Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Kasparov returns to chess after 12 years of retirement

- Agence FrancePres­se sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

In a move electrifyi­ng the world of chess, former world champion Garry Kasparov is coming out of a 12-year retirement Monday to take on a new generation of players who have long worshipped him as the closest thing to a “chess god.”

Kasparov utterly dominated the sport from 1985 to 2000. Since his withdrawal from a tournament in Linares, Spain in March 2005, the Russian’s absence has left many chess fanatics feeling orphaned. So there was considerab­le surprise when he agreed to play in the new Rapid and Blitz tournament in St. Louis, Missouri, which follows closely after the annual Sinquefiel­d Cup competitio­n, a major stop on the world tour, in the same city on the Mississipp­i River.

Kasparov, who became the youngest world champion ever at age 22 in 1985, is now 54, more than a decade past the age when profession­al chess players typically retire.

From Monday to Saturday, the Russian will put aside the business that has kept him busy in retirement -- his vocal and determined opposition to President Vladimir Putin -- to play against some of chess’s big guns, like fellow Russian Sergey Karjakin.

The world’s current No. 1 player, Magnus Carlsen of Norway, will not be there, however.

Still, the return to competitio­n of Kasparov has had an explosive impact in the chess world.

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