How old is hikaru from d=out




















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You can unsubscribe from newsletters and as a registered user you can apply several mail settings to control how your email address is used. For newsletters we transfer your email address and username to the external service MailChimp. Rc4 followed by 29 Ne6 Rg4 as "minimising the damage". Let say Black plays Nd5 b5 other moves might be a bit better, but not taking the knight allows the following sequence: Rxh6 gxh6 Will doublecheck that with shredder The position to be checked is this: Nd5 Bxd5 The move Bxh6 gxh6 Rxh6 click for larger view However Black doesn't have to accept and plays Mar Penguincw : Ah, trip down memory lane.

Anyway, my long term memory isn't as good as I thought, as I went for Qa4 Bf4 Rc7 Ne6 Rxe6 Bxe5 dxe Rc4 Ne6 Ra4 Qf2 Rxg6 Rhg1 Rxg1 Qxg1 Rxe6 Bxh6 Qxe6 Very complex. I never ever would have considered allowing Ne6 and claim this as better than Qxd5 were Ne6 is not possible directly.

Mar whiteshark : So here's the comp. Nxc7 Rxg6 Nxe8 Rxh6 Qxa2 But even so, does White check on f8 with the rook, or does he block the Black Bishop's attack of the a2 square?

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No, I've never had a job other than being a chess player. It's kind of what I grew up with, so it's what I spent most of my time on. If you had the opportunity to have any other career, what would it be? Probably somewhere in finance or Wall Street; probably in trading if I had to take a guess.

I do have quite an interest in the markets as well. Do you invest your prize money in stocks? Yes, usually I invest my prize money in the market. Right now I think markets are a bit high so I wouldn't be investing, I'd just be keeping it in the bank earning zero interest.

Any similarities between chess and the stock market? In chess it's very much about planning ahead and thinking things through logically, and if you're actually investing -- not day trading -- then you try to understand the situation, the economics and the financial numbers, to make logical decisions.

In chess you also try and control your risk- reward ratio. How long were you at Dickinson College? One semester from August to December, Originally, the plan was to get away from chess and do something different.

I was a little bit burnt out at the time. I had been playing a lot of chess and I wasn't really enjoying it, so I decided to go to college to see what else is out there for me. But after about six or seven months away from the game, I just decided that the whole college life wasn't for me and that's why I decided to come back.

I went about five months without playing chess in college. And to not do that is extremely rare; it's quite crazy if you're a serious player. How do you prepare for a big tournament? Is there an equivalent to a boxer's sparring partner in chess?

I'm not going to play against someone seriously, but there are people that I work with to study the game of my opponents. We try to come up with a few ideas for when I actually play them in the competition. So it's not a traditional sparring partner, but you are in a way sparring and training with other people. Are you good in math? No, I'm not a natural mathematician. I would say out of all the things I studied growing up, math was probably one of the things that I liked the least.

I'm much more a history and languages type of person. Do you know the quadratic equation by heart? Laughs , No I don't. What about the Pythagorean Theorum? A long time ago when I much younger I did. But I haven't studied any serious math in 10 years at least.

No, I don't know it by heart, but I do know what it is. If you get the opening move, how do you decide what it is? Usually at the start of the game you play with one of two moves: You move the pawn in front of the king two squares, or the pawn in front of the queen two squares. And normally I just look at my opponents' results and where they have been having difficulties in recent events and recent games. There are databases with millions of games, so we're all very much aware of what we've been doing.

So no secrets at all? Not really, no. Chess is very much a game of complete information. You play online a lot under aliases mainly on chess. Have you ever lost? Yeah, absolutely, I've lost many games on the internet. In chess you try to do your best, but there are instances where you make mistakes or you try and take risks that you shouldn't.

And I think losing games is a good thing, because you learn more from when you lose than when you win. And the people that you lose to have absolutely no idea that they've just beaten the No.

Most of the time they don't. Sometimes I play on accounts with public aliases, so they are aware, but for the most part I'm just playing randomly and they don't know who I am.

Do people ever rub it in your face when they know who they've beaten? You know I'm not treating it like a serious tournament, per se. I'm obviously very competitive, so I don't like losing, but usually they are pretty relaxed about it.

How was working with Garry Kasparov Nakamura trained under the Russian former world champion for most of ? It was definitely interesting. Working with anyone who has such a great breadth of knowledge, it's definitely a very good learning a lot. Our personalities weren't the best fit, but perhaps that made it a bit difficult Nakamura has said that Kasparov was too critical in his coaching. But still, the things that I learned working with him were invaluable.



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