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Difference between revisions of "Dan McColm"
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His Countdown career began in [[Series 64]], when he was defeated in a close contest against future quarter-finalist [[Ned Pendleton]]. However, this wasn't an entirely bad thing, as he was allowed to return in [[Series 71]] (less than four years later), leaving his mark as one of the greatest [[octochamp]]s in the show's entire history. | His Countdown career began in [[Series 64]], when he was defeated in a close contest against future quarter-finalist [[Ned Pendleton]]. However, this wasn't an entirely bad thing, as he was allowed to return in [[Series 71]] (less than four years later), leaving his mark as one of the greatest [[octochamp]]s in the show's entire history. | ||
− | McColm's incredible octorun started off with a relatively close game against one-time winner, primary school teacher [[Gary Mehaffy]] from Nixon's Corner. McColm started off by finding {{word|SULCATE}}, giving him a 7 point lead. However, a tough battle between the two and McColm offering the invalid word {{word|annatos}} {{x}} saw Mehaffy equalise in round 7. Despite the close first half, the game was pretty one-sided fro this point on, with McColm ending his not-technically-a-début début with an extremely impressive 13 maxes and 113 points. He then went on to win a further 7 games, including 6 more centuries, offering words like {{word|NANOTUBE}}, {{word|TERATOMA}}, {{word|PERORATE}} and perhaps the greatest 9 spot in the history of Countdown - {{word|INAMORATO}}. McColm also took advantage of this being the first ODO-dictionary series, offering modern words such as {{word|WHATEV}}, and solving the conundrum {{word|PHOTOBOMB}} in just a second. McColm's score of 137 in his 6th game is the highest ever for a game with only one nine available, and this along with his 4 nines and impeccable numbers and conundrum performance landed McColm with an octototal of 942 - the sixth highest in the show's history. | + | McColm's incredible octorun started off with a relatively close game against one-time winner, primary school teacher [[Gary Mehaffy]] from Nixon's Corner. McColm started off by finding {{word|SULCATE}}, giving him a 7 point lead. However, a tough battle between the two and McColm offering the invalid word {{word|annatos}} {{x}} saw Mehaffy equalise in round 7. Despite the close first half, the game was pretty one-sided fro this point on, with McColm ending his not-technically-a-début début with an extremely impressive 13 maxes and 113 points. He then went on to win a further 7 games, including 6 more centuries, offering words like {{word|NANOTUBE}}, {{word|TERATOMA}}, {{word|PERORATE}} and perhaps the greatest 9 spot in the history of Countdown - {{word|INAMORATO}}. McColm also took advantage of this being the first ODO-dictionary series, offering modern words such as {{word|WHATEV}}, and solving the conundrum {{word|PHOTOBOMB}} in just a second. McColm's score of 137 in his 6th game is the highest ever for a game with only one nine available, and this along with his 4 nines and impeccable numbers and conundrum performance landed McColm with an octototal of 942 - the sixth highest in the show's history. |
− | After defeating [[Paul Worsley]] in the quarter-finals, he defeated the #5 seed, [[George Ford]] in the semi-final with a perfect game. This was described by famous Western philosopher Scooby Doo as "Scoobtastic" and by fellow philosopher Eric Moussambani as "More beautiful viewing then my wife's arse and my last 10m in the Olympics combined". McColm then went on to face #2 seed [[Antoinette Ryan]]. In a close contest, in which McColm dropped behind for the first time by two points, McColm steamrolled to victory and became series champion after solving the conundrum {{word|LETHALITY}} in just four seconds | + | After defeating [[Paul Worsley]] in the quarter-finals, he defeated the #5 seed, [[George Ford]] in the semi-final with a perfect game. This was described by famous Western philosopher Scooby Doo as "Scoobtastic" and by fellow philosopher Eric Moussambani as "More beautiful viewing then my wife's arse and my last 10m in the Olympics combined". McColm then went on to face #2 seed [[Antoinette Ryan]]. In a close contest, in which McColm dropped behind for the first time by two points, McColm steamrolled to victory and became series champion after solving the conundrum {{word|LETHALITY}} in just four seconds. |
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+ | "Cool Dan", as he became known on the show, returned in 2016 for [[Championship of Champions XIV]], coming up against another series winner, [[Paul James]] of [[Series 67]], in the last 16. Cool Dan won this match {{score|106|69}}, solving the conundrum {{word|TOMBOYISH}} in a second. This got him a standing ovation, and it is said that representatives of the Camel Shite Brake Pad company attempted to recruit him following this solve, however McColm did not want to become a freelance brake pad worker from Ingolstadt. Another series winner laid waiting in the quarter-finals in [[Series 70]] champion [[Mark Murray]]. In a very tense battle of the 2014 champions, Cool Dan won {{score|112|99}} to set up a semi-final against [[Jen Steadman]]. In a thrilling match, the spot of {{word|ROSMARINE}} in round 7 proved crucial for McColm, who would win the match {{score|125|117}}, with further brilliance including {{word|GENIUSED}}. In the final against [[Series 69]] runner-up [[Dylan Taylor]], and after finding himself 25 points behind after 6 rounds, McColm pegged him back thanks to the nine {{word|METACONID}}. They would remain 7 points apart (notably with McColm spotting {{word|ROSMARINE}} a second time) up until the crucial conundrum, where after 1.5 seconds, Taylor unravelled {{word|NICETASTY}} to become the fourteenth Champion of Champions. | ||
He made his CO-event debut at [[COLIN 2012]], before finishing as the runner-up at both [[CO:REA]] in April and [[COHUD]] in June of the same year. He eventually won his first CO-event at Leeds in 2018, beating [[Zarte Siempre]] in the final. | He made his CO-event debut at [[COLIN 2012]], before finishing as the runner-up at both [[CO:REA]] in April and [[COHUD]] in June of the same year. He eventually won his first CO-event at Leeds in 2018, beating [[Zarte Siempre]] in the final. | ||
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{{series winner|preceded_by=Mark Murray|series=71|followed_by=Tom Cappleman}} | {{series winner|preceded_by=Mark Murray|series=71|followed_by=Tom Cappleman}} |
Revision as of 20:54, 25 July 2020
Dan McColm octochamp statistics | |
---|---|
Final position | Champion |
Seeding | 1 |
Points total | 942 |
Conundrums solved | 6 |
Dan McColm was a contestant in Series 64, an octochamp in and the series champion of Series 71, and the runner-up of Championship of Champions XIV. He is also an Apterite and a member of C4Countdown.
His Countdown career began in Series 64, when he was defeated in a close contest against future quarter-finalist Ned Pendleton. However, this wasn't an entirely bad thing, as he was allowed to return in Series 71 (less than four years later), leaving his mark as one of the greatest octochamps in the show's entire history.
McColm's incredible octorun started off with a relatively close game against one-time winner, primary school teacher Gary Mehaffy from Nixon's Corner. McColm started off by finding SULCATE, giving him a 7 point lead. However, a tough battle between the two and McColm offering the invalid word annatos ☓ saw Mehaffy equalise in round 7. Despite the close first half, the game was pretty one-sided fro this point on, with McColm ending his not-technically-a-début début with an extremely impressive 13 maxes and 113 points. He then went on to win a further 7 games, including 6 more centuries, offering words like NANOTUBE, TERATOMA, PERORATE and perhaps the greatest 9 spot in the history of Countdown - INAMORATO. McColm also took advantage of this being the first ODO-dictionary series, offering modern words such as WHATEV, and solving the conundrum PHOTOBOMB in just a second. McColm's score of 137 in his 6th game is the highest ever for a game with only one nine available, and this along with his 4 nines and impeccable numbers and conundrum performance landed McColm with an octototal of 942 - the sixth highest in the show's history.
After defeating Paul Worsley in the quarter-finals, he defeated the #5 seed, George Ford in the semi-final with a perfect game. This was described by famous Western philosopher Scooby Doo as "Scoobtastic" and by fellow philosopher Eric Moussambani as "More beautiful viewing then my wife's arse and my last 10m in the Olympics combined". McColm then went on to face #2 seed Antoinette Ryan. In a close contest, in which McColm dropped behind for the first time by two points, McColm steamrolled to victory and became series champion after solving the conundrum LETHALITY in just four seconds.
"Cool Dan", as he became known on the show, returned in 2016 for Championship of Champions XIV, coming up against another series winner, Paul James of Series 67, in the last 16. Cool Dan won this match 106 – 69, solving the conundrum TOMBOYISH in a second. This got him a standing ovation, and it is said that representatives of the Camel Shite Brake Pad company attempted to recruit him following this solve, however McColm did not want to become a freelance brake pad worker from Ingolstadt. Another series winner laid waiting in the quarter-finals in Series 70 champion Mark Murray. In a very tense battle of the 2014 champions, Cool Dan won 112 – 99 to set up a semi-final against Jen Steadman. In a thrilling match, the spot of ROSMARINE in round 7 proved crucial for McColm, who would win the match 125 – 117, with further brilliance including GENIUSED. In the final against Series 69 runner-up Dylan Taylor, and after finding himself 25 points behind after 6 rounds, McColm pegged him back thanks to the nine METACONID. They would remain 7 points apart (notably with McColm spotting ROSMARINE a second time) up until the crucial conundrum, where after 1.5 seconds, Taylor unravelled NICETASTY to become the fourteenth Champion of Champions. He made his CO-event debut at COLIN 2012, before finishing as the runner-up at both CO:REA in April and COHUD in June of the same year. He eventually won his first CO-event at Leeds in 2018, beating Zarte Siempre in the final.
Preceded by Mark Murray |
Series winner Series 71 |
Followed by Tom Cappleman |
Preceded by Charlie Reams |
Champion of Champions runner-up Championship of Champions XIV |
Followed by Bradley Horrocks |
Episodes
# | Date | Type | Contestant 1 | Score | Contestant 2 | Presenters | Guest | Lex | Max | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
5212 | 24/02/2011 | P | Ned Pendleton | 89 – 66 | Dan McColm | Jeff Stelling | Rachel Riley | Mark Foster | Susie Dent | 118 | ||
6007 | 8/10/2014 | P | Gary Mehaffy | 70 – 113 | Dan McColm | Nick Hewer | Rachel Riley | Tony Jacklin | Susie Dent | 131 | ||
6008 | 9/10/2014 | P | Dan McColm | 92 – 70 | Ben Hodgson | Nick Hewer | Rachel Riley | Tony Jacklin | Susie Dent | 127 | ||
6009 | 10/10/2014 | P | Dan McColm | 112 – 37 | Daisy Stemple | Nick Hewer | Rachel Riley | Tony Jacklin | Susie Dent | 119 | ||
6010 | 13/10/2014 | P | Dan McColm | 116 – 47 | John Vivian | Nick Hewer | Rachel Riley | Richard Arnold | Susie Dent | 128 | ||
6011 | 14/10/2014 | P | Dan McColm | 129 – 58 | Samantha Cooper | Nick Hewer | Rachel Riley | Richard Arnold | Susie Dent | 131 | ||
6012 | 15/10/2014 | P | Dan McColm | 137 – 53 | Harry Jarrett | Nick Hewer | Rachel Riley | Richard Arnold | Susie Dent | 139 | ||
6013 | 16/10/2014 | P | Dan McColm | 126 – 44 | Antony Aston | Nick Hewer | Rachel Riley | Richard Arnold | Susie Dent | 130 | ||
6014 | 20/10/2014 | P | Dan McColm | 117 – 51 | Stephen Whieldon | Nick Hewer | Rachel Riley | Richard Arnold | Susie Dent | 121 | ||
6050 | 10/12/2014 | QF | Dan McColm | 109 – 60 | Paul Worsley | Nick Hewer | Rachel Riley | Arlene Phillips | Susie Dent | 121 | ||
6054 | 17/12/2014 | SF | Dan McColm | 123 – 77 | George Ford | Nick Hewer | Rachel Riley | David Baddiel | Susie Dent | 123 | ||
6056 | 19/12/2014 | GF | Dan McColm | 117 – 87 | Antoinette Ryan | Nick Hewer | Rachel Riley | David Baddiel | Susie Dent | 129 | ||
6284 | 12/01/2016 | CP | Dan McColm | 106 – 69 | Paul James | Nick Hewer | Rachel Riley | John Inverdale | Susie Dent | 122 | ||
6289 | 19/01/2016 | CQF | Dan McColm | 112 – 99 | Mark Murray | Nick Hewer | Rachel Riley | Naga Munchetty | Susie Dent | 145 | ||
6291 | 21/01/2016 | CSF | Jen Steadman | 117 – 125 | Dan McColm | Nick Hewer | Rachel Riley | Naga Munchetty | Susie Dent | 146 | ||
6292 | 22/01/2016 | CGF | Dylan Taylor | 121 – 104 | Dan McColm | Nick Hewer | Rachel Riley | Naga Munchetty | Susie Dent | 154 |
Championship of Champions Runners-Up | |
---|---|
I : Joyce Cansfield | II : Peter Evans | III : David Trace | IV : Tony Vick | V : Gino Corr | VI : Chris Waddington | VII : Damian Eadie | VIII : Kenneth Michie | IX : Pete Cashmore | X : Kate Ogilvie | XI : Chris Wills | XII : Mark Tournoff | XIII : Charlie Reams | XIV : Dan McColm | XV : Bradley Horrocks | XVI : James Haughton |