Archive for the ‘Chess’ Category

The Ultimate Game to Teach Your Child As Young As Three Chess, Story Time Chess Receives Webby Award Nomination – Salamanca Press

BROOKLYN, N.Y., April 23, 2021 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- Story Time Chess, the first game to teach children as young as three how to play chess, recently announced that it has been nominated in the Games: Family & Kids category by the Webby Awards. The game, which was released last year, is already the recipient of multiple industry awards. This includes the coveted People's Choice Toy of the Year (TOTY) Award, which is equivalent to the Oscars in the toy industry. The game is praised by parents, celebrities, chess masters and more in its ability to adequately teach children chess through silly stories, vibrant illustrations, custom chess pieces and a unique chess board.

The Webby Awards is the leading international award honoring excellence on the Internet. The Webbys is presented by the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences (IADAS)a 2000+ member judging body. The Academy is composed of Executive Membersleading Internet experts, business figures, luminaries, visionaries and creative celebritiesand Associate Members who are former Webby Winners, Nominees and other Internet professionals.

Story Time Chess is up for a Webby Award in Games: Family & Kids category. As a Webby Nominee, Story Time Chess is now recognized as one of the five best in the world in its category and is competing for the Internet's two most coveted awards: The Webby Award and The Webby People's Voice Award. While The Webby Award is chosen by the Academy, The Webby People's Voice Award is voted on by the public. Both awards are a mark of international distinction for Internet excellence.

Voting for the Webby People's Voice Award is now open until Thursday, May 6th, at 11:59 PM/PST. Supporters can vote for Story Time Chess at vote.webbyawards.com. Webby Award Winners will be announced on Tuesday, May 18, 2021 at the 25th annual virtual Webby Awards, hosted by Jameela Jamil. Story Time Chess is available now on storytimechess.com for the MSRP of $49.99 and is for ages 3+. For more information please visit, storytimechess.com or follow us on Facebook and Instagram.

About Story Time Chess

Story Time Chess (https://storytimechess.com/storytime-chess-the-game/) is based on a chess teaching method that has been utilized and perfected over the last 12 years through a New York City-based company called Chess at Three, which has successfully taught over 100,000 children in the last decade how to play chess through stories. The same story-based curriculum being used by these tutors is also being licensed by over 1,000 schools. The brand-new game compresses 12 years of knowledge from teaching young kids how to play chess and the result is a beautifully designed game that can teach any person from age 3-103 how to play chess through fun engaging stories and exercises.

About The Webby Awards

The Webby Awards is the leading international award honoring excellence on the Internet. Established in 1996 during the Web's infancy, The Webbys is presented by the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences (IADAS)a 2000+ member judging body. The Academy is comprised of Executive Membersleading Internet experts, business figures, luminaries, visionaries and creative celebritiesand Associate Members who are former Webby Winners, Nominees and other Internet professionals.

Media Contact

Erika Cassidy, Southard Communications, +1 2127772220, Erika@southardinc.com

SOURCE Story Time Chess

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The Ultimate Game to Teach Your Child As Young As Three Chess, Story Time Chess Receives Webby Award Nomination - Salamanca Press

Chess: Black is down to a single pawn move but can you find Whites hidden mate in three? – Financial Times

The Russian champion Ian Nepomniachtchi leads three western rivals by a full point with only four rounds (out of 14) left this week as the Candidates to decide Magnus Carlsens next challenger entered its final days at Ekaterinburg but controversy has emerged over one game.

The Candidates Tournament was halted at halfway in March 2020 by the coronavirus pandemic, and will take more than 400 days to complete.

Nepomniachtchi ison 6.5/10, but still has to meet two of his closest rivals. Fabiano Caruana of the US, the world No 2, won the most impressive game.

Caruana defeated Maxime Vachier-Lagrave in the evocatively named Poisoned Pawn Sicilian after catching the Frenchman in some deep prep, where at one stage Caruana was a bishop and three pawns down. It finally came down to an ending where Black missed a chance for a drawing fortress by placing his knight on a different square.

KirillAlekseenkosloss to his countryman Nepomniachtchi in round 10 raised eyebrows, since Blacks defence was sub-standard. He explained it by confusion in an unfamiliar opening. The final four rounds are viewable free and live, starting noon BST (rest days Thursday and Sunday).

Puzzle 2416

White mates in three moves. Black is down to a single pawn move, and there are no checks until the final checkmate, but this tricky Fritz Giegold puzzle is hard even for some computers. Can you crack it?

For solution, click here

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Chess: Black is down to a single pawn move but can you find Whites hidden mate in three? - Financial Times

Aagaard on the Candidates – Round 10 | US Chess.org – uschess.org

For the tenth installment of his Candidates Game of the Day series, GM Jacob Aagaard has analyzed GM Ian Nepomniachtchi's important victory over GM Kirill Alekseenko as only he could deeply, extensively,definitively. This is the analysis that the experts will be quoting tomorrow, and we have it exclusively here atChess Life Online.

Fans of Aagaard's work may also want to check out his recap of Round 10on the Killer Chess Training YouTube channel.

Below we provide Aagaards analysis in replayable format. For those who prefer paper, boards, and pieces, we havecreated a pdf version.

You can also check outan alternative replayable version posted in the ChessBase Cloud.

Previous "Aagaard on the Candidates" installments:

Round 1 -Giri-NepomniachtchiRound 2 -Caruana-AlekseenkoRound 3 -Ding Liren-CaruanaRound 4 -Vachier-Lagrave - GrischukRound 5 -Nepomniachtchi - Wang HaoRound 6 -Nepomniachtchi - Ding LirenRound 7 -Vachier-Lagrave - NepomniatchtchiRound 8 - Caruana - Vachier-LagraveRound 9 - Giri - Wang Hao

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Aagaard on the Candidates - Round 10 | US Chess.org - uschess.org

Israelis and Lithuanians compete in chess event to strengthen ties – The Jerusalem Post

Israelis and Lithuanians competed against one another in a chess event in order to build relations and strengthen ties as part of the Israeli Chess4Solidarity project.

The event, which was held online, was attended by 191 participants from both countries. Viktorija milyt-Nielsen, Speaker of the Lithunian House of Representatives, spoke of the importance of continuing to grow relations between Israel and Lithuania.

milyt-Nielsen also remarked on the project's impact in encouraging members of both Israel and Lithuania's civil society to build connections, such as artists and musicians.

In addition to the political class, other prominent figures attended the events, such as chess grandmaster Gary Kasparov, Boris Gelfand and Bruce Pandolfini, one of the consultants on the Netflix hit The Queen's Gambit.

Israeli Ambassador to Lithuania Yossi Levy spoke of the good relations between Israel and Lithuania at the event as well.

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Israelis and Lithuanians compete in chess event to strengthen ties - The Jerusalem Post

Picking the Candidates, Again — With Ben Johnson! | US Chess.org – uschess.org

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Ben Johnson, host of the Perpetual Chess Podcast

Many years agoat Masterman High School in Philadelphia, I would often play second board behind IM Greg Shahade, so when he was too lazy busy to carry on his handicapping tradition and preview the second half of the FIDE Candidates Tournament, it was only natural that I pick up the baton.

And while I cannot match Gregs chess strength (or his physical strength, for that matter), we share a background of having once played poker for a living and, thus, in theory, we used to know something about assessing odds. So with the help of a few friends, I feel reasonably qualified to tackle the question we have been waiting more than a year to finally answer: What is likely to happen when FIDE resumes its Candidates Tournament on Monday, April 19?

We will discuss each of the participants, along with their odds of winning the tournament according to Unibet*, as well as the estimated tournament-win probabilities from a predictive analytics model created by accountant/stay at home dad/chess fan and creator of the insightful Chess by the Numbers blog, Tai Pruce-Zimmerman#. Here we go!

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photo Lennart Ootes

Nepo has been a frequent top-ten player who has ascended to No. 4 in the world in recent years. He would be a compelling challenger to Magnus, as he has a plus-score against him in classical chess and can hold his own in rapid tiebreaks. In fact, Magnus himself touts Ian as the favorite because 1) He is tied with the most points in first place, and 2) Vachier-Lagrave, the guy who he is tied with, plays Black an extra time. See, chess handicapping isnt so hard!

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photo Lennart Ootes

MVL hasnt been in peak form of late and, although GM Peter Svidler told me that momentum is overrated, no one that I polled favored the Frenchman to win the tournament. (To be fair, I didnt ask any French people!) The highest endorsement I found was from friendly English Grandmaster, author, and endgame technician extraordinaire Keith Arkell, who said:

If I could choose the winner, I would perhaps go for Maxime. However, I feel that I have been watching Giri and Nepo make the most progress as players over the lockdown year. And because Nepo is a point ahead of Giri, I think he is the most-likely winner and challenger to Magnus.

Despite some recent struggles, the friendly Frenchman obviously has a lot of people rooting for him, and MVL is fully capable of harnessing his famed"> calculation prowess to emerge as Magnus challenger.

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Caruana-Nepomniachtchi (photo Maria Emelianova)

The first thing you should know about Fabiano Caruana is that he is very good at chess No. 2 in the world, in fact. He has also proved that his nerves can handle the stress of chess biggest stage. Fabiano trails the leaders of this tournament by one point, but with White against MVL in the first game and a years worth of opening preparation to unveil he could quickly erase that lead.

He is also, of course, loved by the American-skewed handful of titled players that I polled. ChessDojos IM Kostya Kavutskiy tapped Fabi as the winner, mainly because he is rooting for him. WGM Tatev Abrahamyan is also on Team Fabi, but asked that we retroactively change her pick to whoever wins the tournament!

GM Jacob Aagaard, who will be continuing his excellent Candidates coverage for CLO beginning Monday, pulled the fewest punches. Jacob told me: I think Caruana will win. I do not believe in the stability of Nepomniachtchi, and MVL has always choked. Of the rest, Caruana is best placed to lead the pack.

There you have it, Fabi Nation.

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Anish Giri (photo Lennart Ootes)

Considering Giri has the same score as Caruana, the predictive models really dont fancy his chances! Chess Twitter stalwart Matt Fletcher, aka @WMILTTI, has built a model that has Giri with only 2% chancesto win! Though I think these models underrate Giri. He showed strong form when winning the online 2021 Magnus Invitational, and he backed it up by sharing first in an actual elite OTB event at 2021 Tata Steel. Anish might need to steal a game with Black, or hold serve while playing Black four times and then clean up with White, but all that is pretty doable for a player with his level of preparation.

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photo Maria Emelianova

With 4 games remaining as Black and one point behind the leaders, the beloved and wry Russian veteran faces a steep -- though not insurmountable -- climb. It turns out this isnt the only Candidates preview on the internet, and Magnus Carlsens head trainer, GM Peter Heine Nielsen, shared a brilliant insight over on Chess24.com: Peter pointed to an advantage that Grischuk is the only participant to draw each of his first seven games.

Having made all draws is not too bad. I understand that right now its not good for his tiebreak, but it means, whoever he beats he has a plus score against and will be ahead of him by tiebreaks, so he basically just has to beat the leaders in order to be first and to have a massive advantage over them. When you face Grischuk its an unpleasant game, because if you lose to him, hell overtake you and hell beat you on tiebreak as well.

Despite GM Grischuks immensely accomplished chess career, his untreated time-trouble addiction, and his lucrative side hustle as an accomplished poker professional, can give the impression that he could accomplish even more in chess. It would be great to see him do so, if only for more Grischuk"> press conferences.

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Wang Hao (photo Lennart Ootes)

Wang Hao somewhat surprisingly qualified for the Candidates by winning the FIDE Grand Swiss. Less surprisingly, he did not think FIDE should have staged the first half of the tournament amidst the onset of a global pandemic. Despite his laudable objection to the risks of staging the first half of the tournament, Wang Hao held his own over the board in the first half. He beat Ding Liren with Black in round 1 and arrived at the midway point with an even score. With 4 Whites remaining and a veneer of unpredictability, his chances should not be discounted.

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Ding Liren (photo Maria Emelianova)

Ah Ding, what could have been. The dynamic World No. 3 seemed to be the hipster pick to win the tournament prior to its first half. But he disappointed, perhaps thrown off by multiple quarantines and the surreal circumstances of the first half of the FIDE Candidates Tournament. Now, he will likely need a historic run to enter the winners circle. Before picking Fabiano, ChessDojos GM Jesse Kraai told me:

I think Ding is at the same level (of play) as Fabi, but he has less points! Dings first game is crucial, because if he can avenge his Black loss to Wang Hao with a win of his own, he will have a legitimate chance.

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Kirill Alekseenko (photo Lennart Ootes)

The youngest, lowest-rated participant managed five draws with two losses against the worlds stiffest competition. Now he, along with Svidler as his second, returns to Yekaterinaburg looking to learn a few things and raise his profile even higher. Alekseenko has been quiet during quarantine and is young enough that seeing him take another leap in chess strength would not be shocking. He is unlikely to win the tournament, but a landscape-altering upset or two is entirely possible for the young Russian GM.

When I messaged former FIDE World Champion GM Ruslan Ponomariov for his take on this tournament, he nodded to former World Champion Garry Kasparovs prediction prior to the first half of the Candidates:

(Caruana and Ding) are huge favorites, he said. You need a natural disaster for one of them not to win."

His point, of course, is that a healthy amount of modesty is required when venturing predictions. Ponomariov nonetheless did go on to say that he thinks Nepomniachtchi is the most-likely winner.

And I feel similarly. If making one pick, it seems silly to go against Nepo. But I will say that anything can happen with a mere seven games per participant, so I am optimistic about the chances of Grischuk, Giri and Wang Hao relative to the markets and models.

In any event, I am so excited for this next chapter of chess history to finally be written. Whoever you are rooting for, lets all hope for good health amongst the participants and tournament staff -- and for the drama to take place only on the chessboard!

* The Unibet odds have been converted from American style to percentages, then the substantial vigorish was removed and the numbers were rounded off, with the help of Benjamin Portheault. Due to rounding errors, the total Unibet percentages add up to 98%, but hey! At least we are close.

# Here is Tais brief explanation of how the model was created: "I use a Monte Carlo model to predict the tournament results, meaning I simulate the event thousands of times based on the players' ratings, and use those simulations to determine the odds of each possible result occurring."

(shout out to Teimour Radjabov as well, his good judgment deserved a better fate)

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Picking the Candidates, Again -- With Ben Johnson! | US Chess.org - uschess.org