Final Jeopardy: European Islands (3-1-18)

Today’s Final Jeopardy question (3/1/2018) in the category “European Islands” was:

Once known as the Norman Isles, per the British Govt. this group is “not part of the U.K.” & has “never been colonies”

New champ, Laura McClean, won $12,799 yesterday. In her second game, her challengers are: Sarah Norris, from Minneapolis, MN; and Scott Krzywonos, from Levittown, PA.

Round 1 Categories: That’s About the Size of It – Food Franchises – Historic Trios – Mailing It In – Erin – Go “Bra”

Scott found the Jeopardy! round Daily Double in “Historic Trios” under the $600 clue on the 4th pick of the round. He and Sarah both had $200, $200 less than Laura. He bet the $1,000 allowance and went with the Pinta. That was WRONG.

As its name suggests, this caravel was the smallest of Columbus’ ships in 1492. show

Sarah finished in the lead with $5,200. Laura was second with $3,000 and Scott was last with $1,600.

Round 2 Categories: Alimentary School – 14-Letter Words – Getting the Band Back Together – Seeing Things Differently – Such Novel Characters – We’ll Take Your Measure!

Scott found the first Daily Double in “Such Novel Characters” under the $2,000 clue on the 5th pick. He was in second place with $3,200 now, $2,800 less than Sarah’s lead. He bet $3,000 and guessed the Man in the Iron Mask. That was WRONG.

During the French Revolution, Sir Percy Blakeney disguises himself as this hero to rescue the wrongly jailed. show

Scott found the last Daily Double in “Alimentary School” under the $1,600 clue, with 3 clues left after it. In third place with $5,000, he had $10,000 less than Laura’s lead. He bet $1,000 and guessed the heart. That was WRONG.

Often changing in shape this organ contains both cardiac & pyloric sphincters. show

Laura finished in the lead with $15,000. Sarah was next with $11,600 and Scott was in third place with $4,000.

NONE of the contestants got Final Jeopardy! right.

WHAT ARE THE CHANNEL ISLANDS?

The BBC’s profile on the Channel Islands says: “The Channel Islands are an archipelago in the English Channel off the Normandy coast of France. They are divided into two British Crown Dependencies, the Bailiwicks of Guernsey and Jersey.” The UK Ministry of Justice has a Fact Sheet on the UK’s relationship with the Crown Dependencies (the phrases in the clue are in it). The Isle of Man, in the Irish Sea, is also a Crown Dependency.

From 2016: BRITISH HISTORY $600: This group of islands was the only part of Britain occupied in WWII by the Germans



Scott came up with Spain’s Canary Islands. He lost his $3,995 bet, leaving him a fin.

Sarah went with Denmark’s Faroe Islands. That cost her $4,801 bet. She finished with $6,799.

Laura thought it was the Shetland Islands, part of the UK. She lost $8,201, dropping her down to $6,799, the exact same score as Sarah. HA! And we thought we’d NEVER see a tiebreaker clue in a regular game. Here is the very first:

TIEBREAKER: WAY BACK IN 2017: Her April decision to call a snap Parliamentary election proved less than brilliant on June 8. show

Laura buzzed in with the correct response first so she remained champion with a 2-day total of $19,598.

Final Jeopardy (3/1/2018) Laura McLean, Scott Krzywonos, Sarah Norris

A triple stumper from each round:

GO “BRA” ($600) “Starting Here, Starting Now” ends the 1966 album “Color Me” this name

WE’LL TAKE YOUR MEASURE! ($1200) Consult a galvanometer to measure amperes of this

2 years ago: Only ONE of the players got this FJ in “American History”

In the 1690s its legislature referred to this place as “his Majesty’s ancient colony and dominion” show

We may earn a small commission from qualifying purchases made from Amazon.com links at no cost to our visitors. Learn more: Affiliate Disclosure.

Share

You may also like...

17 Responses

  1. TaiwanBill says:

    A nice FJ! I’ve read a bit about the Channel Islands, and I seem to remember that the people there consider themselves the last part of Normandy that didn’t finally fall to the French. As such they owe their history and allegiance to the Duke of Normandy and whoever the current reigning sovereign may be in England. The current Duke of Normandy is one of the titles of Queen Elizabeth II. They belong directly to the Crown, and the Queen is a “Duke”.

  2. aaaa says:

    The tiebreaker rule started as of November 2014, after the November 2014 TofC. While the rule change was known on the internet game show community as contestants mentioned it on Jboard and on Jeopardy Live Panel. Alex didn’t mention the rules of the tiebreaker despite it never being used in a regular game before now. Tiebreaker clues were used when there were ties during tournament QF games, SF games(2007 TofC), or the finals(1996 teen tourney), and one time a tiebreak clue was done during a 2002 Kids Week when it didn’t really need to be, as the kids’ weeks were not part of a tourney format.

  3. Dalton Higbee says:

    This is the first time they had a tiebreaker in regular play.

  4. Pete says:

    Can someone explain to me the rationale for sarah’s bid? Was she going for a tie? If she wanted to win by both being wrong, she didn’t have to wager that much. Or was this bad math?

    • Al gee says:

      She should have bet zero. Or an amount small enough to prevail if she and Laura are wrong. It always the best bet in that situation. Scott would have not been able to catch her. If they (her and Laura) both get it right with her bet she would have lost anyway. if they both get it wrong she wins.
      It could have been bad math. it’s unbelievable when contestants play so well and then lose the game due to simple math.

    • William Weyser says:

      I think Sarah made a mistake of adding a dollar to her maximum wager when she was supposed to subtract a dollar, because if she did the math right, she would have had $6,801, and she would have won by $2. Instead, she made that mistake, entered into a tiebreaker, and lost. Risky move that didn’t work out for you, Sarah.

  5. Alfred Robert Hogan says:

    I wonder if the tie-breaking round was introduced just to save prize money. It is not really fair especially since co-champions would happen so rarely.

    I thought this FJ would easily be a triple-get. Even some JEOPARDY! contestants need to improve their critical geographic literacy very clearly!

    • VJ says:

      Alfred, it wasn’t introduced to save prize money. It was because the contestants were deliberately betting to tie. After a string of games like that in October 2014, the show decided not to allow co-champs anymore. Co-champs have not happened since and won’t ever again.

      • Svoyager11 says:

        Agreed. Given the millions that this show generates saving a few thousand here and there isn’t something that they’re worried about. They made this change for the same reason they don’t allow losing contestants to keep the $$ they ‘earned’ during game play – it’s a TV show and they want the excitement when everyone is playing to win.
        Too bad Sarah’s math was bad.

  6. Louis says:

    It’s been a long time since we saw a tiebreaker question, but congrats to Laura on her second win. The canary islands hasn’t been occupied by the British.or the German forces so it’s not even close. I remember Ben Ingram and Hunter sanderson had ties and were co champs,VJ. So as this season continues, will we see more tiebreaker question types?

    • VJ says:

      @Lou, the FJ! clue had nothing to do with WW2. That was just extra information I added in case a clue on it ever comes up.

      Today’s clue was just about the status of these islands and the location (that they were previously called Norman Isles was supposed to make you think of Normandy and the English Channel)

      I wouldn’t count on seeing another tiebreaker any time soon. 😉

      LINK: 9 more clues from the match

      • Cece says:

        Funny, VJ, that I’ve been anticipating a tie-breaker for the longest time, and when it happened tonight it felt anti-climactic to me. Maybe because the scores were so low? I don’t know, really, what I was expecting—fireworks?

        When I saw the category title, I had a feeling this was gonna be a triple stumper. When Scott got that DD wrong, Alex revealed the correct answer as if saying, “what, you don’t know what Niña means?” 🙂 I’m not sure, but I think in the last 3 days the players have got only 1 DD correct.

        • VJ says:

          @Cece, yes, you’re right about the DD’s. I figure Scott thought Niña meant young girl and Pinta meant pint-sized. 🙂

          As for the low scores, let’s blame Alex. He was complaining about Laura’s $12,799 from yesterday, when under the circumstances, she really couldn’t bet a lot in FJ. It’s the universe telling him to knock it off. 🙂

          I predicted no solves on this one, but I didn’t really think it would happen.

        • Cece says:

          Pinta= pint-sized, of course, lol! Yeah, I’ve noticed that Alex has got a lot to say lately. Jeez!

        • VJ says:

          Yes, Cece, and you would think he would curtail his commentary when he can see that the cows haven’t come home in a while and no pigs have flown by

  7. Richard Corliss says:

    We haven’t seen a tie ever since Catherine Hardee’s fourth game.