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descriptionNY Times: Caruana awaiting his turn on bigger stage EmptyNY Times: Caruana awaiting his turn on bigger stage

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11/12/2015 – As its newest arrival on the top teams, Fabiano Caruana is making the rounds to do his part to promote chess in the United States. He has been impressed by the improvements he has seen since he left it as a teenager. He was recently in new York where he visited schools and met with children for exhibition events and there to cover it was the New York Times.


 
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An American Chess Master, Age 23, Awaits His Turn on a Bigger Stage


By James Barron Nov. 11, 2015

JERSEY CITY — There was trouble after only six moves, and everyone in the room knew it. “I think he’s going to try to beat us in the most painful way possible,” a quiet voice in the back row said.

A dozen elementary school students were playing Fabiano Caruana, who at 23 is the No. 2 chess player in the United States. No doubt they had been hoping to scoop up Mr. Caruana’s kings and queens like a vacuum cleaner, but things did not look good for them.

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As its newest elite player, Fabiano Caruana is making the rounds in the US

“Unfortunately,” said Lawrence Trent, Mr. Caruana’s manager, who was watching from the sidelines, “they’ve fallen into a trap. Fabiano is completely winning.”

Mr. Caruana — who was already the top-ranked player in the country when he was the age of the students he was beating at the Liberty Science Center here — moved his knight. “That’s almost it,” Mr. Trent said, sounding like a broadcast commentator doing the play-by-play at a tournament. “They’re thinking about resigning already.”

The students had a brief but raucous debate among themselves and did the best they could to counter Mr. Caruana by moving a pawn. The outsize chessboard they were using had squares big enough to stand on and chess pieces that were somewhat less than chest high. They were barely knee high on the students and calf high on Mr. Caruana, a trim man whose expression said little about what he was planning as his next move.

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The media such as the New York Times, is ready to help put him in the limelight as he does his
best to help promote chess

It involved his queen. “I smell checkmate,” Mr. Trent said.

Click here to read the complete article

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Albert Silver

Born in the US, he grew up in Paris, France, where he completed his Baccalaureat, and after college moved to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. He was champion of Rio de Janeiro with a peak rating of 2240, and was a key designer of Chess Assistant 6. In 2010 he joined the ChessBase family as an editor and writer at ChessBase News.

descriptionNY Times: Caruana awaiting his turn on bigger stage EmptyRe: NY Times: Caruana awaiting his turn on bigger stage

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Admin wrote:
11/12/2015 – As its newest arrival on the top teams, Fabiano Caruana is making the rounds to do his part to promote chess in the United States. He has been impressed by the improvements he has seen since he left it as a teenager. He was recently in new York where he visited schools and met with children for exhibition events and there to cover it was the New York Times.


 
[You must be registered and logged in to see this image.]

An American Chess Master, Age 23, Awaits His Turn on a Bigger Stage



By James Barron Nov. 11, 2015

JERSEY CITY — There was trouble after only six moves, and everyone in the room knew it. “I think he’s going to try to beat us in the most painful way possible,” a quiet voice in the back row said.

A dozen elementary school students were playing Fabiano Caruana, who at 23 is the No. 2 chess player in the United States. No doubt they had been hoping to scoop up Mr. Caruana’s kings and queens like a vacuum cleaner, but things did not look good for them.

[You must be registered and logged in to see this image.]

As its newest elite player, Fabiano Caruana is making the rounds in the US

“Unfortunately,” said Lawrence Trent, Mr. Caruana’s manager, who was watching from the sidelines, “they’ve fallen into a trap. Fabiano is completely winning.”

Mr. Caruana — who was already the top-ranked player in the country when he was the age of the students he was beating at the Liberty Science Center here — moved his knight. “That’s almost it,” Mr. Trent said, sounding like a broadcast commentator doing the play-by-play at a tournament. “They’re thinking about resigning already.”

The students had a brief but raucous debate among themselves and did the best they could to counter Mr. Caruana by moving a pawn. The outsize chessboard they were using had squares big enough to stand on and chess pieces that were somewhat less than chest high. They were barely knee high on the students and calf high on Mr. Caruana, a trim man whose expression said little about what he was planning as his next move.

[You must be registered and logged in to see this image.]

The media such as the New York Times, is ready to help put him in the limelight as he does his
best to help promote chess

It involved his queen. “I smell checkmate,” Mr. Trent said.

Click here to read the complete article


[You must be registered and logged in to see this image.]

Albert Silver

Born in the US, he grew up in Paris, France, where he completed his Baccalaureat, and after college moved to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. He was champion of Rio de Janeiro with a peak rating of 2240, and was a key designer of Chess Assistant 6. In 2010 he joined the ChessBase family as an editor and writer at ChessBase News.
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