Archive for the ‘Chess’ Category

Chess the barometer of a nation’s health – TheArticle

This chess column is the commencement of my weekly contributions to TheArticle, and I must express my gratitude to editor Daniel Johnson, for giving me the opportunity to explore this new way forwards.

For some time I have felt that traditional newspaper chess columns, designed to appeal to the general chess enthusiast (rather than the devoted chess expert) are failing to keep pace with 21st-century technology. Papers are indeed paying minimal homage to modern technology by reproducing material online, but without the ability to play over games on screen, this represents little more than offering the same fare online as in print.

Readers and fans will still need a chessboard and pieces to follow a game. In contrast, the modern chess column should be accessible anywhere that readers have mobile communications. To enjoy a chess column, you should not need to be stuck at home with a chess set.

This column will be different. I will not be spending time on analysing the latest wrinkle in the Chelyabinsk sub variation of the Sveshnikov line of the Sicilian Defence from the game between Bonsch Osmolovsky and Dus Chotimirsky played in the the Union Championship of Magnetogorsk. Rather, to adapt a phrase from Stefan Zweig, I will focus on what I describe as Sternstunden der Schachheit: stellar moments from the rich and diverse archives of chess, which seek to place the game in its historical, cultural and even financial context.

Games will be made available by linking towww.chessgames.coma free website which not only gives you access to instantly replayable games onscreen, but also invites readers to contribute their own comments to the analytical debate. There is also a computerised analysis function to add an extra dimension of enlightenment, should it be desired.

My inaugural focus of specific interest will be the annual Hastings tournament, which was founded in 1895, with probably the strongest chess tournament ever held up to that time. This years Hastings finishes during the first week of January and at some point I shall return to the 2020 event.

During the 19th century the UK experienced a kind of love affair with chess. The first ever international chess tournament took place in London 1851, with powerful tournaments across the country to follow, of which Hastings 1895 was, at that time, the most impressive. Moreover, Masters and champions of world status regularly gravitated to London, including Paul Morphy, Wilhelm Steinitz , Johannes Zukertort and Emanuel Lasker. Their names are still inscribed on the famous chessboard at Londons Simpsons in the Strand.

Our 19th-century love affair with chess went out with a bang in 1899, when the greatest tournament held anywhere up to that time (exceeding even Hastings) was staged in London. But this was to be the swansong. Over the next 46 years only one significant match, a mere six Grandmaster tournaments and the inaugural chess Olympiad were to be held in London. And worse was to come; between 1947 and 1972, a period of 25 years, no single Grandmaster level tournament was staged in London at all! Hastings was left to carry the flag through all this time as the sole regular Grandmaster level chess tournament in the UK.

How can this be explained?

The answer is that these chess tournaments provide an alarmingly accurate barometer of the financial health of the nation. Chess tournaments famously produce great beauty, intellectual depth, fabulous publicity and profound artistry, but very little hard revenue. They, therefore, flourish in environments where there is wealth to spare. From 1895 to 1899 Britain might have been thought to be at the zenith of her imperial might and wealth, yet the nations riches were about to be sucked into the running sore of the Boer war, which in current terms cost 20 billion pounds. Meanwhile, the nations attention was soon to be diverted by diplomatic, armaments and, ultimately, overt military conflict with the Kaisers Germany.

Howard Staunton, the founder of the 1851 tournament, and great Victorian polymath, believed, and wrote, that chess was the appropriate recreation for men of genius, and in spite of the counter-attractions of computer games, that description remains true to the present day.

In this respect, Hastings 1895 was fortunate in witnessing a number of outstanding cerebral masterpieces, the most thrilling of which was the victory by former world champion Steinitz against the German master Von Bardeleben. When the loser conceded, Steinitz was threatened with checkmate, and every single one of his pieces was under attack . . . yet he was still able to demonstrate a forced win.

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Chess the barometer of a nation's health - TheArticle

2020 NFL Draft: Why Clemson’s Isaiah Simmons is the ultimate chess piece that the Giants and Lions are missing – CBS Sports

Clemson's Isaiah Simmons can not be labeled as a linebacker or safety or slot cornerback. It would be unfair to his skill set. Fans witnessed his rare ability recently in the College Football Playoff National Championship. He can play a handful of positions, which is why he is so valuable to NFL teams.

During the regular season, Simmons played five different positions, according to Jordan Reid of The Draft Network. He spent 253 of 635 eligible snaps (40 percent) as a slot cornerback. He also spent 166 snaps at safety (26.1 percent), 132 snaps at outside linebacker (20.1 percent), 72 snaps at inside linebacker (11.3 percent) and 12 snaps as a boundary cornerback (1.9 percent).

There is an old saying that goes "Jack of all trades, master of none." Simmons is the exception to that rule. He excels in so many different areas on the field, which makes him a perfect fit for the modern NFL. Teams with a top-five pick like the Lions (No. 3) and Giants (No. 4) should think long and hard before passing on such a versatile player who is athletically gifted in all his role and who creates a difficult visual for opposing quarterbacks. Prior to the snap, the quarterback is trying to read where each player is on the field and predict their task on that particular play.

Here is an example: Denver Broncos cornerback Chris Harris Jr. walks onto the field. He might blitz but, in all likelihood, his assignment is to mirror the slot receiver. In the same game, edge rusher Von Miller walks onto the field. His 112.5 career sacks versus three interceptions are an indicator that his coach is asking him to rush the passer, not drop into coverage. Safety Justin Simmons then walks onto the field. He could be sent on a blitz but his four interceptions this season did not happen in the backfield. Before the snap, the quarterback is reading each of these players. He visualizes where they are positioned, who they are communicating with and any step they take to tip off post-snap movement. Those are typically solidified roles.

Finally, Isaiah Simmons walks onto the field. The quarterback has no idea what he will do on any given play. He could line up as a single high safety and later crash the backfield because of his speed. He could line up off-ball, drop into coverage and take away half the field. On one particular play, he lines up in the box. The quarterback reads run support or maybe blitz. The snap, Simmons suddenly bolts back into coverage. Now, the quarterback's first read is gone. He frantically starts working through his progressions, which only gives Miller more time to get home for a sack. That's just one example of how the Kansas native impacts play.

Pictures and videos say a thousand words, right? Here are some examples of plays that the junior has already completed.

On this play, Simmons is playing on the edge spying the quarterback. Watch as the quarterback commits to one direction and the Clemson star reacts, bursting towards the ball.

Here is another example. On the first play, against Ohio State, Simmons is playing single high safety. He reads the eyes of quarterback Justin Fields and covers half the field to come over and make an interception.

One more play: Simmons is playing safety again but closer to the box. He breaks hard on a shallow crossing route underneath. The play is stopped for a short gain.

He is such an instinctual player. One trait that immediately drew my attention to Simmons is his consistency as an open field tackler. If you have ever walked through a wooded area, Simmons is the burr that gets attached to your clothes. You're not really sure how it even got there, but it freeing itself from your clothes is not really an option. If you are still not convinced, maybe this will help: Simmons once went toe to toe with running back Travis Etienne in a foot race. Etienne is a likely second-round pick and one of the fastest players in the 2020 NFL Draft class. Do not be surprised when he leads the pack as a vertical jumper at the NFL combine either.

One of my favorite plays in film study went like this: The Tigers were playing South Carolina. Simmons is covering wide receiver Shi Smith, who is smaller in stature but fast, down the field. It is simply not enough for him to mirror the receiver down the field with his length and take away the play, Simmons actually gets his head around to find the ball and knock it down. He tackles with such great balance and changes directions well. There is nothing that he can not do.

As of writing this Jan. 16, Simmons had not yet declared for the 2020 NFL Draft. It is likely that he will, and he will be rewarded as a top-10 pick. He has been a top-five talent in my rankings from the beginning but he currently sits at No. 6 in our CBS Sports composite rankings. Several teams could use a defensive chess piece like him, but keep an eye on the Detroit Lions, New York Giants, Carolina Panthers and Arizona Cardinals.

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2020 NFL Draft: Why Clemson's Isaiah Simmons is the ultimate chess piece that the Giants and Lions are missing - CBS Sports

Might & Magic: Chess Royale is a Mash-up of Auto Chess and Battle Royale, Launching January 30 on Android – DroidGamers

Ubisoft is continuing its crusade to try and make money from the Might & Magic license by creating a mash-up of the two most popular genres on mobile right now, Auto Chess and battle royale.

The upcoming mobile game goes by the incredibly creative title Might & Magic: Chess Royale. We bet that was a long board meeting trying to come up with that.

Chess Royale pits you against 99 other opponents to determine who is the last person standing. Each round, your team will face a single opponents team, and the winner progresses while the loser is knocked out.

Youll recruit heroes and units from the franchises history and upgrade them each round. Its like a standard Auto Chess game in that respect.

Each match is designed to be over within 10 minutes, so dont worry about them lasting hours as is typical of the genre.

You can pre-register for Might & Magic: Chess Royale right now on Google Play, if you find the thought of it interesting. It launches January 30 on Android.

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Might & Magic: Chess Royale is a Mash-up of Auto Chess and Battle Royale, Launching January 30 on Android - DroidGamers

Check Em: Texas Tech Knight Raiders dominate at the Pan-Am Chess Championship – KLBK | KAMC | EverythingLubbock.com

LUBBOCK, Texas (NEWS RELEASE) The following is a news release from Texas Tech University:

At the end of each of the six rounds of the 2019 Pan-American Intercollegiate Chess Championship, the competitors facing the Texas Tech University A Team all heard the same thing: checkmate.

We won all six matches, saidTexas Tech Knight RaidersCoach Alex Onischuk.That is very unusualto achieve in this tournament I dont remember the last time when a team finished 6-0 in this competition.

But thats just what the team did, earning first place in the tournament, held Dec. 27-30 at the Charlotte Chess Center in Charlotte, North Carolina. The win secured Texas Techs spot at the Presidents Cup, also known as the Final Four of College Chess, April 3-5 in New York City.

This is the ninth time in program history Texas Tech has qualified for the Final Four. Texas Tech won the Final Four in 2011 and 2012.

To earn the top spot at the 2019 Pan-American tournament, Texas Tech beat teams from Ohio State University, Harvard University, the University of Texas-Rio Grande Valley, Saint Louis University (SLU) and University of Texas at Dallas (UTD).

Starting from round three, we were playing very tough opponents and winning all our matches with the smallest margins, Onischuk said. The toughest was the final round against the University of Texas at Dallas. About two hours into the round, it lookedlike wewere going to lose, but our guys managed to turn the tables around. After almost five hours of play, we eventually won.

Im also happy for our womens team.They finished first among the womens teams and overall placed 34th.

Sixty-three teams competed at the Pan-American Championship this year, including three teams from Texas Tech. The A Team took first place with 6 points, the Womens Team earned first place among womens teams and 34th place overall with 3 points, and the B Team placed 26th, also with 3 points.

The Texas Techs A Team win broke a recent streak at the Pan-American Championship by Webster University, which has won the tournament every year since 2012, except for Texas Techs first-place win in 2015. Webster, which placed second (5 points), will join Texas Tech at the Final Four, along with third-place SLU (5 points) and fourth-place UTD (5 points).

We all feel very happy of course, Onischuk said. Before the tournament, we hoped we could get into the Final Four and, with very good play, maybe even win. But nobody expected us todominate this event. It was really a team effort. Everyone played well, and in every round, we had someone who would make a decisive victory.

Onischuk said he and the players are looking forward to competing in New York City this spring.

We will have a competitive team at the Final Four, Onischuk said. I feel that we are getting better with every tournament. Im optimistic. Our players got even more confident, and I know they will be ready.

The 12 students who competed at the tournament were:

For a full listing of the 2019 Pan-American final standings,visit the tournament website.

About the Texas Tech Chess ProgramTheTexas Tech Chess Programwas established within theDivision of Diversity, Equity & Inclusionin 2007. The Knight Raiders, the universitys chess team, has since earned more than 10 national titles and the program was named Chess College of the Year in 2014. Head coach and director Alex Onischuk was named Grandmaster of the Year in 2014 and has been ranked as one of the top 100 players in the world for the past 20 years. In 2018, Onischuk was inducted into the Chess Hall of Fame.

(News release from Texas Tech University)

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Check Em: Texas Tech Knight Raiders dominate at the Pan-Am Chess Championship - KLBK | KAMC | EverythingLubbock.com

In chess game with Iran, Trump has only bad options – Haaretz

WASHINGTON The Trump administration is facing a dilemma in Iraq. A day after the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad was stormed by pro-Iranian demonstrators, the White House needs to decide how to respond to the attack which U.S. officials have no doubt was planned and orchestrated with Iranian approval. Trump has promised to punish Iran for its actions, but how far is he willing to go in this confrontation with the Islamic Republic?

The attack on the embassy was preceded by a week of violence in Iraq, during which an Iraqi Shiite militia operating as a proxy for Iran attacked an Iraqi military base, killing a U.S. civilian contractor and wounding several U.S. troops. In retaliation, the United States carried out three airstrikes on the same Iraqi militia, killing at least 25 fighters.

Listen: Under Trump, haters don't need an excuse to attack Jews. Ep. 55

These events, which took place during the last week of 2019, represent a violent end to a year of constant tensions between the Americans and Iranians. They are the continuation of a series of escalatory steps taken by Iran during the course of the year including an attack on two major oil installations in Saudi Arabia last September, and the downing of an American military drone over the Persian Gulf last June. But while the United States refrained from using military force in response to Irans provocations then, things were different this time. That is why several leading Democratic politicians warned Tuesday that Trump is risking an all-out war with Iran.

Iran is acting out because it is under a lot of pressure from American sanctions, says Tamara Cofman Wittes, a former State Department Middle East director who is currently a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. The Iranians have been slowly and deliberately escalating their attacks, basically telling the United States: If you put us under pressure, we will put you under pressure as well. She believes the Iranian regime will likely continue this behavior in 2020.

The Iranians saw that there was no military response to their previous attacks, so they reached a conclusion that America doesnt want a military confrontation, Cofman Wittes says. The Iranians also dont want a military confrontation with the U.S. and thats certainly not what theyre trying to achieve with these provocations in Iraq. They have a different goal: Getting Trump to enter negotiations.

Risky moves

In May 2018, Trump withdrew the United States from the Iran nuclear deal, which had been signed by his predecessor Barack Obama. The U.S. administration has since placed tough sanctions on Tehran, triggering a financial crisis there that has led to massive street protests across Iran. However, at the same time as imposing these tough sanctions, Trump has also frequently expressed interest in negotiating a new deal with Iran.

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Earlier this month, after Iran and America completed a prisoner swap, he tweeted: Thank you to Iran on a very fair negotiation. See, we can make a deal together!

Over the summer, direct negotiations between the two countries seemed imminent. Trump said he was willing to meet Iranian President Hassan Rohani with no preconditions. But the Iranian side had a clear demand: The Americans had to lift some of the sanctions placed on Tehran in order for a meeting to occur. Trump refused, and an opportunity for the two leaders to meet on the sidelines of Septembers UN General Assembly was lost.

Now, Cofman Wittes says, Iran is trying to escalate the situation in the hope that this will somehow lead to renewed diplomatic engagement. They want to pull in diplomatic attention from other countries such as France, Russia, China, Japan and others to somehow get America to the table. Their moves are risky, but theyre designed to bring about a diplomatic engagement, she says. This is what Iran needs more than anything at the moment: new talks that could perhaps lead to sanctions relief.

Haaretz reported last month that Israeli officials were still alarmed by the prospect of new negotiations between the United States and Iran. The Israeli perspective is that even if no sanctions are lifted, the mere spectacle of a meeting between Trump and Rohani would by itself lift some of the pressure from Tehran. Trump has rejected that point of view and sees no harm in holding a meeting.

The Iranians are going to keep going and going with these attacks if they dont get what they want, unless they become convinced that this could lead to a larger military escalation, Cofman Wittes says. Neither side wants that kind of escalation.

Last June, after the Iranian attack on the U.S. military drone, Trump approved a military strike in retaliation but then canceled it, fearing that a war with Iran could hurt his 2020 reelection campaign.

Grave mistake

The attack on the embassy in Baghdad is part of a larger chess match between the U.S. and Iran, says Michael Doran, a former Middle East director at the National Security Council under President George W. Bush, and currently a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute. Doran shares Cofman Wittes assessment of Tehrans objective: The goal of the Iranians is to increase the pressure on Trump during the election season, in the hope that they can rope him into a negotiation.

Doran, who has advocated a hawkish line against the Iranian regime and was a strong critic of the 2015 nuclear deal, adds that Iran hopes new negotiations will distract the United States from Irans problems at home, and in Iraq and Lebanon where there have been massive street demonstrations in recent weeks against political parties connected to Iran.

In addition, he says, Iran wants negotiations to lead to sanctions relief and to forestall further actions by the United States that would delegitimate Irans supposedly civil nuclear program.

In Dorans view, it would a grave mistake if Trump agreed to such negotiations. The protests that swept Iran, Iraq and Lebanon in November have changed the balance of power. Iran is experiencing unprecedented difficulty at home and abroad. If Trump were to sit with Iran now, he would look weak in the region, demoralize allies and give breathing room to Tehran.

If Trump doesnt opt for negotiations and doesnt want a direct military confrontation with Iran, what are his options?

The administration doesnt have really good options to choose from, says Ariane Tabatabai, an analyst at the Rand Corp. and an expert on Iran. The administration keeps saying that its policy of maximum pressure on Iran is succeeding, but what exactly have they achieved? she asks. They wanted to either lead to the collapse of the regime or to a significant shift in Irans behavior. So far, both have not happened.

Tabatabai says the only option for de-escalation right now is a diplomatic off-ramp that would allow both sides to get out of this cycle. But it doesnt look very likely to happen at the moment. The Iranians view Trump as reluctant to take military action, but they consider maximum pressure a form of war. From their point of view, this is already a war and they are being attacked through economic pressure. So they are going to continue testing the Trump administration.

Wanted: A strategy

All of the Iran experts who spoke with Haaretz agreed on one thing: The attack on the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad was an Iranian initiative and not a local protest, as some news reports described it.

This is telegraphed from Iran, straight out of the regimes playbook, says Behnam Ben Taleblu, an Iran expert at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies a think tank that has advocated for tough sanctions on Iran.

The regime wants to spook America, he says. They hope to either get Trump to agree to negotiations, or, even better, to get America to withdraw forces and send a message of retreat. They would be happy to solidify the impression that America is getting out of the Middle East, whether its in Syria or Iraq. They are willing to take risks to make that happen.

Ben Taleblu says last Sundays U.S. airstrikes were very important, because they sent the opposite message: That the United States would not ignore Irans actions. But he warned that the administration needs to have an Iraq policy, not just a policy to fight ISIS in Iraq. Its clear to everyone what Iran wants to have in Iraq: control. They want to control Baghdad through their proxies. But what does America want in Iraq? Thats more difficult to answer.

Cofman Wittes also says the Trump administration doesnt have a strategy, or even clear objectives. They placed sanctions on Iran and have now responded for the first time with military force to one of Irans provocations. But what is the long-term goal they are trying to achieve? And what is their strategy for getting there?

The Iranian conundrum is further complicated by the political schedule in the United States. The Iranians, as Haaretz reported in August 2018, are betting that they can wait out Trump, who is up for reelection in November. So far, most of the Democratic presidential candidates have promised to return to the nuclear deal that Trump withdrew from. For Iran, this would mean the lifting of many sanctions and a return to the pre-2018 reality that was created by the nuclear deal.

But the Iranians also believe the presidential election will make it more difficult for Trump to take stronger military action. Trump campaigned in 2016 on a pledge to end stupid wars in the Middle East, and criticized his then rival, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, for her support of the 2003 invasion of Iraq (which Trump himself also supported at the time).

Trump has been warned by some of his most influential supporters, such as Fox News host Tucker Carlson, that a war with Iran would harm his standing with voters who oppose U.S. military involvement in the Middle East, and could cost him the election.

The Democrats have already adopted a line of criticism against Trump, warning that he is leading the country to war through reckless policies in the Middle East. This could deter Trump from further military escalation. But he is also facing political pressure from right-wingers, especially his evangelical Christian supporters, who want to see a tough policy against Iran.

At the moment, it seems, Trump is taking political risks no matter what he chooses to do.

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In chess game with Iran, Trump has only bad options - Haaretz