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      Home  >  Daily News • General News • Major Tournaments  >  New match, same result

      New match, same result

      Anatoly Karpov, Chess match, Garry Kasparov, Valencia


      Kasparov beats Karpov in rerun of 1984 chess clash
      Fri Sep 25, 2009 5:05am EDT

      MADRID (Reuters Life!) – Russian chess legend Gary Kasparov has won a re-match of his classic 1984 world championship contest with compatriot Anatoly Karpov, ending a 12-match clash in the Spanish city of Valencia 9-3.

      In relaxed surroundings worlds away from the original clash — played out amid Cold War tension which had converted Kasparov into a western favorite — Kasparov won five speed matches in the final eight-match clash late on Thursday.

      The players plan to play again in Paris in December, a spokeswoman for the Valencia regional government said.

      In 1984 Kasparov, now 46 and a leading opponent of Russian Prime Minister Vladimimir Putin, waged an epic battle with then reigning champion Karpov, now 58, which was called off after 48 matches because of concern over the players’ health.

      Kasparov said the 1984 match was called off to save Karpov from defeat — and a nervous breakdown — as the match had come to symbolize the competing forces then at play in the Soviet Union. Karpov was a darling of the Soviet establishment.

      By the time the 1984 match was halted, Karpov had won five games and Kasparov three, with 40 draws. Both said they wanted to play on.

      (Reporting by Jason Webb, editing by Tim Pearce)

      Source: Reuters

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      3 Comments

      1. Anonymous Reply
        September 25, 2009 at 1:12 pm

        No one will care about the next match since the score is so bad.

      2. Anonymous Reply
        September 25, 2009 at 1:34 pm

        There wont be next match.

      3. Anonymous Reply
        September 25, 2009 at 2:31 pm

        Indeed! And the saddest part is that this skewed score doesn’t at all reflect the level of play accurately. For example, Karpov lost the 4th blitz game on time in a won position, and subsequently collapsed psychologically. If he had managed his time better, it would’ve been a 2.5:1.5 for Karpov after 4 games, and he would’ve played with more motivation the second part. I’m actually surprised Karpov went for a match with short controls given that his rapid and blitz results of late have been so dismal and that Kasparov is known to still play actively blitz online.

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