Jim Plaskett | |
---|---|
Full name | Harold James Plaskett |
Country | England |
Born | Dhekelia, Cyprus | 18 March 1960
Title | Grandmaster (1985) |
Peak rating | 2529 (July 2000) |
Harold James Plaskett (born 18 March 1960) is a British chess grandmaster and writer. [1]
Plaskett was born in Dhekelia, Cyprus, on 18 March 1960 [1] and was educated at Bedford Modern School, England. [2] In the 1990s he was a chess columnist for the New Statesman [1] while working various jobs in London. [3] He is married to the poet Fiona Pitt-Kethley. [4] They relocated to Cartagena, Spain in 2002. [5]
At the European Junior Chess Championship 1978/79, which was won by John van der Wiel, Plaskett came third with 8 points out of 13 games. [6] At the Junior EC 1979/80 Plaskett reached a shared fourth place with 8.5 points out of 13 games. [7]
Plaskett achieved the title of International Master in 1981, [8] and became an International Grandmaster in 1985. [8] At the Hastings tournament in 1986/87 he achieved 7 points out of 13 games, one point less than the winner Murray Chandler. [9]
He became British Chess Champion in 1990, with 9 points out of 11 games. [10] [11] In 1998 he played in the 73rd Hastings tournament, which was won by Matthew Sadler; James Plaskett reached fifth place with 4.5/9.
As of 2018 he continues to be active in chess in Spain. [12] [13] [14]
He has written nine chess books. [1]
In 1987, at a top-flight chess tournament in Brussels, he presented an endgame study composed circa 1970 by endgame composer Gijs van Breukelen. As a result, the famous study is now known as Plaskett's Puzzle.
Plaskett has been recording his own experiences of coincidences since the 1980s. He has said that the coincidences have seemed to proliferate in response to his own study, and have been seemingly interlinked by recurrent themes or motifs, which he felt may be "an indicator of something glimpsed but yet to be clearly seen or understood." [3] He is the author of a semi-autobiographical book, Coincidences. [1]
Another of Plaskett's interests has been the pursuit of the cryptid, the "Giant Octopus". [15] [16] He undertook a three-week expedition in search of it in the waters off the Bermudan coast in August 1999, in collaboration with Cliff Stanford of Demon Internet. [17]
After appearing four times at the qualifying stage of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? , [18] Plaskett, who had arrived with fellow grandmaster and friend Stuart Conquest, got into the hot seat on the show broadcast on 21 January 2006. After becoming the seventh person to reach £125,000 without using any lifelines, he went on to win £250,000. [1]
He has been public in his defence of contestants Charles Ingram, Diana Ingram, and Tecwen Whittock, who were found guilty of cheating to win the £1 million top prize by means of cough signals. Plaskett told journalist Jon Ronson that the alleged cough signals were simply nervous, responsive coughing caused by unconscious triggers, and that they had also occurred during the legitimate win by Judith Keppel. [18] In 2015, Plaskett and journalist Bob Woffinden collaborated on a book asserting that the Ingrams were innocent. [19] The book, titled Bad Show: The Quiz, The Cough, The Millionaire Major, was published in January 2015. [20] Plaskett's book on the Ingram affair inspired a stage play by James Graham, called Quiz . That later spawned a three part TV Drama of the same name directed by Sir Stephen Frears. [21] [22] [23] [24]
Alexander Genrikhovich Beliavsky is a Soviet, Ukrainian and Slovenian chess player. He was awarded the title of Grandmaster by FIDE in 1975. He is also a chess coach and in 2004 was awarded the title of FIDE Senior Trainer.
John Denis Martin Nunn is an English chess grandmaster, a three-time world champion in chess problem solving, a chess writer and publisher, and a mathematician. He is one of England's strongest chess players and was formerly in the world's top ten.
Joseph Gerald Gallagher is a British-born Swiss chess player and writer. He was awarded the title of Grandmaster by FIDE in 1990 and has been the national champion of both Britain and Switzerland.
John Michael Emms is an English chess Grandmaster and chess author. He tied for first in the 1997 British Championship. He was the 2002 captain of the English Olympiad team. In October 2004, he also coached a woman's team in the 36th Chess Olympiad in Calvià, Majorca.
Christopher Geoffrey Ward is a British chess Grandmaster (GM), chess coach, and author. He grew up in North West Kent, on the edge of Vigo Village and played his early chess at the village school chess club.
Eduard Yefimovich Gufeld was a Soviet/American International Grandmaster of chess, and a chess author.
Gary William Lane is a British-Australian chess player and author. He became an International Master in 1987 and won the Commonwealth Chess Championship in 1988. He has written over thirty books on chess, including Find the Winning Move, Improve Your Chess in 7 Days and Prepare to Attack. There have been translations in French, Italian, Portuguese and Spanish. In the 1980s the ITV documentary "To Kill a King" was screened nationwide in Great Britain. It featured a young Michael Adams and Lane. This feature is shown regularly at chess film festivals.
Glenn Curtis Flear is a British chess grandmaster now living in Montpellier, France. He is the author of several books, some on chess openings and some on the endgame.
Adrian Bohdanovych Mikhalchishin is a Ukrainian chess grandmaster now playing for Slovenia. Education: Lviv University, faculty of physics 1976. Mikhalchishin is married, with two children.
Nigel Davies is a Welsh chess Grandmaster, chess coach and writer.
Jacob Aagaard is a Danish-Scottish chess grandmaster and the 2007 British Chess Champion.
Graham K. Burgess is an English FIDE Master of chess and a noted writer and trainer. He became a FIDE Master at the age of twenty. He attended Birkdale High School in Southport, Merseyside. In 1989 he graduated from the University of Cambridge with a degree in mathematics. In 1994 he set a world record by playing 510 games of blitz chess in three days, winning 431 games and drawing 25.
Vladimir Sergeyevich Antoshin was a Soviet chess Grandmaster, a theoretician and a national champion of correspondence chess.
Anthony Cornelis Kosten is an English-French chess Grandmaster and chess author.
Simon Kim Williams is an English chess grandmaster and author who is best known under the pseudonym and Chess Server Nickname "GingerGM".
The Scandinavian Defense is a chess opening characterized by the moves:
Brian Ratcliffe Eley is a former British Chess Champion. He was wanted by the British police on suspicion of sexual offences against underage boys, and had been a fugitive from justice since 1991.