counter Devastated Who Wants to be a Millionaire contestant misses out on £100,000 after getting World Cup question wrong – Forsething

Devastated Who Wants to be a Millionaire contestant misses out on £100,000 after getting World Cup question wrong


A CONTESTANT on Who Wants to be a Millionaire missed out on over £100,000 after fluffing a World Cup a simple World Cup question – but could you get it right?

Marc Offenbacher was well on his way to a life-changing amount of money before getting stumped on the football question.

A contestant on Who Wants to be a Millionaire reaches the €64,000 question.
RTL

Marc Offenbacher was asked a World Cup question for €125,000[/caption]

A man on "Who Wants to be a Millionaire" misses out on £100,000 after getting a World Cup question wrong.
RTL

He asked an audience member for help to try and find the right answer[/caption]

He was doing well on Germany’s edition of the ITV hit quiz show, having got 11 questions correct.

He had already used his safety net on the €500, meaning a slip-up could cost a huge amount of cash.

Offenbacher did not seem worried as he made his way up the question ladder and only using two of his four lifelines.

But as host Gunther Jauch read question 13 worth €125,000 (£108,000), he became stumped.

Jauch asked: “What is the most common final score in men’s Fifa World Cup finals? 1–0? 2–1? 3–1? Or 4–2?”

Do you reckon you know the answer?

Offenbacher did not as he quickly admitted he was not a sports fan to Jauch.

He admitted he was “more of an outdoors person” when asked about his interests.

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He said: “I never watch football. Not even other sports.”

In one attempt to solve the question, Offenbacher used a lifeline which allows him to ask a member of the audience.


This one is not used in the UK edition – hosted by Jeremy Clarkson – but it sees members stand up if they think they know the answer.

A sign of how tricky the question was that only one person stood up to help the struggling Offenbacher.

The audience member said: “I can’t name all the World Cup final results off the top of my head, but I’ve heard that statistically, most football matches end 2–1.

“So I’d assume it’s the same for the World Cup finals.

A contestant on "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire" is shown on screen, along with a question about the most common winning score in men's World Cup finals.
RTL

Offenbacher went for option B and was wrong and missed out on over £100k[/caption]

A man on "Who Wants to be a Millionaire" in Germany smiles with hands behind his head as the screen shows he won €64,000.
RTL

He left with just €500 (£435)[/caption]

“I’d actually rule out 4–2. I think, back in the early days of football, scores were still pretty high.

“But nowadays, the number of goals is usually around two or three per match.

“But as I said, I couldn’t tell you all the World Cup final score.”

Offenbacher agreed to rule out 4-2 and used his 50/50 lifeline which left just 2-1 and 4-2 as potential answers.

He opted to go for 2-1 in the hope of progressing in the game.

However, he was forced to wait due to an ad break before Jauch could reveal the answer.

Jauch then revealed: “Three finals ended 1-0 and 3-1..

“Between those other two results — one of them occurred four times in a World Cup final, and the other only twice…

England captain Bobby Moore kissing the Jules Rimet trophy as his teammates George Cohen, Geoff Hurst, and Martin Peters celebrate winning the 1966 World Cup final against Germany at Wembley Stadium.
Hulton Archive – Getty

England won the 1966 World Cup final 4-2 over West Germany[/caption]

England's Geoff Hurst scores the final goal of the 1966 World Cup Final against West Germany.
PA

Sir Geoff Hurst netted a famous hat-trick in the final[/caption]

“One happened four times, one happened twice… And the score that occurred four times in a final was 4–2.”

The 1930, 1938, 1966 and 2018 World Cup finals all ended with the scoreline.

This includes England’s triumph over West Germany at Wembley thanks to Sir Geoff Hurst’s famous hat-trick.

The incorrect answer saw Offenbacher walk out with just €500 (£435) – €64,500 less than if he refused to answer.

And a stunning €124,500 (£108,327) less than if he had plumped for the right answer.

Before he left, Jauch said: “That’s tragic. You had an incredible run — it was unbelievable.

“And in the very last moment, it went wrong. Such a pity. Really a shame.”

World Cup final scorelines

Here is a look at all the finals in the history of the World Cup

  • 1930: Uruguay 4–2 Argentina
  • 1934: Italy 2–1 Czechoslovakia
  • 1938: Italy 4–2 Hungary
  • 1950: Uruguay 2–1 Brazil (de facto final in a round-robin group stage)
  • 1954: West Germany 3–2 Hungary
  • 1958: Brazil 5–2 Sweden
  • 1962: Brazil 3–1 Czechoslovakia
  • 1966: England 4–2 West Germany (AET)
  • 1970: Brazil 4–1 Italy
  • 1974: West Germany 2–1 Netherlands
  • 1978: Argentina 3–1 Netherlands
  • 1982: Italy 3–1 West Germany
  • 1986: Argentina 3–2 West Germany
  • 1990: Germany 1–0 Argentina
  • 1994: Brazil 0–0 Italy (Brazil won 3–2 on penalties)
  • 1998: France 3–0 Brazil
  • 2002: Brazil 2–0 Germany
  • 2006: Italy 1–1 France (Italy won 5–3 on penalties)
  • 2010: Spain 1–0 Netherlands (AET)
  • 2014: Germany 1–0 Argentina (AET)
  • 2018: France 4–2 Croatia
  • 2022: Argentina 3–3 France (Argentina won 4–2 on penalties)

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