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Difference between revisions of "Brett Smitheram"
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He debuted on 21 October 1997 with victory over [[Scrabble]] player [[Kate Surtees]] who, despite losing her 8th game, held her position as #1 seed. All his wins were half-centuries. After losing his 7th game by one point, he returned to the quarter-finals in December as #3 seed but lost on a tie-break conundrum to [[Ruth Collier]]. | He debuted on 21 October 1997 with victory over [[Scrabble]] player [[Kate Surtees]] who, despite losing her 8th game, held her position as #1 seed. All his wins were half-centuries. After losing his 7th game by one point, he returned to the quarter-finals in December as #3 seed but lost on a tie-break conundrum to [[Ruth Collier]]. | ||
− | He is also one of the world's most successful Scrabble Grandmasters, and has been playing competitive Scrabble since 1996. | + | He is also one of the world's most successful Scrabble Grandmasters, and has been playing competitive Scrabble since 1996. A former UK and World Number 1, he is the 2016 World Scrabble Champion, as well as the 2000 National Scrabble Champion and a four-time winner of the British Matchplay Scrabble Championship. He beat [[Mark Nyman]] 3 games to 0 in the final of the MSI World Championships, held in Lille, France. His second win came from 176 points behind, similar to one of Nyman's fight backs in the 1993 World Scrabble Championship final. Coincidentally, Nyman was the lexicographer at the time of Smitheram's quarter-final appearance as well as the show's producer. Smitheram was also a semi-finalist in the 2018 World Championships, losing to the eventual winner Nigel Richards. In 2020, he won the British Elimination Scrabble Tournament. He is an ambassador for Mind Sports Academy and has launched a petition to reclassify Scrabble, Chess and Go as recognised sports in the UK. |
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In 2003, he was invited back to Countdown for a [[special episode]] against fellow Scrabble great [[Harshan Lamabadusuriya]], losing {{score|87|101}}. | In 2003, he was invited back to Countdown for a [[special episode]] against fellow Scrabble great [[Harshan Lamabadusuriya]], losing {{score|87|101}}. |
Revision as of 13:34, 16 February 2020
Brett Smitheram was a finalist in Series 37. He was a Law Student from Exeter.
He debuted on 21 October 1997 with victory over Scrabble player Kate Surtees who, despite losing her 8th game, held her position as #1 seed. All his wins were half-centuries. After losing his 7th game by one point, he returned to the quarter-finals in December as #3 seed but lost on a tie-break conundrum to Ruth Collier.
He is also one of the world's most successful Scrabble Grandmasters, and has been playing competitive Scrabble since 1996. A former UK and World Number 1, he is the 2016 World Scrabble Champion, as well as the 2000 National Scrabble Champion and a four-time winner of the British Matchplay Scrabble Championship. He beat Mark Nyman 3 games to 0 in the final of the MSI World Championships, held in Lille, France. His second win came from 176 points behind, similar to one of Nyman's fight backs in the 1993 World Scrabble Championship final. Coincidentally, Nyman was the lexicographer at the time of Smitheram's quarter-final appearance as well as the show's producer. Smitheram was also a semi-finalist in the 2018 World Championships, losing to the eventual winner Nigel Richards. In 2020, he won the British Elimination Scrabble Tournament. He is an ambassador for Mind Sports Academy and has launched a petition to reclassify Scrabble, Chess and Go as recognised sports in the UK.
In 2003, he was invited back to Countdown for a special episode against fellow Scrabble great Harshan Lamabadusuriya, losing 87 – 101.
In 2017, Smitheram appeared on the Micky Flanagan show Thinking Aloud on Sky One.
Episodes
# | Date | Type | Contestant 1 | Score | Contestant 2 | Presenters | Guest | Lex | Max | |||
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2119 | 21/10/1997 | P | Kate Surtees | 44 – 59 | Brett Smitheram | Richard Whiteley | Carol Vorderman | Geoffrey Durham | Anna Eaton | 81 | ||
2120 | 22/10/1997 | P | Brett Smitheram | 50 – 28 | Sylvia Bell | Richard Whiteley | Carol Vorderman | Geoffrey Durham | Anna Eaton | 73 | ||
2121 | 23/10/1997 | P | Brett Smitheram | 52 – 45 | Colin Harwood | Richard Whiteley | Carol Vorderman | Angela Rippon | Anna Eaton | 67 | ||
2122 | 24/10/1997 | P | Brett Smitheram | 55 – 29 | Betty Cunningham | Richard Whiteley | Carol Vorderman | Angela Rippon | Anna Eaton | 85 | ||
2123 | 27/10/1997 | P | Brett Smitheram | 53 – 31 | Jonathan Goldstone | Richard Whiteley | Carol Vorderman | Angela Rippon | Anna Eaton | 70 | ||
2124 | 28/10/1997 | P | Brett Smitheram | 59 – 52 | Jeff Schwartz | Richard Whiteley | Carol Vorderman | Angela Rippon | Anna Eaton | 71 | ||
2125 | 29/10/1997 | P | Brett Smitheram | 44 – 45 | Alan Cameron | Richard Whiteley | Carol Vorderman | Angela Rippon | Anna Eaton | 77 | ||
2158 | 15/12/1997 | QF | Brett Smitheram | 44 – 54* | Ruth Collier | Richard Whiteley | Carol Vorderman | Gyles Brandreth | Mark Nyman | 84 | ||
S7 | 3/09/2003 | S | Brett Smitheram | 87 – 101 | Harshan Lamabadusuriya | Richard Whiteley | Carol Vorderman | Richard Stilgoe | Damian Eadie | 118 |