Casablanca Chess

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  • Casablanca Chess

    https://en.chessbase.com/post/back-t...sablanca-chess Interesting concept. Starting games from historic positions.

  • #2
    It will be broadcasted live on Chess.com
    The commentators will be Daniel Naroditsky and Jan Gustafsson.

    Saturday 18th: rounds 1, 2 & 3 will start at 4pm local time (11am Toronto)

    Sunday 19th: rounds 4, 5 & 6 will start at 7pm local time (2pm Toronto) - a bit later in order not to clash with the last day of the Premier League - a nail biter this year.

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    • #3
      https://en.chessbase.com/post/morocco-chess-week-2024

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      • #4
        https://en.chessbase.com/post/casablanca-chess-2024-d1

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        • #5
          https://www.chess.com/news/view/2024...ca-chess-day-2

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          • #6
            https://en.chessbase.com/post/casablanca-chess-2024-d2

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            • #7
              We should definitely consider bringing this variant to Canada - maybe organize a round-robin for the higher rated among us who would enjoy the challenge of playing unfamiliar positions.
              The feedback from the players in Casablanca was extremely positive, they had a great time and hope the concept will stick.

              The post-mortem consensus was that 2 minutes to set the position before the clock starts + 15 minutes and 10 seconds was a bit tight - they suggest the 2-minute timer starts after they reach the relevant position on the board, then have 20 or possibly 25 minutes on the clock + increment for the rest of the game. The rationale is that they were thrown in a critical position they had not built themselves - and they enjoyed studying it before making the first move. They would have liked to invest more substantial time in increasing their understanding of the game at hand without eroding their remaining time too much.

              More than 25 minutes on the clock however would ruin the experience for both the players and the public as this would lead to less decisive games.

              Contrary to the public's intuition, memory did not play a relevant role in the results, even when the players were familiar with the games. They used their own skills and understanding.

              What was clear to me is that Magnus Carlsen is comfortable with any position thrown at him.

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              • #8
                Absolutely intriguing concept, congrats on a great event!!

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