Sunday, November 13, 2011

Masters of the Game

Let this story roll around in your head a bit and wipe out any remaining traces of stereotypes and assumptions.



Fewer than 2 percent of the 47,000 members of the United States Chess Federation are masters — and just 13 of them are under the age of 14.

Among that select group of prodigies are three black players from the New York City area — Justus Williams, Joshua Colas and James Black Jr. — who each became masters before their 13th birthdays...

Although they are rivals, the boys are also friends and share a sense that they are role models.

“I think of Justus, me and Josh as pioneers for African-American kids who want to take up chess,” James said.

2 comments:

  1. I feel a little better now. Maybe 15 years ago, I thought I was "ready." I participated in my first chess tournament.

    Game 1: I lost a hard fought well-played game.

    Game 2: I won. My opponent foolishly tried to play the Sicilian Defense without a good understanding of it. It is a very technical opening and should not be played by people at my and his level in tournament play.

    Game 3: Against Joshua Frank, age 14, a cake walk.

    He was fairly new to chess. In between official games, by pure coincidence, I play several games with him. He was very experimental, and got himself into bad situations with his adventurousness.

    As we sat down, he explained that he was watching how I handle such situations and that I had a specific weakness for queen side attacks. I did not expect that.

    As soon as the game began, he opened with an unexpectedly aggressive queen side attack. I was not concerned.

    Soon he started putting question marks by my moves as he notated them.

    Not long after that, I laid my king on its side.

    Those kids are the ones you have to watch out for. It was a lesson in humility for sure.

    I just Googled that kid. He is now rated above 2000, an expert according the World Chess Federation Ratings, one step below a master.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Fascinating John - thanks for the story.

    I love hearing about how curious his mind was - and open to learning. I'd guess that is an imperative for any kind of "master."

    ReplyDelete

Why did Speaker Johnson change his mind about aid to Ukraine?

Over the last few days, Speaker Mike Johnson has done an about-face on the U.S. providing aid to Ukraine.  In case you didn't know, a gr...