Norwegian phenom has powerful pal
Saturday, October 3, 2009 3:18 AM

By SHELBY LYMAN

Times are surely changing for the royal game.

If publisher Espen Agdestein of Norway has his way, 20-year-old Magnus Carlsen will achieve superstar status.

Agdestein, also a chess player and former director of the media corporation Hjemmet Mortensen, is searching out sponsors for Carlsen, ranked fourth in the world.

“My job is to make Magnus a very attractive object for the market and pick the right sponsors who can build a brand,” Agdestein said.

With few exceptions, big money has been absent from the chess scene.

Bobby Fischer spurned contracts worth millions to live in near-poverty.

Ironically, Garry Kasparov — who became world champion while representing the socialist Soviet Union — probably has amassed the most money from chess: $30 million, according to one estimate. Prize money, fees, endorsements and book royalties have formed the basis of his wealth.

Carlsen is the ideal candidate to give flesh to Agdestein’s concept.

Already a logical choice to become world chess champion, his association with Kasparov — his trainer for the past eight months — raises that probability to a virtual certainty.

Source: http://www.columbusdispatch.com

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