LSE v. The Courtauld Institute
Last Monday was another London University
Derby. Now, yes, being a London University old boy myself I always enjoy this,
but I have to say that I did have a couple of qualms. You see, a specialist
institution like the Courtauld and the LSE, for example, is always I feel at a
disadvantage because by their nature they aren’t going to field teams with such
a wide range of specialisms. Still, let’s see how it all worked out. Representing
LSE were Kevin Schilling, Finn Dignan, James Engels and captain Zara Elstein.
For the Courtauld we had Asher Silver, Morgan Haigh, Nancy Collinge and their
skipper Harry Prance.
Right, as the first question was unfolding, ‘award held
annually’ had me thinking Nobel, and ‘witheld on 19 occasions’ irresistibly
pointed to the Peace prize. Both teams sat on their buzzers until the question
was completed until Harry Prance won the buzzer race to supply the correct
answer. The Muses from Stephen Fry’s Mythos – a good read too – provided just
the one bonus. Kevin Schilling buzzed fairly quickly to identify the work of
the film director Ang Lee. LSE’s bonuses on tortoises and turtles were all
despatched to the boundary fairly quickly. The next starter, on molecular
biology surprisingly gave me a very early lap around the living room for
recognising hormones. Neither team managed that one. I don’t blame Harry Prance
for going early with the London Underground river and offering the best known
of them, the Fleet. However the full question required the Tyburn, which let
Finn Dignan in. This gave the LSE bonuses on coal tar, and they took 2, (even
though they don’t study coal tar at the LSE, Jeremy). Pictures, then. We were
shown a section from the opening scene of a Shakespeare play and asked for the
two missing words, which presumably rhymed in Shakespeare’s time, even though
they don’t now. Morgan Haigh supplied both heath and Macbeth. More of the same
brought one bonus, for which modest return they still earned the coveted Paxman
well done. On the cusp of the 10 minute mark, then, LSE led by 40 – 25.
Guruparabs, as Harry Prance knew, are
events in Sikhism. This gave the Courtauld a set of bonuses on great paintings
of the 1880s. JP took pleasure in pointing out that one of the paintings they
failed to identify – Manet’s Bar at the Folies Bergere, is actually in the Courtauld.
Never mind. The next starter was about an artist. Hmm. Morgan Haigh took that
with Augustus John. Trees in Britain gave another bonus, and Courtauld were
in the lead. Neither team managed to dredge up catastrophe theory for the next
starter. Neither team managed a gettable starter involving knowing works by
Hill and Mill thus giving them herb which rhymes with them – dill. A third
consecutive starter went unanswered about studies into the behaviour of
honeybees. It seemed like a long time since we’d had a correct answer, so it
was a blessed relief when Finn Dignan identified Thomas Carlyle as the man who
coined the phrase ‘ the dismal science’. Actors’ directorial debuts did nowt
for any of us. This brought us to the music set. I wonder how many people said
Andrew Lloyd Webber for the next starter. It was of course Paganini with his
well known ‘Theme of the South Bank Show’. Morgan Haigh took that. More
variations on this particular piece by different composers brought just a
single bonus, but in this low scoring contest every bonus looked like it was
going to count. Zara Elstein took a starter for her team with the term fam.
Organic Chemistry provided me with another lap of honour answer, since I
remember from the old Pears Quiz Companion that Kekule is noted alongside the
words benzene ring. Amazingly I also knew toluene and naphthalene. Well, I’m
very sorry, but doing 4 laps of honour in one show is taking the proverbial.
LSE managed a brace of these. The next question had a helpful reference to a
painting by Monet – you didn’t even need to be an art student to know that this
was obviously Rouen, and Morgan Haigh picked that particular piece of low
hanging fruit. Royal Parks brought what I think was Courtauld’s first full
house of the contest. This meant that by the 20 minute mark they led by 85 –
60.
Finn Dignan was the first to
recognise a set of Eagles for the next starter. Oh, look, I said - it's another art set of
bonuses. What were the chances of that happening? These went begging. Finn Dignan
was nowhere near with his reckless buzz to the next starter, but the Courtauld
couldn’t identify the widely acclaimed world’s worst poet, William Topaz McGonagall.
Nonetheless, Courtauld seemed to have their collective tail up, since Harry
Prance even took the next Maths starter. Astronomy and Geography provided one
bonus. To be fair the second picture starter is often art based, so we can’t
really complain that this week’s showed us a sculpture. Harry Prance identified
the composition as a pieta. Unsurprisingly the set of paintings that followed brought the Courtauld a full
house, and unless the LSE were to develop an hitherto undisplayed turn of foot,
they were going to win now. Nancy Collinge won the buzzer race to identify
Geraint Thomas as the writer of The Tour According to G. National capitals
beginning with the same two letters brought nowt. Finn Dignan hadn’t given up
and won the buzzer race to identify the term pastoral. Terms used in newspaper
titles brought a full house, and at least gave the LSE a fighting chance of a
triple figure final score. No point asking the next chemistry starter, and so
we moved on without anyone buzzing. Nobody fancied a punt at various Siegfried’s,
so Harry Prance took that unconsidered trifle. Royal figures who appeared in
Hugh Thomas’ History of the Slave Trade saw them incorrectly answer the first
and then the contest was gonged, Courtauld winning by 165 – 90.
Well done Courtauld. In all honesty
this really wasn’t a great contest. Courtauld only managed a 42% conversion
rate. LSE did better with 56%, but they had so few bonuses to try and convert
since only Finn Dignan was slinging any buzzer for them. Against a decent
buzzing team with more balanced team, and a less friendly set of questions I’d
suggest that the Courtauld might struggle in round 2, but hey, what do I know?
Jeremy Paxman Watch
When the Courtauld failed to hazard a
guess for the hormones starter he chuckled, “No, I can see the problem, Courtauld.
You don’t study much of that, do you?!” No Jez, neither do the LSE for that
matter, although you chose not to patronise them as well.
Interesting that, because this seemed
to be an overt acknowledgement that the Courtauld weren’t going to be able to
do anything with questions on the Sciences. Maybe it was just me, but it did
seem to me that this was a very Arts heavy, Science light show this week. Coincidence?
Maybe. When the Courtauld only scored on the last bonus for great paintings of
the 1880s he rather sneered, “It may be enough to salvage some honour . . . but
I doubt it.”
Harry Prance offered a speculative
punt of Swinburne as the world’s worst poet, to which JP replied in indignation
“Swinburne?! He would be mortified!” Quite right – everyone knows he was the
jockey who rode Shergar to the 1981 Derby.
Interesting Fact That I Didn’t
Already Know Of The Week
There are no flower beds in Green
Park because Catherine of Braganza didn’t want Charles II picking them to give
to his floozies.
1 comment:
Yeah, not the best match, though perhaps better than the low scoring one from last month, and I agree that Courtauld will need to improve, especially on the bonuses (12/28, compared to L.S.E.'s 10/18), to reach the QFs.
On Monday, Dave, your lot at Goldsmiths play Southampton. No show the week after due to LIVE athletics; when the show returns, hopefully the week after, Huddersfield will be making its UC debut.
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