Say what you like, dearly beloved,
but I do find that a Cambridge v. Oxford match does tend to get the juices flowing.
Corpus Christi were represented by Alexander Russell, Will Stewart, Alex
Gunasakera and skipper Ian Wang. In their turn, Merton were represented by
James Kempton, Rowan Wilson, Jacob Robertson and their captain Nick Ridpath.
A good early buzz from Jacob
Robertson got the Oxford team off the mark. He knew that the first US manned
space program was called Mercury. A set of bonuses on the US Department of the
Interior saw them take one. Neither team could deduce the Wooden Horse of Troy
from the lines quoted for the next starter, and Ian Wang came in too early,
thus losing 5. So to the first question I missed. I may well have heard of
hysteresis before, but I could have waited until doomsday and I still wouldn’t
have been able to drag it up. Unlike Alex Gunasakera, whose swift buzz put
Corpus into the black. There followed a set of bonuses on the film director Eva
DuVernay, or Eva Who? As she is known in LAM Towers. Actually I say that, but I
saw and enjoyed Selma – just didn’t know who directed it. 2 bonuses put them
level with Merton. The next starter was one of those where you had to wait, and
wait, and then buzz like hell once it became obvious. Ian Wang won the buzzer
race to identify the Republic of China as Taiwan. Sea turtles didn’t promise a
great deal, and yet managed to provide a full set for both of us. A lovely UC
special starter in the picture set showed us a disc with ic wille beclyppan รพin hand as it’s title. Now, okay, it may well have been 33
years since I last studied Anglo Saxon, but I still recognised this as the Beatles’
I Wanna Hold Your Hand. Three more of the same followed, and Corpus only missed
out on the most difficult which represented Strawberry Fields forever. Skipper
Nick Ridpath stopped the rot for Merton, knowing that Anya Shrubsole was the
first female to appear on the cover of Wisden. Good shout, that. A set of
bonuses on Physics promised me nothing, but while it delivered a good full
house to Merton, it also gave me a chance to follow the rule – if it’s about
Electricity, say Faraday, and earn myself a lap of honour around the living
room for doing so. So after a brisk and bright opening from both teams, by the
10 minute mark Corpus led by 60 – 35.
Sadly for Will Stewart he fell right
into the trap with the next starter. Asked for the first 3 letters of an Anglo
Saxon kingdom between the Tees and the Forth he went for the later kingdom of
Northumbria – the first three letters of which were Nor. Before Northumbria
there was Bernicia, which later combined with the southern Deira. Nick Ridpath
took the rest of the question and then answered Ber correctly. Events of the
1460s brought a good full set, and the lead. Now, with regards to Science, the only
topics where I usually have any hope of getting any points are firstly, the
periodic table, and secondly Astronomy. So I was in pretty quickly with pulsars
for the next starter, and eventually Jacob Robertson supplied the same correct
answer. Video games surprisingly landed me a correct answer for Ocarina of
Time, but no more, while Merton took two bonuses. Ian Wang was first in to
recognise a description of sacked FBI chief James Comey for the next starter,
thus getting his team moving again. Bays in the UK proved rather elusive for
Corpus as they managed just the one from a distinctly gettable set. This
brought us to the music starter. This gave us I got Rhythm, performed by its
composer George Gerschwin. Alex Gunasakera recognised that one, and 3 more
Gerschwin jazz standards followed, allowing Corpus to identify 2 of the singers,
taking back the lead. Alex Gunasakera took his second consecutive starter,
knowing that the smallest species of lynx is commonly called the bobcat.
Essential amino acids promised me exactly what they delivered, as in nowt, but
it allowed Corpus to stretch the lead a little. Now, I’ve always tried to
resist taking a second lap of honour in the same show. But I’m very sorry, when
JP gave us two mnemonics for a process in cell biology I shouted the only one I
know – mitosis – and I was right! A little while later, when I got my breath
back, James Kempton had correctly answered, and Merton had scored two bonuses
on yr Beibl, and Welsh folk heroine Mary Jones. Jacob Robertson won the buzzer
race to identify John Betjeman who was appointed Poet Laureate in 1972. Doubt
in Shakespeare provided a timely full set which meant that just after the 20
minute mark Merton now had the lead with 125 to 105. Anyone’s game.
Stills from films of Dr. Jekyll and Mr.
Hyde, Treasure Island, and Kidnapped pointed towards Robert Louis Stevenson,
but James Kempton had a speculative punt upfield with Dickens. Ian Wang chanced
his arm with Bram stoker, and so the bonuses rolled over. Will Stewart knew the
Poles, Margaret and Reginald to earn the picture bonuses. 3 more examples of
screen adaptations where the author has more than 250 writing credits on IMD
followed, and I thought Corpus did well to take a full set having missed out on
Stevenson earlier. Another film starter saw both teams miss out on Grace Kelly,
or Princess Grace of Meccano as I think she was once known. Ian Wang correctly
named poetry and music as two of D’Alembert’s five fine arts to take the next
starter at what was a crucial stage of the competition. Ian Wang certainly
seemed to be feeling the tension as he rattled off three correct answers on the
Mercury music prize without JP even having the time to read out the full
question. Ian Ridpath took a flier with the next starter, asking in which
country two teams play a derby. Judging the names as South American he gambled
with Colombia. Sadly the full question wanted the capital city they played in,
not the country, and on such small margins are tight competitions like this won
and lost. Corpus couldn’t capitalise, but they were in the lead anyway, and the
clock was running down. I didn’t understand the next question, but Jacob
Robertson gave the correct answer of acceleration. A full house of three very
quick bonuses on Geology put Merton just 10 points behind. Rowan Wilson lost
five points by answering Hebrew as the second most widely spoken semitic
language after Arabic. To be fair I would probably have done the same, and don’t
blame her for going for it at all. Will Stewart got close with Ethiopian, but
actually the answer was Amharic, which is spoken in Ethiopia. He was right on
the money with Blenheim, as in battle and palace, for the next starter though.
Novels since 1890 with the word Yellow in them only yielded one correct answer,
but crucially this put Corpus 30 points ahead. This meant that a full set would
not be enough for Merton, they were going to need at least 2 visits to the
table. Alex Gnasekera made sure that this wasn’t going to happen by supplying
the word Clade for the answer to the next starter. C’mon Feel The Noyze was my
favourite one of theirs. One bonus on tin was neither here nor there, as there
just wasn’t enough time for Merton now. Will Stewart continued Corpus’
finishing buzzer blitz, knowing the battle of Austerlitz for the next starter.
That, as the Two Ronnies used to say, was all we had time for, as the
competition was gonged with the scores at 195 to 140.
That doesn’t look close, does it? Yet
until the last 3 or 4 minutes it really was either team’s game. Good show –
well played Corpus. It was won on the buzzer, especially in the last couple of
minutes. I hope we’ll see Merton again in the repechage round, because their bonus
conversion was slightly better than Corpus’ – although to be fair both teams
were around about two thirds. That’s pretty good quizzing.
Jeremy Paxman Watch
Surely, I thought, surely JP wasn’t
going to let a set of bonuses on video games pass without comment. Well, he
didn’t let me down totally, but I have to say his comment “I didn’t think you’d
have time for that sort of thing.” Was a but lacklustre. C+, could do better
for that one, Jez.
Interesting Fact That I Didn’t Already Know of the Week
In 2018 Anya Shrubsole became the
first female to appear on the cover of Wisden.
2 comments:
Good match, solid performances from both sides, both deserve to return in some form, and I'm pretty sure Merton will be back in the play-offs.
Wow, I think Will Stephens was a kid my girls went to school with, he's done well..
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