Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Kasparov, Karpov re-match seeks to put chess back in spotlight
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VALENCIA, Spain (AFP) - Chess legends Garry Kasparov and Anatoli Karpov said Monday they hope the re-match of their epic 1984 world championship this week in Spain will renew interest in the game.
"We are here to recover, if not a golden age at least a silver age, for chess," Karpov, 58, told a joint news conference with his old foe Kasparov in Valencia in eastern Spain on the eve of the start of their clash.
Kasparov, 46, who has been active in the political opposition to Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin since withdrawing from competitive chess in 2005 and setting up his own political party, said the World Chess Federation "had let the game die".
"The chess that is played today is more technical, more aggressive, with younger players, but it has lost its glamour," he added.
"The duel will put chess in the spotlight once again, as it did 25 years ago," he said in an interview published in Spanish daily El Pais on Monday.
That epic encounter in Moscow lasted five months before the World Chess Federation, in a controversial move, stopped the duel without a clear winner on alleged health grounds though both players said they wanted to continue.
Karpov, who was 33 at the time, had won five of the matches, Kasparov, who was only 21, won three and 40 more were draws.
In their 1985 rematch, Kasparov beat Karpov narrowly, becoming the youngest world champion, and defended his title the following year.
The last time he played Karpov was in 1990 when he narrowly won.
Their new duel will have only 12 games -- four semi-rapid and eight rapid -- with the two men facing off under the watch of Dutch chess arbiter Geurt Gijssen in Valencia, known as the birthplace of modern chess.
The tournament officially gets under way Monday with both players facing local personalities, but the real action begins Tuesday when Kasparov and Karpov play their first match of the series. It ends on Friday.
Kasparov acknowledged that the match will not carry the same suspense as the 1984 Moscow showdown, when he was challenging then world champion Karpov.
"Don't expect a match with the same quality as 25 years ago," he said.
Kasparov, who earlier said it would be more a "ceremonial tournament", has been training in the Norwegian capital Oslo with the 18-year-old chess prodigy Magnus Carlsen.
Karpov, the undisputed world chess champion from 1975 to 1985 and FIDE world chess champion from 1993 to 1999, has been sparring with a computer and a group of grandmasters, including Moldavia's Viktor Bologan, from a base on the Spanish coast.
Both men are considered among the greatest chess players ever.
The matches will be broadcast live on the Valencia regional government website (www.gva.es). Organisers said they expect some 10 million web users to follow the event.
Kasparov also called for the promotion of chess saying the game could have an "outstanding" social role "in schools, as a prevention for Alzheimer's."
"But good ideas aren't enough, they have to be financed, organised, and promoted," Kasparov urged.
Karpov echoed this view, telling El Pais: "I am convinced that chess is going to have growing importance as a social tool."
"We are here to recover, if not a golden age at least a silver age, for chess," Karpov, 58, told a joint news conference with his old foe Kasparov in Valencia in eastern Spain on the eve of the start of their clash.
Kasparov, 46, who has been active in the political opposition to Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin since withdrawing from competitive chess in 2005 and setting up his own political party, said the World Chess Federation "had let the game die".
"The chess that is played today is more technical, more aggressive, with younger players, but it has lost its glamour," he added.
"The duel will put chess in the spotlight once again, as it did 25 years ago," he said in an interview published in Spanish daily El Pais on Monday.
That epic encounter in Moscow lasted five months before the World Chess Federation, in a controversial move, stopped the duel without a clear winner on alleged health grounds though both players said they wanted to continue.
Karpov, who was 33 at the time, had won five of the matches, Kasparov, who was only 21, won three and 40 more were draws.
In their 1985 rematch, Kasparov beat Karpov narrowly, becoming the youngest world champion, and defended his title the following year.
The last time he played Karpov was in 1990 when he narrowly won.
Their new duel will have only 12 games -- four semi-rapid and eight rapid -- with the two men facing off under the watch of Dutch chess arbiter Geurt Gijssen in Valencia, known as the birthplace of modern chess.
The tournament officially gets under way Monday with both players facing local personalities, but the real action begins Tuesday when Kasparov and Karpov play their first match of the series. It ends on Friday.
Kasparov acknowledged that the match will not carry the same suspense as the 1984 Moscow showdown, when he was challenging then world champion Karpov.
"Don't expect a match with the same quality as 25 years ago," he said.
Kasparov, who earlier said it would be more a "ceremonial tournament", has been training in the Norwegian capital Oslo with the 18-year-old chess prodigy Magnus Carlsen.
Karpov, the undisputed world chess champion from 1975 to 1985 and FIDE world chess champion from 1993 to 1999, has been sparring with a computer and a group of grandmasters, including Moldavia's Viktor Bologan, from a base on the Spanish coast.
Both men are considered among the greatest chess players ever.
The matches will be broadcast live on the Valencia regional government website (www.gva.es). Organisers said they expect some 10 million web users to follow the event.
Kasparov also called for the promotion of chess saying the game could have an "outstanding" social role "in schools, as a prevention for Alzheimer's."
"But good ideas aren't enough, they have to be financed, organised, and promoted," Kasparov urged.
Karpov echoed this view, telling El Pais: "I am convinced that chess is going to have growing importance as a social tool."
Labels: Karpov, Kasparov, trends newsletter
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