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#16
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So... televised chess?
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#17
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Here's Antonio Radić's excellent analysis of that game 11, from his Agadmator Chess channel:
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The Acoustic Guitar of Inyo: 31 solo acoustic covers on a 1976 Martin D-35 32 solo acoustic 6-string guitar covers 35 solo acoustic 12-string covers 32 original acoustic compositions on 6 and 12-string guitars 32 acoustic covers on 6 and 12-string guitars 33 solo alternate takes of my covers Inyo and Folks--158 songs |
#18
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Just over the transom, earlier today, arrived another entertaining and instructive video by Antonio Radić (AKA, Agadmator Chess). He analyzes a game he and his community played against the highest ranked and rated woman in the history of chess--grandmaster Judit Polgar (#8 in the world, 2004, with a 2734 ELO in 2005), she of Hungarian heritage who though now retired from professional tournament chess at the highest level, continues to participate in various simultaneous chess exhibitions around the globe. On March 20,2022, Polgar faced on-line 10 "chess influencers" from several different countries in a simultaneous cyber-chess exhibition, including agadmator (Antonio Radić) from Agadmator Chess, in the first Global Interactive Community Chess Simul. Each influencer in effect made moves for his/her own sizeable chess community, so the format could perhaps best be described as a cyber-consultation exercise, where Judit Polgar faced the combined minds of multiple folks at each cyber chess table; one site I visited estimated that there could have been as many as six million individuals following the games. So without further fanfare, let the game begin. As a preliminary aside here, though, I must report that I was rather surprised that Antonio chose the comparatively rare but theoretically effective Löwenthal Variation of the Sicilian Defense (and, yes, it's named after Johann Jacob Löwenthal--the #2 ranked chess played in the world,1858, who famously lost a match to #1 ranked Paul Morphy in 1858) in response to Judit's usual e4 opening with white; perhaps Antonio had chessic irony on his mind: Johann Jacob Löwenthal was Hungarian, as is Judit Polgar.
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The Acoustic Guitar of Inyo: 31 solo acoustic covers on a 1976 Martin D-35 32 solo acoustic 6-string guitar covers 35 solo acoustic 12-string covers 32 original acoustic compositions on 6 and 12-string guitars 32 acoustic covers on 6 and 12-string guitars 33 solo alternate takes of my covers Inyo and Folks--158 songs Last edited by Inyo; 03-20-2022 at 07:57 PM. |
#19
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From what I read, Fischer felt that the whole memorizing opening lines was ruining chess too. He invented Chess960, in which the back pieces are set up randomly to completely unhinge the memorized opening lines. I have yet to try playing that flavor of chess, but my chess computer has two engines. One is "classic" chess and the other is Chess960. When you start a new game, you choose which you want to play. At the world class levels, these players spend their lives studying chess and work with multiple chess coaches. But for us for whom it is a hobby with casual or even low end tournament play, we can enjoy the game without having to memorize lots of long opening lines. Tony
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“The guitar is a wonderful thing which is understood by few.” — Franz Schubert "Alexa, where's my stuff?" - Anxiously waiting... Last edited by tbeltrans; 03-21-2022 at 12:10 PM. |
#20
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Another great game of chess analyzed by Antonio Radić (AKA, Agadmator Chess).
Here we have a true clash of chessic titans: The World Champion of chess Magnus Carlsen versus the reigning women's chess champion, Ju Wenjun (from China). A spirited contest, indeed, played on March 23, 2022:
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The Acoustic Guitar of Inyo: 31 solo acoustic covers on a 1976 Martin D-35 32 solo acoustic 6-string guitar covers 35 solo acoustic 12-string covers 32 original acoustic compositions on 6 and 12-string guitars 32 acoustic covers on 6 and 12-string guitars 33 solo alternate takes of my covers Inyo and Folks--158 songs Last edited by Inyo; 03-25-2022 at 12:55 PM. |
#21
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I am undeading this thread to provide information on the rather recent chess cheating scandal that perhaps some AGFers have already heard about. It all started when 19 year-old US chess prodigy Hans Niemann, playing with the black pieces, easily crushed current World Number One and still reigning World Chess Champion Magnus Carlsen in an over-the-board game this past September 4.
In the aftermath of that startling loss, Magnus strongly intimated that Niemann might have been cheating during the game, somehow using as an assistant a supremely strong computer chess program (AKA Stockfish, for example) to help him make moves during specific critical moments in the game; even dispassionate observers agreed that Niemann had mysteriously smashed Magnus with the black pieces in a way only a literal mere handful of grandmasters in the world with chess ratings substantially higher than Niemann could even hope to accomplish. Of course, Niemann denied all of this, maintaining that he has never cheated during over-the-board chessic competition, but eventually admitted that he had indeed cheated during online games when he was 12 and 16 years old, presumably to help boost his ratings. So here is Agamator Chess's discussion of the long-anticipated Chess.com report on the curious kerfuffle; note that Chess.com is of course primarily an online chess site that does not usually involve itself with over-the-board chess. Recollect, too, that the organization had already banned Niemann from their online chess activities because of cheating concerns. Bottom line: In their 72 page report--which includes 52 pages of graphs and charts to supplement the primary text--Chess.com noted that while they found no direct proof that he has ever cheated during over-the-board games, there is indeed considerable evidence to support the conclusion that Niemann had indeed cheated in some 100 online games as recently as 2020 when he was 17 years old, falsifying Niemann's claims that his cheating had been confined to only two separate incidences at ages 12 and 16. Here is the Agamator discussion of that Chess.com report: And here's the chess game between Magnus Carlsen and Hans Niemann that started it all back on September 4, 2022. Hint--stick around for the last few minutes, too, after Agamator finishes analyzing the actual over-the-board game; he provides a most fascinating super-computer line that could have led to an even more decisive conclusion for Niemann:
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The Acoustic Guitar of Inyo: 31 solo acoustic covers on a 1976 Martin D-35 32 solo acoustic 6-string guitar covers 35 solo acoustic 12-string covers 32 original acoustic compositions on 6 and 12-string guitars 32 acoustic covers on 6 and 12-string guitars 33 solo alternate takes of my covers Inyo and Folks--158 songs Last edited by Inyo; 10-07-2022 at 09:22 AM. |
#22
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![]() Once a cheater always a cheater. That's pretty strong evidence that cheating is part of his DNA. Why is he even allowed to play in tournaments? And if you're sitting across the world champion in a game, and you're cheating, how are you doing that? I mean, people who cheat at golf, like Patrick Reed of LIV golf, get caught on video sometimes. But at chess. Does he have an ear implant of some kind connected to a computer, telling him what to do? Very strange. But disturbing. I hope they can clean this up satisfactorily, otherwise, high level chess is doomed.
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Best regards, Andre Golf is pretty simple. It's just not that easy. - Paul Azinger "It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so." – Mark Twain http://www.youtube.com/user/Gitfiddlemann |
#23
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As much and some loved him, I never paid much attention to Madden when he was a football commentator. But I'd probably watch at least once if he was still around and applied his hyperbole (with scribbled circles, Xs and arrows) to a televised chess match.
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#24
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My family use to love playing chess against each other. I keep meaning to get back into it, perhaps there is software online that would make it interesting.
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Barry Avalon Ard Ri L2-320C, Martin D-16GT, McIlroy A20, Pellerin SJ CW Cordoba C12, C5, and Fusion 12 YouTube Celtic playlist YouTube nylon playlist Orion {Arr: Jason Mollberg}: |
#25
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Any game in which a computer can defeat a human can and will be won either by the computer or by the human who most efficiently conceals their use of a computer.
Chess is one of those games. EDIT: but it's not really much of a change from all the "championship matches" where the game adjourns and then the players have their respective team of experts comb through every recorded match in history to tell them the best next couple of moves before adjourning again.
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per mare per terras Last edited by frankmcr; 10-07-2022 at 10:01 AM. |
#26
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Thanks Inyo for starting this thread and providing several very interesting posts that I have enjoyed reading.
Tony
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“The guitar is a wonderful thing which is understood by few.” — Franz Schubert "Alexa, where's my stuff?" - Anxiously waiting... |
#27
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I am undeading this thread to supply information pertaining to the just-concluded World Rapid Chess Championship component of the World Rapid and World Blitz Championship tournaments held in Almaty, Kazakhstan (no Borat jokes allowed here, by the way...). It's the final round of the Rapid Chess portion of the twin tournament battles featuring current classical Chess World Champion Magnus Carlsen of Norway versus Parham Maghsoodloo of Iran; Magnus needs to win to stay in contention for the World Championship of Rapid Chess.
Here are the time control parameters for the Rapid and Blitz chess championship tournaments, from the PDF document entitled Regulations for the FIDE Open World Rapid & Blitz Championships 2022 Almaty, 25 – 31 December: RAPID: 15 minutes + 10 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1. BLITZ: 3 minutes + 2 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1. Here is the Agadmator Chess analysis of the championship game that features an instructive, devastating kingside attack by Magnus against his opponent's classical Sicilian Defense (Magnus employs the Richter-Rauser variation in response to Parham's classical Sicilian). The ultimate conclusion--an inevitable Magnus check mating march that forces resignation--is a thing of great chessic aesthetic beauty, indeed. Magnus Carlsen is the 2022-2023 World Rapid Chess Champion:
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The Acoustic Guitar of Inyo: 31 solo acoustic covers on a 1976 Martin D-35 32 solo acoustic 6-string guitar covers 35 solo acoustic 12-string covers 32 original acoustic compositions on 6 and 12-string guitars 32 acoustic covers on 6 and 12-string guitars 33 solo alternate takes of my covers Inyo and Folks--158 songs Last edited by Inyo; 12-31-2022 at 10:38 AM. |
#28
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OK, enough already with the hyperbolic hyper-reaction, I reckon. Admittedly the news is now a few hours old, not of literal immediate import, but ye olde Magnus Carlsen, already reigning World Champion of both the Classical and Rapid chess disciplines, has now become a triple crown champion of chess for the third time in his career, by defeating Nodirbek Abdusattorov of Uzbekistan (last year's Rapid Chess World Champion, by the way) with a Ruy Lopez (Nodirbek used the Morphy Defense variation of the Ruy, playing the black pieces) in the final round of the World Blitz Championship. Magnus is now the 2022-2023 World Champion of Blitz Chess. Magnus won the triple crown of chess in 2014 and 2019, as well. Congratulations to Magnus Carlsen. Well done, indeed. Here's the sterling commentary/analysis by Agadmator Chess:
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The Acoustic Guitar of Inyo: 31 solo acoustic covers on a 1976 Martin D-35 32 solo acoustic 6-string guitar covers 35 solo acoustic 12-string covers 32 original acoustic compositions on 6 and 12-string guitars 32 acoustic covers on 6 and 12-string guitars 33 solo alternate takes of my covers Inyo and Folks--158 songs Last edited by Inyo; 12-31-2022 at 10:38 AM. |
#29
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Well, I'm pretty near certain that this is the first time an international World Championship competition has come down to a battle between Iceland and Uzbekistan.
So, Well Done! to both sides, and Til Hamingju, Island!
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per mare per terras |
#30
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I am undeading this thread to supply information pertaining to the World Chess Championship, 2023.
Reigning World Chess Champion Magnus Carlsen of course abdicated his chessic throne and thus permitted the first and second-place 2022 Candidates Tournament participants to play for the world chess title here in 2023 (in Kazakhstan). The combatants are Ian Nepomniachtchi (Russia) and Ding Liren (China)--the #2 and #3 ranked chess players in the world, respectively. First two games are already in the books. Text that accompanies game 1 at agadmator's Chess Channel: The 2023 FIDE World Chess Championship is a 14-game match taking place in the St. Regis Astana Hotel in Astana, Kazakhstan on April 9-30 between Ian Nepomniachtchi and Ding Liren, who finished 1st and 2nd in the 2022 Candidates Tournament. Reigning World Champion Magnus Carlsen has chosen not to defend his title. The first player to reach 7.5 points wins, while a 7:7 tie will be decided by a playoff. The prize fund is €2 million, split 60:40, or 55:45 if it goes to a playoff. No draw offers are allowed until after move 40. Edit: Games three and four are now in the books:
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The Acoustic Guitar of Inyo: 31 solo acoustic covers on a 1976 Martin D-35 32 solo acoustic 6-string guitar covers 35 solo acoustic 12-string covers 32 original acoustic compositions on 6 and 12-string guitars 32 acoustic covers on 6 and 12-string guitars 33 solo alternate takes of my covers Inyo and Folks--158 songs Last edited by Inyo; 04-13-2023 at 10:36 AM. |