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Young Superstars: Magnus Carlsen

Submitted by WTHarvey on Tue, 08/14/2007 at 12:03pm.

Magnus Carlsen, born November 30, 1990, learned chess at the age of eight and lives in Baerum, Norway, just outside Oslo.  He received the title of International Master in 2003.  The next year, he gained 300 rating points.  In Corus that year, he scored 10.5 out of 13 and earning a Grandmaster norm and a performance rating of 2702.  Lubomir Kavalek wrote for the Washington Post, that Magnus was the 'Mozart of chess'.  At the Moscow Aeroflot Open that year Magnus earned his second norm and later beat Anatoly Karpov in a blitz tournament and drew a game with Garry Kasparov.  Carlsen earned his third norm at the Dubai Open Chess Championship that same year with four wins and four draws becoming the second youngest to gain the GM title, next to Sergey Karjakin of Ukraine.  He completed the year with 7 points of 9 in the Norwegian Championship.  Magnus tied with Berge Østenstad, the champion of 2003.  A playoff was arranged between the two which ended in a 1-1 tie so Østenstad retained his title.

In 2005, Magnus had a four game match with Viswanathan Anand, the then second ranked player in the world.  Magnus lost 3-1.  In the Norwegian Championship that year, Carlsen tied with his teacher, Simen Agdestein and, this time lost after a series of six tiebreak games.  In the World Chess Cup, Magnus beat Zurab Azmaiparashvili, Farrukh Ammonatov and Ivan Cheparinov before losing to Evgeny Bareev.  Having finished in 10th place, he secured a spot in the Candidates Matches, becoming the youngest player to be a World Championship Candidate.  He took first place at the Arnold Eikrem Memorial with a performance rating of 2792.

In the 2006 Norwegian Championship, Magnus once again tied with Agdestein and won the tiebreaks 3-1.  He scored 6 of 8 in the 37th Olympiad in 2006 with a performance rating of 2820.  At the Biel/Bienne grandmaster tournament, he came in second but beat the winner Alexander Morozevich with both colors.

This year, he played in group A in the Corus chess tournament.  At Linares, he scored 7.5 out of 14 with an ELO performance of 2778.  At the Melody Amber tournament, Magnus drew 8 and lost 3 in the rapid section and 3 wins, 7 draws and a loss in the blind section.  In the International Chess Festival Biel Grandmaster Tournament, Magnus tied with Alexander Onischuk and after a grueling round of tiebreaks, became the youngest player ever to win a category 18 tournament.

With White, Magnus plays 1.e4 nearly 2/3s of the time, 1.d4 one third and 1.Nf3 every tenth game.  With the black pieces, Magnus plays c5 two thirds of the time against 1.e4 (Alapin, Rossolimo or Kan Variations) with e5 the rest of the time (Petrov or Two Knights Defenses).  Against 1.d4, he almost always plays Nf6, prefering the Queen's Indian or transposing into a Queen's Gambit Declined (Ragozin or Slav).

Inteview with Magnus after Linares (English subtitles):  http://youtube.com/watch?v=N003wIDsiCc

 All puzzles are White to Move and Win except where noted.  35 more Carlsen puzzles can be found at http://www.wtharvey.com/carl.html

 

 

Comments:

by QUICOY - 4 years ago
United States
Member Since: Aug 2007
Member Points: 28

 

      I kinda like all of the puzzles thanks again!!!!

by RichardHayden - 4 years ago
Ashburn, VA United States
Member Since: Jul 2007
Member Points: 587
I thought the interview was good, and Carsten handled himself well. The Norwegians I know have a fairly silly sense of humor, not unlike Python.
by Phobetor - 4 years ago
International
Member Since: Aug 2007
Member Points: 1184
Both what frode said (he knew), but also I doubt he would be comfortable and not-nervous on any other (big) television show. After all, he isn't used to be interviewed in front of a big audience and dozens of camera's. I think it does help make him feel more relaxed if the interviewer asks funny questions than when it's such a serious show where he has to tell the story of his life once again.
by frode - 4 years ago
Bergen Norway
Member Since: Jul 2007
Member Points: 2
That's Otto's style, and has always been. I'm sure both Magnus and his parents knew that before accepting the invitation to the show.
by verusamo - 4 years ago
Kingston, OK United States
Member Since: Jul 2007
Member Points: 320
I agree.
by jay - 4 years ago
San Jose, CA United States
Member Since: May 2007
Member Points: 1431
Maybe the sense of humor didn't translate well into English subtitles. But Magnus looked mighty uncomfortable during most of that interview, and I thought the questions were pretty inappropriate for a 16 year old.
by Phobetor - 4 years ago
International
Member Since: Aug 2007
Member Points: 1184
Relax jay, let's not call every interviewer with a sense of humor a "complete moron" now.
by jay - 4 years ago
San Jose, CA United States
Member Since: May 2007
Member Points: 1431

Wow, just watched this video http://youtube.com/watch?v=N003wIDsiCc

 

That interviewer is a complete moron. What kind of idiotic, lame, rude questions were those? Have you had the birds and bees talk? What a thing to ask a young chess prodigy. Coming from a guy who probably hasn't dated a woman himself in 10 years.

by StacyBearden - 4 years ago
New Caprica United States
Member Since: Jul 2007
Member Points: 900
Very cool article and puzzles. THANKS!
by piemonkeydude - 4 years ago
Bayamon Puerto Rico
Member Since: Jul 2007
Member Points: 374
cool, nice to know that we teens can make it big if we focus, lol
by jammoe - 4 years ago
Guelph, Ontario Canada
Member Since: Jul 2007
Member Points: 11
#3 blew my mind. Gah.
by Phobetor - 4 years ago
International
Member Since: Aug 2007
Member Points: 1184
There's a nice interview with Carlsen on Chess.com, you can find it here.
by FM thinkdifferent - 4 years ago
Rimini,Italy Italy
Member Since: Jul 2007
Member Points: 64
I remember Magnus in one of the last tournament I played seriously: the Saint Vincent Open 2003.He was a really small 2200-something child,who spoke a quite good english and sometimes looked at my games and post-mortem analysis.A year later he was a 2500 player Laughing
 

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