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Dark Knight / Le Chevalier Noir
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Thats a great anecdote Peter! At that point I wasnt aware of any chess "scene" - a group of 4 of us, all high school students, met at one friends house - the one whose parents had copies of the Toronto papers and New York Times and discussed each game which usually degenerated into discussions of the Fried Liver Attack which was the only opening we were interested in (sadly). It wasnt until October that we all joined the chess club and slowly became aware that there was a much bigger chess world out there.
Yes, good point Peter! Im enjoying the nostalgia. Even played over some of the games and got that: Hey good feeling all over again. Jan Timman also published a good article about the lead up to the match on chess.com.
Me too on the nostalgia. Don't know if you'll remember this, Hans, since you were just a youngster back then, but at that time there was a small museum on Queens Ave just east of the old main branch of the public library. Someone had the inspiration to set up a chess board on a small table outside the front door. Someone at the Free Press would relay the moves to the museum as they came in on the newspaper's teletype and then a museum employee would bring the move out to the anxious fans (maybe a half dozen or so at any one time). Not all of the fans had full command of English descriptive notation so occasionally some very unusual positions would appear on the board (Spassky played THAT?!?). Good fun on sunny summer afternoons!
Yes, good point Peter! Im enjoying the nostalgia. Even played over some of the games and got that: Hey good feeling all over again. Jan Timman also published a good article about the lead up to the match on chess.com.
Chessbase has another article on the subject match. The writer of the article includes this quote from one of Frank Brady's books:
"In the basement, Icelandic masters more quietly explained and analyzed the moves on a large demonstration board, while in the press rooms, a condescension of grandmasters surveyed the television screens and analyzed in their heads, to the confusion and awe of most of the journalists."
A "condescension" of GMs - never heard that one before but think it's brilliant! Right up there with the best of the collective nouns, like a 'murder' of crows.
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