Good morning dearly beloved. No, I’m afraid that I don’t know any details about what caused one of last night’s contenders to withdraw. Look, what with covid, this is the world we live in at the moment, I guess. It isn’t the first time that only 3 contenders have taken part, as far as I know. I think that Magnus mentioned in “I’ve Started So I’ll Finish” that the first final was between three contenders – however I could have that wrong. Let’s concentrate on the three contenders that we did have.
Graeme
Jackson was answering on Grace Kelly, the answer to the question - which
Hollywood film star had an Olympic Gold Medallist father, won a Best Actress
Oscar, and went on to become European royalty? Graeme Jackson impressed with
his round, snapping answers out quickly and economically, missing but little. I
surprised myself managing to get a couple right to start me on the way.
Ironically, considering that there were only 3 specialist rounds last night, it
was one of my better performances, since I managed to get into double figures.
Four of these
points came from Jill Leatherbarrow’s round on Ellis Peter’s Brother Cadfael
novels. It was a long time ago, a good 2 years at least, that I read a lot of
our local library’s stock of the novels, but I did take a couple of obvious
points – Shrewsbury and St. Winifred’s – and a couple of details I remembered
from other books. Jill did well, just missing out on double figures, but it was
clear that she knew her stuff. Off the top of my head I don’t know how many
Cadfael novels there are, but I know enough about some of them to vouch that
Jill’s knowledge of them is pretty comprehensive.
The last
contender of the first round heats to take the seat for his specialist was
David Preece. Now, I have to confess that anything regarding the Beatles
usually has me licking my lips and murmuring – fill yer boots ‘ere, son - . As
such I’d say that my 5 points was decent, although missing out on Brian Jones was
frustrating. Never mind, David doubled my score. 10 points, as I so often say,
is a good score in the current era of the show. It meant that there was
daylight between him and leader Graeme, but not so much that he faced an
impossible task in the GK.
Jill
returned to the chair first for the GK round. She was not going at all badly,
either, but for the last half minute she was just unable to find any more
correct answers which left her becalmed on a respectable 16.
David’s job
was clear. Going by what we’ve seen in the majority of the shows, he was going
to need a score of at least 20, which meant he needed a double figure score on
GK to really give himself a chance. He got it too, just, squeezing in some
French cheeses as the white line of death snaked its way around the score. To
put this into perspective, it meant that Graeme Jackson would need a score of 9
to get an outright win. That’s not a massive target, but on the other hand, it
isn’t a negligible score either.
As the round
progressed, Graeme was missing a few he might possibly have got in a less
pressurized situation. However, crucially he was just keeping his nose ahead on
the clock. He gave his 8th correct answer to equal David’s score,
and then his 9th to give him the win. That was as far as he went,
though anything else is just gilding. He became the 2th qualifier out of 24 for
the semis. Well done, sir, and I wish you good luck in the semi finals.
Now, I asked
myself, how are they going to fill in time until the end of the show? They did
it by putting up the faces of the 24 semi finalists in groups of 4 and showing
the piece to camera that one of each group did after winning their heat. It’s
always nice to see contenders talk about the standard of quizzers who have won
a series, so I didn’t mind this bit at all.
So that’s
the first round done, dearly beloved, and we’ve already seen this year’s
winner. As to who that will be, or at least, the contenders most likely to get
to the final, well, I would d a preview, but I’m off on a sketching trip to
Warsaw a little later today, so I think I might leave that for a few days.
The Details
Graeme Jackson |
Grace Kelly |
12 |
0 |
9 |
2 |
21 |
2 |
Jill Leatherbarrow |
The Brother Cadfael Novels |
9 |
1 |
7 |
1 |
16 |
2 |
David Preece |
The Beatles Recording Sessions |
10 |
0 |
10 |
2 |
20 |
2 |
3 comments:
My first thought when watching this episode was "I wonder if Londinus knows why there were just three contenders?"
Enjoy your trip away
It would certainly have been a last minute withdrawal. I have heard it said that someone in the production team might be invited to step into the vacant slot in this scenario. This clearly didn't happen, most likely because the withdrawal was extremely last minute, leaving insufficient time for a set of specialist subject questions to be written. The montage of semi-finalists at the end was nice but I wouldn't take it as read that the quartets shown on screen reflect the line up of each semi final.
In predictable Mastermind style, the Grace Kelly questions shied away from the more controversial (and inevitably more interesting) aspects of her fascinating life.
The first final as you say had only 3 contestants: Nancy Wilkinson winning ahead of Joan Taylor and Beryl Leatham Thomas.
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