One man against 88 chess players
By C.S. NATHAN

CHESS master Collin Madhavan set a new Malaysian record in Seremban recently by playing against 88 contenders at the same time in what is known as a simultaneous chess match.

Madhavan broke his own record in the Malaysia Book of Records of previously playing against 71 participants at a similar event in Kuala Lumpur in December.

A simultaneous chess match is when a player (usually an expert) takes on the challenge of playing against a certain number of players at the same time. Not only a display of chess skills, the match also is a test of memory as the main player has to keep track of all on-going games.

Hosted by property developer RB Land and co-sponsored by www.quantum.88.com, the RB Land Simultaneous Chess Challenge 2008 saw participants, young and old attempting to outmanouvre Madhavan during the eight-hour long match.

Madhavan who was up against formidable contenders including two FIDE (World Chess Federation) rated players and 36 students from the state MSSM team won the match with a final score of 67 over 21.

Madhavan won 54 games, agreed to 26 draws and lost eight games, with a 76% playing record.

Madhavan said he expected to do better in the match but time constraints had caused him to offer more draws than usual.

“It was an exciting challenge – a test of my own mental and physical strength. Maintaining a high winning tally is essential for a chess master but more important is the game itself.

“I wanted the participants, especially the children to walk away from the game feeling proud of their achievement. It’s not everyday they get to play, let alone win or draw in a game against a chess master,” he said.

Here is the full article.

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