Menu   ≡ ╳
  • News
    • Major Tournaments
    • General News
    • USA Chess
  • Puzzles
  • Improvement
  • Event
  • College
  • Scholastic
  • Women
  • Search

        More results...

        Or you can try to:
        Search in Shop
        Exact matches only
        Search in title
        Search in content
        Search in comments
        Search in excerpt
        Search for News
        Search in pages
        Search in groups
        Search in users
        Search in forums
        Filter by Categories

        Try these: Sicilian Defense, Empire Chess, USA Chess

    • SPICE
    • Videos
    • Susan’s Blog
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • SPICE
    • Videos
    • Susan’s Blog
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    Menu   ≡ ╳
    • News
      • Major Tournaments
      • General News
      • USA Chess
    • Puzzles
    • Improvement
    • Event
    • College
    • Scholastic
    • Women
    • Search

          More results...

          Or you can try to:
          Search in Shop
          Exact matches only
          Search in title
          Search in content
          Search in comments
          Search in excerpt
          Search for News
          Search in pages
          Search in groups
          Search in users
          Search in forums
          Filter by Categories

          Try these: Sicilian Defense, Empire Chess, USA Chess

      Home  >  Daily News • General News  >  Man in the News: Garry Kasparov

      Man in the News: Garry Kasparov

      Garry Kasparov


      Man in the News: Garry Kasparov
      By Charles Clover
      Published: September 25 2009 23:15 Last updated: September 25 2009 23:15
      Financial Times

      Hunched over a chess table, chin wedged into his knuckles, eyes fixed in concentration, a familiar figure returned to Russia’s television screens this week. He had been little seen of late: after 2005, Garry Kasparov, who retired from chess to become the face of political opposition to Vladimir Putin’s Kremlin, all but disappeared from the airwaves.

      Yet as Mr Kasparov played a mini-championship in Spain marking the 25th anniversary of his five-month “marathon match” against Anatoly Karpov – a man he describes on his blog as his “eternal opponent” – an informal Kremlin ban appeared to lift. “We are pleasantly surprised that they show his face at all,” says Marina Litvinovich, Mr Kasparov’s spokesperson, though she notes that the broadcasts “show him exclusively as a chess player, not as a political figure.”

      Since his retirement, Mr Kasparov has been a rabble-rousing leader of the “Other Russia” opposition movement, a fixture at marches that usually feature more grey-camouflaged special forces troops than demonstrators. He has been beaten, thrown in jail, and denounced publicly as a traitor and an American-backed puppet by the Russian media. His foray into politics, he reckons, has been a success, but not exactly what he bargained for.

      In many ways, 2005 was precisely the wrong time to gain traction as a democrat in Russia. Most people were tired of western-style liberalism following the economic collapse of the Yeltsin years and Mr Putin was immensely popular. “He [Kasparov] really thought that his name and his reputation and abilities would allow him to create this big, broad political front. It didn’t really work out. It’s not because he wasn’t capable. It’s just that the people were passive,” says Lev Ponomarev, a democratic activist who has known Mr Kasparov for two decades.

      Now 46 years old, Mr Kasparov grew up in Baku, Azerbeijan, the son of an Armenian mother and a Jewish father. At just 10 he started at the Mikhail Botvinnik chess school in Moscow, where Mr Karpov had earlier studied, and rocketed up the World Chess Federation Rankings through his teens. Even as a young man, Mr Kasparov displayed an outsider’s determination to overturn the chess establishment. “You could already see he was a dissident”, says Mr Ponomarev.

      Here is the full article.

      Posted by Picasa
      Chess Daily News from Susan Polgar
      Previous Article Pinoy GMs Paragua, Dableo make presence felt
      Next Article Nanjing Pearl Spring Chess Tournament

      About Author

      Susan Polgar

      Related Posts

      • The Brave Legend

        August 19, 2017
      • Kasparov suffers 1st official defeat in 12 years, Nepo leads

        August 15, 2017
      • Karjakin: “I think that Kasparov’s doing a lot of bad things, even for chess!”

        December 11, 2016

      2 Comments

      1. Anonymous Reply
        September 26, 2009 at 10:18 am

        This was a very uninteresting match.

      2. Anonymous Reply
        September 26, 2009 at 7:13 pm

        So uninteresting that you watched it and took time to comment it?

      Leave a Reply to Anonymous Cancel reply

      Improvement

      • Important Scholastic Coaching Tips
      • My Chess Quotes Over The Years
      • My kids know chess rules. What’s next?
      • Chess Parenting

      Events

      • My Top 10 Most Memorable Moments in Chess (Part 3) May 13, 2021
      • My Top 10 Most Memorable Moments in Chess (Part 2) May 12, 2021
      • My Top 10 Most Memorable Moments in Chess (Part 1) May 10, 2021
      • About Susan Polgar April 9, 2021
      • About Us
      • Contact Us
      • Daily News
      • My Account
      • Terms & Conditions
      • Privacy Policy

      Anand Armenia Breaking News Chess Club and Scholastic Center of St Louis Chess interview Chess Olympiad Chess tactic Chess tournament chess trivia China FIDE Grand Prix Holland India Khanty-Mansiysk LIVE games Lubbock Magnus Carlsen Moscow National Championship Norway OnlineChessLessons Philippines Puzzle Solving Russia Scholastic chess Spain SPF SPICE SPICE Cup St Louis Susan Polgar Tata Steel Chess Texas Tech Tromsø TTU Turkey Webster University Wesley So Wijk aan Zee Women's Chess Women's Grand Prix Women's World Championship World Championship World Cup

      April 2026
      M T W T F S S
       12345
      6789101112
      13141516171819
      20212223242526
      27282930  
      « Sep