Ugandan player Phiona Mutesi
Ugandan player Phiona Mutesi
In today's Daily Mail, a really inspiring story about Phiona Mutesi, a Ugandan girl who succeeded in chess against all the odds. She came from an extremely impoverished background and only started going to chess classes because it meant that she would get a meal!
She had a natural ability for the game though and she is now a WCM. A new film has been made of her story, based on the book "Queen of Katwe".
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/afp/ar ... odigy.html
She had a natural ability for the game though and she is now a WCM. A new film has been made of her story, based on the book "Queen of Katwe".
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/afp/ar ... odigy.html
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Re: Ugandan player Phiona Mutesi
Adding a new link to this thread (there are a number of threads on the topic of Phiona Mutesi that could be merged if that was thought worth doing):
http://en.chessbase.com/post/chess-movi ... -announced
"Chess is on the rise, even in the world of motion pictures. Based on the true story of Phiona Mutesi, a starving Ugandan girl living in the streets who learned chess at age nine while looking for food handouts and became the Ugandan Open junior champion (defeating the boys) at age 16, Disney will be releasing a film on her later this year starring Oscar winner Lupita Nyong'o."
http://en.chessbase.com/post/chess-movi ... -announced
"Chess is on the rise, even in the world of motion pictures. Based on the true story of Phiona Mutesi, a starving Ugandan girl living in the streets who learned chess at age nine while looking for food handouts and became the Ugandan Open junior champion (defeating the boys) at age 16, Disney will be releasing a film on her later this year starring Oscar winner Lupita Nyong'o."
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Re: Ugandan player Phiona Mutesi
She may now be a WCM (whatever that actually is) but it has been claimed her Elo rating is only in the 1600s.
A nice story, but let's not get carried away......
A nice story, but let's not get carried away......
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Re: Ugandan player Phiona Mutesi
Current rating 1622, which suggests her WCM title is the result of something like scoring 50% in an Olympiad.
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Re: Ugandan player Phiona Mutesi
A title awarded based on results at the 2012 Olympiad.IM Jack Rudd wrote:Current rating 1622, which suggests her WCM title is the result of something like scoring 50% in an Olympiad.
https://ratings.fide.com/card.phtml?event=10000399
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Re: Ugandan player Phiona Mutesi
I think it's hard for serious chess players to be objective about this sort of thing; it's easy to groan inwardly at the hype, but then overlook the genuinely interesting story underneath.
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Re: Ugandan player Phiona Mutesi
FIDE has a long standing policy of awarding titles based on relative performance in its events. Perhaps with the extension of ratings down to 1000 they could reconsider. An Elo of 1600 is broadly equivalent to 125 on traditional conversions. A (male) British (Channel Islands) player achieved a CM title in an Olympiad whilst rarely escaping from the 120s in BCF/ECF grades.PeterFarr wrote:I think it's hard for serious chess players to be objective about this sort of thing
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Re: Ugandan player Phiona Mutesi
Yes I realize she is not very strong, my point is that it's an interesting story given the overall context (non-chess reasons). Think of it as being about a girl escaping extreme poverty, rather than a story about the debasement of chess titles by FIDE.Roger de Coverly wrote:FIDE has a long standing policy of awarding titles based on relative performance in its events. Perhaps with the extension of ratings down to 1000 they could reconsider. An Elo of 1600 is broadly equivalent to 125 on traditional conversions. A (male) British (Channel Islands) player achieved a CM title in an Olympiad whilst rarely escaping from the 120s in BCF/ECF grades.PeterFarr wrote:I think it's hard for serious chess players to be objective about this sort of thing
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Re: Ugandan player Phiona Mutesi
That will be the angle and valid as well. If you check the top five female players in Uganda, she is at number 3, the other 4 having the "higher" WFM title.PeterFarr wrote: Think of it as being about a girl escaping extreme poverty, rather than a story about the debasement of chess titles by FIDE.
http://ratings.fide.com/advaction.phtml ... &line=desc
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Re: Ugandan player Phiona Mutesi
I agree. One purpose of the (W)CM title is to honour players like this one. It's just a shame that it has been stretched so far that it has become a farce.PeterFarr wrote: Yes I realize she is not very strong, my point is that it's an interesting story given the overall context (non-chess reasons). Think of it as being about a girl escaping extreme poverty, rather than a story about the debasement of chess titles by FIDE.
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Re: Ugandan player Phiona Mutesi
I'm puzzled at the puzzlement. A FIDE rating of 1622 would put her at number 44 on the England FIDE women's list, just 9 places below WCM Dinah Norman, 1797
12 year old South African Heinrich Smuts (1161) is the lowest rated CM and 12 year old Algerian Manel Nasr (1015) the lowest rated WCM.
12 year old South African Heinrich Smuts (1161) is the lowest rated CM and 12 year old Algerian Manel Nasr (1015) the lowest rated WCM.
Ah, but I was so much older then. I'm younger than that now.
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Re: Ugandan player Phiona Mutesi
Hardly a fair comparison. Dinah was one of the leading English female players in her prime, and, with a peak rating of at least 2085 (ratings only readily available as far back as 1991, so it might have been higher prior to that), easily worthy of the WCM title. I would imagine, if the title had been available 40 - 50 years ago, she'd be a WFM.Brian Towers wrote:I'm puzzled at the puzzlement. A FIDE rating of 1622 would put her at number 44 on the England FIDE women's list, just 9 places below WCM Dinah Norman, 1797
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Re: Ugandan player Phiona Mutesi
No doubt about that - from one who played against her (and drew) in one of Stewart Reuben's tournaments in the late 1960s. (She was then Dinah Wright, nee Dobson). With more opportunities even WIM would have been a reasonable aspiration.Ian Thompson wrote:Hardly a fair comparison. Dinah was one of the leading English female players in her prime, and, with a peak rating of at least 2085 (ratings only readily available as far back as 1991, so it might have been higher prior to that), easily worthy of the WCM title. I would imagine, if the title had been available 40 - 50 years ago, she'd be a WFM.Brian Towers wrote:I'm puzzled at the puzzlement. A FIDE rating of 1622 would put her at number 44 on the England FIDE women's list, just 9 places below WCM Dinah Norman, 1797
Tim Harding
Historian and FIDE Arbiter
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Historian and FIDE Arbiter
Author of 'Steinitz in London,' British Chess Literature to 1914', 'Joseph Henry Blackburne: A Chess Biography', and 'Eminent Victorian Chess Players'
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Re: Ugandan player Phiona Mutesi
Phiona Mutesi is certainly gathering publicity. Have just been reading an article in the Australian Readers Digest, on her achievements. That Uganda is sufficiently well organised that it can send a team to the Chess Olympiad, speaks volumes for the progress being made in Africa.
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Re: Ugandan player Phiona Mutesi
Uganda has sent a team to every Olympiad since 1980 except for Moscow 1994, when I seem to remember they had visa problems.
Bermuda met them in Yereven 1996, and on top board I played Willy Zabasajja, who had done a great deal to put Ugandan chess on the map after the disastrous Idi Amin period. I realised when reading this thread that I had heard nothing of him for many years - there can of course be many reasons for this, but in that part of the world you always fear the worst. A search reveals that he did indeed die prematurely.
http://www.thechessdrum.net/newsbriefs/ ... ganda.html.
It does at least seem that the good work he did for chess in East Africa lives on.
Bermuda met them in Yereven 1996, and on top board I played Willy Zabasajja, who had done a great deal to put Ugandan chess on the map after the disastrous Idi Amin period. I realised when reading this thread that I had heard nothing of him for many years - there can of course be many reasons for this, but in that part of the world you always fear the worst. A search reveals that he did indeed die prematurely.
http://www.thechessdrum.net/newsbriefs/ ... ganda.html.
It does at least seem that the good work he did for chess in East Africa lives on.
If you want a picture of the future, imagine a QR code stamped on a human face — forever.