CHESS GREATS DUEL IN MOSCOW IN ECHO OF SOVIET EPIC
Agence France Presse
May 9, 2012 Wednesday 4:28 AM GMT
Chess world champion Viswanathan Anand of India goes up against
Israel's Boris Gelfand in Moscow on Friday, in the first game of their
battle to decide the world title -- and $1.5 million in prize money.
The last time two grandmasters clashed for the world crown in Moscow
the Cold War was still raging and chess was one of its biggest
psychological guns.
Garry Kasparov's epic 1984-85 encounter with world champion Anatoly
Karpov was controversially called off by the game's ruling body as
it dragged out, inconclusively.
This time, the winner will be decided over a series scheduled to last
three weeks. The match will consist of 12 games with a tie-break on
May 30, if needed.
But although he will walk away with the title of world champion,
neither man is the number-one rated player.
Top of the rankings is Norway's 21-year-old prodigy Magnus Carlsen,
a former student of the legendary Kasparov, who inspired an earlier
generation of players.
Moscow is nevertheless relishing the prospect of again becoming the
world chess capital.
It was a title it proudly held back in the era when the 64-square board
was one of the battlefields pitting communism against the capitalist
West in the Cold War.
"We had a unique situation that will never be repeated again," said
64 - Chess Review magazine editor Mark Glukhovsky.
"For some reason, the Soviet authorities decided to make chess one of
those things like ballet in which we had to be first. It will never
be that way again."
The Karpov-Kasparov match had a political as well as a personal
dimension.
Karpov was the strait-laced darling of the Soviet nomenklatura.
Kasparov, the son of an Armenian mother and a Jewish father, did not
fit the Communist mould.
Their gruelling battle stretched to 48 games before the powers-that-be
at the World Chess Federation (FIDE) stepped in to end it before
either man had won -- just as Kasparov appeared to be breaking down
Karpov's will.
That meant that Karpov, who had lost more than 10 kilograms (22 pounds)
in the course of the draining affair, held on to his title by default.
Kasparov was left to rue the politics of the game -- but he won
their rematch a few months later and went on become one of the game's
greatest world champions.
In 2005 he quit competitive chess to enter politics, becoming an
outspoken critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The Karpov-Kasparov duels inspired a new generation of new world
players, including those battling for the title today.
And a 2010 study by Moscow's VTsIOM pollster showed an impressive 49
percent of all Russians still play chess.
"It simply does not jump out the way it used to (in Russia) because
many have moved their game from park benches and public squares to
the Internet," Glukhovsky said.
In the meantime, Western interest in the game has been piqued by the
emergence of the temperamental Carlsen -- in January 2010, aged just
19, he become the youngest-ever player to top the rankings.
Glukhovsky called him simply "today's Michael Jordan of chess".
The reason Carlsen is not challenging for the title is because he
decided to pull out of the 2011 qualifying tournament, criticising
the way it had been organised in a letter to FIDE.
It is a decision his former mentor Kasparov criticised.
That left the field clear for other contenders, and it was the
Soviet-raised Israeli Gelfand who emerged from a strong field to win
the 2011 Candidates Tournament and earn the right to go up against
champion Anand.
He is currently only ranked 20th in the world.
Anand is fourth behind Carlsen, Armenia's Levon Aronian and Russia's
Vladimir Kramnik -- and he comes to the match after an unimpressive
run of form by his own high standards. Gelfand has enjoyed better
form recently.
Nevertheless, Moscow Chess Federation grandmaster Sergei Smagin said:
"Anand is the favourite. He is objectively stronger."
Moscow won the right to host the first world title match since
2010 over Anand's home town of Chennai after finding Kremlin-allied
billionaires who were willing to splash out on the $2.55 million purse.
They included Putin's old acquaintance Gennady Timchenko and the
fast-rising ports and railways mogul Andrei Filatov.
Organisers then tried to find a venue with the pomp and ceremony to
match the late-18th-century Hall of Columns that housed Soviet state
funerals and Communist Party congresses before being cleared for the
Karpov-Kasparov series.
They settled on the Tretyakov State Gallery -- a postcard-pretty
building across the river from the Kremlin that holds one of the
world's great collections of Russian art.
Agence France Presse
May 9, 2012 Wednesday 4:28 AM GMT
Chess world champion Viswanathan Anand of India goes up against
Israel's Boris Gelfand in Moscow on Friday, in the first game of their
battle to decide the world title -- and $1.5 million in prize money.
The last time two grandmasters clashed for the world crown in Moscow
the Cold War was still raging and chess was one of its biggest
psychological guns.
Garry Kasparov's epic 1984-85 encounter with world champion Anatoly
Karpov was controversially called off by the game's ruling body as
it dragged out, inconclusively.
This time, the winner will be decided over a series scheduled to last
three weeks. The match will consist of 12 games with a tie-break on
May 30, if needed.
But although he will walk away with the title of world champion,
neither man is the number-one rated player.
Top of the rankings is Norway's 21-year-old prodigy Magnus Carlsen,
a former student of the legendary Kasparov, who inspired an earlier
generation of players.
Moscow is nevertheless relishing the prospect of again becoming the
world chess capital.
It was a title it proudly held back in the era when the 64-square board
was one of the battlefields pitting communism against the capitalist
West in the Cold War.
"We had a unique situation that will never be repeated again," said
64 - Chess Review magazine editor Mark Glukhovsky.
"For some reason, the Soviet authorities decided to make chess one of
those things like ballet in which we had to be first. It will never
be that way again."
The Karpov-Kasparov match had a political as well as a personal
dimension.
Karpov was the strait-laced darling of the Soviet nomenklatura.
Kasparov, the son of an Armenian mother and a Jewish father, did not
fit the Communist mould.
Their gruelling battle stretched to 48 games before the powers-that-be
at the World Chess Federation (FIDE) stepped in to end it before
either man had won -- just as Kasparov appeared to be breaking down
Karpov's will.
That meant that Karpov, who had lost more than 10 kilograms (22 pounds)
in the course of the draining affair, held on to his title by default.
Kasparov was left to rue the politics of the game -- but he won
their rematch a few months later and went on become one of the game's
greatest world champions.
In 2005 he quit competitive chess to enter politics, becoming an
outspoken critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The Karpov-Kasparov duels inspired a new generation of new world
players, including those battling for the title today.
And a 2010 study by Moscow's VTsIOM pollster showed an impressive 49
percent of all Russians still play chess.
"It simply does not jump out the way it used to (in Russia) because
many have moved their game from park benches and public squares to
the Internet," Glukhovsky said.
In the meantime, Western interest in the game has been piqued by the
emergence of the temperamental Carlsen -- in January 2010, aged just
19, he become the youngest-ever player to top the rankings.
Glukhovsky called him simply "today's Michael Jordan of chess".
The reason Carlsen is not challenging for the title is because he
decided to pull out of the 2011 qualifying tournament, criticising
the way it had been organised in a letter to FIDE.
It is a decision his former mentor Kasparov criticised.
That left the field clear for other contenders, and it was the
Soviet-raised Israeli Gelfand who emerged from a strong field to win
the 2011 Candidates Tournament and earn the right to go up against
champion Anand.
He is currently only ranked 20th in the world.
Anand is fourth behind Carlsen, Armenia's Levon Aronian and Russia's
Vladimir Kramnik -- and he comes to the match after an unimpressive
run of form by his own high standards. Gelfand has enjoyed better
form recently.
Nevertheless, Moscow Chess Federation grandmaster Sergei Smagin said:
"Anand is the favourite. He is objectively stronger."
Moscow won the right to host the first world title match since
2010 over Anand's home town of Chennai after finding Kremlin-allied
billionaires who were willing to splash out on the $2.55 million purse.
They included Putin's old acquaintance Gennady Timchenko and the
fast-rising ports and railways mogul Andrei Filatov.
Organisers then tried to find a venue with the pomp and ceremony to
match the late-18th-century Hall of Columns that housed Soviet state
funerals and Communist Party congresses before being cleared for the
Karpov-Kasparov series.
They settled on the Tretyakov State Gallery -- a postcard-pretty
building across the river from the Kremlin that holds one of the
world's great collections of Russian art.