Good evening friends; we're back! After an excellent Euros, the best since 2000 IMO, in which I finally got to see Scotland play at a major tournament, and England finally reached their full potential; I felt genuinely sorry for them last night, Saka especially. Anyway, what better way to get over that tournament being over than the triumphant return of Quizzy Mondays! So, let's get stuck in to the TENTH(!) series of UC I've covered on this blog...
King's College London is appearing on the BBC series for the sixth time tonight; it's best performance was actually last series, where they reached the QFs before losing both their games there to Balliol and Imperial. This year's team, no doubt hoping to better that, were:
Anand Sathyanath, from between Southampton and Portsmouth, studying Medicine
Rachel Bedwin, from South East London, studying Developmental Biology
Captain: Ashad Rahid, from Daventry, studying Philosophy
Oliver Beard, from South East London, studying the History of War
Glasgow is making its 10th BBC series appearance, and its seventh in eight series; in fact, this is the third series in a row it's been in the first episode of the series. Last year's team won that first match before losing to, oh, King's in the second round! No doubt hoping to avenge that loss were this year's quartet of:
Erin Thomson, from Glasgow, studying Physics
Nicki Fairbairn, from Ayr, studying Chemical Physics
Captain: Shaun Cairns, from Clydebank, studying Theatre Studies and Film and TV studies
Darius Darulis, from Vilnius, Lithuania, studying Computer Science and Physics
So, off we set once again, and it was Mr Rashid who took the first starter of the series, identifying orange as the colour linking the various given clues; the London side opened the series with two bonuses on famous quotations. Glasgow then took the next two starters, in fact Ms Thomson took both; the Scots side took one bonus from their first set on people with occupational surnames (I got Andrei Shevchenko), and two from their second set on astronomy. The first picture round, on locations of teams in the Netball Super League, went to Glasgow; no bonuses were taken, giving Paxo an excuse to have a good moan at them over their lack of geography knowledge(!), after which they led 45-20.
Mr Rashid duly reawoke his team by quickly taking the next starter, and bonuses on the actor Lakeith Stanfield provided two correct answers to cut the gap to five points. His opposite number Mr Cairns bit back and took the next two though; no bonuses came from the first set, but the second set on the African Union gave them two correct of their own. This took us the music round, with Ms Thomson winning the buzzer race to identify Johnny Cash; the bonuses, on musicians who advocate prisoners rights, gave them just the one correct answer, which took their lead to 90-40.
Five points were then lost to the first penalty of the series, which allowed Mr Rashid to once again take the points for his team; his side's bonus form ended as they took just one bonus on chemical engineering. Two starters were dropped before Mr Darulis ensured Glasgow's four players all had at least one starter in the bag; they took one resulting bonus on children's laureates, the same one I had. The second picture round, on paintings depicting monkeys, went to King's; one correct answer, from what looked like an educated guess, took the scores to 100-70.
And King's then took a second starter in a row for the first time in the game, and they took one bonus from the resulting set, only for those points to be lost to the first 'just an' interruption of the series. That was the first of two dropped starters before Ms Bedwin put King's within ten points, which became five when they took one bonus on unicorns. Next starter was far too complicated for either team; Mr Beard took the next to give King's the lead for the first time. Two bonuses on marine ecosystems were taken, and that was the gong; King's won 115-100.
A good start to the series despite the low scores, two pleasant teams gave us a good watchable contest. Well done to King's and best of luck in the second round! Hard lines to Glasgow, who will probably not be back in the play-offs, but they gave a respectable account of themselves, thanks very much for playing!
The stats: Ms Bedwin, Mr Rashid and Ms Thomson were joint best buzzers of the night, with three each for their respective teams. On the bonuses, King's managed 10 out of 21 and Glasgow 7 out of 21, with both sides incurring one penalty each, so it was a close match decided on the bonuses.
Next week's match: U.C.L. vs St Hilda's Oxford
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Connect also returned tonight for its 17th series. Kicking off the
series were the Scrubs, Anthony Martinelli (UC winning captain with Caius
Cambridge in 2014-15), Maggie Huang and captain Sophie Lovick, and the
Librarians, Chris Thorpe, Rachel Scott Halls and captain Kathryn Drumm. The
Librarians led 3-2 after a low scoring first round, but the Scrubs turned it
round to lead 8-5 after the second. A slighty better wall for the Liberarians
saw them sneak back into a 15-13 lead going into Missing Vowels, where a very
close and dramatic round ended in an 18-each tie-breaker! The Librarian won
that, but both teams total deserve their respective returns.
Also today, Brain of Britain returned with its triennial Brain of Brains special. This would normally feature the three most recent winners and the highest scoring runner-up; however, 2018 winner Clive Dunning couldn't return, so two runners-up featured. In the end, David Stainer won the show by a single point over Frankie Fanko, who he defeated by a not that bigger margin in the 2019 final; Graham Barker and Hugh Brady, last series' winner and runner-up, finished not that much further back.
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