Archive for the ‘Chess’ Category

Young Chess Stars Meet in a Winner Take All Tournament Checkmate! – The Zebra

Clara Witte(All photos: Vince Ruble)

Alexandria, VA The Queens Gambit is, at the moment, Netflixs most watched show. Many Americans stuck inside have found needed escape in the fictional coming of age story of Beth Harmon, an orphan turned child chess prodigy, who defies the odds to compete with the best in the world. The 7-part miniseries, made for adults, plunges viewers into the world of 1960s competitive chess. But in 2020, adults are not the only ones who need a distraction from the realities of pandemic life.

Recently Zebra got a glimpse into the minds of local children on a similar quest for chess greatness. These serious students of the game, unable to play in the traditional face-to-face setting, found that playing each other in online tournaments presents its own set of challenges and rewards.

For nearly 20 years, Alexandrian Vince Ruble has organized traditional chess competitions at schools around the area, including a citywide tournament in Alexandria. Ruble works for The Campagna Center providing before and after school programs for Alexandrias Elementary Schools, but his main profession now is teaching chess one on one.

Facing quarantine this year, Ruble provided a safe alternative by initiating online play. Since March over 200 bright young players have relentlessly competed for 54 trophies each month. Each contestant played in four matches per tournament. Thats a lot of chess.

Zebra talked with four of these rising chess stars as they prepare for a showdown on December 5, to win an impressive 28-inch trophy. The players are Clara Witte,Ethan Corazza, Andrew Fabian, and Thomas Votsis, and vary in age from 9 to 14. Each has a unique playing style and approach to the game, which is part of what makes chess great. No two players are the same; no two matches are identical.

A great player must see what is in front of them and adapt accordingly. Success is predicated on the individuals ability to predict what their opponent will do next. Players at this level are adept at visualizing the next series of moves and trying to stay one step ahead of their adversary.

No one knows this better than Clara Witte, a sixth-grader at Roland Park Elementary in Baltimore. She uses her innate ability to read people to her advantage.

Sometimes I can see little a disturbance in (opponents) faces, but when its just another computer screen you forget about that and just focus on the game, said Clara. That Clara is the only girl among the four finalists is not lost on the 11-year-old. If a boy wins against another boy, theyre fine with it, she said, but if a girl wins, then they think she is cheating or something.

Clara is quite humble about her accomplishments. I kind of regard trophies as showing off, but whats the point of showing them off? You dont carry them around with you everywhere you go, theyre just sitting on the wall or a shelf.

Nine-year-old Thomas Votsis, a fourth-grader from MacArthur Elementary in Alexandria, has a different view on trying to read his opponent. I usually dont, because sometimes I read their emotions. Then I think maybe Im winning or losing and that makes me overconfident, he said.

Thomas values getting to play chess with a wide variety of players during the few years he has been playing, but, he said, Probably the biggest (take away) is probably focus because, in chess, that is what you have to do. If youredaydreaming while youre playing, youll lose. Ive learned to put my mind to things and accomplish them.

At 13, Ethan Corazza is a seventh-grader at Hammond Middle School and the highest-ranking player of the group. Ethan is modest about this fact. When asked about his achievement, Ethan said, I have been more consistent than most of the other people.

Ethan considers his play to be an opportunistic endeavor and a way to create a more exciting match. If theres an opportunity, if I see it, Ill probably take it. If I can attack or defend, Ill probably attack, he said. The thrill of the attack is no small part of what makes Ethan such a dangerous player.

Andrew Fabian is a 9-year-old attending Mount Vernon Elementary School and a highly cerebral player who prefers to lose himself in the game no matter who the opponent is. I just get so deep into my games, I dont care if its against a random person. Its just the chess pieces, he said.

Not surprisingly, patience is a virtue for Andrew when it comes to chess. You cant force a person to move and go through their thought process. You have to go through your own thought process and think to yourself, is this a trap? Can I get forked in some way? said Andrew. (For those uninitiated in chess jargon a fork is when an opponent forces you to choose between two of your pieces that could be captured in the next move. A fork is something to avoid.)

It will be a fascinating clash of the minds when these exceptional chess standouts collide in the elimination tournament on December 5. When you read this, the tournament will have taken place and we will report the outcome on the Zebra website (thezebra.org) and in the January Zebra. We wish them all luck, as theycompete to see who takes home the title. Make sure you check out our next issue when we will reveal the name of the winner.

ICYMI: Learning Life Lessons through Chess, and More

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Young Chess Stars Meet in a Winner Take All Tournament Checkmate! - The Zebra

The Grand Chess Tour Returns In 2021 – Chessbase News

12/11/2020 The Grand Chess Tour (GCT) is scheduled to return in 2021 and will feature five tournaments and a format that was originally planned for the 2020 edition of the tour. Tour participants will compete for a total prize fund of $1.275 million over the course of the 2021 season.

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Press Release, Saint Louis, MO, December 10, 2020

Following the success of the 2019 Superbet Rapid and Blitz tournament in Bucharest, the Romanian capital will host the first classical event of the 2021 season in June. The 2021 Sinquefield Cup will be in August and will conclude the final leg of the tour. Between the two classical events are three rapid and blitz events, Paris, France, Zagreb, Croatia and Saint Louis, USA.There will not be a GCT Finals tournament in 2021; the final tour standings will be decided based on the GCT points each tour player accumulates over the course of the five tournaments.

Event dates have been coordinated with FIDE to ensure that there will be no clashes with FIDEs major events including the conclusion of the Candidates tournament, the World Championship Match and the expanded FIDE World Cup.The major sponsors of the 2021 Grand Chess Tour are the Superbet Foundation, Vivendi SA, Colliers International and the Saint Louis Chess Club.

The full tour participants will play in both classical events as well as intwo of the three rapid and blitz events. Ten wildcards will be extended toselected players to participate in the rapid and blitzevents. The full schedule for the 2021 GCT season (including arrival and departure days) is as follows:

1. Superbet Chess Classic Romania: June 3 - 15, 2021, Bucharest, Romania2. Paris Rapid & Blitz: June 16 - 23, 2021, Paris, France3. Croatia Rapid & Blitz: July 5 - 12, 2021, Zagreb, Croatia4. St Louis Rapid & Blitz: August 9 - 16, 2021, St. Louis, Missouri USA5. Sinquefield Cup: August 16 28, 2021, St. Louis, Missouri USA

Tour invitations have been extended to the selected participants and further announcements regarding the final composition of the 2021 field and season will be made as they become available.

The Grand Chess Tour is a circuit of international events, each demonstrating the highest level of organization for the world's best players. The legendary Garry Kasparov, one of the world's greatest ambassadors for chess, inspired the Grand Chess Tour and helped solidify the partnership between the organizers. All Grand Chess Tour 2021 events will comply with local and regional COVID-19 restrictions.For more information about the tour, visit grandchesstour.org.

MEDIA CONTACTRebecca BuffingtonPhone: +1 (314) 277 - 3930Email: press@grandchesstour.org

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The Grand Chess Tour Returns In 2021 - Chessbase News

Netflix show credited with renewing interest in chess – HalifaxToday.ca

Don't be surprised if someone you love is hoping to find a chess board under the tree this Christmas

Don't be surprised if someone you love is hoping to find a chess board under the tree this Christmas.

A popular Netflix show is being credited with renewing interest in the game.

The president of Chess Nova Scotia says he's been flooded with phone calls since The Queen's Gambit hit the streaming service.

The series follows a young girl named Beth Harmon who has a natural talent for the game. As she grows older, the prodigy starts entering and winning tournaments around the world.

"They found a way to get inside of a person's mind with the graphics that they use," Ken Cashin told NEWS 95.7's The Rick Howe Show.

"There's a lot to it, a real complexity to thinking ahead and the different variations in the moves. They did a great job of showing everything that's involved in the moves."

Cashin said it's a game that's fairly easy topick up, but it does require strategic thinking.

"To learn the moves is probably no harder than some card games," he explained. "The challenge is, to get better at chess, you really have to think. You have to think your way out of a problem, you have to see your way through all these obstacles."

He's hoping the surge in popularity will result in seeing more faces at local tournaments in the coming years.

Right now, in-person play has been suspended due to COVID-19.

"Our last tournament was February and then everything after that was cancelled ... but we're hopeful for next year," Cashin said. "We had a national level tournament we wanted to put on, the Atlantic All-Ages Chess Festival, but we had to postpone that now, probably until 2022."

On the upside, that will give people plenty of time to sharpen their chess skills.

Cashin recommends heading to chess.com where you can take lessons orplay against people from all over the globe.

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Netflix show credited with renewing interest in chess - HalifaxToday.ca

‘Chess game has started’ – Man United player ‘wouldn’t be disappointed’ to move to another club to ‘meet his friend’ – Sport Witness

Three days ago, Sport reported Liverpool and Real Madrid interest in signing Kylian Mbapp is real as Paris Saint-Germain are looking to extend his contract beyond 2022.

PSG president Nasser Al-Khelaifiinsists the France international and Neymar want to stay at the club and his comments have been relayed in todays edition of Sport.

Another report from the newspaper suggests Manchester Uniteds Paul Pogba could help the Ligue 1 winners to secure Mbapps long-term future.

Mino Raiola, the midfielders agent, has already stressed his client has to change teams, and reports in Italy have pushed forward Juventus as his next possible destination.

Despite not being able to shine regularly for the Red Devils and France, Sport states there are clubs who are ready to bet on the 27-year-old. One who could yearn for Pogbas signing is PSG.

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Its claimed Ole Gunnar Solskjaers man wouldnt be disappointed to return to France and meet his friend Mbapp at the Paris club.

PSG sporting director Leonardo, who is aware of the friendship between the duo, would view signing the United players signing as a strategic move to ensure he and his side can retain their star player for a longer period of time.

Sport end the report by stating the chess game has started, possibly to take Pogba away from Manchester United, and his arrival could be key in retaining Mbapp beyond his current deal.

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'Chess game has started' - Man United player 'wouldn't be disappointed' to move to another club to 'meet his friend' - Sport Witness

The Queen’s Gambit and the next big thing in chess – New Zealand Herald

Greg Bruce goes in search of something interesting about chess.

A few weeks ago, like every other magazine writer in the world, I was tasked with finding a story to cash in on the massive success of The Queen's Gambit - the show that's made chess cool again, despite filling the majority of its running time with close-ups of its star resting her chin elegantly on her hands.

My big break arrived in the middle of the annual report by the president of the New Zealand Chess Federation, where I discovered the winner of this year's New Zealand Junior Open (for players up to 20 years old) was 10.

We all love a good child prodigy story and chess is full of them. Beth Harmon, the fictional central character in The Queen's Gambit is one and so are many of the game's leading real-life players. They arrive at the table barely tall enough to see the pieces, quickly begin humiliating experienced adults, are touted as the next big thing - and sometimes become it. Legendary one-time world champion and troubled genius Bobby Fischer was a child prodigy, so was current world champion Magnus Carlsen, so is Alireza Firouzja who, aged 16, beat Carlsen in a blitz tournament earlier this year and is now seen as one of his biggest rivals.

Increasingly, the modern game is a place for the young. Indian prodigy Vaibhav Suri, 23, who was once the world's highest-rated 12-year-old and who achieved grand master status at 15, was quoted recently as saying: "If you are not a [grand master] by 13, 14 or maybe slightly later, it will be quite difficult to have a chess career."

Nobody knows how many people play chess but estimates typically settle somewhere in the hundreds of millions. The leading chess website, chess.com, has 33 million members and, on the day of writing alone, the site claimed to have added 105,727 new members. Whatever the total number, only 1723 players are currently grandmasters and only one New Zealander has ever reached that level. Could 10-year-old New Zealand junior champion Isabelle Ning become the second?

The photographer and I met Ning and her coach Ewen Green on a Wednesday night, at the Auckland Chess Club in Mt Eden, where she has one of her two weekly lessons, the other being a weekly group lesson with Bulgarian grandmaster Dejan Bojkov.

I'm not sure why the photographer decided to play her. Ostensibly, it was to make the board look better for the photos but there are faster and less humiliating ways to do that.

He talked a good game. If confidence equalled success, he would have adjudged himself the winner after every move, of which there were not many.

"Check!" he said confidently, only a few moves in."Well, you're going to be checkmated soon," she replied.He moved again, poorly. She looked at the board closely. She said: "Hmmmm.""Pressure's on!" he said confidently and without evidence."It's not," she said. "I'm finding the quickest way to checkmate."She moved. He moved again. Almost before his hand left his piece, she said: "Yay! Checkmate!""Goodnight nurse," Green added.The photographer took a couple of seconds to figure out what had happened but quickly rallied. "That was the aim though," he said. "I wanted to lose as quickly as possible."

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Even in failure, he could see only success. Perception is everything, except when it comes to the scoreboard.

The chess community's fear of this article was palpable from my first contact with its administrators and seemed to revolve around a terror of chess players being depicted as mad, or as flawed geniuses, or both. The fact The Queen's Gambit portrayed its chess-prodigy protagonist as an addict seemed to work them into a particular frenzy. "Most chess players are perfectly ordinary people," one of them wrote, in reply to an accusation I hadn't made.

But if chess has an image problem, it's less to do with the media's depiction of flawed geniuses than the game's lack of them. By far the biggest chess celebrity of the past 50 years is Bobby Fischer, the archetypal flawed genius. Fischer died 12 years ago, having effectively quit top-level chess after his 1972 World Championship win against Boris Spassky ignited a worldwide surge of interest in the game. The only other time chess has attracted anything like global attention was during the politically loaded Cold War end-games of the 1980s between Russia's media-friendly radical reformist Garry Kasparov and his conservative compatriot Anatoly Karpov.

Today's world champion is bland, blond, practically invincible Norwegian Magnus Carlsen, 30, a child prodigy who won his first world title at 22 and is sufficiently conventionally attractive for a modelling contract but is otherwise as appealing as a game against an AI. The only vaguely interesting article I've been able to find on him is a Vice story headlined "Magnus Carlsen, World Chess Champion, Is Kind of a Dick".

A lack of flaws can itself be a flaw. It's all about perception.

Ning was precocious and cheeky but most of all she was happy. She stopped smiling only to laugh, which she did a lot, especially while playing. I watched her play two games - her evisceration of the photographer and another game against Green. Never had chess appeared so fun - vastly more appealing than it appears during the hours of dour pouting that make up The Queen's Gambit.

On her head, Ning was wearing a pair fluffy cat's ears. There are many photos of her online playing chess and holding prizes and awards and in every single one of them she's wearing the cat's ears. She started wearing them a year or so before she started playing chess and has never stopped. "I like cats," she says, "and I also like headbands." She's worn them in junior matches, senior matches, national championships, international championships and just for fun. She wore them, unbidden, to the interview for this story. She gave grandmaster Dejan Bojkov a pair last year and they had a photo taken together, in cat pose. In the final game of this year's New Zealand Open, she played 63-year-old New Zealand great, master Bob Smith. She wore the cat's ears, he wore reindeer antlers.

On chess.com her username is "Squishyminions". "I like Minions" she says, "and I like squishing my opponents." She describes a game from earlier this year, against a highly rated player several years her senior: "I went out and beat him up in a knight endgame," she says. "It wasn't that hard, but I liked the way that I slowly squished him I squishy minioned him."

She opened her game against Green with an aggressive variation on the queen's gambit.

"It was supposed to be a Nimzo Indian," she said later, "but I played D4, C4, aka semi-queen's gambit." She said: "That's Isabelle language."

From there, they got into a closed position, from which Ning emerged stronger and from there she began to dominate her coach, whose face showed an ever-increasing amount of mock-concern.

"I don't want to do this move," she said, eventually, "but I want to do it at the same time.""Sounds like life," Green said, "but go on."She made the move."Okay," he said, "so queen takes or pawn takes? What do you think?""Just do eeny meeny," she replied."Eeny meeny is not an acceptable method," he replied. "It's been tried many times and always fails. Pawn takes, please."He told her: "If you can't tell the difference between two moves, play one and assume you've played a good one, instead of sitting there going, 'Did I play the right one?' That's what the top players do and that's why they're top players."She replied: "And then they're like, 'Okay, sure, I just did it! Yay!"

It became increasingly likely she wouldn't lose but it wasn't clear she'd be able to find a way to win."I don't know what's going on in his mind," she said at one point."Not a lot," he replied."As I expected," she said.

She began learning chess in 2016, aged 6, when her parents bought her a compendium of board games from Whitcoulls. She asked to play with them but they didn't know how, so they arranged for her to join a weekly group lesson with 12 other beginners. Four months later, she was the joint winner of the Auckland under-8 girls' title.

In the four years since, she has accumulated a string of age-group titles and prizes, travelled to international age-group tournaments and beaten a string of players both much older and more experienced than her. Earlier this year, aged 11, she was selected to play as part of the New Zealand women's team for the subsequently cancelled Chess Olympiad in Russia.

She is a member of Auckland Chess Centre, one of the most powerful clubs in New Zealand chess, where she's one of three girls Green says have been "beating up on experienced adult players" in the recent club champs. Asked how the adults take it, he says: "Most of them take it okay. They've gotten used to it."

She is already a champion and has achieved far beyond her years but, as with all prodigies, the assumption is that there must be more. What's next? Will she fulfill her potential, whatever that means? And then what? The level of expectation moves in lockstep with the prodigiousness of one's achievements. In The Queen's Gambit, Beth Harmon goes from child genius to world-beater because anything less would be disappointment.

Perhaps the best recent example of our treatment of prodigies is Lydia Ko, who won far more tournaments, accolades and money before her 20th birthday than most professional golfers will win in their careers. Here are some headlines from the last two years: "How golfing prodigy Lydia Ko lost her way" (ESPN), "New Zealand golfer Lydia Ko's sad decline" (Sydney Morning Herald), "Petulant princess or misunderstood millionaire? The truth about what's wrong with Lydia Ko" (New Zealand Herald), "What is behind the decline and fall of former world golf No 1?" (Stuff). Ko is 23.

Green, 70, is a former New Zealand champion and a brilliant blindfolded player who once played 20 simultaneous games he never saw. He speaks six languages and reads three or four more. He exclusively coaches young people and he chooses them carefully. Many have gone on to become leading players. Puchen Wang was New Zealand junior champion at 11 and is now New Zealand's second-highest-rated player, behind only grandmaster Murray Chandler. Another Green protege, Bobby Cheng, finished second in the 2007 New Zealand Junior Open, aged 9, moved to Australia, won the world under-12 title, became a grandmaster and is now that country's second-ranked player.

Green has a list of criteria candidates must fulfill before he accepts them for coaching: a supportive family, talent, a good attitude, a willingness to learn, the dedication to work by themselves and a sense of humour. Ning, he says, has it all. Her potential, he says, is great.

"She's high up there," he says. "I've had a number of seriously talented kids and she's very close. She's near the top."

Asked if she might become a grandmaster, he says: "Oh, many, many, many, many try and some succeed. She is not incapable. But I'm not good enough to judge that sort of level. She certainly has the ability to go far in chess. Just how far, I'm not sure, because I haven't been there myself."

Ning's parents, when asked about their hopes for their daughter's chess career, answer simultaneously: "Nothing."

Her mother says: "She has an interest and passion for chess, so we just support her and see what happens."

In The Queen's Gambit, Beth Harmon learns to play by skipping school in favour of games against the janitor in the basement of the orphanage in which she lives. In bed at night, she practises in her head, visualising games on the roof in a tranquiliser-induced fug. We're not shown the amount of work she puts in, the implication being it's not the work that matters. That's part of the appeal - it looks like magic.

Ning has twice-weekly lessons, outside of which she practises by herself half an hour each weekday and a bit more on weekends. She also has weekly lessons in fencing, piano, art and ballet. She says she'd like to be world chess champion one day but she'd also like to invent helpful things - for example, a teleportation device that would eliminate the motion sickness she currently experiences travelling to chess tournaments.

Green says of her: "She's very self-aware without being self-conscious and genuinely capable of seeing others' points of view, as so many children are not."

It's hard to say how much of her success at chess is genius and how much is hard work. She says she can calculate about 10 moves ahead, if they're "forcing moves" - moves requiring a specific response from an opponent. Green says this is "far more than usual". In non-forcing situations, she says she might think ahead three or four moves, although each one of those moves involves multiple branches, thus making the calculation exponentially more complex. Green says grandmasters typically calculate only four or five moves ahead but the moves they consider are typically superior to everyone else's.

As their game drew on, Green said: "Do you want a draw?""No!" she replied. "You want a draw! I want to win. It's annoying, and I can't find a way to win. Ugh!""So what are you telling me?" he asked. "Are you telling me something?""Well," she said, "You're hoping I say, 'Would you like a draw?'" She looked hard at the board. She said: "Do you have the queen E8 defence? No, you don't have the queen E8 defence. Okay, so it's like a draw, right?"Are you offering me a draw?" he asked."No," she said, "I thought you were offering me a draw.""No," he said, "I'm not offering.""You're not offering," she said. "You're begging for a draw."

Eventually, they agreed on a draw. When asked about it afterwards, Green said: "I semi-begged."

Later, I asked Green how much he thought Ning needed to practise in order to fulfill her potential.He thought for a while, then said: "There is no real limit to practice." He paused, then he challenged the premise of the question, which was fair enough, because the question was flawed.He said: "It pays to have a life." I said: "To be better at chess? Or to be better at life?"He said: "Both."

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The Queen's Gambit and the next big thing in chess - New Zealand Herald