
The London Eye (also known as the Millennium Wheel), 135 metres (443 ft) high
and the largest Ferris wheel in Europe, is visited by over three million people
a year. It was erected in 1999 and is located at the western end of Jubilee
Gardens, on the South Bank of the River Thames.
Before the start of the London Chess Classic, two of the participants, Nigel
Short and Luke McShane, went head to head in a game of blindfold chess in the
London Eye.

In the background you can see Parliament and Big Ben
People and personalities
By Frederic Friedel

The Howell family in front of a portrait of the chess-playing son

Martin, Julia, David and Angeline – a really cool family we reported
about here

Two of the world's most successful chess players (financially) playing blitz
in the VIP room

David Robert Norwood, 41, is a grandmaster writer and businessman who joined
the city investment bank Banker's Trust in 1991 and became the director of Special
Projects at IP Group plc. Today he lives on an island far away from the mainstream
of chess, business, or in fact society in general.

IM Ali Mortazavi, 2372, is a former chess player who made his fortune as a trader

Tara Adams, wife of Mickey, who works on her Eee netbook in the VIP area

The life of the VIP room: Viktor Korchnoi, who provides most of the animation
to the discussion

Wife Petra Korchnoi, who at 82 accompanies and looks after Viktor all over the
world

Espen Agdestein, rated 2382, brother of GM Simen, business advisor of Magnus
Carlsen

Dominic Lawson, who writes for the Independent and the Sunday Times
Dominic is the son of a former Conservative Chancellor of the Exchequer Lord
Lawson. He was educated in Westminster School and Christ Church, Oxford, and
married Rosamond Mary Monckton, daughter of the 2nd Viscount Monckton of Brenchley.
He joined the BBC as a researcher, and then wrote for the Financial Times. From
1990 until 1995 he served as the editor of The Spectator magazine. From 1995
until 2005 Lawson was editor of The Sunday Telegraph, and currently he is an
Editorial and Opinion writer for The Independent, where he usually takes lines
contrary to the newspaper's general political position. For example he does
not believe global warming is caused by increased greenhouse gas emissions,
attributing it to solar radiation. Also he writes a weekly column for The Sunday
Times. He is the author of the book "The
Inner Game: Short V. Kasparov", which Robert Harris called "perhaps
the most intimate portrait of a chess genius ever written." One of the
more interesting people we have met in London.

The Chinese delegation with Li Wenliang and Crystal Zhu

GM Li Wenliang is the second of GM Ni Hua

Crystal Zhu is a second year PhD student who lives in England. She is doing
research on how post colonialism theory is reinterpreted in the Chinese literature
of the 80s. She is also a 2100 chess player.

Raymond Keene, the second English player (after Tony Miles) to become a
grandmaster.
Raymond or "Ray" retired from competitive play in 1986 and is now
better known as a chess organiser, columnist and author. He was involved in
organising the 1986, 1993 and 2000 World Chess Championships, all held in London.
He was awarded the Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for services
to chess in 1985. Keene is a controversial figure in the chess world, and has
had disputes with figures such as Miles, Viktor Korchnoi, John Donaldson and
David Levy. His business dealings, and the quality of his chess books, have
also been criticised. More about that in a separate report.

GM Jonathan Rowson, who helps out with the commentary

Diego Rasskin-Gutman, who presented his book "Chess Metaphors"
Diego Rasskin-Gutman is Ramón y Cajal Research Associate and Head of
the Theoretical Biology Research Group at the Institute Cavanilles for Biodiversity
and Evolutionary Biology, University of Valencia, Spain. He is the coeditor
(with Werner Callebaut) of Modularity: Understanding the Development
and Evolution of Natural Complex Systems (MIT Press, 2009). We will
provide you with a review of his chess metaphors book at a later date.
IM Malcolm Pein, who put this whole event together
Tournament Schedule
Monday |
7th December |
Press Conference + blindfold display |
|
Tuesday |
8th December |
Round 1 |
2.00pm |
Wednesday |
9th December |
Round 2 |
2.00pm |
Thursday |
10th December |
Round 3 |
2.00pm |
Friday |
11th December |
Rest day and Community / School events |
|
Saturday |
12th December |
Round 4 |
2.00pm |
Sunday |
13th December |
Round 5 |
2.00pm |
Monday |
14th December |
Round 6 |
2.00pm |
Tuesday |
15th December |
Round 7 |
12.00pm |