Tokyo Fight, Wonderful Night
By Kaz Ozawa

On April 17, a Friday night, the 2nd World Chess Boxing Championship, ‘The
Tokyo Fight’, was held at the famous interior shop ’Time &
Style’ in Jiyu-ga-oka (“mountain of liberty”), Tokyo.
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For a long time the Japan Chess Association
had been seeking on internet a Japanese challenger who could both play
chess and box.
At last a 22-year-old Japanese,
Soichiro the Cho-Yabai (“very dangerous”), was found. The
challenger (1.77m, 70kg) had put on his gloves five times as an amateur
kick boxer, and his Elo rating was 1465. |

Soichiro's opponent was the reigning world chess boxing
champion Iepe the Joker (29), who had defeated Luis the Lawyer a year
ago in a well-publicised
match in the Amsterdam pop-temple 'Paradiso'.
Iepe is a well known Dutch artist in Berlin.
He is also a familiar person on the Japanese art scene: in 2000, Iepe
did performance art at the crossing in Shibuya, Tokyo, and made Japanese
policemen very angry. |
 |
Lamentably, chess is not so popular in Japan, and so I wondered whether the
event could attract the large crowds. But my concern proved unfounded. About
250 people, young and old, flocked to the event venue ’Time & Style’.

The event venue, the very famous interior shop ‘Time & Style'

Ringside places are quickly occupied

Lifting the chess table into the ring for round one

Before the match, WIM Miyoko Watai introduced the rules of chess to the
audience
The match is staged with four minutes of chess, followed by two minutes of
boxing, then chess again, and boxing, etc. It goes over six rounds of chess
and five rounds of boxing.
The fight between Soichiro the Cho-Yabai and Iepe the Joker starts –
with chess moves

Then comes the boxing, faster and more furious than the chess moves
The match was won by the reigning champion Iepe (1.80m, 74kg) in the 9th round,
which is a chess round. Soichiro the Cho-Yabai tried desperately to knock the
champion out in the 8th round. But he didn’t manage, and was checkmated
in the next round.

The knockout blow (...Qe1#) in the Tokyo Chess Boxing championship

No hard feelings about the cruel knockout in the ring
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