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Imre Leader

Imre Bennett Leader (born 30 October 1963) is a British mathematician, a professor in DPMMS at the University of Cambridge working in the field of combinatorics. He is also known as an Othello player.

Imre Leader

(1963-10-30) 30 October 1963

Combinatorics

Discrete Isoperimetric Inequalities and Other Combinatorial Results  (1989)

Life[edit]

He is the son of the physicist Elliot Leader and his first wife Ninon Neményi (his mother was previously married to the poet Endre Kövesi); Darian Leader is his brother.[1] Imre Lakatos was a family friend and his godfather.[2]


Leader was educated at St Paul's School in London, from 1976 to 1980.[3] He won a silver medal on the British team at the 1981 International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO) for pre-undergraduates.[4] He later acted as the official leader of the British IMO team, taking over from Adam McBride in 1999, to 2001.[5][6][7] He was the IMO's Chief Coordinator and Problems Group Chairman in 2002.[8]


Leader went on to Trinity College, Cambridge, where he graduated B.A. in 1984, M.A. in 1989, and Ph.D. in 1989.[9] His Ph.D. was in mathematics was for work on combinatorics, supervised by Béla Bollobás.[10] From 1989 to 1996 he was Fellow at Peterhouse, Cambridge, then was Reader at University College London from 1996 to 2000. He was a lecturer at Cambridge from 2000 to 2002, and Reader there from 2002 to 2005.[7] In 2000 he became a Fellow of Trinity College.[11]

Awards and honours[edit]

In 1999 Leader was awarded a Junior Whitehead Prize for his contributions to combinatorics. Cited results included the proof, with Reinhard Diestel, of the bounded graph conjecture of Rudolf Halin.[12][13]

Othello[edit]

Leader in an interview in 2016 stated that he began to play Othello in 1981, with his friend Jeremy Rickard.[14] In the years from 1982 and 2022 he was 16 times the British Othello champion.[15] In 1983 he came second in the world individual championship, and in 1988 he played on the British team that won the world team championship.[16]


As of 2024, Leader has won the European Grand Prix Championship six times, most recently in 2023.[17]

Some publications from DBLP

[1]