Brit Wins Memory Olympics
After 3 Days of Grueling Memorizations, World Memory Champion Crowned in London
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Play CBS Video Video Mind Games The third and final day of the World Memory Championship took place in London. As Elizabeth Palmer reports, this mind competition was something never to forget.
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(CBS)
Ben Pridmore from Britain once again has proven he's got the most powerful memory in the world.
The three time international champion faced down stiff competition in events that included matching names to faces and memorizing 4,000 numbers in sequence.
They call themselves mental athletes but most admit - proudly - they're also nerds.
The contestants rely on a combination of unshakeable concentration and sound technique.
"If it's a string of numbers, I see those numbers and I have pictures that correspond to every number," said Ronnie White, a memory competitor from Texas.
White says that long strings of numbers are more memorable if he makes them into mini-stories.
"Today I had Mickey Mouse swinging on a rope into a medical student," White said.
White, an Afghanistan veteran, won the U.S. championship last spring. But in London, suffering from jet lag, he just wasn't a match for his opponents, male or - much rarer - female.
"I'll tell you what. Dorothea from Germany over there - the woman - kicking my butt," White said.
Dorothea, who is only 17 years old, finished in the top ten. But she's got her eye on fierce and growing competition from China which fielded a big team this year - the only ones with matching tracksuits.
"They are, really have a good team. It's kind of intimidating," said one competitor.
Intimidating is also the word for Ben Pridmore who memorized a whole deck of cards in just over half a minute to clinch his win today.
"The standard just keeps getting higher at these competitions," Pridmore said.
But there's constant pressure to improve. Every year the scores get higher and higher. So the on thing these competitors can forget is any thought of slacking off this winter.
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- What a great event! I wish I had been there, cheering on all the brains
from "free" countries, and trying to be politically correct enough to
want to hang with people from the other places. It is great that we still
celebrate uh, you know, the people in the story,..what was the story again? - Reply to this comment
- Well if you guys don't believe it is so hard try one simple thing. Try to memorize (let alone remember) all the addresses you have lived and the corresponding phone numbers of the homes you have lived for your entire life. Once you can master that, try other things like birthdays, the names and faces of all the people you have gone to school with, the names of your teachers. Trust me it is a sport.
- Reply to this comment
- bonjour
Ben Pridmore from Britain once again has proven he's got the most powerful memory in the world.
je suis contente pour vous" ben" congratulations, j'espére que vous vous souviendrez que je vous ai félicité..sinon a quoi cela sert-il d'avoir une "bonne mémoire""meilleure"..mdrr..au revoir - Reply to this comment
- "Brit Wins Memory Olympics"
An unforgettable moment in the world of sports. - Reply to this comment
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