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Chess With Errol Tiwari More Than A Mere Game

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  • Chess With Errol Tiwari More Than A Mere Game

    CHESS WITH ERROL TIWARI MORE THAN A MERE GAME

    Stabroek News, Guyana
    Sunday, September 9, 2007

    Children under instruction at the successful Chess Clinic that was
    held recently at the Carifesta Sports Complex. The Clinic resulted
    from an initiative by Dr Frank Anthony to take chess to the youths
    of the nation. Similar Clinics are planned for Linden,.

    In an age dominated by religious zeal and ideological fanaticism,
    the development and promotion of chess is crucial.

    Chess is a sobering philosophical pastime that transports you away
    from the exhausting world of violence, confusion and uncertainty. When
    you face an opponent over the board, you distance yourself in mind
    from the ugly travails of international conflicts and the extreme
    difficulties which confront you every day on the home front.

    The game has a soothing effect on its devotees. It is little wonder,
    therefore, that it is so meaningful to the powerful, such as CEOs,
    chairmen, managing directors, ministers of government, prime ministers
    and presidents, who will keep a chess board and pieces routinely at
    hand always, to be used when required to assuage the tension caused
    by belligerents scattered across the globe.

    For the modern state and its rulers, chess is more than a mere game. It
    is a weapon that is used by nations to make a statement. If ideology
    necessarily determines foreign policy, then the Fischer-Spassky World
    Championship chess match of 1972 was no sunny afternoon tea-party
    encounter. It was a metaphor for the Cold War. It was the clash of two
    completely different cultures: one American, and the other Soviet. It
    was a battle of ideas, political systems and ideologies in the form
    of an actual chess match waged with great skill, tension and tenacity
    across a wooden board of 64 squares.

    We see clearly the interconnection between chess and the conduct of
    international relations. One news item described Fischer's refusal to
    play for the championship as "the greatest American disaster since
    Pearl Harbour." The championship was never about two grandmasters
    moving pieces and pawns around a chess board. It was about an
    intellectual engagement, perhaps a confrontation, between the two
    most powerful nation states in the universe. It was a tactical and
    strategic mind game between two countries at the height of tensions
    during the Cold War in which the winner put a stamp on his country's
    claim to intellectual superiority.

    Two weeks ago, China stunned the world by defeating Russia in a
    chess match in Russia. Each country fielded a team of 10 players,
    male and female, and China prevailed by the handsome margin of
    52½-47½points. Of course, Russia did not field its strongest
    grandmasters who are preparing to play in the World Championship
    tournament in Mexico City, but China also did not commit at least one
    of its biggest names in the game. At the moment, China is engaging
    England in a similar match with a team of ten also, but this time the
    Chinese have introduced Hou Yifan, a 13-year-old prodigy who is ranked
    No 4 in the world among women. Hou, however, will play as a male member
    of her team and will oppose only male members of the English team. She
    is being fed a steady diet of tough competition, training perhaps, for
    full participation among males in a fashion similar to Judit Polgar.

    In Mexico City, a third world country, India, has the highest ranking
    among chess-playing nations.

    Viswanathan Anand has a FIDE rating of 2792, way ahead of the world
    champion Vladimir Kramnik. Russia, India, Armenia, Hungary and Israel
    are represented at the tournament which begins on Wednesday.

    On the local chess scene, the Steering Committee for the Development
    of Chess has begun preparations for hosting of the country's National
    Chess Championship.

    A seven-round swiss system qualification tournament will begin
    next Sunday to determine 10 players for participation in a double
    round-robin championship tournament later in the year. This tournament
    will be played on two successive Sundays at the time control of one
    hour and fifteen minutes per player per game, and is open to all
    chess players in Guyana.

    The committee is currently engaged in a drive to obtain members for
    the new Guyana Chess Federation.

    Persons wishing to become members can contact Mr Irshad Mohamed on
    Tel. 664-1650 and Mr Shiv Nandalall on Tel. 623-7723.

    Karjakin v Yusupov

    Sergey Karjakin is a teenage grandmaster who has already defeated
    world champion Vladimir Kramnik . He is respected for his prowess in
    sharp positions. In the following game he outplays the renowned Artur
    Yusupov, a former world title contender, celebrated chess trainer and
    author. Karjakin plays the endgame flawlessly and forces his opponent
    into a Zugzwang situation in the end.

    A Yusupov (2583) - S Karjakin (2678) NH Tournament Amsterdam, 2007

    1.d4 d5 2.Nf3 Nf6 3.e3 c5 4.c3 Nc6 5.Nbd2 cxd4 6.exd4 Bf5! The move
    is routine but has a tactical point.7.Nh4 Bg4 8.Be2 Allowing the
    exchange of Black's problem piece, but if 8.Qb3 Qd6 9.Qxb7 Qe6+)
    8...Bxe2 9.Qxe2 e6 Black is very comfortable with his bad bishop
    exchanged and a slight lead in development.10.Nb3 Qc7 11.g3 0-0-0
    12.Bf4 Bd6 13.Bxd6 Qxd6 14.0-0-0 Qc7 15.Nf3 Ne4 16.Kb1 Rhe8 17.Nfd2
    Nd6 18.Rhe1 f6! 19.Qh5 g6 20.Qf3 Qf7 21.Nf1 g5 22.Ne3 h5 23.Nc5 b6
    24.Nd3 Kb7 25.Ka1 a5 26.Rc1 e5! 27.dxe5 (27.Qxd5 e4 traps the knight)
    27...fxe5 28.Qxf7+ Nxf7 29.Rcd1 g4! (Securing an outpost on f3 for
    knight) 30.Nc1 d4 31.cxd4 exd4 32.Nc2 Nfe5 33.Re4 Nf3 34.Rxe8 Rxe8
    35.Kb1 Re4 36.Nd3 Nce5 37.Nxe5 Rxe5 38.Kc1 Re4! 39.Rd3 Kc6 40.Kd1
    b5 41.b3 b4 42.Kc1 Kc5 43.Kd1 Re5 White Resigns! 0-1. Final position
    after 43...Re5. The knight and rook are trapped and 44.Kc1 Re2 wins.

    --Boundary_(ID_mHE05zjGIz6QgnwhDo6V2A)--
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