Recently we received an interesting email from a friend in the US:
Fred, this is probably telling you something you already know, but I'm sure
there's a big future for chess (and hence ChessBase) in the U.S. I've been recently
back in e-mail contact with my old college roommate, and more specifically his
wife, who has become the number 1 supporter and encourager of the chess-playing
activities of her two little granddaughters – aged 4 and 7.
Through her I am beginning to get a glimpse of a groundswell phenomenon occurring
over there: suddenly all the kids are playing chess – in school, at home
and in endless tournaments. With that optimism, energy and determination that
characterizes them, American housewives (that redoubtable breed of animal) have
thrown themselves headlong into backing chess the way they did with girls' soccer.
I got an illustration of their unhesitating determination when I mentioned
to Anni Ruppel (wife of my Harvard roommate Hans) that Chess Base had a new
kids' program. Within 24 hours I got an answer from her telling me that she
not only loved the presentation, but had already ordered the Fritz
and Chesster CD. And you can bet she'll be telling her friends, and
the word will go around. You're on to a good thing, my friend.

From their correspondence:
-
Anni, you should know that Chessbase has just released a chess-learning
game. I had thought your grand-kids too advanced for it, but maybe it's
right for the little one. Go to the ChessBase page and read down their little
one-graf chronicles until you come to the Chesster
item and the article about it in the Houston Chronicle. Maybe this is
right for the little ones? – Rudi
-
Merci, Rudy!! Went to the site, heard the Herald speak, ordered the CD
immediately. It will be just right for Megan. When I first saw it, I thought..."Forget
the kids! This is just right for ME!" I hope they speak in rhymes all
the way through. It's pretty neat. – Anni
-
Rudy, Fritz and Chesster arrived!! Hans and I had such fun with it last
night. We are going to keep this one here and order another to be sent straight
to our kids in Seattle. The game box says is designed for ages 8+ but will
be just right for Megan even though she's fours years. It is so clever and
humorously presented that I think Emily will enjoy seeing it, too. Using
two Sumo wrestlers to demonstrate the king's moves was wonderful. –
Anni
- Hans just came upstairs to tell me Emily has won two games now. He also
said that Megan tried out the "Scholar's Mate" in a game but FIRST
announced to her opponent what she was going to do. The opponent promptly
took her Queen. She always helps her opponent out. when Hans was last in Seattle
and played with her, she pointed out moves to him. He told her if she kept
pointing out moves to her opponent like, "You can check me if you move
here," she would never win a trophy. She said, "I know," and
happily skipped off to play with her fairies. The school coach will not allow
the young players, who are playing seriously, to use this trick. He says it's
not fair and not real chess. The team is still at 3rd place in the tournament
and New York holds the first 2 places. NY sent many teams and they are very
good. – Anni
We asked Rudy to explain the soccer mom thing in greater detail, and he
sent in the following article.
The Chess Soccer Mom
Like most other adult chess fans, I didn't give anything more than cursory
attention to the ChessBase item announcing the birth of Chesster. Teaching chess
to kids, I thought. Good idea. Cute. I scanned rapidly through the text, then
went on to other things.
If I had given it a bit more reflection, though, I wouldn't have been so hasty,
because there was a big and important message there that in my impatience I
had not seen. And that message is this: the U.S. is going to become a powerhouse
of chess, perhaps the world's powerhouse. I can almost guarantee that.
How? Why? Because of the soccer moms and Chesster.

The Sagalchik daughters hanging around while Hana Itkis and IM Anthony Saidy
analyze (yes, the oldest played the youngest in 2002's US Championship!). That's
GM Chernin behind Itkis. Photo John Fernandez.
The realization struck me like a thunderclap when I mentioned the new Chessbase
program to Anni, wife of my old college roommate Hans Ruppel. Anni had told
me her two little granddaughters were playing chess in a school program, but
she had not heard of Chesster. When I prompted her about it, she went to ChessBase
and instantly ordered it. When she slipped the CD into her computer, she kept
it for herself, ordered another for the grandkids and sent me some of the back-and-forth
correspondence about the school's chess team.

Courtney from Phoenix, Arizona, and Elena Winkelmann, the U12 champ, played
an international
Internet match on the Playchess.com server in Dresden
It was then that I realized that I was witnessing the start of a terrifyingly
efficient process: the Soccer Mom phenomenon. When, as a corollary to
the civil rights movements of the sixties, the U.S. congress decided that American
school sports programs were guilty of gender discrimination by favoring boys'
teams, a Niagara of funding suddenly flooded down upon girls' sports from Anchorage
to Miami Beach. Nowhere was this money used to greater effect than with a sport
that until then had been an exotic curiosity for boys, and virtually non-existent
for girls: soccer, the thing Europeans called football.

A girls' soccer team (St.
Steward's University)
Arcane it was, but America's mothers saw that it was also clean, healthy and
(relatively) non-violent. They went for it – big time – and the Soccer
Mom phenomenon was born. They studied the game, they helped with coaching, they
bought the videos, did the lunches, car-pooled the journeys for away games,
lent their shoulders to cry on and generally evangelized for the game with such
spirit and determination that women's soccer in America went from nowhere to
world championship level within the space of a single generation.

|
Mia Hamm is generally considered the best all-around women's
soccer player in the world. She helped the U.S. win gold at the 1996 Atlanta
Games, where women's soccer made its Olympic debut.
Mia has also competed at the past three Women's World
Cup competitions, at which America triumphed in 1991 and 1999 and finished
third in 1995. Described by former national team
coach Tony DiCicco as the most exciting player in the world, Hamm became
the all-time leading scorer in the history of international women's soccer
on May 22, 1999, in a 3-0 victory over Brazil. She broke the record of
107 goals held by Elisabetta Vignotto of Italy. Source: Nationwide
|
Now the same thing is happening with chess. I'm not saying that Chesster will
necessarily be the only instrument defining the movement – other programs
will surely come along to compete with the ChessBase guys. But the point is
that the process is now under way, gathering steam and headed toward a revolution
in mass chess expertise in America.

Three young Fritz & Chesster fans playing against the program at a Hamburg
bookstore
I invite skeptics who view this prediction as wild speculation to stick with
the easy, comfortable things in chess life, like playing black against Kasparov.
Me, I'm going to stand aside at a safe distance and watch the Chess Moms in
action. There is not a more redoubtable adversary on the face of the earth.
The next Morphys and Fischers – and Polgars, of course – are at their
computer screens right now.

Roving reporter Rudy Chelminski, an American freelance writer living in France.
Links

Fritz meets ominous King Black in Fritz and Chesster
Buy
Fritz & Chesster here