University Challenge Semi Final 2 St.
Edmund Hall, Oxford v. Darwin, Cambridge
If I was being unkind I would say
that this contest was all about the two skippers, Freddy Leo of Teddy Hall, and
Jason Golfinos of Darwin. The two have certainly been the most outstandingly
good players on the buzzer throughout the whole series, and there’s certainly
been a lot of speculation as to who is the faster. So you could be forgiven for
thinking that this was going to be all about that contest. And I certainly had
little doubt that this was going to be crucial. However, I’m also experienced
enough to know that it would be foolish to discount the other 6 players. Since
losing on a tie break to Bristol, for example, Darwin have proved to have a
fine conversion rate, and that’s not just down to their skipper. So, Teddy Hall
once again fielded their team of Agastya Pisharody, Marceline Bresson, Lizzie
Fry and the mighty Freddy Leo. Darwin also fielded an unchanged team of Stuart
Macpherson, Christopher Davis, Guy Mulley and the brilliant Jason Golfinos.
Marceline Bresson had obviously not
received the memo that this was all about the two skippers when she correctly
answered the name of economist Friedrich Hayek for the first starter. Her
skipper seemed very happy as JP informed us all that the bonuses were on Wagner.
He wasn’t so happy when he got the first one wrong. Mind you, so did I. 2
correct answers followed for both of us. For the next starter, Jason Golfinos
opened his account recognising several clues leading to the word ‘mercy’.
Golfinos 1, Leo 0. Less common English nouns in the To be or not to be
soliloquy from Hamlet brought two correct answers to level the scores. Jason
Golfinos took a second consecutive starter by recognising a description of the
Peace of Westphalia. Golfinos 2 – Leo 0. Lasers promised me but little, but my
tactic of answering Einstein for any 20th century physicist brought
me an unexpected lap of honour. Darwin took this and one other bonus. This
brought us to the first picture starter. We saw a diagram of the structure of a
vitamin, and Freddy Leo opened his personal account by recognising vitamin B12.
Golfinos 2 – Leo 1. 3 more discoveries of Dorothy Hodgkin brought the 10 points
they needed to level the scores once again. Both Freddy Leo and I said that the
second of the Plagues of Egypt in the book of Exodus was frogs, and we were
both right. Golfinos 2 – Leo 2. Bonuses on punchcards meant that as we
approached the 10 minute mark, Teddy Hall had edged in front with 55 – 40, in a
contest that so far was living up to the hype.
I recognised the novel Perfume a
little before Freddy Leo came in for the next starter with the correct answer.
Golfinos 2 – Leo 3. Bonuses on Thomas Gainsborough saw Teddy Hall take full
advantage with a full house, which for the first time opened some daylight
between the two teams. For the next starter Jason Golfinos tried to stop the
rot, but came in too early and lost 5 for his pains. Golfinos 2 (1miscue) – Leo
3. This allowed Marceline Bresson to give the correct answer of Pietro della
Francesca. Bonuses on French Departments brought just one correct answer, but
that gap between the teams was starting to look ominous for Darwin. Nobody knew
the SI unit the Katal for the next starter. Right, as soon as the next starter
linked essay – 1936 – and – Burma I threw Orwell on the table. A moment or two
later Guy Mulley beat the Teddy Hall skipper to the buzzer, and won a UC
special set on chemical elements. These rather surprisingly defeated them, and
indeed moved Jason Golfinos to announce ‘we got nothing’ when asked for the
last answer. So to the music starter, and Freddy Leo was first in to recognise
the work of Bach. Golfinos 2 (1miscue) – Leo 4. 3 more secular cantatas brought
2 correct answers, and more importantly a 70 point lead. Jason Golfinos came in
first for the next starter about a constellation, then shook his head “Actually
no, nothing.” Believe it or not, folks, that’s what a good buzzer does. You
have to buzz before you’re certain of the answer, in the hope that it will come
in the next couple of seconds. Perfectly legitimate tactic. Freddy Leo had a
punt with Hermes, but it turned out to be Hercules. A fine buzz from Jason
Golfinos this time saw him guess correctly with Charlemagne for the next
starter. I’ll be honest, I was still working out what the question meant while
he was answering. Golfinos 3 (1 miscue) – Leo 4. Sofia Coppola brought just 5
points but at least Darwin were moving again. It was that man Leo who took the
next starter, though, knowing the pleural membrane. Golfinos 3(1) – Leo 5The
term agonistes brought a full house. So on the cusp of the 20 minute mark Teddy
Hall seemed pretty much in cruise control, as they led by 140 – 60.
Jason Golfinos struck right back
being first to recognise a definition of the term imam. Golfinos 4(1) – Leo
5(0). Biochemical compounds linked by the prefix cyto brought two bonuses, and
led us into the second picture starter. Jason Golfinos was the first to buzz
recognising a photo of Anthony Burgess. Golfinos 5(1) – Leo 5 (0). Other
winners of the Benson medal only brought 5 more points. If they were to catch
up, they were going to need more than this. Jason Golfinos duly took the next
starter, knowing a designation of supernovae 1A. Golfinos 6(1) – Leo 5. England
and Scotland in the 12th century failed to bring Darwin any more
points. Agastya Pisharody stopped the Golfinos charge, knowing that calomel is
derived from Mercury for the next starter, which earned a Golfinosesque fist
bump from skipper Leo. One bonus was enough to reestablish a 50 point lead.
Jason Golfinos recognised that the next starter was leading to William F.
Buckley. Golfinos 7 (1) – Leo 5 (0). Football clubs with classical names
brought an overdue full house. Darwin were now just one full set behind. It had
seemed all over by the 20 minute mark, but now. . . Yes, Jason Golfinos did
take the next starter, knowing that the Yangtze is the longest river in the
world entirely in one country. Golfinos 8 (1) – Leo 5. Aphra Behn seemed
unlikely to bring Darwin a full house, but the one bonus they did get narrowed
the gap to 10 points. A single starter. After all the shouting, it came down to
this , a one question starter shootout. Darwin had to get it, there just wasn’t
enough time left for anything else. And yes, Stuart Macpherson had won the race.
And yes, he answered ligament, which I felt was the right answer too. We were
both wrong, and as the rest of the question revealed we were looking for
meniscus. Teddy Hall had done it, and Freddy Leo took his 6th
starter knowing the correct term meniscus. Golfinos 8(1) – Leo 6. There was
just time for one bonus, which Teddy Hall failed to get, but it didn’t matter.
They had won by 165 to 140.
What a splendid match, worthy of a
final, let alone a semi final. For the record, then, Jason Golfinos edged the
battle of the skippers, which I’m sure will be scant consolation, but certainly
is one of the finest buzzers we’ve seen not to make the final in recent years.
With little to choose between the two teams, Teddy Hall had slightly the better
bonus conversion rate, which is what won them the match.
Jeremy Paxman Watch
JP had a good old laugh at Jason
Golfinos’ admission that he had nothing for the constellation starter. Other
than that he did what all god question masters do, and allowed a great contest
to play itself out without unnecessary contributions from himself.
Interesting Fact That I didn’t Already Know Of The Week
The Yangtze is the longest river inn
the world to flow entirely in one country (I guessed it, but didn’t know it
before the question was asked.)
5 comments:
Top contest between two excellent sides that could've gone either way. Ultimately, St Edmund Hall's slightly better bonus rate won the day, 15/25 to Darwin's 12/27. Again, though, they can be happy with their series of performances; Mr Golfinos' final total of 50 starters surely the best every by a member of a non-winning team (Mr Leo currently has 41, so we know what he needs on Monday to top him)
And so to the final. St Edmund Hall will start as favourites, but, as I said before, Edinburgh have certainly proven themselves capable of springing a surprise. Hopefully a good match to end the series on.
Hi Jack,
Not to take anything at all away from Jason Golfinos' brilliant performances, but to be fair, he did play in 3 quarter finals to Freddy Leo's 2. So Jason finishes with an average of 8.3 recurring starters per show, while Freddy's is currently 8.2 starters per show. Basically, as you say, he needs 9 starters to draw level with Jason, and 10 to be overall top dog. If St. Edmund Hall win anyway I dare say that won't bother him.
Glad to see you are back in business!!
An eagerly anticipated match, but glad to see that at least one of my favourite teams has made it through. I haven't been as good at picking them this year.. I think in the end Teddy were the better 'team' which has been a feature of these guys throughout this season. You would have to say 'advantage Teddy' certainly for the upcoming game but Jack I think you're onto something with Edinburgh springing surprises. We shall see. On another note at least the result means we don't have less women players in the final than last year..
I see your opinion of Paxman is similar to his own:
"Other than that he did what all god question masters do"
Hi all,
Skiffle.cat - freudian slip lol. As Winston Churchill supposedly once said of Stafford Cripps - 'there but for the grace of God goes God'.
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