Karjakin loses his record
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Karjakin loses his record
A well-reported account of the world's youngest GM can be found in the link. Scary stuff indeed.
https://www.espn.com/chess/story/_/id/3 ... ss-history
https://www.espn.com/chess/story/_/id/3 ... ss-history
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Re: Karjakin loses his record
Peter Doggers with his usual good article: https://www.chess.com/news/view/abhiman ... ss-history
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Re: Karjakin loses his record
Thanks. I suppose the big question is where does he go from here? How far up the ladder will he go before he reaches the point where he can go no further?
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Re: Karjakin loses his record
Everyone who has broken that record has gone on to become a Super GM (or the equivalent). A few went on to win world championships, and a few others played matches for the world championships. Future looks bright.
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Re: Karjakin loses his record
Some really hellish training. I wonder whether he still enjoys it, or like an Agasi hates his sport?
There is an article that allegedly talks about him and states some scary stuff: https://www.chesstech.org/2021/protect-our-prodigies/
There is an article that allegedly talks about him and states some scary stuff: https://www.chesstech.org/2021/protect-our-prodigies/
He went to school only three days a week to have more time to study chess. He studied chess seven or eight hours every day. All his holidays are spent at tournaments. By the age of eleven he has been taken out of school. He has stopped to do sports. On some days he walks for an hour, on others his body hardly moves. Now he studies chess for twelve to thirteen hours every day. He gets the odd day off chess when a tournament is over. But often his next tournament is starting on the very next day.
His bedtime depends on the hours of his next game. He has to wear a mask during training so that he is used to wearing it when he competes. He has learned not to show his emotions. He hardly smiles or speaks to other players. He hardly speaks to anyone but his dad and his coaches. He sees his mum and sister only during daily video calls. Video calls with friends are much more rare.
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Re: Karjakin loses his record
Wadih Khoury and others interested are invited to read today's just published Guardian article https://www.theguardian.com/sport/chess and judge for themselves whether Abhi's interview with David Howell and Jovanka Houska is consistent with Loeffler's hatchet job.
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Re: Karjakin loses his record
I wonder what Stefan would have said about the Polgars.
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Re: Karjakin loses his record
Yes it looks promising but at some point he will plateau, as to when we'll have to wait and see, probably not anytime soon.
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Re: Karjakin loses his record
Thank you Leonard for the link and the counterpoint. The video does show him to be quite relaxed and smiling which is nice to see.Leonard Barden wrote: ↑Thu Jul 01, 2021 5:51 pmWadih Khoury and others interested are invited to read today's just published Guardian article https://www.theguardian.com/sport/chess and judge for themselves whether Abhi's interview with David Howell and Jovanka Houska is consistent with Loeffler's hatchet job.
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Re: Karjakin loses his record
I think a lot of eyes will be on him at the world cup. Will be interesting to see how he fairs.
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Re: Karjakin loses his record
Now the GM title appears to be nailed down, I hope to see him taking his chances in big Swisses like Silver Lake, which has just finished down the road from where he is. More astonishing results from young Indian players.
https://chess-results.com/tnr555017.asp ... ES&flag=30
https://chess-results.com/tnr555017.asp ... ES&flag=30
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Re: Karjakin loses his record
It feels a bit churlish saying anything other than well done. But it is interesting to speculate on how much further he can go.
My theory is that good coaching gets players to their peak rating quicker, but I am not sure how much it raises their ceiling.
My theory is that good coaching gets players to their peak rating quicker, but I am not sure how much it raises their ceiling.
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Re: Karjakin loses his record
Look at Wei Yi, he went like a greyhound up until 2700, and years on he's still stuck at 2725. Much of it depends on his coaching, surely.
For those interested, they interviewed our youngest GM in the AsianGold Rapid today. David Howell seemed rather impressive by his Carlsen-like play to attain the norm.
For those interested, they interviewed our youngest GM in the AsianGold Rapid today. David Howell seemed rather impressive by his Carlsen-like play to attain the norm.
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Re: Karjakin loses his record
A while back the general view of this Forum was that coaching from Kasparov had raised Carlsen's ceiling.Paul Cooksey wrote: ↑Thu Jul 01, 2021 8:53 pmMy theory is that good coaching gets players to their peak rating quicker, but I am not sure how much it raises their ceiling.
viewtopic.php?f=2&t=1114
Last edited by David Sedgwick on Sat Jul 03, 2021 12:33 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Karjakin loses his record
Well it did draw a lot of complaints from Nakamura when Carlsen started beating people with the KID, which he hadn't been playing before.