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Dark Knight / Le Chevalier Noir
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---- Nous avons besoin d'un traduction français!
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Sundays CFC news feed (http://chess.ca/newsfeed/node/105) mentioned Tomas Krnan's "surprise" win
of the 2013 Slovakian Championship (the Open was considered to be the championship...)
I have to say it did not surprise me! Tomas is a very strong player; great to see him back in form.
Congratulations Tomas!
... 770 games, and tournament ended yesterday. Something to think about it.
I'm guessing that you're noting the difference between Slovakia and Canada. Whenever we compare, we should be sure to compliment those who are volunteering their time, or working for practically nothing, in such situations.
Having said that, I think chess is much better organized in Europe than here, in so many ways. Sports clubs go beyond a single sport and include, say, chess clubs as well. The venomous antagonism towards treating chess as a sport is absent. Chess is not something to ridicule and the Europeans do not have the same, obstinate anti-intellectual climate that Canada and the US have. There is a more democratic sporting culture in general, so that what develops a sport, promotes it among young people, makes a wider public aware of it, and so on, is not limited to volunteers and entrepreneurs. Sports are considered part of culture and culture is for ... everyone.
Mind you, this problem doesn't just apply to chess. Just look at what Canada does for its national men's soccer team. It's a shambles. Canada does not really promote and develop the sport properly at all. Small, Carribbean islands beat Canada. Another obstinate thing is the ideology of winning as everything. We even do this in elections with our primitive "first-past-the-post" electoral system.
Last edited by Nigel Hanrahan; Monday, 15th July, 2013, 01:34 PM.
Dogs will bark, but the caravan of chess moves on.
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