Archive for the ‘Chess’ Category

Outdoor chess tables launched in Hammonds Pond – Cumberland Council

Do you want to know your Knight from your Rook? Your King from your Pawn?

Get to know more about chess and learn the skills behind the brainteaser game at an event at Hammonds Pond Carlisle on Thursday 11 July between 4.30pm and 6pm.

Cumberland Council has installed outdoor chess tables at Hammonds Pondand Bitts Park, Carlisle using government funding.

The four-seater metal tables, which feature a durable and sturdy chess board, are a fantastic addition to the existing green space facilities at both parks.

Cumberland Council, working in partnership with Carlisle Chess Club, Cumbria Chess Association and Chess in Schools and Communities, invite everyone to join them at Hammonds Pond on Thursday 11 July to play a game of outdoor chess and find out more about this timeless and intellectually stimulating game that has captivated players of all ages for centuries.

John Lydon, Cumbria Junior Chess Organiser, will give a short talk and members of Carlisle Chess Club will be on hand to give advice and tips on playing chess.

John Lydon said:

Chess in a very inclusive game where male and female, young and old, disabled and able-bodied people can all play and compete on equal terms. The game has many benefits and teaches important skills such as planning, calculation spatial awareness, logical thinking and concentration amongst others.

Whether you have played chess before or you are a complete beginner we welcome everyone to join us at Hammonds Pond to find out more about this fascinating game.

Chess is enjoyed by all ages and skill levels, with easy to learn rules the game continues to grow in popularity. It is hoped that the outdoor chess tables will create opportunities for people to come together in a joint activity and inspire the next generation of chess players.

Councillor Anne Quilter, Cumberland Councils Executive Member for Vibrant and Healthy Places, said:

I am delighted that we have been able to install outdoor chess tables within both Hammonds Pond and Bitts Park. It further enhances our commitment to the health and wellbeing of our residents.

The tables will provide an excellent opportunity for both the local community and visitors to connect with others who share a passion for the game, reducing social isolation and increasing social inclusion. The outdoor chess tables provide a free, easily accessible activity for all ages whilst also allowing people to connect with nature in our beautiful parks.

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Outdoor chess tables launched in Hammonds Pond - Cumberland Council

Chess: Shreyas Royal, 15, on brink of grandmaster title – Financial Times

Englands best teenage chess player, Shreyas Royal, 15, advanced to the brink of a record-breaking grandmaster title at the weekend when the south Londoner took second prize at the Arona GM open in Tenerife, Spain.

Royal, seeded 24th in a 157-player field, scored 7.5/10 and ended half a point behind the surprise Chinese winner Haowen Yue, 16, with another Chinese player third. The English junior lost in round three, and was behind the leaders on 5/7, but then finished strongly with two wins against GMs, one of them the 2640-rated top seed Alan Pichot.

At 15 years six months, Royal aims to break David Howells 2007 UK record of becoming a GM at 16. For that, he needs a 2500 overall rating, which he achieved at Tenerife, and three 2600 GM performances in single tournaments. He already has two of those, and missed the third at Tenerife by a whisker.

When he was aged nine in 2018, Royal and his family were expected to leave Britain due to the expiry of his fathers work visa, but the then Home Secretary Sajid Javid decided he should stay, calling him one of the most gifted chess players in his generation. Since then, Royal has steadily advanced and is now a candidate for selection for the England team for the 180-nation Olympiad in Budapest in September.

Royal will compete for the British Chess Championship in Hull in July-August, though he may attempt his final norm in an earlier tournament. He is coached by the England over-50 team captain, GM John Emms, and has support from Sir Demis Hassabis of DeepMind, who was himself a chess talent in his youth, as well as from Tata Consultancy Services.

This Saturday, Royal will compete in the ChessKid Youth Championship, a three-minute blitz event for the worlds best under-16s. There his rivals will include GM Abhimanyu Mishra, 15, who at 12 was the youngest ever GM, and the chess Messi, Argentinas Faustino Oro, who has just set a world record as the youngest ever international master at 10 years eight months.

Puzzle 2579

White mates in three moves (by Fritz Giegold, 1959). Just a singleline of play with Blacks replies forced, but youll do well to find it in under a quarter of an hour.

Click here for solution

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Chess: Shreyas Royal, 15, on brink of grandmaster title - Financial Times

Jerry Jones might have been playing 4D chess delaying Dak Prescott extension – FanSided

We are almost to the Fourth of July, the birthdate of this supposedly great nation, and America's team still hasn't signed Dak Prescott to an extension. After finishing runner-up in MVP voting last season, Prescott appeared destined for a lucrative, market-setting deal from the Dallas Cowboys.

Instead of following the common trends of today's league, however, Jerry Jones has decided to pivot. What exactly has Jones pivoted to? It's unclear. The Cowboys are playing hardball with their most important player, essentially hedging their bets and hoping that Prescott's asking price comes down.

It would take an act of God, however, for the asking price to come down. As proven by Trevor Lawrence's gobsmacking new $275 million contract, every remotely good quarterback is getting paid. I mean, it would take something completely absurd to bottom out the salary cap and return leverage to Dallas.

Well... don't look now, but Jerry Jones might get lucky. Sorta.

The NFL was recently hit with a rather significant lawsuit regarding their Sunday Ticket TV package, which is potentially in violation of antitrust laws. Here's the rundown from Justis Mosqueda of Acme Packing Co.

"On Thursday, theNFL was ordered by a jury to pay north of $4 billion in damagesto commercial and residential parties for what is being considered antitrust violations involving the leagues NFL Sunday Ticket package. Due to the fact that this was a federal antitrust lawsuit, damages can be tripled, meaning that the final number could be above $12 billion."

If the league is ordered to pay $12 billion in legal damages, well, the salary cap is going to implode. The league's total earnings in 2023 were $19 billion. The NFL plans to appeal the jury's decision, but if higher courts sustain the penalty, the league is in for a challenging few years.

Contracts won't scale down to the salary cap's percentage if the league's vault is liquidated. Mosqueda uses Jordan Love's inevitable extension with Green Bay as an example. If he signs for $60 million annually and the salary cap gets chopped in half, the Packers are pretty much screwed. Love still makes $60 million annually and their flexibility is naught.

The Cowboys could be in a similar bind, unless Jones waits out the storm and doesn't give in to Prescott's demands. Two possible fallouts are outlined by Acme Packing Co. in the event of severe legal action either the league gets rid of the salary cap entirely, as Jerry Jones once pitched, or the salary cap is drastically reduced and a "cap squeeze" occurs.

Ironically, Jones' long-held desire to absolish the salary cap would probably hurt his case with Prescott. That would only drive up the market price for elite players, and Prescott could conceivably demand the largest QB contract in NFL history and get it. If not from Dallas, then from somebody else. If the cap ceiling is lowered, however, Prescott can no longer ask for a historic figure on his next deal. The Cowboys may not save cap space, but they would save bottom-line dollar value.

Ultimately, Jones and the Cowboys probably want the league to avoid a crippling financial crisis enforced by the court of law. But, hey, we know Jerry Jones likes to maximize his investments. If there's a way to pay Prescott below market value, he will exploit it.

Next. Power ranking every NFL QB situation going into training camp. Power ranking every NFL QB situation going into training camp. dark

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Jerry Jones might have been playing 4D chess delaying Dak Prescott extension - FanSided

The Week contest: Chess team – The Week

This week's question: Employees of Silicon Valley and Wall Street giants, including Google and Goldman Sachs, recently faced off at a chess match, with teams aiming to prove their employer's intellectual superiority. If you could name the chess team for a major corporation, what would you call it?

Click here to see the results of last week's contest: Hot dog memoir

How to enter: Submissions should be emailed to contest@theweek.com. Please include your name, address and daytime telephone number for verification; this week, please type "Chess team" in the subject line. Entries are due by noon, Eastern Time, Tuesday, July 9. Winners will appear on the Puzzle Page of the July 19 issue and at theweek.com/puzzles on July 12. In the case of identical or similar entries, the first one received gets credit. All entries become property of The Week.

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The Week contest: Chess team - The Week

A Music of Shadows: Sheida Gharachedaghi Soundtrack to The Chess of the Wind – The Quietus

At a film festival in 1970s Iran, after the screening of The Chess of the Wind, a critic brutally asked the director Mohammad Reza Aslani, Who has permitted you to be a director? Later, another critic wrote What have the people done wrong that he wants to be a filmmaker?

The critics posed this question to a director whose film is now recognized as one of the best Iranian movies in history even within the flourishing context of 1970s Iranian cinema. The experience of watching The Chess of the Wind, especially considering the realistic and poetic context of Iranian cinema and the technological restrictions of the time, is stunning. The painterly cinematography and compositions, the meticulous decoupage and mise-en-scne, the camera movement, all of which become part of the narrative. The implicit references to both Iranian and European art, and the shockingly anachronistic zoom-out after the final scene, all make this film stand out. However, the movie was bashed by both the critics and the audience at the time of its screening and ignored in the histories of Iranian cinema, only to be rediscovered decades later.

The movies plot is full of intentional ambiguities and paradoxes, as if it is an expressionist effort to transmit the sense of fear and conspiracy felt by the main character rather than a well-crafted sensible story. In the 1920s, in an aristocratic family from the 19th century, following the death of the family matriarch, the paraplegic daughter, aided by her maid, fights to maintain control over her inheritance amidst greed and betrayal from the other family members, including her stepfather and his nephews. The story revolves around the conspiracies, ploys, and multi-faceted struggles to erase the potential heirs. It is metaphorical, symbolic, and open to interpretation. Some even suggest it foresees later events in the country.

The story, with its paradoxes, ambiguities, and intentionally disrupted and inaudible dialogues, in a way becomes a source of fear and anxiety in itself. Considering Aslani is known more as a documentary filmmaker than a director of fiction, this makes even more sense. He was one of the main figures of a poetic movement in 1970s Iran whose emphasis was on form rather than meaning, sense rather than ideology, and image rather than word.

Almost half a century after its limited screening and a few exclusive showings in the 2000s, the negatives of the film were accidentally found in a second-hand shop by Aslanis son. By restoring these negatives, Martin Scorseses World Cinema Project made it possible for the film to be internationally screened in high quality. Soon after, it gained attention both inside and outside Iran, and a rich volume was published in Iran in 2021 about the movie, shortly after its rediscovery.

Amongst many meticulously implemented ideas of the film, which have been explored by critics, one of the recurring themes is shadow. Several scenes and the dark yet rich palette of the film imply this, including the famous scene of forging deeds at the beginning. Even in her dream, the main character has experienced a world where there were no shadows. The characters in the film are shadow-like presences, plotting conspiracies, and neither the main character nor us, the viewers, will ever get through the obscurity of who is doing what. Also, just like shadows, one can see their traces, but cannot see them themselves. The shadows are not only expressed visually, dialogically, or narratively; music and sound also play a crucial role in conveying the eerie traces of the unseen.

Composed by Sheida Gharachehdaghi, the score fits perfectly into the dark, mysterious, and poetic ethos of the film. Gharachehdaghi, one of the few prominent female composers of the time, studied composition in Vienna and returned to Iran in 1969. Before composing music for The Chess of the Wind, she composed music for several short and feature films, including movies directed by the likes of Bahram Beyzaei. After returning, she established the music centre in the Centre for the Intellectual Development of Child and Adolescent in Iran (CIDC), and systematically implemented the Orff method in music education for the first time. She is known as a contemporary composer, with experiences ranging from operatic works (Fairies, 1989) to pieces for piano solo (The Window to the Garden, 1990), and music for children, composed during her years at CIDC.

In her music, there are occasional direct or subtle references to different Iranian music genres. In Fairies, for example, Iranian music is applied as a narrative tool, directly used yet decontextualized and accompanied by an English translation of a famous contemporary Persian poem, an approach repeated in The Chess of the Wind,/i> by the blind musicians who play Iranian classical music out of its context, in a grotesque backdrop. In Chahargah, another piece of hers, an Iranian classical mode is reinterpreted with a contemporary touch. The Chess of the Wind, though, offers a different reading of Iranian musical elements.

Of all the sources of inspiration for her composition, Gharachehdaghi chose one of the most unexpected ones. The film starts with the atonal and unmetered sounds of wind instruments on a background of a metric pattern played by percussion. This combination is very similar to what is known as the music of naghreh-khneh (naghreh-room) in Iran. Naghreh-khnehs were open rooms usually situated on the top of the gates of certain buildings of significance, hosting a group of musicians, playing wind instruments such as sorn and karen, and the percussive naghreh. None of these instruments are typically used in Iranian classical music but are mostly used in certain folklore genres. These musical rooms have existed since at least the 16th century, and European travelers have described its music as chaotic and unpleasant. Musicians in these rooms had to play before dawn and after sunset, in royal ceremonies, in wars, and on special occasions, such as Islamic holidays or the start of the Iranian New Year. There are few active naghreh-khnehs in Iran in religious buildings, such as the holy shrines in Qom and Mashhad; therefore, the contemporary connotations of this type of music are more religious than before.

In this context, the composers choice of this spatio-musical tradition makes more sense. Apart from its historical character, which suits the setting of the story, the amelodic (or even atonal), chaotic, yet polyphonic nature of naghreh-khnehs music fits the multi-layered interplay of conspiracies within the house. Its religious and apocalyptic connotations, reminiscent of the Islamic musical idea of The Trumpet of Israfil, which also heralds the resurrection of the dead, serve the end-of-an-era narrative of the film. Its intertwining with themes of war and terror further emphasizes the violent fate of the characters.

What makes this choice more meaningful is its capacity to be re-framed through an atonal reading, which makes it both contemporary and mysterious. Apart from the opening credits, the composed music score is used in only three other scenes, all of which are murder scenes. In these scenes, the music remains arhythmic and atonal, with occasional vague references to Iranian intervals and melodic figures. Similar to the directors gothic reading of Iranian architecture, the composer offers an unconventional interpretation of Iranian musical elements, which is not lyrical or nostalgic, but rather grotesque, mysterious, and terrifying.

The sounds used in the movie, as heard in the record, also play an important role in emphasizing the gothic ethos of the movie. The shadows are heard in the sounds and voices with invisible sources, such as the coughs and laughter of a supposedly dead character apparently coming from nowhere. Other musical elements fill the silence in the eeriest way, such as the sounds made by the main characters wooden wheelchair, or the ticking sound of the clock and the clinks of the metal flail which, in the murder scene, are dissolved into the music.

These elements represent gaps, silences, or absences: the wheelchairs sound represents the main characters pain, and the constant ticking and clinking are shadows of their fear of the supposedly murdered man even after his death. The sounds, just like the visual elements of the film, are the sonic shadows of the characters, who remain inaccessible throughout the entire film. Aslanis movie and Gharachedaghis score mirror the story and its characters: after decades of dwelling in shadows, they rose from the dead and emerged into the light.

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A Music of Shadows: Sheida Gharachedaghi Soundtrack to The Chess of the Wind - The Quietus