St. John’s , Oxford v. Bristol
JP kicked
off by reminding us that the target for both teams to at least get into the
repechage round was 130. Hoping to win and avoid that route were St. John’s
represented by Alex Harries, Charlie Clegg, Dan Sowood and skipper Angus Russell.
Hoping to block their path were Bristol, represented by Vanessa Lynn, Robert Hayman,
Benjamin Crawshaw and captain Andy Saxon.
The first
question asked about Dutch Palaces, and Charlie Clegg won the buzzer race to
give us the answer of The Hague. Dungeons and dragons in literature brought
them two bonuses. Charlie Clegg buzzed in a little too early for the second,
which gave us a quote from a French composer, but even though they were given
the fact that the composer had composed The Pearl Fishers, captain Andy Saxon
of Bristol couldn’t dig up Bizet to capitalize. Charlie Clegg, quite rightly
not daunted by his previous misfire was first in to offer that part of Austen’s
Persuasion is set in Lyme Regis. A very good full house on the Yi Dynasty of
Korea followed. Various definitions of hot-spot allowed Vanessa Lynn to open
Bristol’s account. 2 bonuses on Carl Jung followed – I surprised myself with a
full house on that set. Already we had reached the first picture starter. This
one revealed a word cloud taken from a book of the King James Bible. The
prominence of the names Abraham and Jacob made it fairly clear we were dealing
with the Book of Genesis, and theology student Charlie Clegg was understandably
first out of the starting blocks for that one. More of the same followed, and a
second full house was duly taken. I’ll be honest, as soon as JP said ‘15th
century thesis’ I offered ‘The Prince’, but would have waited had I been in the
studio, and maybe would have been beaten to the buzzer by Alex Harries, who was
first in. September 3rd. 2 bonuses took their score to 85, which
gave them a 65 point lead over Bristol at the 10 minute mark. They were good
value for it too.
Vanessa Lynn
recognized the opening of Sylvia Plath’s “The Bell Jar”. I may have said this
before, but Sylvia Plath always reminds me of sitting in 20th
century poetry seminars, and every time that Ted Hughes’ name was mentioned a
chorus of voices would intone ‘the wife murderer!’. Bit harsh, that. Novels of
the 1740s brought them 10 more points – they were fine on Richardson and
Fielding, but floundered on Smollett. Dan Sowood scored his first starter for
St. John’s, recognising a definition of menthol. Like St. John’s the only bonus
on Joe Sacco that I could answer was about the Battle of the Somme. Captain
Angus Russell took his first starter, recognizing that JP was describing
Greater Manchester. This now meant that all 4 of St. John’s had correctly
answered at least one starter each. Mark of a useful team, that. One bonus was
taken on scientific instruments. Nobody recognized the work of Tchaikovsky for
the music starter – me neither. Alex Harries took a good starter on the word
fulminate. The music bonuses were all other pieces which were savaged by the
critic Hanslick, otherwise known as the critic Who? St. John’s took one. It’s
worth noting that St. John’s had already reached the magic number of 130.
Bristol, though, were going to need to go like the clappers to give themselves
a chance of getting there. A superb UC special starter asked the teams to
combine two names to come up with Franz Ferdinand – lovely bit of work that –
and Charlie Clegg, pick of the contest’s buzzers by some distance, was first in
with the answer. 2 points on seas of the Pacific Ocean followed. Andy Saxon
managed to beat the might of St. John’s to the buzzer to answer that endocrinology
deals with glands. Sadly embryology yielded them no further points. This meant
that the score at the 20 minute mark stood at 150 – 50. The match was over as
the result was already sorted. How many points could St. John’s score, and how
close could Bristol get to the repechage remained the only real questions to be
answered.
I wouldn’t
claim to be an expert on paintings, but there was something about the second
picture starter that screamed out Caravaggio. Charlie Clegg thought so too, but
he did hesitate, and earned a wigging from JP for his pains. The painting
showed Judith beheading Holofernes, and three more paintings of the same
subject followed. A full house was duly taken. Robert Hay man knew that any
questions with the words Spanish – Greek and painter in it will probably be
looking for the answer El Greco – and he was right. 2 bonuses on the novel
Venus in Furs took them to 70 points. None of us knew enough about crystal
lattices to take the next starter. Andy Saxon knew about some of ‘lands’ in
Antarctica to take the next starter, and Bristol were having their best passage
of the competition. Two bonuses on the Gulf of Guinea took them to 90 points,
and the cusp of the respectability represented by a triple figure score. That
was achieved with the next starter, as Vanessa Lynn knew various thingummybobs
which respond to the sense of touch. This was followed by a full house on human
anatomy. Fair play to Bristol, when they did get a starter they weren’t doing
too badly with the bonuses. The old chestnut Baron Bannside went to Angus
Russell, who knew it was Ian Paisley. A full house on rulers brought St. John’s
double century up. When I hear an astronomy question and the words German
mathematician are included I always go for Kepler. That’s what Charlie Clegg
did, and rightly so. 2 bonuses on latin abbreviations followed. A good buzz
from Alex Harries saw him confirm that 22,000 use British Sign Language as
their first language according to the most recent census. They took just the
one bonus on the five pillars of Islam. Alex Harries knew that a Viscount comes
in precedence above a Baron. Saints and their symbols added another 10 points
to their total. Nobody knew that there’s a palace or something called Cuba on
Sicily. Robert Hayman knew that the Deity Hapi was the personification of the
annual inundation of the Nile. There wasn’t time to complete a set of bonuses
on Administrative regions of European countries, which was a bit of a shame for
Bristol, as they finished close to a repechage slot with 125. Had they found
their buzzer fingers a little more quickly they might even have made it. Take
nothing away from St. John’s though – they look a good outfit, and could go
well in the rest of the series.
Jeremy Paxman Watch
A wee dram
of the pedantic early doors in this show when JP took Charlie Clegg’s ‘Lyme’
and made it clear he was waiting for more. Well, what else could it be, Jez? Light?
Cordial?!
Interesting Fact That I Didn’t Already Know
Of The Week
3 comments:
Definitely one of the better first round matches of the series. A superb performance from St John's against a decent Bristol team who are unlucky to just miss the play-offs. The Oxford side could well have a good run this series, provided they get a good draw in the second round. But, with the third highest score of the series, you'd probably fancy them to win, unless they draw Imperial or York.
On the bonuses, St John's managed 26/39 (with one penalty) and Bristol 11/20.
So, the play offs begin on Monday. The four teams competing are Glasgow, Southampton, Queen Mary and St Peter's. My guess for Monday is Glasgow vs St Peter's, but we shall see.
A small typo: It is Kamchatka, not Kanchatka peninsula.
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