Natasha Katherine Regan is a chess player and an award-winning chess author, best known for her book Game Changer. She has represented England at two Chess Olympiads.[1]
Natasha Regan | |
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Full name | Natasha Katherine Regan |
Country | ![]() |
Born | (1971-06-12) 12 June 1971 (age 51) London, England |
Title | Woman International Master (WIM) |
Peak rating | 2208 (July 2004) |
She is also an accomplished Go player. Partnering with Matthew Cocke, she has won the British pair Go championship 7 times and has taken bronze at the European Pair Go Championship.[2] Natasha has represented the UK at Go at the first World Mind Sports Games in Beijing 2008 and again in 2012.[3][4] At the Mind Sports Olympiad, her medals include silver in the Women's Pentamind in 2018.[5]
Natasha studied mathematics at King's College, Cambridge University[6] and is a professional actuary with twin daughters and a son, Oscar Selby. She taught Oscar math, leading him to become the youngest person ever to obtain the grade of A*, the maximum grade for a GCSE, in 2010 for Mathematics.[7]
While at Cambridge University she became the first female player to play above Board 8 (formerly known as the ladies’ board) in the 1992 Oxford and Cambridge Varsity Chess Match.[8][9] Natasha represented England at the 1992 Chess Olympiad in Manilla and the 1994 Chess Olympiad in Moscow. Natasha was awarded the FIDE rank of Woman International Master in 2002.[8] In September 2019, she was elected to the Board of the English Chess Federation (ECF).[10]
Natasha has co-authored two chess books alongside English chess Grandmaster Matthew Sadler. Their first collaboration Chess For Life won ECF book of the year.[11] It interviews and details the way several notable chess players' styles and games evolved throughout their chess careers.[12]
Natasha Regan came up with the idea for her and GM Matthew Sadler's second collaboration Game Changer[13] which won the FIDE chess book of the year.[14] It details the lessons that can be learnt from how DeepMind's revolutionary computer program AlphaZero plays chess.[15]
The book has been influential upon competitive chess. At the Tata Steel Chess Tournament 2019, after a draw with Teimour Radjabov, number 1 ranked chess player and world champion, Magnus Carlsen commented about Game Changer:
"I found the book quite inspirational. I was thinking at several points during the game: How would AlphaZero have approached this?"[16]
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