Archive for January 23rd, 2010

#617 Kenilworth Championship – Round 2

Saturday, January 23rd, 2010
TD Geoff McAuliffe & unrated junior Braden Reinoso late-joined. The latter will, however, just be a fill.

2nd round synopsis, pairings & results:
  • Two of the top 4 seeds were upset, as Mark Kernighan lost a big lead vs. Richard Lewis & Mark Schwarcz fell to Glen Hart.
  • Ian Mangion got a big gift as I tricked myself into a loss, from an equal position.
  • Joe Renna came from way behind to beat Dan Komunicky & Ted Mann did the same versus Jim Cole.
  • Newcomer Reinoso played well against Lou Stuniolo for 27 moves but then went down quickly.
  • Don Carrelli, Arthur Macaspac & Mike Wojcio also won.
  1. Lewis 1-0 Kernighan
  2. Mangion 1-0 Moldovan
  3. Hart 1-0 Schwarcz
  4. Carrelli 1-0 Pawlowski
  5. McAuliffe 0-1 Macaspac
  6. Wojcio 1-0 Shiffman
  7. Renna 1-0 Komunicky
  8. Mann 1-0 Cole
  9. Reinoso 0-1 Sturniolo

Kruglyak sat-out due to illness and was given a half-point bye.


Java-replay for this round.
PGN for this round.
ChessBase archive with all the games & blanks.


Standings, after 2 of 5 rounds:

= 1-4. Mangion, Carrelli, Lewis, Hart 2.0
5. Macaspac 1.5
= 6-13. Kernighan, Schwarcz, Moldovan, Pawlowski, Wojcio, Mann, Sturniolo, Renna
=14-16. McAuliffe, Kruglyak, Reinoso 0.5
=17-19. Komunicky, Shiffman, Cole 0.0


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Kasparov Reviews “Chess Metaphors”

Saturday, January 23rd, 2010

Garry Kasparov’s “The Chess Master and the Computer” (The New York Review of Books, February 11, 2010) offers not only an excellent review of Diego Rasskin-Gutman’s Chess Metaphors: Artificial Intelligence and the Human Mind but extensive reflections by the world’s greatest chess player on the effects that computers have had on the game.  I especially liked the way he sums up some of those effects:

There have been many unintended consequences, both positive and negative, of the rapid proliferation of powerful chess software. Kids love computers and take to them naturally, so it’s no surprise that the same is true of the combination of chess and computers. With the introduction of super-powerful software it became possible for a youngster to have a top- level opponent at home instead of needing a professional trainer from an early age. Countries with little by way of chess tradition and few available coaches can now produce prodigies. I am in fact coaching one of them this year, nineteen-year-old Magnus Carlsen, from Norway, where relatively little chess is played.

The heavy use of computer analysis has pushed the game itself in new directions. The machine doesn’t care about style or patterns or hundreds of years of established theory. It counts up the values of the chess pieces, analyzes a few billion moves, and counts them up again. (A computer translates each piece and each positional factor into a value in order to reduce the game to numbers it can crunch.) It is entirely free of prejudice and doctrine and this has contributed to the development of players who are almost as free of dogma as the machines with which they train. Increasingly, a move isn’t good or bad because it looks that way or because it hasn’t been done that way before. It’s simply good if it works and bad if it doesn’t. Although we still require a strong measure of intuition and logic to play well, humans today are starting to play more like computers.

The availability of millions of games at one’s fingertips in a database is also making the game’s best players younger and younger. Absorbing the thousands of essential patterns and opening moves used to take many years, a process indicative of Malcolm Gladwell’s “10,000 hours to become an expert” theory as expounded in his recent book Outliers. (Gladwell’s earlier book, Blink, rehashed, if more creatively, much of the cognitive psychology material that is re-rehashed in Chess Metaphors.) Today’s teens, and increasingly pre-teens, can accelerate this process by plugging into a digitized archive of chess information and making full use of the superiority of the young mind to retain it all. In the pre-computer era, teenage grandmasters were rarities and almost always destined to play for the world championship. Bobby Fischer’s 1958 record of attaining the grandmaster title at fifteen was broken only in 1991. It has been broken twenty times since then, with the current record holder, Ukrainian Sergey Karjakin, having claimed the highest title at the nearly absurd age of twelve in 2002. Now twenty, Karjakin is among the world’s best, but like most of his modern wunderkind peers he’s no Fischer, who stood out head and shoulders above his peers—and soon enough above the rest of the chess world as well.

 Hat tip The Chess Mind.

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Edward Winter’s Chess Explorations (35)

Saturday, January 23rd, 2010

Just occasionally, the worlds of chess and murder have intersected: players
of our game have become either killers or victims. In addition to links to his
detailed coverage of the Wallace Murder Case and the fatal shooting of a Hastings
stalwart, the Editor of Chess
Notes
provides citations regarding such figures as the Lipstick Killer,
Moors Murderer and St Albans Poisoner.

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Wijk 07: Nakamura beats Shirov, Carlsen beats Ivanchuk

Saturday, January 23rd, 2010

Detractors had pointed out that Alexei Shirov’s blistering 5.0/5 start was achieved without playing any of the tournament favourites. Today the Latvian GM encountered one, Hikaru Nakamura – and dropped the full point. Magnus Carlsen scored his third win, against Vassily Ivanchuk, who self-destructed on move eight. Nigel Short came tantalizing close to beating Vladimir Kramnik. Full report.

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