Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Chess: Strongest players, Iranian underdogs take wins in opening rou

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Chess: Strongest players, Iranian underdogs take wins in opening rou

    Strongest players, Iranian underdogs take wins in opening round of FIDE championships
    by MAHMOUD KASSEM; Associated Press Writer

    Associated Press Worldstream
    June 19, 2004 Saturday

    TRIPOLI, Libya -- The two strongest players in the World Chess
    Federation championships glided through the first games of round
    one Saturday with solid wins, while two Iranian underdogs clinched
    surprise victories against well-respected grandmasters.

    Bulgaria's Veselin Topalov, seeded No. 1 in the tournament and fifth
    in the world, beat Libyan outsider Tarik Abulhul, ranked 128 in the
    tournament, in 41 moves.

    England's Michael Adams, world No. 8 and second seed in the tournament,
    thrashed his Libyan opponent, Hussein Asabri, in an Anti-Berlin line
    in 35 moves.

    However, the biggest upset of the event came from the Iranian
    contingent. Morteza Mahjoob, ranked 115 in the tournament, beat Zurab
    Azmaiparashvili of Georgia even though the 44-year-old grandmaster
    was playing his favorite line, the Pirc defense.

    Azmaiparashvili was ranked 14 in the tournament.

    "Today I am so happy," Mahjoob told reporters after his match. "My
    game was hard. I won in a hard position. ... He made some not so
    good moves."

    Mahjoob's compatriot Ehsan Ghaem Maghami also displayed unexpected
    prowess against Armenia's Rafael Vaganian in a Queen's Indian Defense
    after offering his opponent a draw, which was declined.

    Vanganian is ranked 37 in the tournament.

    "The game was normal was for first 18 moves. I offered my opponent
    draw but he tried to win and did some bad moves," said Maghami,
    ranked 92 out of the tournament's 124 players.

    The World Chess Federation, known by its French initials FIDE, kicked
    off its Tripoli championship Saturday despite Libya's refusal to
    allow players from Israel and the absence of many top players.

    Only two of FIDE's top 10 were participating, apparently because many
    players were angry that Garry Kasparov of Russia was to be allowed
    to play the winner without having to go through qualifying rounds.

    Libya, which is putting up the US$1.5 million in prize money for the
    tournament, has been struggling to shake off its reputation as a rogue
    state that sponsors terrorism and foments trouble around the world.

    Welcoming the chess tournament and making a failed bid to host the
    2010 soccer World Cup were seen as part of a campaign to clean up its
    international image, but its refusal to bend on Israel show old ways
    die hard.

    Libya has been one of Israel's harshest critics in the Arab world,
    once hosting military bases for radical Palestinian groups. In the
    mid-1990s, Libya expelled thousands of Palestinians in protest after
    Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat entered peace talks with Israel.
Working...
X