Japsex

The ABCs of sex in Japanese
ちんちん (Chinchin) : penis, dick
Some shyer girls might refer to it as “おちんちん” (ochinchin) or “honorable penis” in English, to the delight of males all over Japan.
まんこ (Manko): vagina, pussy
おっぱい (Oppai): breasts, boobs
おおきい (Ookii!): It’s so big! / They’re so big!
Can be used to talk about the male anatomy or breasts.
すごいきれい! (Sugoi kirei.): You look gorgeous. / They’re gorgeous.
Often used to talk about breasts.
なめてほしい! (Namete hoshii!): Lick (or suck) it!
くすぐったい (Kusuguttai!): It tickles!
だめ! (Dame!): You can’t! / Don’t do that!
Tread carefully with this one. Depending on the situation, it could actually mean “keep doing that” or “don’t do that.” If you’re not sure, ask. In Japanese porn, girls often try to appear “demure” by saying no at first, even though they really “want it” but are too embarrassed to say. There’s nothing wrong with a bit of role play in the bedroom, as long as both parties are ok with it.
やめて! (Yamete!): Stop!
See above.
いれてほしい (Irete hoshii!): Put it in! / I want it now!
なまがいい (Nama ga ii!): Let’s do it bareback!
なまはだめ (Nama wa dame!): No, let’s use a condom!
きもちいい (Kimochi ii… ): It feels good….
ぬれてる (Nureteru!): You’re so wet!
あったかい (Attakai!): You’re so warm!
やばい! (Yabai!): It feels amazing!
がまんして (Gaman shite!): Don’t come yet!
がまんできない (Gaman dekinai… ): I can’t wait any longer…
だして! (Dashite!): Come!
いきそう (Ikisou!): I’m gonna come!
いく (Iku!): I’m coming

Crimes and poisoning

Crime. Evidence
f9/11 . attacks ( hearsay)
fake marriage ( documents
HUD Fraud. Documents
Court fraud. Documents
child support fraud. Document’s
e poison me twice. medical records
ongoing terror attack plans . multiple evidences
life sentence in Philippines case . 673 8 in RTC 66 SFLU

Crimes.JAKI

Crime. Evidence
f9/11 . attacks ( hearsay)
fake marriage ( documents
HUD Fraud. Documents
Court fraud. Documents
child support fraud. Documentary pr
Crime. Evidence me twice. medical records
ongoing terror attack plans period multiple evidences
life sentence in Philippines case number 673 8 in RTC 66 SFLU
Show quoted text

Map assassination Kim jong-nam


mirrorLoad mobile navigation
SIGN IN
NEWS
POLITICS
SPORT
FOOTBALL
CELEBS
TV & FILM
WEIRD NEWS
TECHNOLOGY
MONEY
TRAVEL
FASHION
MUMS
QUIZZES
GOT A STORY?


NEWS
Female Kim Jong-nam ‘assassin’ had party 24 hours before killing and said she would be a "big star"

Siti Aisyah had a big night out with pals, who threw her a party at a Kuala Lumpur nightclub and claim she is innocent

COMMENTS
BYJEREMY ARMSTRONG
13:55, 27 FEB 2017UPDATED17:17, 27 FEB 2017

TAP TO PLAY
WATCH NEXT
Shocking footage emerges of Kim Jong-nam airport
MALAYSIAN POLICE RELEASE NEW CCTV OF KIM JONG NAM MURDER SUSPECTS
Get Daily updates directly to your inbox

Enter your email
+ Subscribe
A suspect in the murder of Kim Jong-nam had a wild night out just 24 hours before the assassination – joking she was going to be a ‘big star’.

Siti Aisyah’s friends chipped in to throw a birthday party for her at a well-known night club in Kuala Lumpur on Feb 12.

Just a day before the death of Jong-nam, half-brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, she said she was to take part in a ‘prank for a reality show’.

PROMOTED STORIES

Have You Seen How Cringeworthy These Celebs Look?
PressRoomVIP

Play This for 1 Minute & See Why Everyone’s Addicted
Get it on Google Play – Viking
Did you know you can learn any language in just 7 days?
Babbel
Best Flashlight Ever is Selling Like Crazy
Gladiator Flashlights
by Taboola Sponsored Links
In a video published by China Daily, Siti Aisyah laughed and covered her face shyly when her friends commented she was going to be a ‘big star’.


Siti Aisyah, 25, works as a Spa masseuse and is pictured following her arrest (Photo: AFP)

Kim Jong-nam was murdered at Kuala Lumpur international airport (Photo: Reuters)
She was 25 on Feb 11 – two days before Jong-nam was killed using the lethal chemical weapon VX in the budget airline terminal of Kuala Lumpur international airport.

“I do not believe Siti Aisyah would kill someone just for money,” her best friend said. “It is impossible. I think she has been framed.”

She said Siti Aisyah did not know Jong-nam and had no motive to kill him.


She claimed Aisyah was innocent. Aisyah has told authorities she was paid £72 to carry out the attack , but thought they were wiping Jong-nam’s face with baby oil, not VX, the most lethal chemical agent known to man.

The revelations emerged as North Korea was accused of operating a regiment-level biochemical weapons unit by old enemy South Korea.

Their military warned they had to be prepared for unconventional attacks in the wake of Jong-nam’s assassination with VX, classified by the United Nations as a weapon of mass destruction and banned around the world.

READ MORE
Female assassin of Kim Jong-un’s half-brother ‘was paid £72 to carry out what she believed was a prank’

Suspected assassin wearing LOL sweatshirt
South Korea’s Ministry of National Defence claimed North Korea operated production facilities for chemical and biological weapons, and has a stockpile of such materials that can be used in any attack.

Playboy Jong-nam, 46, collapsed and died after two women allegedly wiped the highly toxic substances across his face. One was vomiting after the attack because of her exposure to a substance which is renowned as one of the world’s deadliest poisons.

A hundredth of a gram is enough to kill within 30 minutes. A drop on a cloth would have been enough to take his life.


Kim Jong-un is believed to have ordered the killing (Photo: Getty)
Experts claim its use put beyond any doubt that the so-called ‘playboy prince’ had been assassinated on the orders of his half brother after he criticised the secretive communist regime in 2012.

Absorbed in large doses, it is fatal after 15 minutes, according to the U.S. Army’s Edgewood Chemical Biological Center, making it the most toxic known nerve agent in the world.

CCTV footage captured the moment Jong-nam was brazenly murdered at the packed airport.

It is still not known how the agent was applied without the woman becoming ill.

Footage begins with him arriving at the concourse in Kuala Lumpur International Airport in a light jacket and carrying a backpack.

He is shown looking at the flight departure boards with other passengers.

READ MORE
Kim Jong-nam murder: Airport decontaminated after VX nerve agent used to assassinate North Korean leader’s brother


Kim, who was preparing to fly to Macau, goes to a ticket machine while the suspects are also shown lurking in the vicinity.

The "LOL jumper" suspect Doan Thi Huong approaches him from behind.


She reaches around appears to target his face, possibly with a poisoned cloth or spray while still standing behind him.

The two appear to wrestle for a second.




Other travellers stand nearby and don’t appear to realise what has just occurred.

The attacker then casually walks off unrushed.



Kim is then shown seeking help from airport staff as he complains about the incident.

He is then shown in the airport’s medical clinic.


He later died on the way to hospital.

South Korean and U.S. officials have said Kim Jong Nam was assassinated by North Korean agents.

Malaysian police said on Sunday that four North Korean suspects in the murder fled Malaysia on the day of the killing.


(Photo: REUTERS)
Malaysian police arrested a North Korean man on Friday in connection to the murder, while the Vietnamese woman and Indonesian woman have also been arrested.

Interpol will now be asked to help in the hunt for seven North Koreans linked to the murder, including a diplomat and airline official said to be in hiding in the country’s embassy in Kuala Lumpur.

The hermit state has accused Malaysia of having “sinister” purposes – saying Jong nam died of ‘heart stroke’.

Police also want to speak to Jong-nam’s mistress as they probe his murder, according to sources in Malaysia.

North Korean So Yong Ra, 41, is a former air stewardess with Air Koryo, North Korea’s national flag carrier.

Her name has previously been reported as So Yong La.

Channel NewsAsia, who published a photo of her, said she was from Pyongyang.

A police source said: “She is believed to have lived in Macau together with him since 2001 and eventually got married.

“She worked at Air Koryo from 1992 to 1998. She studied at the Pyongyang Music and Dance University.”

It has been previously reported Jong-nam had two wives, at least one mistress and several children, including a son and a daughter by his second wife, Lee Hye-Kyong.


Follow @DailyMirror
Subscribe to our Daily newsletter
Enter email
PROMOTED STORIES
Play This for 1 Minute & See Why Everyone’s Addicted
Get it on Google Play – Viking
Look At These Celebs Who Are Aging Terribly
PressRoomVIP
Did you know you can learn any language in just 7 days?
Babbel
Best Flashlight Ever is Selling Like Crazy
Gladiator Flashlights
5 Things Car Salesmen Don’t Want You To Know
Women’s Article
If You Have an Android, This Strategy Game Is a Must-Have
Download from the Play Store – Forge of Empires
by Taboola Sponsored Links
0Comments
Sign In
Sort Comments
MORE ON
Kim Jong-UnInterpolCCTVNorth KoreaKim Jong-Nam
NEWS
ALL
TOP STORIES

CANCER
Childhood sweethearts fight for more time together after brain tumour shock just year since reunion

GRIEVING
Grieving daughter visits dad’s grave to find cemetery has buried headstone under pile of soil

SCHOOLS
"She’s getting sacked in the morning!" Teachers filmed celebrating headteacher’s dismissal – but council says she HASN’T been fired

THE OSCARS
Donald Trump revels in Oscars gaffe after host Jimmy Kimmel roasted President for much of show

PUBLIC SEX
Randy couple caught having sex at Domino’s pizza counter come forward to reveal plans for more public romps

EMMA CROSBY
TV presenter Emma Crosby reveals late pregnancy terror that made her fear for her baby’s life

UKIP
Ukip at war as Nigel Farage demands party’s only MP Douglas Carswell be sacked

TEENAGERS
Social media suicide game blamed after spate of teen deaths and ‘130 children taking their own lives in six months’

CRIME
Judge convicts fraudsters responsible for ‘crash for cash’ death without any jurors after bribes offered

DANGEROUS DRIVING
I met the driver who killed my boyfriend – so I could ask him what was so important on his phone when he crashed

PREMIER LEAGUE
Premier League clubs set to get sponsors on their sleeves from 2017/18 season

LEICESTER CITY FC
Leicester caretaker manager Craig Shakespeare knew the Foxes would beat Liverpool during the WARM UP
NEWS
POLITICS
FOOTBALL
SPORT
CELEBS
TV & FILM
WEIRD NEWS
QUIZZES
TECHNOLOGY
MONEY
TRAVEL
FASHION
MUMS
MOTORING
FOLLOW US
FACEBOOKTWITTERPINTERESTINSTAGRAM
BuySell
Find a job
Find a home
Find a new home
Find a local business
About Us
Contact Us
Follow Us
Sell Your Story
How to Complain
Corrections & Clarifications
Google Survey
Privacy Statement
Cookie Policy
Terms and Conditions
Paper Subscription to the Daily Mirror
Paper Subscription to the Sunday Mirror
Irish Mirror
© 2016 MGN Limited
This website uses cookies. Using this website means you are okay with this but you can find out more and learn how to manage your cookie choices here.Close cookie policy overlay


Strongest formation no ponds

Open main menu

Search Wikipedia
EditWatch this pageRead in another language
Fortress (chess)
Chess tactic
This article is about a defensive technique in chess. For the chess variant, see Fortress chess.
In chess, the fortress is an endgame drawing technique in which the side behind in material sets up a zone of protection around their king that cannot be penetrated by the opponent. This only works when the opponent does not have a passed pawn or cannot create one, unless that pawn can be stopped (e.g. see the opposite-colored bishops example). An elementary fortress is a theoretically drawn (i.e. a book draw) position with reduced material in which a passive defense will maintain the draw (Müller & Pajeken 2008:183).

Fortresses commonly have four characteristics:

Useful pawn breakthroughs are not possible
If the stronger side has pawns, they are firmly blocked
The stronger side’s king cannot penetrate, either because it is cut off or near the edge of the board
Zugzwang positions cannot be forced, because the defender has waiting moves available (de la Villa 2008:23).
Fortresses pose a problem for computer chess: computers fail to recognize fortress-type positions and are unable to achieve the win against them despite claiming a winning advantage (Guid & Bratko 2012:35).

Fortress in a corner

Rook and pawn versus queen

Opposite-colored bishops

Queen versus two minor pieces

Knight versus a rook and pawn

Bishop versus rook and bishop pawn on the sixth rank

Defense perimeter (pawn fortress)

Other examples

A semi-fortress

Positional draw

See also

Notes

References

Last edited 5 months ago by BD2412

Content is available under CC BY-SA 3.0 unless otherwise noted.
Terms of UsePrivacyDesktop

Magnus carlsen’s opening moves


Magnus Carlsen

Photo courtesy of Magnus Carlsen’s Official Facebook Page.

Number of games in database: 2,457
Years covered: 1999 to 2017
Last FIDE rating: 2840 (2896 rapid, 2914 blitz)
Highest rating achieved in database: 2882
Overall record: +646 -263 =646 (62.3%)*
* Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 902 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.
MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
Sicilian (238)
B90 B30 B40 B33 B46
Ruy Lopez (154)
C65 C78 C67 C95 C77
Queen’s Pawn Game (72)
A45 D02 E10 A40 A46
Slav (69)
D15 D17 D12 D10 D11
Nimzo Indian (64)
E32 E21 E20 E54 E36
French Defense (57)
C00 C11 C18 C02 C03
With the Black pieces:
Sicilian (232)
B33 B30 B22 B31 B90
Ruy Lopez (158)
C67 C78 C95 C65 C69
Queen’s Indian (88)
E15 E12 E17 E16 E14
Nimzo Indian (59)
E32 E34 E20 E21 E55
Queen’s Gambit Declined (58)
D37 D38 D31 D30 D39
Queen’s Pawn Game (57)
A45 A46 E00 E10 A40

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
Carlsen vs S Ernst, 2004 1-0
Carlsen vs H Harestad, 2003 1-0
J L Hammer vs Carlsen, 2003 0-1
Kramnik vs Carlsen, 2008 0-1
Anand vs Carlsen, 2013 0-1
Carlsen vs G Tallaksen Ostmoe, 2005 1-0
Carlsen vs A Groenn, 2005 1-0
Nakamura vs Carlsen, 2014 0-1
Carlsen vs Aronian, 2008 1-0
Carlsen vs M Vachier-Lagrave, 2015 1-0

WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: [what is this?]
FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (2004)
Anand – Carlsen World Championship (2013)
Carlsen – Anand World Championship (2014)

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
Norwegian Championship (2006)
Corus Group C (2004)
Norwegian Championship (2004)
Corus Group B (2006)
Corus (2010)
Tata Steel (2015)
Pearl Spring Chess Tournament (2009)
King’s Tournament (2010)
Tata Steel (2013)
Norwegian Championship (2005)
Midnight Sun Chess Challenge (2006)
Amber Tournament (Blindfold) (2010)
FIDE World Cup (2005)
World Chess Cup (2007)
XXII Reykjavik Open (2006)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
Fighting Chess with Magnus Carlsen by jakaiden
rodmalone’s favorite games carlsen by rodmalone
HiperKing Magnus by Gottschalk
MAGNUS CARLSEN’S BEST GAMES by notyetagm
The Carlsen Chronicles by MoonlitKnight
Carlsen Cranks by fredthebear
Wonderboy – Magnus Carlsen, 2000-2004 by Resignation Trap
Match Carlsen! by amadeus
Magnus Carlsen by akatombo
Move by Move – Carlsen (Lakdawala) by Qindarka
Chess Network Videos: Part 2 by Penguincw
Power Chess – Carlsen by Anatoly21
magnus carlsen .. by sk.sen
carlsen games by nadvil

RECENT GAMES:
Carlsen vs Karjakin (Jan-29-17) 1/2-1/2
Eljanov vs Carlsen (Jan-28-17) 0-1
Carlsen vs B Adhiban (Jan-27-17) 1/2-1/2
Harikrishna vs Carlsen (Jan-25-17) 1/2-1/2
Carlsen vs Van Wely (Jan-24-17) 1-0

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Magnus Carlsen
Search Google for Magnus Carlsen
FIDE player card for Magnus Carlsen

MAGNUS CARLSEN
(born Nov-30-1990, 26 years old) Norway
Magnus Carlsen (full name: Sven Magnus Øen Carlsen) is the 16th undisputed World Champion. He won the crown from Viswanathan Anand in November 2013 and successfully defended it in a return contest with the former title holder in November 2014. In November 2016, he retained his crown when he defeated the Challenger, Sergey Karjakin, in the rapid game tiebreaker after the 12-game classical match was tied.

Landmarks

FM (2002); IM (2003); GM (2004); vice-World U12 World Champion (2002); Norwegian Champion (2006); Candidate (2007 & 2013); World Champion (2013 & 2014); World Rapid Champion (2014 & 2015) and World Blitz Champion (2009 & 2014), winner of the Grand Chess Tour (2015), five-time winner at Wijk aan Zee (2008 (jointly with Levon Aronian), 2010, 2013, 2015 & 2016).

Carlsen has been the world’s top ranked player since January 2010, apart from six months between November 2010 and June 2011 when he was #2, and possesses the highest standard FIDE rating ever posted, as well as the highest ever live rating. In January 2016, he became the first person to be the world #1 in standard, rapid and blitz chess.

Master Norms

<IM norms> Carlsen earned his first IM norm in January 2003 at the Gausdal Troll Masters when he scored 7/10. His second IM norm came in June 2003 at the Salongernas IM-tournament in Stockholm where he scored 6/9 and his third IM norm came in the following month at the 2003 Politiken Cup in Copenhagen where he scored 8/11.

<GM norms> In early 2004, Carlsen made a major international impact when he won Corus C with 10.5/13, easily winning his first grandmaster norm and earning his entry to the Corus B in 2005. Carlsen obtained his second grandmaster norm in the 3rd Aeroflot Festival (2004) in February and his third grandmaster norm at the sixth 6th Dubai Open (2004), held between 18th and 28th April.

Background:

He was born in Tønsberg, Vestfold. His parents are Sigrun Øen and Henrik Carlsen, both of whom are engineers. His father taught him chess at the age of eight after which he soon played his first tournament, a junior (Miniputt) Norwegian championship. He was coached by seven-time Norwegian Champion Simen Agdestein and by Torbjorn Ringdal Hansen. He won the title of International Master in 2003 at the age of 12 years 7 months and 25 days. In 2004, after having gained over 300 rating points in little over a year, he became the second-youngest grandmaster in chess history at the time, behind only Sergey Karjakin, at the age of 13 years 4 months and 27 days. Parimarjan Negi later pipped his record by five days to become the second youngest grandmaster ever.

Championships:

<Age>: Carlsen won the Norwegian U11 Championship in 2000 and the U10 Nordic Championship in 2001. In 2002, he placed =1st in the Open Norwegian Junior Championship with 5.5/7, but easily won the same event the following year with 6/6. Carlsen started with 4/4 at the 2002 U12 European Championship but faded to finish sixth. In the 2002 U12 World Championship a few weeks later, Carlsen was sole leader coming into the last round, but was held to a draw by David Howell, enabling Ian Nepomniachtchi to equal his score and to win on tiebreak. He placed =3rd at the 2003 U14 European Championship, half a point behind Sergei Zhigalko and Tornike Sanikidze, a short time later placing =9th with 7.5/11 at the World U14 Championship in Halkidiki.

<National and Continental>: A couple of weeks after being eliminated from the FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (2004) (see below), he placed =1st in the 2004 Norwegian Championship. However, after a two-game play-off match with co-leader and until then, six-time Norwegian champion, Berge Ostenstad was drawn, Østenstad was declared winner on tiebreak. In the 2005 Norwegian Chess Championship, Carlsen again finished in a shared first place, this time with his mentor Simen Agdestein. A rapid game playoff between them resulted in Agdestein’s victory by 3.5-2.5 (+2 -1 =3). Carlsen finally won the Norwegian Championship in 2006, after defeating Simen Agdestein in a tie-break match.

Carlsen’s first and and so far only participation in the continental championship provided a solid 22-point boost to his rating when he scored 8/13 in the 6th European Individual Championship (2005).

<World>: Carlsen qualified for the FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (2004), but was eliminated in the first round tiebreaker by Levon Aronian. His hopes to become a contender for the World Championship in the future took a big step forward by placing tenth at the FIDE World Cup (2005), becoming the youngest player ever to qualify for the Candidates. In his first Candidates match in Elista in May, he drew 3-3 in the six slow games of the Candidates Match: Aronian – Carlsen (2007) before losing in rapid-play tie-breaks. He reached the final four in the World Chess Cup (2007) before being defeated in the semi-finals by the eventual winner, Gata Kamsky. Carlsen’s final placing in the 2007 World Cup qualified him for participation in the FIDE Grand Prix for 2008-09. Soon afterwards he tied for first place in the Baku Grand Prix (2008), the first round of FIDE’s inaugural Grand Prix series. Carlsen later withdrew from the Grand Prix cycle despite his excellent result in Baku, complaining about "dramatic changes to … regulations." and that “…changing the rules dramatically in the middle of a cycle is simply unacceptable.”

On the basis of his rating, Carlsen qualified for the Candidates Tournament that would determine the challenger to World Champion Viswanathan Anand in 2012. In November 2010, however, Carlsen announced he was withdrawing from the Candidates tournament. Carlsen described the 2008–12 cycle as not "…sufficiently modern and fair", and added that "Reigning champion privileges, the long (five year) span of the cycle, changes made during the cycle resulting in a new format (Candidates) that no World Champion has had to go through since Kasparov, puzzling ranking criteria as well as the shallow ceaseless match-after-match concept are all less than satisfactory in my opinion." Carlsen qualified for the World Championship Candidates (2013) that was played in London, again on the basis of his rating. He placed =1st with Vladimir Kramnik on 8.5/14 after both players lost their last round games, but as the first tiebreaker (score against each other in the tournament which was 1-1) failed to break the tie, he won on the second tiebreak which stipulated that the player with the greater number of wins takes first place; he had scored five wins to Kramnik’s four. During the tournament, Carlsen set a new live rating record of 2878.9 after he defeated Gelfand in round 10.

In November 2013, Carlsen won the Anand – Carlsen World Championship (2013) that was staged in Chennai. The first four games were drawn before Carlsen won the fifth and sixth games. The seventh and eighth games were drawn, with Carlsen then winning the ninth game and drawing the tenth and last game to win by 6.5-3.5 (+3 =7).

World Championship Defence 2014

Carlsen defended his World Championship title against Anand – who won the right to challenge for the title by winning the World Chess Championship Candidates (2014) that was held in March 2014 – in Sochi in Russia in November 2014.

The first game of the Carlsen – Anand World Championship (2014) was a fighting draw with Carlsen playing Black and successfully defending a Grunfeld. He drew first blood in game two playing the White side of a quiet Ruy Lopez, breaking down Black’s defences before the first time control. After the first rest day, Anand struck back strongly playing the White side of a Queen’s Gambit Declined (D37), and overcame Carlsen before the first time control. In game 4, Anand played the Sicilian but Carlsen steered the opening into a quiet positional struggle that ended in a draw. Game 5 featured a Queen’s Indian Defence by Carlsen which also ended in a draw. Game 6 may have been the turning point in the match. Anand missed a simple tactical stroke as Black that would have given him a very strong, if not winning position and the lead in the match. After missing this continuation, Anand’s game weakened and Carlsen brought home the point to take the lead in the match for the second time.

Game 7 was another Berlin Defence by Anand who encountered difficulties and surrendered a piece for two pawns. However, his defence kept Carlsen at bay for 122 moves before the game was finally drawn due to insufficient mating material on the board. Game 8 in the match was another QGD, with Carlsen playing Black introducing an innovation from his home preparation that guaranteed him a relatively easy draw. After another rest day, play resumed with Carlsen playing the White side of a Ruy Lopez that turned into a Berlin Defence by Anand. The game quickly came to an end through a draw by repetition, with Carlsen content to maintain his one-point lead. In Game 10, Carlsen again defended a Grunfeld, albeit not as convincingly as in Game 1. However, he defended a long initiative by Anand to secure a drew to continue to maintain his one point lead. Game 11 was another Berlin Defence by Anand which turned into a complex and hard fought middle game following an innovation by Anand on the queenside, which was followed by an exchange sacrifice. Carlsen successfully defended to bring home the final point needed to secure his title for another two years.

Match result: Carlsen won by 6.5-4.5 (+3 -1 =7).

World Championship Defence 2016

Carlsen’s next defence of his classical world title was in November 2016, starting November 11th, in New York City. Sergey Karjakin won the right to challenge him by finishing clear first in the World Championship Candidates (2016). Carlsen retained his title when he drew the classical games 6-6 (+1 -1 =10) and won the rapiad game tiebreaker 3-1 (+2 =2). See Carlsen – Karjakin World Championship (2016) for more information.

Classical Tournaments:

<2004-2007> Carlsen placed 3rd at the 12th Sigeman & Co Chess Tournament (2004) followed later that month with a solid =3rd place at the Politiken Cup 2004, a half point behind the leaders Darmen Sadvakasov and compatriot Leif Erlend Johannessen. In October 2005, he won the Gausdal Bygger’n Masters in Norway with 8/9 ahead of 9 other grandmasters. He continued to improve in 2006, tying Alexander Motylev for first place in Corus Group B (2006). After several more strong performances during the year, including 6.5/9 at the XXII Reykjavik Open (2006), =2nd at Bosna Sarajevo Tournament (2006), =2nd behind Sergei Shipov at the Midnight Sun Challenge at Breivika videregaende skole in Norway, =2nd at Biel Int’l Festival (2006) (after beating the winner Alexander Morozevich twice), first at the Gausdal Classics GM-A and a joint second-place finish at Linares – Morelia (2007), he crossed the 2700-mark, the youngest player ever to do so. A relatively poor result at Dortmund (2007) (3/7) was followed by a win at Biel Chess Festival (2007) (His score was equaled by Alexander Onischuk and so they played a tie-breaker match to determine the winner. After drawing two rapid and two blitz games, Carlsen won the Armageddon game) and a par for rating =2nd at the Arctic Chess Challenge (2007) where he scored 7/9, a half point behind the leader Alexander Moiseenko, and 3rd at the Tal Memorial (2007) in November 2007.

<2008-2009> In 2008 Carlsen was the joint winner of Corus (2008) A-Group together with Levon Aronian, and placed second in Morelia-Linares (2008) behind Anand. He won clear first place at Aerosvit (2008) with a dominant 8/11 score. His "disappointing" third placement at 41st Biel International Chess Festival (2008) with 6/10, a half point behind joint winners Leinier Dominguez Perez and Evgeny Alekseev, was nevertheless still a 2740 performance, whilst his equal second in the Bilbao Grand Slam Chess Final (2008) with 5.0/10 was a 2768 performance. His relatively meagre 7/13 at Corus (2009) was followed by equal second placement behind Kramnik at Dortmund (2009) with a 2773 performance and 2nd with 5/9 at the M-Tel Masters (2009). The arrival of Garry Kasparov in 2009 as his coach enabled Carlsen’s finest tournament performance to date, and one of the best tournament results in the history of chess. Carlsen eclipsed a stellar field consisting of Topalov, Peter Leko, Dmitry Jakovenko, Teimour Radjabov and Wang Yue to win clear first prize with 8/10 at the category XXI Pearl Spring Chess Tournament (2009). Carlsen’s performance rating for the tournament was a record 3002 and lifted his FIDE rating in the November 2009 list to 2801, which made him only the fifth player to surpass 2800, and easily the youngest. After a slow start, Carlsen placed equal second with Vassily Ivanchuk behind Vladimir Kramnik in the Category XXI Tal Memorial (2009), which fielded ten of the world’s top thirteen rated players. He saw out 2009 with a win at the London Chess Classic (2009), a point ahead of Kramnik, a result which pushed him to the top of the world ratings in January 2010.

<2010-2012> In 2010, Carlsen’s success continued, winning Corus (2010) outright with 8.5/13, half a point ahead of joint second place finishers Kramnik and Alexey Shirov. In June, he won the category XXI King’s Tournament (2010) in Bazna in Romania by a clear two points with 7.5/10 and a 2918 performance. Following mediocre performances at the 2010 Olympiad and the category XXII Bilbao Masters (2010), Carlsen returned to form by winning the category XXI Nanjing Pearl Spring Tournament (2010) outright with 7/10 (+4 -0 =6) and a 2901 rating performance, a full point ahead of World Champion Anand who took outright second with 6/10, and finishing the year by winning the London Chess Classic (2010) for the second time in succession. After a slow start in the Tata Steel (2011) super tournament, Carlsen finished =3rd with Levon Aronian behind Hikaru Nakamura and Anand with 8/13 and a performance rating of 2821. He followed up in June by winning the Bazna King’s Tournament (2011) on tiebreak ahead of Karjakin, both finishing with 6.5/10, and by winning Biel Chess Festival (2011) in July with a round to spare and with a final score of 7/10 (TPR 2835). After another characteristically slow start, Carlsen placed =1st with Ivanchuk at the 4th Bilbao Masters (2011) with 15 points under the Bilbao scoring system (+3 -1 =6) and a 2842 performance rating, ultimately winning the tournament in a blitz tiebreaker. Then in November 2011, Carlsen won the Tal Memorial (2011) on tiebreak with 5.5/9 (+2 =7 -0 and a TPR of 2850) over Aronian. Carlsen finished 2011 with 3rd place at the category 20 London Chess Classic (2011) behind Kramnik and Nakamura, scoring +3 =5 (TPR of 2879). 2012 started with =2nd (+4 -1 =8; TPR 2830) behind Aronian and alongside Radjabov and Fabiano Caruana at the Category 21 Tata Steel (2012). He won the category 22 Tal Memorial (2012) outright with 5.5/9 (+2 =7) and a TPR of 2849. The month after his strong results in the World Blitz he finished outright second behind Wang Hao in the Grandmaster Tournament of the Biel Chess Festival (2012). In October 2012, Carlsen repeated his 2011 feat at Bilbao by winning the Bilbao Masters (2012) in a tiebreaker, this time against Caruana. He finished up 2012 by winning the London Chess Classic (2012), the third time he has done so, with a score of 6.5/8 (+5 =3 -0) and a TPR of 2994 (only fractionally below his record effort at Pearl Springs in 2009). London 2012 was also made historic for the fact that Carlsen’s result lifted his January 2013 rating to a new record, exceeding Kasparov’s record 2851 by 10 points.

<2013> Building on his achievements of 2012, Carlsen won the category 20 Tata Steel (2013) tournament with a round to spare, his final score being 10/13. He also set a new live rating record of 2874 after his round 12 win over Nakamura, although this was superseded at the Candidates in March. In May 2013 he played in the category 21 Norway Chess Tournament (2013) held in the Stavanger Region of Norway and came 2nd with 5.5/9, half a point behind the winner Sergey Karjakin; in the preliminary Norway Chess Tournament (Blitz) (2013) held to determine the draw, he came 2nd with 6/9 behind Karjakin, thereby earning 5 games as White out of the 9 to be played. In June he again came outright 2nd, this time at the category 22 Tal Memorial (2013), half a point behind the winner Boris Gelfand. His last hit out before the World Championship match against Anand in November 2013 was the category 22 double round robin Sinquefield Cup (2013), which he won outright with 4.5/6 (+3 =3; TPR of 2966).

<2014> Carlsen’s first tournament as World Champion was the Zurich Chess Challenge (2014), the first ever category 23 tournament (average rating 2801). He came from behind to take equal first with Aronian in the Zurich Chess Challenge (Blitz) (2014), which determined the colors in the main event (Carlsen has 4 whites and 1 black). By round 4 of the standard time event, he extended his live rating to 2882.6, breaking the record he established in round 3. His round 5 draw with Anand enabled him to finish the standard time event in first place, 2 scoring points ahead of Aronian. He needed 3.5/5 in the Zurich Chess Challenge (Rapid) (2014) played on the final day to guarantee his win in the event, however his 2/5 result was sufficient to win the combined event by one point under the scoring system used. His next event was the category 22 Gashimov Memorial (2014), a new event in honor of the late Azeri GM Vugar Gashimov, which he won outright with a score of 6.5/10, defeating Fabiano Caruana, his rival for first prize, in the last round. Although he was the only undefeated player at the Norway Chess Tournament (2014), he won insufficient games to win the event, which was successfully defended by last year’s winner, Sergei Karjakin. In August 2014, he played in the category 23 (only the second such strength event) Sinquefield Cup (2014) and came outright second with 5.5/10, 3 points behind Caruana, the runaway leader of the tournament.

<2015> Following his successful defence of his title against Anand in November 2014, Carlsen won the Tata Steel (2015) outright with a score of 9/13 (+6 -1 =6), his six wins scored in succession after starting the event poorly with two draws and a loss. In April 2015, Carlsen won the category 21 Gashimov Memorial (2015) outright for the second year in succession with a powerful score of 7/9 (+5 =4), a full point clear of a resurgent Viswanathan Anand, who was outright runner up with 6/9. This high was followed by a low at the category 22 Norway Chess (2015) in Stavanger in June 2015, when he crashed and burned to his worst tournament result in almost a decade. After losing his first round game on time to Topalov in a won position, Carlsen never recovered and registered a 3.5/9 (+2-4=3) result that slashed 23 points from his rating. A slow start in the category 22 Sinquefield Cup (2015) following an early loss to Topalov, was followed by three successive wins which enabled Carlsen to draw level with the leader by round 5, before the rest day. However, a crucial loss to Grischuk from an advantageous position and missed opportunities to win against Nakamura relegated him to equal second in the event, a point behind the outright winner Levon Aronian. This result also caused him to shed a few ratings points.

Still struggling with his form, Carlsen began his campaign at the category 23 London Chess Classic (2015) with his characteristic slow start, but was able to finish equal first in the ninth and final round with a win over Alexander Grischuk, scoring 5.5/9 alongside Anish Giri and a surging Maxime Vachier-Lagrave. A three way rapid game tiebreak resulted in Carlsen winning the tournament as well as the Grand Chess Tour of 2015. He finished 2015 with a flourish when he won the powerful Qatar Masters (2015) by sharing first with an undefeated 7/9, then winning 2-0 in the blitz playoff against Yu Yangyi. His tiebreak wins against Yu Yangyi also elevated him back to world #1 in blitz.

<2016> The year started in the best possible way for Carlsen when he scored 9/13 to win outright at the category 20 Tata Steel (2016) event, a point ahead of Caruana and Ding Liren. This was his fifth win at Wijk aan Zee, tying with Anand for the record number of wins at this event, which has been running since 1938. In April, he won the Norway Chess (2016) event for the first time, scoring 6/9 to finish outright first, a half point ahead of outright second placed Aronian who won their individual game; Carlsen also won the preliminary Norway Blitz (2016) with 7.5/9, a point ahead of outright second placed Giri, to win the right to five starts as white in the nine round principal tournament. In July, Carlsen emerged as the outright winner of the Bilbao (2016), well ahead of the runner up Nakamura.

Rapid:

Carlsen won the Glitnir Blitz Tournament in 2006 in Iceland. In September 2006 Carlsen placed 8th out of 16 participants at the World Blitz Championship (2006) in Rishon LeZion, Israel. In the blitz tournament associated with the Tal Memorial 2006, namely the Tal Blitz Cup, Carlsen scored 17½/34 points and placed 9th in a group of 18 participants. In March 2007, Carlsen played for the first time in the Melody Amber blind and rapid chess tournament in Monte Carlo. In the 11 rounds of the 16th Amber Tournament (Blindfold) (2007), he achieved eight draws and three losses (placing =9th) then scored three wins, seven draws and one loss in the 16th Amber Tournament (Rapid) (2007) (=2nd), for an overall 8th place in the combined tournament. In March 2008, Carlsen played for the second time in the Melody Amber blind and rapid chess tournament, which was held in Nice for the first time. Carlsen achieved four wins, four draws and two losses in the Amber Tournament (Blindfold) (2008), and three wins, two losses, and six draws in the Amber Tournament (Blindfold) (2008), resulting in a shared second place in the overall tournament.

In the Chess Classic Mainz (2008), Carlsen finished in second place after losing the final to defending champion Anand 3:1 (two losses, two draws). 2009 saw Carlsen score equal first in the Amber Tournament (Blindfold) (2009) with 7/11 alongside Kramnik and Aronian, and equal second with Veselin Topalov at M-Tel Masters (2009) behind Shirov with a 2822 performance. He also won the XXII Magistral Ciudad de Leon (2009), a rapid knockout tournament, ahead of Morozevich, Ivanchuk, and Wang Yue. Just a few days after his 2nd placement at the Tal Memorial (2009), he won the World Blitz Championship (2009) with 31/42, a full three points ahead of runner-up Anand. He shared first place at the 2010 Amber Rapid and Blindfold Tournament with Ivanchuk; scoring 6½ points in the blindfold and 8 points in the rapid, Carlsen accumulated 14½ from a possible 22 points. After a slow start in the Arctic Securities Chess Stars (2010) rapid tournament, he continued his success by defeating Anand in the two-game playoff for gold. In the World Blitz Championship (2010), held in Moscow on 16–18 November, Carlsen attempted to defend his 2009 title. With a score of 23½/38, he finished in third place behind Radjabov and the winner Aronian. After the tournament, Carlsen played a private 40-game blitz match against Hikaru Nakamura, winning with a score of 23½–16½. A phenomenal 9.5/11, 2.5 points clear of the field, in 20th Amber Tournament (Rapid) (2011) was insufficient for him to win the overall contest, as his results in the 20th Amber Tournament (Blindfold) (2011) were poor, resulting in a 2nd overall to 2008 and 2009 overall winner Aronian. In July 2012 he came clear 2nd in the World Rapid Championship (2012) behind Karjakin with 10.5/15, and clear 2nd in the World Blitz Championship (2012) with 19.5/30, half a point behind Alexander Grischuk.

In June 2014, he realized his ambition to be the triple champion (of standard, rapid and blitz chess) when he won the FIDE World Rapid Championship (2014) with 11/15, half a point ahead of runner-up Caruana, and the FIDE World Blitz Championship (2014) with 17/21, one point clear of Nepomniachtchi and Nakamura. In October 2015, he successfully backed up to defend his title at the World Rapid Championship (2015), scoring 11.5/15, a point clear of runners-up Leinier Dominguez Perez, Teimour Radjabov and Ian Nepomniachtchi. Carlsen was second in the Paris Grand Chess Tour, placing second to Nakamura in the Grand Chess Tour Paris Rapid (2016) and equal first in the Grand Chess Tour Paris Blitz (2016) alongside Nakamura to take second place behind the US grandmaster. Soon afterward, he was overall first in the Leuven legs of the Grand Chess Tour, having won both the YourNextMove Rapid (2016) and the YourNextMove Blitz (2016). Carlsen won his final event before the upcoming Carlsen – Karjakin World Championship (2016) in New York, when he won the final of the Carlsen-Nakamura Chess.com Blitz Battle (2016) against Hikaru Nakamura. Carlsen obtained a large lead after the 5m+2spm and 3m+2spm sections and narrowly lost the bullet 1m+1spm with a final score of 14.5-10.5.

Matches:

The DSB Bank match between Loek van Wely and Magnus Carlsen took place 28th April – 1st May 2006. The four game classical time limit match was tied 2-2. Carlsen won the blitz portion of the match 3.5-0.5. He won a rapid match against Peter Leko held in Miskolc, Hungary, scoring 5:3 (+2 =6). Carlsen played in a curtain raiser to the Norwegian Championship, winning the Carlsen – Predojevic Rapid Match (2013) by 2.5-1.5 (+1 =3); the match was organized by the "Nansen Center for Peace and Dialogue" to celebrate the long-standing relationship between Lillehammer and Sarajevo. (1)

Team:

<Olympiad>: Carlsen represented Norway on board one in the 36th Olympiad (2004), the 37th Chess Olympiad (2006), the Olympiad (2008), the Chess Olympiad (2010), the Chess Olympiad (2014) and in the Chess Olympiad (2016). His best result was in the 2006 Olympiad, where he scored 6 points from 8 games and came 5th for board one. In 2016, he scored 7.5/10 placing 6th on board one, assisting his twelfth seeded Norwegian team to place 5th.

<National> He played board 1 for Norway at the European Team Chess Championships (2007) and won an individual silver medal. He again played board 1 for Norway at the European Team Championship (2015), but returned a very poor result with 3.5/7, losing another 16 rating points to bring him down to his lowest rating (2834) since January 2012.

<Club> Carlsen played four seasons in the European Club Cup. In 2001 and 2003 he played for Asker Norway on board 6 and board 1 (after he had gained his FM title) respectively, while his father Henrik was reserve on both occasions. In 2007 he played board 3 for OS Baden Baden, and in 2008 he played top board for MIKA Yerevan. His total game result from these 4 seasons was 15.5/27 (+11 -7 =9). He also played in the Norwegian Team Championship in 2002, 2003, 2005 and 2006, in the Bundesliga in the 2004-05, 2006-07, 2007/08, 2008-09 seasons, and in the Dutch Team Championship 2007.

<Other Team> In August 2006, he played in the NH Hotels event featuring the older Experience Team vs Youth team (easily won by the Youth team 28–22), and was equal top scorer with Alexander Beliavsky with 6.5/10.

Rating:

The highest official rating achieved by Carlsen to date was 2882 in May 2014. His highest live rating was 2889.2 on 21 April 2014. Both are the highest ratings ever achieved.

Carlsen’s 1 December 2016 FIDE ratings are:

<Standard>: 2840, making him the world #1 ranked player. By the end of the December 2016 rating period, he will have been world number one for a total of 77 months. He holds the record for the longest period as the world’s top ranked Junior (U20) – 36 months – from 1 January 2008 until 31 December 2010. He was also both world number one junior and world number one player for the first 10 months of 2010. Furthermore, he holds the record for the highest rating acquired by any player aged 13, and 17 through to 24 inclusive.

<Rapid>: 2894 (world #1); and

<Blitz>: 2873 (world #2).

Other:

Carlsen won the Chess Oscars for 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2013 and he was also awarded Norway’s annual Peer Gynt Prize for 2011 for being "a person or institution that has achieved distinction in society". (2) After he won the World Championship he was awarded Norway’s "Name of the Year" award for 2013. (3) He has two sisters, Ellen Oen Carlsen and Ingrid Oen Carlsen. Carlsen helped Anand prepare for the World Chess Championships in 2007 and 2008 and 2010. Carlsen has modeled for G-Star Raw, starting with its Autumn/Winter 2010 advertising campaign.

At the Sohn Conference held in New York in May 2015, Carlsen demonstrated his skill by playing three players in a blindfold clock simul. Carlsen and each of the three players were given nine minutes. Carlsen won 3-0. A video of the event can be seen at the link in footnote (4). On September 22, 2016 he was in New York City to play a simul against 11 users of the Play Magnus mobile app. Everybody had 30 minutes on their clocks. Magnus won 11 to 0 (Carlsen Play Live Simul (2016)).

General Sources:

Carlsen’s FIDE player card; Wikipedia article: Magnus Carlsen; live rating: http://www.2700chess.com/; official website: http://www.magnuscarlsen.com/; blogs: http://www.arcticsec.no/index.php?b... (English language); http://simonsenlaw.no/ (Norwegian language); World Championship Index: http://www.mark-weeks.com/chess/wcc... and Olimpbase, the Encyclopedia of Team Chess: http://www.olimpbase.org/

Footnotes:

(1) Magnus Carlsen and Borki Predojevic play in Lillehammer – http://www.peace.no/index.php?optio...
(2) Chess star wins prestigious award – http://www.newsinenglish.no/2011/03...
(3) Magnus Carlsen vant tre av tre priser på Idrettsgallaen – http://www.nrk.no/sport/videoklipp/...
(4) Carlsen blitzes blindfold clock simul – http://en.chessbase.com/post/carlse...

Last updated: 2017-02-26 08:48:35

click here for game list


< Earlier · PAGE 3139 OF 3139 · Later>
Feb-16-17 offramp: I’d prefer it if the Norway tournament had 7 of the world’s top 10 and 5 lesser-ranked players, probably one other Norwegian player and four youngsters.

Feb-16-17 Billy Vaughan: <Best to most ridiculous:>
My own ranking is similar

1. Naka
2. Vishy
3. So
4. Karjakin
5. Giri
6. Fabiano
7. Aronian
8. Kramnik
9. MVL
10. Carlsen I mean look at that face


Feb-16-17 john barleycorn: <offramp> I think the top10 in one tournament is either going to be exciting or the ultimate draw contest. I hope for the former. Karjakin or Carlsen may sort it out.

Feb-16-17 Fiona Macleod: A tournament like this is like a bunch of people having a contest on guessing which moves the best computers will make. The more hits, the better the chances of winning.

Feb-16-17 offramp: I thought it was wonderful when Rapport beat the great Carlsen at Wijk. It does happen! Often! But the youngsters have to be given the opportunity.

Feb-16-17 john barleycorn: let us not forget Ivanchuk.

Feb-16-17 keypusher: <offramp: I’d prefer it if the Norway tournament had 7 of the world’s top 10 and 5 lesser-ranked players, probably one other Norwegian player and four youngsters.>
I agree; that is why Tata is (usually) so good.


Feb-16-17 gopi11: When was the last time we have the top 10 current chess players in the world play each other in a tournament? Like never…
If we go by Jeff Sonas’ system of categorizing a tournament, this will be the strongest chess tournament of all time.

Check his system out -> https://en.chessbase.com/post/what-...


Feb-16-17 HeMateMe: MLV just doesn’t photograph well, not comfortable in front of the camera. That’s not his fault, just a bit shy.
Karjakin’s endorsement patch looks like something the Brown Shirts wore in Weimar Germany, Butt-ugly.


Feb-16-17 WorstPlayerEver: Hmm.. the foto on the site is quite embarrassing. As if the collage is made from the most stupid pics they could find.

Feb-16-17 offramp: It will be 9 rounds, and the winner will probably score 6½ or 7 points. The trouble is that if a player loses in the first round he would have to score <6½ or 7 out of 8> to win, against an unrelenting promenade of super-strong GMs. There are no weakies to target! It means that no one can risk an early loss.

Feb-16-17 WorstPlayerEver: Nope. Topalov isn’t playing.

Feb-16-17 perfidious: <offramp….the winner will probably score 6½ or 7 points…..>
My guess is that +3 will be enough, perhaps for even outright victory; it is hard to imagine anyone reeling off such a string of victories that they are likely to make +4 or +5 as you suggest, barring a run like that of Caruana at St Louis in 2014. We could watch one hundred such tournaments and never see the likes of that again.


Feb-16-17 beenthere240: In all fairness, not one of the contenders was picking his nose.

Feb-16-17 Sally Simpson: I get it. None of us know anything about this level of chess so we have resorted to picking out the best looking guy from
http://norwaychess.no/wp-content/up...

I felt a little uncomfortable with this, me being a guy an all, so I asked three girls at the office to pick the best looking one.

Two for Karjakin and one for MVL "who looks like the most fun to be with". (another commented that the guy in front looked a wee bit like Matt Damon. and another asked if Aronian was in some way deformed.)

I asked who was the ugliest and they agreed, actually they all are.

If any of you know any other females, then carry out your own tests, we could mark them and keep a tally and give them a best looking rating.


Feb-17-17 keypusher: <Two for Karjakin and one for MVL "who looks like the most fun to be with". >
Good for them! It’s such an unflattering picture of MVL, but he still comes across as appealingly geeky.


Feb-17-17 Imran Iskandar: So looks sunburned.

Feb-17-17 offramp: <Sally Simpson:… and another asked if Aronian was in some way deformed.)…>
I really hope that LeaveMe Alonian does not read that!

In 2016 he paid his last $150 to have Dr Renato Rodriguez in Tijuana remove a kilo and a half of assorted chitterlings and cartilage from his titanic sneezer.

He became selfie-obsessed and his results deteriorated owing to the ban on mobile phones.

If he found out that he had gone through that tremendous ordeal and that gals still thought he looked "deformed" then I dread to think of the damage to his already fragile psyche.


Feb-17-17 Sally Simpson: Hi Offramp,
I thought it was because the way camera caught him standing, he appears kind of odd, kind of twisted a bit.

Facially (to me anyway) he’s no different to the rest of them…compared to me they all plug ugly. Though they are all not too bad at chess.


Feb-17-17 zanzibar: <Sally> is it "plug ugly" or "pug ugly"?
And with, or without, a hyphen?

http://grammarist.com/usage/plug-ug...

Funny, you seem to be on the wrong side of the ocean on this one.


Feb-17-17 Sally Simpson: Plug Ugly as in ‘Plug’ from the Bash Street Kids. It’s a UK thing.
http://comicvine.gamespot.com/bash-...


Feb-17-17 zanzibar: According to the link I gave:
< The word plug-ugly is derived from the name of a Baltimore gang in the 1850s, the Plug Uglies. This gang took part in numerous politically-motivated riots during the 1850s and 1860s. It is believed that the Plug Uglies took their name from the plug hats that they wore. In popular slang of the day, plug was a term for a homely, average person, perhaps partially accounting for the term. >

And also:

<he Plug Uglies were a street gang operating out of Baltimore, Maryland in the 1850s. The notorious Know Nothing Riot, in which political and gang rivalries flared up into mob violence, took place in Baltimore in 1856. Gangs called the Rip Raps, the Know Nothings and the Plug Uglies fought pitched battles in the streets and these events were widely reported at the time. A contemporary newspaper report also puts the gang in Washington in the following year. The New York Daily Times, June 1857, printed a report from a correspondent in Washington:

A gang of organized desperate rowdies, some fifty in number, called the “Plug Uglies”, arrived here this morning from Baltimore, for the purpose of defeating the Democratic ticket and keeping naturalised citizens from the polls.>

http://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/...

Clearly the Plug Uglies were just concerned Republicans worried about voter fraud (follow-ups over to <Rogoff>!).


Feb-17-17 offramp: I’ll ask the players. Would you describe yourself as pug-ugly or just plug-ugly?

Feb-18-17 zanzibar: OK, fellow pugs, follow ups over in the cafe.

Feb-19-17 chessmoron: In today’s episode of "The Simpsons," Magnus Carlsen will appear as a voice cameo as himself.

Jump to page # 
3139
go (enter # from 1 to 3139)

< Earlier · PAGE 3139 OF 3139 · Later>

NOTE: You need to pick a username and password to post a reply. Getting your account takes less than a minute, totally anonymous, and 100% free–plus, it entitles you to features otherwise unavailable. Pick your username now and join the chessgames community!
If you already have an account, you should login now.
Please observe our posting guidelines: (1) No obscene, racist, sexist, or profane language. (2) No spamming, advertising, or duplicating posts. (3) No personal attacks against other users. (4) Nothing in violation of United States law.

See something that violates our rules? Blow the whistle and inform an administrator.

Messages posted by Chessgames members do not necessarily represent the views of Chessgames.com, its employees, or sponsors.

Spot an error? Please suggest your correction and help us eliminate database mistakes!
home | about | login | logout | F.A.Q. | your profile | preferences | Premium Membership | Kibitzer’s Café | Biographer’s Bistro | new kibitzing | chessforums | Tournament Index | Player Directory | World Chess Championships | Opening Explorer | Guess the Move | Game Collections | ChessBookie Game | Chessgames Challenge | Store | privacy notice | advertising | contact us
Copyright 2001-2017, Chessgames Services LLC

V3 most popular chess openings

Menu

Search
Solar
Solar NowNow
Most popular chess openings
Recognizing and understanding the basics of these openings will increase your confidence in the opening phase of the game.
Sicilian Defense. …
French Defense. …
Caro-Kann Defense. …
Pirc Defense. …
Queen’s Gambit. …
Indian Defenses. …
English Opening. The English Opening is a flexible choice for White. …
Réti Opening. The Réti Opening (1.
More items…
The Most Common Chess Openings – …
https://www.chess.com › PRINCESTER
Feedback
About this result •
People also ask
What is the best opening move in chess?
What is an opening in chess?
How many first moves can you do in chess?
What is the Sicilian Opening in chess?
Feedback
Top 10 most powerful openings. – Chess.com
https://www.chess.com › monsterking › t…
Jul 26, 2011 – Welcome back everybody. This post will be explaining the top 10 best openings in chess history! May god praise these …
The Most Common Chess Openings – …
https://www.chess.com › PRINCESTER
Recognizing and understanding the basics of these openings will increase your confidence in the opening phase of the game. Sicilian Defense. French Defense. Caro-Kann Defense. Pirc Defense. Queen’s Gambit. Indian Defenses. English Opening. The English Opening is a flexible choice for White. Réti Opening. The Réti …
Top 10 Popular Chess Openings – Mark …
www.mark-weeks.com › aboutcom
Now White decides whether to allow an immediate pin on the Queen’s Knight. 3.Nc3 Bb4 : Nimzo Indian (the alternative 3…d5 transposes to a Closed Game) 3.Nf3 b6 : Queen’s Indian (or 3…d5, also transposing to a Closed Game)
Chess Openings – Learn How To Play The Top 60 Openings – The Chess Website
www.thechesswebsite.com › chess-openi…
Most of the chess openings have been named and analyzed for hundreds of years. It is important if you want to be successful in chess to …
A Beginner’s Garden of Chess Openings – David A. Wheeler
https://www.dwheeler.com › chess-openi…
The first moves of a chess game are termed the "opening" or "opening moves". A good opening will provide better protection of the King, …
Best of 2015: Most popular opening | Chess News | ChessBase
en.chessbase.com › post › best-of-2015-…
Dec 31, 2015 – Today we want you to vote for the most popular opening of the year 2015. The following article features a video by …
Chess opening – Wikipedia
https://en.m.wikipedia.org › wiki › Chess…
Jump to Common aims in opening play – The classical view is that central control is best effected by placing pawns there, …
Most Popular Opening Moves In Chess Over Time – Business Insider
www.businessinsider.com › most-popular…
May 28, 2014 – If you don’t start off with a good opening, you could doom yourself to defeat before the game really even begins.
Videos

10:13
Top 10 Chess Openings
YouTube – Jul 16, 2014

54:19
Top 10 Most Popular Responses to 1. e4 – Chess Openings Explained
YouTube – Feb 11, 2016

9:39
Top 7 Aggressive Chess Openings
YouTube – Sep 4, 2014

57:07
Top 10 Most Popular Responses to 1. d4 | Chess Openings Explained
YouTube – Mar 31, 2016

3:56
Top 10 Best Chess Openings For White : Chess Statistics for Beginners
YouTube – Nov 28, 2012

9:23
One of the best chess openings:The Yugoslav Attack
YouTube – Sep 9, 2010

8:33
Chess Openings: The Queen’s Gambit
YouTube – Mar 14, 2009

3:56
Top 10 Best Chess Openings For White : Chess Statistics for Beginners
YouTube – Feb 2, 2014

16:09
Kingscrusher’s Top 12 Most popular Chess Opening Playlists
YouTube – Apr 2, 2015

32:35
Top 10 Outrageously Aggressive Chess Openings
YouTube – Mar 12, 2015
Opening Chess Moves – to Expert Chess …
www.expert-chess-strategies.com › openi…
Good theoretical Opening Chess Moves help you to get a strong chess position right from the start…
Related searches
stonewall opening
chess openings for white aggressive
best chess openings for black
chess opening moves pdf
sicilian defense chess
ruy lopez opening
best chess openings for beginners
best chess moves to win
Next
Tamuning, Guam – Reported by this phone – Learn more
Terms

Advertisements

Share this:
TwitterFacebookGoogle

Related
Measure Wind Speed with Your Own Wind Meter – Scientific American
SubSonex one man jet airplane
Obama.Accomplishments
February 27, 2017Leave a reply
« Previous
Leave a Reply
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *
Comment 
Name *
Email *
Website
Post Comment
 Notify me of new comments via email.


Search
Recent Posts
Most popular chess openings
Jaki Crime
EX PARTE EMERGENCY MOTION – Invitation to edit
EX PARTE EMERGENCY MOTION – Invitation to edit
Noses are 75% opiates overdoses not notice
Recent Comments
 raymay14 on Pix
Archives
February 2017
January 2017
December 2016
November 2016
August 2016
July 2016
June 2016
May 2016
April 2016
March 2016
February 2016
January 2016
December 2015
November 2015
October 2015
Categories
Uncategorized
Meta
Register
Log in
Entries RSS
Comments RSS
WordPress.com
View Full Site

Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.

Follow


Most popular chess openings

Recognizing and understanding the basics of these openings will increase your confidence in the opening phase of the game.
Sicilian Defense. …
French Defense. …
Caro-Kann Defense. …
Pirc Defense. …
Queen’s Gambit. …
Indian Defenses. …
English Opening. The English Opening is a flexible choice for White. …
Réti Opening. The Réti Opening (1.
More items…
The Most Common Chess Openings – …
https://www.chess.com › PRINCESTER
Feedback
About this result •
People also ask
What is the best opening move in chess?
What is an opening in chess?
How many first moves can you do in chess?
What is the Sicilian Opening in chess?
Feedback
Top 10 most powerful openings. – Chess.com
https://www.chess.com › monsterking › t…
Jul 26, 2011 – Welcome back everybody. This post will be explaining the top 10 best openings in chess history! May god praise these …
The Most Common Chess Openings – …
https://www.chess.com › PRINCESTER
Recognizing and understanding the basics of these openings will increase your confidence in the opening phase of the game. Sicilian Defense. French Defense. Caro-Kann Defense. Pirc Defense. Queen’s Gambit. Indian Defenses. English Opening. The English Opening is a flexible choice for White. Réti Opening. The Réti …
Top 10 Popular Chess Openings – Mark …
www.mark-weeks.com › aboutcom
Now White decides whether to allow an immediate pin on the Queen’s Knight. 3.Nc3 Bb4 : Nimzo Indian (the alternative 3…d5 transposes to a Closed Game) 3.Nf3 b6 : Queen’s Indian (or 3…d5, also transposing to a Closed Game)
Chess Openings – Learn How To Play The Top 60 Openings – The Chess Website
www.thechesswebsite.com › chess-openi…
Most of the chess openings have been named and analyzed for hundreds of years. It is important if you want to be successful in chess to …
A Beginner’s Garden of Chess Openings – David A. Wheeler
https://www.dwheeler.com › chess-openi…
The first moves of a chess game are termed the "opening" or "opening moves". A good opening will provide better protection of the King, …
Best of 2015: Most popular opening | Chess News | ChessBase
en.chessbase.com › post › best-of-2015-…
Dec 31, 2015 – Today we want you to vote for the most popular opening of the year 2015. The following article features a video by …
Chess opening – Wikipedia
https://en.m.wikipedia.org › wiki › Chess…
Jump to Common aims in opening play – The classical view is that central control is best effected by placing pawns there, …
Most Popular Opening Moves In Chess Over Time – Business Insider
www.businessinsider.com › most-popular…
May 28, 2014 – If you don’t start off with a good opening, you could doom yourself to defeat before the game really even begins.
Videos

10:13
Top 10 Chess Openings
YouTube – Jul 16, 2014

54:19
Top 10 Most Popular Responses to 1. e4 – Chess Openings Explained
YouTube – Feb 11, 2016

9:39
Top 7 Aggressive Chess Openings
YouTube – Sep 4, 2014

57:07
Top 10 Most Popular Responses to 1. d4 | Chess Openings Explained
YouTube – Mar 31, 2016

3:56
Top 10 Best Chess Openings For White : Chess Statistics for Beginners
YouTube – Nov 28, 2012

9:23
One of the best chess openings:The Yugoslav Attack
YouTube – Sep 9, 2010

8:33
Chess Openings: The Queen’s Gambit
YouTube – Mar 14, 2009

3:56
Top 10 Best Chess Openings For White : Chess Statistics for Beginners
YouTube – Feb 2, 2014

16:09
Kingscrusher’s Top 12 Most popular Chess Opening Playlists
YouTube – Apr 2, 2015

32:35
Top 10 Outrageously Aggressive Chess Openings
YouTube – Mar 12, 2015
Opening Chess Moves – to Expert Chess …
www.expert-chess-strategies.com › openi…
Good theoretical Opening Chess Moves help you to get a strong chess position right from the start…
Related searches
stonewall opening
chess openings for white aggressive
best chess openings for black
chess opening moves pdf
sicilian defense chess
ruy lopez opening
best chess openings for beginners
best chess moves to win
Next
Tamuning, Guam – Reported by this phone – Learn more
Terms

Jaki Crime

Crime. Evidence
Part of 9/11 Terror attacks ( hearsay) fake marriage ( documentary proof
HUD Fraud. Documentary proof
Court fraud. Documentary proof
child support fraud. Documentary proof
Crime. Evidence me twice. medical records
ongoing terror attack plans period multiple evidences
life sentence in Philippines case number 673 8 in RTC 66 SFLU

On Feb 23, 2017 2:40 PM, "Ray Hackett" <3659745> wrote:

Part of 9/11 Terror attacks fake marriage
HUD Fraud
Court fraud
child support fraud
poisoned me twice
ongoing terror attack plans

EX PARTE EMERGENCY MOTION – Invitation to edit

Superior Court of Guam

CASE# CV0229-12

Plaintiff: Clifford "RAY" Hackett

vs.

Defendants:Leann Castro

EX PARTE EMERGENCY MOTION

This EX PARTE MOTION is made ex parte because plaintiff’s life is in danger from Defendant’s actions. As reported in the original (granted) motion for TRO, defendant threatened to cause plaintiff’s death by forcing him into homelessness, knowing a deaf and blind man could not survive in guam traffic for long. Plaintiff filed paperwork with defendant, adding a roommate to his unit, to pay the rent for him while he was off island. Defendant “LOST” the filed paperwork AND then refused to accept rent payment from the roommate and told him he must vacate the unit, so he did. Defendant has carried out her threat, and plaintiff will die without intervention from the court. Plaintiff asks that the court will order that plaintiff will be placed in the vacant unit K6 in Guma Trankilidat and this matter will be heard by a jury.

I HEREBY CERTIFY that a true copy of the foregoing was sent to the other party the same day it was sent to this court.

sig.jpg

On Feb 24, 2017 5:18 PM, "Ray Hackett (via Google Docs)" <3659745> wrote:

Ray Hackett has invited you to edit the following document:

document-4.png
EX PARTE EMERGENCY MOTION

Sender's profile photoCa$$tro Guam

Open in Docs

Google Docs: Create and edit documents online.
Google Inc. 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, USA
You have received this email because someone shared a document with you from Google Docs.
Logo for Google Docs