Monday, 25 November 2019

University Challenge 2019-20: Round 2: Match 2: Southampton vs Durham

Evening all. On we head then to the second match of the most brutal round in the contest. And after what I said last week, I'm still trying to come up with a new format that ensures no-one leaves after a win and a single loss, is easy to understand and doesn't drag the contest out too much longer. If I come up with something, I will let it be known here. On with tonight's show...

Southampton started slowly in their first match against Goldsmiths of London, not scoring until after the first picture round, before recovering and ultimately winning comfortably 175-95. They were the same foursome as that time around: 
Josh Holland, from Worcester, studying Theoretical Computer Science 
Rory Fleminger, from Oxford, studying Civil Engineering 
Captain: Steve Barnes, from Hyde in Hampshire, studying Chemical Education 
James Carrigy, from Knaphill in Surrey, studying History

Durham lost their first match to Trinity of Cambridge, but survived to the play-offs, where they faced York, and ran out very comfortable winners by 240-145. They were also the same four as those prior occasions: 
Charles Bland, from Sutton in Surrey, studying Philosophy
William Tams, from Kirkby Stephen in Cumbria, studying Biosciences
Captain: Joe Cooper, from London, studying Chemistry
Arthur Raffle, from Manchester, studying French and German 

Off we set again then, and Mr Barnes opened the scoring by knowing the colour linking, among others, the 1991 European Cup winners, to be red (as in Star Belgrade); one bonus on trees followed. Mr Tams set Durham off in quick pursuit, and they fared much better on bonuses on words that can follow 'Shut your' to give expressions meaning 'Be Quiet!', a full house there. Mr Cooper came in too soon and lost five on the next starter, allowing his opposite number to take his second starter of the match; one bonus on pairs of people with similar names followed. Mr Tams was back in for Durham to tie the scores again, and two bonuses followed. The first picture round, on the sites of Scottish battles, went to Durham, who took another two bonuses, taking their lead to 60-30.

Mr Holland came back in for Southampton on the next starter though, unlocking a set of physics bonuses that I'm not even going to pretend I understood; they had two of them correct though, taking the gap back to ten. Mr Raffle upped the lead again, knowing that 'priest' and 'Oliver Goldsmith' would probably mean it was 'The Vicar of Wakefield' we were talking about; this game them a set of bonuses on the FA Trophy, of which they took two bonuses (I had a full set). Mr Tams shot in quickly again for Durham, which gave them a bonus set on IT terms, of which they drew a rare blank. It didn't look like it would matter at this point though, as Mr Raffle took the next starter and two bonuses followed.

Neither side identified a bit of Vivaldi's Four Seasons for the music starter; the replacement starter asked for the year when, among others, the first Shrek film was released; I knew it to be 2001, having rented in on VHS back in the day (ah, the early noughties!). Mr Bland was two years out, and when the question later revealed another clue to be the inauguration of George W Bush, Mr Barnes had the answer. The music bonuses, on horse riding in classical music, gave Southampton no further bonuses, but did reduce their gap to 105-60. Mr Tams recouped Durham's lost points as he took the next starter, and a rather straight forward (and topical) bonus set on political parties in Northern Ireland was swiftly swept clean. Mr Bland took the next, and bonuses on that old quiz staple the Shipping Forecast gave them two correct, and they were unlucky to miss the other, offering 'South Iceland' instead of 'South East Iceland'. Five were then lost to a penalty though, and Mr Carrigy picked up for Southampton; a much needed full set of bonuses on the moons of planets followed. Mr Holland gave the Saints a second starter in a row, and one bonus was sufficient to put them into triple figures.

The second picture starter saw Mr Raffle use the old logic of 'if it's an engraving, Durer will always be a good shout'; the bonuses, on works involving momento moris, gave Durham another two correct bonuses, and a lead of 165-100. And when Mr Tams took the next starter, and another pair of bonuses followed, the Wearsiders were within sight of victory.

Southampton had to go for it now; a chance went begging as Mr Bland buzzed too early on the next starter with only half the required answer, then gave the rest after his side had already been penalised; Paxo rightly canned the starter there. The next was dropped, but when Mr Bland atoned by taking the next, that was game over; a full set of bonuses on penguins confirmed this. Mr Barnes did the right thing and took an early punt on the next starter, but only lost five; Mr Tams did the honours, and a second full set in a row went with it. Mr Holland was unfortunate on the final starter, offering 'Octavius' instead of 'Octavia'; Mr Raffle took the points, and Durham took the one of the two bonuses there was time to answer. At the gong, Durham won 245-95.

A good contest, one sided, but watchable throughout. Unlucky Southampton, a solid team who did not deserve to lose as heavily as that, but a respectable pair of performances, thanks for playing! Very well done Durham though, another great performance against proven good opponents, and best of luck in the quarter-finals!

The stats: Mr Tams was the best buzzer of the night, with seven starters, while Mr Barnes was best for Southampton with three. On the bonuses, Southampton converted 8 out of 18 (with one penalty), while Durham managed 27 out of 38 (with four penalties).

Next week's match: don't know yet, but will keep an eye out.

Only Connect was another good match between the Journeymen and the Junipers, both unlucky to be in the elimination round. It went right to the wire, an 18-each tie, and the Junipers won on the resulting tie-breaker.

Monday, 18 November 2019

University Challenge 2019-20: Round 2: Match 1: Birmingham vs Jesus

Evening all. So, we're into the second round, the round where defeat means you're instantly out and victory means you're guaranteed two more games at least; not perfect, but until something better comes along, it's the best option available (a bit like Scotland having to play Steven Naismith up front!). We had to wait until the continuity announcement into Only Connect to find out who was playing tonight, but, when we did, one could be forgiven for expecting a walkover match tonight...

Birmingham won a low scoring contest against Bristol first time around, edging a narrow contest 125-120, with the gong denying them a winning margin ten points bigger. They were the same team as before: 
Alex Milone, from Brockenhurst in Hampshire, studying Medicine 
Izzy Lewis, from Monmouth, studying Physics 
Captain: Zoe Bleything, from Thornbury in Gloucestershire, studying Medicine 
Ben Sculfor, from Aylesbury, studying Maths

Jesus College Oxford came through the repechage, losing to Manchester first time around before winning a great play-off against Sheffield 170-165 two weeks ago. They too were the same team as those two other occasions: 
Lucy Clarke, from Ottershaw in Surrey, studying Early Modern History 
James Cashman, from Guildford, studying History 
Captain: Matt Cook, from Wellington, New Zealand, studying PPE 
Miranda Stevens, from Sevenoaks, studying Biology 

Off we set again then, and Ms Clarke, one of Jesus' MVPs last time around, started the match off with 'steel'; events of February 1919 gave the Oxonians just the one correct bonus to start with. Mr Sculfor opened Birmingham's scoring with 'bush ranger', and they fared a bit better with their first bonuses, taking two (and unluckily missing the other) and with them the lead. A penalty then increased that lead, and Mr Sculfor took the pickup, but none of the bonuses on the River Trent followed. Jesus then lost another five, but Birmingham failed to take advantage this time. Ms Bleything took the next starter though, and two bonuses added to their advantage. The first picture round, on scientific concepts known by a single Greek letter, went to Jesus; two bonuses meant they trailed 50-25.

The lead rose though when Mr Sculfor took the next starter; a bonus set on that old quiz staple national flags gave Birmingham just the one correct bonus. Ms Clarke came back in for Jesus on the next starter, giving her side a classic UC bonus set on words that came be made using the letters of the word 'POLYMATHS', of which they also took just the one. Birmingham then dropped five as Mr Milone mistakenly offered 'kidney stones' in lieu of 'gallstones'; Ms Clarke picked this up, and two correct bonuses put the sides on level pegging. Mr Cook then gave Jesus the lead, offering 'Davis' as soon as the words 'international tennis tournament' came out of Paxo's mouth; no bonuses followed though.

The music starter asked the teams for the artist behind the classic 'Golden Brown' (as famously covered by Alexander Armstrong); Mr Milone was first to buzz, but no answer came, allowing Mr Cashman to swoop in with 'The Stranglers'. The music bonuses, on pop songs using unusual meters, gave Jesus two correct bonuses, and a lead of 90-60. Fifteen of that lead vanished as Mr Cashman unfortunately slipped on the next starter and Mr Sculfor took the points; Birmingham closed the gap further with one bonus on Scottish golf courses. Mr Cook opened the lead up again as he took the next starter, but no bonuses came on a night when both sides seemed to be struggling with them. Ms Bleything pulled Birmingham into the match with 'eucalyptus', and one bonus was sufficient to narrow the gap to five points.

The second picture round, on world leaders who were known by titles to the equivalent of 'Father of the Nation', went to Jesus; no bonuses followed again, which left their lead at 105-90. Neither side buzzed on the next starter, and a second successive starter was dropped as neither side untangled a rather complicated piece of arithemtic. Mr Sculfor took the next starter though, and two bonuses on types of pasta gave Birmingham back the lead heading into the home straight.

Mr Sculfor took a second starter in a row, but a bonus set on Dickens' David Copperfield didn't add to their score (I got Mr Dick, as I went to watch a friend play him in a production of it once and I remembered him saying it!). Mr Cashman shot in for Jesus on the next starter, and one bonus put the sides on level pegging again. Ms Clarke took a crucial starter with 'saga' to put Jesus back in front, and a timely pair of bonuses put them within sight of victory. And when Ms Stevens took the final starter, that was game over. At the gong, Jesus won 150-120.

A low scoring but close and enjoyable contest, well done both teams. Unlucky Birmingham, but a fair and respectable performance, thanks very much for playing. Well done Jesus though, and very best of luck in the quarter-finals!

The stats: Mr Sculfor was the best buzzer of the night with six, while Ms Clarke was best for Jesus with five. On the bonuses, Birmingham converted 9 out of 24 (with one penalty), while Jesus managed 11 out of 32 (with three penalties).

Next week's match: I would guess Durham will be playing, but I'll retweet anything I find.

Only Connect saw the return of the Eggchasers and the Outliers in the penultimate eliminator; the former won comfortably 26-16.

Monday, 11 November 2019

University Challenge 2019-20: Repechage Play-Off 2: York vs Durham

Evening all. So, the second play-off, with the last place in a very competitive second round up for grabs, and, after last week's very close match, another looked a distinct possibility, with only five points separating these two teams' first round scores. Mind you, that was the case for the second play-off two series ago, and it ended up an absolute demolition job. That's why the play-offs and second round are such fun rounds: they are almost impossible to predict at times.

The University of York (not York University, that's in Toronto) were level pegging with Magdalen of Oxford pretty much all the way through their first match, and ultimately lost by a narrow margin of 170-150. They were the same foursome as before: 
Mickey Conn, from Godalming, studying Social Policy 
Sophie Williams, from Telford, studying Medieval Studies 
Captain: Sam McEwan, from Sevenoaks, studying History and Philosophy 
David Eastham, from Lancaster, studying Archaeology

Durham University started strongly in their first match against Trinity of Cambridge, but their opponents ultimately overpowered them and won comfortably by 200-145. They too were unchanged from that match: 
Charles Bland, from Sutton in Surrey, studying Philosophy
William Tams, from Kirkby Stephen in Cumbria, studying Biosciences
Captain: Joe Cooper, from London, studying Chemistry
Arthur Raffle, from Manchester, studying French and German

Off we set again then, and Mr Raffle was first off the line as he identified 'private' as the common word in the titles of various listed works; Durham opened their night with two correct bonuses. Mr Cooper gave the Wearsiders a second starter, and a repeat performance on the bonuses followed, another two. Mr McEwan opened York's account with the next starter, and a classic UC bonus set on words differing by the addition of 'let' at the end gave them a full house. Back came Durham thanks to Mr Tams though, and they responded with a full bonus set of their own. The first picture round, on maps with countries highlighted depending on whether they recognise a state as an independent country or not, went to Durham; another full house there gave them a lead of 85-25.

It increased when Mr McEwan lost five on the next starter; Mr Bland swept in, thus, already, making sure all four Durhamites had contributed at least one starter. No bonuses followed though, and they then lost five of their own via a penalty, but York couldn't pickup. Mr McEwan identified the owl for the next starter though, the giveaway clue being that it was playing a guitar in a poem by Edward Lear; one bonus followed. A great starter asked for the childrens song the words in which are synonyms of 'cranium', 'scapula', 'patella' and 'phalange'; Mr Cooper was first in with 'Heads, Shoulders, Knees and Toes'! (As someone on Twitter pointed out, if this was OC, Victoria would've been demanding a sing-along!) Durham pushed home their advantage with a full set of bonuses; Mr Raffle then took the next starter, with a further two bonuses pushing their lead to 100.

The music round, on classical pieces used for marches by the Armed Forces, went to Durham, who took a further two bonuses, taking their lead to 155-35. And they weren't stopping yet, as Mr Bland took the next starter, and a full set of bonuses on extinct herbivores went with it. Mr Raffle was maybe a tad lucky to avoid a telling off for a slight pause after buzzing on the next starter, but he was right, and another full bonus set put Durham past 200 and pretty much home and dry already. Back came York at last, with Ms Williams identifying 'Trojan and Trajan'; two bonuses on slave rebellions followed. Mr Cooper was slightly unlucky to lose five on the next starter; Mr Eastham picked up the points, and York took another pair of correct bonuses.

The second picture round, on stills from films whose canine characters have won the Palm Dog award, went to York, who took a sole bonus, which took the scores to 200-90. They'd probably left it too late, but York were at least going down with a good fight; Mr Conn made sure all eight players had answered a starter correct, and a bonus set on the Wikipedia logo (also the subject of Alex Guttenplan's first correct starter ten series ago!) gave them one correct answer.

Ms Williams gave York a fifth starter in a row with 'Daniel Day-Lewis', and another sole bonus pretty much ended their hopes of an unlikely victory. Mr Cooper extinguished them for good as he reawoke Durham by taking the next starter; just one bonus followed, but it didn't really matter now. Karl Marx popped up for the second week in a row on the next starter; Mr McEwan identified him, and York went out in style with a full set of bonuses. Mr Bland was next in for Durham with a very prompt buzz, and bonuses on the works of JM Coetzee saw the Wearsiders employ the old tactic of saying the same thing to all three bonuses and getting it right at the third time of asking. Mr Raffle took the final starter, and there was time for one bonus before the gong; Durham won 240-145.

A top contest between two good teams, very well played by both. Unlucky York, whose impressive recovery came a bit too late, but a fine performance to go out on, thanks very much for playing. Very well done Durham though, a strong performance against good opponents, and very best of luck in the second round!

The stats: Mr Raffle was the best buzzer of the night with five starters, while Ms Williams and Mr McEwan were joint best for York with three each. On the bonuses, York converted 14 out of 24 (with one penalty), while Durham managed 24 out of 37 (with two penalties).

Next week's match: the first second round match; if I find any tweets saying who's playing, I'll retweet them.

Only Connect saw the Wickets play the Electrophiles in the second eliminator; both sides had some unfortunate near misses in a good contest, with the latter ultimately winning 24-18.

Monday, 4 November 2019

University Challenge 2019-20: Repechage Play-Off 1: Sheffield vs Jesus

Evening all. So last week we finished on a bit of a cliffhanger, Paxo telling us we'd have to wait and see which two of the three runners-up that ended on 145 would be going through. As UCStats predicted, it's Durham and Jesus. So now we can properly move on to the play-offs, and with just 25 points between the four teams, two good matches in prospect.

Sheffield played Wolfson of Oxford in their first match, and led for large parts, but ultimately the game ended 170-each, and it was their opponents that took the tie-breaker question. Back for another go tonight were the unchanged foursome of:
Alistair Lyle, from Chiswick in London, studying Metalogy
Sam Kelly, from Seaford in East Sussex, studying English Literature
Captain: Jonathan Newhouse, from Skipton in Yorkshire, studying Cognitive Science
Daisy Fry, from Kent, studying Politics

Jesus College Oxford took on Manchester first time out, and, in contrast, started slowly, ultimately sneaking into the play-offs with a late rally. Also unchanged from before were: 
Lucy Clarke, from Ottershaw in Surrey, studying Early Modern History 
James Cashman, from Guildford, studying History 
Captain: Matt Cook, from Wellington, New Zealand, studying PPE 
Miranda Stevens, from Sevenoaks, studying Biology

Off we set again then, and Mr Newhouse, imperious on the buzzer in Sheffield's first match, opened the scoring with 'Mars'; bonuses on 1960s Britain gave the Steelmen a full house to start with. Ms Clarke duly set Jesus off in pursuit with, what Weaver's Week used to call, a 'Hidden Transmission Indicator of the Week', identifying a list of events that usually occur in November. The Oxonians also took a full set of bonuses to start with. A second starter to Ms Clarke, and a second full set of bonuses, and we had a game on here already. Mr Cashman took a third in a row for Jesus, but the show's perfect start ended as the Oxonians only took one bonus from a classic UC set on pairs of countries where the last three letters of the first and the first three of the second are the same. The first picture round, on fonts, went to Sheffield, who took two bonuses, which cut their gap to 65-45.

Ms Clarke bit back with already her third starter of the night, but, again, just the one bonus accompanied. A penalty then set the Oxford side back five, but Sheffield failed to capitalise; they did when Jesus unluckily lost a second five in a row, and also took a sole bonus. A second starter in a row to the Steelmen unlocked a set of bonuses on Scottish football; I got a full house, but Sheffield only knew Aberdeen to be the club Sir Alex Ferguson won the Cup Winner's Cup with. (A slight mistake on the question writers' part, St Mirren's stadium is South WEST of Glasgow Airport rather than South East, albeit only just)

The music starter was dropped; the Scottish football theme continued on the replacement starter which has the answer 'Falkirk'! (Though the question wasn't actually about that team!) Ms Clarke had that, and Jesus took one of the music bonuses, on classical pieces regularly played at the Nobel Prize ceremonies; they now led 85-75. Back came Sheffield thanks to Mr Lyle, and a full set of bonuses on the work of sculptor Hazel Reeves gave them a full house and the lead back. Ms Clarke duly pulled Jesus back, and they too took a full set and the lead back. A second starter in a row went to the Oxonians, and two bonuses on US dramas went with it. Mr Newhouse bought Sheffield back into the match, but they got nothing from a bonus set on mineralogy (my geologist Dad had a full house!).

The second picture round, on cityscapes, went to Jesus, who took another pair of bonuses, which meant they now led 150-110. A nice starter asked for the only SI unit in the NATO alphabet; Mr Kelly was first to realise it was Kilo, and a full set of bonuses on cuneiform meant they were still very much in the game heading into the home straight.

Mr Newhouse pulled them with five as he took the next starter; two or more bonuses would give them the lead back, but they only had the one they needed to level the scores again. Mr Lyle gave the Steelmen the lead, giving them a bonus set on Greek mythology; just the one bonus followed. Jesus were thus still in the game, and Mr Cashman made sure they were by taking the next starter, but they missed all the bonuses, meaning they were still five adrift. Next starter would win the game, and as soon as the words 'ode by John Keats' emerged, Mr Cashman shot in with 'Grecian urn'. And that was the gong! Jesus won 170-165!

A top match between two excellent teams, very well played by both, such a shame this is a sudden death match. Unlucky Sheffield, unlucky to lose both their matches, but two very respectable performances, thanks very much indeed for giving us them. Very well done Jesus though, and best of luck in the second round!

The stats: Ms Clarke and Mr Cashman were joint best for Jesus with five each, while Mr Newhouse was best for Sheffield again with four. On the bonuses, Sheffield converted 15 out of 27, while Jesus managed 16 out of 27 (with two penalties), so they really did win it on that last starter.

Next week's match: York vs Durham

Only Connect entered its elimination round tonight, with the Gladiators and the Darksiders returning; the latter led comfortably for the most part and ran away in Missing Vowels to win 25-10.