Mark Brader:
> These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2014-09-22,
> and should be interpreted accordingly... For further information
> see my 2014-09-15 companion posting on "Questions from the
> Canadian Inquisition (QFTCI*)".
> * Game 2, Round 4 - Sports - Unbreakable Records
> There's setting the bar, and then there's using a crane to put
> it out of reach. The following sports records are considered
> unassailable. (Okay, maybe they did all beat suppoesedly
> unassailable records in setting these, but you get what we're
> saying.)
> Except as indicated, name the record-holder in each case. For
> teams, the city or team name will do unless it would be ambiguous.
> 1. This NFL expansion team set a record of 26 straight losses in
> the 1976 and 1977 seasons. The closest anybody's come since then
> has been the Detroit Lions, who list 19 in a row in 2008 and '09.
Tampa Bay Buccaneers. 4 for Marc, Bruce, Joshua, Jason, Dan Tilque,
and Pete. 3 for Dan Blum.
> 2. This NASCAR driver -- nicknamed the King -- won 200 races
> in his career. To put that in perspective, Jeff Gordon has 85
> and counting. Name the King.
Richard Petty. 4 for Bruce, Joshua, Jason, and Pete.
> 3. In 1941, this Major League Baseball legend hit in 56 consecutive
> games. The closest since then was Pete Rose with 44.
Joe DiMaggio (New York Yankees). 4 for Marc, Bruce, Joshua, and Pete.
> 4. This Baltimore Orioles great played in 2,362 straight games
> without missing one. Only six other players have played in
> more than 1,000 consecutively.
Cal Ripken Jr. ("Ripken" was sufficient.) 4 for Marc, Bruce, Peter,
Joshua, Jason, and Pete.
> 5. Of course, Wayne Gretzky has every NHL scoring record possible.
> Within 0.5, how many *points per game* did he average through
> his whole career?
1.92 (accepting 1.42-2.42). 4 for Marc and Peter. 3 for Dan Blum,
Joshua, and Rob.
For these records, of course, "points" means goals plus assists.
In 1,487 NHL games he scored 894 goals and made 1,963 assists.
(I guess the question was ambiguous; it might also be taken as
including the one season he played in the WHA before the leagues
merged. He only ["only"!] had 46 goals and 64 assists in those
80 games, lowering his career average to 1.89. Nobody gave an
answer in the range 1.39 to 1.41, so the ambiguity doesn't matter
for contest purposes.)
> 6. Kobe Bryant once scored 81 points in a game, and that's the
> closest anyone has come to the 100 points scored on 1962-03-02,
> in a 169-147 win with the Philadelphia Warriors. Who set this
> unassailable record?
Wilt Chamberlain. (Against the New York Knicks.) 4 for Marc,
Dan Blum, Bruce, Peter, Joshua, Dan Tilque, and Pete.
By the way, according to a Wikipedia article that seems to have
been based on a book about that event, the game was not televised
(pro basketball was not considered a major-league sport at the time),
and although Philadelphia was the home team, they had agreed to
play some games in other nearby cities and this was one of them.
It was played in Hershey, and the arena, which could hold about
8,000 people, was only about half full.
> 7. This fireballer threw 5,714 strikeouts in his career.
> The closest challenger now active is more than 3,000 behind.
Nolan Ryan (New York Mets, California Angels, Houston Astros,
Texas Rangers). 4 for Marc, Bruce, Joshua, Dan Tilque, and Pete.
> 8. He has won 18 Olympic gold medals, twice as many as his nearest
> competitors.
Michael Phelps (swimming, US: 6 in 2004, 8 in 2008, 4 in 2012). 4 for
Dan Blum, Bruce, Peter, Joshua, Jason, Dan Tilque, Rob, and Pete.
Mark Spitz won 7 in 1972 but only 2 others, in 1968.
> 9. The greatest NFL pass receiver of all time, he retired with
> 22,895 career receiving yards. Terrell Owens came closest,
> almost 7,000 yards behind.
Terry Rice (San Francisco 49ers, Oakland Raiders, Seattle Seahawks).
4 for Marc, Bruce, Peter, Joshua, Dan Tilque, and Pete.
> 10. In 1991 he passed Lou Brock's stolen-base record of 938.
> He ended his career with 1,406.
Rickey Henderson (Oakland A's, New York Yankees, A's again, Toronto
Blue Jays, A's *again*, San Diego Padres, Anaheim Angels, A's *yet
again* [is that also a record?], New York Mets, Seattle Mariners,
San Diego Padres, Boston Red Sox, Los Angeles Dodgers). 4 for Marc,
Bruce, Joshua, and Pete.
> * Game 2, Round 6 - Entertainment - Subtitles
> Some movie sequels are identified by number, some by subtitle,
> some by both. On each question, we give the subtitle of a sequel,
> and you identify both the main title (series title) and the sequence
> number of the movie (whether it appears in the full title or not).
> For example, we say "The Golden Age" (2007, historical); the
> complete title was "Elizabeth: The Golden Age"; what you have
> to say is "Elizabeth 2".
Some people didn't seem to grasp the notion that answers in a
particular format had been asked for. I decided there was no reason
to insist on that -- at the original game it wasn't even made clear --
and accepted any format conveying the desired information.
In presenting the answers, I've put the sequence number outside the
quotes if it wasn't part of the actual title.
> 1. "Dead Man's Chest" (2006, action).
"Pirates of the Caribbean" 2. 4 for Marc, Bj�rn, Peter, and Pete.
3 for Rob. 2 for Dan Blum and Joshua.
> 2. "The Cradle of Life" (2003, action).
"Lara Croft Tomb Raider" 2. (Either half of the main title was
sufficient.) 4 for Bj�rn, Joshua, and Jason.
> 3. "The Last Stand" (2006, superhero adventure).
"X-Men 3". 4 for Dan Blum, Bj�rn, Joshua, and Jason.
> 4. "The Quest for Peace" (1987, superhero adventure).
"Superman IV". 4 for Dan Blum, Joshua, Jason, and Pete.
> 5. "The Undiscovered Country" (1991, sci-fi).
"Star Trek VI". 4 for Dan Blum, Bruce, and Dan Tilque. 3 for Joshua.
> 6. "Electric Boogaloo" (1984, musical).
"Breakin' 2". 4 for Joshua and Jason. 3 for Dan Blum.
> 7. "The Season of the Witch" (1982, horror).
"Halloween III". 4 for Jason. 3 for Joshua. 2 for Dan Blum.
> 8. "Reloaded" (2003, sci-fi).
"The Matrix" 2. 4 for Marc, Bj�rn, Jason, and Rob. 3 for Dan Blum
and Joshua.
> 9. "Judgement Day" (1991, sci-fi).
"Terminator 2". 4 for Bruce, Peter, Joshua, Jason, and Pete.
3 for Rob.
> 10. "Tokyo Drift" (2006, action).
"The Fast and the Furious" 3. 4 for Jason. 3 for Dan Blum
and Joshua. 2 for Peter.
Scores, if there are no errors:
GAME 2 ROUNDS-> 2 3 4 6 TOTALS
TOPICS-> Art His Spo Ent
Joshua Kreitzer 31 12 39 34 116
Jason Kreitzer 28 8 16 32 84
Pete Gayde 16 9 36 12 73
Marc Dashevsky 16 16 32 8 72
Dan Blum 16 17 14 25 72
Bruce Bowler 20 0 36 8 64
Peter Smyth 20 7 20 10 57
Dan Tilque 12 8 20 4 44
Rob Parker 4 14 7 10 35
Bj�rn Lundin 0 8 0 16 24
Erland Sommarskog 0 8 -- -- 8
Jeff Turner 4 0 -- -- 4
--
Mark Brader, Toronto,
m...@vex.net
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