Colin Crouch
April 18, 2015
The news has come that Colin Crouch has passed away.
I have been enjoying his daily blog for the past year. It is still online with the last entry being The So-Rich-Akobian dispute, on April 11.
http://crouchnotes.blogspot.ca
It was apparent that he was carrying on with his blog despite a stroke that left him partially sighted. One could see misspellings and some confusion but still be impressed with the strength of his writing against all odds.
This from an interview:
Colin Crouch, an international master of chess, is living in London but grew up in Durham. Colin became partially sighted due to a stroke, but that didn't stop his determination to keep playing chess and now takes part in the blind international tournaments as well.
"I learned [how to play chess] when I was young, carried on playing, became a British champion and a London champion. I've played quite a lot of international tournaments, but this is my first time at a blind international.
"I'm partially sighted as a result of a stroke which has been difficult for me ... I realise I'm not as strong as I would have been a few years back but I'm hoping to improve."
He was 58 years old.
_____
Some quotes from around the Internet:
From chessgames.com:
Dr Colin Crouch's chess books have received big acclaim for their thoroughness and originality, but he is also writing about things other than chess, such as economic and politic history. He completed doctoral thesis on "The Economic Geography of Recession in the UK: the early 1980s and historical perspectives" (1989, University of Durham).
"The readers will find that my basic patterns of thought show similarities, whether I am trying to analyse a game of chess, or whether I am trying to analyse current political questions. It is the "thinking" that is central" (Colin Crouch, The Shakthinking project - a chessplayer thinks)
Crouch's chess books:
-Rate Your Endgame
-Chess Secrets: Great Attackers
-Modern Chess: Move by Move
-Why We Lose at Chess
-Analyse Your Chess
-Fighting Chess: Move by Move
-Magnus Force: How Carlsen beat Kasparov's record.
From the E.C. Forum:
Jonathan Rogers: That's very sad. He played a large part in (London) Barbican's various successes in the 1990s, including four National Club wins at a time when the event was highly competitive, and played for Barbican 4NCL until 2002. He still holds a Club record of sorts for GM slaying: he beat three (Norwood, Baburin and Spraggett) in the space of four rounds in 1999/2000.
He was very creative too, and had his own way of assessing positions, and played his own variations. Neverov v Crouch, Hastings 1992 would be an obvious game to dig out for anyone writing proper obituaries, along with Chandler v Crouch, 4NCL 1994.
I think he had medical problems throughout most of his life, sadly; but as we know, chess can be a lifeline for many such people.
Christopher Kreuzer: Very sad news. I greatly enjoyed two of his books that I read, one on Carlsen (Magnus Force) and the classic Rate Your Endgame (which he co-authored with Edmar Mednis). I also greatly enjoyed reading his thoughts on current top-level chess, especially where he tried to gauge which of the up-and-coming young players might challenge Carlsen. I didn't know Colin well (though I would see him at some Middlesex county matches), but it was inspirational to see how he took on the challenge of resuming playing and writing about chess following his stroke in 2004.
RIP Colin
Jon Manley:
I share everyone's sorrow. Not only was Colin a friendly, thoughtful and sensitive person, but he had a magnificent, mischievous sense of humour. He penned one of the funniest parodies of a chess writer I have read
http://www.kingpinchess.net/2014/11/che ... -fine-art/
April 18, 2015
The news has come that Colin Crouch has passed away.
I have been enjoying his daily blog for the past year. It is still online with the last entry being The So-Rich-Akobian dispute, on April 11.
http://crouchnotes.blogspot.ca
It was apparent that he was carrying on with his blog despite a stroke that left him partially sighted. One could see misspellings and some confusion but still be impressed with the strength of his writing against all odds.
This from an interview:
Colin Crouch, an international master of chess, is living in London but grew up in Durham. Colin became partially sighted due to a stroke, but that didn't stop his determination to keep playing chess and now takes part in the blind international tournaments as well.
"I learned [how to play chess] when I was young, carried on playing, became a British champion and a London champion. I've played quite a lot of international tournaments, but this is my first time at a blind international.
"I'm partially sighted as a result of a stroke which has been difficult for me ... I realise I'm not as strong as I would have been a few years back but I'm hoping to improve."
He was 58 years old.
_____
Some quotes from around the Internet:
From chessgames.com:
Dr Colin Crouch's chess books have received big acclaim for their thoroughness and originality, but he is also writing about things other than chess, such as economic and politic history. He completed doctoral thesis on "The Economic Geography of Recession in the UK: the early 1980s and historical perspectives" (1989, University of Durham).
"The readers will find that my basic patterns of thought show similarities, whether I am trying to analyse a game of chess, or whether I am trying to analyse current political questions. It is the "thinking" that is central" (Colin Crouch, The Shakthinking project - a chessplayer thinks)
Crouch's chess books:
-Rate Your Endgame
-Chess Secrets: Great Attackers
-Modern Chess: Move by Move
-Why We Lose at Chess
-Analyse Your Chess
-Fighting Chess: Move by Move
-Magnus Force: How Carlsen beat Kasparov's record.
From the E.C. Forum:
Jonathan Rogers: That's very sad. He played a large part in (London) Barbican's various successes in the 1990s, including four National Club wins at a time when the event was highly competitive, and played for Barbican 4NCL until 2002. He still holds a Club record of sorts for GM slaying: he beat three (Norwood, Baburin and Spraggett) in the space of four rounds in 1999/2000.
He was very creative too, and had his own way of assessing positions, and played his own variations. Neverov v Crouch, Hastings 1992 would be an obvious game to dig out for anyone writing proper obituaries, along with Chandler v Crouch, 4NCL 1994.
I think he had medical problems throughout most of his life, sadly; but as we know, chess can be a lifeline for many such people.
Christopher Kreuzer: Very sad news. I greatly enjoyed two of his books that I read, one on Carlsen (Magnus Force) and the classic Rate Your Endgame (which he co-authored with Edmar Mednis). I also greatly enjoyed reading his thoughts on current top-level chess, especially where he tried to gauge which of the up-and-coming young players might challenge Carlsen. I didn't know Colin well (though I would see him at some Middlesex county matches), but it was inspirational to see how he took on the challenge of resuming playing and writing about chess following his stroke in 2004.
RIP Colin
Jon Manley:
I share everyone's sorrow. Not only was Colin a friendly, thoughtful and sensitive person, but he had a magnificent, mischievous sense of humour. He penned one of the funniest parodies of a chess writer I have read
http://www.kingpinchess.net/2014/11/che ... -fine-art/
Comment