Tags: online chess, play chess, play chess online, play chess online, chess, play chess, scrabble
Team play forum sitecolony.com << - < - > - >>
| From | Message | Posted by premium_steve sitecolony.com
5/22/2004 19:21:38 play online chess | Subject: new members wanted for my team: 'Newfoundland'
Message: hey everybody,
here's an open invitation to anyone who'd like to join my team...
hope to see you soon
also, any ideas you might have when you join for dressing up the description, team name, or whatever are welcome.
thanks and have fun!
-steve
|
Chess news:
Barden on chess -- Failure can be a great spur to improvement. This autumn David Howell, 18 and England's best young chess talent, was in the gold-medal position at the start of the final round of the world junior (U20) chess championship, but played passively, got short of time, and was crushed. A few weeks later Howell was No1 seed in the world U18, and again finished out of the medals. His chronically poor clock management played a major part. But come his next chess event, the Dresden Chess Olympiad, and Howell was, along with Nigel Short, the high scorer for England. He followed this up by an impressive 10.5/11 runaway victory in the British Rapidplay at Halifax, a chess contest which both ...
Popularity of chess hindered by chaotic leadership -- Chess requires exceptional reasoning ability, but problems besetting the game seem to defy logic. In the last few weeks, disputes within the World Chess Federation have led two top players to withdraw from the world chess championship selection process, while another player faces a two-year ban for failing to take a drug test - although he almost certainly did not take any since there are few if any drugs that can enhance a chess player's performance. The episodes illustrate the struggles and foibles of a game that at times achieves immense popularity around the world and at other times - sometimes for reasons of its own making - falls by the wayside. Chess often ...
Unbeaten streak -- In chess, consistency is hard to achieve. It is possible to play a series of great moves, and maybe a few great games, but doing it day to day, month after month, is supremely difficult. A chess player may become ill, face a better-prepared opponent, or suffer a lapse in concentration during a game leading to a fatal mistake. So, when a chess player puts together a long unbeaten streak, it is something special. That is what Wang Yue of China did. After losing his first game in the Reykjavik Open in March, he played 82 games without a loss. During his streak he often competed against the world's best chess players, and his world ranking rose to 11 from 31. He also tied for first in ...
|
|