The Star Malaysia

Karyakin-Carlsen chess showdown

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MOSCOW: Sitting next to an ornate chess board in his home outside Moscow, 26-yearold Russian grandmaste­r Sergei Karyakin lowers his gaze as he ponders how to beat reigning world champion Magnus Carlsen.

“He has to prove that he’s better than me,” Karyakin said.

“If he tries too hard, I can beat him on the counter-attack. That’s my plan.”

Next month, Karyakin will have his stab at dethroning Carlsen, 25, in New York as he takes on the Norwegian phenomenon in a €

600,000 (RM2.7mil) match some are hyping as a clash between East and West that echoes the Cold War.

The showdown, the youngest ever by cumulative age, has drawn parallels with the 1972 world championsh­ip match between American grandmaste­r Bobby Fischer and Soviet star Boris Spassky as it comes during another surge in tensions: this time over Ukraine and Syria. “We want to bring back the chess fever of the Fischer-Spassky era,” Kirsan Ilyumzhino­v, the Russian president of the World Chess Federation (FIDE), told reporters in Moscow.

“Back then it was the USSR versus the US, and now it’s the European Union and the US and their sanctions against Russia.”

For Karyakin, the geopolitic­s surroundin­g the match could have a special dimension.

Born on the Black Sea peninsula of Crimea, he grew up playing for Ukraine until he moved to Moscow seven years ago and took Russian citizenshi­p.

But despite supporting Moscow’s takeover of his home region from Ukraine in 2014, he dismisses any comparison­s with the Spassky-Fischer clash and insists its all just a matter of sporting pride.

“I don’t see the same kind of rivalry,” said Karyakin, who shied from discussing politics further. “But of course we all want to show that our chess school is stronger.”

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