Today’s Final Jeopardy – Friday, March 15, 2024


Warning: This page contains spoilers for the March 15, 2024, game of Jeopardy! — please do not scroll down if you wish to avoid being spoiled. Please note that the game airs as early as noon Eastern in some U.S. television markets.

Here’s today’s Final Jeopardy (in the category Historic Americans) for Friday, March 15, 2024 (Season 40, Game 135):

Near Kirkbean on Solway Firth, U.S. Vice Admiral Jerauld Wright presented a memorial plaque honoring this man

(correct response beneath the contestants)

Today’s Jeopardy! contestants:

Ben Chan, a philosophy professor from Green Bay, Wisconsin (1 win)
Ben Chan on Jeopardy!
Troy Meyer, a music executive from Tampa, Florida (1 win)
Troy Meyer on Jeopardy!
Yogesh Raut, a social and personality psychologist from Vancouver, Washington (1 win)
Yogesh Raut on Jeopardy!

Andy’s Pregame Thoughts:

As with the 30th Tournament of Champions, the finals of the 31st Tournament of Champions is guaranteed to span the weekend. With all three players at a victory apiece, nobody will be able to get to three victories today. One thing’s for certain: this has been an incredibly evenly matched final between all three players, and some of the best gameplay ever seen on the Alex Trebek Stage. (There have only been 7 Triple Stumpers in the opening three games of the final!) 

Another reminder that I have started a Sunday mailbag column where I answer fan & viewer questions regarding the show. If you have a question, feel free to send it to mailbag@thejeopardyfan.com!

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(Content continues below)


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Correct response: Who is John Paul Jones?


More information about Final Jeopardy:

(The following write-up is original content and is copyright 2024 The Jeopardy! Fan. It may not be copied without linked attribution back to this page.)

John Paul Jones, considered by some to be “the father of the American Navy”, was a commander in the Continental Navy during the American Revolution, was born near Kirkbean in 1747. After leaving Scotland (due to some legal difficulties), he surfaced in America. By 1779, he was given command of the ship that he is most associated with today, the USS Bonhomme Richard, which battled the HMS Serapis at the Battle of Flamborough Head in September 1779.

Again, I can’t see this Final Jeopardy being too difficult for our players today, though viewers at home well-versed in the Revolutionary War era probably won’t find it too difficult either. Also, I definitely like the fact that the writers have gone in the direction of “ask about deeper knowledge regarding someone that at least 95% of the viewers would be familiar with” on this clue.



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Game Recap & Tonight’s Game Stats:

Looking to find out who won Jeopardy! today? Here’s the Friday, March 15, 2024 Jeopardy! by the numbers, along with a recap:

Jeopardy! Round:

(Categories: That’S So 18th Century; Types Of Poems; Food & Drink; On The Web; TV Drama; Champ Change)

While Ben got to the Daily Double, it was Troy who got off to the best start, picking up 8 correct in the opening segment.

Statistics at the first break (15 clues):

Troy 8 correct 0 incorrect
Yogesh 4 correct 0 incorrect
Ben 2 correct 2 incorrect

Today’s interviews:

Ben received post card fan mail from a local fan.
Troy describes his job as “being a dad to musicians”.
Yogesh wanted to make a “My score still up there” joke before Game 3.

Yogesh had the best time in the second half of the opening round, but Troy still led after 30 clues.

Statistics after the Jeopardy round:

Troy 10 correct 0 incorrect
Yogesh 12 correct 0 incorrect
Ben 7 correct 2 incorrect

Scores after the Jeopardy! Round:

Troy $8,000
Yogesh $6,400
Ben $1,800

Double Jeopardy! Round:

(Categories: Making A Pass; Lost Works; What The “H”?; Famous Women; Movie Songs; Extinct Animals)

After Ben got to DD2, Troy seemed to be the only player to dare try clues at the $800 level—and he was rewarded with the third Daily Double! He doubled up for $14,000, but didn’t have a runaway going into Final–and the scores were very interesting!

Statistics after Double Jeopardy:

Troy 21 correct 1 incorrect
Yogesh 23 correct 0 incorrect
Ben 14 correct 2 incorrect
Total number of unplayed clues this season: 0 (0 today).

Scores going into Final:

Troy $33,200
Yogesh $20,400
Ben $12,800

Ben was the only player correct in Final—which makes him the winner of Game 4! Coming from behind again, he’s now “on the hill”, one win away from a ToC victory!

Tonight’s results:

Ben $12,800 + $12,800 = $25,600 (Who is John Paul Jones?) (2 wins)
Yogesh $20,400 – $5,200 = $15,200 (Who Farragut)
Troy $33,200 – $7,601 = $25,599 (Who is Pershing?)


Jeopardy! scores (for the March 15, 2024 game.)


Other Miscellaneous Game Statistics:

Daily Double locations:

1) TYPES OF POEMS $600 (clue #11)
Ben -800 +1000 (Yogesh 2600 Troy 3800)
2) LOST WORKS $1600 (clue #8)
Ben 5000 +5000 (Yogesh 9600 Troy 13200)
3) MAKING A PASS $800 (clue #15, $12400 left on board)
Troy 14000 +14000 (Yogesh 14800 Ben 11200)
Overall Daily Double Efficiency for this game: 300

Clue Selection by Row, Before Daily Doubles Found:

J! Round:
Yogesh 3 3 5 3 4
Troy 4 3 5 4 5
Ben 3*

DJ! Round:
Yogesh 5 5 4 3 5
Troy 4 3 5 2*
Ben 4 3 4* 3 4 5

Average Row of Clue Selection, Before Daily Doubles Found:

Ben 3.71
Troy 3.89
Yogesh 4.00

Unplayed clues:

J! Round: None!
DJ! Round: None!
Total Left On Board: $0
Number of clues left unrevealed this season: 0 (0.00 per episode average), 0 Daily Doubles

Game Stats:

Ben $9,000 Coryat, 14 correct, 2 incorrect, 24.56% in first on buzzer (14/57), 0/0 on rebound attempts (on 1 rebound opportunity)
Troy $20,000 Coryat, 21 correct, 1 incorrect, 36.84% in first on buzzer (21/57), 0/0 on rebound attempts (on 2 rebound opportunities)
Yogesh $20,400 Coryat, 23 correct, 0 incorrect, 38.60% in first on buzzer (22/57), 1/1 on rebound attempts (on 3 rebound opportunities)
Combined Coryat Score: $49,400
Lach Trash: $1,800 (on 2 Triple Stumpers)
Coryat lost to incorrect responses (less double-correct responses): $2,800
Lead Changes: 5
Times Tied: 1

Player Statistics:

Yogesh Raut, career statistics:

243 correct, 17 incorrect
14/16 on rebound attempts (on 35 rebound opportunities)
39.65% in first on buzzer (226/570)
8/8 on Daily Doubles (Net Earned: $43,400)
7/10 in Final Jeopardy
Average Coryat: $20,120

Troy Meyer, career statistics:

337 correct, 28 incorrect
22/25 on rebound attempts (on 43 rebound opportunities)
41.43% in first on buzzer (307/741)
18/20 on Daily Doubles (Net Earned: $98,400)
8/13 in Final Jeopardy
Average Coryat: $22,492

Ben Chan, career statistics:

400 correct, 36 incorrect
17/22 on rebound attempts (on 57 rebound opportunities)
40.44% in first on buzzer (368/910)
23/30 on Daily Doubles (Net Earned: $47,405)
12/16 in Final Jeopardy
Average Coryat: $19,688

Andy’s Thoughts:

  • I would like to unequivocally state that Troy did not make any sort of wagering mistake whatsoever, and any reporter who says otherwise about this game is committing journalistic malpractice and should not be reporting on Jeopardy! strategy.
  • Chances of winning the ToC for each player: Ben 57.225% (-160), Troy 25.606% (+270), Yogesh 17.169% (+450).
  • Chances of each finals length: 5 games 29.263% (+220), 6 games 46.313% (+100), 27.424% (+280).
  • Today’s box score will be linked to when posted by the show.

Final Jeopardy! wagering suggestions:

(Scores: Troy $33,200 Yogesh $20,400 Ben $12,800)

Note: This is a special betting scenario, where the leader’s score is equal to exactly second place plus third place’s score.

Yogesh: Bet at least $5,201—but you might consider going all in here, in case Troy bets just to tie. (Actual bet: $5,200)

Troy: Yogesh has occasion to go all in here. Avoid the possibility of a tiebreaker. Make the cover bet of $7,601 and don’t give up your advantage. (Actual bet: $7,601)

Ben: Exactly one bet gives you the best chance of winning: exactly $12,800. (Actual bet: $12,800)


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19 Comments on "Today’s Final Jeopardy – Friday, March 15, 2024"

  1. I knew Solway Firth was in Scotland, but I couldn’t think of any American who would fit the clue.

  2. I would rate this FJ clue hard, but then I’m having a bad week. The actual name of the Vice Admiral is extraneous detail.

  3. Definitely not in the 95%!

  4. I went with George Washington because I’ve seen a painting of him on a boat. That’s how clueless I was on this one.

  5. So I figured I could go with either famous Americans with Scottish roots OR famous American naval figures. I guess if I’d known that John Paul Jones fit both of those parts of the clue, I’d have gotten it right, but I had no idea he was Scottish. Instead, I just lazily went with Andrew Carnegie, while wondering what the naval connection could be.

  6. It doesn’t get any more Scottish then Jones

  7. The only thing I got correct was connecting the answer to the Revolutionary War.

  8. John m Hensgen | March 15, 2024 at 12:04 pm |

    to solve today’s final jeopardy you would have to know about the home museum for John Paul Jones in Kirkbean Scotland

  9. A seven game series seems like a distinct possibility.

  10. Ships of the Continental Navy did not use “USS” as part of their names. Commissioned warships were not officially designated “USS” until 1907.

    • With all due respect, the title of the Wikipedia article about the ship contains USS. If your assertion was correct, why does it title an article?

      • Robert J. Fawkes | March 15, 2024 at 7:03 pm |

        Curt is correct. From the early beginnings of the U.S. Navy there had been no standard method of referring to U.S. Navy ships until 1907 when President Theodore Roosevelt issued Executive Order 549 on 8 January stating that all U.S. Navy ships were to be referred to as “The name of such vessel, preceded by the words, United States Ship, or the letters U.S.S., and by no other words or letters”.[3]

        The Wikipedia article with the title “USS Bonhomme Richard,” actually addresses five different ships that bore the name Bonhomme Richard. The most recent three (all commisioned after 1907) correctly include “USS” at the beginning. The second oldest correctly does not include “USS.” The first one, which was commanded by JPJ, is incorrectly named in the article by including USS when it should not be included. I hope this clears up the misunderstanding and the difference between Curt and Andy.

        I was surprised this was not a triple get in Final.

        • If it’s incorrect, then, I suggest that someone goes and gets it changed.

          If not—it’s an article title. One has to believe it is that way for a reason. Article titles, by their nature, are generally not incorrect.

          • Robert J. Fawkes | March 15, 2024 at 10:29 pm |

            People frequently have applied “USS” retroactiely to older ships. It’s really not a big deal. Also, the article title is okay because it’s really about the ships named Bonhomme Richard, including the ones with and without the preceding “USS.”

  11. The only way I could have gotten this is if the clue had been “He was the bass player for Led Zeppelin”

  12. Fox coverage of the Big East tournament preempts the 7pm Eastern showing of Jeopardy! in the Baltimore area. Scheduled to air at 11:35pm after the late local news.

Comments are closed.