Blog
"Total Mobilization" - a free lecture by NM Loal Davis
Total Mobilization: Hit Them With Everything You've Got
July 19th – 1pm – 2pm
Top players show their skill and style at World Open
U.S. #1 GM Gata Kamsky and newly minted GM Robert Hess show they can not only play well, but do so in style. Sporting their Chess Club and Scholastic Center garb, obtained during their participation in the 2009 U.S. Championship, both are expected to perform quite well at the World Open.
Board Member Kevin Short Named President Of The Today And Tomorrow Educational Foundation Board
ST. LOUIS – The board of the Today and Tomorrow Educational Foundation has named Kevin Short President of the Today and Tomorrow Educational Foundation Board effective immediately.
Students Play Chess in the Championship Venue
SINQUEFIELDS PURCHASE BOBBY FISCHER'S CHESS COLLECTION
Media contact: Laura Slay, 314-504-0081, lslay@slayandassociates.com
For Immediate Release:
SINQUEFIELDS PURCHASE BOBBY FISCHER'S CHESS COLLECTION
St. Louis, June 11 -- Rex and Jeanne Sinquefield have purchased the chess library of the legendary Bobby Fischer, including notebooks he prepared for his 1972 World Championship match with Boris Spassky. The Sinquefields acquired the collection through San Francisco-based auction house, Bonhams and Butterfields.
"I am thrilled to have this collection from arguably the greatest chess player in history," said Rex Sinquefield, founder and board president of the Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Saint Louis. "I have been a lifelong fan of Bobby Fischer."
The reclusive Fischer died in January 2008 at age 64. The collection purchased by the Sinquefields includes 320 books on chess; about 400 issues of chess-related periodicals; three sets of proofs for Fischer's 1969 book, "My 60 Memorable Games"; and a number of bound volumes detailing the match histories of several chess masters, including Spassky.
The Spassky-related works centers on Fischer's preparation for his historic 1972 match, won by Fischer. The victory ended 24 years of Soviet domination of the World Championship.
The collection also includes a copy of "Bobby Fischer Teaches Chess," with a note indicating that Fischer planned on suing the publishers.
Rex and Jeanne Sinquefield, who are retired investment company executives, said they weren't sure of their plans with the Fischer collection. "I am thinking right now about how to display it and to make it available to scholars," Rex said.
The Chess Club and Scholastic Center was founded in 2007 with funding from the Sinquefield Charitable Foundation. It recently hosted the 2009 U.S. Chess Championship, which was won by Hikaru Nakamura. The center also will host the 2009 U.S. Women's Chess Championship from Oct. 2 to Oct. 12.
The Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Saint Louis is a not-for-profit, 501(c)3 organization. For more information, please visit www.saintlouischessclub.org.
###
2009 U.S. Chess Championship Media
When reusing images please credit: Betsy Dynako, Official Event Photographer
Opening Ceremony and U.S. Chess Championship Related Events
High-Resolution images from the opening ceremony of the United States Chess Championship and the Jenifer Shahade simul:
1. Jenifer Shahade simul - Warning: filesize is 119MB.
2. The Duchamp Opening Ceremony - Warning: filesize is 236MB.
3. U.S. Chess Championship 2009 Bus Painting Event - Warning: filesize is 287MB.
4. The Opening Ceremony Part 2 - Warning: filesize is 43MB.
Closing Ceremony Photos
When reusing images please credit: Betsy Dynako, Official Event Photographer
Round 9 Photos
When reusing images please credit: Betsy Dynako, Official Event Photographer
HIKARU NAKAMURA WINS 2009 US CHESS CHAMPIONSHIP
Saint Louis, May 17 -- Hikaru Nakamura, 21, of White Plains, N.Y., won the the 2009 U.S. Chess Championship after winning in the ninth and final round at the Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Saint Louis.
Second-seeded Nakamura, who also won the title in 2004, when he was just 16, won the venerable 164-year-old title and first prize of $40,000 ($35,000, plus a $5,000 outright winner's bonus) after beating Josh Friedel, of New York. Nakamura finished with seven points over nine games, and never lost a game.