• How the fuck: Two players die at world chess event in the middle of the match in Norway
    15 replies, posted
[IMG]http://i.guim.co.uk/w-620/h--/q-95/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2014/8/15/1408124570436/-Chess-Olympiad-012.jpg[/IMG] [QUOTE]The most prestigious international tournament in chess, at which the world's top players compete alongside amateurs to win honours for their country, has ended on a sombre note after two players died suddenly within hours of each other, one while he was in the middle of a match.Hundreds of spectators attending the 41st Chess Olympiad in Tromsø, [URL="http://www.theguardian.com/world/norway"]Norway[/URL], and countless others watching live TV coverage on Norway's state broadcaster, reacted with shock after Kurt Meier, 67, a Swiss-born member of the Seychelles team, collapsed on Thursday afternoon, during his final match of the marathon two-week contest. Despite immediate medical attention at the scene he died later in hospital. Hours later, a player from Uzbekistan who has not yet been named was found dead in his hotel room in central Tromsø. Norwegian police and the event's organisers said on Friday they were not treating the deaths as suspicious. "We regard these as tragic but natural deaths," said Jarle Heitmann, a spokesman for the [URL="http://www.theguardian.com/sport/chess"]Chess[/URL] Olympiad. "When so many people are gathered for such a long time, these things can happen." The Olympiad involved 1,800 competitors from 174 countries, accompanied by more than 1,000 coaches, delegates and fans. The event sees players compete in national teams over 11 rounds, often playing matches that last for up to six hours, and claims a worldwide online audience of tens of millions. There were brief scenes of panic in the hall after Meier's collapse, when spectators reportedly mistook a defibrillator for a weapon. Play was briefly suspended before his death was marked with a minute's silence during the closing ceremony. While the causes of the two men's deaths are still unknown, they will raise questions about the mental and physical stress that tournaments place on players. Meier is not the first player to die in the middle of a match; in 2000 Vladimir Bagirov, a Latvian grandmaster, had a fatal heart attack during a tournament in Finland, while in the same year, another Latvian, Aivars Gipslis, suffered a stroke while playing in Berlin from which he later died. One of Australia's leading players, Ian Rogers, retired abruptly from chess in 2007, saying he had been warned by his doctors that the stress of top-level competition was causing him serious health problems. Tarjei J Svensen, a reporter for chess24.com who attended the Olympiad, said the event had a reputation for heavy drinking. "There are two rest days during the competition, and particularly the night before the rest days there tends to be a lot of drinking," he said.[/QUOTE] [url]http://www.theguardian.com/sport/2014/aug/15/deaths-world-chess-olympiad-norway[/url] What
Stress is quite the killer, it's surprising that we don't hear more about more top level players dying at events.
Ban chess
checkmate chess players
[QUOTE=Zonesylvania;45709678]checkmate chess players[/QUOTE] King me
very dangerous game: [media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qKcZwPb7C3k[/media]
[quote]There were brief scenes of panic in the hall after Meier's collapse, [b]when spectators reportedly mistook a defibrillator for a weapon.[/b] Play was briefly suspended before his death was marked with a minute's silence during the closing ceremony.[/quote] I suppose you can't blame them though
[QUOTE=Zonesylvania;45709678]checkmate chess players[/QUOTE] [video=youtube;_wsMugQ7hHI]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_wsMugQ7hHI[/video]
[QUOTE=Zonesylvania;45709728]I suppose you can't blame them though[/QUOTE] For all intents and purposes it qualifies, when used outside the intended circumstances :v: But I can see that happening depending on how it looks.
[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=03T2pKO8ItE[/media]
I saw it all,the match was close to an end. Butt both players had a trump card in their back pocket. [sp]Silent but deadly[/sp]
you gotta be an idiot to think a defibrillator is a weapon. "OH MY GOSH, HE'S GOING TO KILL HIM BY APPLYING ELECTRICAL SHOCKS ABOVE AND BELOW HIS HEART. THE WEAPON IS EVEN TALKING AND TELLING HIM HOW TO KILL HIM. AAAAHHH" If you've ever used an AED or seen it used, you know how stupid it is to think it's a weapon.
[QUOTE=Mr_Sun;45709844]you gotta be an idiot to think a defibrillator is a weapon. "OH MY GOSH, HE'S GOING TO KILL HIM BY APPLYING ELECTRICAL SHOCKS ABOVE AND BELOW HIS HEART. THE WEAPON IS EVEN TALKING AND TELLING HIM HOW TO KILL HIM. AAAAHHH" If you've ever used an AED or seen it used, you know how stupid it is to think it's a weapon.[/QUOTE] They were panicking. Fear leads to irrational reactions.
Yeesh, that's one hell of a thing to happen.
A very large portion of the world's Grandmasters and Masters are old as shit. This doesn't surprise me in the very least :v:
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