Tuesday, 28 October 2025

Mastermind 2026 - First round heat 15

Another week, another first round heat. To be honest, the series has fallen a little into the doldrums in recent weeks, with much honest endeavour but little real quality. Apologies to every contender in the last few weeks. You’ve all given it a lash – this is just how I feel and please feel free to disagree. It’s been a little while since any of the contenders really blew my socks off. Could last night’s manage to do this?

Rachel Sambrooks started us off with the short fiction of George Saunders. This was not the same George Saunders who voiced Shere Khan in the Jungle Book, I hasten to add. No, this was the Booker Prize winner who wrote my current read, “Lincoln in the Bardo”. I guessed the ‘I Am Spartacus’ question, but that was all I could manage in this round. Rachel did better, but the questions persisted in going into areas she maybe hadn’t considered during her preparation, and the round ended with Rachel having scored 5.

Like the previous round, Beth Younge’s round on the musical “Les Miserables” brought me just the one point – Bring Him Home, if you must know. For the second round in a row I think we saw a contender having to face up to the fact that the setters took a wider view of the subject than the contender had. Beth too scored 5.

I didn’t really expect that I was going to do that much better with our third specialist, Florence Nightingale. Well, I was right about that. At the start of the round I was on zero and I was still there by the end of it. Terry Edwards managed a respectable 8 on the subject – which is pretty decent considering that our Flo did live a long time. My grandmother Florence was named after Florence Nightingale. Well, sort of. She was actually named after her father’s sister, Florence. Now she was the one who was actually named after Florence Nightingale. There you go.

Submariner Tomas Stevenson brought the specialist round to a close with the O.C., a popular television series from the United States. Which I have never watched. So it was cue another zero points round and an aggregate of a measly 2 points. Tomas stumbled here and there – well, that seemed to be a bit of a linking theme tonight, but he pushed on and like Terry before him he put together a decent round worth 8 points.

An interesting contrast in styles between the two contenders tied in third place actually brought about similar results in the subsequent general knowledge round. Rachel seemed very tense but was snapping out the answers – not always correctly but she really gave it a good go. A respectable 8 points took her up to 13. Beth, on the other hand, seemed a lot calmer, but consequently never really built up a head of steam, either. She too scored 8 for 13, but was behind on pass countback.

Terry, then, had two clear goals. One was to score the 6 points he needed for an outright lead. These he managed. His second objective was to push on to set the most daunting target that he could for Tomas. In this I’d say he was less successful. The questions just seemed to refuse to fall his way, and despite a fair amount of time left in the round he ground to a halt with a total of 7 for 15 overall. Judging by the look on his face he must have known that it wouldn’t be enough.

Still, there’s many a slip twixt cup and list. Alright, Tomas only needed 8 but he still needed to find those 8 correct answers. Well, despite a wobbly first half of the round he settled enough to find nine which gave hm a won with 17. Maybe not the highest winning score we’ve ever seen – well, there’s no maybe about it – but a win is a win is a win. Well done and good luck in the semi finals.

The Details

Rachel Sambrooks

The Short Fiction of George Saunders

5

0

8

0

13

0

Beth Younge

“Les Miserables” The Musical

5

1

8

1

13

2

Terry Edwards

Florence Nightingale

8

1

7

4

15

5

Tomas Stevenson

The O.C.

8

0

9

3

17

3

No comments: