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Here are 0 results for Bernal Daniel in the games. Here are 8 results for Bernal Nicholas in the games. Game_17461 Game_17460 Game_17459 Game_17458 Game_17457 Game_17451 Game_17445 Game_17438 There are at least 25 results for Bernal in the forum. Nelson Bernal Varela (2025-10-21 18:30:36) DNS failure last week Ficgs.com is back and with it chess with algoritms and poker without influencers. I really missed it. In this digital wasteland where everything is selfies and stupidity, a corner returns to think, bluff and lose with dignity. May it never leave again. Nelson Bernal Varela (2019-03-01 04:52:25) Best Opening Move? 1.e4 Nelson Bernal Varela (2018-04-11 01:39:13) Real Poker Game Excellent idea, it would be a kind of world championship FICGS ... if it were possible Thibault de Vassal (2018-03-15 19:22:45) A few questions to Nelson Bernal Varela Of course it is possible but I don't think it would be efficient enough (but I understand the idea to reduce the total time) while creating other problems. I hope more players will try bullet games in the future. Ilmars Cirulis (2018-03-15 17:53:50) A few questions to Nelson Bernal Varela Offtopic question about poker (on FICGS): Is it possible to make some faster time control, for example, +1 day after completed hand instead of single move? Like in chess - Standard and Rapid. Thibault de Vassal (2018-03-15 02:25:51) A few questions to Nelson Bernal Varela Note that I did not ask true technical questions about poker... by the way a friend of mine just suggested that it could be interesting to know what limits such a player is used to, his winrate in bb/100 or ptbb if he plays cash games, also if he studied gto applied to chess... So many possible questions and so few time :) Thibault de Vassal (2018-03-14 23:12:38) A few questions to Nelson Bernal Varela Nelson Bernal Varela is an early FICGS correspondence chess player, now rated 2277 but also rated 2359 at ICCF (Correspondence Chess Master - CCM). Last but not least, and as all poker holdem players here probably noticed, he is also our ranked #1 for years, who just reached an outstanding poker rating of 2382, while number two is now rated "only" 2212. A good occasion to ask him a few questions, that he kindly accepted to answer. ----------------------- - Hello Nelson! You are the 2nd most active player at FICGS for years now. Everyone here probably noticed your incredible results in poker tournaments. "Correspondence poker holdem" was probably a strange idea as it is very unusual and very different from "Internet poker". What's your opinion on this and on the presence of a card game (played without money) at FICGS? NBV: There are more important things than money and one of those is HONOR; It is honorable to be a chess master, international master, grandmaster, world chess champion at ICCF and at FICGS and to be number one in the ranking. It is honorable to be a FICGS world champion at Go and to be first in the ranking, it is honorable to be poker world champion at FICGS poker and in my case, it is an honor to be number one at poker here at FICGS during the last years, understanding that our general level of play has improved remarkably. None of these activities produces money, but to achieve any of the mentioned titles, it is necessary to have extraordinary abilities. When I was about 18 years old, I had the opportunity to meet a person with immense material wealth, we spent whole evenings playing chess and then I told him my perceptions about each movement of the game. He thanked me for my chess explanations and paid me with good money. That wealthy man in his turn told me about life and recommended that I should always be proud of the gifts I had, since he knew, with all the money he had and being able to hire the best grandmasters in the world, that it could hardly come at the level of chess master. That person told me that the intellect can be turned into money whenever you want. Now, by playing poker without money at FICGS, I understood that it was my extraordinary and wonderful opportunity to study-learn-perfect and test my poker theories without costing me a single dollar. In FICGS there is no money, but thanks to the knowledge I gained playing poker in FICGS, today I can go after the money in online poker rooms and probably in OTB poker tournaments. I am studying the possibility of becoming a professional poker player. - The understanding of your opponent's behaviour is usually quite important at Poker. Do you manage to establish some profiles while playing so many simultaneous hands & games? Did you build any method? NBV: Today I am sure that the most important thing to raise, and keep raising my level in poker, has been to build a psychological profile of mine, to get to know Nelson Bernal Varela in depth and above all to understand me, accept me, love me and be work every day eliminating my technical errors, strategic, psychological that make me play badly. I am aware that in poker I can play perfectly and still lose, what I can not forgive me is playing badly, which is why I work hard correcting my wrong decisions. Of course, there is a space in my brain where I have built a psychological profile of each contender, that profile I have been able to elaborate with all the information that is provided to me in each hand we play. The way each of us plays, gives reliable information about our personality. About my method I can write the following: A few years ago, I created a table in excel, where I had all the games with each contender, I identified them with the FICGS numeration and each movement in each hand (preflop, flop, turn, river ) it I was writing and studying; I started to add technical-psychological variables that seemed important to me, resulting in 20 variables that I had to qualify in each movement. With the passage of time and my effort, I no longer needed the excel table and I did not use it again (it was exhausting and time consuming) because I was assimilating things faster and with greater depth. Today I can say that I evaluate these 20 variables in a natural way, as if I was breathing and that when I am at a poker table, online or real, after a few minutes I get the psychological profile of the table and each of my opponents. In the pocket of my shirt I keep a small paper with the list of variables, periodically reread it and I wonder if I should modify, remove or add something. - You won 1007 poker games, and lost only 380, with a ratio usually going from 57% to 80% according to your best opponents. Undoubtly you know the mathematics hidden behind poker but that may not explain everything. How did you learn to play? NBV: Mathematics is an ingredient in poker, in the same way that my psychological aspects and of my opponents (I recommend reading-studying about four times the book “The Poker mindset” of Ian Taylor and Matthew Hilger), it is vital to understand the Law of Large Numbers. Next I make a list of topics that I consider important to raise the level of poker; compete with EV+ cards, you have to know the small ball theory of Negreanu (but not apply it, hahaha) you have to always look at the texture of the board, you have to evaluate your reality and your future, also that of your opponents (act and power), the position to talk is important, the stack, the personality of the table, know who has the panic button on. All these and other variables must be evaluated in the few seconds they have to make a move and the only important thing is to make the right decision according to the circumstances. There is a good list of poker books to read... it is mandatory to have read about 15 poker books. - As for me, I may be wrong but I can't imagine that you reached such a rating without special techniques & maybe by optimizing it in some ways... Of course, "rating management" is not a problem, and it is only one thing with a limited impact, but maybe you have some other secrets? What about this "+1" technique that I noticed in many of our games, if this is not a secret? :) NBV: In these years I have used different techniques that I had to read, study, learn, repeat, modify, invent and sometimes eliminate. Poker is a sport that seems easy, with time one manages to understand that it has an amazing complexity, today I consider poker to be as complex as chess and I study them in a "similar" way. As an example, I have tried to create "openings in poker"; based only on probabilities I invented something that I called mirror theory and another "opening" that I called opposite outs. I am fascinated by mathematics and from the mathematical perspective they are perfect "theories-openings", but I have lost tournaments and a lot of money for applying such theories in mistaken emotional moments. In poker it is important to never lose sight of the Law of Large Numbers and be aware that this LAW likes to make fun of each one of us... I am working on giving an emotional nuance to my theories "mirror" and "opposite outs". There are moments when perfect mathematics becomes an unforgivable psychological error... For the last few months I have modified my way of playing and my results have improved; Today it must be much more difficult to win a game me, thanks to small and imperceptible adjustments that of course only I know, because I have followed my mistakes-successes-evolution in the game over several years. - Isn't it too frustrating for you to play heads up only (here at least) ? Of course it is a way to improve this important technical case but we know that many complexities come with 3 to 8 players on the table, which is the most common case in professional poker tournaments. NBV: Currently I spend little time every day playing heads-up in FICGS, thanks to the fact that I have the profile of each contender. The 4-5 hours that I study poker daily, include practice in micro limits in cash tables of 6 players and tournaments in tables of 8-9 players. I think I'm covering the whole range of possibilities, experiencing game situations between 1 and 8 contenders. - What do you think about computer analysis in poker? Do you think it could make a difference here just like the way we play advanced chess? NBV: I think the algorithms are ready to be written in machine language and the question is where are those algorithms? Well, in the brains of the best players in the world and in their games compiled in huge databases. But programming language can be accelerated with artificial intelligence brains, making A.I. studying databases of the best professionals, playing with itself millions of games and building an invincible TACTIC-STRATEGIC SYSTEM, similar to chess software and GO... I think preflop and flop play would be very similar between humans and artificial intelligence, but on the turn and on the river artificial intelligence would take considerable advantage, but in the short time the level of human poker would rise because artificial intelligence would teach us to play poker, this event that would diminish the profits of the professionals. It will always be said in favor of poker that because it is an incomplete game of information, to make computer algorithms are quite complicated, but despite that, I am sure that artificial intelligence will far surpass the best human poker player. It is possible that an artificial intelligence that plays a perfect poker already exists, but unlike GO and chess, poker does produce a lot of money. Due to the money factor, in today's world, it is very difficult that there is a Prometheus willing to steal fire from the gods and give it to mankind... - How would you describe your relation to games in general? NBV: I can summarize it in one of the first chess books I had the fortune to read, by the great Danish master Bent Larsen, "I play to win" - When did you start to play chess & poker? Do you play other games? NBV: My first contact with chess was at the age of nine, it was love at first sight and until death separates us; I must confess that for some years we have been separated, due to my stupidity and my erroneous decisions. I have always been self-taught in any subject, my method is to buy about 10 to 15 books of the subject that interests me and I read them thoroughly, sometimes 3 or 4 times; already with that information in my head and thanks to the constant practice, I build MY SYSTEM (Nimzowitch) according to my personality, my dreams, my desires, my anguish, my fears... I was youth champion of Bogotá, for 4 years , my OTB level was strong, but I had to abandon chess because I had to work and survive; Being an athlete in Colombia is an absolutely difficult thing, but being a chess player is extremely complicated since there is no support or respect from society and you can not live by chess, because it does not produce money. I met poker in 2009 in FICGS, at that time I was in a terrible emotional situation, trying to get away from a relationship with a woman that I should never approach and where I wasted valuable time and energy. In that context, looking for my thoughts to be occupied, I ended up playing the FICGS C-24 poker tournament and tied the first place with three more players; I kept playing, without understanding what was happening with the cards and obviously, losing, until in 2010 I won the FICGS D-21 tournament with perfect score, 6 out of 6. I had already bought-read my first beginner book: Poker for Dummies of Harroch and Krieger, but my poker was coarse, wild, street, intuitive, amateur, without dedication or study. In the background of this paragraph, the affection and gratitude that I have for FICGS is condensed, a place where I have been able to build-practice-study-test MY SYSTEM in poker. I play Backgammon, I do not care that it may sound pretentious-petulant, but I have a very strong level and I have not read my first book yet. Hahaha. Any year I register as a participant in the world championship and I will cause disgust to more than one professional. Hahaha. Unlike chess and poker, backgammon does not cause me stress, on the contrary, I feel a lot of joy and pleasure when I play backgammon. I feel something similar with math, reading and music. It's true and I'm proud, I've always been a NERD. - We all know how difficult it is to reach a number 1 rank but it is even more difficult to keep it during a long time. What is your motivation? Do you have more goals to achieve (chess & other games included) ? NBV: My motivation in any activity I undertake in my life is to do it with absolute passion (passion is everything you would do to get a breath of air, in the second before dying by drowning or suffocation). I have several goals to accomplish before December 2021; In the ICCF correspondence chess I must reach the 2400 elo and get the titles of International Master, SIM and Grand Master, also perform outstanding performances in world championships. In FICGS Chess I must complete my Master and International Master titles and overcome the 2450 elo, also snatch the title from our eternal champion Eros Riccio. You're warned Eros, hahaha. On the LSS site where I also play, www.chess-server.net I want to be a world champion. In POKER I find myself playing micro limits bets in several online sites; in June 2018 I hope I have built some bankroll. In July of 2018 I must be evaluating my poker to know if my immediate goal is to become a professional poker player, that would completely change my chess goals and I would have to dedicate myself to OTB poker. At the moment I study and practice poker every day, about 4-5 hours a day. At this moment my poker is full of errors that I am eliminating one by one. MY SYSTEM needs to win and raise money in the micro limits, so that it can succeed in professional poker. In chess OTB I should become a great master, but that topic should be left as a goal for after 2021. I could achieve the record of being the oldest human in getting the title of Grand Master OTB. Hahaha. In backgammon I would like to play some important tournaments in USA and Europe and maybe to be OTB world champion, but at the moment I do not have clarity on how to do it. I must mature that idea. I hope they invent immortality before I die and that I have enough money to buy it, because time is what I need to realize all these and other dreams... - Finally, playing so many games on several websites (obviously with serious ambitions in each game & place) may look quite inhuman and exhausting, does your body or brain say "stop" sometimes? Do you train by melting sports and brain games just like Kasparov did in the past? NBV: It's true, it takes willpower and a lot of resistance to sustain the pace that I carry. To take care of my body, I am doing daily exercise for 60 to 90 minutes, including routines of strength, elasticity, speed and endurance. I also practice table tennis to preserve the agility of my body. I'm also divorced and I do not have a girlfriend... Hahaha - By curiosity, do you consider playing Go in the future, even after... 2021? (which would surely be an enormous charge more, but the game is really interesting) I have a kind of commitment with the best Colombian GO player, exchange of classes, he makes me a competitive player of GO and I turn him into a competitive player of backgammon. But the truth is that I do not have time... it could be after 2021... - Do you confirm that you are not (entirely or partly) AlphaZero or any kind of A.I. (yet) ? :-) NBV: Hahaha, of course I would like to be a real centaur, human with machine power, I do not care what physical form I should adopt. I offer myself publicly as a guinea pig in projects of technological singularity. Hahaha - Many thanks for your detailed and instructive (impressive as well) answers! My best wishes of luck in all your games and future tournaments. Herbert Kruse (2016-12-18 14:37:43) Poker Poll Poll: It could Nichols to be # 1 in Poker or Bernal reach the 2400 elo in poker? Bernal Varela Nelson Bernal Varela (2016-12-14 23:14:37) Nelson Bernal Varela (2016-12-14 20:52:33) Nelson Bernal Varela (2016-12-14 20:31:50) Nelson Bernal Varela (2016-12-14 20:29:09) Nelson Bernal Varela (2016-12-14 20:24:05) Nelson Bernal Varela (2016-12-14 16:18:36) Nelson Bernal Varela (2016-12-14 04:50:33) Nelson Bernal Varela (2016-12-12 20:25:41) Nelson Bernal Varela (2016-12-12 20:17:47) Thibault de Vassal (2016-11-07 19:15:35) Poker Poll Bernal & Nichols :) Well, I quite agree with Scott, the fairest test may be a 12 (or more) game advanced poker match. 2400 will be very hard to reach but with some optimization, it may be possible. But to stay over 2400 while finishing games that go wrong would be much much harder IMHO. Ilmars Cirulis (2016-11-07 09:39:50) Poker Poll Bernal Nelson Bernal Varela (2016-11-07 05:23:32) Poker Poll Poll: It could Nichols to be # 1 in Poker or Bernal reach the 2400 elo in poker? Make your bets gentlemen, place your bets Thibault de Vassal (2012-03-04 22:08:50) FICGS poker ratings Let's continue the debate that started in this discussion: http://www.ficgs.com/user_page.php?page=forum_read&id=10306 I'm still not sure of what is best but our top ranked poker player for a while (Nelson Bernal Varela) obviously participated to the discussion his way by resigning all his poker games to show us how much time it will take to regain his points. His rating was about 2200, now 1924 and the date is march 4th, 2012. As we're playing single round-robin tournaments only, the rating list was not so distorted but this is not at the advantage of class B players. Of course I do not encourage this behaviour in any way! However, following the current rules on general forfeits I think that Nelson should continue his experiment so that we can learn from all this. In my opinion he'll reach the top rankings within a few months (particularly if he plays bullet games) which is quite short compared to correspondence chess. This would actually justify - in my point of view (maybe Nelson's one too but I'm still not sure of what he's thinking about that) - the current poker rating system, so let's wait 1 month or 2 before to decide to make this change or not. As a reminder, the initial proposal was: "should we change the poker rating rules so that we win or lose twice points after each game compared to now ?" Thibault de Vassal (2011-11-13 19:52:28) List ordered by rating Here is, but as usual the new ratings (january 2012) will be taken in account... Erwin Thiering 2515 Michael Bergmann 2475 Xavier Pichelin 2454 Thibault de Vassal 2449 Herbert Kruse 2436 Pavel Hse 2332 Ljubomir Tsenkov 2314 Rubn Cmes 2300 Wayne Lowrance 2266 Dariusz Fraczek 2261 Ramil Germanes 2255 Miroslav Gazi 2255 Alexander Blinchevsky 2253 Michael Sharland 2251 Sergey Kokoryukin 2251 Andrey Razumikhin 2250 Valery Nemchenko 2245 Lubos Fric 2241 Kevin D. Plant 2237 Christoph Schroeder 2236 Viktor Shishkin 2234 Slobodan Ilic 2218 Dmitri Mamrukov 2211 Vitaly Rudenko 2203 Alvin Alcala 2203 Carlos Snchez 2203 Garvin Gray 2200 Scott Nichols 2189 Peter Unger 2181 Martin Zeman 2181 Christian Koch 2167 Stephen Hamby 2163 John Schutte 2136 David Evans 2132 Nelson Bernal Varela 2130 Darren DiAlfonso 2123 Ardiantez Polkwitzauer 2123 Thomas Dineen 2118 Peter W. Anderson 2112 Steve Lim 2110 Yu Ming Hoe 2100 Arkadiusz Wosch 2093 Djordje Kasabasic 2093 Luis Flores 2084 Daniel Parmet 2083 Lalit Kapoor 2080 Erik L. van Dijk 2074 Bernd Wolf 2072 Jose Lopez 2071 Sergey Uzdin 2064 Rodolfo d Ettorre 2064 Janos Helmer 2063 Om Prakash 2053 Mykola Simashkevitch 2043 Alexis Duenas 2037 Ireneusz Kasznia 2036 Mihail Larsky 2028 Joop Simmelink 2026 Pan Hardfeldt 2020 Henri Muller 2000 Jaroslav senior Pech 2000 Jaroslaw Gibas 2000 Bogoljub Teverovski 1997 Willy De Waele 1996 Fernando Vasquez 1992 Jose Moreira 1979 Andrew Endean 1975 Henri-Louis Muller 1972 Jose Maria Velasco 1972 Jordi Domingo 1969 Janeen Walden 1958 Andy Richard 1956 Roberto Migliorini 1949 Erika van Dijk 1943 Daniel Reboredo 1938 Coco Maceda 1938 Michael Rogers 1933 Aleksandr Aksenov 1927 Mariusz Maciej Broniek 1923 Robert Wilhelm 1901 Kieran Moore 1900 John Dyson 1889 Catalin Nita 1888 Daniel Jabot 1878 Johanes Suhardjo 1875 Mikhail Ruzin 1871 Benjamin Block 1863 Ilmar Ambos 1859 Vyacheslav Shchelykalin 1859 Jan Peter Lommler 1844 Stanislas Gounant 1840 Mircea Hrubaru 1838 Sasha Lipsits 1833 Nilson Pereira 1833 Aleksey Payzansky 1804 Jai Prakash Singh 1800 Fredi Brumec 1800 Gleen Duran 1800 Josef Strohmeier 1800 Ryszard Sternik 1776 Stepan Pech 1767 Dieter Faust 1764 Dmitriy Malish 1760 Dimitrios Ropokis 1743 Hasan Kirali 1715 Eddit Moreul 1700 Behzad Shahmiri 1700 Jaimie Wilson 1684 Dinesh Bhandarkar 1682 Philip Roe 1667 Olli Ylnen 1660 Graham Cridland 1655 Juan Alvar 1653 Jeremy Banta 1644 Lus Gonzaga Grego 1643 Pablo Siciliano 1623 Mariusz Jandula 1600 Sergey Biryukov 1598 Alejandro Canovas 1589 Jimmy Huggins 1577 Matthew O Brien 1575 Pablo Ruano 1565 Khaled Toutaoui 1528 Stanimir Denchev 1505 Leo Malagar 1500 Richard Hendricks 1479 Eric Price 1469 Antonio Pereira 1456 Angelo Piantadosi 1420 Simon Huxtable 1388 Peter Krakovsky 1326 Marc-Antoine Leurette 1243 Jorge Orden 1204 Hana Pechova 1204 Jorma Hkkinen 1192 Des Jefferis 1186 Deon Whittaker 1111 Matej Pech 1074 Jiri Mach 1022 Cdric Cavaill 1003 Jay Melquiades 0909 Jaroslav Pech 0697 Thibault de Vassal (2010-06-02 18:26:28) Incredible poker hand Just look at this strange hand between Jason Repa & Nelson Bernal Varela... the community cards and player's ones are really amazing... Pair of aces, pair of queens and a straight flush appears in the community cards... quite rare. And only 12 chips in the pot. http://www.ficgs.com/user_page.php?page=viewer&game=43092&move=1023 Any comment on this one? :) Thibault de Vassal (2009-10-29 23:01:27) Most active players, amazing statistics! These statistics (updated every 2 days) are available at : http://www.ficgs.com/about.html And the overall winner is........ :) Players most active : General (moves played) 1. Heinz-Georg Lehnhoff : 124234 2. Rolf Staggat : 81806 3. Anderson Barradas : 55829 4. Stephane Legrand : 47936 5. Scott Nichols : 46711 6. Mark Noble : 37387 7. Findlay Murray : 35874 8. Volker Koslowski : 33241 9. Don Groves : 29539 10. Thibault de Vassal : 26104 11. Francisco Gramajo : 25281 12. Sergey Uzdin : 25256 13. Michael Sharland : 24890 14. Josef Riha : 24193 15. Jason Repa : 22765 16. Laurine Sgur : 22577 17. Alexis Bromo : 20198 18. Benjamin Collette : 20112 19. Fernando Vasquez : 19928 20. Laszlo Kis-Kos : 19174 21. Christian Koch : 18450 22. Evgeny Yarkov : 17168 23. Xavier Pichelin : 16559 24. Garvin Gray : 16388 25. Ranganathan Raman : 15750 26. Sebastian Boehme : 15190 27. Zdravko Stoyanov : 15186 28. Nick Ioffe : 15151 29. Phil Cook : 15007 30. Sean McNabb : 14572 31. Daniel Parmet : 13814 32. Ilmars Cirulis : 13118 33. Joaquim Malpalma : 13057 34. Dmitriy Panov : 12733 35. Nelson Bernal Varela : 12119 36. Marco Roncagliolo : 11741 37. Dmytro Romaniuk : 11648 38. Miroslav Rakovic : 11435 39. Nick Burrows : 11242 40. Janeen Walden : 10967 41. Claude Brisson : 10812 42. Sandor Porkolab : 10714 43. Christophe Czekaj : 10678 44. Janusz Kepinski : 10675 45. Peter Willoughby : 10634 46. Benjamin Block : 10633 47. Kate Lubeck : 10155 48. Charlie Neil : 10076 49. Darko Pipac : 10072 50. William Taylor : 10036 Players most active : Go 1. Don Groves : 17026 2. Claude Brisson : 10812 3. Nick Ioffe : 10795 4. Alejandro Suarez-Moreno : 10018 5. Mickal Simon : 8986 6. Thibault de Vassal : 8870 7. Sean McNabb : 8666 8. Sergey Tarassov : 8236 9. Phil Cook : 8186 10. Tetsuya Kobayashi : 7816 Players most active : Chess 1. Josef Riha : 24119 2. Fernando Vasquez : 19820 3. Zdravko Stoyanov : 14523 4. Anderson Barradas : 12587 5. Ilmars Cirulis : 12200 6. Laszlo Kis-Kos : 12068 7. Janusz Kepinski : 10675 8. Garvin Gray : 10638 9. Scott Nichols : 10211 10. Charlie Neil : 10076 Players most active : Chess 960 1. Christophe Czekaj : 1224 2. Joaquim Malpalma : 916 3. Frederick Estieu : 672 4. Ilmars Cirulis : 605 5. Pavel Hse : 600 6. Sefa Sarihan : 524 7. Sandor Porkolab : 512 8. Jay Melquiades : 495 9. Christian Koch : 470 10. Rick Spangler : 447 Players most active : Big Chess 1. Heinz-Georg Lehnhoff : 5583 2. Peter Willoughby : 4368 3. Jos Carrizo : 3319 4. Thibault de Vassal : 3199 5. Mark Noble : 2949 6. Sandor Porkolab : 2467 7. Volker Koslowski : 1887 8. Paul Knig : 1790 9. William Taylor : 1706 10. Ranganathan Raman : 1620 Players most active : Poker Holdem 1. Heinz-Georg Lehnhoff : 111119 2. Rolf Staggat : 75570 3. Stephane Legrand : 41639 4. Anderson Barradas : 38671 5. Scott Nichols : 36500 6. Findlay Murray : 33008 7. Mark Noble : 31172 8. Volker Koslowski : 25829 9. Michael Sharland : 20721 10. Francisco Gramajo : 20431 Congrats Heinz-Georg, definitely you're the most addicted player ;) Thibault de Vassal (2009-02-03 14:29:07) Chess WCH 5 stage 2 The chess wch #5 round-robin stage 2 should start as soon as the situation is a bit clearer in game 22401 (Bernal Varela vs. Tommasi) http://www.ficgs.com/user_page.php?page=viewer&game=22401 There are 100 results for Bernal in wikichess. Nelson Bernal Varela (2429) f4 d5 Nf3 g6 d3 Nf6 Transpose to wikichess #88276# ============ Contributors : Nelson Bernal Varela Nelson Bernal Varela (2450) e4 e5 Nf3 Nf6 Nxe5 d6 Nf3 Nxe4 d4 d5 Bd3 Bf5 O-O Be7 Re1 O-O c4 Nc6 cxd5 Qxd5 Nc3 Nxc3 bxc3 Rae8 Bf4 Bxd3 Qxd3 Transpose to wikichess #212389# ============ Contributors : Nelson Bernal Varela Nelson Bernal Varela (2448) e4 c6 d4 d5 e5 c5 Nf3 cxd4 Nxd4 Nc6 Nxc6 bxc6 Bd3 e6 O-O a5 Nd2 Transpose to wikichess #203560# ============ Contributors : Nelson Bernal Varela
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