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Moscow Open: The four-year-old veteran

2/5/2015

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We have all read the tales about Kasparov at age four solving a problem on his own, Capablanca beating his father at the same age, and though we never question them, they remain a bit of folklore that is hard to visualize. Meet Timur Yonal, champion of Kosteniuk's children's chess school, competing at the Moscow Open, and... he is just four years old!

Timur Yonal is not learning the pieces, nor is he the mascot of the Moscow Open. He is there as an experienced competitor, who has been playing for over a year already, and very successfully too.

At just four years old, Timur Yonal already has plenty to brag about - he holds 20 cups of various tournaments, as well as the title of champion of Alexandra Kosteniuk's children's chess school. 

At the Moscow Open Timur knew he would face opponents twice as old as himself, and prepared for it very seriously. His mother recounts, "Timur prepared specifically for the tournament and solved 250 chess problems in two days. In the family, we actively support him, and his eagerness to play chess seems to grow every day."

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The Imitation Game

2/4/2015

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The film is based in parts on the life of the English mathematician, codebreaker, and father of computer science. Like a number of British chessplayers Turing, who because of his great mathematical talent was recruited by the British Secret Service, played a crucial role in cracking the code of the "Enigma", the machine the German army used during World War II to code their messages. Turing also formulated the theoretical basis for computer science ("On Computable Numbers, with an Application to the Entscheidungsproblem", 1936), and wrote the very first chess program. He put the sequence of commands for the imaginary machine - computers did not yet exist - on paper and that's why this program was called "Paper Engine".
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Among the English chessplayers in Bletchley Park were Hugh Alexander, Stuart Milner-Barry and Harry Golombek. All of them were part of the English National team at that time. 

Milner-Barry later occupied a high post in English ministeries, Golombek worked as chess publisher and arbiter, while Alexander became director of the MI5 encryption department. This stopped him from playing any tournaments in the Eastern bloc and thus presumably robbed him of a chance to get the GM title.

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