
Their only postseason losses when they gave up home ice were the Stanley Cup finals against Chicago in 2015 and Colorado last season.īased on that history, you really shouldn’t sweat the possibility of finishing behind Toronto in the Atlantic Division in the coming weeks.
Unbeatable series#
Seven times they have begun a playoff series on the road in the East, and seven times they have prevailed. Then they went on the road and beat the Panthers and Rangers, too.Ĭome to think of it, the Lightning have yet to lose a playoff series against a higher seed in the Eastern Conference since Jon Cooper’s arrival 10 years ago. The Lightning finished five points behind the Leafs and eliminated them two weeks later by winning Game 7 at Scotiabank Arena in Toronto. Is that a big deal? It wasn’t last season. And now, with 17 games remaining, the Lightning find themselves four points behind Toronto. Since then, the Lightning have gone 3-5-4 for a. On the morning of February 15, Tampa Bay was tied with the Maple Leafs for second place with 72 points, although Toronto had played one extra game. That’s what this month-long slump might end up costing the Lightning.

Will they regret it if they cede home-ice advantage to Toronto in the first round? We assume that's the mechanical division of co-producers Possessed, and not a ghost in a box.All in all, the Lightning are in a fine spot with the postseason around the corner. Graphics were designed by Component Graphics, displayed by Possessed Machines. Filming for the first series, incidentally, broke off midway through the series after Jason came into contact with a COVID-19 case and he and his cohort were legally obliged to isolate.Įarliest of these shows to air? The Thick of It was the Unbeatable answer. Some think this an acknowledgement that they bit off more than they could chew when ordering fifty episodes, others reckon that the plan was always to break for the football and other sport. Series one took a one-week break after episode 25 to accommodate Euro 2020 and broke off after episode 30 to accommodate Wimbledon. Episodes lost their solo rounds, their The Deciders were worth more (£1,500-£250x, where x is a wrong answer), and their final categories became a choice of three, one a 'neither', and they didn't share answers.ĭevelopment team: Nick Mather, Matt Floyd, Jack Borgeat, Adam MacDonald, Simon Crossley. The show was recommissioned for a second series with 30 x 45 minute episodes on BBC1 and - to our surprise - 15 x 30 minute episodes on BBC2. Unbeatable 'Lori Guy' I'm Laurie Frey' This was nowhere near as funny as it felt at the moment, but right then Deb and I couldn't stop laughing. There's an interesting idea in there, but we're not sure the first series quite brought it home.

It's very repetitive, the questions are adequate but not as fun as The Answer Trap, music's OK, Jason Manford doesn't really have a chance to show his comedy skills or warm the programme up. Unbeatable is watchable, but it's never fascinating. In most shows we've seen, the winner takes some money home. The potential top prize is £10,200, but it's rare for more than £5000 to be on offer.

But if any of the selected answers beat the "unbeatable" answer, our finalist loses and leaves with nothing. And if the player has the unbeatable answer, and the confidence to play all five other possibilities, they'll double their money. Or the player can press on and take four battles for the entire amount they won in the main game.
