War: what is it good for? Absolutely nothing…well according to Edward Starr, though I’d be curious to hear his take on why after 500 years of peace, all Switzerland ever invented was the cuckoo clock… but perhaps such comedic, undergraduate afterthoughts are best left for another time? How about the internet and its ensuing digital revolution: what is that good for? Absolutely nothing other than wasting a few hours everyday and winding up a few fellow chess players online? Not true. Although on-line chess certainly has its pitfalls. Personally, I avoid the main sites as the etiquette of many registered leaves a lot to be desired.

When chess was booming in the late 70’s and early 80’s, after the Fischer and Spassky match, correspondence chess was popular across the globe. Even the best literature of the day, such as Webb’s Chess for Tigers contains a highly useful chapter on it. But as the popularity of chess has waned since and sought electronic formats as well, correspondence chess has suffered accordingly, with only a few die hard fans propping it up these days. Our modern age offers a middle path though, chess by e-mail! If you click on the following link you can find the International E-mail Chess Club, of which I have been a member for about two years now. http://www.chess-iecc.com .

How it works is that you will be paired up with someone within 200 points of your rating. After that you correspond with your opponent and send each other a move within five days of the last. The website is for those who enjoy their chess. There are no annoying little kids, cheats, and people who become rude the second they start losing. There are no frills, its just solid chess for those who love their chess. The site is run efficiently, it is rare that a problem of any kind occurs.

However, I should point out that there are principal differences between chess by correspondence (electronic or otherwise) and over the board chess. I’m not a professional player by any means so I cannot talk at great length. The only advice I can give is to read Webb’s Chess for Tigers. The principle difference, I’ve noticed, is that there is no -real- time constraint as in over the board chess, so you should expect your poor moves to be punished, if you yourself do not use the time available to you. I’m constantly surprised by how consistent the play of my opponents is. Correspondence chess is great for tuning up your skills of analysis and many who play it regularly calculate well. One of the reasons for that is, I think, that you are working with a real board yourself rather than sitting staring at some snazzy interface: though as Webb mentions, an important caveat is when analyzing, its easy to set up the position wrongly if you have just spent days looking at sidelines…I think I’ve already lost 3 games through doing that because I was so caught up in my own analysis.

If you are uncertain of the importance of the digital revolution, then how about a short interview by Lucianio Floridi? An admirably self-confident man who I got to know for a short while whilst studying.

http://philosophybites.com/2009/06/luciano-floridi-on-the-fourth-revolution.html

 

‘Love is the extremely difficult realization that something other than oneself is real. Love, and so art and morals, is the discovery of reality.’ Iris Murdoch – The Sublime and The Good

No sooner had I come in from the cold in some ex-soviet backwater, than I got roped into a quickplay tournament by the sweaty ChaoPraya river, Bangkok in some chess-themed bar entitled ‘The Checkmate Bar and Bistro’. A recent change in the law in Thailand states that whilst ensconced in the country, foreigners must now spend their entire savings on alcohol as opposed to a mere 95%, as per usual. Unfortunately for we chess players, the only appropriately themed bar in the country just had to be devoid of atmosphere and for those who want to be part of the ‘in crowd’ only. Thankfully, the ‘in crowd’ lurk during the evenings when the whole area comes to life (more on that to come). During the day it is dead. That few dozen melancholy woodpushers of which I was one, were left to wander around in the sweltering sun, far away from that filth that is the non-chess-playing pubic.

Not a number, not a free man… .

Since I play so infrequently, I thought that the tournament might help show where I’m at with my chess, given that I will participate in a major tournament next month….if my FIDE ID can be reactivated in time that is. Until I become a number again, I am not free to play in any official FIDE tournament. In an act of embittered patriotism, I was denumbered after being away from England’s green and pleasant lands for too long by the ECF.

I went window shopping today, I bought four windows! – Tommy Cooper

I’d never been to Asiatique, where the Checkmate Bar & Bistro is itself; Asiatique is a night bazaar, at best a pastiche of Asian culture for tourists, local teenagers, the occasional entrepreneur, and just about anyone out of the six million or so nearby; at worst, it’s a packed, over-priced, pretentious free for all lacking in any real character. In Asia most nationalities are either indifferent to, ignorant of, or utterly contemptuous towards one another, and when ethnic minorities or indigenous peoples’ become involved, attitudes become even more ungracious, generally speaking of course! Thankfully, whilst eating each others’ food and drinking their beer, all is forgotten. Even the Chinese can get stuck into some Sukiyaki whilst guzzling Asahi without fear of indigestion should the horrors of the Nanjing Massacre ever repeat on them during their meals -hence the commercial, not cultural, success of Asiatique. I thought that once the sun went down over the river; the Ferris wheel standing over it, the free boat rides along it, the endless lanes of stalls and entertainers leading to it, the crowds of shoppers wandering along it, and the light shows that shone onto it would be nice for the little one to see -and I was indeed correct.

I cannot think of any need in childhood as strong as the need for a father’s protection -Freud. Society and its Discontents

Even though parenthood and playing chess do not compliment one another well in such close proximity, I could not leave Grace for the weekend for chess. My daughter owes her very existence to chess, as it was at a tournament where I first met her mother. Even her name carries a slight sense of her father’s optimism, as her initials are GM (I requested that no middle name be given so she could be forever entitled). It always seems right, rudimentary even, to bring her along to tournaments, though never quite logical: if, however, logic is concerned solely with the present that is. As any sensible parent can tell you, in having children you are, quintessentially, committed to their future and its unfolding. And planning in the context of parenthood requires much more diligence and care than in chess for if you get it wrong over the board you only lose your position/game, but as a father the consequences of a poorly formed plan can be far more reaching. Circumspection is tuned more finely by parenting than chess…and so a day’s chess became the backdrop for a family outing with the calm vital between rounds impinged upon heavily by parental duties and the calm during play disrupted frequently by the need to check that all is fine with the little one.

Tragedy strikes after a solid start

Something so very, very odd happened on the way home. I fell asleep in the taxi, only awaking when we finally arrived home. I do not remember the last time that happened, it was many years ago for sure. Then, when I managed to climb the stairs, I fell asleep again for hours more even though the tv was blaring out, the lights were on full, my wife was chatting to her mum, Grace kept climbing all over me because she wanted to play, but the sleep I fell into was so deep that I could neither move nor respond. Grace even gave me a little kiss at one point when she saw I wasn’t moving but I could do nothing. When I finally awoke, I couldn’t walk properly. Somehow I had slipped into a state of chronic fatigue. Eventually I woke at 3 pm the next day. I had missed the entire second day. Unbelievable!

Nothing more than a mere caricature in a strange land?

Whilst stuck in snowy Azerbaijan, somehow I just ate, and drank, and ate, and ate, and ate and lost my appetite for chess altogether. Worse, I stopped exercising too, became untalkative and rather unhappy, suddenly 15 kgs heavier. I suspect I was still paying the price for such indulgence as on the eve of the tournament, I had to check if I was doing the right thing…what a pity that the timing was so awful. Only those who enjoy keeping fit and exercising regularly can truly understand this paragraph I think.

The saddest of all expressions… .

What is the worst expression a chess player could ever hear? It must surely be the words ‘I hate chess’. But what could cause someone to say such a thing with such venom directly to me? Only those who are forced to play chess against their wishes. I wasn’t the opponent but I did see the game unfold until both became too fed up to continue. I found it saddening to see children being forced into playing chess, they ought to choose what they do with their free time. Though my child will grow up around chess I would never force her to play or do anything she didn’t want to for that matter. Hopefully she will take an interest in it herself (Grace if you are reading this as an adult please take note) but if she doesn’t that’s fine too.

Cruel words sleep above me, mounting and teasing… .

After almost four decades of playing chess I fell asleep during a quickplay game for the first time ever…ah the joys of occasional chess!

Ye Olde daughter at the grand old age of 11 days

Ye Olde daughter at the grand old age of 11 days

Even our resident Grandmaster couldn't draw inspiration from the surroundings.

Even our resident Grandmaster couldn’t draw inspiration from the surroundings.

The irrepressible Tommy, once disrupted some chess action in Luton in the early nineties, owing to his wonderful humour.

The irrepressible Tommy, once disrupted some chess action in Luton in the early nineties, owing to his wonderful humour

The greatest vocalist and front man since the alleged bang bang...his skin isn't a layer of soot.

The greatest vocalist and front man since the alleged big bang occurred a few years back….or whenever it was…his skin isn’t a layer of soot, I doubt whether cruel words mount above him. A man even more obscure than myself.

Once upon a time... I mean when I did my MA I took a trip to north Wales to do a photo shoot here. I was a number back then to, and (drum roll please) a free man...any thoughts on the font used in the image, its history and the instrument that fashioned it?

Once upon a time… I mean when I did my MA I took a trip to north Wales to do a photo shoot here. I was a number back then too, and (drum roll please) a free man…any thoughts on the font used in the image, its history and the instrument that fashioned it?

The Love of Wood

No this is not a post about a gung-ho policeman and his truncheon but a link to a Dutch documentary from the 70’s; lovers of chess, long-hair, questionable attire, smoking at the board, wooden sets, an endless cacophony of plosives, and shoddy camera work may read on.

When they are not misreporting, posting dubious academia that cannot find its way into print or getting carried away with hyperbole, sometimes Chessbase posts content worth paying attention to. I was delighted to see the documentary ‘The Love of Wood’, which can be found here:

If you are interested in the games mentioned within it, you can find links to them below the video itself. I haven’t linked the original Chessbase page as several of the claims made are, as per usual, inaccurate and the aforementioned games cannot be found there either. It’s dated 17/02/14, so find it yourself if you’re interested.

A point made by Chessbase that is worth mentioning, however, is that the documentary is made for chess players, and doesn’t shy away from the more technical aspects of the game. This should please us chess fans. Donner makes a number of interesting claims, and the interview with Euwe was well-handled I thought. You may need to tweak the options button to get the English subtitles.

Well worth a watch.

A quiz which tests your ‘Chess Personality’ has appeared on the net. It’s a bit of fun for a few minutes and not much more. I got ‘mastermind’ whatever that is supposed to mean

http://www.chesspersonality.com/

Our Catholic friends are at it again. A hot-tempered Italian and an Irishman (probably drunk during play) played a late night game of chess, which resulted in a throat being cut open, many other knife wounds as well as other details that the police could not reveal. Even old King Canute never got that carried away… .

Ghastly stuff… .

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jan/13/chess-murder-dublin

Across the Board

In general I consider that in chess everything rests on tactics. If one thinks of strategy as a block of marble, then tactics are the chisel with which a master operates, in creating works of chess art.  –  Tigran Petrosian

If like myself you are a bit of a cynic when it comes to journalism in chess, you may have developed an eye for that worthy of attention. If so, perhaps you noticed the BBC Radio 4 production Across the Board by Dominic Lawson?

The caliber of the journalism is high as you would expect. In each episode a game is played between Dominic and his interlocutor, during which discussion is held about chess and how it has changed the lives of his opponents. There are five episodes in total, with opponents ranging from Politicians to Boxers, Political Prisoners, and even a certain Women’s World Champion.

I found Across the Board to be engaging, carefully researched and deft in touch. Dominic’s style is to converse by expanding on a series on well-chosen questions. The first episode in particular was handled very sensitively and with great dexterity. It was interesting to hear Mr.Healy’s side of his treatment by Faber and Faber, and for me, completely believable. Perhaps a minor criticism may concern the suitability of Hou Yifan. As lovely as she is, I thought she was, perhaps, too young and inexperienced for such a thing -was her inclusion a tip of the hat to chess fans?

The link to all episodes is below in case you missed it. If you are reading this from Jan 2015 onwards, I’m afraid you’ll have to root them out elsewhere. I hope we see Dominic at next year’s Thai Open. Apologies if my daughter’s screaming put him off his pasta during lunch that time last year…hopefully Ms. Trouble won’t cause so much commotion if I can make it this time.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b03pc5q9/episodes/guide

The tactician must know what to do whenever something needs doing;the strategist must know what to do when nothing needs doing.  –  Savielly Tartakower

Queen Sacrifice

Queen Sacrifice is a short film that won many awards in its day. I remember it being shown on BBC 2 in the winter of 1989 but have not seen it since. Though, superficially, the work may appear utterly pointless it is quite a clever, light-hearted piece of work, the only real difficulty is working out if the writer is a chess player or not. The chess action is so quirky it’s hard to tell, though I suspect not.

MJM

Magnus on VGTV

As 2013 comes to a close and my inability to book a train ticket to Tbilisi in time has scuppered my plans for the new year, I will use some of the break ahead to catch up on the many films and documentaries which have appeared on Chessbase recently, linking the best of them on this site. In this post, however, I’ve linked an interview with Magnus instead, as it is impressive on many levels and certainly worth a watch even if you are not an admirer.

Interviewing is an art in itself, and like top-flight chess requires much preparation and understanding of your subject/opponent, some creativity and an ability to seize the moment don’t go amiss also. What I particularly liked about this interview is that it is exemplifies both how to conduct an interview professionally and just how difficult it is to show chess players in a more revealing light. To do this, the interviewer probes the mind of Magnus for 30 minutes, and quite skillfully at times too. Even though some of the questions asked are a little uncomfortable for him, they are handled by his interlocutor with a level of sensitivity that allows the conversation to flow sufficiently. That may sound insignificant but its not. As you will see, Magnus cannot help but ponder or think deeply about even the most trivial of questions, thus getting the subject talking is a tough ask for our non-chess playing friends. Perhaps that was why I did notice the occasional lack of finesse too. Some of the earlier attempts to flatter Magnus weren’t effective and the question ‘What makes you cry?’ asked so directly, isn’t likely to get much of a reply from a shy 23 year old male on tv. You would never have seen Frost blunder like that in his heyday. Anyway, enjoy.

http://www.vgtv.no/#!/video/76074/intervjuet-magnus-carlsen-english-subtitles/offsetVideoTime=1777531

MJM

Malpractice

The slow motion replay doesn’t show how fast the ball was actually travelling – Richie Benaud

In England, there’s much pub-talk about where people were when important historical events occured, such as Armstrong landing on the moon or when England won the world cup or when the great fire of London broke out, and so on, and so on. My question is where were you when McShane played 2 Nf3 against Anand’s Caro-Kann at the opening of the 5th London Chess Classic? For me…well I’d rather not say…I was helping a friend fix his washing machine but became trapped inside the bloody thing, anyway… .

At the beginning of December 2013, the London Chess Classic coincided with The Ashes down under (that’s cricket to all you saddo no-lifes out there), fans of both spent an exceptionally long weekend trying to keep up with the action. An almost improbable task given that we only had eight days for the chess and a mere five for the cricket. Like most, I had to take a week off work to recover from the excitement then several more from the tragedy of it all -well almost. Surprisingly, my request for such time off was not given the seriousness I had hoped for.

The crowd roars it’s deep and so unhealthy… .

Their gloomy beginnings left behind long ago, both chess and cricket now offer a resplendent, high-tech horizon where viewers across the globe can follow the action like never before. But looming on this horizon lies a dark foreboding menace beyond anything vocalist Mike Patton ever ingratiated his audiences with.

Purgatory and the gnashing of teeth…is our top GM going to play 1. b3 or 1. b4 today?

In search of greater revenue both chess and cricket have been forced to modernize themselves in favour of faster, sexier formats. In cricket, the patience batsmen need to build an innings has been steadily eroded by the dominance of one-day internationals and twenty-twenty, where the object of the game is to blast every ball into orbit and beyond, meaning that even world class batsmen (most of the English and some of the Aussie top order) now constantly get out to risky shots that people didn’t play with such regularity ten-twenty years ago, as we saw all too often in the third test. In chess, we now get quick-play tournaments where top Grand masters allow themselves to be checkmated having barely got out of the opening, and where ex-world champions lose in a manner which even beginners would be embarrassed by, as we saw in the London Chess Classic.

Do you feel sometimes that age is against you?

I didn’t follow-up on Kramnik’s defense of his knock-out loss, I assumed there isn’t one. Instead we can only reflect upon the pressure inflicted by such insidious time-controls, and ask ourselves if something is wrong when watching great players blunder game after game becomes synonymous with entertainment for the masses? Mistakes are part of the game at all levels but when the format of the game invites them with such certainty, something much more precious is lost.

The null of losing, can you afford that luxury?

Viewing on line for free I don’t want to sound harsh, especially when those involved did their best, but I for one would be more than willing to pay for a VPN and a choice of game with full commentary instead of what we were given…it was a shame to see the commentary team struggle with the revamped format of the fifth London Chess Classic but was it inevitable? Commentating on one quick-play game between two players, both of whom are several hundred rating points above you is hard enough, but four simultaneously is sheer folly.

The world expects a pose…perfectly natural?

Personally, I don’t like to see GMs making a mess of things. We ought to watch top-flight chess to see how things are done properly and not how they aren’t done properly. If I wanted to watch that, I could just go along to the nearest club and watch some games there.

It’s the thing you hate the most…the thing you hate almost.

Why did the London classic change its format? There are reasons, the main one being the proximity of the Vishy-Magnus match and the participants unwillingness to play classical chess so close to it. From what I understand, a change in format was the only way the tournament could be the first to parade the winner of the match. Sadly, this was not enough to persuade Magnus to join, so there was no world champion present.

“A very small crowd here today. I can count the people on one hand. Can’t be more than 30” – Michael Abrahamson

Was the revamped 5th London Chess classic a success? I have no idea. Given the caliber of the competitors, the play was poor I thought, the commentary even worse and when Vlad played that ridiculous move against Boris in the semis it was the final straw, at which point I turned all my attention to the cricket instead…unfortunately England were in pretty bad shape by then too.

Does life seem worthwhile to you? 

The weekend was over. It was not yet winter but bitterly cold and barely light as I walked across Baku to work, my hands numbed by the morning sleet that fell upon its backstreets leading into the city. With many kilometres ahead I walked slowly, not yet awake but pensive. By then England were close to losing The Ashes and Nakamura had won in London, I was dressed in black accordingly. Just before I reached the government buildings ungainly edged onto the city centre, shivering, I thought to myself ‘sometimes life is just shit‘… .

It was not yet 8.30 when I arrived at work. The office empty, I reclined in my chair. The heating was on high, I drank some hot chocolate undisturbed. Asleep again as my colleagues arrived, I awoke covered in snot, dreamt I’d swallowed my teeth and tried to cough them up…such lyrics and more came from my MP3 player, which I had forgotten to switch off.

Except for boiled potatoes and broccoli, only death is real.

It was a forgettable morning with little to do in the office. The final session in the cricket I dursn’t follow, the chess I just forgot about. The sleet had stopped but a low cloud stayed til lunch, when I ate the portion of boiled potatoes and broccoli given to me. I drifted into thoughts about England as I cut my food with my fork; the cricket, the chess, the inclement weather all reminding me of London strangely. But then my supervisor interrupted, standing at silly point he asked me to complete a report after I had finished. I took an afternoon nap first.

Someone taps me on the shoulder every five minutes, nobody speaks English anymore.

Nap over, bell stopped ringing, corridors all empty now. No one stood at urinals pissing nor in front of mirrors examining their tongues. Where were the students?

I spoke to no one that afternoon and left the office early to the winter park where the subway system beneath was warm and provided shelter. Nearer home, the backstreets were empty of the city traffic and muddy from the morning sleet still. An elder colleague once swore that in Soviet days Baku was a clean and orderly city but after the war, when the Soviets left, people from the country came into the city in their thousands and turned the place into a complete mess. I didn’t doubt it. I was barely 200 meters from the city centre yet the street I took home, named after the satirist Jalil Mammadguluzade, had an entire row of makeshift housing built on the road itself where it widened – most unwise considering that driving licenses are usually bought rather than gained via the proper channels but not unexpected. On the corner nearest, people stood selling bread every morning, hours before it was light even. A little further up I once saw chickens run freely across the road where washing hung between the trees, blocking off what little pavement there was. Nearby, groups of bored teens sitting by open fires on broken furniture left in the street offered to wash cars for a pittance except today, today of course, it was too cold. I saw only one other on the street, an elderly woman carrying a large jar of pickled watermelon in both hands. She had a row of gold teeth behind the grimace on her face…had she watched the cricket too I asked myself? I walked on as fast as I could, it would not be long before I was home and warm again.

Drought makes the workers dream.

The water was off yet again when I arrived. What was I to do tonight I asked myself? Sit staring at the computer screen again? I wanted to get drunk to forget about Baku, to forget about everything. Chess was a motivating factor in coming to Azerbaijan…curse that bloody board game I told myself. On the few times I found people playing, everyone looked so depressed and miserable I dursn’t say anything to anyone, fearing that their misery may be contagious. The fridge was always stocked with beer because I didn’t want a daily encounter with the peasant in the kiosk closest and his tiresome attempts to shortchange me. I drank Czech beer only, certainly none of that local rubbish. The fridge was the only modern item in my apartment. I trusted it, it was switched on to my needs. The first beer sank as I sat in my bed listening to the radio in the dark. I had no bed in the conventional sense of the word, only a mattress on the floor, an over-sized pillow and an old cardboard box as a head rest. I didn’t mind sleeping like that, somehow it seemed appropriate given the state of the building. It was a Stalinka -that being a generic term for anything built whilst Stalin was in power- and had seen better days. I wondered if I would ever return to Azerbaijan and its grotty little capital Baku -a city stricken by decades of Communism still. It would mean yet more time away from my daughter…her funny little laugh and her little smiles I had missed for too long now. I thought about the day I would see her again and wondered if she would still recognize her father. Every time a beer was empty I looked out of the window by the fridge when I got another. There was nothing to see other than the same parked cars and the same row of street lamps becoming fainter in the gloom. I don’t know why I always did that…but then I was unable to stop myself…perhaps it was disbelief. With each day passing as part of one long count, another empty evening lay ahead, soon it would be tomorrow, tomorrow, tomorrow… .

All behold the spectacle of fleshy, limbless rectangles… .

England's greatest ever chess player

Michael Adams – England’s greatest ever chess player

faithnomore-1340109125

Faith No More – America’s greatest ever export

Graham Gooch – England’s greatest ever batsman

...and yes that is a Celtic Frost hoodie.

The author in contemplation, wearing that which he walks to work in. On the left cuff of his Celtic Frost hoodie lies the inscription:
‘Only Death Is Real…’.

 

Off-line mistakes

A short but interesting article has appeared on the NY Times. A chess coach has been accused of cheating and has been barred from chess.com. A lawsuit is pending.

http://nypost.com/2013/11/16/chess-coach-im-not-a-cheater/ .