What an
exciting show! You may have seen my preview earlier this week. I have made a
habit of getting it spectacularly wrong for several years now, and the question
is, then, how well did I call it? Only one way to find out.
First up was
Gareth Williams. I tipped Gareth for the podium. To me, he had looked pretty
impressive in all 4 of his rounds, and especially looked to be a good performer
on GK. His subject for the final was the Falklands Conflict. He’d had a solid
round of 10 in the first round heat, and an excellent round of ten in the 90
second semi final round. Something of that order would be required to give him
a shot, but sadly he didn’t quite make it into double figures. There’s nothing
to be ashamed of with 9, but it looked extremely likely that at least one of
the 5 contenders to come would post a score which would put him out of
contention.
Marianne
Fairthorne arrived in the final with two very good specialist scores, of 14 and
10. Marianne lost on passes to Only Connect winner Alan Gibbs in her first
round heat. Since then she very comfortably won her semi final. My prediction
was a place on the podium, although not necessarily the top step. Well, her
specialist subject was Caterina Sforza, illegitimate daughter of the Duke of
Milan. Now, the dream scenario in a Mastermind Grand Final specialist round is
to have a full house, a perfect round. That’s exactly what Marianne produced –
15 questions, and 15 correct answers. I turned at this point to no one in
particular, and said – there’s going to be quite a few who’ll be out of
contention by half time after that round.
I mentioned
Alan Gibbs earlier. He was one of my most favoured contenders going into the
semi finals. In a remarkable semi Liz Gore beat him to land her final slot. My
prediction was that she’d be among the minor placings, despite this, working on
the principle that the one who wields the knife rarely wears the crown. He
first round GK was fine, but not great, and it was going to need a very good GK
round to win this. Still, as regards specialist Liz was answering questions on the
Raj Quartet of Paul Scott, and she too had a dream round of 15 from 15.
John Beynon,
in his filmed insert, made the point that he’s accrued a lot of experience in
Mastermind over the years, although this is the first time that he has reached
the grand final. John didn’t mention that he is also a runner up in Brain of
Britain. I was a little surprised to see him say that although he loves the
learning of a subject – me too – he doesn’t really enjoy sitting in the chair,
because he gets terribly nervous. Well, I can understand that, but at least it
made my prediction of the minor placings look a little less daft. Answering on
Lord Palmerston, John sadly never convinced, and missed a couple. His score of
8 put him out of contention.
I dubbed
David Greenwood the dark horse of this competition. As had 3 of the other
finalists, he’d scored 10 in his specialist round in the semis. However he had
only scored 11 in his specialist round in his heat. If he didn’t do better than
that this time round, then chances were he would also be out of contention at
half time. His specialist subject was The Ashes 1964 – 1981. Ok, that doesn’t
seem like a very long time, but cricket in general and the Ashes in particular
is one of those subjects where there is so much esoteric trivia which can be
dredged up you could never accuse it of being a subject which is ever likely to
give a contender an easy ride. 12 points was a good return on the round, but left
him 3 points behind the leaders. That’s a big gap to have to make up.
I did
apologise to Diane Hallagan in my preview for making her favourite, since that’s
often been the kiss of death for likely contenders in the past. Yet what other
conclusion could I draw, based on form throughout the competition? Of all of
the finalists, Diane had the top score in specialist in both the first round
and the semi final. She also had the top GK score in the semi final. She’s been
a finalist before, and is an all round terrific quizzer. Diane’s specialist
subject for the final was The Life and Work of Rudolf Nurevey. This meant at
least that she was one of the winners in the filmed insert lottery, having a
filming trip to Russia. Being realistic, Diane needed to at least match David’s
score to have any realistic sort of chance of coming through in the GK. I felt
a little for her when John amplified her correct answer of the island of St.
Barts – saying St. Bartholemew and sstumbling a little before the next question,
she might well have had another question otherwise. Notwithstanding that,
though, Diane managed 10, and that left her 5 points behind.
First back
to the chair was John Beynon. Now, with a 7 point gap to bridge the pressure
was off John, since there was virtually no chance of him being able to set a
total which would give him a realistic chance. Thus, with the shackles of
nervousness removed, John put in a terrific round of 14, and raised his total
to 22. I didn’t think for one moment that this would be enough to put both Liz
and Marianne within the corridor of doubt, but it at least gave him a chance of
climbing up the standings. Gareth Williams has been a fine performer on GK
throughout the series. It doesn’t matter who you are, sooner or later you can
have a round in Mastermind where the questions just don’t run your way, and you
end up struggling. It’s very cruel luck when this happens to you in a grand
final, and sadly this was what happened to Gareth. He finished with 15 points.
Diane followed,
knowing that she needed perfection, or very near perfection, to give herself a
realistic chance. Ah, it wasn’t a bad round, it wasn’t a bad round at all, but
she did make a couple of slips, and it looked like she realized this as the round
progressed. I know lots of people who’d be delighted with 11 in a Mastermind GK
round, but sadly, it just wasn’t enough to allow her to overhaul John’s score.
Bad luck Diane. David Greenwood has been a good performer on GK throughout the
series as well. What was called for in this round was a clear head, and an
ability to treat every question on its merits – answer what you know quickly,
guess what you don’t know quickly, and keep up the momentum of the round. That
was pretty much what David produced, answering no fewer than 13 questions to
set the target at 25. To win, either Marianne or Liz were going to have to set
double figure rounds. Now in the context of a grand final, that’s what putting
another contender into the corridor of doubt is all about. David could have
done little more.
Of the two,
I had clearly said that Marianne was the more likely to win. She’s a quizzer,
and had performed well on GK in both first round and semi. It has to be said
that for the first minute or so of her round it looked like she was going to
comfortably beat David’s total. She reached double figures, but the end of the
round was tortuous, as it seemed as if a brick wall had suddenly been erected
in her path. In the end, she too finished with 25 points. Now, Liz had had a
brilliant round of 14 in her semi final GK, but , I don’t know, I just had the
feeling that this was always going to be her best GK round of the series, and
that she could well end up scoring a bit less in the final. I don’t take great
pleasure form having been right. Liz was clearly enjoying herself, and never
stopped smiling in her round. Good on you Liz. In the end she added 7 points to
her total to finish on 22.
So, wait a
minute. Didn’t that means that we had two contenders level on their answers?
Yes it did. Both Marianne and David had scored 25. Now, I ask you to cast your
mind back to Heat 18 in December. Both Marianne and Alan scored 27 points, but Marianne had incurred 2 passes
to Alan’s 0. Therefore he won, and Marianne had to be content with a repechage
slot. She obviously took that to heart, since in the final Marianne had a grand
total of no passes whatsoever, while David had incurred three in his GK round.
A small margin, but it made Marianne the rightful champion. A brilliant
performance from both, and many many congratulations to Marianne.
Just before
we go, John H. made the comment that he cannot remember such a close result.
Well, John, you have a short memory old son, since in 2004 Shaun won the title
by 2 passes from Don Young – technically a closer result than last night. While
we’re on the subject of achievements Marianne becomes the first champion of the
Humphrys era to be champion after making the semis in a repechage slot – and she
joins a number of champs from the Magnusson era with this distinction. She is
also the second woman to become champion of the Humphrys era, the first since
Nancy in 2009. Hey come to think of it, I did in this very blog advise Nancy
that I though that she was likely to lose her position as the last woman winner
this year. At least I got something right.
Many, many
congratulations, Marianne!
The Details
Gareth Williams | The Falklands Conflict | 9 - 1 | 7 - 1 | 16 - 2 |
Marianne Fairthorne | Caterina Sforza | 15 – 0 | 10 - 0 | 25 - 0 |
Liz Gore | Paul Scott’s Raj Quartet | 15 - 0 | 7 - 3 | 22 - 3 |
John Beynon | 3rd Viscount Palmerston | 8 - 1 | 14 - 1 | 22 - 2 |
David Greenwood | The Ashes 1964 - 1981 | 12 - 0 | 13 - 3 | 25 - 3 |
Diane Hallagan | The Life of Rudolf Nureyev | 10 - 2 | 11 - 1 | 21 – 1 |
4 comments:
Excellent final, congratulations to all involved! Thoroughly enjoyable to watch, as has the series as a whole.
If I may, however, pick up on this: " I felt a little for her when John amplified her correct answer of the island of St. Barts – saying St. Bartholemew and sstumbling a little before the next question, she might well have had another question otherwise"
I've got to say, it's something I've seen repeatedly in the series and it annoys me quite a bit. If a question is right, Humphries should be acknowledging as such and moving on straight away. That after all is the whole point of the format - you can pass and move straight on, or guess and if wrong, you have to lose time by hearing the answer. You should not have to hear the answer once or twice more if you give it correctly.
Perhaps I'm being unfair in criticising this happening, but in cases like this it can be the difference between an extra question and not getting one. Obviously the outcome wasn't impacted here, but it could have been, and this is far from the only time I've seen it. Nor am I the first to point it out on LAM.
None of this takes away from my initial praise for the show, however, and I'm already eagerly looking forward to the next series!
Last year's was much closer. Just saying.
Great final, high quality and very close indeed. Congrats to Ms Fairthorne on a deserved victory.
I flat out told someone the other day I was considering applying for the next series the other day; maybe I'll do just that now.
Yet more evidence that the one golden rule in Mastermind is that you should never pass.
That's how I won in 2000, after all (and obviously I'm only pointing this out because, yet again, the radio winners were airbrushed out of the opening montage - there are photographs of us, Mr Humphries)
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