impressive second halves from firouzja and carlsen. with a pretty uninspiring showing by nepo (apart from his berlin massacre vs karjakin), carlsen has to be feeling good heading into their november match
Norway Chess 2021
Collapse
X
-
Comment
-
Richard Rapport (my opinion) had the best tournament of all the players. He led for most of the tournament except for a slip at the finish. Last three rounds he went from clear first to good chances for first and then an upset by Firoujza (great game by Firoujza) meant a third place finish. Still a great tournament by Rapport.
Comment
-
https://en.chessbase.com/post/gukesh...n-masters-2021 This was the masters section (part of the Norway Open) Lovely games, especially the Gukesh one where he sacrificed a pawn, an exchange, and a bishop (twice!) and then clinched it with a rook pawn march!
Comment
-
Originally posted by Ian Findlay View PostI hate to say it, but this thread makes me miss Wayne already. I loved the way he used to post games and diagrams and the tournament report. So sad....Mike Pence: the Lord of the fly.
- 2 likes
Comment
-
Originally posted by Ian Findlay View PostI hate to say it, but this thread makes me miss Wayne already. I loved the way he used to post games and diagrams and the tournament report. So sad.
I even thought maybe I should try a hand at doing what he was doing, but I don't have any clue what his method was and where he got his information. Plus I don't think I could express his same sincerity. He made top level chess seem worthy of the love that he felt for it. It just came through in his posts, every time.
I googled his name and there is almost nothing about him. Looks like he may have been involved in WWII, perhaps in the air force, but for that I'm only going by a couple of old b&w photos.
If anyone knows anything about him, this would be a good spot to post it for those outside of his family.
- 1 like
Comment
-
Originally posted by Pargat Perrer View Post
I googled his name and there is almost nothing about him. Looks like he may have been involved in WWII, perhaps in the air force, but for that I'm only going by a couple of old b&w photos.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Stephen Wright View Post
While echoing the sentiments expressed here, I note from the other thread that Wayne was born in 1941 which would make him a little young to be involved in WWII ...
Good evening Ken,
It’s really comforting reading through the posts, I am forever grateful being able to read these and get insight into my fathers love for elite chess.
No he was never in the military, although born the same year as the attack on Pearl Harbour.
He was in the cadets as a youth and teen but that was as close to combat as my father got unless it was next to an analogue chess clock.
Thank you again,
Matt
He told me that he would write something about his dad when he gets through all the paper-work and stuff.
- 1 like
Comment
Comment