The Teams
Manchester
Bluma De Los Reyes-White
Ilya Kullmann
Hiru Senehedheera (Capt
Dan Grady
Christ Church, Oxford
Eliza Dean
Melika Gorgianeh
Arthur Wotton (Capt)
Elliot Lowe
Howdy pardners and thank’ee kindly for joining me for another
wee dram in the last chance saloon. And following last week’s fine performance
from Christ Church it really was a case of you pays yer money and takes yer
choice here. I couldn’t pick a winner before we came under starter’s orders.
Hiru Senehedheera came in too early on the first starter,
which remained obscure until the mention of the answer’s trusted lieutenant,
Dessalines created the opening to allow Arthur Wootton in for his first starter
with Toussaint L’Ouverture. The Oxford skipper took 8 starters last time out,
so his buzzer finger would be crucial to CC’s chances of progression. Two
bonuses followed on digraphia. Hiru Senehedheera didn’t have to fish too deeply
for the mathematician Poisson to answer the next starter (see what I did
there?) Medical terms combining Greek and latin derivations, for example
neonatal, provided us both with a full house. Yeah, I did take a lap of honour.
Dan Grady won the buzzer race to provide the name King Kong for the next
starter. Two bonuses on Schopenhauer were taken. I loved the response to the
question about Ixion – it’s not in Percy Jackson so I don’t know! Various clues
to the word jazz went begging for the next starter. Anechoic chamber? Nope, me
neither but the Manchester skipper knew it for the next starter. Two bonuses on
the prophet Elijah followed. The picture starter brought a halt to the
Manchester charge as Arthur Wootton took his second starter recognising the locations
of the cities of Tokyo and Kyoto. More Japanese places with name elements in
common brought one bonus. This meant that as we neared 10 minutes the score
stood at 55 – 35 to Manchester.
None of us knew what ANT stood for so the next starter went
unanswered. Right, now I’m very sorry but the first words of he next starter, “Born
in 1791, which physicist – “ were enough for me to shout FARADAY! And so
confident was I that I’d completed another lap of honour before Hiru Senehedheera
buzzed in with the same. To be fair, it is a very short lap. A UC special set
on prominent thinkers whose name appears in other words proved to be
surprisingly tricky and we both only had the one. Ilya Kullmann buzzed in
before the next starter revealed that the Shakespeare title character it wanted
was female. He answered Macbeth. Cleopatra was the answer but CC shot wide of
the open goal. So the next starter asked about the four corners National
Monument in the USA. Oliver Wotton knew it was maintained by the Navajo nation.
Amol announced that their bonuses were on relativistic mechanics and I prepared
for the strains of the Baby Elephant Walk to start. Gawd knows what the
questions were about, but just like my good self, CC didn’t get any of them.
Nobody knew the Non-juror bishops for the next starter. Eliza Dean came in
early for the next starter on Negritude. Musical performers named in Angela
Davis’ work Blues Legacies and Black Feminism were not as hard a set as it
sounded, and CC failed to score. With the gap standing at 5 points we came to
the music starter. Nobody could identify the music from the ballet Swan Lake. Arthur Wotton won the buzzer race to answer about Robin Hood Bay to earn the dubious
reward of the music bonuses – more pas de deux from other ballets. Nul points.
CC were having a purple patch with the buzzer, but failures on the bonuses
meant that they weren’t pulling away from Manchester. Dan Grady stopped the rot
on the next starter which asked for gravitational waves. Blue plaques in North
Staffordshire paid fitting tribute to Elizabeth Wardle, the lady behind the Victorian
copy of the Bayeux Tapestry where the naked men in the borders seem to be
wearing cycling shorts. Currently in Reading Museum and check it out if you don’t
believe me. Manchester took a full house. Nothing daunted Arthur Wotton knew
that the upside down tree is the baobab for the next starter. A timely full
house on Jose Luis Borges gave CC the lead by 95 – 90 with just a few minutes
to show us who wanted it more.
Arthur Wotton certainly wanted it. He won the buzzer race
to identify two of the three German states that border Poland. Bonuses on de
Toqueville’s “Democracy in America” – which surely inspired Kim Wilde’s
immortal “Kids in America” – brought two correct answers, which meant that
Manchester would need a full house to even the scores. So to the second picture
starter. Elliot Lowe correctly identified a sculpture, of which one of the
figures depicted on it was Aeneas. Three more 17th century artistic
portrayals of the story of Aeneas netted now for them. Still, Manchester now
needed at least two visits to the table. Both teams sat on their buzzer a bit
for the next starter until Ilya Kullman identified Topkapi Palace as the
residence of the rulers of the Ottoman Empire. Bonuses on industrial catalysts
brought one correct answer. Would it be the catalyst that set off a Manchester
revival? It looked like it when Bluma de los Reyes-White gave the correct
answer of Nobel Prize winning scientist Calvin (the awards committee obviously
ignored his partner, Hobbes.) South American cities taking their names from
cities in Spain gave them a full house, and the lead. None of us knew the Roman
poet Sextus Propertius (or even his stupider brother Emptius Propertius). Hiru Senehedheera
came in too early and lost five on the next starter but CC could not take
advantage. The Manchester skipper made immediate amends, winning the buzzer
race to identify the painter Lucien Freud. The Japanese costume designer Emi
Wada did nothing for Manchester other than to run the clock down. Arthur Wotton’s
buzzer finger fired too early on the next question, but Manchester couldn’t
find the word wax to seal the deal. Yet still Captain Fantastic Wotton came
back to take the next starter on the word confederate. Only one bonus on small
choo choos in art left them one bonus behind Manchester. Dan Grady just won the
buzzer race on the next starter on Simone de Beauvoir. GONGGGG! Yes, after a
terrific match it all came down to the last starter. 145 played 130. Congratulations
to Manchester, and many commiserations to Christ Church.
Christ Church achieved a BCR of 37, while Manchester who
scored fewer starters had a BCR of 63, and that’s what won it and lost it.
Amol Watch
With the ANT starter Amol made he slightly cryptic comment “I
thought that was going to take you some time to work out.” Er, they didn’t work
it out, Amol. They had it wrong. Amol seemed surprised that Christ Church didn’t
know de Toqueville wrote ‘Democracy in America’. Well, they’re all easy if you
know them, Amol, and difficult if you don’t.
Interesting Fact That I Didn’t Already Know Of The
Week
Digraphia means languages which can be written in more than
one script.
Baby Elephant Walk Moment
In a ratio relating to the rest mass of a particle and its
mass when travelling a velocity v the Greek letter gamma is used to represent a
factor named after which Dutch physicist and Nobel laureate born (buzz)
2 comments:
Starter watch:
Bluma De Los Reyes-White - 1
Ilya Kullman - 1 (1)
Hiru Senehedheera - 4 (3)
Dan Grady - 3
Eliza Dean - 1 (1)
Melika Gorgianeh
Arthur Wotton - 7 (1)
Elliot Lowe - 1
Winner: Arthur Wotton (you seem to have misheard his first name as Oliver in both this review and the last time Christ Church appeared? But not in the reviews prior to that)
D'Oh! Thanks!
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