Archive for the ‘Chess’ Category

Chess Corner: Give thanks for that – Muskogee Daily Phoenix

What is whites best move?

DIAG 1

Thanksgiving is day that we often eat too much. This weeks position is teaches us to be careful what you gobble. With this hint in mind please try to find whites best move.

This is a classic knight versus bishop endgame where the knight is superior. White demonstrates this with knight to e5 (see next diagram).

DIAG 2

White has placed its knight en prise. However, if black gobbles up the knight, white wins, as whites d5 pawn races to d8. Blacks king is too far away to stop the pawn, and blacks e5 pawn is too slow and cannot reach e1 in time.

The white knight also threatens blacks f7 pawn. If the black king tries to defend by moving to g8, white throws more turkey at black to eat with pawn to h7 (see next diagram).

DIAG 3

One way or another the knight reaches f7 from where the knight can next gobble up blacks d6 pawn and/or wreak more havoc on blacks queen side. Specifically, if the king takes the pawn, the knight takes blacks f7 pawn. If the white king declines the capture and moves to g7, the knight still takes the pawn. If white gobbles up the knight, the pawn promotes.

Blacks best response to knight to e5 is to either move its f7 pawn to f6 or f5. Either way whites g5 pawn takes blacks pawn. Blacks bishop then gobbles up whites h6 pawn, as whites knight hops to f7, threatening the black d6 pawn. Blacks bishop defends by retreating to f8.

From here, white is a little better but the fight continues, as it does in so many things. They both at least can give thanks for that.

Reach Eric Morrow at ericmorrowlaw@gmail.com or (505) 327-7121.

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Chess Corner: Give thanks for that - Muskogee Daily Phoenix

Brothers honoured for excellence in chess – Phoenix Sun – Phoenix Sun

A gala dinner was recently hosted by the Department of Sport and Recreation KZN and the KZN Sport Confederation to acknowledge the achievements of two young chess stars, 12-year-old Virginia Preparatory pupil, Arav JugreeArav Jugree, and his brother, nine-year-old La Lucia Junior Primary pupil, Abhay.

The young La Lucia residents both received their KZN colours and South African colours for chess. Arav is the current under 13 KZN Chess champion.

ALSO READ: KZN community chess tournament held in stellar venue thanks to Sibaya Casino

The brothers recently represented South Africa in the African Youth Chess Championship in Accra, Ghana. The duo have both been playing chess since the age of four.

They said that in chess you have to work hard to overcome your opponent so winning is a rewarding feeling.

The sport also promotes analytical thinking which they feel helps with subjects like maths and science. The young chess stars intend on continuing to develop their skills and competing internationally.

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Brothers honoured for excellence in chess - Phoenix Sun - Phoenix Sun

The best of AB de Villiers, Carlsens chess genius and Chelsea v Man Utd – The Guardian

1) Chelsea and Manchester United meet on Sunday at Stamford Bridge having had very different seasons so far. There are plenty of previous classics between the two sides to delve into, so lets start back in 1965 with a Reds side featuring Law, Best, Charlton et al hammering Chelsea 4-0 on Match of the Day. Another TV-featured meeting of the two, in 1973, saw Chelsea win through a Peter Osgood goal at the Bridge. In the Premier League era weve had Chelsea thrashing Sir Alex Fergusons recent treble-winners in October 1999, Jos Mourinhos Blues securing the title in 2006 and a 4-0 win over Mourinhos United in 2016. On a more heartening note for those in red, heres an eight-goal FA Cup victory in 1998, Uniteds comeback in a 3-3 thriller in 2012, and their last win in this fixture, in 2020 just before lockdown.

2) AB de Villiers announced his retirement from all forms of cricket last week. The South African has been one of the most destructive batters of the modern era, so lets relive his record 31-ball ODI hundred against West Indies in 2015, and his incredible 162 against them at that years World Cup. And here he is nonchalantly hammering a 19-ball domestic Twenty20 half-century. He was no mug in the Test arena either feast on his 278 against Pakistan 11 years ago, or just enjoy this overall career showreel.

3) The World Chess Championship gets under way this week, pitting the defending champion, Magnus Carlsen of Norway, against Russias Ian Nepomniachtchi. Its the first edition of the showpiece since before the pandemic when, in 2018, Carlsen saw off Fabiano Caruana. Heres Carlsen beating this years opponent in 33 moves at a rapid game. This documentary about the chess legends childhood shines some light on his upbringing, and this is why hes known as the Mozart of chess. His opponent is formidable too though take a look at his five best moves.

4) Tefimo Lpez defends his lightweight world titles at Madison Square Garden on Saturday against George Kambosos Jr. He claimed the title just over a year ago with this impressive win over Vasyl Lomachenko, while heres his victory over Richard Commey to take the IBF world lightweight title two years ago. Lpezs top five knockouts can be seen here.

5) Time for some more under-the-radar goals of the week. A 94th-minute winner is always to be savoured, and one as memorable as this, from Morecambes Cole Stockton, away from home at local rivals Fleetwood, doubly so. Just look at those away fans! And has this University of Central Lancashire goal been bettered in student football?

6) Englands women are back in action on Saturday, hoping to extend their 100% record in World Cup qualifying when they take on Austria. England have won all of their previous four meetings; their first, in 2010, featured Ellen Whites debut goal for her country, which she talks about here. England also won this 2017 friendly comfortably and another meeting in Austria a year later.

1) This week the 49ers had this magnificent butt-interception wiped by a penalty, but last year the Jets Marcus Maye got a clean one. Of course, as Giants fans will tell you, theres nothing wrong with using your head in the NFL, and Julian Edelman proves that using other people to catch the ball is perfectly viable.

2) A sleeper smash of the autumn sporting calendar has been Guadalajaras hosting of the WTA Finals. Anett Kontaveit met two-time major winner Garbie Muguruza in the final.

3) Getting out of trouble at the Open.

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The best of AB de Villiers, Carlsens chess genius and Chelsea v Man Utd - The Guardian

The woodland chess game: How to overcome a whitetail’s keen sense of smell – Hornell Evening Tribune

By Oak Duke| Outdoors Columnist

Sportsmen hunt for ammo this year

Like many items across the United States, ammunition for shooting sports is in short supply this year.

Brian Whipkey, Erie Times-News

A whitetails sense of smell is all but beyond our comprehension.

Dogs, too.

My bird dog would lock up on point while retrieving a downed bird.

Somehow that dog was able to smell a woodcock through all that heady grouse scent swirling around his muzzle. His nose was buried in hot feathers!

How could that dog smell a hidden bird with another bird in its mouth?

And how are bomb-detecting dogs able to identify human scent on a tiny exploded bomb fragment?

Older, experienced deer, are quite able to tell when a tree stand is being used. And they often will shy away, especially in the daytime.

A couple of inches of snow on the woodland leaves showed that a deer had walked straight to the base of the tree holding my tree stand. Deer prints on top of boot tracks at the base of the old White Pine tree.

And it was obvious that the whitetail had stood for a little while, shifting its feet back and forth. Every cleft hoof print seen there next to the tree was actually a snapshot of a fleeting emotion of that wary animal.

Our scent hangs like fog, not dissipating for days to a whitetails nose.

Some younger whitetails have also learned to be wary of a spot in the woods, supersaturated with a hunter's odor.

Scent acts a lot like a colored smoke cloud.

The smoke metaphor helps us imagine what it must be like to have a whitetails sense of smell.

So lets say that scent could be colored like a rainbow, the oldest scent to the freshest scent mirrors the colors of the spectrum.

Therefore on one side, old scent, could be represented by blue smoke, maybe up to one-week old. Any older and it would turn to gray and dissipate, being almost undetectable.

Newer scent would be yellow smoke, maybe say, only three days old, and orange smoke would be just two days old. And red smoke was fresh scent, laid down within 24 hours, on the other side of the visible spectrum from blue.

Now take a tree stand that has a hunter in it each day for a week. Throw down a smoke bomb of each color, red, orange, yellow and blue around the base of the tree to represent those days of old scent. That gives us a visual representation of what a whitetail smells.

Now if you were an older whitetail, and wandered even close to a tree with various colors of smoke whirling around by wind currents and thermals, it would be enough to make you at least stop and stamp your foot.

Most hunters believe that the only way to successfully hunt whitetails is from a stand, whether it is a tree stand or a ground blind.

Hunting from a stand seems easy, logical and simple. And it must be the best way because most hunting experts on TV hunt that way.

But time was when we could wander from ridge to ridge, before portable tree stands and videos, playing the wind, still-hunting.

Many of us know that hunting is most productive the first time or two in a stand. We often save choice stands until the rut peaks.

When we hunt multiple days from the same stand, we often see a drop-off in activity.

And forget about it on the fourth, fifth, 10th, and 15th consecutive days.

Visualize the smoke metaphor. Our scent builds up and lasts for days in the vicinity of a stand. If we use it, day after day, whitetail will pattern us better than we pattern them.

And it follows then when we take the same stand day after day, we see fewer and fewer deer.

The more tree stands and ground blinds in different locations a hunter has, the better the chances for seeing deer because we allow our scent to dissipate, not to mention playing the wind in the deer hunters chess game.

And deer hunters who make different stand site moves have better odds of fooling the whitetails nose and getting a checkmate.

Oak Duke writes a weekly column for the Hornell (NY) Evening Tribune.

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The woodland chess game: How to overcome a whitetail's keen sense of smell - Hornell Evening Tribune

Where chess reigned as a spectator sport – The Hindu

Chess is a lonely battle. Not in Kolkata, though.

The Tata Steel Chess, which concluded at the National Library on Sunday, attracted big crowds on all the five days. Not even the pandemic could deter the enthusiasm of chess fans, as they came out to support their favourite players and watch them in action from close quarters.

They would greet the players with loud cheers and would applaud their efforts when the games are over. Some of them could be seen waving Indian flags, too.

For someone playing at the Tata Steel tournament for the first time, it could be a strange experience. It was so strange that I didnt know how to react, says D. Harika, the World No. 12 in womens chess. Then I got used to it and it felt great to play a tournament in front of a crowd. It is nice to connect with the fans.

That rarely happens in chess. The tournaments are often played in halls, with hardly any chess fan turning up to watch.

But right from the first edition of the Tata Steel event in 2018, people have been coming to the venue in large numbers. In fact, they paid for the ticket in the first two years of the tournament; admission was free this year.

The only other occasion one could recall of chess attracting so much attention from the local people was the World chess championship match between Viswananthan Anand and Magnus Carlsen in 2013. But, then, Chennai is Anands hometown and is also the chess capital of India with so many Grandmasters and so many kids learning the game.

I think the passion the people of Kolkata have for chess is something you may not find anywhere, says Woman International Master Saheli Dhar Barua, who is now a coach. As someone who lives in the city, I felt so happy to see so many fans coming to the venue to watch the tournament.

People far away from Kolkata too have come to the city for this elite tournament, like Ruchika Kaushik, who flew down from Delhi. My daughter Siya is learning chess and we wanted to watch his event, she says. I could see the citys love of chess. We have been to the Gariahat flyover, under which people play chess regardless of the noise all around.

Kolkata, of course, is known for its love of sports, especially cricket and football. Looks like chess too is fast making some popular moves.

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Where chess reigned as a spectator sport - The Hindu