Unless I’m very
much mistaken this was the heat originally slated to be the second shown, but
postponed due to the late Sir Edward Heath facing a number of allegations. He
was the subject of the third of the specialist rounds in this evening’s show,
and we’ll come to that in due course.
The first
contender of the evening, Raymond Nicell, came up clean on my contender database,
and so was one of tonight’s two Mastermind virgins. He was answering on Phil
Lynott and Thin Lizzy. This is the kind of subject that the uninformed cite as examples
of Mastermind being ‘dumbed down’, and yet this is exactly the sort of subject
which is deceptively difficult, and much wider than you might expect. Anything
in double figures is fine in a specialist round these days. However, 10, which
is what Raymond scored, is always going to leave you needing a blinding GK
round.
There’s no
really kind way of saying this, so let’s just put it on the table – Barrie Cooper,
the second of tonight’s Mastermind virgins provided us with the relative
rarity, a ‘mare of a specialist round. It’s sometimes difficult to tell whether
a poor specialist round is the result of a failure to prepare, or a surfeit of
nerves, or a mixture of both. Looking at some of the questions that Barrie
failed to answer, I would suggest that it was nerves. I’m pretty sure that
anyone who actually opted to take the wars of the Roses as a specialist subject
would know that Henry VII and Elizabeth of York’s oldest son was called Arthur.
By the end of the round Barrie had scored 4.
Michael
Frankl, a Brain of Britain semifinalist in his time, made his first Mastermind
appearance 2 years ago, where he placed third in his first round heat. He
achieved double figures in both rounds back then, and so the smart money said
that he’d be in contention in this particular heat. It wasn’t a bad round this
time either, although reading back my comments on his previous appearance I did
make the point then that Michael didn’t answer very quickly, and I would say
that this is a criticism that could be levelled at his performance again
tonight. It may have cost him the chance of another question at the end of the
round. I had a feeling that he was going to be behind at the turn around, but
then I did know who was coming next.
My friend,
Rach ‘Cherryade’ Neiman has been racking up a fairly impressive tally of
broadcast quiz appearances over the last few years. She has twice taken part in
Mastermind, and twice reached the semi finals, and was unlucky enough to lose
out on a place in the final back in Aidan McQuade's 2013 series by a single point. Now,
here’s a point to make about Rachael’s previous Mastermind appearances. I’m
pretty sure that she has never been behind at the halfway stage – and in fact
in three out of four appearances has been outright leader after specialist.
This is a contender who knows how to prepare a specialist properly, and,
answering on the comedy series ‘Cabin Pressure’, she gave another virtuoso
performance, scoring a perfect 14 from 14. Brilliant work.
Right, in
all honesty it looked like a two horse race from this point. The question
remained, though, how would Barrie manage to perform after the disaster of the
first round? All things considered, then, the answer was – not so badly. These
days you only really get yourself mentioned in the low score Hall of Fame if
your aggregate is not in double figures, and Barrie’s 8 put him comfortably outside
this. He did still seem to be rather affected
by nerves. If he was, though, it must have been contagious, for poor Raymond
Nicell, who followed him into the chair, seemed so struck by them that he fell into
a horrible pass spiral. Indeed, at one point it was open to question whether he
was going to pass Barrie’s aggregate. In the end he did that with some room to
spare, but his total of 6 only put him 2 points ahead of Rachael, and she had
yet to go with her GK round.
So to the
business end of the competition. nMichael is an old and wise enough hand at
broadcast quizzes to know that all he could do was to try to rack up as high a
score as he could, and put as much pressure onto Rachael as possible. This he
did very well. It’s all subjective, I know, but I didn’t think his GK round was
the hardest I;ve ever heard – the only one I didn’t know was the Missy Elliot
one. I don’t blame Michael for that – he can only answer the questions that he’s
asked. This he did very well to take his score 10 26. 15 is a good GK round by
anyone’s reckoning, and crucially it would give him a shout at a repechage slot
if Rachael managed to beat him.
For my money
this was one of Rachael’s best performances on GK. Where she knew the answers –
and there were 13 of these questions – she snapped out the answers in double
quick time. Where she didn’t know the answers, she came up with something and
avoided the pass. This was textbook stuff. It meant firstly that when she
reached Michael’s score of 26 she had done enough to win, since she had no
passes. It also meant that when she did so, there was time for one more
question, which gave her a superior total as well. Terrific performance.
Well played
Michael – hope that you make it through, and Rach, excellent. Many
congratulations, and I apologise now for the fact that you’ll be burdened with
support from the Clark sofa for the semis/ Best of luck!
The Details
Raymond Nicell
|
Phil Lynott and Thin Lizzy
|
10
|
1
|
6
|
5
|
16
|
6
|
Barrie Cooper
|
The Wars of the Roses
|
4
|
4
|
8
|
6
|
12
|
10
|
Michael Frankl
|
Edward Heath
|
11
|
1
|
15
|
2
|
26
|
3
|
Rachael Neiman
|
Cabin Pressure
|
14
|
0
|
13
|
0
|
27
|
0
|
4 comments:
Coincidentally, both of Michael Frankl's appearances have been transmitted 1 week after Janet Parfitt's appearances.
By my reckoning Rachael Neiman is the 7th person to reach 3 or more semi-finals in the Humphrys era, following Andrew Warmington, Mark Grant, John Beynon, Diane Hallagan, Gareth Kingston, and Hamish Cameron (who has reached the semis on 4 occasions). Only the first two (and Ms Neiman) have won 3 heats.
Great blog, BTW!
Hi Paul - thanks for the stats. Yes, I may be wrong but I think that Hamish has more appearances in individual shows in regular Mastermind than any other Masterminder - the 2014 final being his last appearance to date. Mark - who is a Brain of Britain champ and an Only Connect superchamp - has placed 3rd and 2nd in finals before as well. Diane is a double finalist as well and there still aren't very many of those. Two double finalists - Geoff Thomas and Ian Bayley have ended up as champions.
I hope that the very least that Rachael does is to reach the final.
Hi. I'm pretty sure Rachel's last appearance (before this one) was in Aiden McQueade's 2013 series. She lost out to Andrew Fraser in the Semis.
Hi Will
You're dead right, - I'm getting (even more) careless in my old age. I'll edit the post now, thanks.
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