Mastermind 2019 – Heat 20
So to another Mastermind, dearly beloved,
and one which had to contend with competition from Comic Relief over on BBC
One. Would hat prove to be a good or bad thing for our four contenders? Well,
first up was Lucy Glass. Lucy was answering questions on 80s icon Prince. Cards
on the table, I was never a fan myself, although I thought he was a brilliant
songwriter, and loved some of the songs he wrote for other artists. So as it
was I was quite happy to take my 3 points on this one and run. Lucy did quite a
bit better. 11, as we all know by now, is a competitive score. However it did
leave quite a bit of wiggle room for any contender who could have a belting
round on their own subject.
Next to try to administer said
belting was Geoff Stephenson. He was answering on a good, old traditional
Mastermind specialist with the engineer Thomas Telford. I did slightly better
on this round with 4. Geoff started like he really meant business. However, as
the round progressed he began picking up a few errors. Nothing too serious, but
it did again limit his score to 11.
Now, the next contender was another
Stephenson, Tom of that ilk. Nobody mentioned whether he and Geoff were
related, but if they were, then it wouldn’t be the first time we’ve had
relatives on the same show together. It’s not important anyway. What is important
is that Tom was answering on the Julio Claudian dynasty, which is something I
rather immodestly claim to know a bit about. So I was satisfied when I accrued
a score of 13 from the comfort of the Clark sofa. From the clutches of the
black chair, Tom managed 11. That’s a perfectly good score, but I would argue
that at least 2 of those he dropped were perfectly gettable.
Finally Susan Simmons, answering on
the novels of Charles Dickens. Phew, that’s a subject fraught with danger I
thought to myself, and despite the fact that I love Dickens, I’d never have
opted to take it as a specialist subject. He wrote 14 completed novels and one incomplete,
and each of the complete ones is a hefty tome. To learn them to the kind of
depth needed to give yourself a fighting chance would be a mammoth undertaking.
Seen in this light Susan’s 7 doesn’t seem quite such a modest score, but the
fact remains that it left her out of the competition to all intents and
purposes with the GK still to come.
I never had to go first in a GK
round, so I don’t actually know what the experience is like, but I’d imagine it
can’t be an easy one. So Susan returned to the chair, and she scored 9 points,
a respectable round, certainly in the context of some of the GK rounds we’ve
seen in this series. But with all due respect, this was never going to have a
bearing on the race for the semi final seat.
Lucy Glass’ round, on the other hand,
looked very competitive. I always like to see a contender getting the most
points the possibly can by using the supposedly simple tactic of treating each
question on its own merits, answering what they know, and coming up with a
decent guess for what they don’t. It sounds simple when I write it like that,
but it’s so easy to end up dropping points on stuff you know, or could work out
when you’re in the chair. Lucy’s 13 for a total of 24 looked the kind of target
which could actually give her a fighting chance of the win.
It looked even more so after Geoff
had returned to the chair, and never looked quite convincing as he rather
laboured to 11 for a total of 22. That’s a perfectly respectable overall total,
but it’s not quite enough to give you a realistic chance of winning.
All of which meant that only Tom
stood – er – sat between Lucy and the semi final. And to be fair to Tom, right
up until the end of the round he looked on target to do it. He Was on 22, with
a good 5 questions still to come. If he could answer three of them, then he’d
go through. Well, the questions came, and they went, and it was only as the
blue line of doom completed it’s stranglehold on the score box that he managed
to find a correct answer, leaving himself stranded on 23.
Well played Lucy – good luck in the
semi finals.
The Details
Lucy Glass
|
Prince
|
11
|
1
|
13
|
4
|
24
|
5
|
Geoff Stephenson
|
The Life and Work of
Thomas Telford
|
11
|
1
|
11
|
2
|
22
|
3
|
Tom Stephenson
|
The Julio-Claudian
Dynasty
|
11
|
3
|
12
|
3
|
23
|
6
|
Susan Simmons
|
The Novels of Charles
Dickens
|
7
|
2
|
9
|
2
|
16
|
4
|
2 comments:
This appears only to have been the second time in the Humphrys era that we have had 2+ contestants with the same last name on the same show. The previous instance was in July 2003, in only the 3rd Humphrys-era show, when Nigel White and Martin White both competed.
Just for info: Tom and I are not related, and it was a complete surprise to both of us when we learnt that we were both Stephensons.
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