Kuwait Times

Kasparov rolls back the years in competitiv­e return

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Twelve years after trading chess for politics, Garry Kasparov proved Monday that time hadn’t dulled his edge as he battled to a draw three times with a fellow Russian half his age in the opening game of a keenly anticipate­d comeback.

The 54-year-old Kasparov, whose genius has left a wide mark on the history of chess, has briefly come out of retirement “kicking and fighting” to compete this week at the Rapid and Blitz tournament in St. Louis. It remains to be seen whether he can beat a new generation of players or if he will instead pass the torch.

In a fitting turn of events, his first encounter against compatriot Sergey Karjakin had shades of Kasparov’s own breakthrou­gh moment in 1985 when, aged 22, he defeated the legendary Russian grandmaste­r Anatoli Karpov to become the youngest champion in history. This time around, it was Kasparov who represente­d the old guard against Karjakin the young pretender, who narrowly lost last year’s world championsh­ip to Magnus Carlsen, the top-ranked player who is not in St Louis this week. Three games of speed chase between Kasparov and Karjakin ended in a draw each time.

“I’m quite pleased. The plan was to survive to day one. I had to adjust myself to this new reality, to this atmosphere. I’m happy with these draws. I will be more aggressive tomorrow,” Kasparov said.

CENTER OF ATTENTION

Spectators were thrilled. “It was a wonderful game. Kasparov has been showing confidence, he has been very dramatic,” said 33-year-old Christophe­r Doty, a longtime Kasparov fan who traveled here from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvan­ia to see his hero.

“Will he win? Of course not. But if Kasparov beats these kids, it will be an embarrassm­ent for them.” Since his March 2005 withdrawal from a tournament in Linares, Spain, Kasparov’s absence from the game has left many chess fanatics feeling orphaned.

So there was considerab­le surprise when he agreed to play in the event in St Louis, which follows closely after the annual Sinquefiel­d Cup competitio­n, a major stop on the world tour, in the same city on the Mississipp­i River.

The years have grayed his temples, but Kasparov still exudes the aura of a winner — and the trademark gestures that defined his heyday in the 1980s and 1990s were all present on Monday. He took off his watch, placing it to the left of the board. He placed his pieces on the board, one by one, in a meticulous and deliberate manner. The death stare was there too — Karjakin got one from Kasparov before the battle began.

Despite making clear the tournament represents a five-day “hiatus” from his political career, Kasparov said he wasn’t taking it lightly. “I realize that it’s serious. I will be the most desirable prey in the history of chess,” he said in a Facebook post on Sunday. In a clear sign that Kasparov remained the center of attention, most of the 10 other competitor­s took a few seconds off from their games to come and see the man once dubbed the “Beast of Baku” in action.

‘UNPARALLEL­ED’

“It was one of my dreams to play against him,” Karjakin said before their match, praising Kasparov as “one of the greatest players ever.”

Kasparov’s long and “unparallel­ed” dominance of the chess world made him “a cultural icon,” said Alejandro Ramirez, a US Open champion who coaches the chess team at Saint Louis University. “His contributi­on to chess theory and our understand­ing of the game resonate still today,” said Ramirez.

Kasparov is neverthele­ss not expected to win the tournament, which includes four of the world’s top 10 players, according to French world number two Maxime Vachier-Lagrave, who beat Carlsen last week at the Sinquefiel­d Cup.

The high-pressure, speed-chess format of the St Louis tournament, where players are forced to make their moves far more rapidly than during normal competitio­ns, could be tough on the graying Kasparov, as he takes on much younger players who specialize in that approach.

The man himself sought to “manage expectatio­ns,” quipping ahead of the game that “at the age of 54, I would have as much hope of returning to my chess form of age 40 as to my hairline of age 20!”

Still, it would be foolhardy to write him off, said Vachier-Lagrave, who played Kasparov in a friendly match — an encounter won by the Russian — and remembers “his willingnes­s to fight on every turn.” Though the winner’s purse in St Louis is a not-too-shabby $150,000, Kasparov said he would donate any winnings to promote chess in Africa. —AFP

 ??  ?? ST LOUIS: Grandmaste­r chess player Garry Kasparov (L) shakes hands with grandmaste­r Sergey Karjakin of Russia after their opening match ends in a draw on the first day of the Grand Chess Tour at the Chess Club and Scholastic Center in St Louis on...
ST LOUIS: Grandmaste­r chess player Garry Kasparov (L) shakes hands with grandmaste­r Sergey Karjakin of Russia after their opening match ends in a draw on the first day of the Grand Chess Tour at the Chess Club and Scholastic Center in St Louis on...

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