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- <text id=93TT0846>
- <title>
- Sep. 20, 1993: Blood On The Board
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Sep. 20, 1993 Clinton's Health Plan
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CHESS, Page 72
- Blood On The Board
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The chess world erupts in its strangest move yet: dueling championships
- </p>
- <p>By PAUL GRAY--With reporting by James Geary/Amsterdam and Barry Hillenbrand/London
- </p>
- <p> Amid the noise of jostling photographers and clacking shutters,
- the two combatants finally squared off last Tuesday on the stage
- of the Savoy Theater in London. In one corner, the challenger
- and clear crowd favorite, a pink-cheeked, brush-cut 28-year-old
- and the first native-born Briton ever to contend for the world
- title. In the other, the defending champ, an Armenian-born egoist,
- 30, with killer instincts and a reputation as the best warrior
- of all time. At stake: competitive pride and a purse of $2.6
- million.
- </p>
- <p> And then, as the din gradually subsided, Nigel Short and Gary
- Kasparov began to push chess pieces across a board.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, the official World Chess Championship had opened
- a day earlier, with considerably less hubbub, in the small town
- of Zwolle, the Netherlands. There, former world champion Anatoly
- Karpov faced Dutch grandmaster Jan Timman for prize money of
- roughly $1.4 million.
- </p>
- <p> What in the world of chess was going on around here? Since matches
- determining the best player on earth normally crop up only once
- every three years, the phenomenon of two such face-offs commencing
- during the same week left rank-and-file devotees with divided
- loyalties and confusion aplenty. On the one hand, the Karpov-Timman
- contest bore the imprimatur of FIDE (pronounced FEE-day), the
- Federation Internationale des Echecs, the powerful governing
- body that has been running world championship competitions since
- 1948. In the past, FIDE's authority would have been enough to
- convince chess fans that Karpov-Timman was the match to follow.
- Unfortunately, Karpov and Timman had both been eliminated by
- Short during the FIDE-sponsored competitions to determine who
- would challenge Kasparov for the championship.
- </p>
- <p> So why were Kasparov and Short not playing for the FIDE world
- title in Zwolle? Because these two, who seem genuinely to dislike
- each other, had nonetheless banded together to mount an unprecedented
- challenge to the reigning chess establishment. When FIDE decreed
- last February that the Kasparov-Short match would take place
- in Manchester, England, for a purse of about $1.8 million, Short
- claimed angrily that he had not been consulted. He was unhappy
- with the choice of Manchester, hardly a high-profile or glamorous
- setting, and he didn't like the prize money either. He phoned
- Kasparov and said, as he recalls, "Look, why don't we play this
- match outside of FIDE?"
- </p>
- <p> Kasparov had his own reasons for warming to the idea. His resentments
- against FIDE date back to the mid-1980s, when he was challenging
- his compatriot Karpov for the world title. After an epochal,
- 48-game struggle, with Kasparov surging from behind and Karpov
- near collapse, FIDE president Florencio Campomanes suddenly
- declared the contest finished "without result" and ordered it
- to be replayed from the start. Outraged, Kasparov decided that
- the monolithic Soviet chess federation, which grudgingly tolerated
- him while championing Karpov, had leaned on FIDE and Campomanes
- to salvage Karpov's title, at least for a while.
- </p>
- <p> And Kasparov was not the only one who thought that the U.S.S.R.,
- long the dominant force in world chess, dictated FIDE policies.
- Bobby Fischer had accused the Soviets of match rigging and clashed
- repeatedly with FIDE officials before and after he won the world
- title from Boris Spassky in 1972.
- </p>
- <p> United, Kasparov and Short mounted a far more powerful counterforce
- to FIDE than the solitary Fischer had ever managed. They became
- the founding--and only--members of the Professional Chess
- Association ( P.C.A.) and began entertaining bids for their
- runaway world championship match. The Times of London, owned
- by Rupert Murdoch, rose to the bait. A 24-game competition stretching
- over eight full weeks and featuring Britain's first-ever contender
- promised reams of publicity, much of which the Times could provide.
- Weeks before the match started, the paper began running extensive
- and incessant chess coverage. London's double-decker buses sprouted
- ads proclaiming, THERE'S ONLY ROOM FOR ONE AT THE TOP and THE
- BATTLE COMMENCES SEPTEMBER 7TH. The Times's name and logo figured
- prominently in the 56 hours of television coverage that the
- commercial network Channel 4 committed to the event.
- </p>
- <p> For its part, FIDE responded predictably: it expunged Kasparov
- and Short from its list of ranking grandmasters and decreed
- the Karpov-Timman match in Zwolle as the only true chess championship.
- No one, not even FIDE loyalists, took this claim seriously.
- Surreptitiously or not, chess attention centered on London.
- </p>
- <p> There, last week, the most dramatic moment occurred in the initial
- match, when Short ran out of time, could not make his 40th move
- within the required two hours and lost to Kasparov. This outcome
- provided some grim satisfaction to purists; one of the reforms
- initiated by Kasparov's and Short's P.C.A. was to condense playing
- time in order to make championship chess more palatable to casual
- spectators.
- </p>
- <p> Can chess, a notoriously cerebral exercise, ever achieve the
- critical mass-market niche necessary to pay top players what
- they now think they are worth? To those who do not know the
- game, televised chess can seem slightly less enthralling than
- a test pattern. Despite all the hype, Kasparov and Short have
- not yet filled the Savoy to its 1,030-seat capacity. As both
- championship matches stretch on, and the war between FIDE and
- the top two players escalates, chess fans may come to wonder
- whether they are experiencing an embarrassment of riches or
- merely an embarrassment.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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