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Cover

Garry Kasparov 
Kramnik and Kasparov declared themselves joint winners in Linares.

Petra Kortchnoi
Alexey Shirov:
clock-like regularity.


Yet another example of the ubiquitous move g2-g4.

Jeroen Piket
Food for thought.

Sergey Dolmatov
If in Soviet times your chess lacked punch...

Content

LINARES HERALDS Y2K
At the end of ten long and tense rounds Garry Kasparov and Vladimir Kramnik shared the spoils at the seventeenth Ciudad de Linares tournament. The two K's also remained in charge of the proceedings after the last game had finished. In unison they overruled the tournament regulations that called for one winner, either by tiebreak or in the worst case by tossing a coin, and declared themselves joint winners.
An extensive report with great analysis including the `old notebook story' by FIDE champion Alexander Khalifman.

SHIROV SHINES IN MONACO
Straight as an arrow Alexey Shirov went for overall first at the ninth Amber rapid and blindfold tournament. With clock-like regularity the Latvian Spaniard notched up his first nine(!) matches with the same 1,5-0,5 score.
An on-the-spot report including a brief talk with Anatoly Karpov on his case against FIDE.

INTERVIEW: VLADIMIR KRAMNIK
The Brain Games World Chess Championship match against Garry Kasparov will net him a pleasant or an outright delectable chunk of a two million dollar prize-fund. Yet, Vladimir Kramnik is so thrilled about the prospect that he confides to Dirk Jan ten Geuzendam: `I can tell you, I would even play for free.'

THE JUMP
The history of chess is not only a history of marshalls and generals. Chess also has its `tombs of the unknown soldier'. Genna Sosonko wrote a moving memoir about one such soldier, the tormented attacking genius Alvis Vitolins.

SOS
Fond of the move g2-g4? Here's an idea that may take your opponent by surprise.

THE BANKRUPTCY OF FIDE
Jan Timman read Kirsan Ilyumzhinov's Memorandum on the Commercialisation of FIDE and could only come to one conclusion.

CHESS AND FOOD
You are what you eat. Gregory Serper explains what food may do to your chess.

VAIN EXPECTATIONS OF MYSTICISM
Brimming with curiosity and anticipation, Viktor Bologan travelled to China to play his first tournament in a country that had always held a mysterious appeal to him.

SADLER ON BOOKS
A friend of Matthew Sadler told him that his reviews could be a lot ruder. So starting from this issue..!

SOVIET CHESS
Hans Ree reviews Andrew Soltis' monumental new book Soviet Chess, a cornucopia of stories connected with the greatest collective effort for the sake of chess that the world has ever seen.

Plus our regular features NIC'S CAFE, YOUR MOVE and Edward Winter's CHESS NOTES

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FREE: From Previous Issues
Some selected highlights
 
pdf FIERCE FIGHTS IN FOROS

by Loek van Wely
New In Chess 2007/5

pdf Look it's Sofia-Men

by Dirk Jan ten Geuzendam
New In Chess 2007/4

pdf Emotions Run High in Buenos Aires

by Giovanni Vescovi
New In Chess 2005/7, page 58

pdf Topalov's Magnificent Seven

by Dirk Jan Ten Geuzendam
New In Chess 2005/8, page 10

pdf 'The Happiest Day of My Life'

by Larry Christiansen
New In Chess 2006/3, page 54

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