Re: Chess Superpower
If only kasparov wasn't such a douschebag...
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Re: Chess Superpower
WORLD YOUTH UNDER-16 CHESS OLYMPIAD
Organizer: TURKISH CHESS FEDERATION
Town : Akhisar-Manisa, Turkey
Dates : 2009/09/25 To 2009/10/02
Rank after round 7
Rank Team Pts.
1 Russia 20
2 India 20
3 Armenia 18
4 Hungary 18
5 Azerbaijan 17½
6 Turkey-Turkuaz 16½
7 Turkey-Red 16½
8 Turkey-Girls Red 16
9 Georgia 15
10 England 15
11 Uzbekistan 14½
12 Turkey-Girls White 14½
13 Turkey-White 14
14 Greece 13½
15 South Africa B 13
16 Libya-A 13
17 South Africa A 12½
18 Sri Lanka 12½
19 New Zealand 11½
20 Turkmenistan 9½
21 Turkey-Akhisar 4
22 Libya-B 3
Note please that Turkey has five teams and they all together with Azeries are well located under Armenian one. I wish the children to replace our government.Last edited by gegev; 09-30-2009, 11:00 AM.
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Re: Chess Superpower
Thanks for coming out Karpov.... better luck next time.
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Re: Chess Superpower
Originally posted by Federate View PostArmenian chess players defeat Turkish teams at Junior Olympiad
26.09.2009 19:33 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian junior chess team showed a good game at the World Junior Chess Olympiad going on in Akhisar, Turkey.
The Armenian team defeated Turkish chess players 3-1 and 3.5-0.5 in the first and second rounds respectively.
So, our chess players are the 4th with 6.5 points. Georgians are leading with 8 points.
Armenia is represented by grandmaster Samvel Ter-Sahakyan, Tigran S. Petrosyan, Robert Aghasaryan and Vahe Baghdasaryan.
http://www.panarmenian.net/news/eng/?nid=36939
Nowadays chess is the only positive news source.
Kasparov Karpov match is over:
Rapid games:
Kasparov 3
Karpov 1
Blitz games:
Kasparov 6
Karpov 2
Alltoghether:
Kasparov 9
Karpov 3
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Re: Chess Superpower
Armenian chess players defeat Turkish teams at Junior Olympiad
26.09.2009 19:33 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian junior chess team showed a good game at the World Junior Chess Olympiad going on in Akhisar, Turkey.
The Armenian team defeated Turkish chess players 3-1 and 3.5-0.5 in the first and second rounds respectively.
So, our chess players are the 4th with 6.5 points. Georgians are leading with 8 points.
Armenia is represented by grandmaster Samvel Ter-Sahakyan, Tigran S. Petrosyan, Robert Aghasaryan and Vahe Baghdasaryan.
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Re: Chess Superpower
Armenia revels in its chess prowess
Armenia, with a population of three million, has won the last two men's world team chess championships, beating opponents including Russia, China, and the US. What is their secret? David Edmonds travelled to the country to find out.
I speak not a word of Armenian, and the first man I met in Armenia spoke not a word of English.
He was the driver picking me up from the airport.
"David," I said, pointing at myself. "Tigran," he said, shaking my hand, "Tigran Petrosian."
This seems a weird coincidence. In 1963, his namesake, Tigran Petrosian, had defeated Mikhail Botvinnik to take the world chess title.
For Westerners it was a case of one Soviet Man beating another. The Soviets used chess to demonstrate the superiority of communism over capitalism, and had created a highly efficient chess factory, churning out prodigies like sausages.
But that is not how they saw it in Armenia. For them, Petrosian was above all an Armenian.
National obsession
Tens of thousands of people gathered in Opera Square in the capital Yerevan, to watch the games being displayed on giant boards, as the moves were relayed from Moscow.
The result led to an outpouring of patriotic fervour. That same year, John F Kennedy was assassinated.
"In America everyone can remember where they were when Kennedy was shot," one man tells me. "Here in Armenia, everyone of a certain age can recall the exact moment Petrosian became world champion."
From that moment on, chess became a national obsession.
“ A spectator tells me that Armenia's number one player, Levon Aronian, is their equivalent of David Beckham. He even has the designer stubble. ”
My driver, Tigran, was not the only Tigran I met.
Tigran is an ancient Armenian name. Tigran the Great built a vast empire here in Roman times.
But since the chess conquests of Tigran Petrosian, Tigrans have multiplied.
Tigran Xmalian is a director, who has made a film that uses chess to tell the history of modern Armenia. It is a tragic story.
The defining episode occurred in World War I. Around a million people - some say more, others less - were massacred or died of exhaustion in enforced deportations by the Ottoman Turks.
Since the late 1980s, Armenia has experienced a catastrophic earthquake, war with Azerbaijan and economic collapse. Tigran Xmalian says chess offers the people hope - the chance of salvation. For in chess, he says, every pawn can become a queen.
Later I meet the president of the Armenian Chess Federation. The interview had taken months to arrange.
That may seem odd until you realise that in his spare time, he is also president of the country.
His cabinet consists of two Tigrans - the prime minister and the finance minister.
The state already offers free training to the most promising players, and a guaranteed salary (equivalent to the average wage) to any Armenian who reaches the elite title of grandmaster.
The president now plans to introduce chess into the school curriculum.
"We don't want people to know Armenia just for the earthquake and the genocide," President Serge Sarkisian said. "We would rather it was famous for its chess."
Chess house
In the centre of Yerevan, there is an imposing four-storey, Stalinist-era edifice where anybody can turn up for a quick blitz game, lasting just a few minutes, or a more measured contest of several hours.
Some players thump the pieces down like slabs of meat, others glide them across the board as if they were fragile china.
The men (they are almost all men) range from international class to what in the chess community are known as patzers, useless amateurs.
The building is called the Tigran Petrosian Chess House and inside you can hear lots of explanations as to why Armenians excel at the game.
Secretly, sometimes not so secretly, many think that the real reason is Armenians are just more creative, more logical, and just, well, smarter than the rest of us.
Celebrities
At a major international chess tournament taking place in the spa resort of Jermuk in the arid mountains, I bump into yet another Tigran Petrosian.
He is no relation of Armenia's chess legend, but when Petrosian won the world title, says the younger Tigran, his father had a dream that if he ever had a son he would call him Tigran.
The boy has himself grown up to be a high-ranking grandmaster, a member of Armenia's world-conquering side.
Cheery and plump, this Tigran Petrosian is an unlikely sex symbol, but in Armenia chess players are celebrities.
A spectator tells me that Armenia's number-one player, Levon Aronian, is their equivalent of David Beckham. He even has the designer stubble. Young girls and aspiring chess players chase him for photos and autographs.
In Jermuk, the crowds gather in the piazza where the games are being shown on display boards. A number of seated, elderly gentlemen passionately debate the moves, the high sun reflecting off their brown, bald temples.
The tournament is called the Tigran Petrosian Memorial Tournament. The world champion, who died two decades ago, would have turned 80 this year.
Tigran Petrosian junior hopes to make the Armenian side that will defend its gold medal in 2010.
"The name gives me a good feeling," he says.
"But the problem is that with this name everyone expects me to win every game. It is too much pressure."
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Re: Chess Superpower
Thanks for the news!
Kasparov was one of the few champions whose ElO rating had been exceeding all other grandmasters with solid margin. Nowadays the margins are very small. I guess the most Karpov can do is a few draws. And even now Kasparov can challenge the current champion Anand.
Last edited by gegev; 09-22-2009, 01:30 AM.
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Re: Chess Superpower
Chess players Kasparov, Karpov get ready for rematch marking 25th anniversary of famed bout
MADRID, Spain - Chess eminences Garry Kasparov and Anatoly Karpov are dusting off their knights and pawns for an exhibition rematch marking the 25th anniversary of their first title bout - a grueling one that lasted five months and was eventually halted.
The two former champions will play 12 games of two kinds of speed chess starting Tuesday in the eastern Spanish city of Valencia. The four-day match is the highlight of a chess conference organized by the regional government, town hall and corporate sponsors.
Kasparov, 46, is considered by some to have been the best player in chess history. He retired from top-level professional play in 2005, saying that after a career in which he had become chess' youngest-ever champion at age 22 and dominated the game for two decades, he had little left to achieve.
can read the rest here:
http://www.cbc.ca/cp/world/090921/w092161A.html
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