Showing posts with label Avalanche Journal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Avalanche Journal. Show all posts

Sunday, April 1, 2012

Tech chess wins Final Four second straight year


Tech chess wins national title second straight year
April 1, 2012 - 8:40pm

Texas Tech University’s Knight Raiders can boast a national championship for a second year in a row, even as its head coach and top players prepare to leave the university.

The team won the President’s Cup, an annual competition known as the Final Four of College Chess to determine the country’s top intercollegiate team, according to a Texas Tech news release and coach Susan Polgar.

The three-day event in Washington D.C. began Friday and concluded Sunday with the Knight Raiders repeating as national champions with an eight-point victory after Tech members played four games against each of the three teams also competing in the tournament.

The University of Texas at Dallas and University of Maryland Baltimore County finished second with 7.5 points each, and New York University finished fourth.

Polgar, Knight Raiders head coach and director of the Susan Polgar Institute for Chess Excellence, is the first woman in history to lead a men’s Division I team to two straight national championships.

“It was total teamwork. Nothing was decided until the final second,” Polgar said in the Tech release. “We are very proud and happy to bring another Final Four Championship to Texas Tech.”

In February, Polgar announced she plans to transfer her SPICE center along with highly recruited Grand Master-level players to Webster University in St. Louis starting June 1.

Both Polgar and Tech officials said the move came on good terms. Polgar added she wanted to pursue greater opportunities to create a global center for chess excellence in St. Louis.

On Sunday, Polgar, a Hungarian native, said she is proud of the five years she spent working with Tech officials to create the chess program focusing on nationwide team competitions and local outreach programs for area youth.

“I think it certainly created a legacy and history for Texas Tech in chess,” she said.

Knight Raiders who participated in this weekend’s tournament are chess grandmasters Georg Meier, a freshman finance major from Germany; Elshan Mordiabadi, a business graduate student from Iran; Anatoly Bykhovsky, a sophomore finance major from Israel; and Andre Diamant, a sophomore economics major from Brazil.

Also in accompaniment were two alternates: Grandmaster Denes Boros, a sophomore psychology major from Hungary; and International Master Vitaly Neimer, a freshman finance major from Israel.

Tech’s news release said Polgar’s move likely will end her institute’s five years in Lubbock.

In addition, all members of the reigning national collegiate champion Texas Tech “A” chess team will transfer to Webster and be enrolled at the university in the 2012-2013 academic year, Polgar said.

Source: http://lubbockonline.com

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Do not violate the Opening Principles of Chess


Los 5 principios básicos de la apertura – No rompas estos principios

No rompas estos principios

http://www.clasesdeajedrez.net/2011/09/21/principos-basicos-apertura/

Susan Polgar

Avalanche Journal

Aquí están todos los principios de apertura que todos los jugadores principiantes e intermedios deberían seguir.

1. Controlar el centro!
El centro del tablero incluye las casillas e4, d4, e5, and d5. Cuando comienza una partida, hay que poner peones en el centro y ocupar la mayor cantidad de casillas posible.

2. Desarrollar las piezas lo más antes posible.!
Saca tus caballos y tus alfiles. Esto debe ser hecho en las primeras 6 a 7 movidas, antes de que intentes darle jaque mate a tu rival.

3. Enroca lo más antes posible!!
Mantener a tu rey protegida es esencial para evitar perder rápido. No te olvides, si te tu rey esta descubierto, te va a costar ganar. Después de enrocar, es importante conectar las torres desarrollando a tu dama

4. Mantener tus piezas defendidas!
No dejes tus piezas colgando, o sea sin protección. Cada pieza que tenes es valiosa, así que no olvides protegerlas. Proteger significa que si tu rival captura, podrás recapturarlo.

5. Divertirte, gana con finesa y perder con dignidad!
Esta es mi lema en el ajedrez. Primero y ante de todo, el ajedrez debe ser divertido. A veces se pierde y a veces se gana, pero es parte del juego. Cuando se gana, sé un caballero, se respetuoso y no burles de tu rival. Cuando pierdas, se mas caballero aun, dale la mano y felicítalo. Esto a la larga, te llenara de buenas amistades.

Do not violate the Opening Principles of Chess
Susan Polgar
Avalanche Journal

Here are my power principles of chess, something which all beginners and novice players should follow:

1. Control the Center!

The center of the board includes the squares e4, d4, e5, and d5. When you start a game, place your pawns in the center to occupy and control as many of these squares as you can. Location, location, location!

2. Develop Your Pieces as Soon as Possible!

Get your Knights and Bishops out right away. This should be done before you try to checkmate your opponent, some time in the first 6 or 7 moves if possible.

3. Castle as Soon as Possible!

Castle at the very first chance you have in order to keep your king safe. Remember, you can’t win if your king isn’t safe and you get checkmated first. So don’t forget to castle! Then after you castle, connect your rooks by developing your queen.

4. Keep Your Pieces Protected!

Don't leave your pieces hanging without protection. Each and every piece you have is very valuable, so don't forget to protect them. Protecting means if your opponent can take your piece, then you can take your opponent's piece.

5. Have Fun and Win with Grace, Lose with Dignity!

This is my motto in chess. First and foremost, chess should be fun. Sometimes you win and sometimes you lose, it’s all part of the game. When you win, be a good sport and don’t trash talk or make fun of your opponent. When you lose, be an even better sport and not a sore loser. Shake hands and congratulate your opponent. This will go a long way toward making good friends.

A continuación, se puede ver qué sucede cuando no se respetan los principios mencionados.:

Tarrasch, Siegbert – Mieses, Jacques [C10]

Match Game 3, Berlin 1916

1.d4 e6 2.e4 d5 Esta es la apertura Francesa

3.Cc3 dxe4 4.Cxe4 Cd7 5.Cf3 Cgf6 6.Ad3 Ae7 7.0-0 Cxe4 8.Axe4 Cf6 9.Ad3 Hasta aquí todo es normal, en esta posición las negras deberían enrocar.

9…b6? Un error critico de las negras. Es imprescindible enrocar lo más temprano posible. Las negras pagaran caro por este error, miremos como las blancas se aprovechan.

10.Ce5! Las negras se encuentran en un problema serio. Si desarrolla su Alfil a b7, las blancas jugaran Ab5y las negras no podrán enrocar. Mieses se da cuenta de esto y decide enrocarse, aunque ya es muy tarde y Tarrasch logra sacar ventaja.

10…0-0 si10…Ab7 11.Ab5+

11.Ac6 Una Buena jugada! Veremos porque brevemente.

11…Dd6 si 11…Dd7 12.Df3 Ab7 13.Cxe7+ Dxe7 14.Dxb7+-; 11…De8 Esta variante rara es la mejor par alas negras 12.Cxe7+ Dxe7 13.Df3 Tb8 14.Dg3 Las blancas tienen una ventaja posicional fuerte con la pareja de alfil apuntando al enroque del rey negro.

12.Df3! Otra Buena jugada! Las blancas amenazan un jaque descubierto con Nxe7+ (descubriendo el ataque destapan la dama de f3 contra la Torre negra en a8.)

12…Ad7 La única jugada. 12…Ab7 13.Cxe7+ Dxe7 14.Dxb7y las negras se encuentran con una pieza de menos.

13.Cxe7+ Porque las blancas cambian un caballo active y bueno por un alfil negro malo. La respuesta es que las blancas ven una clavada mortal para la jugada siguiente. Sin buena razón este cambio es malo.

13…Dxe7 14.Ag5! Amenazando 15.De4! Cxe4 16.Axe7. Las negras no tienen manera de salir de la clavada.

14…Tac8 15.Tfe1 Agregando otro pieza a la acción, para tener un ataque ganador es necesario traer todas las piezas en juego 15.De4 hubiese sido menos preciso para las blancas puesto que 15…Cxe4 16.Axe7 Tfe8 17.Axe4 Txe7 +=

15…Tfe8 si 15…c5 16.Dh3 h6 17.Axh6 gxh6 (17…c4 18.Axg7 Axg7 19.Dg3+ Rh8 20.Dh4+ Rg7 21.Dg5+ Rh8 22.Dh6+ Rg8 23.Ae5) 18.Dxh6 cxd4 19.Dg5+ (19.Te5? Tc5) 19…Rh8 20.Te4 y las negras deben entregar a su dama para evitar el jaque mate.

16.Dh3! Estas jugada crea otra amenaza. Puesto por la clavada del caballo, el peón h7 esta vulnerable. Las blancas combinan la presión contar el peón h7 con el Alfil de D3 y Dh3; mientras tanto el alfil de g5 está atacando al caballo de f6 que es el único defensor de h7.

16…Dd6? La posición de las negras es muy crítica. Esta jugada incluso empeora todo 16…h6 17.Axh6 gxh6 18.Dxh6 Df8 19.Dxf6; 16…g6 17.Dh4 Rg7 18.Te4!; 16…e5 17.Axf6 Axh3 (17…Dxf6 18.Dxd7; 17…gxf6 18.Dxh7+ Rf8 19.Dh8#) 18.Axe7 Txe7 19.gxh3; 16…c5 17.Axh7+ Rf8 18.Ae4 Rg8

17.Axf6 Eliminado al protector de h7

17…gxf6 18.Dh6! Las negras piensan sacarle el escape a f8 y luego e7, con el rey cortado. La siguiente jugada es muy instructiva, cuando estas al ataque no hay que dejar que tu rival se escape.

18…f5 si 18…Dxd4 19.Axh7+ Rh8 20.Ag6+ Rg8 21.Dh7+ Rf8 22.Dxf7#

19.Te3 Acercando la torre a la acción, y sacrificando el peón de d4. Mientras tanto, las piezas negras no están coordinadas para defender al rey.

19…Dxd4 si 19…f6 20.Tg3+ Rf7 21.Dg7#; 19…Rh8 20.Th3 Rg8 21.Tg3+

20.c3 Atacando la reina, obligada a defender a la casilla g7, próximamente se encontrar sin casillas. Yo prefiero Tg3, puesto que ataca al rey. 20…Rh8 Ahora jugaría 21.c3 transponiendo a lo que sucedió en la partida. 21…De5 22.f4 Ahora la dama no tiene casillas para defender a g7. Las negras rinden
1-0

Resumen:

Que aprendimos de esta partida?
1. No rompas con los principios de la apertura. Asegúrate de enrocar lo más antes posible, las negras no lo hicieron en la jugada nueve y pagaron caro.
2. Cuando atacas, utiliza tus piezas, acercando a la torre al ataque las blancas ganaron

Articulo Original – GM Susan Polgar

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Texas Tech freshman Andre Diamant shines at World Chess Olympiad


Texas Tech freshman Andre Diamant shines at World Chess Olympiad
Posted: October 10, 2010 - 12:03am

The World Chess Olympiad just ended Oct. 3 in West Siberia, Russia. Approximately 1,500 players, coaches and captains of 264 men’s and women’s teams from over 150 countries were in Khanty-Mansiysk for two weeks to battle for the individual and team gold, silver and bronze medals.

Here were the final team standings:

Men’s (Open) Olympiad

1. Ukraine: 8 wins, 3 ties, 0 losses, 19 points, gold medal
2. Russia (A): 8 wins, 2 ties, 1 loss, 18 points, silver
3. Israel: 7 wins, 3 ties, 1 loss, 17 points, bronze

Women’s Olympiad

1. Russia (A): 11 wins, 0 ties, 0 losses, 22 points, gold medal
2. China: 9 wins, 0 ties, 2 losses, 18 points, silver
3. Georgia: 7 wins, 2 ties, 2 losses, 16 points, bronze

Texas Tech freshman Andre Diamant (Brazil) recorded fantastic results at the Chess Olympiad. He scored 5 wins and 3 draws (0 losses) for a winning percentage of 81.3, which was the second highest overall of the Olympiad, and a rating performance of 2644, which was sixth overall of the Olympiad on board five for Brazil. This was his best ever Olympiad performance. He qualified for his first Olympiad appearance in 2008 in Dresden, Germany, at the age of 17.

As I mentioned in a prior column, chess is a part of the IOC (International Olympic Committee). The Chess Olympiad enjoys the second position behind the Summer Olympics with around 150 countries battling every two years.

• 2008 Summer Olympics (Beijing, China): 204 nations.
• 2008 Chess Olympiad (Dresden, Germany): 152 nations.
• 2006 Winter Olympics (Turin, Italy): 86 nations.

Next, Andre and his teammates will represent Tech at the SPICE Cup later in October at the Texas Tech Student Union Building, Texas State Championship in November in Corpus Christi, and the PanAm Intercollegiate Chess Championship in December in Milwaukee, Wis.

I am very proud of what Andre achieved on the world stage in Khanty-Mansiysk where millions of chess enthusiasts followed the live action over a two-week period on the Internet. He handled the immense pressure very well. Andre proudly wore his Knight Raider/SPICE shirts, which served as a great promo for our university. This speaks volumes for the kind of international talent we attract to Tech through the Susan Polgar Institute for Chess Excellence.

Tech is now one of the most respected universities with a chess program in the world. We are also the only university with a chess institute. The Knight Raiders have won a total of one regional, two state and five national championships in the past two years.

Chess in schools boom

I recently interviewed Ali Nihat Yazici, president of the Turkish Chess Federation, about the incredible chess in the schools program in his country. Here is what he had to say:

In 2002, Ali approached the minister of education of Turkey with the idea of introducing chess in the schools. At that meeting, he was asked, what is his goal with the project? He made a “blunder” by responding: “Can you imagine Turkey having the next Karpov or the next Kasparov?” His dream was rejected at that time. However, he learned his lesson. He realized that the approach had to be modified.

Ali had to wait another three years before he got the next opportunity to present the “new plan” to the next minister of education. He was asking for an appointment for over two years. One night out of nowhere, he received a phone call from a contact to come and meet in 10 minutes. The minister was having kebab with the contact and he was willing to give Ali 10 minutes! He was on his way immediately.

When Ali met the minister, he presented the idea of chess in the schools to help educate the next generation of Turkish children to grow up more intelligent.

After his presentation, the minister said thank you and told him that it sounded very interesting. He said he would be in touch. Ali left the restaurant and thought sure the minister would call … one day.

To his biggest surprise, the next morning shortly after nine, his phone rang. It was an unknown number. It was none other than the minister. The minister invited him to meet and discuss the idea further. As Ali was driving, he almost caused a mass accident in his (pleasant) shock.

Well, that was 2005, the year when chess was introduced for the first time in some Turkish schools. Since that time, the number of schoolchildren involved in the chess program has grown to 2,250,000 in over 10,000 schools, with around 50,000 chess teachers! Mind-boggling numbers!

The chess in the school project in Turkey currently receives 1.5 million euros in governmental support. That is a huge number! However, through the various forms of taxes, the project also generated 1.8 million euros in revenues for the government.

In addition to the support from the public sector, last year the TCF succeeded in attracting major contribution from the private sector. IS Bank supports scholastic chess with 1.6 million euros to enable schools in need to also introduce chess to underprivileged children.

The TCF has developed its own teaching manuals and recommended learning materials for students; 300,000 of the first edition of the student “source-book” was printed by the nonprofit branch of the TCF Satranc. Many doubted Ali’s decision at the time, asking “what will we do with all those copies?” Since then, over two million copies have been sold, and it became a major source of revenue for the TCF.

In Turkey, chess for the past five years has been a part of the curriculum as an elective. There are only four elective subjects: art, painting, religion (general) and chess. The children who choose chess as an elective learn it two hours a week throughout the entire 32-week school year.

This year in the city of Burdur (west of Turkey) the Turkish Chess Federation started a pilot project with kindergarten-age children, starting at age 4. So far it has been very well received, and the TCF has already donated 10,000 chess sets and boards to the project.

While the above project mostly focuses on the social benefits of chess as a side effect, a certain percentage of kids naturally will take a more serious interest in the game and desire to compete. At Turkey’s 2009 scholastic championship, 30,000 schoolchildren took part.

There are around 1,300 chess clubs in Turkey today. Fourteen of them compete in the first division. Each of those clubs receives 12,500-euro support yearly from the TCF. The TCF currently has 200,000 paid members, including 60,000 rated players.

In the first division team league, many of the players have contracts guided by the template designed by TCF. The league is designed after the most successful professional sport in Turkey, which is soccer.

A very impressive story. Certainly today Turkey is a place to learn from and an example to follow for any country that would like to see chess being a part of the curriculum.

Source: Avalanche Journal

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Chess team director shares game philosophy, recruiting criteria


Chess team director shares game philosophy, recruiting criteria

Lubbock Avalanche-Journal
Sunday, January 10, 2010
Story last updated at 1/10/2010 - 12:59 am


Last week I wrote about the Texas Tech Knight Raiders chess teams winning multiple national titles at the 2009 Pan-American Intercollegiate Team Chess Championship, which took place in South Padre Island Dec. 27-30.

I have to say that I could not be more proud of my players. They gave everything they had to achieve incredible success on the chess board and in the classroom. They also brought priceless positive exposure for Texas Tech.

Since then, I received a number of e-mails asking about my coaching philosophy and recruiting standards, etc.

Question: What are some of my recruiting criteria to put together a top notch college chess program to win national championships?

Answer: I look for a number of things. I believe they are very similar to other sports. Here are just a few of them:

• Professionalism (Will the recruit take pride in what he/she does and give his/her all?)

• Work ethic (Will the recruit be willing to put in maximum effort academically and in chess training?)

• Coachability (Will the recruit be willing to be coached to improve his/her chess strength? There is no perfect chess player. Every player has room to grow.)

• Team player (Will the recruit put the team concept above personal accolades in team competition? Team unity and chemistry are extremely important for success.)

Question: What is my coaching philosophy and how am I able to achieve so much success with the Knight Raiders chess teams in just two short years?

Answer: The answer is quite complex. There are a number of little things that create one big success. However, my job is very different that many other coaches at Texas Tech or at other universities.

An athletic coach usually has the responsibility for one team. In chess, there are multiple divisions. Therefore, I have to recruit, coach, and work with the A team, the B team, and the women's team, etc. Each team and each player has completely different training regiment.

In addition to coaching, I also have a numerous other responsibilities as the director of SPICE. But to make the long story short, here is my coaching philosophy:

• I treat my players the way I would want to be treated.

• I give my players complete respect and I would never raise my voice or have harsh words toward them, even if they lose.

• My motto is "Win with grace, lose with dignity" and I expect all my players to follow it.

• I dissect the styles, strengths, and weaknesses of my players and I work with each player accordingly.

• I praise my players when they do well and I comfort them when they do not. There is no need to dwell on the negatives. The point is to learn from mistakes and not to repeat them .

• I commit 150 percent of my effort to my players and I expect them to do the same for me.

• However, I do not expect and I do not want my players to live, eat, drink, and breathe chess 24/7. When they train, I expect them to train hard. When they play, I expect them to give their all. But when we have down time, I also expect them to have fun and relax.

• I always stress the team unity concept and I was extremely pleased to see the players from my three teams work together, help one another, and cheer each other on at the national competition.

Question: Where do I find my players and what kind of majors do chess players usually major in?

Answer: My players come from all over the country and all over the world. They have very diversified majors and they take their studies seriously. A number of them are in Honors College. I have nearly 20 players after just two years and here are the backgrounds of just my three teams at the recent national championships:

A team: Davorin Kuljasevic, Croatia, graduate student in finance; Gergely Antal, Hungary, senior economics major; Gabor Papp, Hungary, senior finance major; Chase Watters, Texas, graduate Ph.D. student in microbiology.

B team: Zachary Haskin, Texas, freshman, Spanish major; Josh Osbourn, Kentucky, sophomore, English major; Konstantin Parkhomenko, Russia, final-year law student; Brett James, Virginia, freshman engineering major; Shail Shah, India, graduate student in biotechnology.

Lady Knight Raiders: Lilia Doibani, Moldova, first-year law student; Rebecca Lelko, Ohio, freshman, math major; Stephanie Ballom, Texas, psychology graduate; Ananya Roy, Georgia, freshman, political science major.

Question: How important is physical fitness in chess competition?

Answer: There is a big misconception that chess is not a physically demanding sport. Many of my players regularly hit the gym, play tennis, soccer, volleyball, swim, jog, or do yoga, etc. When you play two games per day, up to 4-5 hours per game, plus many more hours in preparation, you better be physically and mentally fit. Otherwise, it is not possible to handle this kind of grueling competition.

Source: AJ
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Tuesday, June 1, 2010

The incredible difference one man can make


The incredible difference one man can make
May 30, 2010 - 1:02am

The 2010 U.S. Championship just concluded in St. Louis a few days ago. The 24 qualified players competed for nearly $200,000 in prizes over 10 days. After the smoke cleared, two former U.S. Champions, Gata Kamsky of New York and Yury Shulman of Barrington (a suburb of Chicago), tied for first. Gata clinched the title after a playoff.

The tournament was sponsored by Rex Sinquefield, a wealthy politically conservative businessman, co-founder and past co-chairman of Dimensional Fund Advisors Inc. This is the second year that Sinquefield sponsored the U.S. Chess Championship and U.S. Women's Chess Championship.

St. Louis, known as a sports town with the St. Louis Cardinals (baseball), St. Louis Rams (football), and St. Louis Blues (hockey), has now become a one of the chess capitals in the United States within a few short years, thanks to the generosity and vision of Sinquefield. Through Internet technology, millions of people nationwide and worldwide are able to follow the action live.

Sinquefield did not just sponsor these major chess events. He also invested a few million dollars to buy and renovate a three-story building in the heart of the central West End to open the nonprofit Chess Club and Scholastic Center of St. Louis. This instantly provided chess access to countless kids in that area. Maybe one day something similar can happen in Lubbock, which would greatly help so many of our young people. In the meantime, SPICE will continue to make a positive impact through chess locally, one school at a time.

One thing I can promise is a number of hard-working local volunteers and I will continue to work hard every day to try to make this a reality. Young people in West Texas do need our help. Chess changed my life in so many ways and I would like to give these young people the same opportunity I had.

If you want to help or if you know people who can help, please do not hesitate to contact me. We would welcome any support we can get.

Here is the full article.
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Friday, May 21, 2010

Game's importance


Texas Tech chess institute head Susan Polgar stresses game's importance during match with reporter

Posted: May 21, 2010 - 12:31am
By Matthew McGowan

Nobody expected it to be pretty.

She's a grandmaster, the highest honor a chess player can earn.

I occasionally challenge, and frequently lose to, strangers online.

She has won international acclaim and holds myriad world records.

I take pointers from 13-year-old amateurs in Sweden.

So who knows what I was thinking, challenging Susan Polgar to a game a chess.

Mental illness, perhaps. Or maybe hubris.

I like to think it was just another gauche act of daily journalism - you know, a work hazard.

But whatever the reason, I found myself sitting across a chess board from Susan Polgar on Wednesday morning.

Yeah. Call your bookies and place your bets, folks.

No surprises here. She won - twice.

Of course, I had no delusions of victory going into this thing, but I did have the faintest hope that maybe, just maybe, she would have to pause and think just once before moving a piece.

She didn't, as far as I could tell.

Polgar, one of the best players in the game's history, took no mercy. I watched helplessly as my pieces - my doomed minions - disappeared from the board.

The first game lasted only a few minutes, and even most of that passed during the question-and-answer pauses between moves.

Pretty soon my king was cowering in the back-left corner of the board, his entire posse helpless on the sidelines.

"Checkmate," Polgar smiled.

Ouch.

"Play again?" I asked.

My opponent nodded and we were off.

I put the notebook down and vowed to concentrate this time.

She immediately took me off guard and had her queen on the offensive.

The queen, as I understand it, is a piece used best in the middle- and end-phases of the game.

But Polgar undoubtedly knows all the strategic norms ... which means she's allowed to break them.

Her white queen shirked my pawns and landed deep behind my lines, where she took my rook - so much for my counterattack! - in seconds.

Within minutes, my king was again cornered. Then came the second checkmate.

You may not know it just by looking at Polgar - soft-spoken and patient with constantly calculating eyes - but she's one of the most skilled chess players in the world.

She made history in Pamplona, Spain, on Jan. 1, 1991, when she became the first woman to earn a grandmaster title on men's terms. Her title, she said, gave women access to what had historically been a boys club.

Natural, raw talent? I wondered.

No, she said. A lot of hard work.

"One of the main ingredients of success is to be motivated and driven, in addition to knowledge," she continued.

Polgar came across a chess set as a bored 4-year-old in search of "a new toy." She vaguely remembers that day, she now says, but she brought it to her mother - a school teacher in their home town of Budapest, Hungary - and asked if she could show her how to play.

Her mother had never played, so the young Polgar waited for her father, now a retired psychologist, to come home and teach her.

He was delighted, she said, that his daughter had taken an interest.

It took her less than a year to become Budapest's youth champion. She won her first world title at the age of 12. By 15, she ranked as the No. 1 female player in the world.

And that, she said, is the beauty of chess. No matter their color, gender, socio-economic status or age, anybody can play.

"That's one of the best things about chess," she said. "It's an equalizer between all those things. I enjoyed the feeling that I could play with grown men and I could have a fair game."

My own introduction to chess also came at a young age. I was no older than 5 years old when my father called me into his study, where he was puffing on his pipe and staring down at a peculiar array of little wooden figurines.

It didn't take me long to appreciate the dazzling choreography of the game. The knights and their L-shaped tracks. The bishops and long-range diagonal threat. The helpless king. The henchmen-like rooks on the flanks. The eight pawns - they're the grunts.

And then there's the queen, the doomsday weapon with unrestricted motion.

Mastering all the dynamics takes time, study and plenty of practice.

I played a few tournaments back in grade school, but not much since, I told my opponent, except for a few quick games online or chance game against an acquaintance.

"It's never too late to start again," Polgar, always the educator and advocate, reminded me without pause.

I surveyed the board and nodded, "You're absolutely right."

Chess is, after all, hard not to love. To me, it's the perfect game - a potent combustion of space, motion and wit.

According to the U.S. Chess Federation, the game's roots stretch back some 1,400 years to ancient India. Persian merchants brought it to Europe in the 11th century, where some of the eastern pieces were renamed to fit western norms - bishop, queen, etc. - but their range of motion was still restricted, thus slowing the game and blunting its intensity.

Then, in Europe in the 15th century, the game Polgar and I played this week was born when the rules were changed to allow longer movement ranges. This, in turn, unbridled a faster pace of play and yielded more excitement.

Nobody knows exactly who, or which group, was responsible for the major changes all those centuries ago, but they clearly hit the mark.

Today, the game is played by millions, but it's still mostly a men's game.

Women comprise between 3 and 5 percent of U.S. Chess Federation members, according to the group's numbers.

That's one of Polgar's priorities today.

She moved to New York City from Budapest in 1994 and began touring the country on exhibition tours and lecture circuits. She even came through Lubbock in 2005, where the seeds of Texas Tech's Susan Polgar Institute for Chess Excellence (SPICE) were planted.

She returned as a commencement speaker in May 2007, when the university announced it would create the institute.

Polgar knew Tech was offering a "one-of-a-kind" opportunity through SPICE, so she moved to the Hub City with her two sons, now ages 9 and 11 (and, yes, they both play chess).

She has also written several books on the game and coaches Tech's team, which has won many national and even international titles under her guidance.

But there's more work to do, she said. The game has yet to find a broader pop-culture foothold.

If poker can land a television slot, she said, why not chess?

"Certainly, chess has the merits and worthiness to make it popular," she said. "Unfortunately, we haven't it made it there yet, but I believe it's only a matter of time."

Source: Avalanche Journal

Sunday, March 21, 2010

The hunt for the elusive chess norm


The hunt for the elusive international grandmaster chess norm
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal
Sunday, March 21, 2010
Story last updated at 3/21/2010 - 12:26 am

This week, Dr. Rich Rice and Dr. Hal Karlsson, are contributing to this column. Both are associate professors at Texas Tech and they are also assistant tournament directors at the 2010 SPICE Spring International Invitational.

Thousands of years ago, Native Americans hunted buffalo and bison on the southern High Plains. Today, a different hunt is taking place in the same region.

Ten chess players have come to Texas Tech to compete in the 2010 SPICE Spring Invitational. They hail from four different countries (USA, Canada, Hungary, Croatia) and six different states (Texas, New York, New Jersey, Missouri, California, Florida). Seven of these players are aiming for their international master or grandmaster chess norms: three for a final norm, two for a second norm, and two for a first norm.

The battle for cerebral fitness is taking place in the English department at a university. These chess players compete for the love of the game, for bragging rights, and for personal satisfaction as they hunt for that elusive chess norm.

Chess is the most popular game on the planet, with more than 45 million people playing chess in America and more than 700 million players worldwide. Millions of kids who learn and play chess each year in the states develop life skills that benefit them the rest of their lives.

As the popular saying goes, chess is easy to learn, but hard to master. The 10 players who are in Lubbock this week are working to master the game. They are some of the best chess players in their respective countries with some of the top chess ratings according to the United States Chess Federation and the World Chess Federation (FIDE).

The average FIDE rating at this tournament is 2490.5, which is equivalent to a category 10 event. A Grandmaster norm at this tournament is 6 points (out of nine games) and an International Master norm is 4 points (out of nine games).

Many online spectators have tried to predict who will earn their norms at this tournament. There are so many variables that impact each player's final tournament score.

At the time of this article, 13-year-old Texan Darwin Yang just defeated grandmaster Jesse Kraai to earn his first international master norm. Four players, including Texas Tech's own international master Gergely Antal, are still in contention for various norms. This certainly will be an exciting finish.

Chess is a game that requires mental toughness, physical fitness, strong nerves, diligent preparation, strenuous calculation, superb memory, pinpoint intuition and some plain old luck. Each player faces ups and downs during each grueling round. This is why chess is so challenging.

During this tournament, simultaneously at another tournament, one of the world's best players opened with a3, which is moving a pawn located on the side of the board rather than in the middle. This move is typically considered a beginner's mistake. His game was still going on in France while the players in Lubbock loaded up on coffee and tea discussing it before their next round.

Who will win the 2010 SPICE Spring Invitational? No one knows. Chess is live, varied, and exciting. After each game is completed, I, and others, deconstruct the language and nuances of each game. It is fitting we are doing so in the English department lounge, where words and phrases and books surround them. Analysis has shown missed checkmates, missed wins, and miracle comebacks.

Source: Avalanche Journal
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Sunday, January 31, 2010

Lubbock chess tournament sees a record turnout


Polgar: Lubbock chess tournament sees a record turnout
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal
Sunday, January 31, 2010
Story last updated at 1/31/2010 - 12:22 am

The fourth "Get Smart! Play Chess!" Winter Scholastic Chess Championship was held on Jan. 23 at the Lubbock Science Spectrum. The event drew around 100 players - ages 6 to older than 60 - from Lubbock, San Angelo, Amarillo, and Midland, etc.

The players fought hard for four rounds. However, players managed to have a blast exploring the exciting exhibits between rounds. Some even enjoyed an IMAX movie after the tournament.

This is a wonderful collaboration among Texas Tech SPICE, the Knight Raiders, the Susan Polgar Foundation, and the Science Spectrum. I am hoping to partner up with more local businesses in the future to provide more activities, excitement, and benefits to our community.
Below are the top five individual finishers in each section (when tie, players are listed by the order of tie breaks):

K-2

1. D'Amico-Wong, Luca 4.0 points

2. McClure, Andrew 3.0

3-4. Church, London 2.0

3-4. Kotarski, Bridges 2.0

5. Walden, Sarah 1.0

K-5

1. Cheatham, Benjamin 4.0 points

2-6. McCarty, Danny 3.0

2-6. Polgar, Leeam 3.0

2-6. Mulligan, Brian 3.0

2-6. Simmons, Max 3.0

2-6. Asakawa, Anil 3.0

K-8

1. Simmons, Wolfgang 4.0 points

2-4. Tafoya, Emmanuel 3.5

2-4. Tafoya, Isriel 3.5

2-4. Butler, Anthony 3.5

5-11. Perez, Felix 3.0

5-11. Cassity, Taylor 3.0

5-11. Garcia, Gabriel 3.0

5-11. Arce, Jordan 3.0

5-11. Morris, Gordon 3.0

5-11. Sproles, Nathan 3.0

5-11. Johnson, Sam 3.0

K-12

1. Cortes, Joel 4.0 points

2. Perez, Bernadette 3.5

3-5. Smith, Quinton 3.0

3-5. Reyna, Gilbert II 3.0

3-5. Ball, Charles Adam 3.0

Open section for all ages

1-2. Cassidy, Brian (AZ) 1815 3.5 points

1-2. Polgar, Tom (TX) 1793 3.5

3-5. Haskin, Zachary (TX) 1869 2.5

3-5. Lelko, Rebecca (OH) 1835 2.5

3-5. Metzler, Shane (TX) 1465 2.5

Big thanks to Chase Watters, Brett James, Gabor Papp, Davorin Kuljasevic, Stephanie Ballom, Peggy Flores, Hal Karlsson, Lucia Barbato, Jerry Perez, Rich Rice, and Paul Truong for their help. Special thanks to Dr. Juan Munoz and Jeannie Diaz for their support. Last but not least, a sincere thanks to the Science Spectrum for hosting this event and for supporting chess in education.

Here is the link to 68 pictures from this event: http://susanpolgar.blogspot.com/2010/01/4th-get-smart-play-chess_23.html.

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Chess opening traps for players to know and avoid


Polgar: Chess opening traps for players to know and avoid

Lubbock Avalanche-Journal

Sunday, November 01, 2009
Story last updated at 11/1/2009 - 12:52 am

Normally you can be safe by following the general opening principles. I discussed these principles in the past but I will discuss them again for ones who have not seen them before.

Control the center

The center of the board includes the squares e4, d4, e5, and d5. When you start a game, place your pawns in the center to occupy and control as many of these squares as you can. Location, location, location.

Develop your pieces as soon as possible

Get your knights and bishops out right away. This should be done before you try to checkmate your opponent, some time in the first 6 or 7 moves if possible.

Castle as soon as possible

The first chance you have, castle immediately to keep your king safe. Remember: you can't win if your king is not safe and you get checkmated first. So, don't forget to castle! Then after you castle, connect your rooks by developing your queen.

Keep your pieces protected

Don't leave your pieces hanging without protection. Each and every piece you have is very valuable, so don't forget to protect them. Protecting means if your opponent can take your piece, then you can take your opponent's piece.

Besides the valuable principles above, there are others that you should try to remember. Chess is a game with logic, strategies, planning, and tactics. Keep the following principles in mind as you play.

• Every move should have a purpose.

• What is the idea behind your opponent's move?

• Always think before you move. There is no take back in chess. So make your decision carefully.

• Learn to make plans. Planning is one of the most important elements of the game of chess.

• Analyze your games and learn from your mistakes. Every player, from beginner to world champion, makes mistakes. It is very important to go over your games to find mistakes and learn from them.

• Pace yourself wisely.

However, there are some famous opening traps which you need to know about. Here are three examples:

Click here to read the full article.

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Part 2: Chess proponent shares harrowing story


Polgar: Part 2: Chess proponent shares harrowing story of getting to U.S.
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal
Sunday, May 10, 2009
Story last updated at 5/10/2009 - 2:04 am


This is a continuation from last week. Some readers would like to know who my husband is and what is his role in chess.

Susan Polgar: How did you manage to survive?

Paul Truong: I guess my father and I survived because of our inner strength. We said to ourselves, "we have to live. We have to make it because if we don't, my younger brother and mother would eventually die in Vietnam." They had no way of taking care of themselves. The communists did not treat them well after learning of the escape of my father and me. They punished them. They took away everything they owned. So we had to be strong and make it. We had no choice.

SP: I've known you for more than 20 years now. I know you usually don't want to talk about it. But I think this is really important for chess fans around the country and around the world to know why you are so passionate about helping chess. I think it is very inspirational. Please go on. How did you survive?

PT: We were drifting nowhere for a long time. All of sudden, after weeks of nothing but ocean, we finally saw land at the end of the horizon.

SP: So that was it?

PT: Not exactly! We could not get there because we had no fuel. And it was too long of a distance to swim. No one would make it. But luckily, I don't know how, but the current apparently pushed us slowly closer. Then out of nowhere, Indonesian navy ships came in front of us to stop us from entering. My father was brought to the commanding ship. They told my father to turn our boat around. My father explained to them we could not. We had no fuel, no food, no water and many of our people had died. They said they had orders not to let us in. If we do, they have no choice but to shoot us down.

My father told them in that case then please just save all of us from a slow and eventual death by shooting all of us now. We would not make it anyway.

Upon returning to our boat, my father ordered everyone to throw overboard all the dead bodies that relatives were still trying to hold on to for a proper burial. This was our only hope to show them how bad the situation was. When the captain of the commanding ship saw how many bodies were there, I think he changed his mind. An hour later, an official helicopter circled around us and they officially requested to have us brought to safety. In my heart, I know that the captain had radioed for help. But he would never admit it.

SP: So this was the end of the journey?

PT: Kind of! To make the long story short, after we were brought to this wild and deserted island, we were safe. But we still had no food. I had to hunt and fish with my bare hands, and find fruits from the jungle. We had to do whatever we could to survive.

This was a real survival experience, not the game you see on TV. Many more people died as a result of malnutrition. We stayed here for about 5-6 months I think. Then finally, we came to New Jersey on Dec. 1, 1979. I spoke no English. I was frail. I was very rusty in chess. It was a disaster.

SP: So did you start to play a lot of chess in here in America? And did anyone know what you had to endure?

PT: I played in any tournament that I could afford to enter. I had no money. I was going to high school full time (without even knowing the language) and I worked seven part-time jobs at night and weekends to raise money to send back to Vietnam to help my mother, my brother and more than 60 other relatives. Most people did not know this. Some knew, but very little. I did not want anyone to feel sorry for me. I wanted to earn everything by merit.

I became a master again in 1980. I was right around 15. I won many tournaments, but I could not afford to enter many big tournaments, so mostly regional ones.

SP: So when did you leave chess?

PT: At the age of 17, I had to make a very hard decision. Do I want to continue to play chess and be a professional, and to fulfill my dream of being a grandmaster? Or do I just give it up and go to college and have a professional career?
I chose to leave the game. How could I be a world-class player if I did not even have the opportunity to train or play? So I went to college.

SP: What happened after college?


PT: I began working professionally. I worked very hard. I put in 16- to 18-hour days, seven days a week. I did that every day for 15 years. Then in 2001, on 9/11, you remember we had a business meeting right around the World Trade Center area that morning. I guess someone up there did not want us to go. That was when I felt that it was my calling to do something I always wanted to do, and that is to get back into the chess field. That was always my true love.

SP: Is this why making a difference for chess is so important to you?

PT: Yes. Absolutely. I lost my chance to become a very special player in chess when I was younger because of the political situation in my country. I did not have this chance. Then when I came to America, I could not pursue chess fully because I could not afford it. That is why it is my mission to change this.

I want to be able to give every child an opportunity to play this game. I want every child who wants to pursue his or her dream will have the proper guidance and assistance. I would like to promote chess as a tool to help all children academically and in life. I know that I may not reach every child. But I will give it 150 percent everyday to fulfill this mission. Why not? Who says we can't do it? If I can survive everything I went through in life, why can't I do this?

I don't know failure. I don't accept failures. I don't understand the word "impossible." I did not risk my life, give up everything to come here to just be another person. I want to make a difference. I want to give back for the blessing I had.

SP: Is this where you get your passion?

PT: Yes! Whatever I do, I give 150 percent of myself. Everything I do, I do with a passion. Everything I say, I say it with a passion. This is me. I hope my passion will rub off on other people. I hope that when more people see why I am doing this, they will join and lend a hand.

There are about 40-45 million people who play this game according to the numbers I read. Why can't chess be bigger and more popular? I am absolutely positive that we will succeed if everyone works together and what we do can change an entire generation.

Source: Avalanche Journal
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Sunday, May 3, 2009

Personal story of struggle to escape homeland


Polgar: Chess champion shares personal story of struggle to escape homeland (part 1)
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal
Sunday, May 03, 2009
Story last updated at 5/3/2009 - 2:07 am

The question of the week is very different this week. Some readers would like to know who my husband is and what is his role in chess.

My husband has been one of my best friends for more than two decades, who also happens to be my business manager and chess trainer as well. His name is Paul Truong.

He is the director of marketing and PR for SPICE at Texas Tech and is also the assistant head coach of the TTU Knight Raiders Chess Team.

He is the brain behind many current and past incredible chess projects in the U.S. His background is in marketing and PR and his mission is to bring chess to the level of popularity of golf, tennis and other sports.

He has dedicated the last nine years to promoting this wonderful game with all its vast benefits, especially to young people. Often, people ask me why he does this. I think you will know why after reading this two-part interview. It was a very emotional interview because it touched upon many painful topics for my husband, some things he usually does not to talk about.

Susan Polgar: Why are you so passionate about changing the face of chess in America?

Truong: Well, it is a very good question and one I don't think I have talked about too much. It started from circumstances I had to deal with throughout the early part of my life. Growing up in Saigon, South Vietnam, I became a chess icon at a very young age. I won many national junior and open championships. The first one came unexpectedly when I was only 5 years old. All of a sudden, I became a sensation, a child prodigy. My celebrity status skyrocketed.

I was invited by the late President Marcos of the Philippines to attend the Fischer vs. Karpov match in Manila in 1975 (which of course never took place). I also qualified for the World Junior (under 21) Championship in Manila that same year. At that time, I thought I had a chance to showcase my talent on a world stage. Then, my life came crumbling down. The communists from North Vietnam took over my country on April 30, 1975. I was no longer allowed to travel. I was no longer allowed to play chess freely.

Since my father was working for the U.S. Embassy prior to the fall of South Vietnam, my family was singled out. They considered us traitors. For the next four years, my father had to constantly be in hiding, otherwise, he would have been executed. The new government no longer allowed me to train in chess. The only thing they allowed me to do was to defend my National Championship, which I did successfully until April 30, 1979, the fourth anniversary of the fall of Saigon.

On that day, my father and I escaped by boat through an underground network, leaving my mother and young brother behind. They would never survive this dangerous escape. Our hope was to be able to get out first and bring them out later through another channel. To make the long story short, we faced death many times. How we survived was a miracle in itself.

SP: So what exactly happened?

PT: We had a lot of problems the first time we tried to escape. The wooden boat was only about 150 feet long and there were more than 600 people inside. We were sitting like sardines in a can, even worse. There was no ventilation, no food, no water and not even a bathroom. The engine could not hold up and exploded. We were stranded in the ocean without food and water for a while.

After we were lucky enough to be rescued, our boat was towed back to Vietnam and we were all thrown in jail. Luckily, the authorities did not know who my father was. After bribing the local officials, we were released and we escaped again a month later.

This time, the engine was bigger. But we had different problems. We were attacked by pirates from Thailand. They took the valuables from people on the boat. They raped our women and young girls. They even took some to their boat when they were done. We never saw these young girls again. We had to go through this five different times with five different pirate ships.

SP: So how did you get to safety?

PT: During the fifth attack, the pirates could not find any valuables because the previous four groups took everything. They were angry so they sunk our boat. We were in the middle of nowhere in shark-infested waters. Many people could not swim and drowned. Others died of exhaustion. And some died from you know... My father and I were lucky enough to live through this. An American oil tanker happened to go by, saw us and rescued us.

SP: So you were safe after this?

PT: No. After being in a small enclosed abandoned soccer field with no roof over our head, little food and unbearable living conditions for 30 days, we were thrown out of Malaysia because the locals could no longer to help us.

They put us on a boat taken from previous refugees, threw in another 350-plus refugees from different boats (now we had about 700 people total), gave us about 20 gallons of fuel and 20 gallons of water (no food), then towed us out to international waters.

Could you imagine, 20 gallons of fuel? Where do you go with 20 gallons? And 20 gallons of water for 700 people? How long can anyone last under 120-degree heat directly under the tropical sun with no food or water?

Not only that, while they towed us out, they purposely tried to sink us. They towed us in a zigzag formation to tear apart the front of the boat. They did but we were lucky that the boat did not break in half. After they got us to the point where they thought we could never survive, they left us to die.

Again, we had to drift to nowhere for weeks without food, water or fuel. Many people died of hunger and thirst. Dead bodies were everywhere. There was nothing you could do. All you could do was pray.

The second part of this interview will continue next week.

Sunday, November 2, 2008

An interview with World Chess Champion Anand


Polgar: An interview with World Chess Champion Anand of India
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal
Sunday, November 02, 2008
Story last updated at 11/2/2008 - 2:48 am


Grandmaster Viswanathan Anand of India just defeated Grandmaster Vladimir Kramnik of Russia in a 12-game World Championship match in Bonn, Germany to retain his title. The final score was 6.5 - 4.5. The match prize funds are 1.5 million Euros ($2.35 million U.S.).
Here is the continuation of my column last week.

Susan Polgar: What role do computers play in today's chess?

Viswanathan Anand: Well, I think it is like having the best tactical player in the world at your disposal 24/7.

Clearly, you have to find a way to use that. And of course as the processors get better, the computer goes a little bit further out. So nowadays, we have engines even suggesting non-tactical moves, simply because they look so far ahead. And I think it is a great help.
But of course you have to make sure that you don't drown in that information, so you have to keep track of what you do. Essentially, it comes down to the same thing, getting to the heart of the position, some key concepts, and then being able to get to the bottom of things.

SP: How have you been able to maintain your top level for two decades?

Anand: I think it is basically easy, because chess is fascinating and it is very easy to keep that. And of course when I start to lose it, I take off for a few months and maybe take a vacation and do something else and things usually come back after that.

Sometimes you manage to stop on your own, and sometimes it takes a heavy defeat to stop you. But anyway, usually after you stop for a while, you'll get it back, as long as you maintain this kind of balance with the right amount of chess. You need practice and you need to maintain that tournament tension to have that feeling. If you stay away for too long, you lose that and then it is harder to come back.

But if you can sort of manage this kind of balance, it's nice. I like to lose myself in my hobbies as well, like astronomy and traveling. And this is nice because it allows you to put chess in the proper place.

SP: How many countries have you visited and do you have a favorite?

VA: Actually, I just reached forty-nine. So I am hoping to get to fifty.

SP: Can you tell me about the chess in the school's program in India?

VA: We currently have a program called Mind Champion's Academy. It is an idea from the IT company that I work with (NIIT), they already do all the computer education through many schools in many states, so something like 4,000-plus schools, with a total student population of more than 1.4 million. And of that, more than 70,000 have played in a competition this year. The nice thing is that we also reach out to non-traditional areas; not only the cities, but small towns and villages as well. So hopefully in five to ten years, we will start to see the effect of this as more and more people enter the chess world.

But the idea for the students is that even if their attraction for chess is limited, we think it is a good tool to help their academics, to develop certain skills and so on. So it is a win-win situation and that's what I'm excited about. Obviously when I come back now, it is a program that I'll continue.

SP: What role does chess play in education?

VA: I think nowadays, children need all the help they can get and generally children learn better in the form of a game. So in that sense, chess has a role because it teaches them problem solving, but in a fun way, because they will reject anything that bores them.

For chess, I think there is an incentive because it will help the sport. But frankly, it is a big help for the schools and it gives the kids something to do. Perhaps it will replace other less healthy alternatives. To give them anything that's fun and positive is good.

I think that's one area where chess will grow, because many countries are doing the same thing, and all based on the theory that chess develops skills that are useful. I think it's something that will prosper.

Source: Avalanche Journal
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Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Local youngster wins National Championship


Lubbock boy wins national chess title
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal
Tuesday, May 13, 2008
Story last updated at 5/13/2008 - 1:45 am


Tom Polgar-Shutzman, a third-grader at Ramirez Charter School, won his third national chess title at the National Elementary Chess Championship in Pittsburgh, Pa.

Polgar-Shutzman was among 2,200 young chess players who competed for national titles during the event Friday through Sunday.

He scored 6.5 points in seven games, earning six wins and one draw. He shares the first-place title in the K-3 section with Danny Angermeier of Massachusetts.

Polgar-Shutzman is the eldest son of Susan Polgar, director of Texas Tech's Susan Polgar Institute for Chess Excellence and Knight Raiders head coach.

Two weeks ago, Polgar-Shutzman represented the Ramirez Charter School and captured first place in the first Lubbock Open (third- through fifth-grade section) with a perfect 4-0 score.

He also helped his school team win the third-through fifth-grade first-place team trophy.

Source: Avalanche Journal
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Sunday, May 11, 2008

Big boost for SPICE and Chess in Lubbock


SPICE and chess in general in Lubbock get big boost from benefactor
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal
Sunday, May 11, 2008
Story last updated at 5/11/2008 - 4:01 am


Last week, I mentioned the record-breaking participation at the first Lubbock Open Chess Championship. The Lubbock Open took place on April 26 at Monterey High School. The local support for the event was overwhelming, and we are very excited about organizing the event every year.

Now there is more good news for Texas Tech's Susan Polgar Institute for Chess Excellence (SPICE) and chess in Lubbock. A number of schools in Lubbock ISD already offer chess as an after-school program. The Lubbock Area Foundation recently awarded SPICE a substantial grant to introduce chess in schools that do not have such programs.

The LAF is a tremendous resource for Lubbock and West Texas citizens. My hope is to be able to raise enough financial support to begin or support chess programs in every school in Lubbock and surrounding cities. Chess is such an effective and inexpensive tool to enhance young people's educational and life experiences.

Also, a few days ago, SPICE announced an extremely generous pledge from a private donor. The gift will provide $320,000 for TTU scholarships beginning this fall and spread out over the next five years. This support follows $25,000 in support already given to Texas Tech's chess program by the same benefactor in 2007. Get your guns up, chess fans!

There's more. Additional funds will support the installation of three double-sized concrete chess tables between Texas Tech's Student Union building and library to support the increased enthusiasm for chess on campus.

Texas Tech has enjoyed a large number of inquiries from student chess players in the past year. In the fall, some of the top chess players in the United States, and indeed the world, will enroll at Tech. Rising water raises all boats, and it sure has been raining a lot this past week! Soon, Lubbock will be known as the center of chess in the United States.

Here is the full article.
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Sunday, April 20, 2008

Avalanche-Journal new weekly chess column


Head of Tech chess program begins column
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal
Sunday, April 20, 2008
Story last updated at 4/20/2008 - 4:04 am


Welcome to my weekly chess column!

My name is Susan Polgar. I was born and raised in Budapest, Hungary. I moved to the United States in 1994, and I lived in New York until August of last year when I relocated to Lubbock to join the Texas Tech family and the Lubbock community.

I am a professional chess player. More information about my work can be found through http://www.susanpolgar.com/.

Some of the highlights:

• Breaking the gender barrier to be the first woman ever to qualify for the Men's World Championship tournament.
• Breaking the gender barrier to become the first-ever woman to earn the title of Grandmaster.
• Winning four world championships and becoming the only chess player in history to win the triple-crown (which includes Blitz, Rapid and Classical time controls).
• Winning 10 Olympiad medals including five gold, four silver and one bronze.

I first visited Lubbock in the fall of 2005 as part of my national chess exhibition and lecture tour. Little did I know at the time that less than two years later I would call Lubbock home. My family and I absolutely love the city and region.

In 2006, I received an invitation to be the commencement speaker at the May 2007 TTU graduation ceremonies. At the ceremony, President Jon Whitmore announced SPICE (Susan Polgar Institute for Chess Excellence), which has four main goals:

1. To put SPICE, Texas Tech University and Lubbock on the chess world map (more than 700 million people play chess worldwide).

2. To introduce chess as an educational tool in all local and regional Lubbock area schools as part of our outreach program, with the goal of going national and international.

3. To conduct research projects connecting chess and other important fields such as education, computers, medicine, psychology, math and writing.

4. To recruit talented chess players worldwide who want to combine their academic studies with continuing to study chess. We hope to be able to put together in the near future a championship-caliber chess team that could compete nationally and internationally for high honors.

Here is the full article.
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Friday, March 14, 2008

Knight Raiders


Tech's Knight Raiders Chess Team flies high at competition
By Ashley Simpson AVALANCHE-JOURNAL
Friday, March 14, 2008
Story last updated at 3/14/2008 - 2:18 am

The Knight Raiders Chess Team took second place at the 2008 Southwest Collegiate Championship in Houston last weekend - the best ever showing in team history.

Nearly 1,500 players statewide attended the competition. Texas Tech's team placed ahead of the University of Texas in Austin and behind the University of Texas in Dallas.

"We were playing against the No. 1 team in the nation, so I'm really stoked about (our win)," said Chase Watters, president of Tech's chess team. "We're hoping to get some international masters and grandmasters next year."

Team members Stephanie Ballom, Walter Albeldano and Bryan Pernes, along with Watters, brought home the second-place award.

Susan Polgar, head coach and director of Tech's Susan Polgar Institute for Chess Excellence, said the award is a significant accomplishment for the community.

"It was a wonderful achievement for our students," said Polgar. "I'm very proud of them."

Polgar, winner of four Women's World Chess Championships, 10 Olympic medals and Women's World Chess Cup, said she hopes her team will continue to make Lubbock proud.

Ballom said Polgar is always there for the team to provide help and encouragement.

"Susan is an amazing coach," she said.

The team prepared for the event with relentless practice and weekly tournaments, said Albeldano.

"We've been working hard," he said. "I'm excited to be part of it."

Source: Avalanche Journal
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