Friday, October 7, 2011

The HighSchool Chess Coach

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I had a great laugh reading Mark Week's latest entry in his blog about an old  (I mean really old ) Saturday Night Live  skit about a high school chess coach!  A great parody!

'For half a century, dozens of world grandmasters have come out of America's high school chess clubs. Most of the credit for that belongs to the unsung hero of chess, the high school chess coach'   begins the video.  Enjoy!  (And thankyou Mark for great research!)


Insight into the meaning of LIFE

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How much elementary school has changed since my days!



ADDICTIONS I
ADDICTIONS II

SHE SAID: ''NOW BOYS, JUST WATCH AND LEARN HOW IT IS DONE...''


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NAUGHTY CANADIAN TOURISTS IN EUROPE:


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BASIC SAFETY RULES FOR USING THE METRO


1. ALWAYS USE THE HANDRAIL

2. ALWAYS READ THE SIGNS

3. RESPECT THE YELLOW LINE




4. DON'T DISRESPECT FELLOW RIDERS


5. WHEN METRO IS IN MOTION, BRACE FOR SAFETY
(Like the man is doing, ofcourse!)
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AT THE BEACH IN THE GOOD OLD DAYS....

SOCKS??


SUN PROTECTOR??


NOT ENOUGH SUN PROTECTOR!

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STOP!

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Today's winning ''women with guns'' theme

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You would not stand a chance against her!

Saturday's chess puzzle

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Good morning Saturday! Today is a great problem! It has given me headaches to solve it,but it was worth it! You will need about half an hour and good calculation skills. Be patient, drink a coffee and block out the world for a while. White to play and win. Good luck!









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Thursday, October 6, 2011

Ivanchuk mugs Nakamura

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The second half of the Grand Slam (in Bilbao)  got off to a good start today with Ivanchuk crushing Nakamura in a complex Sicilian,  showing that he had recovered 100% after being mugged outside of his hotel just before leaving Sao Paulo  a couple of days ago.  The Ukranian superstar leads the tournament with 4.5 points out of 6.  The next highest score is 3 points (!), shared by no less than 4 of the remaining 5 participants!  It seems that the organizers needed Ivanchuk getting mugged in order to arouse public interest in what otherwise seems like a pretty dull affair, so far atleast...










The variation of the sharp Sicilian opening that appeared on the board  featured Black doubling White's c-pawns in exchange for his dark square Bishop.  It is very difficult to evaluate these positions, and no doubt the American was hoping to gain something from this, atleast from the surprise point of view.


GM  Nakamura
GM  Ivanchuk

Black has the better pawn structure (ending)  but White has attacking chances on the K-side.  From Black's perspective, he considers the White attack just a temporary initiative that will grind to an end once he is able to crash thru the centre with a timely ...d5.  In praxis, however, one slip and that 'temporary initiative' might turn into a full blown mating attack!


Parts of this game remind me of one of Boris Spassky's most famous attacking games (against GM A.Suetin in Moscow in 1967).    In that game Suetin's ...d5 break worked against him big-time:


gm Suetin
gm Spassky

Here Spassky broke thru in brilliant style with 22.Bxd5!  Bxd5 (22.. Nxd5?? goes off to 23.Rxh7-ch!! and mate next move)  23.Be7!!  Qc6 (what else?) 24.Rh6!!  (see game below in full)



Former World Champion Boris Spassky (born 1937, St.Petersburg) was a fearsome attacker in his prime, arguably the best of his generation..  Curiously, Bobby Fischer considered him a much better attacker than Tal--whose style of play Fischer considered reckless and more oriented for the spectators than anything else...




GETTING BACK TO THE IVANCHUK vs NAKAMURA GAME:

In the diagram above, Ivanchuk might try (as Spassky did) to put his Rook on h3 first: 18.Rh3!?, for then 18...Ne7?  19.Nd2!? d5?? goes off to 20.Bxe7!  Qxe7 21.Rxh7-ch!  winning immediately.  However, Black has a much better way to play that might even get the advantage:  After 18.Rh3 he has the Nimzovitchian 18...Nb8!! , with the idea of recycling the N to d7, adding extra protection to the N of f6.  If then 19.Rf-f3  (19.Qh4  Nbd7 20.g4 g5!! pushes White back) then everything seems in order in Black's position after 19...Nbd7  and it is not clear how White should proceed:


variation


If 20.Rh4 g6! 21.Rf-h3 Rg7!! and White's pieces are beginning to look foolish and there is no mate!  So the logical conclusion is that moving the Rook to h3 first is not dangerous for Black, providing (of course) that Black finds the right defence!

IN THE GAME , Ivanchuk therefore played 18.Qh4!?  and Nakamura immediately went wrong with the routine 18...Ne7?  ( Once more, the Nimzovitchian 18...Nb8!! followed by 19...Nbd7 provides a satisfactory defence)


The wrong Knight move!

Ivanchuk started to pile up the pressure 19.Rh3 (Perhaps the immediate 19.Bc1!! is more precise)  19...d5?!  now both players missed 20.Bc1!! threatening Bg5 in many lines, which should win quickly.  For example: 20...dxe4 (What else? 20...Rgc8 is met by 21.g4!)   21.Bg5!  Ned5  22.Bxe4! 


variation

With a position strikingly similar to the Spassky vs Suetin game (Moscow, 1967) above!  Black is faced with mate and finds himself helpless.  He can resign with a clear conscience...


''Nimzo-who??''


INSTEAD,  both players were in severe time-trouble (reports claim that they had just a few minutes left each to reach move 40) and Ivanchuk played the optically good  20.Nc5 (?) and the game became a chaotic western-style shoot out with the advantage changing hands several times before Nakamura losing.  A great game for the spectators!







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Today's winning ''feeling''

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Award winning photographer, age 35, born in Moscow

Brain chemistry for dummies

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Dr. John Gray is one of the leading experts in brain chemistry and has written / lectured / sang from roof-tops about the relationship between nutrition and  the brain.  In particular, about the role of hormones and how they affect our personal relationships.

When we are under stress the adrenal gland produces lots of  cortisol , which is a bad thing if we find ourselves constantly under stress.  This probably explains why chess players have so many failed-relationships.  Having too much cortisol in our bodies for long periods of time also reduces our ability to retrieve and process information stored in our memory.  We begin to rely on short-term memory for most of our activities and become more easily victims of mood swings, depression  and tend to focus on the negative..

Come to think of this, cortisol might go a long way to explain what is wrong with the chess community (!) and why there is such a gap between chess players and chess politicians.  But I am getting ahead of myself:  this blog article is about brain chemistry and nutrition.  ENJOY the following video by the good doctor....










Wednesday, October 5, 2011

The idea of letting go...

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STEVE JOBS  (1955 -- 2011)


Steve Jobs and the idea of letting go


By Hank Stuever, Updated: Thursday, October 6, 3:50 AM

Remember a few years ago, when your Apple store on any given Saturday afternoon ceased being the clean, technological zendo you once admired — the place you bought your iMac — and instead became a crowded bazaar of idealized wonder and hopeless waits at the Genius Bar?

The movement spread. People built their lives around the objects Steve Jobs gave them: the MacBook, the iPod, the iPhone, the iPad. What happened with Jobs and Apple over the past decade is one of the rare participatory phenomena of our disconnected and no-longer-common culture. It was as if this generation’s defining event took place in a shopping plaza and then up in the “cloud,” and this time everyone (that is, everyone who could afford Apple products) got to go to Woodstock.

People stopped lining up for concert tickets and started lining up for new phones. This was the future right in front of you. It was sleek, responding to your touch. Imagine explaining an iPad to someone from 1984. They might get it, they might not.

Jobs died Wednesday at age 56 after a long battle with pancreatic cancer that his wasting form came to wear as familiarly as his preference for outdated jeans and black turtlenecks. When news of his death broke around 7:30 p.m. on the East Coast, a good number of us sought immediate solace (to say nothing of information) from our Apple stuff. The rippling tweets and shares fanned outward.

Swipe, swipe, touch. The nighttime news anchors, fearful of the obsolescence that dogs them at every turn, turned to ¬social-media feeds for confirmation of a shared sense of loss; they invited hipster tech writers and thinkers who scorn old-media ways to make themselves available to grieve analytically on the air. (The digital air, that is; in Jobs’s world, we sacrificed the broadcast band to the broadband.) You can easily imagine newspaper assignment desks, similarly afflicted with professional hypochondria, scrambling reporters to Apple stores to gather quotes from the bereaved.

That is what Steve Jobs gave us: the future. A sense of ourselves moving forward into this century, which has proved especially hard to do, with its lack of employment opportunities and its addiction to panic. He gave us a look at the future and all the ambivalence and worry that comes with it. It was the most elegant form of social disruption, and now your kids won’t glance up from their iPhones. They’ll never need to.

We spend a lot of time wishing for the past, carping about our gizmos and the sway they lord over us, while loading up our iPods with songs that were popular when we were in high school, while stalking old boyfriends on Facebook. That in itself is a pleasant form of grief, but it is grief all the same.

Jobs kept nudging us away from that. Under his leadership, Apple’s subliminal selling point was: Let it go. Let go of the uneasiness about computers. Let go of ugly, antique technology. Let go of the fantasy future of personal rocketships. Let go of the expensive, shiny new phone that you bought last year for the slightly less expensive, shiny new phone that’s coming out this year. But let go of something deeper, something resistant in you that romanticizes the past.

In 2011, so much of our culture — as well as our politics — feels as though we’re losing grip on the old, beloved things. Where did record stores go? What happened to letters that come in the mail? Where did movie theaters go? What about the books? Where is my Main Street? Where is my America?

Jobs had been teaching us to say goodbye to all that for decades — we just didn’t know it. Some of us said goodbye to typewriters in the 1980s when we finished term papers using MacWrite on a Macintosh Plus for the first time. Some of us said goodbye when we made PTA fliers and “Lost Dog” posters that were far and away better than their Sharpie-scrawled predecessors. Let it go, let it go: Take your CDs to Goodwill; give your books to the library sale.

It was therefore an irresistible metaphor, in these final years, when the auditorium lights would go down and the crowd would go wild for Jobs, who increasingly greeted his followers and touted the latest neat, new thing even as he wore the look of a person who was not going into that future with us. He would be getting off here; we were to proceed without him into the unknown. Let it go and look ahead was the message all along.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Hank Stuever is an American journalist who writes about pop-culture  for the Washington Post. Stuever has twice been a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. 


Today's chess quotation

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GM  Igor Zaitsev  (born 1938) is a well known name in Russian chess. A very strong competitor in his own right , Zaitsev dedicates his time today to coaching.  And what a coach!  He served as Karpov's second in many of his matches and just this week was appointed head coach of the new chess school at the Botvinnik Central Chess Club in Moscow.

In an interview (see link below) he was asked about his goals and objectives as the new head coach.  What I liked most of this interview is contained in the quotation below: a certain realism that, despite the very significant role of computers in chess today, it is very important to help children realize the importance of independent thought and objectivity.




''The ultimate goal ...is to instill the skills of independent thought in young chess players.  That strikes me as exceptionally important in our digital age.  Of course, it's unrealistic to dream about completely escaping from captivity to the computer.

I'd consider our task complete even if we managed to just slightly reduce the dependency of decisions made during opening preparation on the computer's recommendations.''

Today's smiling win !

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...and don't forget the bikinis--ofcourse!


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When the winning move is...luft!

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There is a reasonably strong Open tournament taking place right now in Oslo, Norway. More than 10 GMs are participating, including well-known names such as Sadler, Mikhavevski, Tiviakov, Hammer, De Firmian, Rozenthalis, and my friend Kuloats.   It is worth checking out the website as it has lots of photos and other interesting things.

The game that attracted my attention so far was the really nice attacking  game between IM Urkedal and national master Tari.  Black gambled in the opening to win a pawn: the price was a lag in development.  Things got worse when Tari did not make the right choice of where to hide his King:


POSITION AFTER WHITE'S 19th MOVE (19.Qg4-ch)

Tari,A
IM  Urkedal,F

WHERE DO YOU GO:  f8 or h8?


Tari chose the natural-looking move (19...Kh8 ?, in the corner), which is the wrong place in the position above.  No doubt Black had overlooked that after 20.Qh4! the originally planned 20... e5? would lose to the clever 21.Rc6!!.   Seeing  this only at the last moment, Black had to improvise and try to hold on move to move.

 Unfortunately for Black, Urkedal played with great energy and precision; it seemed that for almost every  move after that White created a new threat !  Black had absolutely no breathing room... I especially like the final move of the game:

POSITION AFTER 28.MOVES:



29. h3!!


Creating luft and threatening Re-g4 followed by inevitable mate!  Black threw in the towel....





Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Today's quotation

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''I now have closure with the game that has been a significant part of my life for 18 years. It is time to leave and pursue other goals.... I don’t plan to play chess in the near future.''

Canadian grandmaster Mark Bluvstein  , announcing his retirement from the game on his blog earlier this week.



Today's laughs

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NOTHING TO DECLARE ?

A young woman on a flight from Ireland asked the Catholic priest beside her, 'Father, may I ask a favour?'

'Of course child. What can I do for you?'  the priest replied.

'Well, I bought an expensive woman's electric hair dryer for my Mother's birthday that is unopened and well over the Customs limits, and I'm afraid they'll confiscate it. Is there any way you could carry it through Customs for me? Under your robes perhaps?'

'I would love to help you, dear, but I must warn you: I will not lie.'

'With your honest face, Father, no one will question you.'

When they got to Customs, she let the priest go ahead of her. The official asked, 'Father, do you have anything to declare?'

'From the top of my head down to my waist, I have nothing to declare.'

The official thought this answer strange, so he asked, 'And what do you have to declare from your waist to the floor?'

'I have a marvellous instrument designed to be used on a woman, but which is, to date, unused.'

Roaring with laughter, the official said, 'Go ahead, Father...NEXT!"

(Thx roots!)









Forty years on....

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I still remember so clearly the night The Beatles appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show.  Just like it was yesterday...in the spring of 2014 it will be a cool 50 years.  I admit that I am getting older : it is just that I refuse to accept it!   To me it was yesterday, the formative years of my youth.



Forty years ago , however, The Beatles were already history.  The band, I mean.  The last time they had performed live was in London in 1969 on the roof-top of the Apple headquarters.  In 1971 everyone hated Yoko and dreamed of a Beatle come-back, if for no other reason than to remind us that everything is possible.  But no, it did not happen.  It never happened.

And for such reasons youtube videos like that below are so wonderful; so powerful.  A reminder of the impact 4 lads had on our generation.


[A] vintage interview with Dick Cavett. Recorded 40 years ago (November 23, 1971), the conversation starts with light chit-chat, then (around the 5:30 mark) gets to some bigger questions -- Did Yoko break up the band? Did the other Beatles hold him back musically? Why have drugs been so present in the rock ‘n roll world, and did The Beatles’ flirtation with LSD lead youngsters astray? And is there any relationship between drugs and the Indian music that so fascinated Harrison? It was a question better left to Ravi Shankar to answer, and that he did.