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 • Major Tournaments  >  The real world championships?

      The real world championships?

      Anand, Sports Illustrated, World Championship


      The real world championships
      by Steve Rushin
      Posted: Wednesday October 27, 2010 10:03AM
      Updated: Wednesday October 27, 2010 10:03AM
      Sports Illustrated

      It’s that time of year again — October — when we crown another deserving World Champion. I’m speaking, of course, about the just-concluded World DJ Championship, which was contested among turntable wizards from 25 nations and won — I hardly need to tell you — by the French spinner LigOne at club KOKO in London.

      By contrast, the other World Champion crowned next week will have vanquished teams from two countries en route to winning the World Series. The World DJ Championship, we are left to conclude, is a far more cosmopolitan event than the World Series will ever be. The only thing the two events have in common is a lot of scratching.

      So why in the world do we persist in calling the winners of America’s domestic sports leagues “World Champions”? It has often been noted that the NFL is about as international as the International House of Pancakes. But that simply isn’t true: IHOP has franchises in the U.S., Canada, Mexico and the Virgin Islands. The NFL does not have a franchise in Los Angeles.

      The governing body of the World Chess Championship, FIDE, comprises 158 national associations. Given that the United Nations only has 34 more countries than that, we might consider FIDE a truly global operation. If any victor, then, has the right to slip into a “World Champion” T-shirt and duck-walk around a field of play as Tina Turner sings “You’re simply the best” over the sound system, it is 40-year-old Viswanathan Anand of India, the reigning world chess champion. It would certainly make the tournament more lively.

      Instead, Anand, who took a 40-hour bus ride to Bulgaria to earn his title in May, pronounced himself “relieved” to have won, then treated himself to a flight home. This backs up what Francis Bacon once said: “The less you speak of your greatness, the more I shall think of it.”
      Of course, that was the 16th century, and Bacon today would no doubt be tweeting us all a link to his Bacon Bits blog, where he’d have posted several more aphorisms like that one. But the point remains: “World Champions” protest too much.

      Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/steve_rushin/10/27/world.champs/#ixzz13aAaSZOz

      Posted by Picasa
      Chess Daily News from Susan Polgar
      Previous Article Video from Cap d’ Agde
      Next Article Ready for the SPICE Cup

      About Author

      Susan Polgar

      Related Posts

      • Carlsen – Caruana World Championship Match LIVE!

        November 27, 2018
      • The biggest threat to Carlsen?

        November 18, 2017
      • Lanka: “Time for Anand to quit”

        September 17, 2017

      3 Comments

      1. Anonymous Reply
        October 28, 2010 at 4:56 am

        Chess is the real world championship.

      2. Anonymous Reply
        October 28, 2010 at 9:54 am

        I lol’d at Bacon Bits.

      3. Lionel Davs Reply
        October 28, 2010 at 2:51 pm

        Well my teacher Bobby Fischer was never defeated for the World Title to begin with and as far as fide’s top match in Bulgaria , it doesnt take a rocket scientist to look at the White House and then play Ng4(Leap of Faith- U.S.C.F. i read your mag. thats the real reason he moved the knight.), actually from an Ultramodern perspective vishy’s lack of understanding about this new idea is clear by the games hes playing in Nanjing right now. When President Obama came to Buffalo, N.Y. i went downtown to see why you over there in Europe seeing Aliens and moving that knight in a circle, so when your TOLD we living in a time of CHANGE!!!,and then the chessboard changes, why then do you wanna believe that this Universal Occurance has anything to do with Fide’s Chess World Championship or Vishy or Kasparov, why would a chessplayer, a reasonable thinking individual in the United States look at how much different CHESS HAS CHANGED!!! look at the White House then act CONFUSED, about what to do in the Midterm Election? We dealing with a Universal Truth thats sitting in the White House and i hear Rush Limbaugh on the radio makin silly noises and Sarah Palin spittin rhetoic, this is for our children’s future and Chess is showing the whole world that its not “just a game”.

      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