Tuesday, 31 October 2023

A ‘Pride Of Huddersfield’ Man A Biography of John Watkinson

 Editor note- I played Edgar as the first formal game I played in Huddersfield chess club- he was a nice gentleman. I didn't really know who he was then but he was always kind to me...

A ‘Pride Of  Huddersfield’ Man

A Biography of John Watkinson

By Edgar Priestley

A Famous Huddersfield Citizen

John Watkinson was born in West Parade, Huddersfield in 1833; and he died at his home at Fairfield, New North Road, on December 26th 1923, aged 90 years. So that he lived under four British sovereigns. He was the youngest member of the  family of Mr. Charles Clapham Watkinson. He was one of the first pupils of the Huddersfield College, which began its career in two cottages near the site of the present St. Paul’s Church. He was then only five years old, and under the age limit, but was admitted because his elder brother, Edward, was also a pupil. When the new college buildings in New North Road were opened, as a boy of six, he took part in the procession of children from the school in Commercial Street (now lost by the University campus), to the stone laying ceremony of the Secondary School building in New North Road. John was thus, at the time of his death, one of the oldest surviving ‘old boys’ of that school. The first principal was Dr. Wright and the vice-principal (was later succeeded Dr. Wright) was Dr. Miles.

Always a warm supporter of educational movements, John Watkinson in later life became a trustee of the Huddersfield Old Boys’ Scholarship and for a great many years held the office of treasurer and secretary from its formation in 1874. He became one of the two survivors of the original trustees, the other being the late Dr. Cameron, the medical officer for Huddersfield, and later for Leeds.

Upon leaving school in 1848, John Watkinson went as a clerk into the Halifax and Huddersfield Union Bank, whose premises at that date were in what is now Union Bank Yard, New Street.

Five years later he entered the services of  Messrs. John Brooke and Sons, Armitage Bridge Mills, and, although he returned to the bank for a short period, he completed fifty years with that firm on December 31st 1903. He served Messrs. Brooke as book-keeper and confidential cashier, a position which had been held by his father. To mark his retirement, John Watkinson was presented by the firm with a solid silver salver, an inscription on which testified to his ‘faithful service and friendship’.

An Enthusiastic Chess Player

John Watkinson was a keen chess player beginning when 15 years old. By the age of eighteen he was already proficient in the specialised department of chess – the problem.

As a player he entered the Great Exhibition of London, where he won a prize of 1 guinea (£1.10), no mean amount at that time.

In early 1852, he began to test his skill against more experienced players in Huddersfield, such as Thomas Parratt, who was the organist at the Parish Church for many years, and a Mr. D. Marsden, a bank manager. These players used to meet in the reading room of the Philosophical Hall to play casual games. At first, although he had acquired a good knowledge of opening theory from having the possession of Staunton’s handbook, he found that he could not compete in practical over-the-board play. But in due course his standard of play increased to be able to compete with the best opposition.

So in November 1852 he persuaded several other young players to form an organised chess club. He had the honour to be elected as the first President and a Mr. Henry Shaw junior became the first secretary.

On February 1st 1862, he was presented with a very handsome set of Staunton pattern ivory chessmen and board. The inscription on the silver plate, let in to the lid of the box read ‘Ivory chessmen, box and board, presented to Mr. John Watkinson by members of the Huddersfield Chess Club, to testify their appreciation of the services rendered by him to the Club, and for promoting a taste for the game of chess generally.’

By this time John Watkinson was regarded as being one of the strongest players of the game in Yorkshire. In 1861 he was challenged to play a match against Edmund Thorald of Sheffield. The match took place from February to August, on Saturdays with alternating venues. The winner was to be the first player to achieve seven wins. Thorald won the first game, but John levelled the score in the following game. After this the Sheffield player won the next three games, so that he lead by four games to one. The Huddersfield supporters were not very happy at this stage. But John Watkinson came back in great style and won all the next six games to take the match by seven games to four, with no draws. He could then rightfully claim to be the strongest player in Yorkshire.

In 1872, John Watkinson began to edit a chess column in the ‘Huddersfield College Magazine’, and later he edited the whole of this journal. The fame of these chess columns spread world-wide, in a short time, particularly because of the high standard of the chess problems included. By 1880 it was agreed that it should have a separate existence as an independent chess organ, and this became the ‘British Chess Magazine’. John had editorial and financial control for seven years. This still survives to the present day, being the official publication of the ruling body, the British Chess Association.

His retirement from the magazine was the subject of a poem. In the same year he disposed of a library of works on chess, the second largest in England. John Augustus Myles wrote a work entitled ‘Poem and Chess Problems’ and dedicated it to Mr. Watkinson.

The Jubilee President

John Watkinson was elected as President of the Huddersfield Chess Club, for a long period in the 1870s and 1880s. Then when the Club celebrated their 50th anniversary, John was again elected, and he was presented with a silver rose bowl. On this occasion he astonished many who were present by producing a book in which he had kept a record of every game he had played from 1850 to 1880. In all were 4136 games (many of them giving odds) of which 3136 had been won, 996 lost and 233 drawn.

John was again made President when the Club celebrated its diamond jubilee in 1912-13, and yet again in 1922 for the 70th anniversary. This, thus completed a record which is noted in the ‘Guiness Book of Sporting Records’. This refers to the fact that John Watkinson had the longest time interval between his first and last terms as President (70 years) of any other sporting organisation.

On this last occasion the Club entertained him to a dinner held at the South Parade Masonic Hall. In his reply to a proposition of his health he said:-

"Our great dramatist has said, 'some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some  have greatness thrust upon them'. On the present occasion I feel to be in the last position. I at first shrank from the proposed publicity, although I fully appreciated the honour, but the committee kindly modified their first intention, and excused me from making anything like a speech. I must however express my thankfulness to be able to take part in the 7Oth anniversary of the Huddersfield Chess Club, and to be honoured by being elected to the position of President."

He went on to mention the names of several distinguished visitors, "such as my old friend Mr. Woodhouse, who has done so much for chess in Yorkshire; Mr. Woolard, the veteran player and editor; Mr. lviary, who holds a high position in Yorkshire chess; and last but not least, the British Champion Mr. Yates, and the ex-champion Mr. Atkins, who have just returned from their victories -- and defeats -- in international tournaments. I would also include Sir Walter Parratt, Mr. Brown, and Mr. Weir, who I am sure are with us in spirit if not in bodily presence.”

"Another great honour I feel is the projected Chess Congress. I have on former occasions spoken of various matters of chess interest, from Staunton to Morphy, and from Morphy to Steinitz and Lasker; chess with the board, and without the board; of gambits and close openings; and will not go over the ground again. I wonder how many people are alive now, who have heard Jenny Lind sing, how many have seen Alfred Mynn bowl and George Parr bat; how many have seen Howard Staunton and played with Harrwitz and Lowenthal? I have done all three --seventy years ago! Looking back on my life, which has long exceeded the allotted span, and is now approaching its termination, I will, with your permission bring these desultory remarks to a close with a few personal allusions. My business life has been a happy one - fifty years with one firm, and such a firm! My home life has been a very happy one. My outlook on life has been a wide one, and has given me many pleasures; pleasures of sport. When chairman of the Football Committee it was my duty and pleasure to accompany the team over the county, and I have witnessed many a tough fight from the days of Harry Ruth, Jack Dyson, down to the days of Wrigley and Wagstaffe. Cricket! How many times have I set off with my county ticket and sandwiches in my pocket to Leeds, Bradford or Sheffield to watch our great trio Hirst, Rhodes, and Haigh! Pleasures of travel! I have seen the sun rise on Mont Blanc from an elevation of 8000 feet; I have looked dowm on the plains of Italy from the spires of Milan Cathedral; I have viewed Wales and the Lake District from the summits of Snowdon and Skiddaw. Romantic Scotland, with its Ellen's Isle, its Staffa and Iona. Pleasures of literature -- the three Thomases, Thomas Carlyle, Thomas De Quincy, Thomas Hardy; and the poets Longfellow, Tennyson and Wordsworth. Pleasures of music, which I have enjoyed and enabled my fellow townsfolk to enjoy as well. But there is no pleasure I have enjoyed more than what has brought us together this evening, the game of chess."

The headmaster of Huddersfield College, from 1909-36 Henry E. Atkins, who was also the leading British chess player of the time, having won the British Championship for a record nine times, was present at this meeting. In his speech he pointed out that very few people had solved as many chess problems as John Watkinson and practically none were as quick at them.

In 1895, the Huddersfield Chess Club organised the increasing number of local clubs into a league, which then became a separate organisation entitled the Huddersfield and District Chess Association. John Watkinson took it upon himself to present a trophy for the annual competition between these clubs. This ‘Watkinson Trophy’ is still competed for to the present day, and the league is referred to as the ‘Watkinson League’. The association instituted three knockout competitions for players of various strengths in 1936 and the three trophies were inscribed as the ‘Watkinson Cups’.

Musical Interests

At an early age John Watkinson was given piano lessons by a Mr. Horn, a local organist.

In 1865 he organised a series of lectures on music at the Highfield Chapel, which developed into concerts as well.

In 1882 the Town Hall, then recently opened, was engaged as an experiment. The lecturer and solo organist on that occasion was one of Huddersfield’s eminent men, Mr. (afterwards Sir) Walter Parratt (later ‘Master of the King’s Music’). Walter was a fellow chess player and a logical choice for John’s first concert. The title of ‘Huddersfield Subscription Concerts’ was adopted in 1885. For his enterprise as promoter of the Subscription Concerts, Mr. Watkinson earned the warmest gratitude and praise of music loving people in the town and district.

John Watkinson also found time to advance the musical interests of Huddersfield by association with the Choral Society, of which he was President in 1906, and later a member of the executive council, the Glee and Madrigal and the Amateur Operatic Societies.

Literary and Art Interests

This remarkable gentleman possessed keen literary tastes. He was a man of wide reading in several branches of science. He wrote a series of articles for the ‘Huddersfield Examiner’ entitled ‘Recollections of a Tour of Switzerland’. He was a member of the Public Library and Art Gallery Committee, becoming deputy chairman in 1906, and he was an honorary member of the Art Society.

Interest In Outdoor Games

The Huddersfield Cricket and Athletic Club at Fartown also owed a good deal to John Watkinson. The first annual meeting of the club was held on June 25th 1865, and in 1880 he was elected vice-president and chairman of the Football Committee. For years, despite his advancing years, he continued to take great interest in the club, and was frequently seen at Fartown.

Private Life

In June 1863, John was married at Highfield Chapel, by the Rev. Dr. Bruce to Miss Laura Ellen Robinson. There were two daughters of the marriage.

Conclusion

It seems quite extraordinary that a man who worked at a responsible job for over fifty years, could also have had the time and energy to be involved in so many other interests. But this many talented man was no jack-of-all-trades, he was a master craftsman.

It is quite clear that he had a great ‘Pride in Huddersfield’, and he is a man of whom Huddersfield should be proud.

Will I be Remembered in Huddersfield Chess History as a Famous Player?

 Welll.....

I guess this is a bit like over confident maybe but just felt like writing it...

Been reading a lot about chess history chess players and writers in general...

So.......

Thought I'd type a few things out.....

I was born in Huddersfield...

Learnt chess age 4...

I'm sure there are lots of players more naturally talented than me in fact I know there are but......

From like 7 playing at lunch at QEGS every day, played a few matches...

I was playing chess for like cubbbbbbbbs at 9 and beating people...

Actually and this is only v distant memory I think I went to Huddersfield chess club once ot twice at 9...

Anyway...

Left QEGS, joined BGS... still played a lot... aged 13 joined Netherton chess club then started playing for Yorkshire for my age... at age 15 I was playing for Yorkshire under 18s...

Won Netherton junior champs that had been won by players like IM Dunnington...

I've casted my mind back and even at the age of like 13/14 I was playing Roger Keely lols... I lost but I think he said I put up a good fight...

Won all matches on board 1 for BGS beating top boards of Bradford Grammar, Leeds Grammar, St Bedes Board one first time before draw with Wainwright etc....

Anyway I still wasn't that good really but just a bit of history... aged 17 was graded 117 on old gradings...

My grade has been messed up quite a bit. 

Think I got a draw with Mick Newsome aged about 20 who's beaten an IM...

You know the whole thing is...

When I joined the Yorkshire setup we were told to give an estimate of our grades... Marcus Coupe said the southern juniors just made up any number and they believed them. I was quite like cautious at that age and I think I said 70...

But anyway...

Even when I was like about 16 I knew I wasn't going to be pro etc but still liked playing...

Got up to 129 YCA grade... yeah people have been chatting about Rob Sutcliffe and he was partly the reason I left Hudds chess club I guess but remember I played for Netherton again after that...

Didn't play too much in 2007 or that much in 2008 due to good sales job...

After Dec 2008 people were still RINGING ME UP asking me to play but was still doing job and playing poker... having a partly illegal house being built right opposite me didn't help with that!

Even Matthew Parsons who I drew with in 2006 was asking me to come back in a job we worked in in 2011...

But yeah started doing financial goals in 2011... I still kinda have them but bit less money focused now...

Obvs chess is NOT a good way to get money but it's interesting in a way...

Like I've said played over 2000 games online... I don't know how many... before I had better conditions to play online than I do now but still may play online etc maybe even do streaming...

In terms of coaching I've coached loads of people informally and a few people formally. I like coaching my niece and nephew...  I actually have another niece but she's 2 so that's a bit young to start chess...

Worldwide selling chess novel giving promotion to Huddersfield chess came out in 2005. Chatted to many GMs and quite surreal Kevin Spraggett has featured articles by me and linked to my site. GM Davies also links to my site etc...

Anyway...

Since 2008 came back to chess club for first time in June 2023...

Won OTB game in Sep 2023. Still unbeaten otb since Jan 2007... 

Hopefully there's still more to come... I think there is ;)


Respecting High Value Coaches

 Blasting into this one... prob have a call soon but it's on my mind...

At some point I'm thinking of paying for some HIGH LEVEL coaching...

But like... I will want to be READY for it...

I do get coaching in various areas from great people... and for like the physical part of it is not rocket science at all... it's just like making the effort. I could do 100m in 14 secs at 14 and I didn't train that much for that... prob can never do that again but I'd like to get a bit quicker. So I made myself do 2 walks in rain today...

ALL good coaches I get coaching from get a good or v good review and I look for ways I can add value to them too...

Yet I think it's a good goal to have... to get good enough that it's WORTH paying for coaching... like asking SPECIFIC questions to real EXPERTS...

Then take ACTION on it for results...

Dean Staveley is so Sensible He has never played a Proper Chess Game in His Life ;)

 Dean Staveley is so Sensible He has never played a Proper Chess Game in His Life ;)

One Walk Done Today Have a Few Jobs Interested...

 One Walk Done Today Have a Few Jobs Interested...

Monday, 30 October 2023

Huddersfield Chess

 

Nice to be Part of the Honley Team in Huddersfield League!

Post by Mark Howitt » Mon Oct 30, 2023 6:35 pm

Hi...

Quick post as it's on my mind...

Nice to be part of Honley team in Huddersfield league. Even though I've only played one game that I've won I have been following all the results. I've offered to play sometimes but like squad rotation... I will play again at some point. There are lots of things I want to do in my life but even though it's cheappppppper I'm not going to just spend my life typing on internet ;)

I'd honestly like to say it's nice to be part of a team with cool people. Leo Keely has competed in the British Championship and international tourns and it was v kind he spent some time looking at my game. Granville Boot... I remember his name from when I just started playing league chess when I was 13! I even looked up what the name means, it means big town :) Dave Gray has a lot of experience and been around Hudds chess for years...

Anyway I am still training and playing and will play for the team again!

Money from Internet

 Although I'm not quite as good at it as writing I think where potentially I make more money from the internet is from speaking and video content...

Will work on this... audio first...

Senoirta

 Lyrics

I love it when you call me señoritaI wish I could pretend I didn't need yaBut every touch is ooh, la-la-laIt's true, la-la-laOoh, I should be runningOoh, you keep me coming for ya
Land in MiamiThe air was hot from summer rainSweat dripping off meBefore I even knew her name, la-la-laIt felt like ooh, la-la-laYeah, noSapphire moonlightWe danced for hours in the sandTequila sunriseHer body fit right in my hands, la-la-laIt felt like ooh, la-la-la, yeah
I love it when you call me señoritaI wish I could pretend I didn't need yaBut every touch is ooh, la-la-laIt's true, la-la-laOoh, I should be runningOoh, you know I love it when you call me señoritaI wish it wasn't so damn hard to leave yaBut every touch is ooh, la-la-laIt's true, la-la-laOoh, I should be runningOoh, you keep me coming for ya
Locked in the hotelThere's just some things that never changeYou say we're just friendsBut friends don't know the way you taste, la-la-la'Cause you know it's been a long time comingDon't you let me fall, oh
Ooh, when your lips undress meHooked on your tongueOoh, love, your kiss is deadlyDon't stop
I love it when you call me señoritaI wish I could pretend I didn't need yaBut every touch is ooh, la-la-laIt's true, la-la-laOoh, I should be runningOoh, you know I love it when you call me señoritaI wish it wasn't so damn hard to leave yaBut every touch is ooh, la-la-laIt's true, la-la-la (true, la-la)Ooh, I should be runningOoh, you keep me coming for ya
All along I've been coming for ya (for ya)And I hope it meant something to ya (ooh)Call my name, I'll be coming for yaComing for ya, coming for ya, coming for ya
For yaFor ya (oh, she loves it when I call)For ya
Ooh, I should be runningOoh, you keep me coming for ya

As You Get Older You Value Your Time More

 As You Get Older You Value Your Time More

So......

I was actually a GOOD PUPIL in school...

I'd always do what the teacher said if I thought it was fair...

But when you think about my mindset then... this is even in schools where my parents PAID for me to go...

It's like... oh it's school today, you gotta turn up...

I could write a lot more about BGS and I will at some stage but they expected you to turn up each day...

But now for example... if I feel like writing something I will just write. Nobody has the right to give me an 'exam' on writing lols that's just stupid...

This is why more smart young people today are NOT going to uni esp if they are writers... look at Rupert Hargreaves.

So yeah... anything you do or learn ask... what's in it for me ;)

I am available for coaching...

Why I won't be Scared of Higher Rated Players If I play them again...

 I remember when I was like about 21...

There was this rapidplay tourn in Calderdale...

I remember coming to play my opponent... oh I thought... his grade's not that high it can't be that good.

I won.

It turned out to be Dave Patrick who was rated around 150 before the old grades got inflated.

But because I THOUGHT it was an older man with a lower grade I just expected to win. Like how I expected to beat Greg Eagleton in 2004...

But like when I was say about 18 I was a bit SCARED of playing higher rated players... like ohhhhh he's higher rated than me... I might LOSE...

But with the amount I've looked at chess now...

Carlsen said it himself... the game is a draw if nobody makes a mistake...

So it's just like a puzzle really... certainly if a guy is older than me he might be less physically fit or his mind might be slowing down...

Sunday, 29 October 2023

Chess Tournament

 If I actually get rich what I'd like to do one day is sponsor a chess tournament in Huddersfield called the Mark Howitt Chess tournament or something. And I'd say exactly how much I'd added to the prize fund and I know who'd give free entry to... ;)

More free financial coaching for my dad he deserves it more than my sister...

 More free financial coaching for my dad he deserves it more than my sister...

If I see anymore 'hsbc' ads I honestly might stop using li... One of the best things of working for NewDay was taking customers away from them...

 If I see anymore 'hsbc' ads I honestly might stop using li...


One of the best things of working for NewDay was taking customers away from them...

Remember you can still contact me for coaching... while I'm available ;)

 Remember you can still contact me for coaching... while I'm available ;)

I Only Know a Few of the 500,000 Yet Thanks...

 So...

This is the official 200,000 thanks post...

Because remember when you're talking share articles... it's 500,000 views... honestly I don't know how many people have read me on different platforms... people can write about me when I'm dead.

At this stage as a writer I just want to let it flow and get it out there...

Like if I've got something to say... say it... edit it later if I want...

I mean the world is just so surreal...

I wouldn't believe it if someone said in covid times... yeah Sabrina Chevannes will write to you...

Wasn't until I googled her more that I saw she had over 50,000 copies sold of one kid's chess book!


I might buy one for my niece...


Oh yeah... and then like a multi millionaire like Kevin Nagle writes to you and you get to do stewarding...

Honestly being a writer is so surreal... stick at it though... gets better ;)



There were good things and bad things I saw when I went in store @IcelandFoods should I include in review?

 There were good things and bad things I saw when I went in store @IcelandFoods should I include in review?

Two walks done today :)

 Two walks done today :)

3 Month Global Reach

 

United Kingdom
6.16K
Singapore
5.28K
United States
1.92K
Germany
271
France
209
Canada
77
Australia
61
Israel
56
Netherlands
29
India
26
Romania
14
Serbia
13
Switzerland
7
Japan
7
Albania
4
Hong Kong
4
Indonesia
4
Russia
3
Belgium
2
Other
730

The Huddersfield Hyundai Garage

 Gonna blast this one out...

Sure it can be quite hard as a writer to get paid work... but guys... never underestimate your power...

So... MY PARENTS (not me as I alluded to previously because I'd never allow myself to get into this situation) got bad service from local Hyundai garage... I rung them up and 'chatted' to them about it then put a few tweets out on twitter...

I was informed the garage people had SLEEPLESS NIGHTS over the review ;)

So yeah... don't give the Howitt family bad service, I could write much more if I wanted...

I'll give another quick example... Healds Hall... they'd like a bigger review from me... but it's only worth my time doing it if they pay... but for example if someone I knew wanted to see pics etc I would show them for free...

More writing to come for me ;)

High Value Training

 I've written a bit more about the subject on another thread...


I guess with the free info I'll give here I might save it because quite valuable...

I think often the lower skill someone has the more need they have to be educated- and sometimes they're willing to pay for it. School children are taught by teachers paid by taxpayers (if they're in the state sector) to read etc... someone with money and not much chess ability is more likely to pay for chess education.

Put this on ECF forum... this is a Mark Howitt blog exclusive...

But you also have OTHER people of a higher skill level who are still willing to pay. For example I personally have bought around 80 chess books, I paid for a few training events as a junior etc...

Rowson paid to live with a GM and learn more...

I often now chat to titled playes on facebook for free because there is a VALUE exchange there. One thing I would like to do in future is exchange my financial coaching for chess coaching with FMs and above...

The Value of a Chessplayer...

 The Value of a Chessplayer...


More thoughts...

And this kinda alludes back to what I wrote on this blog years ago...

There are plenty of jobs where you can get paid and it doesn't need much brainpower or skill. Sometimes in fact once you get IN a job you don't have to do much work and you can get paid for 'team building' etc...

A chessplayer...

Well I've been looking at chess results lately...

There are some chessplayers who play chess all their lives. Everyone has 24 hours in a day.

I think people prob play chess for different reasons. Like the Inner Game of Tennis goes into... some will play for the social aspect, some to get out of the house etc...

But anyway...

The value of even a good club chessplayer is something that would take MANY hours of work to reproduce. Like imagine you wanted to take even quite a smart guy off the street at random. How many hours of work would it take to make him into a good club chessplayer.... hundreds min...

(He'd have to have the right type of intelligence in memory etc to even do it)...

So... if chessplayers were valued more BY THE UK or people in the UK in general even good club players could be paid or at least not made to pay to play. There are plenty of other countries where chess gets more government support. I think one of the reasons we produce so few pros is they're having to compete with people from India etc who have a low min wage compared to ours and they fight for the same prize money in intenrational tourns...

Will add this now... it's like I put out an ad saying I'd be willing to play in the 4NCL. A decent guy in the forum said well you might have to had play more games etc... But I've been contacted by a nice team v eager to talk to me...

Like way back in 2008 Ben Purton wanted me to play for his team... I was like... I'm not good enough and it's quite far away...

Smart people realize how valuable a chess player is and are willing to offer value...

Anyway.... just more thoughts...

Chess Thoughts

 Just like saying things on my mind...

In terms of actually just PLAYING online chess is much more like time efficient than OTB chess...

Of course people could cheat, I never have, in blitz chess you'd have to have like a separate comp I think...

Esp if no money involved which for vast vast majority of internet chess there isn't there's no point in cheating anyway...

I think one of main reasons for this is COST OF TRAVEL... then u've got to look at things like time travel takes and if you're doing tourns entry fees etc...

Despite this I've played like...

It's hard to say...

But if you're talking formal and informal probably around 700 otb games in my life.

Maybe about 200 graded games...

Online... again hard to say but I'll have played about 2000 or more onine games I think... then different time analysing studying, reading books etc etc

Remember that from December 2008 until now I still in that period played hundreds of online games... and did some analysis so perhaps in some ways I am stronger now than in 2008... won one formal otb game where I played fairly well but a lot more to prove obvs...

And the kind of good thing when I think about this is... I mean on lichess beaten someone nearly 2300 with black and won the other game with black... I don't take it as serious on other sites as I used to but still play pretty well... it honestly like really varies... sometimes online you get players in the 1800s who are just really bad...

But anyway... what I'm saying is I will have done studying and playing etc when some GMs today WERE NOT EVEN BORN lols... so yeah obvs they have more talent than me but no reason why I couldn't get a higher rating than I have now in some ways...

It's a crazy amount of time really but I like chess...

You could say it's a good mental workout... and you do actually get to meet some interesting people in chess...

The thing is though what I've been thinking recently is...

Say for example I HADN'T spent that time doing that and done a regular job etc I would have quite a lot more money...

So... should I keep playing chess...

Yes I prob should online but otb atm... maybe limit it...


Saturday, 28 October 2023

Reading about other Huddersfield chess players from @YorkshireChess history...

 Reading about other Huddersfield chess players from @YorkshireChess history...

Friday, 27 October 2023

Chess

 

Re: 2023/2024 Season

Post by Mark Howitt » Fri Oct 27, 2023 12:03 pm

MartinCarpenter wrote: 
Fri Oct 27, 2023 8:17 am
Mark Howitt wrote: 
Thu Oct 26, 2023 5:08 pm
Just interested to know what everyone thinks :)
We covered this once already! No, no one gets played to play in the Yorkshire league. The whole idea is mildly offensive to be frank.

It does happen in the London league of course.

York had at least one important player missing - for very good real life reasons! - and Hull are just very solid now. Our bottom boards did brilliantly to keep it close - they've been driving us for the past few seasons. We're about 50% on the top 4 boards over that period, some huge percentage from 5-8.
Thanks Martin I remember u said that York didn't pay anyone I was just wondering if other clubs did. I think I remember Matthew Turner got paid to play for Hull in some comps and they paid Jon Speelman to write for them at some stage...

I get why people drop out of chess more now :) LIke imagine you were thinking of it as a career or even spending a lot of time on it... you could get to IM and still make v little money from it ;)

I do know IM Simon Ansell has made decent money from poker though chatted to him a bit...

I like Mr Bear

 I like Mr Bear

4NCL

 

Re: 4NCL Season 2023-24

Post by Mark Howitt » Fri Oct 27, 2023 6:37 am

Just had interesting thought...

And I kinda know what people may say yet will say it anyway...

You know how it is called the NATIONAL chess league?

Well it would be nice if it could be in different venues across the nation like football is then :)

I know I know hard to find the right venues etc... but it would be easier for certain players to get to and promote chess nationwide more...