This statistical analysis uses data from the IMAT results that students receive. Greek candidates are identified from their names but some names could be wrongly assigned as Greek. This year's cut-off score in the first round is 53.8 points. Greek candidates (who number about 1300) show almost indistinguishable performance compared to the rest of the candidates. Scores below 20 are not published so data from the low tail of the distribution is missing and the mean is inferred from a truncated normal fit. About 1 in 10 candidates succeeds in this test. The test is effective in producing normally distributed results with a slight right skew as negative scoring has a stronger effect on the weaker candidates.