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Hikaru Nakamura
Nakamura 
 

Number of games in database: 3,914
Years covered: 1995 to 2025
Last FIDE rating: 2804 (2734 rapid, 2837 blitz)
Highest rating achieved in database: 2816
Overall record: +593 -246 =724 (61.1%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 2351 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Sicilian (272) 
    B90 B30 B23 B51 B42
 Ruy Lopez (172) 
    C65 C67 C78 C77 C84
 Reti System (148) 
    A06 A04 A05
 Queen's Gambit Declined (119) 
    D37 D31 D38 D30 D35
 Queen's Pawn Game (115) 
    A45 D00 D02 E10 D05
 Grunfeld (77) 
    D85 D70 D78 D91 D80
With the Black pieces:
 Sicilian (251) 
    B90 B30 B80 B22 B92
 Ruy Lopez (247) 
    C67 C65 C70 C78 C72
 Queen's Gambit Declined (156) 
    D37 D31 D30 D06 D39
 Queen's Pawn Game (123) 
    D02 A45 A40 A41 A46
 King's Indian (114) 
    E97 E90 E92 E94 E63
 Giuoco Piano (107) 
    C53 C50 C54
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Krasenkow vs Nakamura, 2007 0-1
   Gelfand vs Nakamura, 2010 0-1
   Rybka vs Nakamura, 2008 0-1
   So vs Nakamura, 2015 0-1
   G Sagalchik vs Nakamura, 2003 0-1
   Crafty vs Nakamura, 2007 0-1
   Nakamura vs Karjakin, 2004 1-0
   Nakamura vs Kramnik, 2012 1-0
   A Beliavsky vs Nakamura, 2009 0-1
   Nakamura vs J W Loyte, 2001 1-0

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

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   Corsica Masters (2007)
   Trophee CCAS (2008)
   Magnus Carlsen Invitational (2020)
   Bullet Chess Championship (2023)
   Meltwater Tour Final (2021)
   Chess.com Speed Chess Championship 2017/18 (2017)
   Ordix Open (2009)
   Magnus Carlsen Chess Tour Finals (2020)
   chess.com Speed Chess (2020)
   New In Chess Classic (2021)
   Tata Steel India (2022)
   Chess.com SpeedChess Finals (2024)
   Champions Showdown (2019)
   Pro Chess League (2018)
   PRO League Group Stage (2019)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Naka's Nook Mistook Fredthebear stan theo by fredthebear
   0ZeR0's collected games volume 212 by 0ZeR0
   0ZeR0's collected games volume 243 by 0ZeR0
   Notable Nakamura Games by caracas1970
   book: Fighting Chess with Hikaru Nakamura by Baby Hawk
   Fighting Chess with Hikaru Nakamura by kenilworthian
   Vid e o put Fredthebear in th is cent ury by fredthebear
   Notable Nakamura Games by iron maiden
   2020 The Corona Beer & Black Bears Matter Mo Ode by fredthebear
   Hikaru! by larrewl
   Match Nakamura! by docjan
   Match Nakamura! by amadeus

RECENT GAMES:
   🏆 Norway Chess Armageddon
   Carlsen vs Nakamura (Jun-02-25) 1-0, armageddon
   Carlsen vs Nakamura (Jun-02-25) 1/2-1/2
   Nakamura vs Caruana (Jun-01-25) 1/2-1/2
   Nakamura vs Caruana (Jun-01-25) 1/2-1/2, armageddon
   A Erigaisi vs Nakamura (May-31-25) 1-0, armageddon

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

HIKARU NAKAMURA
(born Dec-09-1987, 37 years old) Japan (federation/nationality United States of America)

[what is this?]

IM (2001); GM (2003). Hikaru Nakamura won the US Championship in 2004, 2009, 2012, 2015 and 2019. He was the world's second-ranked player as of October 2015. In July 2023, he married WGM Atousa Pourkashiyan.

Prodigy

Christopher Hikaru Nakamura was born December 9, 1987 in Hirakata in Osaka, Japan, to a Japanese father and an American mother. He is the younger brother of Asuka Nakamura. When he was two years old, he and his mother and brother moved to the United States. He started playing chess when he was seven, coached by his stepfather, Sunil Weeramantry. He was the youngest player in US history to defeat an International Master (Jay 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.

Championships

<Youth> In 2001 he won the World U14 championship.

<National> When he won the Chessmaster US Championship 2005 (2004) (on tiebreak from Alexander Stripunsky), he was the youngest player to win the US championship since Robert James Fischer. He also won the US Championship (2009) outright by half a point ahead of the joint runners-up Robert Hess and Alexander Onischuk, and the United States Championship (2012) outright by a full point ahead of the winner of the 2010 and 2011 events, Gata Kamsky. He won the national title for a fourth time when he took out the US Championship (2015) with 8/11, half a point ahead of the outright runner up Ray Robson.

<World championship cycle> 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 Aleksej 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 qualified to play in the World Cup (2013) through his rating, and defeated Peruvian WGM Deysi Estela Cori Tello in the first round, Azeri GM Eltaj Safarli in the second round and Indian GM Baskaran Adhiban in the third round, but was eliminated in the Round of 16 (fourth round) by Ukrainian GM Anton Korobov. He qualified by rating to participate in the World Cup (2015), and is doing so although he has already qualified for the Candidates Tournament of 2016 via the Grand Prix series of 2014-15. He defeated Richmond Phiri, Sam Shankland in the first two rounds, as well as Ian Nepomniachtchi in a third round thriller that Nakamura won in the deciding Armageddon blitz tiebreaker game after the three previous sets of rapid and blitz tiebreakers had been drawn. In the Round of 16 (the fourth round) he won against Michael Adams by 1.5-0.5 but lost to Pavel Eljanov in the quarter final, bowing out of the event.

<Grand Prix Series 2012-2013> He started the Grand Prix series with last at the FIDE Grand Prix London (2012). After bouncing back into contention with outright second in the FIDE Grand Prix Zug (2013), a poor showing at the FIDE Grand Prix Thessaloniki (2013) eliminated him from contention for the top 2 spots that would have qualified him for the 2014 Candidates Tournament. (1) He did however place 3rd behind Fabiano Caruana and Boris Gelfand in the FIDE Grand Prix Paris (2013) to accumulate 300 GP points and place 6th in the 2012-13 Grand Prix series. Subsequently, his only chance to play in the 2014 Candidates Tournament was to be nominated as the Organizer's wild card once the venue was settled, however this did not eventuate.

<Grand Prix Series 2014-2015> Nakamura competed in the first leg of the series at the FIDE Grand Prix Baku (2014), where he scored 6/11 to place 3rd-7th, half a point behind the joint leaders Caruana and Gelfand. He therefore kicked off with a GP tally of 82 points, representing the even distribution of points applicable to each place from 3rd to 7th. In the second leg of the series, namely the FIDE Grand Prix Tashkent (2014), he placed =2nd and stood in 2nd place overall, excellently situated to take advantage of the opportunity to qualify for the Candidates tournament in 2016. He took full advantage of this in FIDE Grand Prix Khanty-Mansiysk (2015), when he came =1st to qualify for the Candidates Tournament of 2016.

Standard tournaments

In 2005, he won the 7th Foxwoods Open (2005).

In 2007, he won both the National Open (2007) that was held in Las Vegas and the Casino de Barcelona (2007).

The following year, he beat Xiangzhi Bu in the play-off to win the Gibraltar Masters (2008) Masters Open with 8.0/10.

Nakamura tied for first with Evgeny Najer at the 37th 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 Group A (2010), and was equal top scorer in the victorious Rising Stars team in the Rising Stars - Experience (2010) tournament. He scored 5/9 (+1 -0 =8) at the Tal Memorial (2010), placing =4th, and finished the year with =4th place in the London Chess Classic (2010).

Nakamura began 2011 by taking clear first place at the A-Group of the prestigious category 20 Tata Steel Group A (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 placed =3rd in the Bazna King's Tournament (2011), in July he scored 4.5/10 at Dortmund Sparkassen (2011), in August he came =1st in the 2011 US Open Championship with 7.5/9 and in October he came =3rd in the Grand Slam Chess Final (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 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 Group A (2012), scoring 7.5/13 (+3 -1 =9). He followed up in April 2012 with 1st at the 6th Annual Grand Pacific Open held in British Columbia. 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 underperformed at the 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 Group A (2013) event. He then followed up in May 2013 with equal 2nd at the Norway Chess (2013) with 5.5/9, half a point behind Sergey Karjakin and 3rd on tiebreak behind Carlsen; he also placed =2nd with 6/9 at the preliminary Norway Chess (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. In June 2013, he contested the category 22 Tal Memorial (2013), and was outright leader after 6 rounds. However, he lost the last 3 game to place 6th with 4.5/9, winning more games (4) and losing more games (4) than any other player in the tournament. Soon after, he came =3rd in the Houston Open in July 2013. In September he played in the quadrangular double round robin category 22 Sinquefield Cup (2013), and was in contention for first place until the last round, when he drew against Gata Kamsky finishing second with 3.5/6 (+2 -1 =3; TPR 2863) behind Magnus Carlsen.

Nakamura's first event in 2014 was the category 20 Tata Steel Masters (2014) where he scored 5/11 (+2 -3 =6) to shed a few rating points for FIDE's February rating list. He next competed in the category 23 Zurich Chess Challenge (2014) in which he placed 4th with 2/5 after coming agonisingly close to defeating World Champion Magnus Carlsen. He came 2nd with 3.5/5 in the Zurich Chess Challenge (Rapid) (2014) which followed the standard time event, to remain in 4th in the overall event with the results of the standard and rapid events combined. In April, he participated in the inaugural Gashimov Memorial (2014), a category XXII 6-player DRR event inaugurated in honor of the late Azeri grandmaster, scoring 5/10 and placing =3rd behind Carlsen and Caruana. At the London Chess Classic (2014), he scored 2.5/5 to place 4th.

Nakamura's start to 2015 was to win the powerful Gibraltar Masters (2015) with 8.5/10 (+7 =3), and return a PB on his live rating and his new FIDE rating due in March. Despite cracking the 2800 barrier in the live ratings during the RR category 22 Zurich Chess Challenge (2015) held in February, he placed outright 2nd in the standard portion of the event behind Anand, ahead of Kramnik, Karjakin, Aronian and Caruana respectively. His second place in the Zurich Chess Challenge (Rapid) (2015) with 3/5 made him =1st with Anand in the overall event, but he won an Armageddon tiebreaker with the former World Champion to win first prize. His good form continued at the category 22 Norway Chess (2015) event, where he was undefeated to place =2nd (3rd on a narrow SB tiebreak), behind Topalov and alongside Anand with 6/9 and a TPR of 2900. In September he competed in the second leg of the inaugural Grand Chess Tour at Sinquefield Cup (2015), and finished equal second with 5/9 behind Aronian in what amounted to a par for rating performance. October saw Nakamura compete in the lucrative Millionaire Chess (2015) tournament, which he won after battling through a complicated tiebreak system that involved a playoff to decide a playoff for fourth, and then winning a knockout rapid game semi-final that was called after round 7 of 9 of the main standard time event. He finished the year with a poor performance at the London Chess Classic (2015) where he came in toward the bottom of the field after scoring 4/9.

He started 2016 with an upbeat result at the Gibraltar Masters (2016), winning first prize after a rapid and blitz game tiebreak that ended in an Armageddon victory against runner-up Maxime Vachier-Lagrave. He finished clear second at the
FIDE Grand Swiss (2023), scoring 8/11 (+5 =6 -0) and qualifying for the 2024 Candidates tournament.

Team Events

<Olympiads> Nakamura has represented the U.S. in the Olympiads of 2006, 2008, 2010, 2012 and 2014, helping his country to the bronze medal in 2006 and 2008. He scored 6/10 during the Khanty-Mansiysk Olympiad (2010) on top board for the USA and a performance rating of 2741 and 6/9 in the Istanbul Olympiad (2012), coming in fourth on top board. His overall score in Olympiads is 31 points accumulated in 49 games played.

<World Team Championship> Nakamura played board 1 for the USA at the World Team Championship (2010), scoring individual gold and team silver. He also played top board at the World Team Championship (2013), winning individual silver and helping his team to 4th place in the event.

<European Club Cup> He played top board for the SK Husek Vienna in the European Club Cup (2009) and top board for the Italian club Obiettivo Risarcimento Padova in 2012 and 2013, second board for the Italian club in 2014 and board 3 for the same club in 2015. He scored individual bronze in 2013 and 2014.

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. (2) He also won the first ICC Open in 2011 ahead of over 2000 other contestants. (3)

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 Trophee CCAS (2008), defeating Xiangzhi Bu, Anatoly Karpov and Vasyl Ivanchuk in the playoff matches to take first prize in a field that included 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 also defeated Rising Stars team mate Anish Giri for the right to play at Amber 2011.

In 2012, Nakamura won the trifecta of silver medals at the SportAccord World Mind Games (Men's Rapid) (2012), the World Mind Games (Men's Blitz) and the World Mind Games (Men's Blindfold) events. He closed out 2013 by winning the London Chess Classic (Knockout) (2013), defeating Gelfand in the final by 1.5-0.5, after qualifying for the final by winning the preliminary London Chess Classic (Group C) (2013).

In June 2014, he competed in both the World Rapid Championship (2014) and the World Blitz Championship (2014) that were held in Dubai. In the former, he scored a relatively meager 8.5/15, losing 40 rapid rating points, while he was much more successful in the latter, scoring 16/21, being the runner up by a point behind the winner Magnus Carlsen. His blitz rating skyrocketed to over 2900. Subsequently he competed in the Super Rapidplay Open that was a companion event to the 2014 London Classic (see above), winning the event with an almost perfect score of 9.5/10. He also competed in the London Elite Player Blitz that was the other companion event, and placed =1st with 6/10.

The 2016 edition of the Zurich Chess Challenge was a two-part event, which kicked off with a preliminary Zurich Chess Challenge (Opening Blitz) (2016) to determine who had three whites in the five rounds of the Zurich Chess Challenge (2016) (rapid). Nakamura placed first in the Opening Blitz earning the use of the white pieces in three of the five rounds of the first section of the actual tournament, the round robin rapid event where he placed equal first alongside Anand. Nakamura playing the black pieces three times in the second section of the event, the Zurich Chess Challenge (Blitz) (2016), again placed equal first with Anand to tie the overall score, but won on tiebreak to take first prize.

He has authored the book Bullet Chess: One Minute to Mate.

Matches

In December 2004, Nakamura played the best-of-six game Karjakin - Nakamura Match (2004) 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). In June 2014, he played for the Cez Trophy Navara - Nakamura Match (2014) in Praha, Czechia, which involved a 4-game standard time match against David Navara. He won the match by 3.5-0.5.

960 Chess

In August 2009, Nakamura defeated Aronian in Mainz, Germany to become the 960 world champion and remained unchallenged as such until Carlsen defeated him in a match in February 2018 by a margin of 14-10.

Ratings and rankings

Nakamura's highest ranking as a Junior (U20) was #3 in April 2004 and 2005. He first broke into the world's top 100 in October 2004 when he was still 16 years old, and has remained in the top 100 continuously since that time. He reached the world's top 10 in January 2011, and has remained in that elite group continuously since January 2013. In September 2015 his rating reached 2814 despite which he was still ranked world #4 behind Carlsen, Anand and Topalov respectively. However in October 2016, his ranking reached its highest point so far, 2816, when his ranking was world #2, his highest ranking so far.

Sources and references

(1) Wikipedia article: FIDE Grand Prix 2012–2013 (2) http://dod.ru/chess/game/Crest/Smal...; (3) Further details are at this post: Hikaru Nakamura; (4) https://itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast... (podcast interview by Ben Johnson through iTunes); Live rating list: http://www.2700chess.com/; Wikipedia article: Hikaru Nakamura

Last updated: 2024-04-14 20:46:42

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 157; games 1-25 of 3,914  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. S Predescu vs Nakamura 1-0641995U.S. National Scholastic Grade 2 ChampionshipB08 Pirc, Classical
2. L Au vs Nakamura 1-0431997Hawaii opB83 Sicilian
3. Nakamura vs J Bonin 1-0361997Marshall Chess ClubC02 French, Advance
4. J Kleinman vs Nakamura  ½-½411997January CongressA49 King's Indian, Fianchetto without c4
5. Nakamura vs B Karen 0-1521997Nassau FuturityB06 Robatsch
6. A Bisguier vs Nakamura 0-1211998Somerset ACN Action SwissE70 King's Indian
7. B Karen vs Nakamura  0-1261998Nassau g/30B23 Sicilian, Closed
8. A Stripunsky vs Nakamura 0-1431998Marshall Chess ClubB40 Sicilian
9. P MacIntyre vs Nakamura  1-0541998US Amateur Team EastA07 King's Indian Attack
10. J Thinnsen vs Nakamura 1-035199899th US OpenA45 Queen's Pawn Game
11. Nakamura vs I Krush 1-062199899th US OpenB67 Sicilian, Richter-Rauzer Attack, 7...a6 Defense, 8...Bd7
12. S Kriventsov vs Nakamura  1-0241999Rated TournamentB80 Sicilian, Scheveningen
13. Nakamura vs J Fang 0-12119998th Eastern Class ChampionshipsB73 Sicilian, Dragon, Classical
14. A David vs Nakamura  1-025199927th World OpenB92 Sicilian, Najdorf, Opocensky Variation
15. Nakamura vs W Paschall  ½-½251999North Bay OpenB65 Sicilian, Richter-Rauzer Attack, 7...Be7 Defense, 9...Nxd4
16. J Hebert vs Nakamura  1-0601999North Bay OpenE97 King's Indian
17. Nakamura vs V Rajlich  1-0521999North Bay OpenB90 Sicilian, Najdorf
18. G Taylor vs Nakamura  1-0311999North Bay OpenE75 King's Indian, Averbakh, Main line
19. Nakamura vs F Baragar  0-1451999North Bay OpenC17 French, Winawer, Advance
20. M Stroud vs Nakamura  0-1371999North Bay OpenE92 King's Indian
21. S Glinert vs Nakamura  ½-½381999North Bay OpenA07 King's Indian Attack
22. D Moody vs Nakamura 0-1201999100th US OpenB21 Sicilian, 2.f4 and 2.d4
23. Nakamura vs A Aleksandrov ½-½601999100th US OpenC45 Scotch Game
24. A Wojtkiewicz vs Nakamura 1-0421999100th US OpenE62 King's Indian, Fianchetto
25. Nakamura vs G Gaiffe 1-0541999100th US OpenB23 Sicilian, Closed
 page 1 of 157; games 1-25 of 3,914  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Nakamura wins | Nakamura loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
ARCHIVED POSTS
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 283 OF 858 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Oct-12-09  TheGladiatres: Looking forward to see Naka play in London. It will be interesting to se what he can do against some of the best players in the world.

A good showing there (and on Corus of course) should secure him more invitations to events like this.

Oct-13-09  Atking: <frogbert: <Is something funny going on?> nah, people just happy to draw against strong players... even if their team is losing! :o)> By experience I think they ask to the Team Captain before to accept the offer.

<awfulhangover: I wonder why Naka didn't play 15.d5 like Magnus did when he outplayed Leko recently?> If I remenber well leko played 13...0-0 then 14.Nc3 Qf5 15.d5! But here unlikely Kramnik 13...Bh3 14.Bf3 Qf5 15.Re1 d5 not time apparently to play d5 for White.

Oct-13-09  Atking: <timhortons> You gave 3 moves 18.Bxd5 18.BxBg4 and 18.Nxd5 I'm inquiring myself with 18.Bg2 (Bf2 looks passive but it's a tricky piece for defense and attack purpose) e.g Rab8 19.Re3 Nc6 20.Rae1 Nxd4 21.Qa4 with Nxd5 and Re5 just an idea. I should check it on a board. But it's one o'clock right now in Japan.
Oct-14-09  timhortons: Naka is blitz king of ICC/PLAYCHESS.COM!

naka is back at ICC setting new high record score in blitz!

< 3741 elo ICC > NEW icc record in blitz

1.magnus carlsen alias andrino gordano record busted! 1.depressnyak alias grischuk record busted!

<naka beat ubiyca/GM radjabov 12 times,drawing ones lossing ones.>

<naka beat le quang liem 7x>

[Event "ICC 3 1"]
[Site "Internet Chess Club"]
[Date "2009.10.14"]
[Round "-"]
[White "quangliem"]
[Black "Smallville"]
[Result "0-1"]
[ICCResult "White resigns"]
[WhiteElo "3509"]
[BlackElo "3741"]
[Opening "Queen's pawn: English defense"]
[ECO "A40"]
[NIC "VO.03"]
[Time "06:17:47"]
[TimeControl "180+1"]

1. d4 b6 2. e4 Bb7 3. Bd3 e6 4. Nf3 Nf6 5. e5 Nd5 6. O-O Nb4 7. Be2 d6 8. a3 N4c6 9. Nc3 dxe5 10. dxe5 Qxd1 11. Rxd1 a6 12. Bf4 Nd7 13. Rd2 h6 14. Rad1 O-O-O 15. h4 g6 16. Nd4 Nxd4 17. Rxd4 Bg7 18. R4d2 Nxe5 19. f3 Nd7 20. Kf2 Nc5 21. Be3 Rxd2 22. Rxd2 Nd7 23. Ne4 Bxb2 24. a4 Nf6 25. Ng3 Nd5 26. c4 Nxe3 27. Rxb2 Nf5 28. Nxf5 gxf5 29. Ke3 Bc6 30. c5 Kb7 31. a5 b5 32. g4 fxg4 33. fxg4 Rd8 34. Rd2 Rxd2 35. Kxd2 f6 36. Ke3 e5 37. Bd3 Bd5 38. Be4 Bxe4 39. Kxe4 b4 40. Kd3 b3 41. Kc3 Kc6 White resigns 0-1

[Event "ICC 3 0"]
[Site "Internet Chess Club"]
[Date "2009.10.14"]
[Round "-"]
[White "Ubiyca"]
[Black "Smallville"]
[Result "1/2-1/2"]
[ICCResult "White ran out of time and Black has no material to mate"] [WhiteElo "3464"]
[BlackElo "3599"]
[Opening "Queen's pawn: English defense"]
[ECO "A40"]
[NIC "QO.17"]
[Time "04:33:51"]
[TimeControl "180+0"]

1. d4 b6 2. c4 Bb7 3. Nc3 e6 4. a3 Nf6 5. Nf3 d5 6. cxd5 Nxd5 7. Qc2 Nd7 8. e4 Nxc3 9. bxc3 c5 10. Bd3 Qc7 11. Qb1 Be7 12. O-O O-O 13. Re1 e5 14. Be3 Bd6 15. h3 Rfe8 16. Qa2 Rac8 17. Bc4 Nf6 18. dxe5 Bxe5 19. Nxe5 Rxe5 20. Bf4 Rf8 21. Bxe5 Qxe5 22. Qd2 Nxe4 23. Qd7 Ba8 24. Re3 Qg5 25. Rae1 Qxg2+ 26. Kxg2 Nf6+ 27. f3 Nxd7 28. Re7 Bc6 29. Rd1 Nf6 30. Rd6 Be8 31. Rxa7 b5 32. Ba2 c4 33. a4 bxa4 34. Bxc4 h6 35. Rd8 g5 36. Ba2 Kg7 37. c4 Bd7 38. Rxf8 Kxf8 39. c5 Ke8 40. Ra6 Nh5 41. c6 Nf4+ 42. Kg3 Bxh3 43. Ra8+ Ke7 44. c7 h5 45. c8=Q Bxc8 46. Rxc8 f5 47. Ra8 h4+ 48. Kh2 g4 49. fxg4 fxg4 50. Rxa4 g3+ 51. Kg1 Ne2+ 52. Kg2 Nc3 53. Ra3 Nb5 54. Re3+ Kf6 55. Bc4 Nd4 56. Re4 Nf5 57. Bd3 Ng7 58. Rxh4 Ne6 59. Kxg3 Ke5 60. Re4+ Kd5 61. Re1 Nc5 62. Bf1 Ne6 63. Kf3 Nd4+ 64. Kf2 Nf5 65. Bg2+ Kd6 66. Kf3 Nd4+ 67. Ke4 Nb5 68. Rd1+ Ke6 69. Rh1 Nc3+ 70. Kd4 Ne2+ 71. Ke3 Ng3 72. Rh6+ Ke5 73. Ra6 Nf5+ 74. Kd3 Ne7 75. Ra5+ Kf4 76. Be4 Nc8 77. Ra6 Ke5 78. Rc6 Nd6 79. Rc5+ Ke6 80. Kd4 Ne8 81. Re5+ Kd7 82. Bc6+ Kxc6 83. Rxe8 Kd6 84. Re5 Kd7 85. Rd5+ Kc6 86. Ke4 Kc7 87. Ke5 Kc6 88. Ke6 Kb6 89. Rd6+ Kc5 90. Ke5 Kc4 91. Rd5 Kc3 92. Rd4 Kb2 93. Kd5 Kc3 94. Ke4 Kb3 95. Ke3 Kc3 96. Rd3+ Kc4 97. Rd4+ Kc5 98. Ke4 Kb5 99. Ke3 Kc6 100. Kd3 Kc5 101. Kc3 Kb5 102. Rd5+ Kb6 103. Kc4 Kc6 104. Rc5+ Kb6 105. Kd4 Kb7 106. Kd5 Kb6 107. Kd6 Kb7 108. Rc6 Ka7 109. Kc5 Kb7 110. Kb5 Kb8 111. Rb6+ Kc7 112. Kc5 Kd7 113. Kd5 Ke7 114. Rc6 Kf7 White ran out of time and ♗lack has no material to mate 1/2-1/2

<the site has yet to update>

http://www.cs.utu.fi/~juhkivij/ches...

Oct-14-09  Strongest Force: Tim, looks like Nsk finally got back the all-time high score honors at ICC. Congrats to Nak for that!Also, good job by Grischuk for giving Nak the competition Nak needs in this category.
Oct-14-09  Riverbeast: Yeah, well...I've still got the all time high score on the Ms. PacMan machine, at the pub down the street!

How you like ME now, Nakamura?

:-)

Oct-14-09
Premium Chessgames Member
  HeMateMe: I was Galagula champ at a few places, but could never master Ms. Pacman.
Oct-14-09  nhat8121: tim how about using prog like camstudio to record naka playing and put them up on your youtube channel...that would be awesome.
Oct-14-09  timhortons: < nhat8121> i just remember how the fanboys suckled on the idea when andrino gordano beat nakas record, now i know they gonna deny him as there own but during the time that andrino beat nakas record they beat there drums with celebration.

andrino take the record in an almost ambush like fashion, i remember naka is not playing blitz then or his blitz rating that time is in one of his lowest, here comes andrino out of nowhere with out telling anybody who he was, lure naka into game and stunned him, even trash talk with him each game, why i know because naka is telling the main panel that andrino trash talk him, he first suspect its aronian but the fan boys said hoorah, its there holy cow, its the classmate name of there god.

he take the record in an ambush, almost ungentleman manner i felt, in a very very rough manner at all.

naka take back the record beating radjabov 12 times and le quang liem 7 x, no ambush made, no hiding of name done, no trash talk uttered.

imagine hiding who you are and chamllenge somebody to a fight,very very villanous act.

Oct-14-09  timhortons: at least grischuk had the balls to have his depressnyak handle tag along his neck when fighting naka.
Oct-14-09  timhortons: naka hit ceiling high at 3750. who Can beat radjabov 12 in a row?

naka log/playing at ICC...

263 OBSERVER....

Oct-14-09  timhortons: i hope andrino daddy let him play at icc again, im sure naka will hit 4000 elo by beating the crap out of this guy.

everything is up to daddy so lets see if daddy let him play online blitz again.

Oct-14-09  ycbaywtb: sorry, my Naka page doesn't seem to refresh, just checking if this post will do it, again, sorry, anyway, Naka's a great player, more power to him, what tactical vision, too bad GK doesn't train Naka, lol
Oct-15-09  theagenbiteofinwit: I think Nakamura needs to get off ICC and do some serious positional analysis if he wants to compete at the highest level.

The best player in the world is a positional player and the second best player in the world is a positional player coached by probably the greatest attacking player ever. Neither one of them will give Naka an opportunity for a brilliant tactic in classical OTB play.

Oct-15-09  Pjalle: Timhortons,
Andrino has moved on, he has bigger fish to fry.
Oct-15-09  Rolfo: <..imagine hiding who you are and chamllenge somebody to a fight,very very villanous act.>

tim, you are going wild here. A handle is a handle, even Nakamura doesn't play as Nakamura. If AndrinoGiardino was carlsen, let it be..Whoever it was, he did it for surprise and fun as part of the game. Also great speculation and fun among observers, isn't it? Great marketing for ICC as well

Oct-15-09  rogge: Let the fanboy have his fun. Congrats to CyberNaka.
Oct-15-09  Winter: It's not the handle but the trash talks and ungentlemanly manner brought about by winning.

When you challenge, say, Smallville, using (AndrinoGiardino) unfamiliar to ICC followers, then announcing who you really are after winning the match is an act with malice in mind.

What if you lose the match? Nobody will know who you really are! And since you won, then, I am so and so aka AndrinoGiardino. This is to my understanding was what <timh>'s saying here.

Oct-15-09  Ken Ji jun: Classical Over The Board face off chess is real, true chess, NOT over-the-bytes realm of internet/ICC, or whatchamacallitwhatsoever.
Oct-15-09  Winter: I loved Nakamura toying with Rybka...
Oct-15-09  Strongest Force: I agree with the angry Tim. I think Nak was angry as well. This is all good for chess whether the future confrontations be classical or blitz, over the Internet or OTB.
Oct-15-09  timhortons: <This is all good for chess whether the future confrontations be classical or blitz, over the Internet or OTB>

<right sf>

<then announcing who you really are after winning the match is an act with malice in mind.>

winter..the fanboys actually say its there god who beat naka 6 times, they talk alot about it here at there page.

anyways the boy dont desrve to have the highest rating at icc, actually he just share the record with grischuk.

everything back to naka.

ICC RULES!

Oct-15-09
Premium Chessgames Member
  keypusher: <timhortons> I am sort of baffled by this whole discussion. I've never seen anyone care about the ICC as much as you do. Nakamura, I guess. Not Carlsen's fans, or Carlsen. Congratulations to Nakamura, anyway.
Oct-15-09  timhortons: <keypusher> i dont mind if ICC issue dont interest you.
Oct-15-09  timhortons: updated ICC RATING LIST!

http://www.cs.utu.fi/~juhkivij/ches...

this is a good warm up for Norway blitz!

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