Jan Šimara

Jan Šimara (* December 1985 Zlín) is a Czech player of the board game Go. He placed first in the European Go Championship in 2012.[1]

Jan Šimara
Nicknameflashback (KGS)
BornDecember 1985
ResidenceZlín (Czech Republic)
Rank6d

Curriculum vitae

He first participated in the tournament at the age of 14 in 1998 in Olomouc, when he began his go career with a 5-0 win.[2] After playing 2 another tournaments, he stopped playing go due to his interest in chess because his chess coach convinced him to focus only on chess. He returned to the game of go after four years in 2002 in Olomouc and again won all five games.[3] According to the comparison[4] of go players performance in the Czech Republic, J. Šimara maintained the same performance trend as several other top players in the Czech Republic. In the following years, he began to focus primarily on go. He advanced from 14 kyu to 5 kyu in one year. He reached the first dan class after three years in 2005.[5] Until 2011, he devoted himself to the game of go while studying at ÚTB[6] in Zlín, which he successfully completed by defending his diploma in the form of an interactive textbook of informatics. After graduating, he continued his sports career in the board game go. After winning the European Go Champion[7] title in 2012, he began playing the Poker card game, which he made for living for the next few years. In the same year -2012- he reached a 6 dan. At the turn of 2014/2015, he completed a one-year internship in Beijing aimed at improving game performance. At present (2020) he ranks among the top Czech Go players. He is known as flashback[8] on the KGS go server.[9]

Game achievements

  • 2nd place at the European Team Championship in 2014,[10][11] Romania (Sibiu)
  • 1st place at the European Team Championship in 2013,[12][13] Poland, Olsztyn
  • 2nd place at the European Team Championships in 2012,[14][15][16] Germany, Bonn
  • 1st place in the European Championship in 2012,[17][18] Germany, Bonn
  • 6th place in the SportAccord World Mind Spord Games in 2011, China, Beijing
  • 7th place Student World Championships in 2011,[19][20] Japan, Tokyo
  • 5th place in the team tournament at the World Mind Sports Games in 2008
gollark: It would be very hard to make one preserving all JS's weird quirks.
gollark: I mean, yes, Turing completeness means you *technically* can (except that both OC and CC have finite memory), however you practically can't.
gollark: Except very basic versions.
gollark: JS and HTML5 are highly accursed and complex so you have no chance of implementing them.
gollark: > ok fine, a microwave from the 1800s to be specific.I don't think they had those then. Modern magnetrons are IIRC a 1900s invention.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.