Kasparov: King who reigned supreme

Friday, 11 March, 2005, 18:34 GMT

Kasparov: King who reigned supreme

By Finlo Rohrer
BBC News

Those who meet Kasparov are struck by his intensity

Garry Kasparov’s retirement at the age of 41 brings to an end 20 years of
domination of the world of chess.

In the black-and-white world of chess, Kasparov is regarded by many as the
greatest.

There are those who are drawn to the flashes of brilliance of the eccentric
former US world champion Bobby Fischer, but Kasparov’s relentless two-decade
crushing of the opposition has left most chess aficionados awed.

Like a Schumacher or a Sampras, the genius from Baku has an aura of
invincibility that will live long in the memory.

He may have lost his championship to the younger Russian Vladimir Kramnik in
2000, but he is retiring as the undisputed world number one.

English grandmaster and Sunday Telegraph chess columnist Nigel Short is one
of those who has been on the wrong end of Kasparov’s brilliance, losing their
world championship clash in 1993.

He is just a giant figure in chess – it is the passing of an era

Nigel Short

Speaking from his Athens home, he told BBC News that facing Kasparov across a
chess board was a uniquely formidable prospect.

“He is one of the very few opponents I’ve been afraid to play. I can play a
guy like [world number two Viswanathan] Anand and I respect him greatly, I’ve
huge admiration, but I’m not afraid of him.

“I think [Kasparov’s] greatest strength was the moves on the board but there
was this physical presence when you played him, you felt this aggression.

“It is sad. In a way it is quite emotional. He is just a giant figure in
chess. It is the passing of an era.”

Kasparov’s frustration

Much of the motivation for his retirement seems to stem from a desire to get
away from the frustrating “politics” of world chess and spend more time with
his real political interest, toppling Russian President Vladimir Putin.

When Kasparov spoke exclusively to the BBC News website on a trip to London
in January, he was full of frustration at the cancellation of a championship
match with Uzbek star Rustam Kasimdzhanov in Dubai.

He was candid about his disillusionment with efforts to organise a match with
Kramnik, and about his feeling that he had achieved everything as a player
and was now becoming a historian of the game.

Nigel Short has been on the receiving end of Kasparov’s genius

He said: “I don’t care. I no longer have the same passion for playing the
world championship.”

It is Kasparov’s consistency, since his triumph over Anatoly Karpov in 1985
to claim the world championship, that marks him out as the greatest.

“Fischer stopped playing tournament chess at 29, Kasparov is 42 next month
and he has gone on and he has won again and again and that is why he is really
great,” Short concluded.

“The Karpov match was an almighty struggle. He has more or less been on top
ever since then, awesome.”

Those who meet Kasparov are struck by his extraordinary energy and his
intensity, and his play is equally affecting.

Writing praise

To Raymond Keene, English grandmaster and chess correspondent for the Times,
Kasparov’s play is “very dynamic, active, highly tactical and ambitious,
clearly the best player the world has ever seen”.

“Even in retirement many will still see him as the king across the water.

“The world champion is Kramnik, but he will never replace Kasparov.”

He is fed up with the world championship, with the idiots in charge of it

Malcolm Pein
Chess writer and master

And for Keene, Kasparov’s writing on the game, and particularly his recent
series on the world champions, My Great Predecessors, are a considerable
achievement.

“His books on the previous champions are a milestone in chess writing. It is
rather as if Michelangelo had produced a treatise on Da Vinci.

“You don’t often get one great genius agreeing to evaluate the achievements
of another.”

Those looking back on Kasparov’s career will see many guises, the young star
setting himself against the Soviet establishment in the 1980s, the
all-conquering champion, and the anti-Putin firebrand.

That he is a complex character, few doubt.

Chess writer and master Malcolm Pein said: “He is a man with a mission. He
doesn’t take kindly to people who waste his time or say things that don’t make
any sense. He uses every minute of the day.

“He is fed up with the world championship, with the idiots in charge of it.”

Great genius

And Short adds: “I’ve had ups and downs with Gary. At one time I didn’t like
him at all, he is a flawed character, but we all are.

“When he is doing things I think of him as a great genius but sometimes he
behaves in an annoying or childish way. I very rarely have no opinion – I tend
to have strong opinions for him or against him.

“When I saw him last he was very happy to chat and very affable, a familiar
figure in a changing chess world.”

Like retired boxers, always surrounded by rumours of a return, there will be
many, not least Fide officials missing their most bankable star, who will long
for Kasparov to change his mind.

But old adversary Short is not sure.

“I suspect that is it. But he is the greatest player of all time.”

TOP EUROPE STORIES NOW

Russia interested in lasting peace in Caucasus – envoy to Armenia

Russia interested in lasting peace in Caucasus – envoy to Armenia

Arminfo
9 Mar 05

Yerevan, 9 March: The Russian ambassador to Armenia, Anatoliy
Dryukov, has described as fictitious the media reports that “Russia
is leaving the Caucasus and Armenia.” The ambassador said this at a
solemn ceremony at the Russian-Armenian (Slavic) University [RAU] to
award him the honorary RAU Order and the title of the university’s
honorary doctor. He stressed that Russia is “a Caucasus country”, and
therefore, Russia is extremely interested in establishing a lasting
peace in this region.

Dryukov said that politicians who discuss Russia’s dwindling
influence in Armenia are formulating the question incorrectly. He
noted that Armenia must conduct not a pro-Russian or pro-Western, but
a pro-Armenian policy based on securing national interests. Dryukov
thinks that “the world has changed and there are no opposing camps or
Cold War.”

The head of the Russian diplomatic mission noted with regret that the
psychological perception of the population both in the CIS and in the
West is changing very slowly, “and many are still talking from Cold
War positions”.

Nevertheless, the latest events in the world compel people “to be
united, not disunited”. International terrorism, nonproliferation of
weapons of mass destruction, transnational crime and kidnapping – all
these problems, Dryukov said, compel Russia and Western countries to
look jointly for effective methods of struggle. He stated that the
old system based on the Treaty of Versailles has exhausted itself and
a new international system will be established in view of these
realities.

The Russian diplomat stated that the main path of the development of
the world community is democracy. Therefore, Russia is carrying out
an absolutely ideology-free and pragmatic policy with no dividing
lines.

Holy War Against Armenia

HOLY WAR AGAINST ARMENIA

Azg/arm
12 March 05

According to the Azeri press, Hajigha Nuriev, head of the Islamic
Party of Azerbaijan, stated that Azerbaijan should unfold a holy war
against Armenia to conquer back the occupied territories. “The fact
that 20% of Azeri lands are in the hands of Christians should make
us begin a jihad,” Nuriev said.

By the way, Ilham Aliyev has just returned from Saudi Arabia, a country
that “exports” jihad and terrorism. Ilham Aliyev highly estimated
the policy of that country which is not going to establish diplomatic
relations with Armenia, unless Nagorno Karabakh conflict is settled.

Recently, Vartan Oskanian emphasized that notwithstanding the
determination of the Armenian side, three countries refuse to have
diplomatic relations with Armenia. These countries are Saudi Arabia,
Pakistan and Turkey.

Syrian Ambassador Will No More Work In Armenia

SYRIAN AMBASSADOR WILL NO MORE WORK IN ARMENIA

A1+
11-03-2005

Today in Holy Echmiadzin Garegin I, the Catholicos of all Armenians
received doctor Khassan Raslan, temporary ambassador of the Syrian
Republic to Armenia who has finished his diplomatic mission in Armenia.

The Catholicos highly appreciated the ambassador’s work in Armenia and
his efforts in the development of the relations of the two countries
and nations.

The Catholicos also mentioned that the Armenians of Syria want to
build in Armenia a monument for the gratitude of the Armenian nation
to the Arabian and for the friendship of the two nations.

Thanking for the heartfelt reception, doctor Raslan said, «The short
period of time spent here gave much impressions about the country
and the Armenian nation and they will accompany me long».

–Boundary_(ID_poIBf8RgbNNP69MskL4XbA)–

Armenians Prefer To Keep Their Money In Cash US Dollars

ARMENIANS PREFER TO KEEP THEIR MONEY IN CASH US DOLLARS

   YEREVAN, MARCH 10, ARMENPRESS: A recent survey conducted by the
Armenian Central Bank to find out what hard currency cash Armenians
prefer to have revealed that 84 percent of cash held by citizens was
in US Dollars. According to Hakob Zorian, head of a Central Bank
department, the amount of cash in hard currency kept by Armenians
increased from $572 million in 2003 to $915 million in 2004, of which
871 million were in US Dollars. In 2003 this figure was $560 million.
The per capita amount of hard currency cash was equal to $190 in 2003
and $304 in 2004.
   The survey was conducted among 900 households. It also revealed
that well-to-do families kept 98 percent of their cash money in US
Dollars, middle-class families kept 82.4 percent of their money in
greenbacks, while very poor families only 15 percent of their cash.
   Also 57 percent of respondents preferred to keep their savings in
US Dollars, 35 percent in the national currency-dram and 6 and 2
percent in euros and other hard currencies respectively.
   He also said last year around $760 million were remitted by
Armenians working abroad to their families in Armenia, a 26 percent
rise against the previous 2003. He said forty percent of respondents
receive money transfers from abroad.

–Boundary_(ID_5sabq6+ePy8eTpXTQ0AiLg)–

Armenian president, Argentinian businessman discuss investment

Armenian president, Argentinian businessman discuss investment

Public Television of Armenia, Yerevan
10 Mar 05

Armenian President Robert Kocharyan today received the president of
the Armenian International Airports company, a prominent Argentinian
businessmen, Eduardo Ernekyan.

Issues of implementing investment programmes at Yerevan’s Zvartnots
international airport were discussed at the meeting.

Eduardo Ernekyan also informed Robert Kocharyan that he intends to
invest in Armenia’s agricultural sphere.

[Video showed the meeting]

Armenia committed to integration with Europe – Kocharian

Armenia committed to integration with Europe – Kocharian

Interfax
March 7 2005

YEREVAN. March 7 (Interfax) – Armenia is interested in becoming part of
Europe, President Robert Kocharian said. “Armenia is strongly committed
to its integration with the European family and all reforms being
carried out in the republic are aimed at bringing it in line with
European standards,” Kocharian’s press service quoted the president
as saying at a meeting with visiting Latvian parliamentary speaker
Ingrid Udre. The three Baltic nations have set an excellent example,
Kocharian said, adding that such a high level of cooperation in the
South Caucasus could help bring a lasting peace and stability to
the region.

Armenian president and Latvian speaker discuss cooperation

Armenian president and Latvian speaker discuss cooperation

Public Television of Armenia, Yerevan
7 Mar 05

A delegation led by the speaker of the Latvian Saeima [parliament],
Ms Ingrida Udre, arrived in Armenia today for a two-day official
visit. Armenian President Robert Kocharyan received the high-ranking
guest on the same day.

Ms Udre briefed the president on the political and economic reforms
implemented by Latvia after its admission to the European Union [EU].
She said that her country has made huge progress towards membership
of the European Union but there is still a lot to be done to fully
meet European standards.

The head of the Latvian parliament said that Latvia is now planning
to pay more attention to bilateral relations with Armenia and with
other countries of the South Caucasus, which make progress towards
integration into the European family.

President Robert Kocharyan noted that Armenia is very serious about
its intention to become part of the European family and is carrying
out reforms in the country in accordance with the European standards.

The president stressed that Armenia has always paid and will continue
to pay attention to Latvia’s expertise in that area.

[Video showed the meeting in progress]

Kerkorian’s vision shaped Las Vegas Strip

Las Vegas Sun
March 5 2005

Kerkorian’s vision shaped Las Vegas Strip

By Liz Benston
<[email protected]>
LAS VEGAS SUN
WEEKEND EDITION

March 5 – 6, 2005

Pittsburgh had Andrew Carnegie, Cleveland had John D. Rockefeller,
Seattle has Bill Gates.

And Las Vegas has Kirk Kerkorian.

As a developer, Kerkorian three times built the world’s largest hotel
in Las Vegas.

And as the majority shareholder of MGM Mirage, Kerkorian made the two
largest deals in the history of the casino industry.

After the second deal, MGM Mirage’s $7.9 billion buyout of Mandalay
Resort Group that is expected to close this month, Kerkorian will
have a majority stake in a lucrative real estate empire of historic
proportions.

He’ll control 11 major resorts and the largest share of Strip hotel
rooms, casino space and entertainment venues ever assembled by one
owner.

Kerkorian, a fixture on Forbes’ list of the richest Americans, had an
estimated net worth of $5.8 billion last year. His Tracinda Corp.
holding company, named for his daughters Tracy and Linda, holds about
59 percent of MGM Mirage’s stock, a stake worth $6.1 billion as of
Friday’s closing price.

Despite his record and wealth, Kerkorian’s nearly 40-year Las Vegas
career is little known by the public, and even by his peers in Las
Vegas, where strong personalities and new entertainment venues grab
headlines.

He avoids the spotlight, rarely giving speeches and leaving
management up to trusted executives. He is also modest and
unassuming, typically giving others credit for their role in his
success.

“It’s just amazing that he’s taken Las Vegas to the next level three
or four times and he can practically walk down the street without
being recognized,” said Steve DuCharme, a casino consultant and
former member of the state Gaming Control Board. “But that’s the way
he wants it.”

Kerkorian once drove himself to a Gaming Control Board meeting when
DuCharme was on the board.

“I think it was a Chevrolet station wagon,” DuCharme said.

Quiet leadership

His publicity-shy demeanor belies a sharp business sense and an
ability to time the market, observers say.

Henri Lewin, a retired casino consultant who ran Hilton Hotels’
gaming properties in the 1980s, said Kerkorian was always “one step
ahead” of the competition.

“The man had more brains than anybody,” said Lewin, whose former
employer bought the International hotel from Kerkorian. “Kerkorian
knows what the value of a company is and when to buy it. Then he
knows who to put in to manage it. He doesn’t buy anything unless he
knows he can do better with it.”

Boyd Gaming Corp. Chairman and Chief Executive Bill Boyd said
Kerkorian “has been a tremendous influence” in the transformation of
Las Vegas into a resort destination.

“I’ve always been impressed by his ability to see where the market
wants to go,” said Boyd, whose father created his own gaming empire
after arriving in Las Vegas in 1941. “On no less than three occasions
with the International, the MGM and MGM Grand, his company has
pointed the way toward Las Vegas’ future. And now he’s doing it again
with MGM’s planned CityCenter.”

In an industry that has had its share of risk and failure,
Kerkorian’s string of successes and big deals have been a big
positive for Las Vegas, experts say.

“He does it so effortlessly that people don’t stop and scratch their
heads in wonderment,” DuCharme said. “There’s never a concern about
whether things will get done right and get financed. It just gets
done.”

Las Vegas Sands Corp. Chairman and Chief Executive Sheldon Adelson —
No. 60 on last year’s Forbes list before a spectacular initial public
offering of stock raised his net worth by $15 billion — said he
respects Kerkorian’s ability to weather risk.

“He’s obviously a very shrewd investor and a fine gentleman,” said
Adelson, who has a majority stake in Las Vegas Sands. “We don’t play
tennis together and we don’t have dinner together, but we have mutual
respect for each other.”

The son of Armenian immigrants, Kerkorian dropped out of school to
box and later discovered flying.

In World War II, he transported planes from Canada to Great Britain
as a pilot in the Royal Air Force and later bought his own plane to
charter passengers to Las Vegas.

Kerkorian and Hughes

When Howard Hughes was buying up hotels, Kerkorian was using profit
from a land sale on the Strip and the sale of his charter service to
purchase land for the International, which would open in 1967 as the
world’s largest hotel. The Paradise Road property was later bought by
Hilton Hotels Corp. and renamed the Las Vegas Hilton.

“The dream of one man — it’s a remarkable story,” Nevada Gaming
Commission member Art Marshall said before the commission unanimously
approved the Mandalay purchase. The approval marked the last major
regulatory hurdle for the deal.

“We’ve had 40 years of behavior by this principal and their team. I’m
willing to trust them,” Marshall said before entering his vote.

It was the story of Hughes, the eccentric playboy, and not of
Kerkorian, that made its way to the silver screen last year. While
both men were pilots and emerged in Las Vegas around the same time,
Kerkorian’s contribution to Las Vegas is generally believed to be
much more significant than Hughes’.

Hughes arrived in Las Vegas in 1966 and, clouded by mental illness,
bought up six casinos on the Strip while doing little to transform
them. His purchases of the Desert Inn and other landmark properties
would be small by today’s resort standards.

“(Kerkorian) doesn’t have the mystique of a Howard Hughes or the
charisma of a Steve Wynn,” said David Schwartz, coordinator for the
Gaming Studies Research Center at UNLV. “Maybe he doesn’t get all the
credit he should have.”

Schwartz said Kerkorian has had a “huge role” in casino history for
foreseeing future demand for Las Vegas and by building some of the
world’s largest resorts.

When MGM Grand acquired Steve Wynn’s Mirage Resorts in 2000 for $6.4
billion, the deal set an industry record and established MGM Mirage
as the largest competitor on the Strip with a 27 percent share of
hotel rooms and casino space.

At the time, Mandalay Resort Group — which owns three of the largest
hotels — had about 27 percent of the hotel rooms and about 22
percent of the Strip’s casino space.

Kerkorian’s timing couldn’t have been better for the buyout of Mirage
Resorts. He offered $17 per share for Mirage in February 2000 — an
unsolicited offer that was well below Mirage’s 52-week high of $26.37
in May 1999.

A variety of factors, including less-than-spectacular earnings at
Mirage’s older resorts, had depressed the stock to levels that some
experts said weren’t warranted longer-term.

Wynn rejected the first offer, but was put in a difficult position of
refusing a bid that was 56 percent over Mirage Resorts’ then stock
price of less than $11 per share. Analysts warned investors to hold
out for a higher price. Wynn and shareholders eventually accepted an
offer of $21 per share.

MGM Grand sold 46.5 million shares of stock for about $1.3 billion to
help finance the $6.4 billion Mirage acquisition.

Tracinda purchased about half of those shares for $609.5 million,
with the remainder going to financial institutions. The sale reduced
his holdings in MGM Grand from 64 percent to 60 percent.

Only 62 percent of Mirage shareholders voted in favor of the deal,
with many naysayers believing that they could have gotten more out of
Kerkorian.

Bidding for Mandalay

Likewise, MGM Mirage’s landmark bid for Mandalay Resort Group was far
from a slam dunk. While the deal breezed through investigations by
the Federal Trade Commission and Nevada gaming regulators without the
companies being forced to sell any Las Vegas casinos, Mandalay
shareholders could have stopped the deal in its tracks.

Fewer than 60 percent of Mandalay shareholders approved the deal,
according to institutional shareholders — another sign that
Kerkorian bought at a favorable price.

Kerkorian’s involvement was less overt this time. Historically, low
interest rates and unprecedented hunger on Wall Street for Las Vegas
gaming deals are allowing MGM Mirage to finance nearly all of the
$7.9 billion acquisition with low-interest-rate bank debt.

Kerkorian is more than just a dealmaker, said Hal Rothman, chairman
of UNLV’s history department.

In creating MGM Grand, Kerkorian has developed a “visionary profile”
for the city, Rothman said.

“What they’re really buying is ideas and approaches,” he said.
“That’s why he bought Wynn’s properties. He has taken Wynn’s vision
and carried it out.”

Rather than micromanaging, Kerkorian has left the management of his
casino empire to MGM Mirage Chief Executive Terry Lanni and his team.

“The people under (Kerkorian) are as qualified as the guys on top,”
Lewin said. “There’s not a lot of companies like that. These are blue
bloods. You will never see them doing something stupid.”

Kerkorian still keeps abreast of his investments, Lewin said.

Lewin came into contact with Kerkorian when Hilton executives were
negotiating with Kerkorian’s executive Fred Benninger to buy the
International hotel.

“Kerkorian came into the meeting room and he made comments about the
property that we didn’t even see, and we went through all the books,”
Lewin said. “We went through the whole hotel and didn’t see it. He
said he didn’t have to go to the hotel to know what was going on. He
said, ‘I have my people and I have the books, and I look at the
books.’ I look dumb next to him.”

Instead of incorporating the Mirage Resorts properties into MGM
Grand, the company set up a separate Mirage operating division and
allowed those properties to be run much like they had been, Rothman
said. The tactic was aimed at encouraging competition and innovation.

“What size does is breed uniformity,” Rothman said. “Size can
discourage innovation.”

MGM Mirage executives said they expect to do the same with Mandalay
Resort Group. All company casinos “compete mightily against one
another,” with presidents at each property compensated based on
individual financial results, President and Chief Financial Officer
Jim Murren told state Gaming Control Board members at the hearings.

For all his visionary might, Kerkorian may not have all the answers.

In an interview prior to Control Board approval of the deal,
Kerkorian said he was “very much” surprised at the visitor growth in
Las Vegas and the nationwide popularity of its casino culture.

He gave a cryptic answer to a reporter’s question about whether this
deal marked the culmination of his deal-making career.

“Who knows?” the spry 87-year-old said.

The future of Kerkorian’s Las Vegas investment looks bright.

MGM Mirage’s proposed $4.7 billion CityCenter — an urban complex of
three hotels, a casino resort and high-rise residential towers — is
a sign that the company is trying to improve upon the typical casino
model in a way that benefits the entire city, Schwartz said.

“I think this (buyout) is more about real estate and (future
development) and that’s good because it shows there’s a master plan,”
he said. “This is not saying, ‘Let’s add 10 slot machines this
quarter and see how it goes’ and ‘We’re going to redo the buffet next
year.’ “

Turks in fauna name games

Sunday Mail (SA),
March 6, 2005 Sunday

Turks in fauna name games

ANKARA: Turkey is renaming three indigenous animals to eliminate
references to Kurdistan and Armenia, saying the old names were given
by foreigners.

A species of red fox known as “Vulpes Vulpes Kurdistanica” will now
be known as just “Vulpes Vulpes,” a species of wild sheep called
“Ovis Armeniana” was changed to “Ovis Orientalis Anatolicus,” and a
type of deer known as “Capreolus Capreolus Armenus” was renamed
“Capreolus Cuprelus Capreolus,” a ministry statement said.

“Unfortunately, foreign scientists, who for many years researched
Turkey’s flora and fauna, named plant and animal species that they
had never come across before with a prejudiced mind-set,” the
statement said.