I have been informed that Dan Scoones has died. No other information at present.
RIP Dan Scoones
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Dan was one of my great chess friends during my time in Vancouver and we kept in touch after I moved to Budapest. He would give me an update once every few months and I always got a nice message around Xmas time. One convo we had was when he mentioned after retiring he would have time to play chess, but I did not see him in many tournaments after this
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This is a shock. Dan was co - admin on my facebook group - Outdoor Chess tables - and he often posted and we exchanged emails. I would often go to him for historical chess knowledge and he was a great source of information and support for me. It will be like missing an old friend. RIP Dan
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This is a very significant loss for Canadian and B.C. chess. I never met Dan, but I learned an enormous amount from an extraordinary article he wrote for 'Chess Canada Echecs', on chess openings in a general sense. This was one of the very best articles ever published by the magazine.
Dan was a National Master player for several decades, resident in Victoria. He was also an organizer, and chess teacher.
Rest In Peace, Dan Scoones.
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RIP Dan Scoones
April 20, 2021
Edward Winter in Chess Notes gives the passing of Dan Scoones
https://www.chesshistory.com/winter/index.html
and points out his contribution to the non-coverage of Korchnoi in the Candidates cycle:
https://www.chesshistory.com/winter/extra/korchnoi.html
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Originally posted by Frank Dixon View PostThis is a very significant loss for Canadian and B.C. chess. I never met Dan, but I learned an enormous amount from an extraordinary article he wrote for 'Chess Canada Echecs', on chess openings in a general sense. This was one of the very best articles ever published by the magazine.
Dan was a National Master player for several decades, resident in Victoria. He was also an organizer, and chess teacher.
Rest In Peace, Dan Scoones.Attached FilesLast edited by Brian Profit; Thursday, 22nd April, 2021, 02:17 PM.
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Originally posted by Brian Profit View Post
When I read this thread, my memory went to the article that Frank writes about. I also thought it was a very helpful as I was just starting out as a chess player. His advice shaped by opening play for years. I have scanned the article and attached it to this post for those of you who want to read it again, or for the first time. Maybe it can be included in the next issue of Chess Canada!?
...Mike Pence: the Lord of the fly.
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Thanks to Brian for posting this article. Having read it again now, its great value still resonates! Dan's section on 'Nodes' is especially insightful for me; its concept was completely new for me. The article got me thinking about chess in several ways I had simply not done before. Using several of its major themes, I began studying more, with more focus, and playing more tournament chess. I advanced from rating of 1780 in 1985, when the article was published, to 2000 by 1991.
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I didn't know Dan super well, but I had nothing but pleasant encounters with him. He was friendly, clever, and incredibly knowledgeable of local chess history and lore. My thoughts are with his family.everytime it hurts, it hurts just like the first (and then you cry till there's no more tears)
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This should appear on the BCCF website soon (chess.bc.ca), but for the time being
https://bcchesshistory.com/BCCFBulletin409.pdf
(starting on page 4)
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