logo
Viswanathan Anand to take on ‘Messi of chess', 11-year-old Faustino Oro, on June 1

Viswanathan Anand to take on ‘Messi of chess', 11-year-old Faustino Oro, on June 1

Indian Express07-05-2025

Over the course of his illustrious chess career, five-time world champion Viswanathan Anand has dealt with challenges of all shapes and sizes. But even by those standards, he will confront a unique challenge on June 1: he will take on 11-year-old Faustino Oro, nicknamed the 'Messi of chess', in an exhibition game in Tuscany.
The battle will see a clash of generations — Anand, who calls himself semi-retired, is 55 years old, while his opponent is yet to turn a teenager. The event's organisers have called it 'a meeting between the past and the future of chess'. Oro is one of the most promising stars on the circuit and is tipped for big things in the sport.
Last year, Oro set a record by becoming the youngest-ever International Master in chess history. The Argentinian prodigy became one of only three players to achieve the title before turning 11. Currently rated 2454, the Argentine prodigy is chasing history: he wants to become the youngest-ever grandmaster. He's had a remarkably fast rise in the sport: he crossed the 2000-rating threshold for the first time only in May 2022, but in three years, he is already knocking on the doors of the 2500 rating club.
The exhibition game is organised by Unichess and conceived by Grandmaster Roberto Mogranzini and Italian tenor Andrea Bocelli, who is also a chess lover. The exhibition game is part of the Pietrasanta and Versilia Chess Roads project, which will take place this June at Italy's La Versiliana. The event will see a unique exhibition from June 2 to 15 called Chess Roads, which will feature 40 rare and original chess sets from Asia and Europe. The exhibition event will see chess pieces in ivory, wood, and bronze, ranging from the late 1700s to the present.
Organisers said that the match will 'shine an international spotlight on this corner of Tuscany'. The winner of this battle will then face twenty guests in a simultaneous (popularly known in chess circles as 'simuls') match. While the contest is an invitation-only event for a select international and Italian audience of chess lovers, Chess.com will broadcast the match in three languages.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

French Open 2025 Final: Jannik Sinner's calm meets Carlos Alcaraz's chaos in 12th chapter of rivalry
French Open 2025 Final: Jannik Sinner's calm meets Carlos Alcaraz's chaos in 12th chapter of rivalry

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

French Open 2025 Final: Jannik Sinner's calm meets Carlos Alcaraz's chaos in 12th chapter of rivalry

Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz (AP Photo) NEW DELHI: Jannik Sinner versus Carlos Alcaraz has been hailed as the next big rivalry in men's tennis, with Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal , and Andy Murray all retired and 38-year-old Novak Djokovic losing his powers. They've brought this sensational contest to the grandest scales as well, including last year's French Open , Wimbledon in 2022, and sandwiched in between was a shot-making bonanza at the 2022 US Open. All of these have come on the path to glory. Round of 16 at 2022 Wimbledon, quarter-final at 2022 US Open and semi-final at Roland Garros last year. On Sunday, when they step up for their 12th match-up overall, it will be with a trophy on the line. Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW! The matchup has already created a couple of milestones. Sinner became only the second Italian to reach the Roland Garros final since 1976. He is now into his third straight major final, winning the previous two. Defending champion Alcaraz is the fifth-youngest player to reach five Men's Singles Grand Slam finals and has been to the title matches of a major for four straight years now. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Giao dịch CFD với công nghệ và tốc độ tốt hơn IC Markets Đăng ký Undo Spain's Carlos Alcaraz smiles (AP Photo/Thibault Camus) Maybe, most important of all, it will be the first major final between two men born in the 2000s, just in case anyone needed further affirmation that the new era has begun. If that's not enough, here's more: 22-year-old Alcaraz and 23-year-old Sinner have won the last five majors. The path to the title clash has been contrasting, though. As Alcaraz hopes to retain the Coupe des Mousquetaires for only the third time since Gustavo Kuerten and Nadal, it comes with the knowledge that Sinner has yet to drop a set this fortnight. The World No. 1 has lost just seven matches since the start of 2024, including one this year, but four of them have come against the Spaniard, the most recent one coming in Rome three weeks back. "He's the best tennis player right now," said Alcaraz. "I mean, he's destroying every opponent." Such is the brutality and consistency of Sinner's shot-making that there is a running joke among his peers where they celebrate getting a game off the Italian. Jiri Lehecka, Andrey Rublev, Alexander Bublik and Casper Ruud have been at the receiving end in the last month. Bublik and Rublev needed 27 minutes to win one game against Sinner, Ruud took 47 minutes and Lehecka raised his arms in celebration after 55 minutes. The latest opponent, Djokovic, pushed him the longest: three hours and 16 minutes. Yet, all he could squeeze out of the lanky Italian were 15 games. Alcaraz, meanwhile, has won just two of his six matches in straight sets but had a shorter time on court on Friday after Lorenzo Musetti was forced to retire. There are plenty of things going in the Spaniard's favour, too. He is 21-1 on clay; won titles in Rome and Monte Carlo in the tune-up; has won the past four matches against Sinner to lead the head-to-head 7-4. Contrary to Sinner, Alcaraz is jovial on the court, likes to entertain and didn't hesitate in acknowledging that he's unlikely to make things easy for himself and his fans. His belief is backed by the confidence of not giving up. 'Because I know that I have time and I'm strong mentally enough to come back,' Alcaraz said. He proved just that in last year's French Open final, when he came back from two-sets-to-one-down to beat Alexander Zverev. Sinner and Alcaraz come into the French Open final with a flawless record in major title clashes. That, however, will change on Sunday. "The stage, it doesn't get any bigger now. Grand Slam finals against Carlos, it's a special moment for me and for him, too," said Sinner. "The tension you feel before the match and during the match is a little bit different in a way, because we are both very young, we are both different, but talented." Italy's Jannik Sinner (AP Photo/Aurelien Morissard) Alcaraz acknowledged he'll have to play out of his skin to deny Sinner a maiden French Open title. "I love that battle. But most of the time is just about suffering, because (he pushes) you to the limit," said Carlos. Rivalry comparisons with Nadal-Djokovic-Federer get repeated and rightly so. But the 38-year-old Serb, who has been embroiled in 60 clashes with Nadal and 50 with Federer, thinks it's too early to draw fair comparisons. 'At the moment, that's kind of hard, because they need to play against each for at least 10-plus years nonstop in order to be part of the same discussion,' the 38-year-old Djokovic said Friday, laughing. 'But they're definitely great for tennis, both of them. I think their rivalry is something that our sport needs, no doubt. I'm sure that we're going to see them lifting the big trophies quite often.'

Local cultures, or booby traps?
Local cultures, or booby traps?

Economic Times

timean hour ago

  • Economic Times

Local cultures, or booby traps?

CUCCIOLO, DON'T LOOK, BUT THEY'RE HAVING CAPPUCCINO NOW, AT MIDDAY! Bunny and I are in Torino and are mindful not to offend local sensibilities. The name of the city means 'little bull' - an affectionate diminutive given concrete shape in the small taurine-shaped fountains that dot the city and afford crystal-clear, refreshingly cold water to quench the thirst of it's not water, but another potation that is a matter of concern. The Torinese, like all Italians, are passionate about coffee in all its manifestations and have strict dos and don'ts about when it is to be imbibed. Years ago in Delhi, an Italian diplomat friend narrated a cautionary tale about an Indian guest she'd invited to dinner at a restaurant in Italy. When the meal, including the dolce - the dessert course - was over, the hostess asked the guest if he'd like coffee. 'Yes, please. I'll have a cappuccino,' said the invitee, much to the consternation of both hostess and waiter. 'And to make matters worse, he asked for a second cup,' confided my friend, repressing a shudder of remembered horror. In Italy, to ask for a cappuccino after 11 a.m. is deemed, if not exactly sacrilegious, at the very least a solecism bordering on the barbaric. Because to drink such a milk-laden beverage later in the day is considered uncivilised for all except small and I, being bullish about Torino - as indeed about all of Italy - don't want to blot our copybook (kapi book?) by committing such a grievous faux pas. We are careful to get our daily fix of cappuccino - never to be called 'cappucicinos'! - before the clock has struck the taboo stroke of 11 ante however, is not quite as simple as it might sound. In Italy, time has relative elasticity, which could well baffle an Einstein. From midnight onwards, the correct form of salutation is 'Buongiorno' or 'Good day'. So far, so good - or so buono. But at some unspecified moment, Buongiorno is transformed into 'Buonasera', or 'Good evening'. Visitors who proffer a Buongiorno, at say, 3 p.m., could well be met with a corrective Buonasera in confound temporal confusion, there's also a 'Buon pomeriggio', or 'Good afternoon'. But reliable information has it that only pedants and pernickety types would say 'Buon pomeriggio'. All in all, it's enough to say 'Buona notte', 'Good night', and call it a Anglo-Saxon England, as distinct from multiculti Britain, table manners are dictated by cutlery, or what Americans call flatware. For the fish course, the fish knife, with its mysterious notch below the rounded tip, must be deployed.I've asked several people, English and otherwise, who are well-versed in matters epicurean, what the strange notch is for. I am yet to receive an answer that conveys certitude. My suspicion is that the design serves no useful purpose whatsoever, other than to confuse the uninitiated, who reveal themselves as such by displaying their ignorance before assembled one is eating soup - soup is always eaten, never drunk, not even when it's a watery consomme - the dish must be tilted away from you to spoon up, using the soup spoon, never the dessert spoon, the last of the helping. When eating porridge, on the other hand - or the other spoon - the bowl must be tilted towards you. Those who thumb their noses at such pettifoggery could take recourse to the recusant rhyme: 'I eat my peas with honey/ I've done it all my life/ It makes the peas taste funny/ But it keeps them on the knife.'A cautionary tale about culinary contretemps recounts how a Delhi entrepreneur would invite his Shanghai business associate to a Chinese restaurant to make the visitor feel at home. After repeated meals, the guest vouchsafed to his host that, business apart, he loved coming to Delhi to eat 'all that wonderful Indian food at that restaurant you keep taking me to'. (Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this column are that of the writer. The facts and opinions expressed here do not reflect the views of Elevate your knowledge and leadership skills at a cost cheaper than your daily tea. The answer to companies not incurring capex may lie in stock markets We are already a global airline, carry the national name and are set to order more planes: Air India CEO How Uber came back from the brink to dislodge Ola Banks are investing in these funds instead of lending the money. Why? Sebi, governing markets for 3 decades, in search of governance rules for itself F&O Radar | Deploy Short Strangle in Nifty to benefit from volatility, Theta Stock picks of the week: 5 stocks with consistent score improvement and return potential of more than 28% in 1 year These large- and mid-cap stocks can give more than 30% return in 1 year, according to analysts

French Open final: Carlos Alcaraz must reduce errors, win mental battle to beat near-perfect Jannik Sinner
French Open final: Carlos Alcaraz must reduce errors, win mental battle to beat near-perfect Jannik Sinner

Indian Express

time4 hours ago

  • Indian Express

French Open final: Carlos Alcaraz must reduce errors, win mental battle to beat near-perfect Jannik Sinner

Over the last three years, as Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz have mounted their ascension to the top of the rankings and won multiple Majors, they have also created an engrossing rivalry. Their 11 previous contests — Alcaraz leads 7-4 — have witnessed some of the best that tennis has to offer at the moment. But never before have they played in a Grand Slam final. On Sunday, the two best players in the world will compete for one of the biggest prizes in the sport in the French Open final. The Italian World No. 1 has set a high standard of dominance on tour last year, and after returning from a three-month anti-doping suspension just last month, it has continued at Roland Garros. He has won 18 consecutive sets, dropping serve only twice, and often dispatching opponents with such ease that they celebrate just for winning one game. Alcaraz does have a blueprint to break through his rival – having won each of their last four matches – but its effectiveness is in question given Sinner's baseline performance in Paris so far. Sinner commands the back of the court against virtually everyone other than the Spaniard, whose superior forehand does much damage and allows him to contend with, and even hit through, Sinner. World No.1 🏆 World No.2 It doesn't get much bigger than THIS. — Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 6, 2025 But the Italian's forehand has been near-perfect this tournament. He has 116 winners from that wing while leaking only 140 errors (forced and unforced) for a negative differential of only 24, a massive anomaly in today's game. To put that into perspective, Alcaraz, whose forehand is widely considered the best in the game today, has hit more winners (141) but also has 217 errors, making for a differential of 76 which is much closer to the tour average, showing not only Alcaraz's tendency to be more erratic, but Sinner's abnormally serene consistency. The Italian's pure hitting power is meeting accuracy, and more crucially, restraint, to produce as few errors as possible. Much will depend on the crossourt exchanges on Sunday, if Alcaraz can once again step it up on the forehand and start extracting errors from Sinner (which nobody has been able to do at Roland Garros so far), he will gain a substantial advantage. Another key area is rally length. In their semifinal, Sinner outplayed Novak Djokovic. The Italian won 15 more points than him in total, but the gulf in class between the two was there in the rally breakdowns. Sinner was far superior in the shorter rallies, winning 12 more points in those that lasted four shots or shorter. Within the 5-8 shot bracket, Djokovic won four more points whereas in rallies that were nine shots or more, Sinner showed his superior power and fitness to win seven more points. Against Alexander Bublik in the quarterfinal too, Sinner won 30 more points than his opponent in the rallies that lasted four shots or shorter, but that advantage ceased once the exchanges went longer, with the Italian winning only six more points than his opponent in rallies that were five shots or longer. Sinner's superiority on both serve and return means he gets on top in rallies from the very beginning; if Alcaraz can throw in variety and resilience to elongate the exchanges and disrupt the Italian's baseline rhythm, he may unlock a way to wear the Italian down. Despite what the numbers and finer analysis say, much of this encounter will hinge on whether or not Alcaraz can shed his recent tendencies to let his level lapse in the longer matches. Alcaraz knows how to win Major finals. He beat Djokovic in back-to-back Wimbledon finals with a blinding level of tennis, but he also wore down Alexander Zverev in last year's final in Paris in five sets despite never playing his best and hitting one error too many. In the past year, that aspect of his game, one may call it a fragility, has crept up a lot – he has lost sets in four of his last six matches in Paris alone – and a player in as fine a touch as Sinner will make him pay for those dips. At his highest level, as he has produced in Major finals in the past and against Sinner in each of their last four matches including as recently as last month's Italian Open final, the match may be on his racquet. But he must win battles of the mind first.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store