Tuesday, 7 January 2025

University Challenge 2025 - round two Darwin, Cambridge v. Edinburgh

The Teams

Darwin, Cambridge

Rebecca McClelland

Sophie Willis

Harrison Whitaker (Capt.)

Rowan Stewart

Edinburgh

David Aiton

Jess Mellor

Greg Myles (Capt)

Caitlin Self

Ah, here we are again, Dearly Beloved. OC has finished its Christmas specials and we’re back to the competition proper. I Can’t Believe It’s Not University Challenge finished last week, meaning we’re back to the real mccoy. I noticed that Mastermind Lite hasn’t finished yet, but hopefully we’ll be back to normal soon.

One of the small pleasures of UC is watching for that moment when one word or two unlocks a question. In the case of the first starter it was Baron Hausmann, which gave Harrison Whitaker the answer of Paris. Paintings of enslaved people brought 2 bonuses from what was not the easiest set. A very excited Harrison Whitaker won the buzzer race to answer Argonauts for the second starter. He bonuses on extinct creatures taught me something. I had always thought that the Dimetrodon lived in the Triassic, but it was even earlier, the Permian. We both took the other two bonuses. Nobody knew about prosecutions for blasphemy for the next starter. The next starter about contributions to a reference work could only be answered by the OED or the Britannica. Harrison Whitaker zigged with Britannica allowing Jess Mellor to zag with OED and get Edinburgh moving. Bonuses on cinema in Taiwan brought 2 bonuses. So to the picture starter. Yes, to be honest I was disappointed that it was a scientific diagram of something that Sophie Willis informed us was called the Krebs process – presumably named after the character played by Steve Kanaly in Dallas. (ask your grandparents). Three more pictures of the cycle asking about various bits of it brought just the one correct answer. More science followed with a bewilderingly long chemistry starter. Greg Myles knew the iodine clock reaction. A set on nixtamalization – me neither – brought me a lap of honour for knowing niacin is vitamin B3 – while Edinburgh took just the last bonus. This took us to the 10 minute mark with Darwin leading 55 – 30. It was becoming an interesting contest, but neither team was pulling up any trees with the bonuses.

With the next starter you just had to wait until the name Bamako made it clear the country in question was Mali. Harrison Whitaker made no mistake, timing his buzzer run to perfection. The French department of Yvelines brought two bonuses, but being realistic Darwin probably could have known the treaty of St. Germain for a full house. Still, another Harrison Whitaker starter followed in short order on film director Ari Aster. Place names that are etymologically related brought another single bonus. So to the music starter, and David Aiton recognised an arrangement of Pictures at an Exhibition by Mussorgsky. More classical music brought 1 bonus when a good save saw them swap Satie for Saint Saens at the last moment. David Aiton took his second consecutive starter recognising various uses of the word arc. Women In Science saw a harsh but fair ruling, disallowing Dorothy Hodgkins for Dorothy Hodgkin. This meant that they took just the one on the set. Caitlin Self took Edinburgh’s third consecutive starter, knowing that Attila (the Hun, not the Stockbroker) was nicknamed the Scourge (of God). Extinct Germanic languages brought two bonuses. Now, the next question began “Which figure of Anglo Saxon legend . . . “ Come on, it’s got to be worth an interruption for Grendel after that, hasn’t it? Both teams sat on their buzzers for a moment or two until his mother was mentioned, which allowed Harrison Whitaker to shake off the doldrums and get his team buzzing again. A lovely set on Shakespeare’s characters as they would appear in an alphabetical list brought two bonuses. David Aiton knew that con sordino means played with a mute. The tree of Life brought jus one bonus, still at just after the 20 minute mark the score stood at 110 – 95 in Darwin’s favour, and it was anybody’s game.

So to the second picture starter, and what one of my less enlightened friends once called ‘one of them pre-Raphaelite bints.’ It looked more like Lizzie Siddal than Jane Morris, I thought, and so did Harrison Whitaker. We were right. More paintings by other artists for which Ms. Siddal modelled brought just the one bonus. Harrison Whitaker was the first to get clues to words beginning with pep for the next starter. US astronomer Debra Fisher brought me my second lap of honour opportunity for the Doppler Effect. Then another for diffraction, while Darwin managed just the one bonus. The next starter suggested Sri Lanka, and David Aiton buzzed in with just that answer. Bonuses on the archaeological excavation of Aphrodisias ( a made up name, surely ) in Turkey brought two bonuses, but Edinburgh were still a full house behind – and we hadn’t seen many of them in this contest. Various Ao – names ad words fell to that man Whitaker again. Ninette de Valois yielded just one bonus, but more importantly ran the clock down. Then a candidate for the baby elephant moment yielded me another lap of honour opportunity for knowing precession for the next starter. Greg Myles had it too. Two bonuses on Mohism brought nowt, and then the gong ended the competition. Darwin won by 155- 125.

Neither team impressed with the bonuses. Darwin’s BCR was 48 while Edinburgh’s was 42. I’m tempted to say that the difference between the teams was Harrison Whitaker’s buzzer speed. Whatever the relative strength of the opposition, 19 starters in two games is serious form. However, that BCR is a concern.

Amol Watch

Amol started off paying tribute to Harrison Whitaker’s 11 starters in the first round. Fair enough, it was a hell of a performance, but you gotta admit that was putting a lot of pressure on the Darwin skipper for this match. Maybe this was why he was so hyped up for the competition that with the second starter he committed the breach of show etiquette which saw him buzz and shout out the answer before his name was announced. Amol, possibly realising that he himself might have been partly responsible allowed it but reminded him to wait for Roger.

Interesting Fact That I Didn’t Already Know of the Week

In 1697 Thomas Aikenhead became the last person in Britain to be executed for blasphemy.

Baby Elephant Walk Moment

I need the name of a chemical here. Widely used in chemistry courses to demonstrate rates of reaction and chemical kinetics, the clock reaction, developed by Hans Heinrich Landolt, involves measuring the time taken for a colourless solution of reagents to turn blue as what element reacts with a starch indicator.

I slept well last night after playing that question again on the iplayer. In fact I nodded off about halfway through it.