The Teams
St. John’s. Cambridge
Thomas Clark
Louis George
Jonathan Chan (Capt.)
Kyanna Ouyang
Trinity, Cambridge
Hattie Innes
Navonil Neogi
Ludwig Brekke (Capt.)
Luke Kim
Shall we cast an eye over the form book, dearly beloved? St.
John’s are arguably the more battle hardened team, having lost twice, but won
through from the first round repechage, before losing their first QF to
Emmanuel. Trinity had made sweet progress, before suffering the wrath of the
mighty Edinburgh team in their own first QF. You pays yer money . . .
I did think that both teams sat on their buzzers a little for
the first starter. When you hear the name Carrara, that ought to be the signal
for you to buzz in with ‘marble’. When the question finished, Jonathan Chan was
first to chance his arm, supplying the correct answer. Foodstuffs that form the
titles of books yielded just one bonus. Neither team knew that the Spanish word
for the mouth of a river is Ria. Nobody knew the term abscissa for the next
starter either. However, Jonathan Chan did know that Cape Farewell is the tip
of Greenland. Scientific terms beginning with hap – gave St. John’s a full
house, and meant that last week’s lap of honour free zone was a one off, since
haploid set me off around the sofa. A good fast buzz by Navonil Neogi saw him
identify the first lines of Camus’ The Plague. County tops bonuses stubbornly
yielded just the one correct answer. Thomas Clark knew that the drosophilia
order of insects take their name from words meaning dew loving. Bonuses on 1982
in literature brought 2 correct answers. So, as we approached the 10 minute
mark, St. John’s had comfortably had the best of the opening exchanges, and led
by 60 – 15.
The first picture starter saw Luke Kim identify Lake Baikal
from a map. Good shout, that. Three more lakes, each being the deepest of its
respective continent brought a full house, making a significant inroad into the
St. John’s lead. Various Browns took another ten point chunk out of it was
Ludwig Brekke won that buzzer race. Shipwrecks listed as protected wrecks by
Historic England brought two correct answers, which gobbled up the rest of the
lead. All square. Jonathan Chan recognised a reference to the ever popular
Interrobang. Science stuff beginning with c brought just the one bonus. A
science starter about the number of Newtons needed to do something or over
passed by all of us. Luke Kim recognised several things which all occurred in
the 1510s. 2 bonuses gave Trinity the lead for the first time. This lead
increased when Ludwig Brekke very quickly recognised Sia for the music starter.
Bonuses followed on 2 songs each, looking for the artist performing the first
of each, who also wrote for the artist performing the second. None of them did
any good for any of us. The next starter gave us some pretty good clues to
Wuthering Heights, but neither team could get it. Neither team could get that
the Daniel K. Inouye telescope in Hawaii is used to study the Sun. Louis George
stopped the rot, buzzing in early to identify the subject of The Black Jacobins
as the Haitian Revolution. Two bonuses were just enough to give St. John’s back
the lead, and just approaching the 20 minute mark the score was 95 to 90.
Louis George also knew a string of Italian words beginning
with fo. Fo’ sure. Diseases and their vectors brought a timely full house. Luke
Kim took a flier on the next starter which alluded to a group of elements on
the Periodic table, zigging with noble gases, which allowed Jonathan Chan to
zag with halogens. We had literature in 1983 earlier, and now we had bonuses of
international events of 1981. Two bonuses were taken, and suddenly the St. John’s
lead was looking ominous. Nobody recognised the work of Ohara Koson. Jonathan
Chan seemed convinced that his answer to the next starter, histology, was
wrong. Well he was wrong about that. This earned bonuses on works in the kocho –
e genre depicting birds and flowers. St. John’s only managed one, but the lead
was growing, and the time remaining was shrinking. Various works linked to the
words ‘How to’ gave Ludwig Brekke the chance to strike back for Trinity. They
could have done with a full house, but a difficult set on collaborative fiction
only yielded one correct answer while eating up precious time. Nobody knew the
next starter about the Vendee. Nobody knew the next starter about the way CS
Lewis used the word drab either. Luke Kimm knew that the River Shannon rises in
County Cavan. One bonus on Hng Kong was not enough, even though Luke Kim won
the buzzer race to identify electrons for the next starter. There was no time for
Science bonuses. The contest ended, with St. John’s winning with 155 – 125.
Bad luck Trinity – never an easy team to beat, but they can
be pleased with the fight they put up. Well done St. John’s – one more win and the
semi finals await.
Interesting Fact That I Didn’t Already Know Of The Week
Sorry – nothing stood out for me this week, although there
were plenty of things I didn’t already know.
1 comment:
Starter watch:
Thomas Clark - 1
Louis George - 2
Jonathan Chan - 5
Kyanna Ouyang
Hatty Innes
Navonil Neogi - 1
Ludvig Brekke - 3
Luke Kim - 4 (1)
Winner: Jonathan Chan
Post a Comment