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  • Pawn in their game

    Santa Fe New Mexican.com, new mexico
    Aug 29 2004

    Pawn in their game


    BARBARA FERRY | The New Mexican
    August 29, 2004

    A queen ate Doritos. A bishop poked a rook with an umbrella. A pawn
    sat down and declared, "I'm going to die." It was, all in all, an
    unusual game of chess, Saturday afternoon, when New Mexico state
    champion and International master Jesse Kraii took on grand master
    Varu Akobian using real, live, squirmy but patient children as chess
    pieces on a giant board set up on the street in front of the Hotel
    St. Francis.

    The game was part of the first Santa Fe Chess Open, an event that
    organizers hope will become an annual event. The two-day series of
    tournaments, including 10-minute blitz chess, continues today. It is
    sponsored by businesses along Don Gaspar Avenue.

    On Saturday, star power was provided by 20 year-old Akobian, who was
    born in Armenia, lived in Moscow and now resides in Los Angeles.
    Akobian is ranked 16th by the United States Chess Federation.
    Akobian's heritage also provided the Russian Summer connection
    organizers were seeking. Akobian has played in chess tournaments
    around the world. "But I have never participated in anything like
    this before," he said.

    Jeff Burch, president of the New Mexico Chess Organization, said
    Akobian, a rising star in the chess world, was a big draw for local
    players. "Anytime you can get a grand master, it's great, but a young
    grand master is even better," Burch said.

    The local hero was Kraii, who started playing chess while attending
    Capshaw Middle School. Kraii teaches local kids to play chess and is
    ranked 67th in the country. He is working on beating enough
    top-seeded players to gain the coveted grand-master title.

    Kraii, who led the white army, strolled around the board consulting
    with his pieces, who carried white umbrellas topped with balloons.
    "Are you ready to checkmate?" he asked them, getting a cheer out of
    his team.

    Akobian, commanding the black side of the board, dressed in black
    from his shoes to his sunglasses, hung back, visualizing the board in
    his head. Chess aficionados crowded around a board set up on an easel
    that kept track of the game. "Black is burnt toast," one observer
    mumbled at one point, claiming that Akobian, unclear about the
    position of his king, had made a blunder.

    Each player had an hour to complete his or her plays, an eternity for
    the uninitiated, and possibly for some of the pieces on the board.

    Dave Thompson, whose children Emma, 6, and Samuel, 9, were pieces on
    the white team, said the pace is one of the things he likes about
    chess. "Kids today often don't have patience. Chess slows them down.
    It makes them think."

    In the end, Akobian, facing a checkmate, resigned with about nine
    seconds on the clock.

    "Chess is cool," declared Taylor Vigil, 9, who plays for the Kearney
    Elementary School team.

    John Coventry, one of the event's organizers, said the idea was to
    "build Santa Fe's scholastic-chess movement." Another idea was to
    raise money to restore Fountainhead Park, a narrow strip of stone
    benches and tables on Don Gaspar Avenue that includes a chess table.
    The event won't make any money this year, though organizers were
    pleased to see the city turned on the fountain on the corner of Don
    Gaspar Avenue and Water Street for the first time in several years.

    At noon today, Akobian will take on all comers. Anyone wanting the
    privilege of being beaten (probably) by a grand master, can show up
    with a board and $20 registration fee.

    Akobian will play up to 50 people simultaneously, said Burch.
    Tournament organizers have purchased prizes, such as biographies of
    Russian chess masters, to give to players who beat Akobian. But Burch
    said he doesn't expect to be giving away many prizes.
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