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MonRoi - Live Chess Games

Liviu Dieter Nisipeanu stands out at the European tournament circuit

Written by Ignacio Dee

Friday, 29 July 2005, id:13 Article cached on Friday, 10 October 2008 07:23:02

     He is tall, wears his hair in a pony tail, and plays a distinctive brand of chess where he enters risky lines and wrings out victory or draw.
     He won the European championship in Warsaw last weekend, beating Alexander Beliavsky in the last round, to score 10 points out 13 rounds. Teimour Radjabov came in second with 9.5 points.
     Will this result provide the impetus to finally catapult Nisipeanu to the 2700 Elo rating club, where he deservedly belongs? 

Men better at chess

Written by Jacquie van Santen, ABC Science Online

Sunday, 24 July 2005, id:25 Article cached on Friday, 10 October 2008 07:23:02



     The battle of the sexes has spilled over into chess.
     In a novel approach to testing gender differences in achievement, an Australian researcher has compared the past three decades of male and female international chess results to see if gender differences have diminished with changes in society.
     But the results of the study, by Dr Robert Howard from the University of New South Wales, may ruffle some female feathers.
Read the article...

Do players still fight for honor, and not prize money?

Written by Ignacio Dee

Sunday, 24 July 2005, id:23 Article cached on Friday, 10 October 2008 07:23:02

     This still happens in a country like the Philippines, whose national championship for men and women, are being held without prize money.
     Philippine chess federation officials made this radical decision to solve game-fixing, which unofficial sources claimed to have worsened in the last few years.

In Chess, Masters Again Fight Machines

Written by Dylan Loeb McClain

Sunday, 24 July 2005, id:22 Article cached on Friday, 10 October 2008 07:23:02

     It has been eight years since Garry Kasparov, then the world chess champion, lost a match to the computer Deep Blue.
     In the wake of Deep Blue's victory, it would not have been surprising if elite players stopped competing against computers. After all, if the world's best player could not beat a computer, how could lesser ones? The possibility, even probability, of losing - and perhaps losing badly - to a machine could have particularly discouraged grandmasters, who are known to have egos that match their abilities and who sometimes have difficulty accepting defeat.
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Anand hopeful of chess getting promoted in proper manner

Written by PTI

Sunday, 24 July 2005, id:20 Article cached on Friday, 10 October 2008 07:23:02

     Grandmaster Anand, on a visit to the city to launch the NIIT Mind Champions' Academy 2005 National School Chess Tournament, told reporters, "I am hopeful the new set of administrators would focus on promoting the game in a better manner than before. We had lost considerable time earlier. ...
     ... Agreeing that chess is not a spectator sport, the chess ace pointed out that chess games are followed by millions on the internet and a suitable way can be found to make it interesting for TV viewers too.
     "Yes, chess is not a spectator game for TV audiences. But it's an exciting sport and a way can be found if it's done intelligently to promote it".
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Vietnam sends its best to World Youth Chess Champs

Written by nhandan.com – Compiled by Minh Phat

Sunday, 24 July 2005, id:19 Article cached on Friday, 10 October 2008 07:23:02


     Vietnam will send six of its ace chess players to attend the World Youth Chess Championship 2005 which will kick off in Belfort, France from July 18 – 29.
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Cheating in chess? Legalize it!

Written by Jack Peters, International Master

Sunday, 24 July 2005, id:18 Article cached on Friday, 10 October 2008 07:23:02


     The future of chess may have been on display at an Internet tournament last weekend. The tournament was similar to other online events except that players were encouraged to consult friends and computer programs for advice. In other words, what would be considered cheating in most tournaments was perfectly acceptable in this "Freestyle" event.
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Supercomputer slays U.K.'s top chess player

Written by Tom Espiner, ZDNet (UK)

Sunday, 24 July 2005, id:17 Article cached on Friday, 10 October 2008 07:23:02

     U.K. chess grandmaster Michael Adams has been soundly beaten in his titanic struggle against Hydra, a supercomputer. 
     Adams, the U.K.'s top chess player, lost five out of six games, and only managed a single draw at London's Wembley Centre.
Read the article...