WITHQUIZ

The Withington Pub Quiz League

QUIZBIZ

18th December 2024

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Full marks to the unstoppable Prods on reaching the half way mark intact; elsewhere the Charas have a notable victory, KFD keep on keeping on and the History Men creep up to 5th;

Merry Christmas & A Happy New Year - see you January 15th 

History Men beat Opsimaths

Ethel Rodin lost to Charabancs

KFD beat Electric Pigs

Prodigals beat Albert

Latest WithQuiz League Table

History Men beat Opsimaths

The Hisory Men's forward march continues; the Opsis improve a little

Mike wallows in an evening spent convivially with old mates

What a happy evening lounging in the curtained off area of the Parrswood opposite the bar with the friendliest bunch of quizzers you could hope to meet!  As a bonus Opsimath Tehmeena joined us to spectate and (of course) she knew a number of answers none of us got (particularly the US universities pair - well, being from Canada she would, wouldn't she?).

The respective line-ups were Ivor, Anne, David and Alison against Charlotte, Emma, Brian and myself - with Guy QMing in his usual gentle and helpful manner.

The Opsis burst into an early lead (4 points ahead at one stage I seem to remember) but then, as we feared, we slumped a little - but by no means as severely as we have done over recent weeks.  We were in with a shout right up to the final round.  Everyone had their moments in the sun so no obvious Jonahs.  We live to fight another day.  Perhaps post Christmas we can arrest the downwards trajectory.


Rugby's French Pele

(R6/Q4)


Ivor tells the story of a victory despite Vanessa being off ill

Back to the Parrswood for our last match of 2024.  The pub was a little busier than usual - apparently it is Christmas next week.  For us retirees, of course, every day is a Christmas Day.  The Parrswood is so vast that we have played at no fewer than four different locations there this year and all relatively quiet (though that might be down to age-related hearing loss).  One of those locations was labelled 'Reserved' but much to our delight it was reserved for us.  It was the subsidiary snug with the splendid armchairs where team captains (appointed or self-appointed) can preside over proceedings like a Judge Jeffries (or Hammond) of our time. 

Tonight we faced the Opsimaths.  Mike informed us they now have a pool of nine players available for call-up.  This is rather more than the Historymen but we reassure ourselves (like whistling in the dark) that the few we have are rare gems.  Unfortunately Vanessa was felled by illness, presumably acquired from her class of eight year olds (Covid, flu, RSV or noro, or possibly all of them).  Thus there was a last minute recruitment of Alison (Mrs C).  Alison normally spends Wednesday nights watching My Brilliant Friend (fourth series now) as it is the only time she has entire possession of the remote control, but she did her duty for the team driving there in the rain, getting 2 twos, and failing to  blurt.  As per tradition she did end up with the unlucky seat getting three of the eleven unanswereds.  We started badly and were four points behind after Round 1, but were five points ahead after Round 5 and for once held on.  Anne, of course, was MVP yet again.

Afterwards the usual post game banter and drinks with our now very old friends and, like election night, the delight (and schadenfreude) of the results of other games coming through to Mike.

Best wishes to all the teams and we look forward to returning next year for further battles.  Like student rugby teams we like to play hard during matches and play even harder afterwards.


Sleeping partners

(R7/Q7&5)


Ethel Rodin lost to Charabancs

A famous Chara victory lifting them to  a mere 2 points below their opponents

Soggy but joyous Damian reports

On the wettest night of the season I would like to humbly thank all those kind virgins who accepted last week's invitation to sacrifice themselves to the quiz gods to prevent us constantly snatching defeat from the jaws of victory (as was the case last week - and on various previous occasions).  Thanks to their timely intervention the only thing that suffered divine wrath were the soggy bits of my marking sheet that emerged piecemeal from my soggy coat.

Fortunately Chara Bill is proving to be an efficient marking backup for us, arriving by car with our newly teetotal John.  He managed to keep his bits and bobs nicely dry enough to record what must be the most pleasing score we have notched up this season so far.  That it was against one of the most formidable opponents we have ever faced - and in the comfort of our old haunt, the former White Swan - made the result even more satisfying. 

After sneaking past us last week, the Bards atoned for the heartbreak by providing a paper that really did have something for everybody - at least in our case - and thereby helped us to a very welcome victory against last season's league champions.  Ethel Roddy kept popping in to see us every few minutes to gauge how his (former?) team mates were doing.  He may now have to reconsider his retirement plans after seeing them suffer their fourth defeat of the season which has enabled us to emerge from the role of the league's whipping boys (at least for the time being) and placed us now just one level below them in the league table.

All in all, a very satisfying way for us to complete the first half of the season and so give us renewed hope and confidence for the next half.

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to all! 


Everybody likes it hot

(R2/Q7)


James watches the visiting Charas score a confident win

Charabancs took an early lead and maintained it throughout, despite Ethel briefly threatening a comeback in Round 5.  The subject matter and themes played very much more into their knowledge base than it did ours, and I suspect with that set of questions they’d have given every team in the league a run for their money.  They left some points out there too - with at least three where they mentioned the right answer in their discussions before plumping for something else.  They also picked up a ridiculous number of steals. 

There was possibly some advantage in going first, and, looking at the scores across the night, that might have been the case elsewhere too - but that was a marginal factor in our game. 

Roddy sat out again, and would probably have got a few that we missed out on, but again, that was only a marginal factor - and of course, he would not have offered much insight into, for example, alleged bully rapper Lizzo.  

Merry Christmas to everyone and Best Wishes for the New Year. 


Delius' spring sighting

(R5/Q5)


KFD beat Electric Pigs

A goodly victory for KFD keeps them well-placed to benefit if the Prods slip up

Kieran tells of a win - but more significantly of the end of an era

A pointsfest (at least in our game) courtesy of the Bards.  Our highest score and biggest win of the season so far and a first appearance in ten months for young Liam® (he's still way short of thirty).  All done by 9.50 under the firm and always fair supervision of 'Ballcrusher' Bob.  What's not to love?  Well not much really.  Martin replaced Barry in the belly of the whale, snagging all three of our unanswereds and we can only just see the Prodigals way ahead up the road and looking unstoppable, but overall it's been a decent first half of the season.

Dhani/Erling being back in the team was good news for a couple of reasons: firstly because he's a nice guy and it's good to catch up with him and find out what he's been up to since we last saw him; secondly... more of that... well now actually.


Greatest saxophonist ever?

(R8/Q7)


You see, in a few months time ... (klaxon alert) ... KFD will be no more - at least we will not be recognisable as anything we have been for more than thirty years. No it's not another gratuitous and irritating name change, although if we have any future that is inevitable.  After nearly fifty years in Manchester and more than thirty at the top of our order, the second half of this season will be Barry's last in WithQuiz.  The sci-fi cockney red, the Lowestoft Ben Duckett, our man everywhere from the Halls of Montezuma to the shores of Tripoli begins his valedictory tour, in the Griffin of course, in just four weeks time. Now don't worry, Barry isn't ill, isn't about to croak his last ever quiz answer; he's just retiring and moving to Norwich.  You might consider that to be quite similar to turning up your toes and dropping off the quiz perch but I assure you it's his entirely voluntary decision and one he's very happy about.

No more will his mighty Suffolk willow crash the first question of the season over the ropes for a maximum (I've lost track of the number of times he's done that, I'd guess at least twenty).  Speaking of twenty, that's the number of league titles he's won, and sadly a romantic twenty first looks unlikely. Four WIST trophies (still a chance of another one of those) and countless wins in other cups and end of season tournaments.  One of the most bemedalled players the league has ever seen - or will ever see.  Much, much more important than all that he's one of the genuine good guys; utterly reliable, totally trustworthy and completely discreet.   Someone I feel privileged to have called a friend for forty years - and he's a red!  


Hollywood's co-operative quartet

(R2/Sp)


You have the chance to tell him, over the next few months, how much you've appreciated being continually bested by his extraordinary appetite for quiz points; don't miss it.  At present we're planning on carrying on after Barry leaves but our squad will once again be pretty small and we won't be - can't possibly be - anywhere near as good a team.  Barry hopes he'll be able to visit Manchester from time to time so you never know we might see him grace the quiz league making an occasional guest appearance every now and then.   

"If sometimes you're catching a Fleeting glimpse of twelfth fifth man at silly Mid-on Ethel's White Swan (?) And it could be Geoff and it could be John"

or it could be......

Barry it's been a blast, so many memories of so many great nights quizzing and sometimes nothing to do with quizzes at all.  Thanks for being brilliant at answering questions and an awful lot more besides.


"Greed, for lack of a better word, is good"

(R2/Q8)


Prodigals beat Albert

Magnificent!  A whole half season and not a point dropped; the Prods power on

Mike's having discipline problems - again!

As the newly appointed commissar for team standards I drove through the appaling weather conditions last night hoping to intercept the playing squad before it reached the bar of The Albert Club.  Alas, I was too late; it was like watching  a crowd of unruly kittens let loose in a field of catnip and it was downhill all the way from there.

We were never really in the hunt as the Prods established an early lead and maintained it all the way through.  I have tried to explain to my team that to win quiz  fixtures it is necessary to know something but the concern on their little faces as they wrestle with this concept is touching to behold. 


Enabling footballers to move freely

(R8/Q3)


Quiz paper set by...

... The Bards

Average Aggregate score 76.8


An excellent quiz from the Bards to take us into the Christmas break.  Good themes and knowledge demands set at just about the right level.  I just wonder whether Tony set the Porridge round having spent much of his working life consigning villains to chokey.


Wilkinson's boat disguise

(R7/Q6)


... and Damian's verdict?

The scoreline was just above the seasonal average making this one of the more accessible papers of the season with mostly gettable themes that helped rather than hindered finding the right answers.  We particularly enjoyed the Porridge theme round but failed to recall anyone called 'Bonecrusher' to apply to the likes of Mike Tyson.  We waited in vain for 'Lukewarm' to make an appearance but wisely decided that it didn't somehow quite fit Mr Tyson's fearsome persona. 


Innocent Edith

(R2/Q1)


... and James had this verdict ...

If the 'Giuseppe Mazzini' question was obscure enough to have passed by both Greg and Rob, it was probably a tougher answer than his impatient quiz partner Busy Lizzie (by the way Jason 'Dizzy' Gillespie resigned as coach of the Pakistan Test team a few weeks ago, so that question wasn’t quite up to date - but we knew who they meant).

The ‘On the….’ round was a bit hit and miss, with a few missed/conferred answers when neither team were sure if some of the phrases quite reached the threshold of ‘well known’.  Listing the local bus companies that we all used to use was perhaps a less difficult question than some of the others, as well as ‘On the Buses’ probably being the first ‘On the.…’ phrase most people would write down.

But in general the paper was pretty good.  


Cissie and Ada chew the cud

(R6/Q8)


... and Mike O'B's view ...

It was a perfectly reasonable paper with some innovative tweaks involving connections and Run-ons, albeit with the occasional signposting of the correct answer to the second of a pair of questions in the answer to the first ofg the pair.  Our team got its nickels in a twist over this.


Batley belter

(R2/Q4)


... and finally Ivor's feedback ...

We can't complain about the quiz.  It certainly had all the hallmarks of a Bards’ paper.  Tony tells me they had it all ready and sealed in the envelope over a week ago.  This is something we Historymen can never manage, and, even if we seal the envelope on Wednesday morning, I find myself opening it in the afternoon as I realise I have introduced a howler (hence recent alterations in pen e.g. 'North Down' turning into 'South Down')  and then have to reseal the envelope with sellotape.

The Bards’ questions were more historical than even the Historymen produce.  We always expect a land or sea battle from Tony and in 20 years he has covered every one since the Crusades.  Perhaps it was inevitable that he would go back even further in time and that caught us out (but not Brian).  The themes of old cars and old sitcoms played to the strengths of both teams’ older members.  Both teams failed with the US universities (though not the Opsimath’s Canadian reserve).  I quite liked the 'On the…' round though I was berated by Anne for hoping that 'On the job' and 'On the game' might appear.  


Contract - but with strings attached

(R3/Q8)


Question of the Week

This week I've chosen Round 3 Question 8, which had just the right degree of guessability whilst still revealing a surprising fact...

Which instrumentalist’s contract with EMI lasted from 1929 to his death in 1999?

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


Just another stock picture

(R2/Q5)


... and also

You may have wondered  why one of our venues - The Sun in September - is a tad different from your normal run of South Manchester hostelries.  Well, Andrew's referred me to an article which goes to explain why Samuel Smith pubs are the way they are ...

Sam Smiths