Friday, November 30, 2018

A00981 - Magnus Carlsen, World Chess Champion


Magnus Carlsen Wins World Chess Championship, Beating Fabiano Caruana

Norway’s Magnus Carlsen has held the world chess championship since 2013.CreditTolga Akmen/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

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Norway’s Magnus Carlsen has held the world chess championship since 2013.CreditCreditTolga Akmen/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
After three weeks, 12 straight draws and a day of tiebreakers, Norway’s Magnus Carlsen finally retained the world chess championship in London on Wednesday with a victory against Fabiano Caruana, his American challenger.
Carlsen’s victory came in what amounted to sudden-death chess: a scheduled series of four so-called rapid games in which the players started with 25 minutes to make their moves. The speedier pace of the games, after the far more deliberate matchups of the previous three weeks, meant players were more likely to make blunders. And that increased the chance of a victory by one player.
Carlsen won the first two games, then closed out Caruana in Game 3.
“Everything kind of went perfectly,” Carlsen said.
In Game 1, Carlsen, playing white, quickly seized control of the center and, after a flurry of exchanges, wound up with a pawn advantage. For the first time in the match, he was able to turn the edge into a win; Caruana resigned after 55 moves.

Caruana got the white pieces for Game 2 and seized an early advantage of his own. But he seemed to press his advantage a little too hard, commentators said, and Carlsen turned the tables on him for win No. 2.
That left Caruana needing two straight wins to extend the championship to the next round of even speedier matches. But Carlsen needed only a single draw, and when he got his third win — in the face of an increasingly aggressive series of moves by Caruana — the title was his.
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Caruana, 26, was bidding to become the first American champion since Bobby Fischer beat Boris Spassky to win the world title in 1972. The famously cantankerous Fischer forfeited his title in 1975 amid a dispute with the world chess federation, and the sport has been dominated by Russians and Eastern Europeans in the decades since then.
The tiebreaker result was not a shock. While Carlsen, 27, and Caruana, 26, are closely matched in longer conventional chess games, known as classical chess, Carlsen had been considered the favorite in the tiebreaker because he has had better rapid chess results than Caruana.
The tiebreaker was a decisive end to a match that promised excitement when it began Nov. 9 but instead fizzled amid an interminable run of draws. Carlsen and Caruana are the two best players in the world, and an eager crowd watched them play from behind one-way glass in London. Millions of others, including a surprisingly large portion of Carlsen’s native Norway, followed the moves and the commentary about them on television and over the internet.

The first 12 games of the championship, played at conventional length, all ended in draws. Some of the games lasted as long as seven hours, while others were relatively quick. In a few of the games, one player or the other seemed to gain a small advantage, only to fail to capitalize on it and close out a win.

Magnus Carlsen, left, beat Fabiano Caruana in tiebreaking games on Wednesday.CreditDan Kitwood/Getty Images

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Magnus Carlsen, left, beat Fabiano Caruana in tiebreaking games on Wednesday.CreditDan Kitwood/Getty Images
It was the first time in the history of the world championship, which dates to the 1800s, that regulation play ended with every game a draw. A player needs 6½ points from those games to win the title, but the series of draws left the match tied, 6-6, after Monday’s 12th game.
Chess fans seemed especially disappointed by Game 12. Carlsen seemed to be ahead on the board and had more time on his clock to ponder his remaining actions, but nonetheless he offered a draw after only 31 moves, a tepid ending to the main part of the match.
The legendary former champion Garry Kasparov suggested the draw offer was a sign that Carlsen was losing his nerve, and on Twitter he proclaimed Caruana the favorite in the tiebreakers. “They’re entitled to their stupid opinions,” Carlsen said with a smile of his critics after his victory.
Kasparov did praise Carlsen’s play on Wednesday: “We all play worse as we play faster and faster, but his ratio may be the smallest ever.”


Carlsen’s consistent level of play in rapid chess is phenomenal. We all play worse as we play faster and faster, but his ratio may be the smallest ever, perhaps only a 15% drop off. Huge advantage in this format.

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Questioned about the parade of draws, Caruana seemed unperturbed. “We work with the match that we have,” he said. “If the powers that be want to change it, then we’ll work with something else.”

Had the four rapid games ended with the players still tied, they would have moved on to a series of blitz chess games, in which players start with only five minutes each.
Carlsen won the world chess title in 2013 at age 22, then successfully defended it in 2014 and 2016. Carlsen’s 2016 match against Sergey Karjakin of Russia also went to tiebreakers, although each player had posted a victory in the 12 conventional games. Carlsen won with two wins and two draws in the four rapid games.
Caruana, like Fischer, is a Brooklyn-bred grandmaster and is at the vanguard of an improved group of American players who are challenging the dominance of Russia and others.
Caruana moved to Europe at age 12 to find better chess opportunities and returned to the United States three years ago, when he switched his chess nationality to the United States from Italy.
“I am very disappointed,” Caruana said. “I maybe missed like two big chances,” in the opening 12 games, “and Magnus also had two. I can’t really say I missed more chances than Magnus over all.”
Carlsen’s recent success has led to a chess boom in Norway. Carlsen has become one of the country’s most famous people, and viewers attracted to the game by his victories now play it in clubs, bars and even on trams in Oslo. For the past month, many of those players — new and old — have been glued to televisions to watch his matches. Even the draws.
Those fans were rewarded on Wednesday; Caruana stymied him for weeks, but in the end, Carlsen is still the world champion.

Tuesday, November 27, 2018

A00980 - Willie Naulls, Knicks All-Star and Celtics Champion


Willie Naulls, Knicks All-Star and Celtics Champion, Dies at 84

Knicks forward Willie Naulls, right, tried to block a shot by Wilt Chamberlain, the N.B.A.’s leading scorer in 1962, in a game against the San Francisco Warriors. Naulls was an All-American at U.C.L.A. and an N.B.A. All-Star.CreditAssociated Press Photo

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Knicks forward Willie Naulls, right, tried to block a shot by Wilt Chamberlain, the N.B.A.’s leading scorer in 1962, in a game against the San Francisco Warriors. Naulls was an All-American at U.C.L.A. and an N.B.A. All-Star.CreditCreditAssociated Press Photo
Willie Naulls, a four-time All-Star forward with the Knicks, a member of three consecutive N.B.A. championship teams with the Boston Celtics and one of pro basketball’s early black stars, died Thursday at his home in Laguna Niguel, Calif. He was 84.
The cause was respiratory failure resulting from Churg-Strauss syndrome, a rare condition that can restrict blood flow to vital organs and tissues, his wife, Dr. Anne Van de Water Naulls, said.
A fine outside shooter and a rugged rebounder at 6 feet 6 inches and 225 pounds or so, Naulls was an All-American at U.C.L.A. in 1955, his senior season, playing for the future Hall of Fame coach John Wooden.
He was a second-round draft pick of the St. Louis Hawks but was distraught over the city’s racial climate, his family having moved from Dallas to Southern California to escape segregation.

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“To go to St. Louis and its segregated hotels, restaurants, cabs, living districts and attitude was a cultural shock,” Naulls once told the Knicks’ Hardwood Classic website. “As a 21-year-old man, I had rarely experienced that since I was 8 years old.”
But the Hawks traded Naulls to the Knicks in December 1956 after he played in 19 games for them, and he spent all or parts of seven seasons in New York. He teamed with guard Richie Guerin and forward Kenny Sears as outstanding players on lackluster teams.
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When Naulls played in his first All-Star Game, in January 1958, he joined Bill Russell and Maurice Stokes as the only black players on the court.
He became the Knicks’ captain in the early 1960s, the first black athlete to hold such a post for any team in a major American sport, according to the Knicks.
Naulls once held two Knicks scoring records. He set a single-season mark in 1960-61 with 1,846 points, an average of 23.4 a game, and another record when he scored at least 30 points in seven consecutive games.

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During that streak, his tally of 31 points against the Philadelphia Warriors on March 2, 1962, went essentially unnoticed. On the same court in Hershey, Pa., Wilt Chamberlain had astonished the basketball world with a 100-point game. That night, putting the trouncing aside, Naulls and a few other Knicks drove back to New York with Chamberlain, who was living there while owning a Harlem nightclub.
Naulls shed the burden of playing for losing teams when he joined the Celtics in 1963 after a brief stint with the San Francisco Warriors. He played on Boston teams that won N.B.A. championships in 1964, 1965 and 1966.
William Dean Naulls was born on Oct. 7, 1934, in Dallas, a son of Daily and Bettie (Artis) Naulls. The family moved to Los Angeles during World War II, and his father worked at shipyards in the port of San Pedro. His mother was a domestic worker.
Naulls was a basketball star at San Pedro High School before Wooden recruited him. He averaged more than 15 points and 11 rebounds per game in his three seasons at U.C.L.A. but he battled weight problems, bringing him the unwanted nickname Willie the Whale.
His biggest game may have come in December 1954 when his Bruins earned a 47-40 victory over the University of San Francisco, which was led by Russell and K.C. Jones, his future Celtics teammates. It was the only defeat that season for the Dons, who would win the first of two consecutive N.C.A.A. tournament championships.
After all those poor seasons with the Knicks and briefly with the Warriors, Naulls considered retiring. But he changed his mind after receiving a phone call from Russell urging him to become a Celtic.
Red Auerbach, the Celtics’ coach, who oversaw the franchise’s personnel moves, obtained him from the Warriors for cash and a future draft pick.

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Naulls was unaccustomed to Auerbach’s grueling preseason drills preparing his team for its fast-break offense, and he fainted during his first workout. But he grew to like playing in an up-tempo style he had not experienced since his U.C.L.A. years.
Naulls was part of the N.B.A.’s first all-black starting lineup, along with Russell at center, K.C. and Sam Jones at the guards and Satch Sanders at forward for a December 1964 game against the Hawks in St. Louis.
He retired after his three seasons with the Celtics, having averaged 15.8 points and 9.1 rebounds per game in 10 N.B.A. seasons.
Turning to the business world after leaving basketball, Naulls owned an auto dealership in Los Angeles and invested in enterprises that he felt could provide jobs in black communities.
Influenced by his mother’s strong Baptist faith, he had a spiritual awakening in the early 1990s. He created Willie Naulls Ministries in 1993 and received a master’s degree from Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena, Calif., in 1994. The following year, he opened a facility in Hawthorne, Calif., to house community-based programs that focused on inspiring young people from inner-city neighborhoods to lead productive lives. At his death, he was the ministry’s president.
In addition to his wife, an obstetrician/gynecologist who is the ministry’s secretary-treasurer, he is survived by his sons Shannon and Jonah, his daughters Lisa Naulls and Malaika Naulls Morrison, and six grandchildren.
Two months before the death of Chamberlain, his longtime friend, in October 1999, Pastor Naulls, as he was known then, reflected on Chamberlain’s 100-point game, viewing it as a glorious moment with racial significance in a pro sport that had been wary of seeing too many black faces on the court.

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“Wilt had rung the bell of freedom loud and clear, shouting, ‘Let my people be free to express themselves,’” Naulls wrote in his church newsletter, as related in Gary M. Pomerantz’s “Wilt, 1962” (2005).
“For we were and will be for all time those who withstood the humiliation of racial quotas even to the point of the N.B.A.’s facing extinction because of retarded expression and stagnating growth,” Naulls continued.
Recalling the camaraderie of that shared ride to New York after the game in Hershey, Naulls wrote, “We are Brothers, in the Night of His Flight, Forever.”