James Plaskett
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Jim Plaskett | |
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File:James Plaskett (2004).jpg | |
Full name | Harold James Plaskett |
Country | England |
Born | Cyprus |
18 March 1960
Title | Grandmaster |
FIDE rating | 2438 (January 2025) |
Peak rating | 2529 (July 2000) |
Harold James Plaskett (born Dhekelia, Cyprus, 18 March 1960) was British Chess Champion in 1990,[citation needed] awarded the International Grandmaster title in 1985,[citation needed] and is also a writer, blogger, sometime explorer/cryptozoologist and legal campaigner.[citation needed] Married in 1995 to writer Fiona Pitt-Kethley, they have a son, Alexander, born 1996, and live in Cartagena, Spain.[citation needed]
Biography
Plaskett was educated at Bedford Modern School.[1] He has written nine chess books and a quasi-autobiography, Coincidences. For some years in the 1990s he was chess columnist at The New Statesman.[citation needed]
He organised and led a 1999 National Geographic expedition to Bermuda to follow up reports of "Octopus giganteus" near the island, but was unsuccessful in filming it.[2][unreliable source?]
He then appeared unsuccessfully several times on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?,[citation needed] and drew on these experiences to write a defence of contestant Charles Ingram, who along with two supposed accomplices had been found guilty of cheating to win the £1 million top prize.
This essay led to an article by Bob Woffinden in The Daily Mail of 9 October 2004 – Is The Coughing Major Innocent?,[citation needed] and also prompted a reconsideration of the case in The Guardian Comment is free blog on 17 July 2006 from Jon Ronson – Are the Millionaire three innocent?[3] Woffinden and Ronson had both been initially sceptical.
His collaboration with Woffinden led to the publication of their book - Plaskett´s eleventh - Bad Show: The Quiz, The Cough, The Millionaire Major on 29 January 2015.
Plaskett finally got into the hot seat on a show broadcast on 21 January 2006, becoming the seventh person to reach £125,000 without using any lifeline en route to winning £250,000.[4][self-published source] He was accompanied by fellow Grandmaster Stuart Conquest.
He is a Deist, a dualist and a vitalist. He is also a critic of neo-Darwinian evolutionary theory.
His brother, Allan, invented the snickometer device which is used globally to assist in umpiring decisions in cricket.
Bibliography
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- Plaskett, James, Woffinden, Bob (2015) Bad Show. Bojangles Books:ISBN 978-0-9930-7552-0; ebook: ISBN 9780993075537
See also
References
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External links
- James Plaskett player profile and games at Chessgames.com
- http://www.jamesplaskett.com
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- ↑ School of the Black And Red-A History of Bedford Modern School, by Andrew Underwood (1981); reset and updated by Peter Boon, Paul Middleton and Richard Wildman (2010)
- ↑ Institut Virtuel de Cryptozoologie
- ↑ Are the Millionaire three innocent? guardian.co.uk
- ↑ Charles Ingram and 'Who wants to be a Miilionaire?'
- Pages with reference errors
- Use dmy dates from August 2012
- Use British English from August 2012
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles with unsourced statements from March 2012
- Articles lacking reliable references from March 2012
- Accuracy disputes from March 2012
- 1960 births
- Living people
- Chess grandmasters
- British chess players
- British non-fiction writers
- British chess writers
- People educated at Bedford Modern School
- British male writers