Tuesday, 24 March 2026

University Challenge - Quarter Final sudden death - Manchester v. Sheffield

The Teams

Manchester 

Ray Power

Kirsty Dickson

Kai Madgwick (Capt)

Rob Faulkner

Sheffield

Rhys Lewis

Abdelrahman Elsisi

Jacob Price (Capt)

Isobel Dobbie

The first of two winner takes all matches to round off the quarter final stages pitted two of my favourite teams against each other. Oh, don’t get me wrong, I like all teams on UC but there are some I really find myself rooting for and both of these Manchester and Sheffield teams fell into this category. Well, only one of them was walking out of the last chance saloon alive in this match.

A long and involved starter saw Kai Madgwick buzz in first to identify countries and territories whose internet domains all start with H. Regions of Chile would bring me 2 answers with O’Higgins and Punta Arenas. Manchester had the last one I didn’t but not the second which I did. Isobel Dobbie opened the Sheffield account when she answered the late American artist Keith Haring for the next starter. I remembered the Graeae from Greek mythology. Sheffield didn’t but took bonuses two and three anyway. Sadly Sheffield lost five of their points for an incorrect buzz for the next starter, allowing Kai Madgwick to supply the colour black. Had I listened to the whole of the first geometry bonus I would have been stunned into silence, but after the first few words I guessed ellipse and rewarded my correct answer with a lap of honour around the Clark sofa. As for Manchester, well, they took a full house. I will be honest, I didn’t work out that De Woeste Hoegte (a hit for chanteuse Kaatje Boousch ?) was the Dutch title of Wuthering Heights, nor did I get it from any of the other titles for it in other languages for the first picture starter. Kirsty Dickson worked it out. More of the same left me pointless, while Manchester managed the last one, Pride and Prejudice. Jacob Price knew kaons for the next starter. Documentaries by Wim Wenders brought a plethora of passes. Incidentally, I’m sure the Buena Vista Social Club was also name checked in Mastermind earlier. Abdelrahman Elsisi knew that the Zabur in Islam is equivalent to the book of Psalms in the Old Testament. The only 14 mountains recognised as being more than 8,000m above sea level brought us both a timely full house. So at just past ten minutes the match was nicely poised with Manchester leading 60-50.

Kai Madgwick worked out that two cocktails were originally made in Trinidad and Tobago. James Dewar, the vacuum flask man, brought one bonus. Ray Power knew the Act of Killing for the next starter. (That’s the documentary as opposed to the deed itself.) Jacquetta Hawkes (‘Sparrow’ to her mates, I believe) brought us both just one bonus. Jacob Price was first in to recognise The Cure for the music starter. Three bonuses on Bands that Dave Has Never Even Heard Of brought Sheffield a full house. I know little about economics but the computer reference in the question seemed to be screaming input and output to me so I was a bit surprised neither team could take the next starter. But then I didn’t know Sun Wukong for the next starter which Kai Madgwick did. The word moral, its derivatives and their earliest OED citations brought two correct answers and just brought a feeling that Manchester were starting to get the upper hand. Abdelrahman Elsisi struck back with Malmonides. Dutch architect Rem ‘Wie?’ Koolhass enabled me to be smug knowing that Boavista FC play in Porto and take the first bonus. Bonuses narrowed the gap and then Rhys Lewis supplied the musical term acciaccatura which narrowed it down to 10 points. Bonuses on the religious text, The Canticle of the Sun, saw Sheffield surprise me when they missed the first which so clearly pointed to St. Francis of Assisi. They took one to be just a single bonus behind Manchester. Who decided that this was quite enough of that sort of thing as Kai Madgwick buzzed early to answer a starter on Anish Kapoor. Manchester, mainly through Kirsty Dickson took a full house on DNA damage. I was disappointed none of the questions were about the kind of DNA damage that creates superheroes but there you are. On 20, Manchester led by 135 to 105 and both teams were still in it to win it.

None of us knew thioester for the next starter. Crikey moses, polyester is just about my level. Kai Madgwick knew King Frederick II for the next. Royal Succession brought two out of a gettable three bonuses. Didn’t matter though as Manchester were building momentum. Nobody recognised that the two leathery old geezers in stetsons in the photo for the 2nd picture starter were John Wayne and John Ford. (Permit me a small digression – forgive me if you’ve heard it. John Wayne played the centurion in the biblical epic The Greatest Story Ever Told. He didn’t have many lines. One of which was something like ‘Surely this man wuz the Son of Gaahhd’. He delivered the line in his trademark drawl, then director George Stephens asked, “Could you say it with a little more awe, John?” Wayne drew a breath, then said ‘Awww, surely this man wuz the Son of Gaahhd.) Rob Faulkner identified Belle Vue as a greyhound racing venue and earned Manchester the picture bonuses, showing more director – actor combinations who had made several films together. The two bonuses gave Manchester a lead which would require several unanswered visits to the table for Sheffield to wipe out and this looked ominous at this stage of the competition. It didn’t help that Kai Madgwick took the next starter on the poem Ulysses. A very, very nice UC special set on football clubs that are the only league clubs based in particular metropolitan or London boroughs brought no joy to Manchester but even then it still ran the clock down a bit. Had I not already had my lap of honour I’d have taken it for knowing sulphur dioxide as a constituent of acid rain for the next starter. Rhys Lewis had that one. Social Science bonuses refused to provide any of us with points. Abdelrahman Elsisi was in very quickly with the Sanskrit word sandhi – which was also the title of a song in Grease. Seaweed in cooking passed the team by. They were in such a rush that they passed on the last question even though Abdelrahman Elsisi had put the correct answer on the table. It wouldn’t affect the outcome of the match – that had already been decided. Nobody knew RK Narayan for the next starter. Jacob Price recognised the ph scale for the next starter. British screenwriters and their stage plays proved another bonus set of which they failed to get any. This would do bad things to their BCR. There was no time to complete the next starter, meaning that Manchester won by 185 to 135.

The stats, then. Manchester’s BCR was 56.6% to Sheffield’s 37%. This wasn’t the only reason why they won – they were generally faster on the buzzer too. That’s the way it goes. Hard lines Sheffield, but I’ve enjoyed watching your progress through the series.

Amol Watch

Enjoying your work, sir. Bamber Gascoigne, God rest his soul, always seemed to be thoroughly enjoying each contest, and so do you, which is an admirable quality.

Interesting Fact That I Didn’t Already Know Of The Week

The earliest known use of the word ‘moral’ is in The Clerk’s Tale in Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales. Look, I like words, okay?

Baby Elephant Walk Moment

Three questions for you, Manchester, on a shape. The lack of an algebraic equation for calculating the perimeter of what shape has led to the development of a number of formulae for approximating it, the simplest being pi times the sum of A and B, where A and B are the lengths of the semi-major and the semi-minor axes of the shapes? What didn’t you get it? I did, but still - Dum de dumdum dum dum dum dum dumdum.

Monday, 23 March 2026

Mastermind 2026 - Semi Final 3

The Tale of the Tape

Pete Simmonds

13

0

14

1

27

1

Eric Davies

12

0

12

0

24

0

Ross Taylor

10

0

9

0

19

0

Tomas Stevenson

8

0

9

3

17

3

 

Before we begin, let me pass on my heartfelt condolences to the family and friends of Tomas Stevenson. I did not know that he had passed away since the recording of the semi-final until the tribute at the end of the show. Rest in peace.

Well, after that it kind of puts everything into perspective. But it would be unfair to Tomas’ memory and to the other contenders if we did not review the show. So there looked to be a fairly widely spread roster for this third semi final. Pete Simmonds had been number 2 on our official table, Eric Davies joint 6th, Ross Taylor joint 15th and Tomas at 16th.

Ross kicked off answering on the western films of Clint Eastwood. I got one which was one more than I expected. Ross was perfect . . . right up until the last question, where he zigged with sausages when he shoulda zagged with fried eggs. Nonetheless 12 is a serious statement of intent in the specialist round of a semi final.

Pete Simmonds’ specialist subject, Hieronymus Bosch, never made any western films to the best of my knowledge. Incidentally my knowledge of the subject brought me three points so was obviously better than I thought it would be. Pete didn’t get them all right but he managed to go so quickly that he still accrued 11 points which meant that whatever happened in the next two rounds he was going to be in contention at the turn around.

Tomas was next into the chair. He was answering on the studio albums of Bruce Springsteen. The questions proved to be unkind and he finished the round with 4 and 1 pass.

Eric Davies was answering on my ‘banker’ subject, Cyrille Regis. You know, I didn’t know that he was still going when the Premier League started. I did know enough to score 4 and take my aggregate to 9. Eric really knew his stuff and he achieved a specialist score in the teens with 13 – a rara avis indeed in the semi finals.

Tomas achieved his own double figure score in the GK round. It would not bring him the win, but it was a good round, which pretty much set the tone for what was going to follow.

Pete Simmonds had scored an excellent 14 on General Knowledge in the first round heats. If he could repeat this performance then the last two contenders would have to really improve upon their own first round GK scores. Now, it’s all in the eye of the beholder and yes, the ear of the behearer, but I found Pete’s round harder than the other three. Just the way I found it. They’re all easy if you know the answers. Pete did repeat his first round GK score, and I felt that this was an even better performance than his first round bearing in mind the difficulty of the questions. Game over?

Not necessarily. For Ross Taylor, who had scored 9 on GK in the heats had started his round very well. Then he continued his round very well. Then he finished his round very well, and on the way he passed the target before he breasted the tape with a wonderful score of 15 for 27. This was a fine, fine display of general knowledge quizzing. Whether this is his normal level and the score in the heats was an aberration, or a case of the questions falling his way to enable him to outdo himself – well, we’ll have a better idea of that when we see the final in a few weeks.

You have to feel for Eric Davis. The preceding two rounds had been so good that he must have felt as if he was staring down the barrel of a gun. Under the circumstances I give him credit for producing a GK round of 12 that was as good as his GK round in the heats. Only good enough for third place, but he can console himself that he would have been a contender in either of the other semi finals we have seen so far.

Mind you, Pete Simmonds’ 25 would have been good enough to win either of them. He’ll be missed in the final, but I wouldn’t describe it as a travesty of justice by any means. For Ross had come from nowhere and had to produce a brilliant performance to win – which he did. Many congratulations Ross. I thoroughly enjoyed your performance tonight. And following last year’s precedent I will not be scuppering any of our contenders’ chances by predicting who will win, so you’re all 6 of you in with a chance in the final.

The Details

Ross Taylor

Western Films of Clint Eastwood

12

0

15

0

27

0

Pete Simmonds

Hieronymus Bosch

11

0

14

1

25

1

Tomas Stevenson

Studio Albums of Bruce Springsteen

4

1

10

0

14

1

Eric Davies

Cyrille Regis

13

0

10

0

23

0

 

As a small PS, I had my laser eye surgery today and it seemed to go very well. So, hopefully, you’ll be stuck with my old nonsense for a while to come.

Sunday, 22 March 2026

If I have to stop - and - Mastermind subjects for tomorrow

You know, we’ve been through quite a bit over the years , you and me, haven’t we? So I don’t mind sharing this with you. When I had my annual diabetic eye check up a few weeks ago, this time I received a diagnosis of diabetic eye disease. I was booked in for an urgent appointment, which is tomorrow morning. It is possible that the consultant may decide to do laser surgery n me during the consultation.

So basically, I do not know what the prognosis is at the moment. I’m being quite fatalistic about it. At the end of the day it doesn’t matter what I want because what will be will be. But I’d be lying if I didn’t say that I’ve been thinking about what the implications could be.

So, anyway, if I do stop posting some time in the future (very near, near or far) this is probably the reason, and I know you’ll understand.

Now let’s move on to more pleasant matters. Tomorrow’s Mastermind Specialist subjects are: - Clint Eastwood's western films, the Dutch painter Hieronymus Bosch, the studio albums of Bruce Springsteen and the footballer Cyrille Regis. None of which offers me a great deal. I like Clint very much, but westerns were my late father’s favourite genre and that in itself was enough to put me off for life. I really don’t know very much about Hieronymus Bosch – the Garden of Earthly Delights and that’s about it. I’m not really sure why, but I’ve never been a great fan of Bruce Springsteen. Cyrille Regs was in his pomp at the time I was most interested in football so I guess he might be my banker, but then the bar is set exceptionally low on that score this week.

I hope to see you again soon (pun intended). 

Tuesday, 17 March 2026

University Challenge Elimination Quarter final match - Darwin, Cambridge v. Warwick

The Teams

Darwin, Cambridge

Lewis Strachan

Ruth Ni Mhuircheartaigh

Louis Cameron (Capt)

Jonathan White

Warwick

Josh Howarth

Antoni Kluzowski

Chris Levesley (Capt)

Lucy Dennett

Last chance saloon time again peeps. Louis Cameron won the first gulp when he knew that Dante Gabriel Rossetti created many versions of Persephone/Proserpina. Roman perceptions of Britain - multa pluvia est – (ask your Latin teacher. Thank you Mr. Rose) Darwin took the first two but didn’t know that Tacitus wrote about Agricola. I prefer Settlers of Catan. Neither team knew the two Baltic states concerned with operation Red Trek. Funnily enough I visited Estonia just a fortnight ago – really enjoyed it. I know nothing about semi conductors – but Chris Levesley did to take the next starter. Three questions on the fictional Clorinda brought two bonuses for both of us. Lewis Strachan knew that two of the Mongolian Three Games of Men were Archery and Horseback Riding. I think that refusing to bother the doctor may be the other. Greek letters used representationally in physics raised a groan in LAM towers when it was announced as the bonus subject. Darwin weren’t groaning, they managed two bonuses. For the picture starter we were shown a photo of the bridge between the mainland and the Isle of Skye. Lewis Strachan took that one. Maps showing Scottish Islands with single syllable names brought two bonuses. Film adaptations of short stories by Murakami saw a good early buzz from Louis Cameron. Social sciences yielded us both just the one bonus. Still, this meant that Darwin led by 75 – 15 on 10 minutes and looked good value for the lead too.

Amazingly I earned a lap of honour for the next starter. I didn’t understand any of the guff Amol spouted for most of the question, but Expansion Constant seemed to match Hubble’s constant and it did. Chris Levesley had it too. Now, Raphael was a renaissance artist as well as a turtle apparently, and Warwick did very well to take a full house on him. The next starter, asking for a port city, was a wait for it question. Both teams did and as soon as Amol mentioned ‘sweet orange’ Jonathan White went for his shooting irons and gave the correct answer of Jaffa. Music theory sounded an unpromising subject for bonuses but Darwin took two of them. Well done. Josh Howarth worked out that Sam Houston was the only person to be governor of two different US States. Sandstone brought just the one bonus. Nobody recognised the work of Mendelssohn for the music starter. Antoni Kluzowski knew that Bismuth s the most naturally diamagnetic metal. Nope, me neither. This earned the dubious reward of the music bonuses. Pieces that premiered at the Three Choirs Festival did not add to the Warwick total at all. Louis Cameron recognised references to Soren Kierkegaard to earn bonuses on underground rivers. These also yielded nowt – tough set but they might have had the Mojave from the clues. Louis Cameron came in early to pair Absalom with Achitophel as in Dryden’s poem about the Duke of Monmouth. Ruth Ni Mhuircheartaigh helped her team to a pair of bonuses on Irish mythology. The clues were all there in the next starter but nobody worked out that Trafford was required. Gawd knows what an affine transformation is but so does Ruth Ni Mhuircheartaigh. Processes used in making confectionary brought, well, nothing. Didn’t matter. After allowing Warwick a wee revival Darwin had pulled away again and led by 135 – 65 as we approached 20 minutes.

Mathematical notation brought them two bonuses. For the second picture starter Jonthan White recognised some eucalyptus leaves. Other antibacterial plants brought both of us just one bonus for Aloe vera. More flippin’ science saw Chris Levesley take the next starter with phosphorus. Dancer and choreographer Bill T. Jones (yeah, go on then, Bill ‘Who?’ Jones) brought Warwick one bonus. Jonathan White knew about Canossa for the next starter. The United Rugby Championship brought two bonuses and with the clock ticking down it looked as if Darwin had already passed the Event Horizon. Chris Levesley hadn’t given up though. He recognised various uses of the Greek letter theta. And yay, the bonuses were on more blimmin chemistry. Actually to be fair I did have quicklime and limelight. Warwick themselves only took one. Nobody knew that BNG on an ordnance survey map means British National Grid. Lewis Strachan knew aether for the next starter. Eastern and Southern Africa did not add any gilding to the Darwin score but they were home and dry by now. Antoni Kluzowski recognised that a group of football clubs all have the word Plough in their name. English words for clergy and their derivations brought us to the gong and Darwin had won by 175 – 125.

For the record Darwin managed a BCR of 42.4% while Warwick did slightly better with 48%. But it’s bonuses for show and starters for dough in this game and this is where Darwin won the contest.

Amol Watch

You know, the mark of a good question master is often that you don’t notice them during the quiz. So to that extent this was a lovely performance from Amol, a fine example of the simple art of getting the hell on with it.

Interesting Fact That I Didn’t Already Know Of The Week

The only person to act as Governor for two different states at different times was Sam Houston. He was also president of the Republic of Texas at one time. Busy guy.         

Baby Elephant Walk Moment

Which lepton was discovered in 1936 by Carl D. Anderson and Seth Neddermeyer in cosmic ray particle showers? It is unstable, with an average lifetime of just 2.2 microseconds and has the same charge and spin as an electron but is 207 times more massive.  – I was okay up to Which. Dum de dumdum dum dum dum dum dumdum.

Monday, 16 March 2026

Mastermind 2026 Semi Final 2

The Tale of the Tape

3

Diane Howe

12

0

14

1

26

1

=15

Matthew Patenall

11

0

8

0

19

0

=15

Max Bougeard

9

0

10

0

19

0

17

David Slater

6

1

9

1

15

2

 

Well, prior to the start of the second semi final you’d have been forgiven for making Diane Howe the red-hot favourite based on the first round performances of all involved. Diane was 3rd on my unofficial table and had posted an excellent 14 on GK – sorry, but that marks you out as a potential series winner. While our other three contenders were all from the bottom half of the bottom half of the table. But semis don’t always work out according to the predictions of the form book. Do they?

Diane was first up. She was answering on American singer Jeff Buckley. I expected no points on this round, but the question about who wrote ‘Hallelujah’ was such a gimme it brought me an unexpected point. Diane did well. 9 is not a score to be sniffed at. It was not, however as good a score nor quite as good a performance as she gave us in the heats and 3 passes looked just a little on the profligate side to me.

Max Bougeard offered us the managerial career of the much-travelled Rafa Benitez, a man who it seems had more clubs than Rory McIlroy (and almost as many as Frank Worthington). Again, there was a tiny bit more for me in this round than I expected, and 3 points brought my score to 4. Max had scored a double figure GK round in the heats, so he would be in with a chance of a famous victory if the questions fell for him.

Matthew Patenall looked to need a cricket score in his specialist based on his GK performance in the heat. He was answering on Andy Warhol and for the most part answering very well, too. I took two of these, though it would have been more if I could have remembered Sedgewick. That’s life. Matthew scored 10 and having incurred no passes this took him into the lead on countback.

There’s been a bit of comment (some of it from me, admittedly) about David Slater making it to the semis with a total of 15 in his heat. Well, all you can do is beat the other contenders you’re up against and David certainly did this in his heat. If he could now win the semi then all discussion of his first round performance would be academic. I loved his specialist subject – the classic Routemaster bus. Hey, I grew up in West London in the 70s, and the AEC bus works was just down the road between Hanwell and Southall. However, it is the kind of ‘out there’ subject that is going to find you out if you have not comprehensively and meticulously prepared. There were just too many holes and gaps in David’s knowledge I’m afraid and he scored 5. I ended with an aggregate of 8.

So it was all down to GK, and you have to say that even though she lay in third it looked very much advantage Diane. David though was the first to return to the chair and considering the disappointment he must have felt over his specialist he did a very good job, scoring 10 to equal his first round heat total of 15. This time though it surely wasn’t going to be enough to bring a win.

Diane did not manage to repeat her GK performance of the heat. But that didn’t mean that she didn’t put in a good GK round. Anything in double figures is good, we know that. She started brilliantly, but just showed signs of fatigue in the second minute where she started dropping a few gettable points. She kept her cool though and in the end she had scored 11 to set the target at 20. If anyone was going to beat her they were going to have to equal or exceed their heat scores.

Max Bougeard couldn’t. He gave it his best shot, but it was clear that he was behind on the clock by the halfway mark and in the end he could only add 7 to his total for 17.

As for Matthew Patenard, well you could tell he wanted to succeed very, very badly indeed. Every time he supplied a wrong answer you could see him react almost as if a tiny electric shock was passing through his body. Sadly the questions just did not fall for him. Not enough of them anyway.  He scored 6 for a total of 16.

Well done Diane! You are now, and will always be a Mastermind Grand Finalist. As I said earlier, you can only beat the opposition in front of you, and that you certainly did.

The Details

Diane Howe

Jeff Buckley

9

3

11

2

20

5

Max Bougeard

The managerial career of Raphael Benitez

10

0

7

2

17

2

Mattew Patenall

Andy Warhol

10

0

6

0

16

0

David Slater

The Classic Routemaster bus

5

2

10

1

15

3