Archive for February, 2010

Backgammon Arena and Olympic Stadium

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

1.

Play65 closes February with a large backgammon tournament – Backgammon Arena €4000 on February 28th, 2010 20:00 GMT. Entry fees are €45, and there are satellites everyday 18:30 and 21:30*. Winner gets €1200!

backgammon arena

* For free entry to the daily satellites, deposit $€₤100 and enter the coupon code: BGARENA

2.

Should backgammon be in the Olympics? The instinctive answer would be no, but if curling is sports, and ESPN dared to suggest to include poker among the Olympic Games, we can contemplate the idea as well.

Most of the poker players who discussed this half-amused notion with the ESPN columnist, agreed that poker does not belong to the Olympics. Poker, like backgammon, is not really a physical activity, it involves some amount of luck, and its skill element finds expression only in the long run - after a week long tournaments marathon or its 27-points match backgammon equivalent.

Poker author Nolan Dalla thinks otherwise:

"I have just two words for anyone opposed to poker as an Olympic sport: synchronized swimming."

backgammon players

athletes in action

Backgammon in War and Love

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

Who is a better backgammon player – Obama or Ahmadinejad?

No answer to that, but American players have won in 56% of the online backgammon games held against players from Iran on Play65 platform in the past three years. But when the Americans face their old iron curtain rivals, the Russians, they lose in 53% of the games.

But Play65 biggest winners are the Turks who triumphed in more than 220,000 games held in the last three month of 2009. They are followed by the Israelis with a record of almost 180,000 wins in three months. The German players are the third big winners with less than 125,000, who are followed closely by the Americans with almost 123,000 winning games. The top five list is closed by the Russians with an average of 32,000 wins a month. Surprisingly, the nation with the biggest percentage of wins (as opposed to biggest number of wins) is China. In the meantime, this success did not found expression in live backgammon tournaments.

backgammon war

(More statistics on Play65 backgammon war zone, in Hebrew)

Valentine Supplements

Play65 Valentine tournament, held last weekend, was not the first time backgammon was linked to love (or the other way around). Backgammon boards, especially the more costly ones, are traditionally recommended as a Valentine’s Day gift for him, and playing backgammon is a commonly advised Valentines date idea.

If you can’t imagine anything romantic or passionate about backgammon, the following excerpts would probably convince you:

"Love is a serious play. So is Backgammon, a fascinating game of chance and challenging contest of strategy. Love is passionate. Play Backgammon and experience together an exciting duel, engaging both heart and mind. Love is tender and sensuality. "

(from Ghiso blog)

The roll of the dice makes the heart beat faster,

The wrong move now can lead to disaster,

For the love that you pledged is caught in a trance

And the pieces move swiftly as if in dance.

The rhythm of love paints music on the soul,

The blessings of passion await you in your goal…"

(from A Valentine’s Message for Backgammon Lovers by Myron Edwards, originally published on American Chronicle for 2007 Valentine’s Day)

Play65 Valentine’s Day Tournament

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

Play65 is inviting you for a special backgammon tournament for Valentine’s Day

DON’T PLAY WITH YOURSELF ON VALENTINE‘S DAY

PLAY WITH REAL PEOPLE!

The tournament will be on February 13th* at 20:00 GMT

Prize pool starts from $1000 with $300 guaranteed to the winner.

valentine's da y tournament

* Technically Play65 Valentine’s tournament is at Valentine’s Day eve, so you can still play with yourself on Valentine’s Day, buy pink teddy bears, soak your partner’s body with aromatic message oils, go for a moonlit snowshoe tour or a romantic dinner & movie, etc.

Backgammon Photographs by Douglas Ljungkvist

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

Backgammon is the subject of a new series of works by New Yorker photographer Douglas Ljungkvist. He is not interested in documenting the backgammon match itself, thus in his photos you will not see the current position of the game, not the two players facing each other and nor the group of spectators surrounding them.

backgammon photo

Typical backgammon photo from 2009 Monte Carlo championship

What you will get is a close look at the formal elements that assemble the backgammon game, tangible sense of the board’s material; nuanced glance at the players’ hands, as they roll the dice, move the checkers or record the score, and the appearance of the playing surface at the end of the game. 

backgammon photo by Douglas Ljungkvist

backgammon photo by Douglas Ljungkvist© (as all the photos below)

 How do backgammon players stack the checkers while bearing off?

"Photographing a backgammon match per se is visually not very interesting." Ljungkvist told Play65 blog. "Backgammon does, however, offer color combinations, texture and variety of surface materials. I am also interested in studying how a board looks after a match is over. How do people stack the checkers while bearing off? Sometimes chaotic patterns are created by hands at the end of a match by a player expressing his disgust at losing. The result is like the calm after the storm. Who is left standing, how and where?"

backgammon photo by Douglas Ljungkvist

 Eric Steiner’s old beat up backgammon board

Although Ljungkvist’s endeavors in backgammon photography are still at the beginning, his backgammon connection goes back to his childhood, through the vivacious Stockholm scene of the 1980s, and includes winning the Swedish Team Championships and a special heritage backgammon board.

"I started playing backgammon around the age of nine thanks to Swedish poker/backgammon player and gambling legend, Eric Steiner", he recalls, "We visited Marbella, Spain from Sweden often and became friends with Eric, staying at Eric’s beach house on a vacation. At night, Eric would go out to play high stakes money games with rich but not so good players in the upscale Puerto Banus marina. I remember vividly that Eric’s favorite opening move was a 6-1." 

playing backgammon

"My first backgammon board was one that Eric gave to me during one of those visits. It was a large but pretty beat up board that I used for the next ten years or so playing mostly against my sister and mom. Some years later we had moved from Gothenburg to Stockholm and I learned there was a backgammon scene with tournaments and weekly league games. People would make fun of my beat up old board until I told them who had given it to me. I wish I still had that board. I eventually invested in a Dal Negro board that I purchased in Rome, Italy and still use to this day." 

Swedish backgammon days

"In Stockholm my interest in backgammon grew and I attended tournaments regularly and played in a weekly league with ten teams each in two divisions. Though I would play the Swedish Open and some other tournaments around Scandinavia, I was never a star player. I was on the team that won the Swedish Team Championships that, the weakest among formidable players like Robert Lindbom, Johan Moazed, and Ulf Ring. My biggest contribution to the team was probably when I clinched the deciding semi-final and final matches to claim the championships in the late 80’s. The legendary two time World Champion Jorgen Granstedt was on the very first league team that I played on. 

Backgammon and Ping Pong

Ljungkvist interest in backgammon started fading upon his move to New York in 1990, and came alive again in recent times, while working on his ping pong project, "partly a formalist still life study of space, design, color, space, and form. I realized there were certain visual similarities between backgammon and ping pong that interested me, the limited boarded playing surfaces, colors, space, and shapes; the rectangular board, triangular pips, round checkers, and square dice." 

backgammon ping pong

"The backgammon board does not have enough scale to make the venue or combination of the board and its environment interesting in the same way a ping pong table can do in the urban landscape or in an interesting inside venue. Backgammon offers more color combinations, texture, and variety of surface materials compared to ping pong."

Backgammon future plans and alternative rule

"Once I complete my ping pong project I hope to find more time to photograph backgammon, both on locations where people gather and play, as well as creating conceptual scenes in my studio. I might explore some tightly composed player portraits during matches representing various states of emotion; the poker face, disappointment, exhilaration, disgust, fear, intimidation, counting, analyzing, and more." 

backgammon image

"I’m excited to play backgammon again. I definitely have as a goal to play the World Backgammon Championships in Monaco at some point. Backgammon is a good fit for my personality. It is faster than chess and good for someone who likes variety and can get bored easily. I am a feel player evaluating situations more by position, experience, and objectives than equity or pip counts. This is probably also my biggest weakness. Generally, I am a better match than money game player. Now, if only I could get in from the bar on two and three point boards. My dream is that they would change the rules so that each player would roll for the other."