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WHY CHESS IS POPULAR

QUALITIES OF A GOOD PLAYER

During a great international chess contest the whole world awaits results with the keenest impatience. The world Press devotes considerable space to problems appertaining to this absorbing game. I shall demonstrate why chess has gained universal appeal (writes J. R. Capablanca, the .chess champion). The characteristics of our epoch are far from being of a philosophical nature engendering quietude, tranquility, and powers of observation; attributes vitally necessary to chess players. Rather do we live in a century of unrest. Nevertheless, chess is more popular than zer. If we search for th* causes underlying that fact we must believe that it conforms, in spite of apparent incongruity, with the general philosophy of the present century.

More than ever are physical and intellectual values appraised, and consequently sports have grown in importance. There is no sport or game on earth that does not interest a tremendously large following. The majority of mankind, while they do not take an active part in sport, take an intellectual interest in it and flock to contests. There is keenness in witnessing the tussle for supremacy between either physical or inteleetual forces. I know, a good many people who themselves do not play chess, but who are well acquainted with the masters of the game and know who are the most recent winners in contests of world-wide importance. As to what constitutes the good chess player, it is impossible to give absolute definitions of the attributes he should possess if he desires to become a pastmaster in the art —for art it is, like painting or sculpture. One can no more become an artist than one can become a great player of chess unless one possesses inborn talent in that direction.

The only generality one can make on that score is to say that usually men who in their first youth showed strong leanings towards mathematics later on showed leanings towards chess. Abstract study is good groundwork for that game. Chess is, on the whole, an abstract science, but on the other hand one must also possess a great deal of imagination to bring a game to a successful issue. Great scientists who made discoveries of world wide import did not always succeed through pure logic, but brought an ardent imagination in play. A good chess player must have imagination as well as logic in his make-

up. Neither quality can stand alone to arrive at satisfactory results in the game. Reflection is necessary, and quick judgment, the better to profit by one’s opponent’s mistakes. When the great masters are playing, it is, of course, out of the question to count on actual mistakes, but he who perceives first his adversary’s plans and intentions is he who wins ultimately. In that process the chess player requires, in addition to imagination and logic, an equally good supply of psychological * talent, for by such means he can gauge his opponent’s character, which gives a clue to his projects in mind.

Some famous masters in the game of chess'are always aggressive in their tactics, others remain on the defensive and only start their own line of attack towards the end of the game.

Chess originates from Persia, and was transmitted to India, and from there to Arabia. Centuries ago the Arabs and Turks in their conquests of parts of Europe introduced the game to .the Western world.

Though the game is of Eastern origin, and Orientals are renowed for their patience, for the present the white race is supreme in the game and white men the best players of this century. Perhaps, on the whole, there are more chess players in the East, but actually Europeans are those who have created the science of the game.

It is difficult to say which nation produces the best players. I know English players who are endowed with more imagination than Spaniards; and I have met Italians and Hungarians who are even colder and more reserved than Scandinavians. Most countries have some good chess players.

My personal system in the game is fundamentally very simple, and is rather contradictory to my Southern origin.l always play with prudence and take no risks. Moreover, recklessness is direct contradiction to the original principle of chess, which is not a game of chance, but of skill. I have so often been asked how it is that women, so efficient in all other walks of life, have as yet not given the world a great chess player. I thins there will never exist a large number of good chess players in the feminine ranks, just because women have never made good mathematicians. The psychology of women does not draw them to the game, and it is just as well, for they have so much else to give humanity.—“ Star and Anglo-American N.S., copyright.).

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19291228.2.168.8

Bibliographic details

Dominion, Volume 23, Issue 80, 28 December 1929, Page 27

Word Count
804

WHY CHESS IS POPULAR Dominion, Volume 23, Issue 80, 28 December 1929, Page 27

WHY CHESS IS POPULAR Dominion, Volume 23, Issue 80, 28 December 1929, Page 27