The Teams
Edinburgh
Ben Russell Jones
Lewis Thomas
Rishi Sundar (capt)
Al Karunaratne
Trinity
Hattie Innes
Navonil Neogi
Ludwig Brekke (capt)
Luke Kim
Now, I know what you’re thinking. – What does the form book
say, Dave?- Well, Edinburgh scored a mighty 270 in the first round when they
beat Peterhouse in the first round, but only just beat Bristol in a quality
match in the second. Trinity took out Durham by a margin of 100 in their first-round
match, before destroying St. Hilda’s in one of the most impressive performances
of the second round. So the form book pretty much washes its hands of the whole
business and says it’s anybody’s game. On paper, that is.
I had nothing for the first starter until the word ‘opium
eater’, and then answered ‘confessions’ at the same time as Rishi Sundar.
Bonuses on trees brought just the one correct answer. For the next starter
there was an awful lot of water that passed under the bridge between ‘thin
wafers of which element’ and ‘integrated circuits’, but I guessed silicon as in
chips, and so did Al Karunaratne, seemingly disbelieving that it could be that
simple. Who cares? -thought I, and set off on my lap of honour around the Clark
sofa. Physics in popular music promised little, but I had REM and EMF. Edinburgh
also took two. A great buzz by Lewis Thomas saw him identify Jeanne Baret as
reputedly the first woman to circumnavigate the world. Medieval History –
specifically battles of the Wars of the 1th century – brought a full house. I
was fuzzy on the next question, but Ben Russell Jones knew that the answer was
Fuzzy logic. Their bonuses were on the artist Kehinde Wiley, who painted the
official portrait of Barack Obama. They took one, but missed out on another
from that popular misconception that it’s Grand Central Station beneath Madison
Square Garden. It isn’t – it’s Pennsylvania Station, but I’ve heard question
masters say that it is before now. They’re always right, you know. I didn’t
know Puncak Jaya on the island of New Guinea for the picture starter, but then
neither did anyone else. The next starter asked for a cartoonist, and it was
some time before it became obvious that the answer was going to be Rube
Goldberg. Lewis Thomas won that buzzer race. The picture bonuses showed three
peaks, each of which is in the top ten highest peaks on islands in the world. Two
of these put Edinburgh up to 100, and completed a shut out of Trinity up to the
10 minute mark.
The game wasn’t over, of course, but Trinity really needed to
find their buzzer fingers. I really don’t know why they struggled so much at
the start of the match. Yes, Edinburgh were very good on the buzzer, not
unbeatably so. The wait for their first starter continued, as Ben Russell Jones
answered that Napoleon’s fateful number was 18. Fair enough. The magnitude of
stars provided just the one correct answer. Finally Trinity got their first
shot at a starter as Luke Kim buzzed in to identify the 16th century
scientist who was the subject of a 2009 opera. What’s more, he was right when
he said Kepler. I didn’t care for Jeremy’s snarky “You’re awake. Good!” The
pantheon of Gods in the Elder Scrolls video game thankfully drew on sources
that gave me a couple of points. Trinity scored a timely full house. Lewis
Thomas was the first to join up the dots on the next starter and come up with
the correct answer of Portland – as in vase, and bill. Fish whose name contains
the name of a mammal provided one correct answer. I don’t know how I have got
to 57 and a half years of age without knowing about gombocs, but I have. Still,
now that I know about this class of three-dimensional homogenous bodies I find
it to be a word which I would like to use more in conversation. Neither team
knew it either. Parmentier in the next starter suggested we were looking at
spuds, and again it was Lewis Thomas who took this one. Words beginning with
sph yielded two bonuses. For the music starter Navonil Neogi was in quickly to
recognise the werk of teutonic miserablists Kraftwerk. Three more performers or
groups who have cultivated robotic stage personas – announced Jeremy. Gary
Numan and Daft Punk will be there, I predicted. I was right too, although I
didn’t know Janelle Monae (another member of the Who? family in these parts, I’m
afraid. I was surprised Edinburgh didn’t have a punt at Daft Punk. They didn’t
need to, though. Neither team knew the term Cats paw. I can only suggest that
none of them are fans of the original series of Star Trek. A Maths starter
littered with letters and words like factorial followed, and Navonil Neogi
correctly answered the Exponential function. Gesundheit. A couple of bonuses on
language families reduced the gap between the teams to double figures, but it
was still looking like a long, long way back for Trinity. Especially when Lewis
Thomas took the next starter, recognising a definition of the phrase ‘nuclear
family’. New writers in the 70s brought a couple of correct answers. The
normally sure footed Lewis Thomas came in way too early on the next starter
asking for one of the new sports which debuted in the Tokyo Olympics. He zagged
with sport climbing, and lost , allowing Ludwig Brekke to zig with
skateboarding. A full house on flags that are mostly green meant that Trinity
trailed by 80 to 185 at the 20 minute mark, and they were not going to win, but
at least they were on the brink of a triple figure score.
Neither team recognised a description of the sternum. Now,
for the next starter we were asked who painted the 1917 Bride and Groom with Eiffel
Tower. I am sure we were shown this picture as a bonus in a picture round
earlier in this very series. I remembered it as Chagall, which is more than
either team managed. Neither team knew Zambia for the next starter either. This
brought us to the actual second picture starter – and it was Ben Russell Jones who
recognised the work of Kazimir Malevich. More works where the artist made
interesting and extensive use of white brought just the one bonus. I knew that
French words for war and wasp both begin with GU – I still remember reading
about the adventures of Sylviane la guêpe in an ancient French text book we
used in the first year in the comp. Bloody crap it was, too. Musicians and
instruments put Edinburgh just one starter away from 200. I visited Prague in
2017, and so I saw the Dancing House, and very proud of it the good people of
Prague are too. Ben Russell Jones won the race to identify where it is. Wild
Goats didn’t sound like the most promising subject for a set of bonuses, but Edinburgh
managed a couple of them. I didn’t really get the next question, but it
required nautical mile and nanometre, and it went begging. Now, I absolutely
loved dinosaurs as a kid after being given the How and Why Wonder Book of
Dinosaurs at a young age. I think it was
my first ever favourite book. So the 6 year old me would definitely have known
that the dinosaur whose name translates as double beam is Diplodocus. Al
Karunaratne knew it too, although his tone and gesture suggested that this had
been a bit of a shot in the dark. Places connected with the name Caesarea
earned a full house. Lewis Thomas did a rather strange thing. The next question
asked for a Scottish University. He knew it was either Strathclyde or Stirling.
He gave the wrong answer of Strathcylde, and so said the right answer,
Stirling, immediately after. Ta muchly, thought Ludwig Brekke, and answered
Stirling, looking across to Lewis Thomas as he did so. It was a rare moment of
light in what had been a pretty grim evening for Trinity. Subatomic particles
provided the bons First three flavours of quarks to be discovered? Immediately
I said the first three to come into my head – up, down and strange – and they
were right! Nastily the contest was gonged when Trinity were on 95, with a bonus
yet to come which might well have taken them to 100. The final score was 230 to
95.
I’m not crowning Edinburgh as favourites yet – I think they’ll
be relieved about that, but they did very well indeed. Trinity are no mugs at
all – they didn’t get many chances at bonuses but did very well with those they
did get. But oh, they must get their buzzer fingers working from the start next
time out.
Interesting Fact That I Didn’t Already Know Of The Week
Jeanne Baret is widely believed to be the first woman to circumnavigate
the world.
1 comment:
Starter watch:
Ben Russell Jones - 4 (2)
Lewis Thomas - 5 (2)
Rishi Sundar - 1
Al Karunaratne - 3
Hatty Innes
Navonil Neogi - 2 (1)
Ludvig Brekke - 2
Luke Kim - 1
Winner: Lewis Thomas
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