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CHESS
BEAST NEEDS YOU!!!
Tell
us...
* The worst tournament you ever went to, and why
* Your unusual pre-match rituals
* Why do we bother writing this rubbish?
* Does comedy belong in chess, or should we start
a bridge website instead? I mean, 'rubber'!?!
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We have the latest Kingpin Chess Magazine to give away. To win it simply write
us a funny review of the worst chess book you ever read.
Email
entries, including your address (!), to:
pawnpusher
Closing
date for entries is 27th November 2002. The winning entry, and the best of the
rest, will appear here next month.
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Beating
the Chess Habit
You
know all those stories about chess being good for you, and a great educational
tool for kids, helping them develop logical thinking, spatial awareness, social
skills and self-esteem? Utter tripe!
Chess
is bad for you!
These
days kids much prefer to sit in their bedrooms playing netchess than actually
getting their hands dirty playing the 'real world' version. But even so, what
kind of social skills are improved by sitting opposite someone for 4 hours in
total silence?
Self-esteem?
When that mono-browed caveman in the fourth form is chasing you round the playground
calling you a 'swotty git' and threatening to break your glasses cos you go to
the chess club, well that really boosts the old ego!
The
real clincher though, for both kids and adults, is the fact that an interest in
chess tends to become an unhealthy obsession very quickly.
Chess
Beast reader Graham Moore wrote in to say...
"To
me chess is like a patient and faithful lover; I may not always be there for her
- er, it - but it is always there waiting by the phone for me to call and start
up with the affair all over again."
Now,
does that sound healthy to you? After extensive sessions with our resident chess
therapist, Graham analysed his obsession in depth and finally came to a rather
different conclusion...
"Actually,
chess is like an ageing, syphallitic, drunken whore who periodically tears me
away from my family, takes all my money and leaves me depressed and guilty, vowing
never to return... until the next time. Bitch!
What is this strange hold she has over us? It's like some crazy mind-bending voodoo,
which turns us into weekend chess nerds then chews us up and spits us out."
So,
how do you know if you have a problem?
One
of the clearest signs of unhealthy chess obsession is the tendency to turn every
conversation, no matter what the subject, round to chess. Even when the non-chess
audience (for audience read 'victims') finally snap and tell you they aren't at
all interested in hearing you witter on about it, you just keep plugging away
regardless.
Other
signs:
If you have ever
said "J'adoube" in a non-chess situation.
If you own a chess video, but not for putting on at parties to be post-modern
and ironic.
If you own a chess tie (yikes!)
If you get angry
when films and tv shows include chess boards that are set up wrongly or players
pondering a while before playing one move checkmates.
If you finally
beat your chess computer, and now you just play the same line against it over
and over again.
How
to cure a chess obsession
1.
Set a date when you intend to quit and stick with it. Tell everyone you know (this
makes it harder to fingerslip).
2.
Destroy, sell or give away any chess paraphenalia you own (board, pieces, clock,
books etc)
3.
Avoid chess-related situations and discussions.
This can be difficult, because if you've played for any length of time then many
of your friends will be chess players. Tell them your reasons and let them know
that if they want to continue being friends outside the chess arena then that's
ok by you.
4.
Find something else to do with your hands.
Chess involves a lot of hand action, and if you give up abruptly then there's
often a psycho-physical hole that needs plugging. Some suggestions:
- Learn the bagpipes
- Take up knitting
- Start smoking
- Get a typewriter
and hammer it like a madman
Anything
that requires constant hand-movement will do.
5.
Every day set aside 10 minutes and repeat...
"I
am a non-chessplayer. Life is more than just black and white. The trees are green.
The sky is blue. Kings and queens have had their day. Vive le revolution!"
Good
luck! Let us know how you get on.
Send
your suggestions on how to break the habit, or your tales of struggles with a
chess obsession to pawnpusher@btinternet.com
and we'll feature the best ones here.
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Thanks to the Beasters
who entered last months prize competition. We asked you for suggestions to make
chess more exciting, and these are the best of the entries we received...
"Make
chess more exciting by following Dave and play naked"
Michael Stevenson
(Editor's Note: see "The
Chess Nudist" in last month's edition)
"Now
we all know that chess is dull. That's because we've sat there (sometimes for
as long seven hours) playing it. What do we end up with at the end of it? Usually
some stupid mistake ridden piece of junk! So what's the answer? Fischer hinted
at it long ago. The reason why the Russians are so good is that they pre-arrange
their games. That way they get what looks like nice exciting chess and they still
get to pop off down the pub for 5 hours at a stretch or down to the restaurant
to get served coffee by that gorgeous waitress who never buttons up her top properly."
Ian Davis
But the winner
this month is 'MIRA', with a corking idea to spice up tournament chess...
"Introduction
of the Chess Psychopath Rating System
(First Draft)
Too often the better chess player loses excitment/interest in a game because of
the psychopathic behavior of the opponent. The Chess Psychopath Rating system
(CPR) would, I believe, do much to enhance the interest of playing chess, if not
necessarily make it more 'exciting.' CPR, or as it is more commonly referred,
the 'CasPeR' (homophonically named for the individual--guess who-- who personifies
the concept), works on the objective principle that if one is chess psychopathic
the opponent will be able to know this beforehand by referring to the former's
CasPeR; consequently, a player knowing his opponent is indeed a chess psychopath
will be better prepared to deal with the consequent tantrums, abuse, and other
minutiae of weirdness exhibited by said psychopathic opponent--or better yet,
just decline playing. The CasPeR will greatly improve chess enjoyment and increase
the excitement of playing for normal, well-adjusted individuals because the Disgust
Factor (DF) and Tedium Factor (TF) of chess will be minimized.
This test can be easily conducted before each game to determine the emotional/psychological
condition of each player. This testing procedure prior to actually playing would
offset the Shocking Conduct Value (SCV) advantage chess psychopaths have because
opponents would be ready for any psychopathic knucklehead antics.
The process, questions, and its evaluation are straightforward and easily understood
by arbiters: a series of five questions are asked to each player; and an answer
of 'yes' to any part of each question is 'worth' up to five points ; A total of
30-24 points means one is a really sad case, and an exciting game can only be
had if you enjoy seeing a fellow human being get epileptically frothy-like or
you don't mind having your computer hacked and terminated with viruses aplenty.
A score of 17-23 indicates a sad case; any thought of an exciting game will be
diminshed by the thought that this person may at any moment --in a very sudden
move--leap up grab the board, and as you are still sitting, fling it across the
room and accuse you of being a chess psychopath, or hack your server and erase
your chess rating. A score of 13-16 means the person cheated on at least one of
the other questions by answering 'no', and therefore, is probably the most psychopathic.This
person should never be played under any circumstances; consequences include having
your car trashed or being invited to join his/her buddy list. Finally, a score
of 9-12 indicates a borderline nutcase, so caution should be exercised.
Here are the Tentative questions (CasPeR is a work in progress, suggestions accepted);
an answer of yes to any part of each question is one point.
Questions
1.Do you consider yourself a middle-class(1) bigtime beer drinker (2) suburbanite
(3) patriot(4) homophobe(5)? (14-15 points)
2.Do you consider yourself smart-clever(1)/well-educated(2)/intellectual(3)?
(6 points)
3.Do you get upset when you lose to a lower rated player (3)?
4. Do you go to chess tournaments/computer chess sites to meet someone of the
opposite sex or same sex as the case may be? (3)
5. Do you think chess is more than just a game? (3)
In conclusion, I am tired of writing this because it nears the optimum Tedium
Factor (TF) which I always reach when playing chess psychopaths."
Congratulations
'MIRA', the latest Kingpin magazine is yours.
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Following last
month's article on Dave Wolz, the chess nudist, I received 2 pieces of interesting
feedback.
Cathy McGeough
emailed to say she once streaked a tournament in Hilo, Hawaii, then got dressed
and went back to play. She was also the tournament director!!
Then Matt Nemmers
wrote to say that Dave Wolz had been banned from playing in a tournament in Lincoln,
Nebraska because he refuses to wear shoes. Apparently, the site sponsors were
demanding a large liability policy if Dave turned up barefoot.
Now I don't know
about you, but I think this is a bit harsh. Ok, he might be odd, and not everyone
would approve of what he gets up to in his spare time, but if he wants to turn
up at a tournament with no shoes it's pretty much his business I'd say. Why not
just ask him to sign a statement saying it's his fault if someone stands on his
big toe and get on with it?!
What next? 'All
players must arrive in full evening dress'?
If chess tournaments ban him, where can Dave drive to naked?
Maybe we should start a campaign?
If all the players in Dave's area start turning up barefoot, or naked even,
then the tournament organisers will have to listen.
NO BAN FOR NAKED MAN!
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I heartily recommend
the full black leather ensemble. The hotter the venue, the better. Just
wipe off the cascading sweat with your fingers before moving your pieces. Your
opponent will have a good long think before he summons up the gumption to touch
some greasy biker-sweat-covered piece. Maybe give your nose a good picking first,
as well.
Suggeted
by Mitchell Schaub
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| How
To Be A Bad Winner - Update |
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Beast reader Mark
Howitt writes...
"In a Yorkshire
league match this season I was a knight up with a clearly winning position. I
expected my opponent to resign graciously (showing my eighteen year old innocence)
but instead he sat and thought for ages, sighing as he did so.
Needless to say, I procrastinated in my position and from seemingly nothing he
generated some threats to my king. Now here comes the coup de grace; as we were
both short of time he slipped out briefly and came back with a huge cheese sandwich.
As I desperately tried to save my position, he started cheerfully munching on
it, allowing me to see the cheese sliding among his even more yellow teeth. I
lost about 6 moves later, with just 3 minutes left on his clock.
Even more painfully, by this time all the members of his team had crowded around
the board, like vultures circling a dying animal. As soon as he won my opponent
was quick to point out, "he
was a knight up, but my positional mastery saved the day."
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