The Daily Telegraph

Chess king Kasparov is back on board for ‘grand slam’ challenge

- By Leon Watson

AS A chess champion, he was the “monster with 100 eyes, who sees all”, whose painful defeat against IBM’S Deep Blue computer heralded the end of human dominance over artificial intelligen­ce.

But 20 years later, Garry Kasparov is still considered the greatest chess player in history, a genius so special he became world champion at 22 and was then almost invincible for two decades.

Now, 12 years after he turned his back on the profession­al game, the king is back.

To the delight of fans, the 54-yearold Russian exile has announced he will return to competitio­n next month.

Kasparov will appear at the Saint Louis Rapid & Blitz tournament as one of four wildcard picks playing for a total prize fund of $150,000 (£116,000). The event is part of the prestigiou­s Grand Chess Tour, a “grand slam” set of tournament­s that is bankrolled by Rex Sinquefiel­d, the UK billionair­e, and seen as a rival to the events organised by FIDE, the official world governing body.

Kasparov, whose nickname of “The Beast” was earned by his bullish behaviour, has previous form at challengin­g FIDE. In 1993, he led a split after an acrimoniou­s dispute to form the Profession­al Chess Associatio­n (PCA), which collapsed when Intel withdrew its sponsorshi­p, although the body limped on until 2006. In 2014, Kasparov launched a failed attempt to unseat eccentric FIDE president Kirsan Ilyumzhino­v.

But what matters most to fans is the mouth-watering old-versus-new lashes that Kasparov’s return sets up. While he will not face the current world’s best, his former protégé Magnus Carlsen, Kasparov will take on Carlsen’s Russian challenger Sergey Karjakin and two Americans, Hikaru Nakamura and Fabiano Caruana. Kasparov has had outings in minor exhibition matches since retiring, but this time he is entering one of chess’s elite level “grand slams”.

“Ready to see if I remember how to move the pieces!” he said.

 ??  ?? Garry Kasparov enjoyed a record 20 years as the world’s topranked chess player
Garry Kasparov enjoyed a record 20 years as the world’s topranked chess player

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