Morteza Mahjoob breaks Guinness Simultaneous Chess World Record
The Guinness World Record for the largest number of simultaneous games played
in a single session was initially set in 1996 Swedish Grandmaster Ulf Anderson,
who took on 310 opponents. This record was broken in 2004 by British IM Andrew
Martin, author of many of our openings
training DVDs. Martin played against 321 opponents, scoring 294 wins, 26
draws and 1 loss for a winning percentage of 95.64%. In August 2005 GM Susan
Polgar played
against 350 players simultaneously at the Gardens Mall in Palm Beach Gardens,
Florida. Finally, in February this year, Bulgarian GM Kiril Georgiev played
a simultaneous
exhibition against 360 opponents.

The latest record attempt by Iranian GM Morteza Mahjoob
Recently Iranian GM Morteza Mahjoob, 29, took it on himself to break this record
– actually smash it to little pieces. He planned a simultaneous exhibition
against 500 players, which entailed walking for about 40 kilometers and staying
awake and sharp for up to 24 hours.

The training phase: Morteza Mahjoob preparing for his physical ordeal

The GM had to be ready to walk 40 kilometers and stay awake and fit for 24 hours
The name of the world record attempt was Rokh-dar-rokh 500 (rook vs
rook 500). The opening ceremony began on August 13th at 9:00 a.m., with nearly
700 participants (500 players and 200 reserve players) present. In addition
there were nearly a thousand spectators at the playing venue "Yadegar-e-Emam",
a multi-purpose sport saloon in the "Engelab Sport Complex" in Tehran.

A crowd has collected at 9:00 a.m. in front of the Engelab Sport Complex
in Tehran

Dignitaries: Kiomars Hashemi, Vice President of the Iranian National Sports
Organization; FIDE Vice President Nizar Elhaj (middle), President of
the Iranian Chess Federation Dr. Mohammad Ebarahim Maddahi (right)

The President of the Iranian Chess Federation Dr. Mohammad Ebarahim Maddahi

Iranian soccer star and manager Peyrovani is interviewed at the site

Iranian Taekwondo champion Behzad Khodadad (watch him in action here)
The President of the Iranian National Olympic committee, Mohammad Ali Abadi,
who is also the Iranian vice President, some of his deputies were also at the
location: FIDE Vice President Nizar Elhaj, who came as the official observer
for FIDE, the President of the Iranian Chess Federation Dr. Mohammad Ebarahim
Maddahi and many well-known Iranian sportsmen such as Hadi Saei, three times
Olympic medal winner and recent Olympic Champion in Taekwondo, who is a member
of the Tehran Council. Finally a number of famous actors and movie stars participated
in the ceremony.

Preparing the venue for the mammoth event

Everything is in place, the simultaneous master and his opponents can start
playing

Iranian TV talks to GM Morteza Mahjoob before the start of his record attempt

The GM and Hadi Saei, Olympic medalist in Taekwondo, are interviewed
The games officially started at 10:00 o'clock. The 500 players all were present
at the time on their boards. GM Morteza Mahjoob executed his first five moves
in two hours. The first (and only) break, for lunch, was after the ninth move
at 14:30 to 15:00. After the break all players came back to their boards and
games continued.

GM Morteza Mahjoob starts his simul on board one of five hundred at 10:00
a.m.

An Iranian lady helps her grandson to prepare for his game against the grandmaster

The master moves from board to board, making his first moves in this exhibition

1.Nf3 was one of the opening moves the grandmaster used

The jacket is off for the second round of moves
Just after midnight there were 130 players left. Many of them had no chance
of winning, but they insisted on
playing on. There were some kids and semi-professional teenage players who resisted
for more than 15 hours.
Their parents helped them by massaging them. Some of the players who hung on
for 15 hours needed medical attention. One of Morteza Mahjoob's chess students,
who is six years old, won his game against his teacher. This kid was amongst
the last ten players in the simul.

A very youthful opponent, a student of the Master, won his game in the simul
At 23:30 Morteza had succeeded in achieving 88.42% over 364 boards. The remaining
games continued and finally at 04:12 on August 14, 2009 he finished the last
game.
The final result over 500 boards was: 397 wins, 90 draws, 13 loses, with total
score of 442/500 points and score percentage of 88.4%.

The long cycle time between moves was not just tiring for the master

Even the older players felt the strain

Women's chess is definitely on the rise in Iran
The main sponsor of this event was Candy,
an Italian producer of home appliances. The sponsor covered all organizing expenses
as well as cash prizes for every winner and everybody who could make draw. There
were also some prizes from their products, drawn by lottery, for spectators.
The organizer of the event was the Iran Chess Federation. Chief organizer and
technical director was IO Hadi Karimi, Chief Arbiter was IA Hosseingholi Saloor,
first deputy of chief arbiter was IA Hamid Reza Pourshahmari. Three other Deputy
Arbiters were: IA N. Kananazar, IA F. Eskandary, IA. H. Kazemiashtiyani. Two
FIDE Aribiters and 48 National Arbiters refereed in this event. Near 30 people
helped in the organizing team.

The arbiters and organisers pose for a group photot
The oldest and youngest players were 81 and 4 years old. Many international
and national rated players participated and showed stiff competition. Also three
strong blind Iranian chess players competed all the way until the final hours.

A blind Iranian chess player amongst Mahjoob's simultaneous opponents
Many TV channels and other Media covered the event from beginning to end. The
games had live coverage by IRIB3 (Iranian National broadcasting) for near two
hours in three different segments. All daily newspapers as well as all news
agencies put the event on the front page.

Flowers for the record-breaking GM from football manager Farhad Kazemi

The simultaneous master at the end of his 18-hour ordeal
All photos provided by Mehdi Mahjoob
Videos of the record simul (in Farsi)
Links