The Teams
St. Catharine’s, Cambridge
Jenny Hay
Emma Dinnage
Nick Scott (capt.)
Lydia Michaelides
University, Oxford
Leonardo Buizza
Anisan Qausher
Oliver Hargrave (capt)
Abby Karas
Nearly there, dearly beloved – just the one heat left after
this one. A nifty turn of speed on the buzzer was shown by Nick Scott, the
Cambridge skipper, as he buzzed just when the first starter, asking for the 30th
member of Nato, became obvious as JP started to say about the addition of a
word to its name. Bonuses on names in architecture beginning with the same
letter were not especially difficult, but the Cambridge team couldn’t take any
of them. A lovely UC special starter saw Abby Karas correctly answer that the
first word of Pride and Pred, amongst other novels, is ‘it’. Book titles taken
from lines of poetry saw University take just the one bonus. Incidentally, one
of the titles – “Eyeless in Gaza” I once saw written as “Eyeless in Gazza”. I
think we’ll leave that one and move on. Leonardo
Buizza won the buzzer race to identify a definition of palm oil for the next
starter. Provincial birds of Canada saw University miss out on tits – ooh Matron
– but score on ravens and puffins. For the picture starter, asked to identify a
city on map of part of Britain, Leonardo Buizza was close but no cigar with
Leeds, leaving Jenny Hay to swoop in with Bradford. More cities in the UNESCO
Creative City network brought our first full house of the evening. Nick Scott,
not for the first time or the last of the contest won the buzzer race for the
next starter, identifying the fortress of Masada. Silence in television brought
a further two correct answers, and this was enough to give the Cambridge team a
lead of 55 – 35 at a little past the 10 minute mark.
Time was that the answer to any questions featuring the words
“Toccata and Fugue in D Minor” was as likely to be the film ‘Rollerball’ as it
was to be JS Bach. Well, the film, which used it as its theme music, has
largely faded from public memory so it fell to Emma Dinnage of Catz to provide
the name of the composer. Bonuses on two digit numbers earned my respect for
referencing the best number according to Sheldon Cooper – 73.*WARNING – Lap of
honour is imminent* - Yes, I awarded myself a lap of honour for knowing the
atomic number of chlorine – 17. Catz took a full house, and it was just
starting to look as if they were pulling away from University. I knew that the
19th century translator of the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam – who incidentally
is also a character in Noel Dyson’s enchanting ‘ The Land of Green Ginger – was
Edward Fitzgerald, so Fitz was the prefix linking all the clues. Oliver
Hargrave took that one. Slim pickings were to be had by them on Metropolitan
Boroughs and rivers. Nobody knew that The Committee on Evil Literature was
formed in the Irish Free State in 1926. The next question, about a
mathematician, took a long time to get where it was going, but as soon as the
word enigma was uttered Jenny Hay buzzed in with Alan Turing. Bonuses on
History took Catz to within one starter of triple figures. The music starter
offered us Donna Summer, who was gratefully accepted by the University skipper.
More tunes which Georgio Moroder included on his top disco tunes list saw them
add just the one bonus. Nick Scott was the quickest to play through the to be
or not to be soliloquy in his mind to be able to buzz in and provide JP with
the two nouns he wanted – slings and arrows. Bonuses on Edith Wharton provided
just 5 points, nonetheless this was enough to ensure that as we approached 20
minutes, Catz had a useful lead of 110 to 60.
Cometh the hour, cometh the team. The fightback for
University began as Oliver Hargrave identified concepts associated with
Nietzsche – there’s nothing Nietzsche couldn’t teach yer ‘bout the raising of
the wrist, you know. There was only one bonus they managed on Geology, but
never mind, their score was at least rising. Oliver Hargrave took a flier that
the story of Samson and Delilah was in Genesis, which let theology student
Jenny Hay in with Judges. Bonuses on Juliet Binoche saw them rather tie
themselves in knots, but then running down the clock is not a problem when you’re
in the lead. For the second picture starter Abby Karas identified one of the
many film versions of Jane Eyre, or as I preferred to refer to it when studying
A Level English, ‘ that bloody awful Jane Eyre’. I never put that in an essay
about it, mind you. More stills of other actresses playing the title role
showed that University had not, I believe, really listened to the question. A
great early buzz from Leonardo Buizza saw him concatenate the two letter code
for given US states to make the name Ganymede. Too fast for me. Bonuses on
metabolism meant that University were now a mere starter behind Catz. Leonardo Buizza
soon added that starter, knowing that the Lelos is the nickname of the Georgian
international rugby team. They failed to answer any of the bonuses on ruins in
Asia, and with hardly any time next, chances are the next correct answer would
win it. Neither team knew Alan Aykbourne for the next starter. Just one last
throw of the dice remained, and it was Nick Scott who knew that immediately to
the west of Ghana you get Cote D’Ivoire. We were gonged before the first bonus,
giving Catz a win by 130-120. What a good contest.
JP was uncertain whether we’ll see University College again.
Well, hard lines if we don’t, but well played. Kudos to Catz. They rode their
luck a little at times, and will want to do better with some sets of bonuses,
but they’re safe in the second round. Best of luck.
Interesting Fact That I Didn’t Already Know Of The Week
The Committee on Evil Literature was formed in the Irish Free
State in 1926
1 comment:
Jenny Hay - 3
Emma Dinnage - 1
Nick Scott - 4
Lydia Michaelides
Leonardo Buizza - 3
Anisah Qausher
Oliver Hargrave - 3
Abby Karas - 2
Winner: Nick Scott
Post a Comment