Here we are at heat 20, dearly beloved. By my reckoning there’s just 11 shows to go.
Our first specialist subject last night was famous traitor
Kim Philby. I once read that when Philby joined MI6 he felt that the whole
place was so disorganised that it must be only a front, and that he was taking
part in some bizarre initiation. Well, that didn’t feature in any of the
questions. Rachel Fullard, our first contender was equal to the vast majority
of the questions that were asked and she posted a good 9 points to lay down the
gauntlet at the feet of the other three contenders. I took 2.
One of the younger of this year’s contender pool, student
Edison Hipkin was answering on Chess: the Musical. A fair proportion of the
questions on this round weren’t about the musical show itself so much as the
original concept album. Thankfully, Edison was quite prepared for this. It was
an impressive performance and I was delighted for him that he got a double
figure score which as we know is a real mark of quality for a specialist round
in the current format of the show. I guessed Stockholm for one of the answers
which brought me my single point.
Mark Davies, our third contender, was answering on the
Castles of North Wales. I had to feel for Mark. Somehow it all seemed to go
wrong for him after the first couple of questions, and I take my hat off to him
for rescuing the situation towards the end of the round. Mark finished with 5.
By no means a disaster, but a score which left him with a veritable Snowdon to
climb in the GK round. I added 2 to my aggregate.
We finished then with Julie Ashcroft, answering on The Life
of Thomas Hardy. Julie didn’t seem to be answering particularly quickly but she
just kept answering correctly and the score built accordingly. One question
elicited a pass, but other than that she went on to produce a very fine round
indeed. 12 points and 1 pass gave just a little daylight between herself and
the peloton going into the GK round. As for me, well my knowledge of Hardy’s
oeuvre proved enough to give me 5 points and take me to a double figure score
of 10.
Mark was first to return to the chair for the gk round and
what followed was a rather different kettle of fish from his first round. Although
not answering quite at express pace Mark racked up an impressive twelve. I
don’t know if he will decide to chance his arm in Mastermind again, but GK like
that allied to a more lucrative specialist round could see him do well. He set
the bar at 17.
Being realistic, Mark was always too far behind at the
halfway stage to win. However three points separated the top 3, which meant
that any of them could do it with the right performance on GK. First to try was
Rachel Fullard. She didn’t match Mark’s even dozen, but she managed double
figures with a 10 which raised the target to 19. A winning score? Well, it was
not impossible, certainly.
I always worry with the youngest contenders that they may
find the GK rounds a bit of an ordeal. It didn’t look as if Edison was under
any distress, however there were just too many questions where I think his
relative youth played against him. He achieved a perfectly respectable 8, but
this still left him a point behind Rachel.
So finally this brought us back to Julie. 7 and 1 pass
would force a tie break and anything higher would bring an outright win. In
response to this target Julie produced by far the best GK round we’ve seen for
quite a few weeks. She scored 14 and no passes, to leave the rest of the field trailing
in her wake for an excellent 26 points. In her piece to camera Julie sounded
very surprised at what had happened. Well, if that GK round was not just a
flash in the pan, Julie, you have the ability to go further. I wish you the
very best of luck in the semi finals.
The Details
Rachel Fullard |
Kim Philby |
9 |
1 |
10 |
1 |
19 |
2 |
Edison Hipkin |
Chess: the Musical |
10 |
2 |
8 |
3 |
18 |
5 |
Mark Davies |
The Castles of North
Wales |
5 |
1 |
12 |
0 |
17 |
1 |
Julie Ashcroft |
The Life of Thomas
Hardy |
12 |
1 |
14 |
0 |
26 |
1 |
4 comments:
I am curious as to how old Edison Hipkin actually is, as he didn't look old enough to even be a contestant. I guess he surely must be at least 18.
Yes George, he has to be at least 18 - it stipulates on the application form that this is the minimum age you have to be. I guess he proves the old saying - if you're good enough, you're old enough.
Actually, speaking of which, did you watch the short-lived Junior Mastermind programme that was on in the mid-2000s? I enjoyed that, I'd like them to bring it back.
They don't have many serious quizzes for children anymore, do they? When I was a child, I remember there were a fair few, like Eliminator and Hard Spell.
Thank you for your kind words!
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