The Teams
Imperial
Max Zeng
Fatima Sheriff
Michael Mays (capt.)
Gilbert Jackson
Reading
Sylvian Jesudoss
Margaret Ounsley
Michael Hutchinson (capt.)
Kira Bishop
One match, two teams, and it
all comes down to this, dearly beloved. I’m tempted to say let’s forget about
the form book, but we can’t really. In my preview posted on Sunday I explained
that I was tipping Imperial but could foresee circumstances in which Reading
could win. It’s difficult to ignore Imperial’s commanding win over Reading in
the quarters, but ignore it we must. JP reminded us that there are champions
from past series who won by avenging a loss in the final.
Not that it looked likely to
happen when superbuzzer Max Zeng won the race to identify Thucydides from JP’s
question. A brace of bonuses on trees in English poetry followed. I didn’t
think these were at all easy either. I had the Tennyson, but that was it. Reading
struck back through superduperbuzzer Michael Hutchinson who knew the British
winners of the Modern Pentathlon at the Tokyo Olympics. Modes in music promised
me little – I managed a couple though. Reading took a full house, proving that
they were not just here to make up the numbers. The point of the next question
was the mathematical point, which Michael Mays knew. I awarded myself a lap of
honour on the mathsy/science bonuses that followed for knowing ‘octave’. Last
lap of honour of the series, so that’s my exercise for this year done till the
next series starts in the summer. Bonuses took Imperial to 40, and we were
arriving early at the picture starter. As soon as JP said it was going to be a
map, I waited for the inevitable Max Zeng buzz. I wasn’t disappointed, as he
identified the source of the river Niger. Three more Wetlands of International
Importance followed – and for the first two captain Michael Mays didn’t bother
asking, and just uttered the magic words – nominate Zeng. Yes, it was a full
house. I visited Amsterdam a few years ago now, so I knew about the Badass
Flag, and so did Gilbert Jackson. Bonuses on philosophy saw Imperial only able
to add another 5 points to their score. Nonetheless, this meant that they lead
by 80 to 25 at the ten-minute mark, and things were going according to the
script.
The lead stretched further
when Fatima Sheriff won the buzzer race to identify Atropine. New York Drag
slang – not a subject I recall any previous UC questions about – passed Imperial
by without troubling the scorer. I was a bit surprised that they missed voguing
– too young possibly? Right. With Imperial 10 points away from triple figures,
this was time for Reading to go off script and ad lib a bit. Michael Hutchinson
mentally drew lines across the Periodic Table and came up with the shape of Pi.
Mmm, pie. Sorry. Beatrice – or Tilly – Shilling was another illustrious member
of the Who? family to be the subject of a set of bonuses, brought a timely full
house. This brought us to the music starter. I can’t say that I’m really
surprised that nobody recognised the opera “Nixon in China”. For the next
starter, asking for a Scottish king, a son of Malcolm II ‘Canmore’, Margaret
Ounsley chanced her arm too soon, allowing Michael Mays to eventually toss in a
speculative David I, which much to his surprise turned out to be the right
answer. This earned the very dubious reward of the bonuses on Nixon in China. Only
the last one yielded points. Michael Hutchinson then made an extremely good
buzz to identify Frantz Fanon. Bonuses on Carl ‘Who’ Woese brought them 1
correct answer, but at least kept the score moving and the gap narrowing. When
I heard the next starter, referring to a Shakespeare play which mentioned
carnival misrule I knew the answer, and thought that this looked very much like
a Margaret Ounsley question. I was right. This brought Reading a set on nude
portraits. I say, steady the buffs. (The in-the-buffs?) I didn’t have a Scooby about
any of these and neither did Reading. Still, at the 20-minute mark Imperial’s
lead had been reduced as they led by 10 – 70. And the go-forward was with
Reading.
Michael Hutchinson knocked off
10 points knowing that the wife of the 2nd president of the USA was
Abigail Adams. The Kingdom of Prussia knocked another 10 points off, reducing
the gap to 15. The next starter was another Margaret Ounsley one, as she was
the first to recognise that the word sward is often paired with the adjective
green. One bonus on Islamic scholars mentioned in The Canterbury Tales was
needed to tie the scores, and another to take the lead. They took one, and the
scores were tied. How long was left? Difficult to know considering that time
had to be left for the presentation of the trophy. Nobody recognised the work
of Yinka Shonibare for the second picture starter. That man Hutchinson took the
next starter on a chap called Stokes. One of the picture bonuses took them to
120, and a 15 point lead. Another Geography question followed, and inevitably Max
Zeng won the race to name the Brecon Beacons National Park. 2 bonuses on planned
NASA space missions gave Imperial the narrowest possible lead of 5 points. How
much time was left? Couldn’t be a lot. Nobody knew the carnivorous sundew plant
for the next starter. Right, let me tell you that there was time for just one
more question, although neither team could have known that. In order to win,
Reading had to win the buzzer race, and had to get it right. Anything else
would leave Imperial as winners. The thoroughly admirable Michael Hutchinson
won the buzzer race. But. . . he got it wrong. We were gonged before the
question was completed, with Imperial winning by 125 to 115.
Imperial were presented the
trophy by Nobel prize winning scientist Sir Andre Geim. Judging by his
achievements he’s probably been the subject of a UC question in the past – or will
be in future. It was a fair result – they have been the strongest team through
the series. But congratulations too to Reading, who must have given them the
fright of their lives. I notice that Michael Hutchinson is now a teacher. I can’t
help wondering if he will go in for Mastermind one day, and become the next
teacher to win it?
Congratulations to both teams
and thank you for the great entertainment you have given us. Thanks also to
Jeremy Paxman. I can’t imagine that his condition makes it any easier to
present the show, and we can be grateful that he chooses to continue doing so.
Interesting Fact That I Didn’t
Already Know Of The Week
Maybe I was just concentrating
on the show too much, but I’m sorry – nothing especially grabbed me last night.
5 comments:
Excellent final; not the best, but a pretty decent close final nonetheless. Either team would've deserved to win.
This hasn't been the best series of UC, but even a lesser series is still perfectly enjoyable viewing, and its forgivable in the circumstances. I can only echo Paxo's comments thanking everyone who took part and who worked hard behind the scenes to get this series done. Hopefully the next series will be/has already been made under better conditions.
Been good to see you blogging again as well Dave; keep up the good work!
Thanks Jack. It was a bit of a nervy final, wasn't it? Good, though.
I got through every episode! Really enjoyed it.
I think when talking about Reading, it's also important to note that their achievements are even more impressive given that they had a change in their line-up midway through the series, when Kira Bishop replaced Alex Skopic. I didn't form any particular opinion as to whether Kira or Alex was a better team member, but it should at least have made it somewhat more difficult to gel as a team without the same four throughout.
I wonder how long Jeremy Paxman will keep going? To the best of my knowledge he has no plans to retire as yet - if he gets through two more series, he'll have been presenting the show for a staggering thirty years!
Starter watch:
Max Zeng - 3
Fatima Sheriff - 1
Michael Mays - 2
Gilbert Jackson - 1
Sylvian Jesudoss
Margaret Ounsley - 2 (1)
Michael Hutchinson - 5 (1)
Kira Bishop
Winner: Michael Hutchinson
Wasn't there a graphene question in one of the quarter-finals?
Sorry Stephen, not sure about that. Memory's not what it was. Oh, and another thing - my memory's not what it was either.
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