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Get Your Pawn Off Of My Queen

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  • Get Your Pawn Off Of My Queen

    GET YOUR PAWNS OFF OF MY QUEEN
    By Nancy Macdonald

    Maclean's, Canada
    June 19, 2006

    The 'Anna Kournikova of chess' has sparked a violent love triangle

    British chess ace Danny Gormally and Armenian Levon Aronian -- the
    world's third-ranked player -- were out partying earlier this month
    during the World Chess Olympiad in Turin, Italy. Gormally, apparently
    drunk, became so jealous when Aronian started hitting on the Aussie
    teen sensation Arianne Caoili -- known as the "Anna Kournikova of
    chess" -- that he knocked his rival to the ground. Gormally had
    recently struck up an email relationship with the chess beauty, and
    didn't like the moves Aronian was making on the dance floor. Fists
    flew again the next morning, when the Armenian team exacted revenge
    on Gormally while he was out for coffee. Dubbed "Gormallygate" by
    chess fans, this international incident is providing the rest of the
    world its closest glimpse of the game since the historic Cold War-era
    match between Bobby Fischer and Boris Spassky in 1972. And with it,
    the image of chess as the gentleman's sport is coming undone.

    You might expect this kind of behaviour from college football stars,
    but grandmasters? This is the philosopher's sport, after all -- the
    ultimate intellectual pursuit. But chess stars, it appears, are no
    better adjusted than your average first-round draft pick. Not that
    there haven't been signs of that before. This esoterics-only club's
    most famous alumnus is Chicago-born Bobby Fischer -- the raving,
    Jew-hating recluse who now calls Reykjavik home. And the sport attracts
    Fischer-like obsessive misfits -- the type happy to spend Sundays
    watching planes land. At its highest level, the game requires -- no,
    demands -- that sort of compulsive concentration. Matches often exceed
    five hours. And aside from pushing chess pieces and hitting the clock,
    the only movement during the long silent hours of a match is the rise
    and fall of players' chests.

    Stone-faced, players churn through thousands of possible moves in their
    head at every turn, in an effort to outmanoeuvre their opponent. Chess
    lingo -- to capture, to crush, to destroy -- suggests that in chess,
    as with any sport, there's no second place. Russian great Viktor
    Korchnoi has always said that winning at chess requires hating your
    opponent. There's violence in this -- a struggle to the end. And
    while usually the killer instinct doesn't manifest itself physically,
    as it does in, say, hockey, there have been physical altercations:
    in the late 1970s, organizers of a world championship match had to
    put a board under the table so rivals Korchnoi and Anatoly Karpov
    couldn't kick each other.

    Like in any sport, there are also brittle egos in the world of chess,
    and Gormally may be more fragile than others, in part, due to his
    recent slide in the ranking. While Aronian, 23, is now recognized
    as a future world champion, Gormally, 30, who stumbled in Turin, has
    slipped off the charts. Caoili (whose nickname is a reference to the
    sexy tennis queen), has been painted as the vixen -- perhaps fairly.

    "It is my weakness to sometimes start a random friction between myself
    and another to test reactions," wrote the 19-year-old on her website
    after the scrap.

    Regardless of whether it's deserved (Caoili is ranked third among
    females in chess-poor Australia), the Kournikova tag is becoming
    sportswriting's most tired cliche. And Caoili isn't even the only
    grandmaster to get Kournikovaed -- she shares the honour with Russian
    chess star Alexandra Kosteniuk. That young, sexy women are excelling
    at chess -- now common, according to the Chess Federation of Canada's
    Robert Hamilton -- should be assumed. Male or female, eccentric,
    even, yep, foxy, grandmasters want to win. Chess, according to the
    late great Emanuel Lasker, the longest-reigning world champ, has
    falsely been elevated to a science, or an art. In Lasker's opinion
    chess is neither. Instead, he once said, it's what human nature most
    freely indulges in: a fight.

    GRAPHIC: Photos 1 through 3, CAOILI has two grandmasters -- Gormally
    and Aronian -- fighting for her.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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