:: Wednesday, September 23, 2009 ::

Rematch
I remember chess being big news during my childhood in the '80s, around the time I started playing. So it's interesting to see the biggest match, and biggest rivalry, of the era being relived.
"Garry Kasparov and Anatoly Karpov have renewed their old rivalry in a twelve game exhibition match at Valencia. The contest will last three days with two rapid games on days one and two to be followed by eight blitz games on day three."
Channel 4 news gives a nice introduction [video link] including some explanation of the political backdrop.
The rematch so far is reported here. "Garry Kasparov beat Anatoly Karpov in two games Tuesday at the start of an exhibition chess match marking the 25th anniversary of their first title bout, a grueling event that was eventually ended after five months."
Pierre Garon: How the game of chess lost its soul "Yet we only know these names today because of one man: Bobby Fischer. Before Fischer, chess in America was an intensive care unit patient on IV. The title of world chess champion belonged to the Soviets. Then Fischer rose to prominence in the Sixties, and with incredible ease dispatched all candidates to become, in 1972, official challenger to titleholder Boris Spassky."
Coincidentally, I'm currently reading one of the more accessible books about the match. David Edmonds' and John Eidinow's Bobby Fischer Goes to War.
The psychology is interesting. The authors perhaps overplay the suspicions of cheating, the chapter applying game theory to Fischer's unreasonable behaviour is perhaps a step too far, but it's a riveting read nontheless. The profiles of both players early lives make me wonder about the mindset of the grandmaster. The savant like powers of recall make me wonder about how their brains may be differently wired to some other peoples. In much the same way as Oliver Sacks considered musicians in Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain. I'd like to see chess get a similar treatment.
The "Living Chess" chapter of the Bobby Fischer book mentioned touches on this, mentioning the similarities in thinking between mathematicians, chess players and musicians. It also quotes Nabokov, who said, "There is nothing abnormal about a chess player being abnormal. This is normal." It goes on to cite some of the more extreme examples, such as Paul Morphy, the unofficial world champion in the 1850s. (The official world championship is generally regarded to have begun in 1886.) Quoting the same book at length:
"[Morphy] also despised the chess 'scene'. While only in his twenties, he descended into a state of paranoia and depression, and became a recluse. Occasionally he was seen wandering the streets of New Orleans, muttering to himself in French. A shoe fetishist, at the age of forty-seven he was found dead in his bathtub - rumour says surrounded by women's shoes."
For further accessible chess related entertainment there's always the film Game Over: Kasparov and the Machine, reviewed here.
Labels: Chess, Literature, News
:: Dan 23.9.09 [Arc]
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:: Saturday, January 19, 2008 ::

Bobby Fischer RIP
Edited text from the two links:
Bobby Fischer, who died on Thursday aged 64, was a high school dropout who may have been the greatest chess player of all time, but ended his life in eccentric seclusion.
He turned the chess world on its head when he wrested the world chess title from Soviet domination in 1972, beating world champion Boris Spassky, in a Cold War chess showdown in Reykjavik known as the match of the century. But while the theatrics made him a celebrity he also succeeded in alienating himself from all but a small band of friends and chess enthusiasts. Despite having a Jewish mother, Fischer was a vicious anti-Semite, using broadcasts at far-flung radio stations to accuse Jews of everything from his legal woes to an alleged conspiracy to kill off elephants.
Fischer returned to chess in 1992 with a rematch against Spassky in Yugoslavia, then in the throes of the Balkan wars. At a press conference he spat on a US government notice warning him he was breaking sanctions and proceeded to defeat Spassky once again, winning more than three million dollars on which he boasted he would never pay tax.
In 1996 he created Fischer Random Chess (Chess960). Fischer's goal was to create a chess variant in which chess creativity and talent would be more important than memorization and analysis of opening moves. His approach was to create a randomized initial chess position, which would thus make memorizing chess opening move sequences far less helpful.
In 2004 Fischer was taken into custody at Tokyo's Narita airport for travelling on a passport which Washington said was revoked.
With Japan deliberating for months on whether to send him to the United States, Iceland came to his rescue in 2005, granting him citizenship in tribute to his role in making the island.
"The Jew-controlled United States is evil. They talk about the axis of evil. What about the allies of evil? What about the US, England, Japan, Australia and so on? These are the evil doers," said Fischer.
I can see the biopic already.Labels: Chess, RIP
:: Dan 19.1.08 [Arc]
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:: Thursday, July 19, 2007 ::

ChessCoaster
People playing chess on roller coasters [via grom]
 Labels: Chess, Humour
:: Dan 19.7.07 [Arc]
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:: Monday, April 09, 2007 ::

Listening Whilst Gardening
Andrew Marr's Start of the Week on Radio 4 this morning was particularly interesting. It included discussion with chess master Garry Kasparov about his new book How Life Imitates Chess (added to wishlist), Prof. Jeffrey Sachs giving a hint of some of the subjects he'll be covering in this year's Reith Lectures (starting Wednesday), and Norman Lebrecht on the classical music record industry. Worth a listen. The MP3 download trial [17MB] and the podcast seem to be down at the time of writing but the streaming version is working (see first link, above).
Edit: Download and Podcast now workingLabels: Academic, Chess, Radio4
:: Dan 9.4.07 [Arc]
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