Chess Curiosities |
01 |
The longest Chess game theoretically possible is 5,949 moves. |
02 |
Judit
Polgar (1976- ), at the age of 9 in 1986, won the unrated section of the
NY Open, winning 7 games and 1 game drawn. At 11 she was rated 2350 and earned an International
Master title, younger than Fischer or Kasparov. At age 12 she was
rated 2555 and was awarded the Woman GM title. At 13 she was
the FIDE’s highest rated
woman. Grandmaster at age 15 years, 4 months, and 27 days. |
03 |
In
the match between Britton and Crouch in 1984, the Black player did
Check his opponent forty three consecutive times!
|
04 |
The
record of moves without capture is of 100 moves during the Match
between Thorton and M. Walker in 1992. |
05 |
After
each side has played three moves, the pieces could form any one of
over nine million possible positions on the board. |
06 |
The 12th and last Inca Emperor of Peru, Atahualpa (1500-1533), who
was imprisoned by Francisco Pizarro and the Spanish Conquistadors
in 1533 in Cajamarca Peru, learned Chess by watching his
guards play and before long, he was beating them all.
|
07 |
In 1985, the
Soviet player Garry Kasparov became the youngest World Chess
Champion ever at the age of 22 years and 210 days. |
08 |
The longest time
for a Castling move to take place was the match game between
Bobotsor vs. Irkov in 1966: 46. 0-0 |
09 |
The
Chinese Emperor Wen-ti executed two foreign Chess Players after
learning that one of the pieces was called ‘Emperor.’ He was upset
that his title of Emperor could be associated with a mere game and
forbade the game. |
10 |
The
longest time recorded for a Chess player to make a move, goes to
the International Grand Master Trois from Brazil with 2 hours and
20 minutes on the 7th move. |
11 |
The
first Chessboard with alternating light and dark squares appears
in Europe in 1090. |
12 |
A boy gave
General Rahl of the British Army a note from a spy that George
Washington was about to cross the Delaware and attack. The general
was so immersed in a Chess game that he put the note in his pocket
unopened. There it was found when he was mortally wounded in the
subsequent battle. |
13 |
During World War
II, some of the top Chess players were also code breakers. British
masters Harry Golombek, Stuart Milner-Barry and H. O’D. Alexander
were on the team which broke the Nazi Enigma code.
|
14 |
The number of
possible ways of playing the first four moves per side in a game
of Chess is 318,979,564,000. |
15 |
The first
mention of Chess in America occurred in the year of 1641 in Esther
Singleton’s history of Dutch settlers. The first American Chess
tournament was held in New York in 1843. |
16 |
As late as 1561,
Castling was two moves. You had to play R-KB1 on one move and
K-KN1 on the next move. |
17 |
During the 1972
Fischer-Spassky match in Rekjavik, the Russians linked Spassky’s
erratic play with Fischer’s chair. The Icelandic organization put
a 24-hour Police guard around the chair while chemical and x-ray
tests were performed on the chair. Nothing unusual was found.
|
18 |
Ray Charles, the
legendary Genius of Soul, learned Chess in 1965 after being busted
and hospitalized for heroin addiction. He learned Chess in the
hospital where he went cold turkey. |
19 |
Rookies or,
players in their first year, are named after the Rook in Chess.
Rooks generally are the last pieces to be moved into action, and
the same goes for Rookies. |
20 |
According to the
America’s Foundation for Chess,
there are 169, 518,
829, 100,
544, 000,
000, 000,
000, 000 ways to play the first
10 moves of a game of Chess.
|
21 |
The word “Checkmate”
in Chess comes from the Persian phrase “Shah Mat,” which
means “the King is dead.” |
22 |
The first
mechanical Chess clock was invented by Thomas Wilson in 1883.
Prior to that, Sandglasses were used. Sandglasses were first used
in London in 1862. The present day push-button clock was first
perfected by Veenhoff in 1900. |
23 |
The first Computer
program that played proper Chess was written at MIT by Alex
Bernstein in 1959. The first Chess tournament in which the
only players were Computer programs was held in New York in 1970.
|
24 |
There were 72
consecutive Queen moves in the Mason-Mackenzie game at London in
1882. |
25 |
John Lennon and
Ringo Starr played Chess. Yoko Ono, Lennon’s widow, is an avid
Chess player and supporter. |
26 |
BELLE, the first
Computer awarded the title of U.S. Chess Master, in 1983. BELLE won the 1980 World Computer Championship in Linz, running on
a PDP 11/23. BELLE was created by Ken Thompson and Joe Condon.
|
27 |
Blathy, Otto (1860-1939), credited for creating the longest Chess
problem, mate in 290 moves.
|
28 |
Albert Einstein was
a good friend of World Chess Champion Emanuel Lasker. In an
interview with the New York Times in 1936 Albert said, “I do
not play any games. There is no time for it. When I get through
work I don’t want anything which requires the working of the
mind.” He did take up Chess in his later life. |
29 |
The shortest
game ending in mate after two moves: 1. g4 e6 or e5, 2. f3
or f4 Qh4 mate. |
30 |
Benjamin Franklin
(1706-1790), wrote the first Chess article published in America:
“The Morals of Chess.” |
31 |
The Police raided a Chess Tournament
in Cleveland in 1973, arrested the Tournament director and
confiscated the Chess sets on charges of allowing gambling (cash
prizes to winners) and possession of gambling devices (the Chess
sets).
|
32 |
The folding Chess board was
originally invented in 1125 by a Chess-playing priest. Since the
Church forbid priests to play Chess, he hid his Chess board by
making one that looked simply like two books lying together.
|
33 |
Anatoly Karpov, the first world
champion to win the title without playing a Chess match. He got
the title in 1975 when Fischer refused to defend his title.
Anatoly became a Candidate Master at the age of 11, a Master at
15, an International Grandmaster at 19, and World Champion at 24.
|
34 |
The number of possibilities of a Knight’s
tour is over 122 million.
|
35 |
Labourdonnais and
MacDonnell played 85 games, the largest number of games ever
played successively in match conditions. Neither knew a word of
the other’s language. Labourdonnais spent his time spitting,
cursing, singing, and laughing. MacDonnell spent up to an hour and
a half to make a single move. |
36 |
In 1985, Eric Knoppert played 500
games of 10-minute Chess in 68 hours.
|
37 |
Lewis Chessmen is
the oldest known Chess pieces in existence, carved from walrus
ivory. Seventy-eight pieces were found in a stone chamber in a
sand bank on the west coast of the Isle of Lewis in 1831. They
date back to 1150-1170. The pieces were discovered by a peasant
who found a mysterious stone building buried under several feet of
sand. The pieces reside in the British Museum and the National
Museum in Edinburgh. The most striking piece is the Rook, which is
the form of a captain afoot, rather than a castle.
|
38 |
The longest Chess
game is 269 moves (I. Nikolic - Arsovic, Belgrade 1989) which
ended in a draw. |
39 |
Frank Marshall
(1877-1944) was the first American to defeat a Soviet player in an
international tournament in New York, 1924. He reigned as U.S.
Champion for 30 years, but only defended his title once when he
defeated Ed Lasker (5-4) in 1923. He was the first master to play
more than 100 games simultaneously. |
40 |
The worst loss
by a player was Macleod of Canada who lost 31 games in the New
York double-round robin of 1889. |
41 |
The youngest Master
was Jordy Mont-Reynaud at 10 years, 7 months (1994). The
oldest player to become a Chess Master was Oscar Shapiro, at age
74. |
42 |
From the starting position, there are eight
different ways to Mate in two moves and 355 different ways to Mate
in three moves. |
43 |
Mephisto Portorose,
is
one of the strongest commercially available Chess microcomputers.
In 1990 defeated Karpov, Huebner, and Bronstein in simultaneous
exhibitions, won the West German blitz championship, and earned an
International Master (IM) norm by scoring 7-4 in the Dortmond
Open. |
44 |
The United
States is the only country to defeat the USSR twice in the Chess
Olympiad. |
45 |
There are 400
different possible positions after one move each. There are 72,084
different possible positions after two moves each. There are over
9 million different possible positions after three moves each.
There are over 288 billion different possible positions after four
moves each. The number of distinct 40-move games is far greater
than the number of electrons in the observable universe.
|
46 |
The new Pawn
move, advancing two squares on its first move instead of one, was
first introduced in Spain in 1280. |
47 |
In the 15th
century, promotion to allow more than one Queen was considered
improper because it symbolized adultery. In Spain and Italy in the
17th century, the Pawn could only be promoted to the rank of
Queen. In France and Germany, promotion was limited to any piece
which had been lost. In some countries a player could promote a Pawn
to an enemy piece so as to force stalemate. The current law in Pawn
promotion was established at the first International Tournament in
1851. |
48 |
The most popular
PBS TV show aired was the 1972 Bobby Fischer-Boris Spassky Chess match.
|
49 |
The very first
postage stamp depicting a Chess motif was issued in Bulgaria in
1947. |
50 |
The first child
prodigy of Chess was Paul Morphy. He learned the moves at the age
of 8 and
beat the strongest players in New Orleans at 11.
|
51 |
Yasser Seirawan
(1960- ), first American to beat a reigning World Champion. He
defeated Anatoly Karpov in 1982. |
52 |
The first Chess
game between space and earth was played on June 9, 1970 by the
Soyuz-9 crew. The game ended in a draw. |
53 |
Kirk and Spock
have played Chess three times on STAR TREK. Kirk won every game.
|
54 |
David Strauss
(1946- ), first International Master to lose to a Computer. In
1986, an experimental Fidelity machine defeated Strauss at the
1986 U.S. Open. |
55 |
The
Anderssen-Kolisch match in 1861 was the first time a time-limit
was used. An hour-glass gave each player 2 hours to make 24
moves. |
56 |
Dr. Emanuel
Lasker from Germany retained the World Chess Champion title for
more time than any other player ever: 26 years and 337 days.
|
57 |
A
Computer Program named Deep Thought beat an
International Grand Master for the first time in November 1988 in
Long Beach, California. |