Was 2013 Countdown’s Peak Year?
Posted: Sat Jan 24, 2026 11:56 pm
After talks of The Traitors possibly peaking out in 2026 in the same way as Big Brother, The X Factor and The Apprentice did in 2004, 2010 and 2012 respectively according to popular opinion, it got me wondering, when was Countdown’s finest year?
I think it’s 2013 – the last full year to use the paper dictionary, before switching to an online one in 2014, then accepting predominantly obscure words in 2015, all of which were permanently erased in 2024. By 2013, Nick Hewer was nicely settling in to the host role. That’s just the tip of the iceberg though, as I’m about to describe.
In 2012, Countdown reached a milestone 30th anniversary. To mark the occasion, albeit delaying it by a couple of months, Countdown decided to reinvite 41 past players back to take part in the 30th Birthday Championship, which aired from January to March 2013. 16 of those players would otherwise have made up a regular Champion of Champions. Some of the other 25 appeared as early as the 1980’s.
Indeed, the standard was at the ceiling, with 5 games featuring maximum scores achieved by the winner. 3 of those came from the tournament winner Conor Travers, and missing the first numbers game in the grand final evaded an unprecedented 4th max game in a row but nevertheless equalled the then-record score of 146. The other two perfect games were achieved by Kirk Bevins and Jon O’Neill, who took Travers all the way in the semi-final, only to be beaten on a crucial conundrum.
As the championship occupied the first 8 weeks of 2013, the next regular series (65) had to be 2 months shorter than the usual 6 months. Because of this, the No. 8 seed qualified with only 2 wins. Nevertheless, the No. 1 seed Giles Hutchings set the record 8-game cumulative score with 965 points and won the grand final by 9 points. Dylan Taylor bettered that 8-game record in Series 69 with 974, with the No. 2 Jen Steadman on 952 (the highest by a female player) and Glen Webb on 945 which includes 7 wins from the Series 65 before carrying over to Series 66. Amazingly, all 3 lost to No. 7 seed Callum Todd, who scraped through his first win with a score of 70! Indeed, the grand final was a case of David beat Goliath.
In short, 2013 had the lot.
I think it’s 2013 – the last full year to use the paper dictionary, before switching to an online one in 2014, then accepting predominantly obscure words in 2015, all of which were permanently erased in 2024. By 2013, Nick Hewer was nicely settling in to the host role. That’s just the tip of the iceberg though, as I’m about to describe.
In 2012, Countdown reached a milestone 30th anniversary. To mark the occasion, albeit delaying it by a couple of months, Countdown decided to reinvite 41 past players back to take part in the 30th Birthday Championship, which aired from January to March 2013. 16 of those players would otherwise have made up a regular Champion of Champions. Some of the other 25 appeared as early as the 1980’s.
Indeed, the standard was at the ceiling, with 5 games featuring maximum scores achieved by the winner. 3 of those came from the tournament winner Conor Travers, and missing the first numbers game in the grand final evaded an unprecedented 4th max game in a row but nevertheless equalled the then-record score of 146. The other two perfect games were achieved by Kirk Bevins and Jon O’Neill, who took Travers all the way in the semi-final, only to be beaten on a crucial conundrum.
As the championship occupied the first 8 weeks of 2013, the next regular series (65) had to be 2 months shorter than the usual 6 months. Because of this, the No. 8 seed qualified with only 2 wins. Nevertheless, the No. 1 seed Giles Hutchings set the record 8-game cumulative score with 965 points and won the grand final by 9 points. Dylan Taylor bettered that 8-game record in Series 69 with 974, with the No. 2 Jen Steadman on 952 (the highest by a female player) and Glen Webb on 945 which includes 7 wins from the Series 65 before carrying over to Series 66. Amazingly, all 3 lost to No. 7 seed Callum Todd, who scraped through his first win with a score of 70! Indeed, the grand final was a case of David beat Goliath.
In short, 2013 had the lot.