechtenstein, and Vedanth Nair won the buzzer
race to supply that answer. This time Emmanuel’s bonuses were on female
military leaders in China – can’t wait – I thought as JP announced these.
Actually I still managed two, while Emmanuel took a good full house. Some
chemistry thing to which Ben Harris supplied the correct answer Friedel-Crafts
followed. Pressure brught another full set of bonuses, and at this stage the
odds on a King’s win were getting longer and longer. There was a long time
still to go, but Emmanuel had a 100 point lead. Nobody knew about ephedrine for
the next starter. Now, if you ever get a question which contains the words “a
German philologist” then it’s going to be about one or both of the Brothers
Grimm. Daniela Cugini knew this as she buzzed in really quickly to answer Grimm’s
Law to the next starter. Names often heard in pairs gave us a wonderful UC special
set which earned Emmanuel two bonuses. So to the music starter. Anthony Chater
quickly recognised that the Trolley Song was from the musical Meet Me In St.
Louis. Three more MGM musicals from this period brought the ten points they
needed to reduce the gap to an even hundred. A UC special set saw Ben Harris give
us auk and ork, and then almost curse himself as he realised it is auk and orc,
a fact which didn’t escape Katie Heath. Bonuses on various Engelberts brought
the gap down to 75. Katie Heath then committed the fatal error of not listening
to the question. Asked for an island in a novel by Swift, she gave us the title
of the novel, “Gulliver’s Travels” allowing Ben Harris to take revenge by
giving us Lilliput. To bonuses of their own on impact craters in the solar
system followed. Rhianne Jones knew various latin words beginning with AL.
Countries that formerly possessed nuclear weapons brought a couple more bonuses
for King’s, and right on the cusp of the 20 minute mark the score stood at 175 –
95 to Emmanuel. The task was not totally beyond King’s at this stage, but it
would require some phenomenal buzzer work.
Nobody knew the geometry starter which
followed. Vedanth Nair recognised that the other person from the one named who
shared the 2014 Nobel Peace Prize was Malala Yousafzai. The anatomy of fish
brought up a full house, and magnified the scale of the mountain that King’s
still had to climb. The second picture starter brought a photograph of a
British historical figure. Connor Macdonald did the old quizzer’s trick of only
offering the surname “Pankhurst”. JP was having none of it, “Which one?” he
asked, his eyes narrowing with suspicion. Connor Macdonald zigged correctly
with Emmeline. Three more people involved in the Women’s Suffrage Movement
brought one bonus. Now, if it’s a beverage and it’s a cantata, it’s coffee.
Anthony Chater knew that, and struck like a coiled cobra. Madness in
Shakespeare brought 2 bonuses. However, every time King’s scored, Emmanuel
would just take the next starter, and Vedanth Nair recognised a description of
Baku for the next starter. National trails in Southern England brought just one
bonus, but it really didn’t matter. The clock was running down and King’s were
pretty much out of time, even if they answered every remaining question. They
took the next one, Liam Tsang knowing osteoblasts. Fictional spacecraft did
them no favours and they failed to add to their score. The impressive Vedanth Nair
took the next starter giving the terms of supply and demand in economics. Pele did
them no favours, but it was immaterial. Anthony Chater won a fast buzzer race
to identify the opening line of “The Go Between” which I once mistakenly
thought was written by J.R.Hartley, (younger readers may wish to consult their
parents or grandparents about that specific cultural reference). Island
countries did at least allow King’s to reduce the gap to double figures. That
was it. Emmanuel won by 235 to 140, in a pretty convincing performance. Hard
lines King’s.
Jeremy
Paxman Watch
‘Is it Alexander von Humboldt? is that the
brother you were thinking of?’ asked Jez, teasingly. ‘Yes? Well, you didn’t get
him!’ He started early this week. For the film question, asked for a city in
Yorkshire, Daniella Cugini, acting on advice from Vedanth Nair that the answer
began with T, offered Truro. Cue the Paxman eyebrows shooting towards the ceiling.
“Truro’s NOT in Yorkshire!” he sniffed, his nose wrinkling as if it had just
detecting an unpleasant odour. Actually, though, I think that there was a bit
of sympatico between Jez and the Cambridge skipper. When she offered Apollo and
Daphne instead of Daphnis and Chloe, she shrugged her shoulders and went ‘Ach’
in a ‘hey, whaddya gonna do?’ gesture, which caused the great man to laugh, and
replicate the same. Down, boy, down, or they’ll be putting bromide in your Horlicks
again.
Interesting
Fact That I Didn’t Already Know Of The Week
Chopin gave his final performance in London in
1848 after fleeing the unrest in Paris (which saw the overthrow of Louis
Phillipe)
2 comments:
This was probably the best game of the series so far; both sides gave a high quality performance, both sides strong on the buzzer, and the bonuses, Emmanuel 24/36 and King's 12/24. No shame in King's to go out on that performance; Emmanuel, meanwhile, having performed strongly against two decent opponents, must be one to keep an eye on.
On Monday, the second play-off sees Hertford take on Exeter. The second round starts the week after, no word on who's playing yet though.
A great match as Jack says. Emma set out their stall pretty early on and although King's, who were a decent team in their own right, tried, they couldn't catch them. Emma seems balanced, all players contributed, and a good quality captain to boot. All things being equal they should go far. I enjoyed the questions this week as well.
This monday's match could go either way in my view, although as a gut feeling I may say advantage Hertford, thinking back on performances.
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