Nørdiphiles v. Night
Watchmen
The Nørdiphiles, Will Day, James Keeling and captain Joanna Murray
are, I believe, brand new to Only Connect, and united by their love of all
things Scandinavian. Skål! Their opposition, Jonathan Wilson, Robert Winder and
skipper Daniel Norcross were the Nightwatchmen, brought together by a shared
love of what Kipling called ‘flannelled fools at the wicket’. It was fascinating
to hear captain Daniel say that he had taken part in the original pilots for the
series, in which they even tried three teams of two.
Round One – What’s the
Connection?
Put in first by the Nords, Daniel of the Nights blotted his copybook
for me by failing to voice the second vowel of Horned when he opted for the
viper. First off was Best Picture Oscar Nominees (2010). This didn’t help. UEFA
Euro Championship teams (1996) didn’t either. Jonathan had a good idea at this
point, suggesting that this was when the number of participants increased. When
prompted for a little more, they offered this was when the number of
participants doubled. Good shout. The Eye of Horus gave the Nords – Ruddigore –
to start. Gilbert and Sullivan was far too obvious. It’s subtitled The Witches’
curse – so I guessed maybe we were going down this route. Straw Dogs seemed to
put the kibosh on that idea. Jamaica Inn came third, and I still hadn’t come up
with an answer, so plumped for the hopeful – all set in Cornwall. Doc Martin
certainly fit the pattern. They tried – complaints about the sound quality, but
the Nights took the bonus with set in Cornwall. You can’t afford to throw sets
like that away – they probably should have had it from Jamaica Inn and Doc
Martin. Two Reeds gave us Doctor Evil’s Number Two – Snake Plissken. That was
enough to give me eyepatches – Snake Plissken being Kurt Russell’s character
from Escape from New York and its sequel. Number Two is Robert Wagner’s
character, and not mini me as I heard the Nights suggest. Rooster Cogburn came
next, and this set Jonathan on eyepatch. That was enough for captain Daniel, and
they didn’t need to see the fourth clue, Danger Mouse. Not Nelson, I’m glad to
say. There’s no eye patch on the statue on Nelson’s Column, you know. The Nords
picked Lion and the music. This allowed them to redeem themselves by seeing
Streets after two clues. Good shout. Twisted Flax, then, gave the Nights
Miedinger and Hoffman. I did actually know that these two were something to do
with Helvetica font. When Hoefler and Frere-Jones came next one of them did
actually mention fonts, but captain Daniel wasn’t convinced. John Baskerville
looked to have sealed the deal as the third clue, which indeed it did. Fair
play to the Nights, this is a show where discretion is more often the better
part of valour. Left with water the Nords saw pictures of a mountain and
Rosamund Pike. Taking the mountain as Scafell Pike, they buzzed in off 2 to
take the points. So barring the Nord’s first, this had been a quality opening
round, and the Nights led with 8 -6.
Round Two – What Comes
Fourth?
The round that separates the men from the boys saw the Nights take
water to start. Seine was the first clue. That gave too many possibilities. The
second clue, setter – offered but little. Ottoman came third, but I’m afraid
that I was out with the washing on this one. Both teams were sidelined by
ottoman. Actually its to do with Italian numbers. Sei – sette – otto – so a
word beginning with nove – eg novel – would follow. Hard set. Three cheers to
the Nords for asking for Hornèd Viper for the next. We saw a picture showing
the numeral 1 made out of 4 matchsticks. Next we saw 2 made out of 5
matchsticks. Surely 4 made out of 7 was too obvious? Yes, since the third was 6
made out of 6 matches. So the question was, which would you need to add another
matchstick to make, and the answer looked like 8. I was right, so were the
Nords, and that was a textbook example of why it is sometimes necessary to take
all of the clues. Lion gave the Nights Johnson: The Vantage Point. Now, I read
a biography of LBJ a few weeks ago, so I knew that Johnson was LBJ, and the
book was about his years as president. So, from the comfort of my sofa I thought
that there have been three democrat presidents since LBJ. Obama hasn’t written
presidential memoirs yet, but he wrote Dreams from my father – and – The Audacity
of Hope. So I went for Obama: Dreams From My Father. Given the other two clues,
the Nights tried Obama : Dreams About My Father, which Victoria decided was
close enough. Eye of Horus showed the Nords – 2004: Beckham and Vassell – and I
had a strange flashback. The euro championships 1996, mentioned in the previous
round, saw England lose a penalty shoot out. In 2004, England lost in a penalty
shoot out, and both Beckham and Darius Vassell missed. Working backwards, I
thought we might well end up with 1990, Stuart Pearce and Chris Waddle. We had
Ince and Batty in the 1998 world cup, then Gareth Southgate in the 1996 semi
shoot out against Germany in between if I was right. The Nords could see
football, but not what. Ince and Batty gave them missed penalties, and after
almost arguing themselves out of it they went the right way. Great – if painful
to an England supporter – set. For their last choice the Nights opted for Two
Reeds. Haffaz suggested Sacha Baron Cohen characters – that was the name of The
Dictator from that movie. In which case Ali G. would be a good bet. Brüno
certainly seemed to confirm the prediction It was enough for the Nights, who
supplied Ali G at this point. Twisted Flax remained for the Nords with 3 elves,
which made the Nords think the same as me – Tolkein’s rings of power. 3 for the
elven kings – 7 for the dwarf lords in their halls of stone – nine for the
mortal men - oh flip, that’s it. 7
dwarves came next, as it should do. But the sequence ends with the nine rings.
Unless – I thought – it’s in the rhyme that it ends with one ring to rule them
all etc. So I went for 1 Sauron. The answer the Nords gave was One ring to rule
them all. Which was ignoring the form of the set. How many and who for, that
was what was needed. The answer, which the Nights didn’t see either, was 1 Dark
Lord. Hoepfully I might have been given it for Sauron. A good round with some
nice sets , and the score was now 13 – 11 to the Nights.
Round Three – The Connecting
Walls
The Nords chose the Lion Wall. Italian musical instructions was the
first set they saw, along with sporting implements. Actually though the first
set they isolated – Presto – Bat – Bristo – Well – were all towns with a letter
missing. Mallet – Cue – Club and Hurley, the sporting implements followed hard
on their heels. They waited a while before completing the last two lines on their
first go. Grave – adagio – vivace and lento were the musical terms. This left
Largo – Big Pine – Sands and Plantation. Now, they knew Key Largo, having
mentioned it more than once, but crucially did not offer Florida Keys as the
answer. This limited them to 7 points.
The Nights were left with water. Figaro – Bild – Pais and Stampa
fell early as European newspapers. Parts of a shoe looked to be there, but when
they didn’t fall into place they went for a set of things you can hold – tongue
– breath – horses – nerve. They knew that the connections were between the last
two lines – synonyms for vamp, and parts of a shoe. The shoe parts were Heel –
Welt – vamp and sole, which left as the flirtatious females – siren – circe – minx
and coquette. 10 points earned, which gave them a 5 point lead of 23 – 18, and
made them favourites to take the match.
Round Four – The Missing
Vowels
The first set, famous last lines from films, went 2 – 1 to the
Nords. Gap thus down to 4. Dragons wiped out that gap completely, 4 – 0 to the
Nords. The next set, fictional boarding schools, went 2 – 1 to the Nights. So
sad that nobody got Linbury Court Preparatory School – I LOVED Anthony Buckeridge’s
Jennings books when I was a lad. Flight Instruments brought 3 crucial points to
the Nords, and against the run of play in the first three rounds they had won a
narrow victory by 28 – 26. The Nights will definitely bounce back after this
performance though. I was impressed with both teams in this show. Well played
both.
1 comment:
"You can’t afford to throw sets like that away" - unless you win the missing vowels 10-3! Biggest deficit ever overturned in the final round?
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