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A group of mathematics students trying to organise a game of 5-a-side have resolved the equation of player distribution into eleven against minus one, despite the solution being in the name of the game.



Second-year student Oliver Jaunt, commented: “Putting five players on each team logically cancelled each other out, effectively leaving the product of players as zero. This didn’t match the empirical evidence of there being ten of us waiting to play. Plus, it was getting cold, sugar levels were dropping, and four players needed a wee.



“We experimented by having the players line-up with legs astride the halfway line, wherein everyone could play quantumly for both teams at the same time, as long as they weren’t observed out of position.



“This worked as elegant mathematical symmetry. But, because nobody moved they were both onside and offside simultaneously, incurring yellow cards and subsequently getting sent off, which upset some players.



“To resolve the problem we borrowed a negative player for one side and added an imaginary player to the other which served as a functioning solution to how we could have a multi-player kickabout without reducing numbers to zero, and sobbing.


“Once the proof was submitted for review, we had run out of time on the pitch. So we had snacks, juice and another wee, then designed a computer program to simulate the match.



“It was thrilling, the game finished y+(x/x2) to minus nil. We’re playing Rugby 7s tomorrow”.





A gigantic wave of apathy swept the UK as another predictable day of unpredictable exam results arrived. With 99% of the nation spending the last two years working hard not to study an A level, the tension experienced by whiny teenagers was greeted with the same indifference we reserve for coastal erosion in New Zealand or celery.


Said one attractive female student: 'I've been jumping and beaming gormlessly, in this tight top, for photographers all morning. It captured my boundless excitement for a jobless future and crippling University debt. Fortunately, I had an elderly relative on hand to dampen my enthusiasm by explaining that exams were tougher in 'their day'- as was contraception and trying not to be racist'


The Department of Education put out an encouraging message: 'Even if results are down, standards are clearly on the rise. Yet teachers are still dreadful. And probably Trotskyites. Remember, A-levels are the gold standard...unless of course we're in Opposition; in that case, they're worthless. Either way teachers are dreadful'.


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