Oxford Brookes v. UCL
Simon Joyce, Paula Ayres, Stephen Mayes, and
skipper David Ballard of Oxford Brookes scored a narrow victory over
Jesus College in their exciting first round match. Bethany Drew, Andrew
Brueton, Haraldr Gunnarsson. and the captain Thomas Halliday of
University College London had rather more of a comfortable ride in their last
match against Exeter. Difficult to pick a winner before the start of the show,
but it was a high stakes match, with the winners going on to take the last
place in the quarter final stage.
Asked for the three letter combination linking
the start of the name of the nobody whose diary was written by the Grossmiths,
the Hill in the title of a Kipling story, and a well known literary bear,
Bethany Drew buzzed in early with an incorrect guess, leaving the field clear
for Oxford – Brookes to have a go but fail to see they are all Poo - . David
Ballard knew The Night CafĂ© was one of Van Gogh’s for his team’s first points. South
Africa provided them with nowt. Early days yet. Haraldr Gunnarson buzzed in
very early to correctly answer that the only one of the Chartist’s 6 demands
never even partly accepted was annual elections. Bertrand Russell was the
subject of their bonuses, of which they managed 1. There was a long and
involved question for the next starter, but the answer was beryllium, as
Stephen Mayes well knew. The brightness of celestial objects left me feeling
anything but bright, but Oxford Brookes took two of them. Now, the only reason
I got the picture starter was because I’ve had a question or two about it on
Superbuzzer. We were shown the title of a film in ite original language. In
this case it was – El laberinto del fauno. Well, say what you see – Pan’s
Labyrinth then. David Ballard had that, and more of the same followed, one of
which was taken. Simon Joyce worked out that Patroclus said “Good Riddance” at
one stage of Troilus and Cressida. The internet provided Oxford Brookes with 5
more points. So, having had by far the better of the opening exchanges they led
at the 10 minute mark by 60 – 10.
Something about configurations of LEDs followed
– and Haraldr Gunnarson knew it was 16. Narrative paintings in the Manchester
Art gallery provided the first full set of the contest. Skipper Thomas Halliday
buzzed in too early on the largest Austronesian language said to be the largest
language without an official status. Simon Joyce was close, but giving Javan
rather than Javanese was not given the points. Bethany Drew knew Calvinism in
an early buzz for the next starter. Bonuses on Physics brought 5 more points.
On to the music starter by an Austrian composer, but nobody knew it.Now, Bethany
Drew knew that if you’re asked for a Lancashire artist born 1887 you buzz as
fast as you can and you answer ‘Lowry’. This brought up the music bonuses on
recordings of composers conducting their own work. They actually managed two
bonuses, but missed out on Aaron Copeland. Whether that was after or before he
was the drummer with The Police, JP didn’t say. Simon Joyce won the buzzer race
for the term ‘greenstick fracture’. French Presidents provided one correct
bonus. David Ballard knew several cities which were all linked by the letter V.
Simple heraldic designs, sometimes called ordinaries, sounded somewhat harder
than they proved to be, and Oxford
Brookes duly obliged with a full set. You had to feel for Haraldr Gunnarsson.
As soon as he heard the name “Steven Levitt” he buzzed right in with the title
of his famous book, Freakonomics, only to lose 5 as the question swerved by
asking for the title of the sequel. Oxford Brookes could not capitalise on
this. Andrew Brueton took a flyer on the next starter on a pope’s regnal name,
and it didn’t come off. Given the whole question Oxford Brookes knew it was the
pope who commissioned the Sistine Chapel, but they went for Sistus rather than
Sixtus. All of which meant that at the 20 minute mark Oxford Brookes had pulled
away again to lead by 100 – 55. One had the feeling that UCL felt that they
were chasing the game and playing catch up, hence the hopeful buzzing which was
costing them points.
Haraldr Gunnarsson knew that the largest
dolphin is the orca. A full set of bonuses on cities with 4 letter names
provided another 15 points. The second picture showed us a still from The King
and I , which Paula Ayres well knew. Stills from three other films which won
Oscars for costume design brought them their own full set, and the gap was as
wide as ever. I had a Science starter! With the next question I shouted “Latent
heat of fusion!” That must have been the Science lesson when I was actually
paying attention – there was only ever one of them. Poor old Thomas Halliday
lost five for just saying Latent Heat, which let Stephen Mayes in for the
points. Ophthalmology, and colour blindness provided them with 2 correct
answers. A great starter followed – During the 1990s two Booker Prize winning
novels were adapted into films that won the Oscar for Best Picture. Neither
team could dredge up either Schindler’s List or The English Patient. Simon
Joyce knew that Guangdong is the most populous province of China. Titles linked
by the number 7 provided them with nowt, and maybe they might have done a bit
better with them, but nonetheless they had a lead of 80, and to all intents and
purposes looked certain to win. Bethany Drew knew a list of books all by Thomas
Pynchon. Two word names that include the name of a US state brought UCL 5 more
points. Which were lost by another fast buzz on the next question. You can’t
blame them. If you have to go down, then go down buzzing, I say. Anyway, nobody
else knew Active Galactic Nucleus. Nobody knew that the Madonna of the
Carnation is by Da Vinci either. Simon Joyce won the buzzer race to say one of
the sports governed by FINA – he went for swimming, as you would. Bonuses on rocks and stones brought a full
house. UCL were still going for the early buzzes, unsuccessfully on the next
starter, all words which can be combined with the word angle for concepts in Physics.
Fair enough. Bethany Drew buzzed early for the next starter, knowing that the
famous WH Davies couple ends with the word stand and stare. Fictional Books and
the works in which they appear was a bit tricky. I too went for the first
Hitchhikers’ Guide to the Galaxy book rather than the second. That was it – we were
gonged before the next.
The final score was 180 – 90 to Oxford Brookes.
They were pretty good value for their win too. Best of luck in the quarters.
Jeremy Paxman Watch
JP got quite funny with David Ballard for
attempting the Dutch pronunciation of the painter we call Van Goff. He got him
to repeat it, then said “Yes . . . you’re just pronouncing it correctly. “ He
didn’t actually say – don’t do it again! – but I’d like to think he was
thinking it.
There was more than a little exasperation when
Oxford Brookes offered Haydn as the Austrian Composer. “Haydn?!” our hero
queried, his eyebrows shooting towards the ceiling, “It was Mahler!” Well,
excuse me. I mean, it’s not like they answered Ronnie Hazlehurst is it?
Interesting Fact That I Didn’t Already
Know Of The Week
Men Who Hate Women was the original language title for the film of “The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo”
Men Who Hate Women was the original language title for the film of “The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo”
4 comments:
An unfortunate exit for U.C.L., who were probably better on the buzzers than Oxford Brookes, but horrifically unlucky this time. In all, the side incurred seven penalties, which is the most I can recall for a while.
Well done to Oxford Brookes, in particular blog reader Simon Joyce ('asphinctersays'), and best of luck to them in the QFs.
On the bonuses, Oxford Brookes converted 18/30 and U.C.L. 11/20 (with those seven penalties).
So, the QFs begin on Monday. No word on who's on yet though.
Ronnie hazelhurst. Love it. Great comment.
Error alert: the novel which won the Booker Prize was called 'Schindler's Ark'.
It was the film that called itself 'Schindler's List', although the book was subsequently renamed. It was an Ark wot won the Booker, though.
Hi Stephen
Yes, you're right, of course. D'oh!
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