The Teams
Reading
Sylvain Jesudoss
Margaret Ounsley
Michael Hutchinson (capt.)
Kira Bishop
Imperial
Max Zeng
Fatima Sheriff
Michael Mays (capt.)
Gilbert Jackson
Well, here we are again, dearly beloved. I’m so sorry that it
has taken me so long to post this. It was a busy week, and then I’ve been
preparing for a trip to Warsaw next week – my first European sketching trip for
2 years. No excuse really. Still, shall we have a look at the form book? In
heir first quarter Reading won a tough match against Birmingham 170 – 13, while
Imperial thrashed Kings in their first quarter. I know many who fancy Imperial
as favourites to take the title. Well, I’m not so mean that I’m going to
scupper anyone’s chances by tipping them to win.
It didn’t appear as if Reading had heard that Imperial were
favourites as Margaret Ounsley recognised several uses of the word gross for
the first starter. Etymologically unrelated words beginning with the same first
three letters were a UC special set of the sort where you should expect to get
a full house, and Reading were happy to oblige on this score. I didn’t know
that the Dunlap Broadsides were printed copies of the American Declaration of
Independence but Michael Hutchinson did, and what’s more, he did so early. Reading
took two bonuses on my favourite 19th century novel, Vanity Fair.
-Right- thought Imperial – that’s enough of that – and Gilbert Jackson buzzed
in to identify the description of the moon Europa. I thought Platonic solids
are what you feed babes if you want them to grow up to be philosophers, but no,
it’s something to do with Geometry apparently. I didn’t get any of the bonuses
on them, but then neither did Imperial, so fair’s fair. When the picture round
showed us the coat of arms of a European country’s navy I though – here comes
Geographer extraordinaire Max Zeng. He did too, and correctly identified Italy.
Surprisingly Imperial only took two bonuses on quarters of the shield and the
maritime republics they symbolised. Margaret Ounsley knew that the cap or
helmet of Hades confers invisibility upon the wearer for the next starter.
Bonuses on opera yielded us both a single bonus. Nobody worked out that the three
letters which stand for numerical values which appear consecutively on a qwerty
keyboard (X – C – V ) spell out the number 95. We were right on the cusp of the
10 minute mark, and Reading had a lead of 60 – 30.
The lead increased as Michael Hutchinson was first to buzz in
to recognise Madagascar as a producer of vanilla and other specified
commodities. Diane Fossey – who was apparently not the choreographer of Cabaret
– brought us both a full house of bonuses. At this point the Imperial skipper
found his buzzer range and won the race to identify some of the illegitimate
kids of Charles II. The Maths and Physics bonuses that followed did no good for
any of us. The Italian artistic term ciaroscura suggested to me that Sciagraphy
is the study of the projection of shadows. Neither team got that.The Whiteboy
Shuffle and the Sellout are works by Paul Beatty (I’m afraid Paul Who? in LAM
Towers), which Fatima Sheriff well knew to take the next starter. So called
coloured cities of Rajasthan followed and we both took two correct answers for
Jaipur and Jodhpur. Gawd knows what meiosis is all about, but Max Zeng
correctly supplied it as the answer to the next starter. So all four of the
Imperial team had correctly answered starters now, and you sensed that the
Imperial Juggernaut was really starting to work up a head of steam. (I love a
mixed metaphor. That’s my excuse and I’m sticking to it.) This impression
seemed to be confirmed when Imperial took a full house on bonuses of shared
papal names which gave them the lead for the first time. Gilbert Jackson was in
early to identify the work of Saint-Saens. Works by other composers parodied in
said Carnival brought another full
house. 5 minutes earlier you’d have put good money on Reading being the first
of the two teams to break through the 100 barrier, yet Imperial had done it,
while Reading still languished on 80.Which European country – began JP and I
thought – Max Zeng’s in here. Mind you so was I , knowing that Poland was
partitioned more than once in the 19th century. Going there on
Tuesday. Faked correspondence brought two more correct answers. Incidentally
this meant that Imperial had achieved the relatively rare feat of scoring 100
points during the course of which their opponents scored 0. Mind you, they
lost of them when Michael Mays came in
too soon for the next starter. I bet that Reading understood the question
better than I did, but neither of us came up with the answer – linear momentum.
Undeterred by the previous starter Michael Mays was in very quickly to identify
the word patina. Wasn’t she Troy Tempest’s girlfriend – aqua Patina? Two word
terms of which the first word is new brought another two correct answers. All
of which meant that Imperial led by 145 – 80, and it seemed as if the semi final
beckoned for them.
It seemed even more so when Max Zeng identified a treaty
between Russian and Chinese empires. Anagrams of transuranic elements looked to
be an easy set, and I told myself I could only have a lap of honour if I had a
full house. I did too, and so did Imperial, although to be fair they didn’t get
up and run around their chairs like I did, so I think that’s a moral victory
for me. At last Michael Hutchinson managed to buzz his way back by identifying
a photograph of Nina Simone for the second picture starter. Other performers
featured in the 2021 Documentary Summer of Soul brought two bonuses – one of
whom I once met in Athens airport – BB King (long story, ask me if you ever
meet me). Fatima Sheriff won the buzzer race to identify that the two composers
referenced in the question were both Bernsteins. 20th century poets
as described by Seamus Heaney brought just the one bonus. Gilbert Jackson knew
various species of Macaque for the next starter. Fortresses brought two
bonuses, which saw Imperial again through the 200 points barrier. Max Zeng knew
Boron for the next starter on the periodic table. Now, be honest, when JP
announced that the next bonus set was on apples in art, did you instantly think
Rene Magritte? I did. He was the last bonus, and Imperial also took the first
on Cezanne. Sez who? You had to stick with the next question, but the mention
of the worship of Artemis at the end gave both Margaret Ounsley and me the
answer of Ephesus. Bonuses on McLarens brought two correct answers. That was it,
the contest was gonged, with Imperial winning 225- 110.
Well done to both teams. Congratulations to Imperial, first
through to the semis. You’ll probably be tagged favourites by most now, but I
have faither in you that you can cope. Not panicking after Reading’s lightning
start was impressive. Bad luck Reading, but you can still make it.
Interesting Fact That I Didn’t Already Know Of The Week.
The three letters which stand for numerical values which
appear consecutively on a qwerty keyboard (X – C – V ) spell out the number 95.
Great question I was too slow to work out.
1 comment:
Starter watch:
Sylvian Jesudoss
Margaret Ounsley - 3
Michael Hutchinson - 3 (1)
Kira Bishop
Max Zeng - 5
Fatima Sheriff - 2
Michael Mays - 2 (1)
Gilbert Jackson - 3
Winer - Max Zeng
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