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  • Chess: World still looking for undisputed king

    The Hindu, India
    November 29, 2004

    WORLD STILL LOOKING FOR UNDISPUTED KING

    by Stan Rayan

    Chess will have a new junior World champion in a couple of days in
    Kochi. And a few of the stars here, like India's P. Harikrishna, a
    strong favourite for the boys World title, and the aggressive
    Armenian Tigran Petrosian, could threaten the big guns in the men's
    World in a few years time.

    But unfortunately, while the junior scene appears very promising, the
    world of men's champions is ridden with chaos.

    The sport does not even have a proper men's World champion, a king
    who could be accepted by everybody. While Uzbekistan's Rustam
    Kashimdzhanov is the FIDE World champion, Russian Vladimir Kramnik
    was crowned as the non-FIDE World champion a few weeks ago.

    Attempts to unify the World title, to produce an undisputed champion,
    also look absurd.

    For the unification match, which has the backing of the world chess
    federation FIDE and which is likely to be held in Dubai some time
    next year, will have the planet's No.1 player Garry Kasparov playing
    Kasimdzhanov, who is currently ranked No. 47 in the latest FIDE list.

    Sadly, since the series will be without some of the sport's biggest
    stars, like Indian Viswanathan Anand and Kramnik, the World number
    two and three respectively, the disputes are likely to continue,
    throwing the sport into a bigger chaos.

    But the world chess federation is keen on going ahead with the
    Kasparov-Kasimdzhanov match, said the FIDE vice-president P.T. Ummer
    Koya.

    "The issue was discussed at the recent FIDE general assembly held
    during the Olympiad in Calvia (in Spain). Dubai will be the venue of
    the match and there is no change. But we have not finalised the new
    dates," said Mr Koya.

    After retaining his classical chess World title recently in
    Switzerland, Kramnik came up with a proposal to unite the crown.

    "Instead of the Kasimdzhanov-Kasparov match, we could hold a
    tournament with the participation of Kasparov, Kasimdzhanov, Anand
    and Ruslan Ponomariov with the winner playing against me for the
    world title," said Kramnik in a recent interview.

    Both Anand and Ponomariov are former FIDE world champions.

    "Kramnik's proposal sounds good. Unfortunately, such a thing working
    out is very remote," said Mr Koya. "And FIDE did not discuss
    Kramnik's proposal at the Calvia general assembly," he said.

    The non-FIDE title came into existence when Kasparov, the then World
    champion, broke from FIDE in 1993 to create the now defunct
    Professional Chess Association (PCA).

    Kasparov beat Nigel Short of England in 1993 and Viswanathan Anand of
    India in 1995, before losing to Kramnik in 2000.

    The recent match Switzerland with Hungarian Peter Leko was Kramnik's
    first defense of the title.

    Kramnik's proposal has a strong supporter in Poland's Radoslaw
    Wojtaszek, the lone current world champion at the Kochi Junior Worlds
    that resumes on Monday after today's rest day.

    "The title will have value only if the world's top four or five
    players figure in it. And Anand is currently the world's best player.
    He's just fantastic," said Wojtaszek who won the under-18 World title
    a few days in Greece.

    "But we should not give in to the players," asserts Koya.

    "If the association does not assert its supremacy, the game suffers,"
    he said.
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