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Date: 08 Oct 2008 17:21:25
From: Chess One
Subject: chess tales from the real world
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while recently serving as a bagger at the local co-op [2 hours month required all members] i encountered a guy with a big chess diagram on his t-shirt 'that a position from the modern?' i asked 'no' he replied, and paused, since mine was an educated mistake, but an informed mistake! 'its from the leningrad dutch' he said from which we well into conversation on chess i suppose there are other ways to meet other chess players who are not obviously such - they being not playing the game at the time of encounter - and i wonder what anecdotes others here have of encountering the like of such as we? cordially, phil innes
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Date: 14 Oct 2008 06:22:03
From: The Historian
Subject: Re: chess tales from the real world
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On Oct 13, 2:41=A0pm, "Chess One" <[email protected] > wrote: > "The Historian" <[email protected]> wrote in message > > news:[email protected]... > On Oct 9, 2:17 am, SBD <[email protected]> wrote: > > > On Oct 8, 4:21 pm, "Chess One" <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > from which we well into conversation on chess > > > Did you tell him about your summer in Europe where you would have > > earned the IM title if you weren't stoned in the back of the van all > > the time? > > I thought he was 'legless' on vodka. > P Innes wrote: **It was a woman, Neil. The "legless on vodka" referred to you during your chess 'career' earning the Nearly an IM 2450 title on the Eurotrash coffeehouse circuit.
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Date: 12 Oct 2008 10:41:10
From: The Historian
Subject: Re: chess tales from the real world
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On Oct 9, 2:17=A0am, SBD <[email protected] > wrote: > On Oct 8, 4:21=A0pm, "Chess One" <[email protected]> wrote: > > > from which we well into conversation on chess > > Did you tell him about your summer in Europe where you would have > earned the IM title if you weren't stoned in the back of the van all > the time? I thought he was 'legless' on vodka.
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Date: 13 Oct 2008 15:41:27
From: Chess One
Subject: Re: chess tales from the real world
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"The Historian" <[email protected] > wrote in message news:[email protected]... On Oct 9, 2:17 am, SBD <[email protected] > wrote: > On Oct 8, 4:21 pm, "Chess One" <[email protected]> wrote: > > > from which we well into conversation on chess > > Did you tell him about your summer in Europe where you would have > earned the IM title if you weren't stoned in the back of the van all > the time? I thought he was 'legless' on vodka. **It was a woman, Neil. That has provided 'perk' to many men - as you may yet discover. As for SBD he never even heard of Swabisch even though he lived in Germany - he even suggested to me the 'right spelling' of it [ROFL] A grad student recently told me of his colleague from Swabia, how he couldn't understand him in his Frankfurt Univ, so they spoke in English. What you 'thought' was wrong -and you should have thought woman and her VW beetle, though these sorts of thoughts occur mostly to men of a certain experience, and we are much projected upon by 'men' of uncertain anything - even virgins speculate just like that! I think you can understand this from your limited experience, nein? Phil Innes
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Date: 11 Oct 2008 18:27:50
From: =?Windows-1252?Q?J=FCrgen_R.?=
Subject: AW: chess tales from the real world
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Chess One wrote: > while recently serving as a bagger at the local co-op [2 hours month > required all members] > > i encountered a guy with a big chess diagram on his t-shirt > > 'that a position from the modern?' i asked > > 'no' he replied, and paused, since mine was an educated mistake, but > an informed mistake! > > 'its from the leningrad dutch' he said > > from which we well into conversation on chess > > i suppose there are other ways to meet other chess players who are not > obviously such - they being not playing the game at the time of > encounter - and i wonder what anecdotes others here have of > encountering the like of such as we? When I meet the likes of such as you, even if they not be playing the game at time of encounter, I turn around and run as fast as I can. > > cordially, phil innes
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Date: 10 Oct 2008 02:52:10
From: Offramp
Subject: Re: chess tales from the real world
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On Oct 9, 8:17=A0am, SBD <[email protected] > wrote: > On Oct 8, 4:21=A0pm, "Chess One" <[email protected]> wrote: > Did you tell him about your summer in Europe where you would have > earned the IM title if you weren't stoned in the back of the van all > the time? I played in the first Chess Festival in Avoine, France in 1985. In one game I had a tricky ending the exchange down. I went and spoke to the only other English players: can you guess? Glenn Flear and Tony Kosten! Why did they play so much in France? I showed them the ending. They were like my seconds. Flear said I was going to get squeezed. Another player there was Dizdarevic. Flear showed me and Kosten the well-known game Dizdarevic-Miles, where Miles played Bb7-f3 and then Bxg2. Kosten said that if he had black against Dizdarebic he would play the Queen's Indian. I had a really good time. Flear and Kosten are very nice blokes. Alan
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Date: 14 Oct 2008 12:03:51
From: Chess One
Subject: Re: chess tales from the real world
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"Offramp" <[email protected] > wrote in message news:ec512f45-6604-44c1-9107-c41bf147cb7e@d31g2000hsg.googlegroups.com... On Oct 9, 8:17 am, SBD <[email protected] > wrote: > On Oct 8, 4:21 pm, "Chess One" <[email protected]> wrote: > Did you tell him about your summer in Europe where you would have > earned the IM title if you weren't stoned in the back of the van all > the time? I played in the first Chess Festival in Avoine, France in 1985. In one game I had a tricky ending the exchange down. I went and spoke to the only other English players: can you guess? Glenn Flear and Tony Kosten! Why did they play so much in France? **It was cheap to nip across the channel and to get to Paris, all you needed was a buddy there to put you up. I played in Paris in the early seventies [stayed in the working class outskirts East of city on the Marne, and then later lieved and played in Germany. Besides, where else to go? Holland or Begium is easy by ferry, anywhere between Ostende and the German border at Aachen - but school boy French argued for Paris since relying on kind-hearted Dutch to speak English was uncertain. I showed them the ending. They were like my seconds. Flear said I was going to get squeezed. Another player there was Dizdarevic. Flear showed me and Kosten the well-known game Dizdarevic-Miles, where Miles played Bb7-f3 and then Bxg2. **Um, is that an English Defence? Keene Plaskett and Tisdall published their title in 87, and they might have well as called it Tony's Defence [or actually, attack! since it seemed to be the predominant pioneer] Did you, BTW look at Keene's chess bio of Miles? **I was in Europe some 10 years before your time, and when GMs, even IMs were hardly yet invented - never went East across the border of course since that was the Wall! though there was talk of it in the late 60's. Our team-captain was P H Clarke and he got to play Ivkov - and there was an absurd idea of taking seconds with him [in this case, thirds or fifths even, for sure we would have been of no use to Clarke] though naturally nothing came of it but good resolutions. Kosten said that if he had black against Dizdarebic he would play the Queen's Indian. I had a really good time. Flear and Kosten are very nice blokes. **I note a Flear-Plaskett game in the Brit Champ 82 in the Eng Def [p. 58] where Glen uncorks 17. d5 !! "a brilliant solution that shatters Black's dreams". Kosten doesn't seem to have messed with the Eng Def at that time - even though he would 'mess' with the QI. Lots of annotation by Basman, and who is this Huntingdon player, P. Dansey [for 16. Nf4!] and other moves, as well as Leicester player Otto Hardy who seems like a major contributor to this line of the Eng D? I also assume that Maggeramov is not an English player. **Strangest game I've played for a couple of years was on a park bench where I was being presented with a chess set by a Russian master, previously used by 5 world champs, and so i immediately proposed playing a game with it - and because we didn't have a board we decided to play without one. Wasn't a bad game, and we drew in about 30 moves wothjout too much disgrace to either of us - he had won the exchange, then lost it back to me, and we gave up before disgracing ourselves further. Cordially, Phil Alan
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Date: 09 Oct 2008 00:17:32
From: SBD
Subject: Re: chess tales from the real world
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On Oct 8, 4:21=A0pm, "Chess One" <[email protected] > wrote: > from which we well into conversation on chess Did you tell him about your summer in Europe where you would have earned the IM title if you weren't stoned in the back of the van all the time?
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