Posted 2009-December-05, 19:04
The following rings true with me.
Comments by Ulf Andersson (Chess GM, 58 yrs old in 2009, chess professional since he turned 19)
Inteviewer
"What do you think would be necessary to do in order to make chess as popular a sport as, for example, football or tennis
?
Andersson
I do not consider chess as a sport, what so ever. ... Why would chess be as popular like football or tennis? It is how it is! Just to realise the fact. I like sports a lot. I prefer to look at sports, rather than chess on TV, when there is chess on TV. I prefer to look a game where Barcelona, Real Madrid, Manchester or Chelsea are playing, than to look at a chess game. I would look at a chess games on the professional interest, not for fun!
Source:
http://susanpolgar.b...04_archive.html
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Personally, I would characterise bridge as an intellectual contest that can bring satisfaction to those who like solving puzzles in a competitive atmosphere. In comparison, sport is primarily a physical contest that can immediately engage the emotions of viewers without necessarily requiring any intellectual involvement. Viewing physical contests surely evokes a more viseral response - one involving our "reptilian brain", that part of our brain concerned with fundamental needs such as survival, dominance, preening and mating.
Do we really think that the puzzle-solving part of our brain can compete with our "reptilian brain" when it comes to spectator interest and involvement?
Peter . . . . AKQ . . . . K = 3 points = 1 trick
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