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Nakamura 
Photography copyright © 2008, courtesy of chesspatzerblog.  
Hikaru Nakamura
Number of games in database: 1,042
Years covered: 1995 to 2013
Last FIDE rating: 2775
Highest rating achieved in database: 2786
Overall record: +367 -150 =297 (63.3%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games
      Based on games in the database; may be incomplete.
      228 exhibition games, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Sicilian (84) 
    B42 B90 B23 B30 B33
 Queen's Pawn Game (34) 
    A45 E00 D00 A50 D02
 French Defense (32) 
    C11 C02 C10 C16 C18
 English, 1 c4 e5 (27) 
    A22 A23 A29 A20 A21
 Queen's Gambit Declined (27) 
    D31 D37 D38 D30 D35
 Slav (25) 
    D15 D10 D11 D16 D12
With the Black pieces:
 Sicilian (126) 
    B90 B92 B30 B42 B23
 King's Indian (51) 
    E97 E94 E92 E99 E63
 Sicilian Najdorf (43) 
    B90 B92 B99 B94 B96
 French Defense (35) 
    C11 C12 C03 C10 C04
 Queen's Pawn Game (27) 
    A40 A45 E00 A41 D02
 Dutch Defense (27) 
    A88 A81 A85 A89 A87
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Krasenkow vs Nakamura, 2007 0-1
   Rybka vs Nakamura, 2008 0-1
   Gelfand vs Nakamura, 2010 0-1
   Crafty vs Nakamura, 2007 0-1
   G Sagalchik vs Nakamura, 2003 0-1
   Nakamura vs Kramnik, 2012 1-0
   Nakamura vs Karjakin, 2004 1-0
   Nakamura vs T Hillarp Persson, 2005 1-0
   Beliavsky vs Nakamura, 2009 0-1
   Nakamura vs S Muhammad, 2004 1-0

WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: [what is this?]
   FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (2004)

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   Torneo Continental Americano (2003)
   34th World Open (2006)
   Corsica Masters (2007)
   Casino de Barcelona (2007)
   5th Gibraltar Chess Festival (2007)
   Cap d'Agde (2008)
   Ordix Open (2008)
   Gibraltar (2008)
   Ordix Open (2009)
   Gibtelecom (2009)
   Tata Steel (2011)
   US Championship (2012)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Fighting Chess with Hikaru Nakamura by kenilworthian
   Notable Nakamura Games by iron maiden
   Hikaru! by larrewl
   Match Nakamura! by amadeus
   Art of War's favorite games 7 by Art of War
   Selected Tournaments and Favorite Games (2011) a by partien
   Nakamura's Noteables voted by members 1/26/08+ by ffpainz

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Hikaru Nakamura
Search Google for Hikaru Nakamura
FIDE player card for Hikaru Nakamura


HIKARU NAKAMURA
(born Dec-09-1987) Japan (citizen of United States of America)

[what is this?]
Christopher Hikaru Nakamura was born December 9, 1987 in Hirakata in Osaka, Japan, and is the younger brother of Asuka Nakamura. When he was two years old he and his family moved to the United States. He started playing chess when he was four, coached by his stepfather, Sunil Weeramantry. He was the youngest player in US history to defeat an International Master (Jay R Bonin) in a USCF-rated game (10 years, 0 months), to become a National Master (USCF) (10 years 79 days), to defeat a Grandmaster (Arthur Bisguier) in a USCF-rated game (10 years, 117 days), and to become an IM (13 years 2 months), although most of these records have subsequently been surpassed. In 2003 he became the USA's youngest-ever grandmaster (15 years 2 months and 19 days), a record later broken by Fabiano Caruana and Ray Robson.

Classical tournaments

In 2001 he won the World U14 championship and in 2004, seeded number 87 and aged 16, Nakamura reached the final 16 in the FIDE World Championship Knockout Tournament (2004), defeating 46th seed Sergey Volkov, 19th seeded Alexey Aleksandrov, and 51st seed Alexander Lastin in the preliminary rounds before bowing out to number 3 seed and finalist Michael Adams in the round of 16. He also won the U.S. Championship in 2004 http://graeme.50webs.com/chesschamp..., making him the youngest player to achieve that honor since Robert James Fischer. In 2005, he won the 7th Foxwoods Open (2005). In 2007, he won the National Open (2007) in Las Vegas and the Casino de Barcelona (2007). In 2008 he managed to win the Gibraltar (2008) Masters Open with 8.0/10 after beating Bu Xiangzhi in the play-off. In 2009, Nakamura won the US Championship (2009); tied for first with Evgeny Najer at the World Open (2009) after taking two last-day byes, each worth half a point; and won the Donostia Chess Festival (2009) in tiebreak over Ruslan Ponomariov. In 2010, he came =4th at Corus (2010), and was equal top scorer in the victorious Rising Stars team in the Rising Stars vs Experience (2010) tournament. His legendary prowess at blitz chess enabled him to defeat Rising Stars team mate Anish Giri for the right to play at Amber 2011. He scored 5/9 (+1 -0 =8) at the Tal Memorial (2010), placing =4th-6th, and finished the year with =4th place in the London Chess Classic (2010) and ten points (+2 -1 =4), counting 3 points for each win.

Nakamura began 2011 by taking clear first place at the A-Group of the prestigious category 20 Tata Steel (2011) (formerly Corus) with a 9/13 score (+6 -1 =6) and a 2880 performance rating, ahead of a powerful field including the world's top four players: World Champion Viswanathan Anand, Magnus Carlsen, Levon Aronian and former World Champion Vladimir Kramnik. In June 2011, Nakamura scored 4.5/10 (+1 -2 =7) coming =3rd in the Bazna King's Tournament (2011), in July he scored 4.5/10 at Dortmund (2011), in August he came =1st in the 2011 US Open Championship with 7.5/9 and in October he came =3rd in the 4th Bilbao Masters (2011) with 5/10. The following month, he suffered a lapse in form at the category 22 Tal Memorial (2011), scoring 3/9 and coming last but recovered in time to finish 2011 with second place behind Kramnik at the category 20 London Chess Classic (2011), scoring +4 -1 =3 (TPR of 2887). He started 2012 by coming =2nd (4th on count back) at the Reggio Emilia (2011), half a point behind Anish Giri, and then came =5th at Tata Steel (2012), scoring 7.5/13 (+3 -1 =9; TPR 2808). He followed up in April 2012 with 1st at the 6th Annual Grand Pacific Open held in British Columbia and in May 2012 by winning the US Championship (2012) outright with 8.5/11 (TPR 2831), a full point ahead of the winner of the 2010 and 2011 events, Gata Kamsky. He competed in the Tal Memorial (2012) held in June, scoring 4/9. In July/August 2012, Nakamura placed a solid =3rd at the Biel Chess Festival (2012), but then placed last at the FIDE Grand Prix London (2012) with 4/11 putting a crimp on his 2014 World Championship campaign and underperformed at the 28th European Club Cup (2012), although in October 2012, he recovered to some extent by winning the 4 player double round robin 16th Unive Tournament (2012) (crown group) with 4.5/6 (+3 -0 =3). Nakamura finished 2012 with a strong 3rd placement in the London Chess Classic (2012) behind Carlsen and Kramnik, adding enough rating points to restore him to the top 10.

2013 started with a modest 7/13 result for outright 6th at the Tata Steel (2013) event. In the wake of his poor Grand Prix result in London, Nakamura bounced back to take outright second in the FIDE Grand Prix Zug (2013) putting him back into contention for the top 2 in the 2013-14 Grand Prix series and qualification for the 2014 Candidates. He then followed up in May 2013 with equal 2nd at the Norway Chess Tournament (2013) with 5.5/9, half a point behind Sergey Karjakin and 3rd on tiebreak behind Magnus Carlsen; he also placed =2nd with 6/9 at the preliminary Norway Chess Tournament (Blitz) (2013) held to determine the draw for the main tournament, and earned the right to play with the White pieces in 5 games out of 9.

Olympiads

Nakamura has represented the U.S. in the Olympiads of 2006, 2008, 2010 and 2012, helping his country to the bronze medal in 2006 and 2008. He scored 6/10 during the Chess Olympiad (2010) on top board for the USA and a performance rating of 2741 and 6/9 (TPR 2794) in the Chess Olympiad (2012), coming in fourth on top board. His overall score in Olympiads is 25.5 points accumulated in 40 games played.

Rapids

Nakamura is one of the world's best rapid and blitz players, and the world's best bullet (one-minute) player. He regularly plays on the internet, usually at the ICC where he is the highest rated player (userid <Smallville>), and at Playchess, where he is known as <Star Wars>. He has set many rating records under different categories. In 2008, he challenged and broke blitz king Alexander Grischuk ’s record at ICC of 3737, reaching 3750. Grischuk subsequently challenged Nakamura to a 20 game 3 minutes blitz match, which Nakamura took out convincingly by 14.5-5.5.* He also won the first ICC Open in 2011 ahead of over 2000 other contestants.**

In 2007, he won the annual Corsica Masters (2007), defeating Rustam Kasimdzhanov in the final. One of the most convincing demonstrations of Nakamura’s ability as a rapid player was when he won the Cap d'Agde (2008), defeating Bu Xiangzhi, Anatoly Karpov and Vassily Ivanchuk in the playoff matches to take first prize in a field that included Magnus Carlsen. Nakamura also defeated Carlsen to take out the BNbank Blitz (2009). He was runner-up to Ivanchuk at the Cap d'Agde (2010) in the playoff.

He authored the book Bullet Chess: One Minute to Mate. He is the younger brother of Asuka Nakamura.

Match

In December 2004, Nakamura played a best of six game match against 14 year old prodigy GM Sergey Karjakin in the "Duelo de los Jovenes Prodigios" (Duel of the Wonder Boys) in Cuernavaca, Estado de Morelos, Mexico, winning 4.5-1.5 (+4 -1 =1). In May 2011 at the St Louis chess club, he won the Nakamura-Ponomariov Match (2011) by 3.5-2.5 (+2 =3 -1).

960 Chess

In August 2009, Nakamura defeated Levon Aronian in Mainz, Germany to become the 960 World Champion and remains unchallenged as such into July 2012.

Ratings and rankings

As of 1 May 2013, Nakamura's rating was:

<Classical> 2775, maintaining his position as the top ranking player in the Americas; he is also the number 7 player in the world;

<Rapid> 2795 (world #4); and

<Blitz> 2844 (world #4).

Sources and references

Live rating list: http://www.2700chess.com/; Nakamura's blog: http://www.hikarunakamura.com/naka/...; * http://dod.ru/chess/game/Crest/Smal...; ** Further details are at this post: Hikaru Nakamura; Wikipedia article: Hikaru Nakamura


 page 1 of 42; games 1-25 of 1,042  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves Year Event/LocaleOpening
1. S Predescu vs Nakamura 1-064 1995 U.S. National Scholastic Grade 2 ChampionshipB08 Pirc, Classical
2. Nakamura vs B Karen  0-152 1997 Nassau FuturityB06 Robatsch
3. L Au vs Nakamura 1-043 1997 Hawaii opB83 Sicilian
4. Stripunsky vs Nakamura 0-143 1998 Marshall Chess ClubB40 Sicilian
5. Bisguier vs Nakamura 0-121 1998 Somerset ACN Action SwissE70 King's Indian
6. B Karen vs Nakamura  0-126 1998 Nassau g/30B23 Sicilian, Closed
7. Nakamura vs I Krush 1-062 1998 Cardoza US opB67 Sicilian, Richter-Rauzer Attack, 7...a6 Defense, 8...Bd7
8. P MacIntyre vs Nakamura  1-054 1998 US Amateur Team EastA07 King's Indian Attack
9. D Schneider vs Nakamura 0-153 1999 Manhattan CC-chB90 Sicilian, Najdorf
10. D Moody vs Nakamura 0-120 1999 U.S. OpenB21 Sicilian, 2.f4 and 2.d4
11. Wojtkiewicz vs Nakamura 1-042 1999 U.S. OpenE62 King's Indian, Fianchetto
12. S Kriventsov vs Nakamura  1-024 1999 Rated TournamentB90 Sicilian, Najdorf
13. A David vs Nakamura  1-025 1999 World opB92 Sicilian, Najdorf, Opocensky Variation
14. Nakamura vs A Aleksandrov  ½-½60 1999 U.S. OpenC47 Four Knights
15. Nakamura vs O Adu  1-037 1999 Washington Eastern opB54 Sicilian
16. S Kriventsov vs Nakamura  1-095 1999 Eastern OpenA49 King's Indian, Fianchetto without c4
17. A Hoffman vs Nakamura 0-135 1999 U.S. Open 99E61 King's Indian
18. Wang Yue vs Nakamura 1-0112 1999 Wch U12A04 Reti Opening
19. Nakamura vs J Fang 0-121 1999 Eastern Class- chB06 Robatsch
20. Nakamura vs G Gaiffe 1-054 1999 U.S. Open (5)B23 Sicilian, Closed
21. Efimenko vs Nakamura 1-040 2000 KasparovChess Cadet GP netB99 Sicilian, Najdorf, 7...Be7 Main line
22. Nakamura vs Harikrishna ½-½22 2000 Wch U14C16 French, Winawer
23. V Gaprindashvili vs Nakamura 1-051 2000 World OpenA04 Reti Opening
24. Nakamura vs A De Palma 1-030 2000 World Open Friday Action OpenC45 Scotch Game
25. Nakamura vs Stellwagen 1-042 2000 Wch U14C11 French
 page 1 of 42; games 1-25 of 1,042  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Nakamura wins | Nakamura loses  
 

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 729 OF 773 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Apr-22-12  timhortons: check, check, check!

toink!

hail magnus! the best of todays generation but second to bobby fischer!

i hope harry lime dont read it:)

go go jombar.

Apr-22-12  timhortons: why nobody kibitz at magnus page? im worried of the boys popularity.
Apr-22-12  shach matov: <drik: You are waiting for 'real evidence' from me?>

you still have not provided ANY evidence which would accord with my definition of <lazy>. When you do we'll continue this discussion ;=]

Apr-22-12  KKDEREK: <Appaz: I've blown the whistle on this pathetic troll - for triple duplicating of posts>

Which one? Some many trolls around, Im confused. Why is that? Spring?

Apr-24-12  drik: <shach matov: you still have not provided ANY evidence which would accord with my definition of <lazy>.> & there we have the gist of it ... "YOUR DEFINITION OF LAZY". As ever the rest of the world gets no say! Appaz & KingDeath seem to speak the same language as me ... but you have the knack of deliberately misunderstanding. You provide NO EVIDENCE & you get to DEFINE THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE according to your convenience. LOL! You can't provide ANY evidence - & you can't acknowledge evidence provided. Defeat on both counts.

<When you do we'll continue this discussion ;=]>

<;=]>? So once I fulfill your arbitrary conditions, you will continue this 'discussion'? LOL! What discussion? I have provided links, quotes ... evidence. You have provided NOTHING. A discussion requires genuine feedback - this is just a soliloquy required to silence lies.

You claimed that Kramnik's blindfold talent was dubious on the basis of one bad tournament ... ignoring that he won 9 out of nineteen Melody Amber Blindfolds.

You claimed that Kasparov's <"He does not work as hard as he should."> was about what Carlsen needed to BECOME #1 - when it was made AFTER Carlsen was ALREADY NO.1?

I can see why you would like to sign off on this 'discussion'. You've been caught distorting the truth regarding Kramnik ... & and ignoring it altogether regarding Carlsen. YOU HAVE NO ANSWERS, NO DEFENCE. So feel free to stop this 'discussion' with any pretext you can clutch at - & cover your deceit with an emoticon, whilst you're about it.

Apr-24-12  MORPHYEUS: Enough of this lazy stuff already.

Cmon. Boring.....

Apr-24-12  MORPHYEUS: Besides that's off topic here.

Bring it over the Magnus page. Nobody's kibitzing there right now.

Apr-24-12  shach matov: <drik>

you still missing the point: I simply do not agree with your definition, so it's rather pointless to even debate this. If you're able to provide evidence according to my definition, I would very gladly consider it.

Apr-24-12  dangerhump: Any chance we can turn the discussion to some real talk on Nakamura rather than this pointless and ceaseless criticism?

Does it really matter if he gets to 2800? If he does, good for him and we can talk about it. But if he doesn't, big deal, he has still been a worthy competitor in the world for the past few years.

There's nothing wrong with being a fan of a chess player. Let's just enjoy the games and see what happens.

Apr-24-12  King Death: < dangerhump: ...Does it really matter if he gets to 2800? If he does, good for him and we can talk about it. But if he doesn't, big deal, he has still been a worthy competitor in the world for the past few years.>

More than once I put it out on this page that it doesn't matter on its own, that the kid can play and a lot better than the ones doing the trolling. Even if he retires from chess today it's a nice career.

Apr-24-12  timhortons: why you bring magnus topic at magnus page?

a rivalry must be created:) though how much droll the idea was concieved:)

go go magnus...

bat man got joker, spider man got the invincible sand man, captain america got red skull,obiwan got sky walker, Magnus got naka! hey hey folks, follow how our super hero tear to pieces the poker head of chess.

Apr-24-12  timhortons: I sometimes wonder if magnus camp really playing hand to make this rivalry? maybe not at all.

can they convert this idea into cash? the answer is no.

who will benefit it? the answer is, since naka is the lesser stronger player,he will benifit from the match up.

does this thing create excitement in chess, the answer is, it bores every one to death!yawn <kaka versus magnus>

nothing really worthy to talk about magnus lately.

i hope magnus page will, have its usual traffic, i will blame magnus in killing chess if he bore every one to death.

when you speak of boxing you need to look at its number one player, same in tennis,basketball and so be in chess.

Apr-24-12  timhortons: please answer my post in magnus page.
Apr-24-12  drik: <shach matov: <drik> you still missing the point: I simply do not agree with your definition,>

You simply do not agree with Carlsen's definition when HE calls himself lazy. Or with Friedel's definition when HE calls Carlsen lazy. Perhaps you should clarify the definition of LAZY with Carlsen & Friedel? The very reason I gave those quotes is that they INCLUDED THE WORD LAZY. Basically - you do not agree with anyone except yourself.

Apr-24-12  drik: <shach matov:>

You claimed that Kramnik's blindfold talent was dubious on the basis of one bad tournament ... ignoring that he won 9 out of nineteen Melody Amber Blindfolds.

You claimed that Kasparov's <"He does not work as hard as he should."> was about what Carlsen needed to BECOME #1 - when it was made AFTER Carlsen was ALREADY NO.1?

If you can explain these statements, to show that deceit was not the objective - it might be worth pursuing this 'discussion'. Otherwise, I take it as an admission of deceit.

Apr-24-12  shach matov: <drik>

Don't get me wrong <drik>, I think you're a good boy. But it seems the "debate" has gotten into an absurd state where you constantly claim things I never said! also, the whole thing is completely pointless and very repetitive (as has been mentioned by a few posters here), which is against site policy ;]... and rather annoying to other people here.

I think we can end it by saying that you failed over and over to provide ANY proof of your definition... I do,however, believe that you're entitled to your opinion, although I reserve the right to disagree... but lets respect other posters here who could care less about this issue and move on!

Enjoy your day ;]

Apr-24-12  voratco: <Laziness is nothing more than the habit of resting before you get tired. ~Jules Renard>

<Basically - you do not agree with anyone except yourself.>

I agree with Shach.

Apr-24-12  voratco: <timhortons: at one time id seen how intense frogbert with his fanatical love for magnus, but as time pass by it slowly fade away,>

I don't think so, I think he remains the same. He just got caught up defending himself from somebody who promised to take him down. The ardous moments were energy draining, after successfully standing his ground. He is just lazy right now, he is trying to rest. :D)

Apr-24-12  MORPHYEUS: Stop spamming the page with this lazy issue about Magnus.

I repeat this is the Nakamura page.

Apr-25-12  KKDEREK: Indeed..Man we <need> some chess..I mean more tournaments..Now I see how we miss Carlsen Naka Topa playing..Can't wait for WCC match or Tal Memorial starts
Apr-25-12  frogbert: well, there isn't too much relevant or newsworthy to say about either of carlsen or nakamura these days. but the us championship is getting closer...
Apr-25-12  jombar: Here's the line up for Tal Memorial:

Carlsen, Aronian, Kramnik, Radjabov, Morozevich, Grischuk, Caruana, Tomashevsky, Mcshane, and Naka.

I predict Naka will suffer badly in this event.

As a result, Naka's rating will plummet to 2730 - and will be thrown out of the top ten league.

Apr-26-12  voratco: Nobody bites the bait but somebody in the group will become a punching bag, just can't say who will be, will be.
Apr-26-12  jombar: <Naka tweeted: "There is more to life than simply chess unless your aspiration in life is to lose your mind and go crazy like Fischer!">

Chess greats like Tal, Capablanca, and Botvinik were sane, wise, and intelligent people who devoted their entire lives to the game and art of chess. None of the above lost their minds.

This is simply an ignorant statement from Naka again. The kid is on a roll with hogwash.

Another reason to doubt Naka's involvement with chess, and another reason why Naka will never be as great as Kasparov or Fischer.

He clearly lacks the great determination to put his mind solely on the perfection of chess, which Fischer and Kasparov possessed.

As GM Averbakh says: "Even as a youth, he (Botvinnik) set himself the task of becoming world chess champion, and turned away from everything that interfered with that aim."

Naka does not have that aspiration and I have no doubt that he will always be a mediocre player.

He should turn to poker instead. Nah, he's not even good at poker.

Apr-26-12  KKDEREK: Very tough line up for Tal Memorial. McShane and Tomashevski are both very strong , solid players..I dont see any fish here..
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