Durham v. Keble, Oxford
Here we are again after the
light-hearted fun of the Christmas alumni series. Oh, if any of the producers
are reading, if you want to put Goldsmiths – or Swansea University in it next
year I would definitely be available. No? Always worth a try.
Actually, I don’t know why they have
to stop the real series while this is on. Mastermind doesn’t. Last night, while
we had the real, full sugar caffeinated version on BBC Two, we also had
Mastermind Lite, now with added celebrities (and fewer correct answers), on BBC
One. Alright, enough nonsense, and as JP would say, let’s get on with it.
Durham achieved a fantastic score of
360 when beating a Strathclyde team all ways till Tuesday on the buzzer first
time out. Well it doesn’t matter who your opposition are, you’ve got to be good
to do that. They were again represented by Sian Round, Cameron Yule, Ben Murray
and skipper Matthew Toynbee. The unenviable task of opposing Durham fell to
Keble College Oxford. (Are there any other long-in- the- tooth Monty Python
fans who automatically think Keble BOLLEGE Oxford whenever they hear that name?
No? Well, please yourselves) Keble set UAE home in the first round, although
this was more of a contest then Durham’s had been. As before they were
represented by Ellen Pasternack, Michael Green, Thomas Player and their captain
Rose Atkinson.
Michael Green took first blood for
Keble, knowing that Salvator Mundi (who I thought was a Spanish surrealist) was
a painting by Da Vinci sold in 2017. Novels published in 1818 sounded full of
eastern promise for me, and indeed provided a full house, although if truth be
told they weren’t all that easy. As Keble duly found, failing to add to their
total. Ellen Pasternack did though, knowing that the personal pronoun which
begins an Isaac Asimov collection of short stories about robots is I. Aye. Fish
brought us both a couple of bonuses. Ben Murray opened Durham’s account,
recognising a couple of quotes about statistics. Bonuses on the National Gallery
of Art in Washington DC followed. They took a brace of bonuses. A good buzz from Sian
Round saw her correctly ascribe an observation made in a lecture to Virginia
Woolf – good shout that. Periodicals founded in the 18th century was
the subject of the bonuses that followed. A full house earned Durham the
coveted Paxman ‘well done’ and gave them the lead. You sensed that the Durham
juggernaut was building momentum. The picture starter was one of those – I don’t
know, but what else could it be? - questions. Shown symbols from the notation
system for a game, I thought – well I only know about chess notation so I’ll go
for that and checkmate. I don’t know if the same thought processes were what led
Ben Murray to give the same answer, but we were both right. Three more examples
of algebraic notation denoting specific events in chess brought Durham 10 more
points. Matthew Toynbee was the first to get the old chestnut about the kind of
cake eaten specifically at Easter, after being given the additional clue of the
name being the same as a pretender to Henry VII. (Warbeck cake never caught on
apparently). So ironically every member of the Durham team had now had a
correct buzz apart from Cameron Yule, who was so good in the first round match.
Plenty of time left for that, though. Building materials brought another one
correct answer. This gave Durham a healthy lead of 80 – 30 at the ten minute
mark.
Ben Murray knew that Galen was the
ancient physician mentioned in the next starter. This was Mr. Murray’s third
starter so far. The composer Anne Dudley (yes, Anne Who? in LAM Towers)
actually gave me a full house, while Durham managed just one. Didn’t matter at
this moment, since they were buzzing Keble to shreds at this point. Michael
Green stopped the rot, knowing that 1816 was a year during the lifetime of
Niels Abel. Scientific awards during 1979 promised but little but we both
managed the last. More importantly, Keble were moving forward again. I felt for
Michael Green when he ascribed the tale of Patient Griselda to the Canterbury
Tales. A version is actually in there, but the question had specified it was
part of a collection of 100 tales, which should have given someone the idea of
the Decameron. Durham couldn’t capitalise.
I felt for Rose Atkinson on the next starter. She knew that one of the
clues referenced Suzanne Vega, but in the heat of the moment forgot that the
question asked for the given name rather than the surname, and offered Vega.
This allowed Matthew Toynbee to toe poke that particular ball into the open goal. A very
nice UC special set on letter combinations provided Durham with a full house,
and took them into three figures. Cameron Yule now broke his duck on the music
starter, very quickly recognising Joel Grey in Cabaret. Other singers sharing
surnames with British PMs caused some hilarity when Durham offered James Brown
and Gordon Brown – I’d have paid money to see that duo on stage together – instead
of Jackie and Harold Wilson – ditto. As a result they didn’t offer answers to
the next two. I didn’t really get the next question, but Ellen Pasternack did,
and this earned much needed bonuses on Latin America. I took a full house on
national flags, while the way that Keble went about answering, and failing to
add to their score suggested that they may well have been feeling shellshocked
by this stage. Fair play to Michael Green, he was first in to recognise the
works of de Toqueville for the next starter. Nuclear physics offered me little
chance of a lap of honour round the living room, and indeed did not deliver
one. Nor for Keble either. Now, I did know that rongorongo is the largely
undeciphered writing system from Easter Island. So did the impressive Ben
Murray. Two bonuses on plagiarism meant that Durham led by 150 – 55 at just
after the halfway mark. Yes, Keble could still win, but it would take a
comeback to rival that of Lazarus.
I recognised a Rembrandt self
portrait for the picture starter, as did Sian Round. Now, when JP announced
bonuses on artists’ self portraits from the sub genre – self portrait with dog –
I fully expected Hogarth and his pug to appear. They didn’t. Shame. One of my great, great, great, great grandfathers was a one-time pupil of Hogarth and one-time teacher of Turner. Enough of that. Landseer and Frida
Kahlo did appear, and I recognised them, but not Gustav Courbet. Durham took one
bonus. I didn’t know the scientific term efflorescence, but Matthew Toynbee did
for the next starter. Yoga bonuses exposed all of our collective ignorance.
Matthew Toynbee was the first in to supply the word impediments to the end of
the first line of the famous sonnet 116. Actually it’s the end of the middle of
the second line, but it was clear what was meant. Acronyms in Physics gave nowt
to any of us. For the next starter Ellen Pasternack supplied the term bacteriophage,
and since I’d just said it as well, I set off on my lap of honour. The art
critic and novelist John Berger, with whose work I am not familiar, provided
both of us with one bonus. Now, I guessed that a millionth of a micrometer
might be a picometer, but I’ve got my winter cold at the moment so I didn’t take my second lap of
honour. Thomas Player took that one. Ancient Egypt saw them take two bonuses.
Cameron Yule knew that Closing Time is the belated sequel to Catch 22. Moths
took them to 200 for the second time in a row. Michael Green – Keble’s best
buzzer by some distance – knew that the Instrument of Government related to
Oliver Cromwell. UK island group bonuses were gonged before they could add
further points, but at least the starter had taken them to 100 points. I thought
that they had some bad luck with the bonus sets they earned, although they
still probably should have done better than the poor conversion rate they
managed. I don’t think they would have won though. Durham’s performance on the
bonuses was rather average in this contest in my opinion, but their buzzing
meant there was no chance they were ever going to lose this.
Jeremy Paxman Watch
An early raising of the eyebrows and
an incredulous repetition from JP as Keble offered Ivanhoe rather than Scott’s
Heart of Midlothian promised some fireworks, but it turned out to be a bit of a
damp squib. That was it.
Interesting Fact That I Didn’t Already Know Of The Week
When writing about plagiarism,
Laurence Sterne plagiarised another author.
2 comments:
Happy New Year Dave!
I think the reason why UC pauses for the Christmas specials is because they're on every day for two weeks, whereas Celebrity Mastermind goes out whenever there's a free slot, and on a different channel too.
As for this game, it was indeed Durham's better buzzing that won the game, though Keble deserved to reach three figures on the whole. And yes, Keble were let down by their bonus rate, just 6/23, while Durham managed 16/36. As you say though, I suspect Durham would likely still have won comfortably enough even if Keble had fared slightly better on the bonuses. Definitely a team to keep an eye on in the QFs Durham, definitely capable of finally giving us a non-Oxbridge finalist.
On Monday, a Cambridge derby between Downing and Darwin, followed by Warwick vs Bristol.
As the last Keble English student to win UC, I think someone should have told them that you really need one of those in your team if you're going to do well. Ideally, a historian too.
Shame you don't report on the Christmas version of UC, Dave: not only would you have seen some very good matches, but you'd have known who Anne Dudley is. Some UC self-referencing in those bonuses, or so it seems.
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