WITHQUIZ

The Withington Pub Quiz League

QUIZBIZ

15th April 2026

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Albert, Charas, Prods and Pigs contend next week's Cup semis;

History Men, CKC, Bards and Opsis fight for the Plate;

all to be entertained by a paper from luckless Ethel Rodin

Val Draper Cup - Round 2

History Men lost to Albert

CKC lost to Charabancs

Prodigals beat Ethel Rodin

Electric Pigs beat Bards

Final WithQuiz League Table

Val Draper Cup - Round 2

CKC lost to Charabancs

The handicap system works its magic to see the Charas through to the semis

Damian returns from cruising to get the coach back on the road

Honestly, I can't leave my lot for 5 minutes whilst I go cruising the Atlantic (OK it was actually for 2 weeks)  and have to read results which include the lowest score of the season against the bottom team of the season (sorry, Mike and the Opsis, just sayin').  No sooner back on dry land, and we manage to notch up only our second win of the year against fellow Griffiners and old rivals, CKC.  Is there a pattern here or am I just exaggerating my worth to the team (please don't rush in with any answers).  Efficient conferring and the presence of former captain Gerry who was our star player of the evening, notching up three twos, helped us considerably. The stats read six twos apiece with the steals favouring us four to three and with three of the four unanswereds falling to us.  In the event, the handicap played to our advantage as we would have lost by just one point had it not been a factor.   Still, a win is a win and a comparatively rare outcome for us these days so we'll take it, handicap and all!  We did feel going first conveyed an advantage as we quickly built up a big lead by half time and then saw it gradually clawed back when CKC went first in the second half. The points total of 73 just about met the seasonal average.  

Comic offering of the evening was QM Bob mistaking Benny Rothman, leader of the mass trespass of Kinder Scout in 1932, for Benny Goodman! For a moment he had us scratching our heads wondering what revolutionary activities clarinettist Benny could have been involved in when not playing his instrument?  We had visions of him leading all those hikers whilst playing his clarinet, a kind of Pied Clarinettist of Kinder Scout.


Where the music was born

(R1/Q8)


Kieran's Cup doesn't quite runneth over

The cup is never what you might call fun and that was true in spades tonight.  We started four down on the Charas and hoped for an Opsis trademark pointsfest which would make overturning the deficit much easier.  Hope made its excuses and left town halfway through Round One.  Going first in the first half seemed to be a huge advantage and the Charas led by eleven at the break. However the Opsis are seasoned quiz setters and they know what they're doing; we won the second half by eight and the margin of our defeat was one point fewer than the handicap - which is always really annoying.  Ours was the only game in which the handicap decided the result; no doubt an Opsimath spreadsheet wrangler has taken a measure of satisfaction from that.  


Didsbury's History Boy

(R1/Q3)


Martin has gone to the dogs, more or less.  His niece is having her second wedding in the space of four months - both to the same man before you raise an Ancelotti eyebrow.  This one is taking place in Taiwan where the groom/husband hails from, so Martin is dog/cat/budgie/ferret/alpaca/whatever sitting the family pets in Grimsby while his sister (and the cousins and the aunts most likely) travel half way round the world for a very expensive sense of déjà vu David and I therefore played alongside the league's real youth policy; young Liam® (just turned thirty) and even younger Thomas.  Lowering the space mutts average age to well below fifty helped us not one bit as a paper more suited to curmudgeonly old gits unfolded throughout the evening. Musicologists Liam and David duelled collaboratively over their Beatles knowledge with Liam just edging it for knowing about Alan Civil's other horn solo.  David almost matched him on the harp but even this expertise and the points garnered were not enough for us to get the win.   


The past rearing its ugly head in Spain

(R3/Q1)


Our dire situation after three rounds was such that we were staring down the barrel of having to set two quiz papers in three weeks and I was staring very hard at the spectating and partly responsible Lord Bath.  Time for this curmudgeonly old git to get moving and reel off five successive twos thereby a) bringing some respectability to the score, b) relieving the league organiser of a dilemma and c) dropping Ethel right in it - sorry guys.  Mind you I had made a total bollocks of the Factory Records question in Round One so I owed my doggie team mates something.   

Jaw-dropping, sense-mangling moment of the night was discovering that Boney M had recorded a version, incomprehensibly described as "excellent" in the question, of No Woman, No Cry.  Only WithQuiz can come up with this sort of information and often I wish it wouldn't. I wasn't sufficiently anaesthetised by Joseph Holt's best bitter to check it out at the time but, foolishly, have done so since.  It's exactly what you would expect - awful.  If you can't resist rubbernecking musical car crashes and you have an ample supply of Class A drugs to hand then out there on YouTube is Barbra Streisand 'singing' Life on Mars.  Really I swear it's true, she actually did that, and don't blame me if you clicked on the damn link.   

We have another game next week in the Parrs Wood and we hope we'll have a special guest in our line up to take on Tony and co, such is the stuff from where dreams are woven. Meanwhile what passes for prayers in our kennels will be offered that Arsenal will continue to be utterly useless for another four days - at least. 


Maybe that's why the roof leaked

(R3/Q7)


Very first Ballon d'Or

(R6/Q2)


History Men lost to Albert

Relative league positions win out at the Parrswood to favour the Albert

Ivor celebrates Eveline's football knowledge

A night of great success: we do not have to set the questions next week as lowest scoring losers, and we duly progress into the Plate semi finals.

The game tonight was close (28-28 at the end of Round 6) but the Albert pulled away in the last two rounds.  Albert had already won before the last pair so sadly Eveline, answering a football question correctly for the first time ever, was just icing on the cake rather than the unexpected winner in Fergie time.

It was a lively evening with the Albert being even more raucous than ourselves. Perhaps this was due to Jeremy, in his mustard coloured corduroys tonight, being demob happy (he joins the ranks of we retirees soon), and Captain MOBO sitting far back in the audience (of one) unable to administer any necessary discipline.  However we always play fairly and there were several occasions when total silence enveloped us as a player was cogitating - the kind of silence only experienced when a gallery of Britons (not Americans) are watching a player take a vital putt (though not followed up by whoops of “You’re the man” afterwards).  Ian and Ashton were the Albert’s stars (4 and 5 twos each) with Anne in Seat 3 as our MVP. She would have done even better had she asked herself: "Would Sherpa Tenzing really have turned up at Olive Shapley’s door?”


Ubu Imperator

(R6/Q8)


There were only five unanswereds. Sometimes theme rounds can run out of steam by question five when only dull, or obvious, or very hard answers, or none at all, are left for the compiler but that was not the case tonight.  The Excel-lent round exemplifies how best to set such a set of questions.  I was lucky to get the whooping cough question because PERT is a word that only springs to mind with the meaning (according to Wiktionary dating from the 14th century) “of a part of the body, well-formed, shapely” rather than the Wikipedia article  “PERT" (program evaluation and review technique).  I am now better informed but no wiser about four parameter beta distribution and excess kurtosis.  We also like whimsy and there was just the right amount with the German CO (R2 spare) and the local pub assistant (R1 spare).  I think MOBO would not have controlled any guffaws even with the Paddle of Rebuke.  The other thing the Historymen like is history and although the Gallipoli campaign eluded an answer we enjoyed the 'What, Where and When' puzzles.  Anne  also had happy memories of Benny Rothman (R8/Q5) whom she had met in later life.  Our most embarrassing moment was trying to remember the track that Alan Civil played on (R8/Q1), especially as we ourselves had set that very question (in a different format)  only two weeks ago.  Vanessa rescued us, though admitting: “I should have read the paper”.


"Your day breaks, your mind aches"

"Leaving the note that she hoped would say more"

(R8/Q1&2)


Prodigals beat Ethel Rodin

Our league champs make short work of their handicap to go through

The Prods came back from the brink of extinction says Michael

A few weeks ago at the Ladybarn Club, Greg pronounced confidently: "We'll get you in the cup.  We always do".  And so it proved, as Ethel brought a four-point handicap advantage with them to the club.  For the first few rounds anyway, it felt like a lot more than four points. Indeed, it was not until Round 6, which the Prodigals won 9-1, that we entertained any thoughts of winning, with only John's dredging of some inspired answers keeping our heads above water. The gross score on the night, therefore, did not reflect our experience; we thought we were packing our bags for season. 


The Schlieffen Chicken

(R2/Sp)


Electric Pigs beat Bards

The Pigs knock up a stonking 48 points to storm to the semis


Meanwhile back in Blighty history was moving on

(R5/Q5)


This week's Quiz paper set by...

... The Opsimaths

Average Aggregate score 78.5

As one of the setters I know I'm not allowed to pass comment on this week's paper so I turned up at the Griffin (CKC v Charabancs) and jokingly told Bob that I was there as a sort of WithQuiz 'Of-QM' to check on the standard of QMing (Bob used to be a headteacher so he appreciated that - and indeed told me a few Ofsted tales from his own back catalogue).

As ever Bob was excellent.  He was clear of voice, patient of repetition and made everyone feel welcome at the start.  We forget sometimes how much we owe Bob and his likes each week.  He even had some comforting words for Fr Megson in the light of the Donald's recent blasphemies (come to think of it Gerry owes us a few apologies from down the years for his own blasphemies - but there we are).

Bob's only slight hiccup was confusing everyone by having Benny Goodman playing his clarinet atop Kinder Scout in the 1930s.  But of course we forgave him his trespasses!


The Maiden's Tresses in NW Scotland

(R5/Sp2)


P.S. As I sat listening to Bob intone the questions last night, my mind wandered off to the back room at the Albert Inn (now the Fletcher Moss), sometime in, say, the mid 1970s.  There down the right hand side around that long table sat Seamus, Olive, the Dalai (or Dazza as we used to call him) and Nicholas Hytner arguing the toss, when in strolled Bob fresh from his gig at the ABC on School Lane.  Wonder what their conversation was?  "Can you tell those f***ing quizzers to shut up?  They think they own the place!"  I think we have the makings of the lyrics for a new song there - Didsbury Pie maybe?


Didsbury boozer

(R1/Q2)


... so what was Damian's view ...

Tonight's paper was set by the Opsimaths who have traditionally been our favourite setters.  We usually do well on their questions. There was the usual variety on offer with especially good rounds on Didsbury and the 'What happened on this date in history' round. We didn't manage to guess the hidden theme but found the chicken-related round amusing. 


... and this was Ivor's verdict ...

We all enjoyed the quiz tonight with its varied themes and formats, and questions composed so that there is always a chance of coming up with the answer.


... and Michael T's ...

As for the quiz itself, a sense of dread befell us (well, Richard and me) over the first few rounds, as questions about old, local things were apt to confound; indeed, I think Round 2 was the first I can remember where I genuinely had no clue as to any of the eight answers. Things definitely picked up, though. The 'Who, What, Where?' round was a nice innovation, while nobody can complain about getting questions on subject matter as diverse as Tractarian theology, West African civil wars, and celebrated guitarists.


Question of the Week

Looking on at the Griffin one of the highlights was watching both teams in turn trying to fit the parts of a musical instrument into the frame of a chicken (or vice versa).  "Don't violins have necks?"  "Does a cello have a breast?"  Neither team navigated their way to the actual answer - and when Bob read it out there was a great "of course!" - so Round 2 Question 3 gets this week's 'Ballon de WithQuiz' ...

Although maple and oak are sometimes used, hickory is the most commonly used wood to make which parts of a musical instrument?  Metal and carbon fibre are also occasionally used.

For the answer to this and all the week's other questions click here.


No need to forgive his Trespass

(R8/Q5)


... and also

One of the traditional moans of the WithQuiz grump is that we are all getting ancient together, we've got no new players and the league will die with us.

Well ... nonsense!

I'd like to think that the Opsimath line up over the past couple of seasons has demonstrated otherwise, and this week at the Griffin Liam and Tom showed how the average age of serial league winners, CKC, has dropped a decade or more and still left the team ultra-competitive.


.. she's the true trespasser

(R5/Q8)


Over in Ladybarn too, Ethel's team has shown some fresh faces with Michael and Rob joining the line-up.  Rob is Professor of Political Science at Manchester University and lately a regular voice on political shows and podcasts across the airwaves nationally; he's a sort of slightly more kempt version of  Sir John Curtice -  who Rob knows well and has worked with frequently.  In such turbulent political times its crucial that both the students and the wider public have an expert to make sense of it all.  Well, Rob's your man.

This week my colleague, Don Berry and I welcomed Rob to our ALL FM radio show (Vintage FM) where he told his story (and selected his music - he loves R.E.M. as it happens).  It's a good listen.  Catch it here.