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 The World Memory Championships 2009 - Important News

With the numbers of competitors currently registering for the 2009 World Memory Championships it is becoming obvious that our original venue of Simpsons on the Strand will not be large enough to accommodate the event.

 

We are currently making new arrangements with the Strand Palace Hotel to use the much larger Exeter Suite there.

This will mean that the competitions will take place on the 12th / 13th and 14th of November and NOT the 13/14/15th as originally planned.


UK OPEN MEMORY CHAMPIONSHIPS - RESULTS

Surprise Results at the UK Open Memory Championships 

 

For full results click here

 

YOUTH TRIUMPHS AT UK MEMORY CHAMPIONSHIPS!

 

“I was absolutely terrified when I first arrived”

 says 15-year-old who beat World Champion

 

 

A new generation of Memory competitors achieved amazing results at the third annual UK Open Memory Championships, which took place over the weekend of 15th/16th August in London’s Strand Palace Hotel.

 

As expected, World Champion - and World Ranked Number One - Ben Pridmore (32) from the UK comfortably won the overall competition with a score of 6,447 Championship points. However, he didn’t have everything his own way…

 

Spectacular performance from 15-year-old Eva Ball

The results that rocked the Memory community were achieved by diminutive, but characterful Eva Ball (15) from Coventry. Early in July, having trained her Memory for only a few weeks, Eva came top in her school competition and then went on to win this year’s UK Schools Memory Championships. In this, her first World Ranked Memory Championships, Eva achieved a staggering two Silver Medals and a Gold. The Gold Medal was for the 5-Minute ‘Names and Faces’ discipline (this being the very first time she had competed in the event), where she correctly recalled 39, beating Ben Pridmore into 4th place. Eva’s Silver Medals were in ‘5-Minute Random Words’ where she scored 43, and in ‘15- Minute Abstract Images’ where she achieved a spectacular 95.. 

 

“For a first competition, her results were truly amazing” says 8 times World Memory Champion Dominic O’Brien.  “She obviously has a great future in the Sport.”

 

Says Eva:  “I was really pleased to have done so well.  I thought I was lucky winning the UK Schools Memory Championships in July, but when I was invited to come to the UK Memory Championships, I didn’t take it too seriously as I was going to be the youngest competitor and I thought I’d just be a novelty!  In the end I enjoyed every minute of it, as everyone was very welcoming, but I was absolutely terrified when I first arrived.  I was sure I was destined to come last!

 

“To actually beat the current World Champion in the ‘Names and Faces’ discipline was mind-blowing.  I had never competed in that subject before, but I found it quite easy really.  I must have the sort of brain that likes remembering things visually. 

 

“I’ve been asked if I am going to compete in the World Championships, which are also being held in London - in November.  I’m going to have to think about it, as I’ll be up against the world’s best and most competitive Memory brains – but it is a big temptation to see whether I, as a teenager, can beat any of them!”

 

Ameel Hoque (21) from the UK - World Ranked Number 44 - was originally introduced to Memory by a chance visit to his school some years ago by Dominic.  He beat twenty-five other contestants to take the Silver Medal position with 4,093 Championships points in just his third competition – his best score to date.  Florian Dellé from Germany, who has been competing since 2003, also achieved a personal best with a score of 3,035 to take the Bronze Medal position, and was also the top ranked Overseas Competitor in the competition.

 

Cannyminds.com, the sponsors of the event, are the UK’s first web portal to offer a comprehensive selection of brain training books, games, DVDs, and audio books to challenge and stimulate the mind.   The range includes language courses, board games, How To books and a reading & viewing group.  The site also offers expert articles and advice on mental agility and challenging puzzles and quizzes developed especially for Canny Minds by Mensa’s puzzle editor.

 

Jenny Low from Canny Minds said: “We’ve been going to the gym for years to keep our bodies fit and healthy so it’s about time we all started putting the same effort into our mental fitness and agility.

 

Amongst the 26 contestants from eleven countries – England, France  Germany, Holland, Italy, Mongolia, Nigeria, Norway, Poland, Sweden and Ukraine – are four particularly high achieving mnemonists: representing England, the current World Champion Ben Pridmore, and Ameel Hoque (world ranked 44); and from Germany, Dennis Muller (world ranked 22) and Dorothea Seitz (ranked 29).

 

The youngest competitor was 15-year-old Eva Ball from Coventry – who recalled 94 numbers, 137 words, 12 events/dates, 102 binary numbers and 9 shuffled playing cards in sequence - to take Gold at the 2009 UK’s Schools Memory Championship last month.

 

The competitors took part in ten of memory disciplines over the two days:  Random Words, Binary Numbers, Names & Faces, Decimal Numbers, Ten Minute Cards, Speed Numbers, Abstract Images, Historic & Future Dates, Spoken Numbers (2 trials) and Speed Cards (2 trials).

 

To put the mind-boggling feats which these high-flying memory wizards perform into perspective, the current World Record holder for Ten Minute Cards is England’s Ben Pridmore (364 cards), while Germany’s Johannes Mallow holds the record for both Five Minute Numbers (405 digits) and Historic & Future Dates (110.5 items), while in Spoken Numbers Gunther Karsten of Germany currently reigns supreme (202 digits).

 

Visit the new Official Memory Blog site


Pre Event Release.

 

MEMORY SPECTACULAR…

     Spectacular memories!

 

The third annual UK Open Memory Championships takes place at the weekend (during the mornings of 15th/16th August). originally scheduled to take place at the renowned Simpsons-in-the-Strand, a last minute increase in the number of competitors has meant moving across the road to the Strand Palace Hotel in the Grenville Suite.  The event finishes at 12.30 p.m. on Sunday, and the results will be declared at 6.30 p.m.

 

Amongst the 26 contestants from eleven countries – England, France  Germany, Holland, Italy, Mongolia, Nigeria, Norway, Poland, Sweden and Ukraine – are four particularly high achieving mnemonists: representing England, the current World Champion Ben Pridmore, and Ameel Hoque (world ranked 44); and from Germany, Dennis Muller (world ranked 22) and Dorothea Seitz (ranked 29).

 

The youngest competitor is 15-year-old Eva Ball from Coventry – who recalled 94 numbers, 137 words, 12 events/dates, 102 binary numbers and 9 shuffled playing cards in sequence - to take Gold at the 2009 UK’s Schools Memory Championship last month.

 

The competitors will take part in a number of memory disciplines over the two days:  Random Words, Binary Numbers, Names & Faces, Decimal Numbers, Ten Minute Cards, Speed Numbers, Abstract Images, Historic & Future Dates, Spoken Numbers (2 trials) and Speed Cards (2 trials).

 

To put the mind-boggling feats which these high-flying memory wizards perform into perspective, the current World Record holder for Ten Minute Cards is England’s Ben Pridmore (364 cards), while Germany’s Johannes Mallow holds the record for both Five Minute Numbers (405 digits) and Historic & Future Dates (110.5 items), while in Spoken Numbers Gunther Karsten of Germany currently reigns supreme (202 digits).

 

In addition to the tournament itself, on Saturday afternoon there is a not-to-be missed opportunity for members of the public to learn how to improve their memories.  A programme of seminars is to be held in the Strand Palace Hotel’s Conference Centre – situated opposite Simpsons.  The highly-respected speakers from the world of Memory include Dominic O’Brien (author and eight Times World Memory Champion) and Tony Buzan (author, inventor of Mind Maps and joint founder of the World Memory Championships).

 


Kids Get Memory Boost....
 
The brain has a limitless capacity, and every day recalls tens of thousands of things particular to every one of us. A good memory is all about how we manage our brain's capacity. A super-powered memory involves combining left and right brain abilities to maximum effect.   

The World Memory Sports Council has received the following statement regarding the 2009 Championships.

 

"World Memory Championships International Ltd, the promoters and organisers of the World Memory Championship, has taken advice regarding the developing situation in Iran and other countries surrounding the Gulf. With a clear duty of care for the wellbeing of competitors travelling from around the world, it has reluctantly taken the view that it is necessary to relocate the 2009 Championships to the UK. Whilst this will inevitably mean some inconvenience to both competitors and organisers, the overriding objective has to be the safety and security of all concerned."

So, after two successful years of holding the Championships in Bahrain, the World Memory Championships are finally returning to the UK.  The Strand Palace Hotel, opposite Simpsons, will now host the event on the 12/13/14 of November 

Contact details for the Strand Palace hotel are The Strand Palace Hotel  372 Strand, London, WC2R 0JJ  RESERVATIONS: +44 (0)20 7379 4737   SWITCHBOARD: +44 (0)20 7836 8080  www.strandpalacehotel.co.uk    mailto:reservations@strandpalacehotel.co.uk

All competitors are encouraged to register as soon as possible.  A schedule for the event will be published shortly 


Creighton Carvello, memory man and photographer, was born on November 14, 1944. He died after a long period of ill health on November 18, 2008, aged 64

A mine of sporting facts, he remembered the goalscorers and referees in every FA Cup Final since 1872

The Memorable Carvello, as he was known to his friends and admirers, was a legend in the world of memory. The original “memory man”, he was famed for his phenomenal powers of recall — he could recite thousands of numbers and memorise hundreds of playing cards and pages of telephone directories after only a single sighting, and he was a walking compendium of sporting trivia.

Creighton Carvello was born in Patna, India, in 1944; he was the middle child of five whose father worked on the railways. In 1949 the Carvello family returned to England and settled in Middlesbrough, where Creighton would spend the remainder of his years. His father first noticed his extraordinary talent when, aged 7, he started to memorise information from cigarette cards with pictures of aircraft and cars.

After leaving school Creighton honed his talent by memorising more and more information and he soon became a sensation as he toured clubs and pubs entertaining the public with his memory. His pièce de résistance was knowing the telephone number of anyone called Smith who lived in the Middlesbrough area.

He first got into the record books in his thirties after reciting Pi to 20,013 decimal places. He travelled the world appearing on television and baffling audiences with his elephantine memory. On a live television broadcast in Japan he was asked to memorise the order of six separate packs of playing cards which were placed on a rickety card table. While he was in the memorisation phase, the table collapsed and the 312 cards were muddled together. As the Japanese presenter panicked, Carvello asked for the cards to be presented in a single stack, the order of which he memorised after a single glance of each card.

Unawares, Carvello had given impetus to the emergence of a new mental sport as a new generation of memorisers was inspired to train their own memory to emulate his. In 1991 he was one of seven “mnemonists” to take part in the first World Memory Championships, held at the Athenaeum club in London. At the ensuing award ceremony, the winner, Dominic O’Brien, thanked Carvello and explained that he had been inspired to take up a career in memory in 1987 by seeing Carvello memorise a pack of cards on the television programme Record Breakers, presented by Roy Castle and Norris McWhirter.

In 2003 Carvello set a world record by recalling 3,500 facts about every FA Cup Final since 1872, including the names of the referees and goal scorers, the teams, crowd attendances, scores, venues and more. An avid reader, he once memorised the exact sequence of 10,000 words from Ernest Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea. In 2004 he won a place in the Book of Alternative Records for memorising 17 random digits viewed for only two seconds.

Carvello was a man of many talents, including photography, writing song lyrics, drawing and joke telling. In 2007 his humour was put to the test. After collapsing from a stroke at home where he lived alone — he did not marry — he lay paralysed for four days without food or water before a friend raised the alarm. Recovering in hospital he joked with reporters that the four days of total abstinence was his latest record attempt.

He spent a year in hospital and although his body never recovered from a succession of illnesses, his mind remained sharp. After his long stay in hospital Carvello moved to a care home. Its elderly residents would test his memory with questions such as naming what day of the week they were born on. Only days before he died one lady gave her date of birth, July 29, 1921, and Carvello immediately replied, “Friday”.


Britain's Mental Athletes excel with four World Records broken at the UK Memory Championships in London. - Click here


ALL SET FOR WORLD MEMORY GOLD Britain’s top Memory Brain wins UK Open Memory Championships - and slashes three World Records - Click here
A WEEKEND TO REMEMBER!
The second UK Memory Championship - Click here
TOTAL RECALL
You must remember this:
The second UK Memory Championship - Click here


HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR MEMORY
The UK memory champions share their secrets. From phone numbers to names and faces - here is how to boost your recall - Click here

THE UK OPEN MEMORY CHAMPIONSHIPS
The Events -
Click here



 

 
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