University Challenge
University Challenge (UC) is a British television quiz show in which teams of students from universities and colleges in the UK compete against each other in a knockout tournament. University Challenge was originally a spin-off of College Bowl. The programme first aired in 1962, being aired on ITV and hosted by Bamber Gascoigne until the show was axed after 1987. UC was revived in 1994, airing on the BBC and being hosted by Jeremy Paxman until the end of the 52nd series in 2023, whereupon he was replaced by Amol Rajan.
Magdalene College (Oxford), the University of Manchester and Imperial College London are tied for the most series wins, with 4 wins each as of 2023.
Format
University Challenge is roughly similar to quizbowl in format, although differs in question style. Starter questions are answered on the buzzer and are worth 10 points, with a 5 point penalty for an incorrect interruption. Starter questions are generally much shorter than quizbowl tossups, only consisting of 1 or 2 sentences, and are not necessarily pyramidal. A correct starter question earns the team a set of 3 bonus questions, worth 5 points each.
There are always two visual (or picture) rounds per game, and an audio round (almost invariably music) at the halfway mark. The visual rounds can be on a wide range of themes, although the audio round is typically either classical or popular music. If a picture or music starter is missed, the related bonus questions are held until the next starter question is correctly answered.
The tournament format has been unchanged since 2010. 28 teams are selected to take part every year, with the first round consisting of 14 one-on-one matches between them. The 14 winning teams automatically go through to the second round, while the 4 teams with the highest losing score compete against each other at the end of the first round, with a total of 16 teams entering the second round. The second round is a straight knockout round with no repechage. In the quarter-final round, teams must win twice to progress to the semi-finals, and teams that lose twice are knocked out. From the semi-finals, it once again becomes a knock-out tournament.
The programme has been criticised for allowing individual colleges from the universities of Oxford and Cambridge to enter as separate teams, which results in those universities receiving a disproportionate amount of airtime.
Past results
Year | Winners | Runners-up |
---|---|---|
1995 | Trinity, Cambridge | New, Oxford |
1996 | Imperial | London School of Economics |
1997 | Magdalen, Oxford | Open University |
1998 | Magdalen, Oxford | Birkbeck, London |
1999 | Open University | Oriel, Oxford |
2000 | Durham | Oriel, Oxford |
2001 | Imperial | St John's, Oxford |
2002 | Somerville, Oxford | Imperial |
2003 | Birkbeck, University of London | Cranfield University |
2004 | Magdalen, Oxford | Gonville and Caius, Cambridge |
2005 | Corpus Christi, Oxford | University College London |
2006 | Manchester | Trinity Hall, Cambridge |
2007 | Warwick | Manchester |
2008 | Christ Church, Oxford | Sheffield |
2009 | Manchester | Corpus Christi, Oxford* |
2010 | Emmanuel, Cambridge | St John's, Oxford |
2011 | Magdalen, Oxford | York |
2012 | Manchester | Pembroke, Cambridge |
2013 | Manchester | University College London |
2014 | Trinity, Cambridge | Somerville, Oxford |
2015 | Gonville and Caius, Cambridge | Magdalen, Oxford |
2016 | Peterhouse, Cambridge | St John's, Oxford |
2017 | Balliol, Oxford | Wolfson, Cambridge |
2018 | St John's, Cambridge | Merton, Oxford |
2019 | Edinburgh | St Edmund's, Oxford |
2020 | Imperial | Corpus Christi, Cambridge |
2021 | Warwick | Magdalene, Cambridge |
2022 | Imperial | Reading |
2022 | Durham | Bristol |
- Corpus Christi College, Oxford were originally declared the winners, but were later disqualified after it was found out that one of the team members had not been a student at the time of filming.
External links
- Blanchflower results page
- Wikipedia entry
- University Challenge page on bbc.co.uk
- the 2006 film Starter for 10 is named for the British equivalent of "for 10 points" and follows the Bristol University UC team