Chess boxing From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia A chess - TopicsExpress



          

Chess boxing From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia A chess boxing match in Berlin, 2008 Chess boxing is a hybrid sport that combines chess with boxing in alternating rounds. The sport was invented by French artist and filmmaker Enki Bilal in his comic book Froid Équateur in 1992. The first real event of chess-boxing was organized by Dutch artist Iepe Rubingh in 2003. Chess boxing is a fast growing sport,[1] with large followings in Berlin and London, where most events take place. Several other chessboxing events have taken place around the world, including in Los Angeles, Tokyo,[2] Nantes (France), Reykjavík (Iceland), Amsterdam,[3] Calcutta (India) and Krasnoyarsk (Russia). Participants must be skilled as both boxers and chess players, as a match may be won either way. Contents [hide] 1 Structure and rules 2 History 2.1 2006 2.2 2008 2.3 2009 2.4 2010 2.5 2011 2.6 2012 3 Required chess skill 4 Documentary 5 References 6 External links Structure and rules[edit] A full match consists of eleven rounds: six rounds of chess, each four minutes long, and five rounds of boxing, each three minutes long (four minutes under amateur rules).[4] The match begins with a chess round which is followed by a boxing round. Rounds of chess and boxing alternate until the end of the match.[1][5] There is a one-minute break between each round, during which competitors cool out and change gear.[4][5] Rules of fast chess are used, and a competitor only has a total of twelve minutes to use for all his chess moves. Players chess time is measured using a chess clock.[5] A competitor may win the match during a boxing round by knockout or a technical stoppage by the referee, by achieving a checkmate or if the opponents twelve minutes run out during a chess round, or by the opponents resignation at any point.[1][5] If the chess game reaches a stalemate, the scores from the boxing rounds are used to determine the winner. If the boxing score (calculated on a round-by-round basis) is also a draw, the player with the black pieces is awarded the win on the grounds that his/her achieving a stalemate despite Whites generally acknowledged first-move advantage in chess is evidence of a superior performance by Black.[4] If a competitor fails to make a move during the chess round, he can be issued a warning after which he must make a legal move within the next 10 seconds or become disqualified. Repeated warnings may also result in a disqualification. The warnings are in use to avoid situations where a competitor would stall a losing chess game and focus his activity only on boxing.[6] The players wear closed-back headphones during the chess rounds to avoid being distracted by the live chess commentary, or hearing advice shouted from the audience.[5] History[edit] The hybrid sport was envisioned in 1992 by comics artist Enki Bilal, and chess boxing was featured in his graphic novel Froid Équateur.[1] Iepe Rubingh brought the concept to life, fighting under the name Iepe the Joker.[7] Rubingh felt the method described in the book, a boxing match followed by a chess match, was impractical. He instead decided on alternating rounds of chess and boxing.[8] A similar concept was featured in the 1991 Finnish film Uuno Turhapuro—herra Helsingin herra, where the hero plays blindfold chess against one person using a hands-free telephone headset while boxing another person. It is not known if Bilal was aware of the movie. There was also a 1979 movie by director Joseph Kuo called Ninja Checkmate; the English-dubbed American version was known as the Mystery of Chess Boxing. It does not feature chess boxing, but it is probably the inspiration for the Wu-Tang Clan song Da Mystery of Chessboxin on their first album Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers) (1993). Wu-Tang Clan producer RZA is a fan and advocate of the sport.[1] The earliest chessboxing reference occurred in London in 1978 when two brothers Stewart and James Robinson began chessboxing at the Samuel Montagu Boys Club. Iepe Rubingh was unaware of this before being shown the picture at the Berlin vs London press conference in June 2011. The sport is governed by the World Chess Boxing Organisation (WCBO), whose strapline is The smartest toughest (wo)man on the planet. The first world championship was held in Amsterdam in 2003 and was won by Iepe Rubingh.[9] The First European Chess Boxing Championship took place in Berlin on October 1, 2005. Tihomir Atanassov Dovramadjiev of Bulgaria defeated Andreas D Schneider of Germany, who conceded in the seventh (chess) round. 2006[edit] On the left: reigning light heavyweight world champion Nikolay Sazhin from Russia. On April 21, 2006, 400 spectators paid to watch two chess boxing matches in the Gloria Theatre, Cologne. Zoran the Priest Mijatovic opened with the Queens Gambit. Zorans opponent, a 37-year-old former UN Peacekeeper named Frank Anti Terror Stoldt, was well prepared and dominated in both the chess and the boxing rounds.[10] In the seventh round (chess) Mijatovic realized he was three moves away from being checkmated and resigned.[10][11] 2008[edit] In April 2008, the World Chess Federation FIDE posted a video on its website showing its president, Kirsan Ilyumzhinov, playing a friendly chess boxing match in Elista.[12] That same month, the United Kingdoms first chess boxing club was begun in London by the Great Britain Chess Boxing Organizations founder Tim Woolgar. In July 2008 in Berlin, a 19-year-old Russian mathematics student Nikolai Sazhin won the World Champion title in chess boxing by defeating Frank Stoldt.[13][14][15] Stoldt resigned in the 5th round (chess) after losing his queen.[14] 2009[edit] On November 28, 2009 the light heavyweight world championship bout took place between chess boxers Nikolay The Chairman Sazhin and Leo Granit Kraft, at the Ivan Yargin Palace of Sport in Krasnoyarsk, Siberia, before a crowd of 2000. Sazhin, a native of Krasnoyarsk, had previous amateur boxing experience, having fought in 95 previous bouts (winning 85), and possessed a chess Elo rating of 2005; however, he had recently suffered an injury to his knee. His opponent, Kraft, was four years younger (at 17 years of age); he was born in Gomel, Belarus, but was representing the German Chess Boxing Organisation. Although younger, Kraft had fought in 50 amateur boxing fights (with a record of 45 wins), and had an Elo rating of 1997.[16] The fight opened with the Grünfeld Defence, and was followed by the first boxing round, which was largely dominated by the younger Kraft. The return to the chessboard in the third round saw Kraft castling early, and the resulting play saw Kraft having to defend his king. Sazhin continued in the subsequent boxing round, taking the upper hand in the fight. However, once they returned to the chess board, Sazhin used up too much time attacking Krafts king. Thus by round eight Sazhin was forced to win by knockout or lose on the board. He failed to do so, and on returning to the chess board, Sazhin resigned the match.[16] 2010[edit] Chessboxing continued to grow in 2010 with events being held around Europe. In London, English Chessboxing founder Tim Woolgar won against heavyweight Hubert van Melik of the Netherlands. 2011[edit] 2011 saw London emerge as a force in international Chessboxing. Svein Clouston won an inaugural Scottish middleweight title in Tufnell Park in March. London Chessboxing experienced success by defeating a Berlin select by two bouts to one at a Chessboxing challenge match in Germany. The Scala in Kings Cross became the first nightclub venue in England to host Chessboxing. At 900 strong crowd watched Hubert Van Melik defeat American Andrew McGregor in the 2nd round. This event also hosted the first recorded womens Chessboxing fight. The Indian Chessboxing Organisation was founded in 2011 and staged its first event in Kolkata in November. Nikolay Sazhin who had by now moved up to the Heavyweight division took on former Mixed Martial Arts fighter and experienced Chessboxer Andy The Rock Costello in Siberia. Sazhin won a chess victory in front of his home supporters. 2012[edit] Nikolay Sazhin faced Andy The Rock Costello again, in March at the Scala in Kings Cross. Costello who held the white pieces opened with a Kings Indian Attack. However he failed to find an initiative and quickly fell into a passive position. Despite a determined effort by Costello who dominated the boxing rounds. Sazhin withstood the assault and a capacity crowd saw him win in the final round of chess. The evening also saw Mike Botteley winning a rematch against Chris The General Levy, their second bout. German Tim Bendfeldt defeated Hungarian Atilla Por by TKO in their undercard match on the same bill. July 2012 saw the first titled chess grandmaster compete in Chessboxing. Arik Braun took part in a Berlin event and emerged victorious. Required chess skill[edit] World-class chess-boxers must not only be experienced boxers, but must also be at least Class A strength as chess players.[17] For example, Nikolai Sazhin has an Elo rating of around 1900, roughly corresponding to high Class A or low expert level, while European chess boxing champion Tihomir Atanassov Dovramadjiev is a FIDE Master with a rating over 2300 and has won multiple chess competitions.[17][18] Arik Braun, the strongest chess player to have competed in Chessboxing, is a grandmaster rated 2556 by FIDE.[19] Documentary[edit] The first feature-length documentary about chessboxing is currently in production, entitled Chessboxing: The Kings Discipline. The film follows the development of the sport over a span of 3 years as the promoters in Berlin, London and Los Angeles each attempt to bring their differing visions for the sport to a mainstream audience. At the same time the film explores the various critiques of the sport put forth by members of the chess and boxing communities, while also seeking to understand the potential social impact of a never-before-seen mental/physical sporting combination such as this. The project is completely independent, produced and directed by Canadian filmmaker David Bitton under the banner of his Anonymous Pineapple Productions. A kickstarter campaign was launched on June 12th, 2013, in order to raise the funds needed to complete post-production on the film. [20] The documentary is expected to be completed in the 1st quarter of 2014. References[edit] ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Calhoun, Ada (2008-07-10). Chess-Boxing Hits it Big. Time Magazine. Retrieved 2008-07-13. Jump up ^ The Tokyo Fight Jump up ^ 1st Chess Boxing World Championship ^ Jump up to: a b c Chesboxing. World Chess Boxing Organization homepage. Retrieved 20 August 2012. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Highlights of the 2008 World Chess Boxing Championships. secondsout YouTube channel. 23 July 2008. Retrieved 20 August 2012. Jump up ^ What is ChessBoxing?. London ChessBoxing. Archived from the original on 2008-08-22. Retrieved 2008-07-18. Jump up ^ James, Kyle (April 19, 2006). Chess-Boxing Combines Brawn and Brains in One Event. National Public Radio. Retrieved 9 January 2010. Jump up ^ McGroarty, Patrick (2008-07-17). New sport combines boxing and chess. Associated Press. Retrieved 2008-07-18. Jump up ^ van Melick, Simon (2003-12-05). Chess Boxing World Championship. Chessbase. Retrieved 2008-07-17. ^ Jump up to: a b Mahoney, Donny. Da Mystery of Schachboxen:Ringside at the Chess Fights. Mongrel (21). Retrieved 2008-07-15. Jump up ^ Special:Chess Boxing. SportsCenter. 2007-05-07. ESPN. Jump up ^ Kirsan Ilyumzhinov As A Chess Boxer!. FIDE. 2008-07-18. Retrieved 2008-07-18. Jump up ^ Bouvier, Arnaud (2008-07-07). Chess boxers slug it out. Melbourne, Australia: The Age. Retrieved 2008-07-18.[dead link] ^ Jump up to: a b Nikolay Sazhin is the New World Champion. World Chess Boxing Organisation (press release). Retrieved 2008-07-13. Jump up ^ Chessboxing World Championship 2008 in Berlin. ChessBase (press release). 2008-07-03. Retrieved 2008-07-13. ^ Jump up to: a b Youngest Chessboxing Champion Ever. World Chess Boxing Organisation. 2009. Retrieved 9 January 2010. ^ Jump up to: a b Chalk, Andy (2008-07-07). World Chess Boxing Champion Crowned. The Escapist. Retrieved 2008-07-21. Jump up ^ Chessboxing on ESPN, Playboy and Maxim. ChessBase. 2006-06-27. Retrieved 2008-07-21. Jump up ^ Arik Braun rating card at FIDE Jump up ^ kickstarter/projects/1617582565/chessboxing-the-kings-discipline External links[edit] Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chess boxing. The official WCBO site The official Chess Boxing Club Berlin site Official UK site The official Siberian Chess Boxing Organisation site The official Chess Boxing Organisation of India site Chessboxing site Chessboxing video The official Great Britain Chessboxing Organisation site A review of chessboxing training classes in London A photographic account of London Chessboxing clubs matches since 2009. Interview with Iepe Rubingh The official site of Anonymous Pineapple Productions Kickstarter campaign page for Chessboxing: The Kings Discipline [show] v t e Hybrid sports and the sports that form them [show] v t e Boxing terminology Categories: Individual sportsMultisportsChess variantsBoxingCombat sportsChess boxing Navigation menu Create accountLog inArticleTalkReadEditView history Search Main page Contents Featured content Current events Random article Donate to Wikipedia Interaction Help About Wikipedia Community portal Recent changes Contact page Toolbox Print/export Languages العربية Български Català Česky Dansk Deutsch Eesti Español فارسی Français Galego Íslenska Italiano עברית Lietuvių Magyar Nederlands 日本語 Norsk bokmål Oʻzbekcha Polski Português Русский Shqip Simple English Suomi Svenska ไทย Українська 中文 Edit links This page was last modified on 11 September 2013 at 19:33. 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Posted on: Tue, 29 Oct 2013 07:49:08 +0000

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