Thursday, 16 05 2024
Thursday, 16 05 2024
16:42
Byblos Bank Armenia celebrates Students’ Day with scholarship recipients
16:23
China and Russia support a world order based on international law
16:04
The meeting between Lukashenko and Aliyev has started
15:45
“The Azerbaijani side is inclined to continue the demarcation process in the same format.” Deputy Prime Minister
15:26
“We have created a demarcation formula that should be used for the further process of demarcation.” prime minister
15:07
“I consider what happened to be a great success.” Nikol Pashinyan on border demarcation
14:48
About 25 houses in Armenia’s territory remained in the Baghanis-Ayrum, Ashagh Askipara, and Kheyrimli villages of Azerbaijan
14:29
I am shocked by the attack against Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico. Nikol Pashinyan
14:10
Precipitation is expected, and the air temperature will drop
Armenia emphasizes the role of science, technology, and innovation
Papoyan discussed the process of diversification of the Armenian economy with US officials
13:13
It is known who carried out the assassination attempt against the prime minister of Slovakia
12:54
“It is an event of special importance for the capital city.” Tigran Avinyan
12:35
The RA government is one of the most important partners of the EBRD
12:16
“You won’t surprise anyone by flying into space now.” Nikol Pashinyan
11:57
“Chelsea” will still receive a bonus from “Real” from Hazard’s transfer
11:38
The condition of the Prime Minister of Slovakia is considered serious
11:19
“The border liberalization process will teach Armenia and Azerbaijan to live peacefully.” prime minister
11:00
President of the European Commission Von der Leyen condemned the assassination attempt against Fico
10:41
Details from the assassination attempt on the Slovak Prime Minister
10:22
The court of Baku extended the detention of the former leaders of Nagorno-Karabakh
Pashinyan sent a congratulatory message to the Prime Minister of Serbia
17:58
Australia will increase its military budget
USA
17:39
The US Senate called the adoption of the law “a black day for Georgian democracy.”
17:20
450,000 Palestinians left Rafah under Israeli pressure
17:01
Ukraine has demanded from the USA to lift the ban on strikes on Russian territory
16:42
The Indian Foreign Ministry responded to the US regarding the Iranian port
The parties discussed the possibility of financing the Sisian-Qajaran road construction
16:04
RA is interested in deepening and expanding cooperation with France in all fields. prime minister
15:45
The President of Georgia met the EU Foreign Ministers

Chess Reigns as Kingly Pursuit in Armenia: Winning Move. The Wall Street Journal

Reporters stake out Tigran Petrosian’s home. Fans seek his autograph. His image is splashed across magazine covers, and his youthful face beams from posters on teenagers’ walls.

The sturdy 28-year-old isn’t a star athlete or a movie star. He is a chess grandmaster. In this chess-crazy country, that makes him a king among pawns.
“Chess here is like soccer in Brazil or football in America,” Mr. Petrosian said over coffee at the Yerevan Chess Academy ahead of a concert to honor the country’s top players. The concert featured musicians and singers performing in front of 10-foot-high chess boards while the audience clapped rapturously.
Mr. Petrosian—whose father named him Tigran after a former chess champion with the same surname—is one of a legion of top chess players that have catapulted this poor nation of three million into world beaters on the 64-square board. In September, he was part of the five-man squad that claimed Armenia’s second consecutive gold medal at the World Chess Olympiad.

Being good in chess carries big benefits in Armenia. Top players say they struggle to be allowed to pay for gasoline or parking. Restaurant bills sometimes never materialize when they go out to eat.
“Some girls giggle when they see us on the streets and some even give me presents,” says 30-year-old Levon Aronian, Armenia’s No. 1 player and the second-ranked player in the world. “Most of us are just regular nerds, so it’s quite a lot to get used to. I’ve changed the way I dress for photo shoots but that’s all.”
Armenia’s veneration of its chess players recalls a bygone era when the game produced a series of global household names.

In a Cold War grudge match that captivated audiences world-wide, American Bobby Fischer in 1972 broke Soviet dominance by beating champion Boris Spassky. Chess is still popular across much of the former Soviet Union, a legacy of Moscow’s patronage of a game it said demonstrated its intellectual superiority over the West.
But whereas chess players are on their own in many Soviet spinoffs, they still have full state support in Armenia. The country’s president, Serzh Sargsyan, also is the president of the Armenian Chess Federation.

In September 2011, his government passed legislation that made chess compulsory in schools. Promising players get free training at elite chess academies. The state pays for children to play in foreign championships and pays a salary to all grandmasters.
Mr. Sargsyan hailed a “golden age” for Armenian chess in a speech earlier this year. “It continues to inspire our society with belief in its own strength and self-confidence,” he said.

Armenia’s love affair with the game is less than half a century old. The country caught the chess bug on May 20, 1963, when 33-year-old Tigran Petrosian, no relation to the current player, dethroned reigning world champion Mikhail Botvinnik, a Soviet, over a grinding 24-game match.
Nicknamed “Iron Tigran” because of his impenetrable defense, Mr. Petrosian’s victory made him a national hero. Thousands of families named their children Tigran in his honor.

“In the U.S., everyone can remember where they were when President Kennedy was killed. In Armenia, everyone can remember where they were when Petrosian won that championship,” said Aram Hajian, board member of the Chess Academy of Armenia.

Nowadays, chess fever starts young in the country.
At the Patriarch Vasgen elementary school in Yerevan’s northern suburbs, aspiring grandmasters daily squeeze into the chess room: a makeshift shrine adorned with the sober faces of former champions and half a dozen huge magnetic boards showcasing the game’s most celebrated offensive and defensive plays.
All boards, pieces and textbooks are provided by the government. The children switch between theory and practice and sit through a written test every two months. The teacher, Marina Kamalyan, a frizzy-haired chess evangelist who plays online late most nights, insists on total dedication from the pupils.

“Chess is a real passion that is a metaphor for life. Education is a very important part of our mentality in Armenia, and I want to pass on this passion to the children,” Mrs. Kamalyan said as she moved white pieces into an unassailable position on one of the class’s wall-mounted magnetic boards.
Many of these children are already veterans, but they are determined to join Armenia’s top players as world beaters.

“I want to be world champion. Grandmaster is not good enough,” says 9-year-old Yervan Davtyan, after thrashing a reporter in a game lasting less than 15 minutes.
“I taught my mother how to play better, but I didn’t show her all the secrets because I want to be the best,” adds 8-year-old Julia Hakobyan.

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