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      Home  >  Daily News • Major Tournaments • SPICE / Webster • Susan's Personal Blog  >  Youth rules

      Youth rules

      Columbus Dispatch, Hikaru Nakamura, Ray Robson, Shelby Lyman


      Game’s top tier growing younger
      Saturday, October 31, 2009 3:11 AM
      By SHELBY LYMAN

      When Bobby Fischer gained worldwide fame by earning the grandmaster title in 1958 — at the age of 15 years, six months and one day — the preconceptions of many were shattered.

      Chess, the public learned, was not a game only for older people and bearded savants; young people played, and at least one of them — a teenager — was among the best in the world.

      Since then, 22 other young men and women have surpassed the American’s benchmark. The youngest is Sergey Karjakin of Ukraine, who earned the grandmaster title at 12 years and 7 months in 2002.

      It’s a measure of Fischer’s achievement that it has taken 51 years for a modest number of exceptional talents to supersede him, despite the significant advantages they possess, including computer databases and Internet play.

      Precocity is a marker of future greatness: Five of the top 20 players today are among those who have bettered Fischer’s record.

      I, therefore, look forward to the future efforts of two Americans: 21-year-old Hikaru Nakamura and 15-year-old Ray Robson, both of whom became grandmasters earlier than Fischer.

      Both will be tested in the months ahead by world-class competition.

      Source: http://www.columbusdispatch.com

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      4 Comments

      1. Anonymous Reply
        October 31, 2009 at 3:12 pm

        Soon, there’ll be GMs at age 10 and 11.

      2. ChessDad Reply
        October 31, 2009 at 3:14 pm

        Best Luck to Hikaru and Ray!

      3. Anonymous Reply
        October 31, 2009 at 5:26 pm

        Fischer was the best!

      4. timothee3331 Reply
        November 2, 2009 at 3:04 am

        I don’t want to criticize ray and hikaru, for whose play i have the greater appreciation, but when fischer earned the grandmaster title, he dit it by being amongst the top players in portoroz and was ahead of great players like bronstein. He was already amongst the very very best in the world, that’s what meant his grandmaster title.
        Ray and Hikaru have become “common gms” at the age of 15, with enormous technology, which does not exactly mean they are amongst the top 10 at 15 years old.

      Leave a Reply to Anonymous Cancel reply

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