Game Recap – Jeopardy! Greatest of All Time, Match 1 (Tuesday, January 7, 2020)


Warning: There may be spoilers in the post below at any point after 8:00 PM Eastern on January 7, 2020.

Tonight’s the night for Match #1 of the Jeopardy! Greatest of All Time! Here’s tonight’s game recap (for January 7, 2020):

Are you looking for the recap for tonight’s syndicated game? Find it here!


Today’s contestants:

Brad Rutter, currently on 0 wins
Brad Rutter on Jeopardy!
Ken Jennings, currently on 0 wins
Ken Jennings on Jeopardy!
James Holzhauer, currently on 0 wins
James Holzhauer on Jeopardy!

This is currently a placeholder post which will be updated with Final Jeopardy! information and a game recap once it is known.

Preview: Anything can happen and a lot is unknown going into the first of these matches. The prediction model from December made Brad a very slight favorite going in. The winner of this match will certainly get some confidence and momentum for Match #2 tomorrow as well! In case anyone was wondering, these episodes were not live; taping began on December 10.


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Part 1, Final Jeopardy! category: PRESIDENTS & THE BIBLE

Part 1, Final Jeopardy! clue: “Silent” Calvin Coolidge was inaugurated in 1925 on a bible open to this 6-word first line of the gospel according to John


Did you know that you can now find game-by-game stats of everyone, now including Jason Zuffranieri and James Holzhauer, who has won 10 or more games on Jeopardy!, here on the site?


Part 1, Final Jeopardy! correct response: What is “In the beginning was the word”?


Part 2, Final Jeopardy! category: ASTRONOMERS

Part 2, Final Jeopardy! clue: This man’s name was given to a comet that crashed into Jupiter in 1994; he’s the only human whose remains lie on the moon


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Part 2, Final Jeopardy! correct response: Who is (Eugene) Shoemaker?


Game 1 results:
Brad 5,200 + 5,200 = 10,400
James 16,600 + 16,600 = 33,200
Ken 33,200 + 11,800 = 45,000

Game 2 results:
Brad 10,000 – 10,000 = 0 + 10,400 = 10,400 (Who is Hale)?
Ken 12,200 + 6,200 = 18,400 + 45,000 = 63,400 (Game 1 winner)
James 15,000 + 15,000 = 30,000 + 33,200 = 63,200

Tonight's final scores for Jeopardy! Greatest of All Time Match 1 (January 7, 2020).

Daily Double locations:
1) MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS $1000 (15th pick)
Brad 1800 +1800 (James 5200 Ken 4000)
2) DANCING WITH THE CZARS $1600 (1st pick)
Brad 4000 -4000 (James 7800 Ken 7000)
3) BEFORE, DURING & AFTER $1200 (4th pick)
Ken 8600 +8600 (James 9800 Brad 0)
4) GREATEST OF ALL TIME TRAVELLERS $600 (5th pick)
Ken 2400 +2400 (James 1000 Brad 0)
5) LET’S JAZZ UP THIS PLACE $1600 (1st pick)
Brad 3800 -3800 (James 8200 Ken 7000)
6) PHILOSOPHERS $2000 (7th pick)
Brad 2800 -2800 (Ken 10600 James 9800)
Overall Daily Double Efficiency for this match: 0

Unplayed clues:
Game 1, J! round: None!
Game 1, DJ! round: None!
Game 2, J! round: None!
Game 2, DJ! round: None!
Total $ Left On Board: $0

Game Stats:
Ken 36,200 Coryat, 48 correct, 5 incorrect, 43.86% in first on buzzer, 1/1 on rebound attempts (on 3 rebound opportunities)
James 31,600 Coryat, 39 correct, 2 incorrect, 33.33% in first on buzzer, 3/3 on rebound attempts (on 6 rebound opportunities)
Brad 25,000 Coryat, 28 correct, 4 incorrect, 21.93% in first on buzzer, 3/3 on rebound attempts (on 7 rebound opportunities)
Combined Coryat Score: $92,800
Lach Trash: $2,400 (on 2 Triple Stumpers)
Coryat lost to incorrect responses (less double-correct responses): $12,800

James Holzhauer, stats to date:
1,348 correct, 47 incorrect
41/44 on rebound attempts (on 82 rebound opportunities)
55.69% in first on buzzer (1228/2205)
78/84 on Daily Doubles (Net Earned: $676,988)
37/39 in Final Jeopardy
Average Coryat: $29,272

James Holzhauer, to win (per the prediction model):
Wins in 3: 0.000% of the time.
Wins in 4: 7.383% of the time.
Wins in 5: 12.928% of the time.
Wins in 6: 11.790% of the time.
Wins in 7: 5.866% of the time.
Overall: 37.966% of the time.

Ken Jennings, stats to date:
2,983 correct, 299 incorrect
108/134 on rebound attempts
58.66% in first on buzzer (2888/4923)
145/175 on Daily Doubles (Net Earned: $465,399)
56/85 in Final Jeopardy
Average Coryat: $26,386

Ken Jennings, to win (per the prediction model):
Wins in 3: 7.147% of the time.
Wins in 4: 10.393% of the time.
Wins in 5: 11.455% of the time.
Wins in 6: 8.249% of the time.
Wins in 7: 3.695% of the time.
Overall: 40.938% of the time.

Brad Rutter, stats to date:
722 correct, 81 incorrect
41/44 on rebound attempts
41.27% in first on buzzer (681/1650)
43/52 on Daily Doubles (Net Earned: $62,300)
16/27 in Final Jeopardy
Average Coryat: $19,124

Brad Rutter, to win (per the prediction model):
Wins in 3: 0.000% of the time.
Wins in 4: 3.059% of the time.
Wins in 5: 6.259% of the time.
Wins in 6: 7.434% of the time.
Wins in 7: 4.342% of the time.
Overall: 21.095% of the time.


Andy’s Thoughts:

  • The turning point was absolutely the BEFORE, DURING & AFTER Daily Double, and it goes to show just what they can do. Good on Ken for going all-in. That buoyed a Double Jeopardy! round where he went 16/0 in the second half of Game 1, en route to a Game 1 $25,800 Coryat and a 27-20 advantage over James on the buzzer.
  • James played very well for not seeing a Daily Double, and the prediction model is bullish on James’ chances, even though Ken is a slight favorite thanks to his Game 1 win.
  • Brad’s interview comments about his brain losing a step were prescient; it felt like all 3 of his Daily Doubles were on the tip of his tongue, and he probably would have had them all in 2005. I’ve always said that he gives you one chance to beat you. Was this the one chance? Will he be able to bounce back tomorrow?

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22 Comments on "Game Recap – Jeopardy! Greatest of All Time, Match 1 (Tuesday, January 7, 2020)"

  1. I was wondering how many total games Ken has played so it must be 85 (based on 56/85 in Final Jeopardy). Hopefully he gets in the 90 total games played lifetime.

    • Because of the All-Star Games last season, it’s difficult to put a specific number. I’d say 87 is probably the best number. (He didn’t play Final Jeopardy! at all during the All-Star Games.)

  2. Does anyone remember the exact question that James answered = cataracts?

    It was something about an $11 cure.

    Thank you!

  3. Ken bet MASSIVELY wrong in the FJ! in the first game… he should’ve bet at LEAST 25k. He could’ve essentially locked in the match there with a category that he knows very well that he is the best at. The odds of him missing and the other 2 hitting are SO low at that specific category.

    I want a game where the 3rd place can beat the first 2, if they both get it wrong, with James in the middle position, and see how he bets (I forget which scenario this is). I’d also like to see how he bets in that same scenario as the person in third. So interesting analyzing these game theories in this type of tournament!

    I think Ken is well out gunned after watching that.

    • Sorry — game = second game in the match…

      this was the one game that Brad gave Ken to win the tournament… Brad will get stronger on buzzer through the match, while Ken will get weaker, given they use the same method. A method that will weaken, given it uses cadence, and cadence will change, given … why we all give to the purple ribbon society.

      Ken getting the last DD in his strongest category (a connect the dots), a double up was easy… I think I bump Ken and Brads odds down, when incorporating luck factor in these matches.

      Ken also won the buzzer handily today. Alex’ cadence will change and brads ability to pick up on that will get stronger (Ken HANDILY won the buzzer battle, while it seemed it was = bw methods), and in interviews Ken has mentioned how “age matters” with ringing in.

    • Had Final Jeopardy! gone the other way (i.e. a very difficult Triple Stumper), Ken would have had a $20,000 lead. I thought he made a sufficiently aggressive wager, considering the circumstances.

      • Ok, but bible and history are notably Ken strengths. So are ~Kennections~. A 20k lead is not much with an opponent that bets aggressively and another opponent that knows he must now also do that and has beaten you in other games.

        A 30k lead over a new opponent, who you know is strong that you’ve never played, and 50k lead over someone you’ve lost to in every single dual game match that you know has to play the same aggressive style?

        Would you rather bank on the triple stumper and be up 20k in one of your strongest suits, or put it away?

        Again, in this specific category, he needed to bet 2/3 or more. He’s historically not strong at FJ! and the other two are, where is almost matters most. He could have put the match away early and chose not to, and that to me signals he will not fare well.

  4. Ugh *fair well

  5. Ugh… and I clearly shouldn’t have corrected my correct self to be incorrect.

    Finally, to me — effectively put it away or come out w a 10k lead is a clear no brainer over coming out effectively 10k ahead on a triple stumper and just 6k ahead. Ken’s abilities to adjust his strategy to an opponent clearly lack, given his inability to win a tournament and that he’s only ~essentially~ won against fresh opponents.

    This is not an indictment against Ken’s abilities at trivia or Jeopard (he is very traversed and very respected), but rather it’s a commentary on the art of how cards are drawn and how to adjust to known opponents.

    • Jim Thompson | January 8, 2020 at 8:57 am |

      Ummm…you realize you are criticizing as “MASSIVELY wrong” a player who has won more games than anyone else, and in particular WON THIS TIME?
      I do agree with you that your comments are not an “indictment.” LOL

      • Thank you Jim Thompson! Ken really does take “massively wrong” to a whole new level, doesn’t he?

  6. Just finished watching on the West Coast, Amazing! Ken was exciting with his biggest DD bets ever and extremely quick on the buzzer. James & Ken had the most competitive tournament match ever! Can’t wait for day 2! James did amazingly well despite no DDs. If he can get a fair share in his remaining games, I predict he wins the tournament. But DDs weren’t Brad’s friend today!

  7. Andy (or whomever) — Out of curiosity, do you know how they taped these? Did they do two episodes (four games) per day? One per day over a longer time?

  8. James Allen | January 8, 2020 at 2:27 am |

    Great stuff! Brad obviously had a terrible time with the DD’s, but I imagine he’ll bounce back (sometimes it’s best to have all your whiffs in one match). Ken wasn’t kidding in his little pre-taped segment, he was intense as all get-out, especially when he got the second Final Jeopardy! right. James was his usual cool self, but the lack of a DD can be all the difference in this game. What is clear is that James’ DD strategy will not be ignored by Ken and Brad. ALL “True” DD’s today! Let’s hope for more drama on Day 2.

  9. Can anyone shed some light on how the lock out system works? Specifically, on the “recorder” clue, when Ken tried to ring in based on the cadence of Alex’s voice (not realizing there was a musical component) would he have remained locked out at the conclusion of the clue or can the lock out elapse during the clue?

    It occurred to me, based on Andy’s description of buzzer technique in the preview article, that although Brad rang in on this one, James might have an advantage on media clues of indeterminate length since he’s accustomed to reacting to the lights.

  10. Steven G Orvis | January 8, 2020 at 8:22 am |

    The bottom line is that all three of these guys are absolutely brilliant, and it was never clearer than it was tonight.
    I was especially impressed with their responses to the “Before, During and After” and “Triple Rhyme Time” categories. The responses were out of their mouths in about one second.

  11. Jim Thompson | January 8, 2020 at 8:48 am |

    Ken in 4.
    This is a buzzer contest, and the DD advantage should average out, theoretically.

    • I’ve felt all along that finding the DDs, and when you find them, is a HUGE luck issue. But just think: if the questions in DDs were terribly obscure! Then, finding the DDs would be a negative! Betting huge sums would no longer be wise! Perhaps, this was a move that the organizers have used in dealing with GOATS like Ken, Brad, and James. We’ll see…

  12. Another amazing thing was the first game J! round , which they completed in record time without missing one. They completed all of them in the time Alex normally takes a break after 15 or so questions.

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