Chessboxing
History
Rubingh’s idea to create a new sport fusing the two disciplines, chess and boxing, originates
from the 1992 comic Froid Équateur—written by French comic book artist Enki Bilal(born Enes
Bilalović)—that portrays a chessboxing world championship. In the comic book
version however, the opponents fight an entire boxing match before they face
each other in a game of chess. Finding this to be impractical, Rubingh
developed the idea further until it turned into the competitive sport that
chessboxing is today with alternating rounds of chess and boxing and a detailed
set of rules and regulations. An earlier version of combining chess and
boxing was said to have taken place in a boxing club outside London in the late
1970s. The Robinson brothers were in the habit of playing a round of chess
against one another after a training session at their boxing club. However, no
direct correlation can be made between the Robinson brothers’ chess playing and
chessboxing. The same goes for the Kung-Fu movie Mystery of Chessboxing (1979) as well as the Wu-Tang Clan's song
"Da Mystery of Chessboxing" (1993).
The early years
The first chessboxing competition took place in Berlin in 2003.
That same year, the first world championship fight was held in Amsterdam in
cooperation with the Dutch Boxing Association as well as the Dutch Chess Federation and under the auspices of the World Chess Boxing Organisation (WCBO) that was founded in Berlin shortly
before. Dutch middleweight fighters Iepe Rubingh and Jean Louis Veenstra faced
each other in the ring. After his opponent exceeded the chess time limit,
Rubingh won the fight in the 11th round going down in the history books as the
first ever World Chess Boxing Champion. The same goes for the Chess Boxing Club Berlin,
created in the following year (2004), that is the first of its kind making
Berlin the birthplace of chessboxing.
2005–2008: the first champions
A picture of the chess-portion of a chess
boxing match in 2008.
Two years after the first world championship, the first European
Chess Boxing Championship took place in Berlin on October 1, 2005. Present day
chessboxing commentator Andreas Dilschneider was defeated by Tihomir Atanassov
Dovramadjiev when he resigned in the 7th round (chess), crowning the latter the
first European Chess Boxing Champion.[7] In 2006, more than 800 spectators filled the
Gloria Theatre in Cologne for the world championship qualification fight
between Zoran Mijatovic and Frank Stoldt. The 37-year-old Frank Stoldt, former
UN-Peacekeeper in Kosovo and Afghanistan, won when his opponent resigned in
chess in the 7th round. After qualifying himself to fight for the title in
2006, Frank Stoldt went up against the American David Depto in November 2007 in
Berlin, to fight for the first world championship title in the light
heavyweight division. More than 800 tickets were sold for the event at the Tape
Club in Berlin and made it the biggest chessboxing title fights by then. Frank
Stoldt defeated Depto in the 7th round, and thereby cemented Berlin’s status as
the leading city in the chessboxing world becoming the first German world
champion.
2008–2011: the chessboxing family grows
Chessboxing first received credit from the international Chess
Federation FIDE, in April 2008; its president, Kirsan Ilyumzhinov, took part in
a chessboxing demo fight in Elista.[9]At the same time, the chessboxing community
began to grow globally at an even faster rate. In 2008, chessboxing clubs were
founded in London and Krasnoyarsk. Created in 2009, the Los Angeles Chessboxing
Club was the first of its kind in the United States and was directly followed
by the New York Chessboxing Club in 2010. The Boxwerk in Munich also opened in
2010 and offers chessboxing training. In addition to the WCBO’s initially
European and then later world championships taking place worldwide, the scene
at the London Chessboxing Club grew where chessboxing events take place on a
regular basis. In 2011, the first international club matchup took place with
Berlin and London in the ring—London came out the winner with 2:1 won bouts.
2011–2014: chess boxing turns professional and goes worldwide
In 2011, the WCBO and with it the global chessboxing community
made the biggest leap forward in its development to date with the foundation of
the Chessboxing Organisation of India and its expansion in Asia, including also
Chessboxing China and the Chessboxing Organisation of Iran which were founded
in 2012. Furthermore, the third chessboxing organisation in the United States,
USA Chessboxing, was founded in 2011 and the European movement was being
reinforced by the foundation of the Italian Chessboxing Federation in 2012.
What's more, the professionalisation of chessboxing started to take shape in
the second decade of the 21st century. In addition to the WCBO that became a
registered association under German law in 2014, the Chess Boxing Global
Marketing CBGM GmbH—called Chess Boxing Global, CBG—was founded, that as of May
2013, is responsible for organising all of the professional chessboxing fights
worldwide and above all, for the organisation of the Chess Boxing World
Championships.
The Chess Boxing Organisation India was founded in 2011 by
kickboxing official and former Indian kickboxing and karate champion Montu Das.
With this, the growth of chessboxing in Asia gained momentum with the first
Chess Boxing Organisation in Western Asia already being built in the following
year by another experienced official in the kickboxing world: Fereydoun Pouya
started the Chess Boxing Organisation Iran.
At the same time, the process of turning chessboxing
professional reached a milestone: The 2013 World Championship in Moscow was the
first chessboxing event organised and marketed by Chess Boxing Global. With
three world championship fights in one night, more than 1200 spectators and a
standard of fighting never seen before, the first CBG event set new standards
in the history of chessboxing with Leonid Chernobaev leading the way. He has
been able to make a name for himself with more than 15 years of chess playing
experience and in the boxing world, as Marco
Huck's and Yoan
Pablo Hernández’ sparring partner and having fought over 200 amateur
bouts. He won the light heavyweight title against Indian fighter Shailesh
Tripathi after a technical knockout in the 8th round (boxing). Sven Rooch
secured his title in the middleweight class division winning against Jonatan
Rodriguez Vega after the Spaniard resigned in the 7th round (chess) and Russian
Nikolay Sazhin won the heavyweight title against Gianluca Sirci by checkmate.
Thus, Sazhin (Heavyweight), Chernobaev (Light heavyweight) and Rooch
(Middleweight) would all go down in Chess Boxing history as the first Chess
Boxing Global World Champions. They are also the first professional world
champions in chessboxing ever.
In terms of its development into a mass sport, there was much
success in 2013 and early 2014 for the chessboxing world. There were more
competitors in the second and third Indian Championships in summer 2013 and
early 2014 than in any chessboxing events ever before, with more than 245
fighters varying in both age and weight class, taking place in Salem and
Jodhpur, respectively. Furthermore, the chessboxing community in
London—under the command of London Chessboxing and the WCBA—has continued to
grow constantly since 2011 and by now stages chessboxing events for 800 or more
spectators on a regular basis 4–5 times a year at the Scala, King's Cross.
2015: Chessboxing today
Chessboxing events in 2015 were produced by London
Chessboxing under the WCBA—two events at Scala, Kings
Cross in London.
The second event in June 2015, The Grandmaster Bash!, saw the British, European
and IBF light welterweight
world champion Terry
Marsh fight and defeat Dymer
Agasaryan. Terry
Marsh (57) is the first
professional boxer to compete in Chessboxing and has competed in 3 fights since June 2014
in London and still remains unbeaten in his career. The
fight was one of the most compelling to watch as it went the distance, normal
time ending in stalemate. After a deciding round of boxing Terry
Marsh was awarded victory on
points.
Rules
How a chessboxing fight works
A chessboxing fight consists of 11 rounds, 6 rounds of chess and
5 rounds of boxing. Chess and boxing rounds alternate, beginning and ending
with a round of chess. Each round lasts three minutes, regardless of whether it
involves chess or boxing. The total amount of chess playing time is 18 minutes,
making it 9 minutes each player. After each chess round, the exact setup is
digitally recorded and then repositioned before the following chess round. The
breaks in between the chess and boxing rounds usually last 60 seconds. The
duration of the rounds and overall fight time in amateur chessboxing fights can
change to some degree, as in for example youth tournaments and exhibition
fights.
Decisions
In a chessboxing match, a competitor may win in regulation time
by any of the following:
·
Knockout (boxing
rounds)
·
Technical Knockout
(boxing rounds)
·
Checkmate (chess
rounds)
·
Exceeding of the time
limit by the opponent (chess rounds)
·
Disqualification of
his opponent by the referee e.g. due to inactivity due to overextended playing
time (chess or boxing rounds following multiple warnings)
·
Opponent resigns (chess
or boxing rounds)
In the case that neither of the chessboxers win in regulation
time and the chess game ends in a draw, the fighter who is ahead on boxing
points wins the chessboxing bout. In case the scoreboard is also tied, the
fighter that used the black chess pieces will be named the winner. This has not
yet occurred in practice.
Weight classes
Currently, the following weight classes apply to professional
chessboxing events of Chess Boxing Global (as of October 2014):
Men (17 years+)
·
Lightweight: max.
154.324 lbs (70 kg)
·
Middleweight: max.
176.37 lbs (80 kg)
·
Light heavyweight:
max. 198.416 lbs (90 kg)
·
Heavyweight: 198.416+
lbs (90+ kg)
Women (17 years+)
·
Lightweight: max.
55 kg
·
Middleweight: max.
65 kg
·
Light heavyweight:
max. 75 kg
·
Heavyweight: 75+ kg
For amateur and youth chessboxing bouts under the flag of the
WCBO weight classes are graduated in 5-kilo-steps. In exception event hosts can
classify into 10-kilo-steps.
Particular requirements and training
A chessboxer must have strong skills in both chess and boxing in
order to be permitted to compete in a professional chessboxing fight. The
current minimum requirements to fight in a Chess Boxing Global event include an Elo rating of 1600 and a record of at least 50 amateur
bouts fought in boxing or another similar martial arts. One deciding factor in
chessboxing is that the fighters have to mainly train in speed chess, seeing as
the requirements in speed chess are different than those in a classical game of
chess. However, chessboxing is not only the ability to master both sports but
above all, being able to withstand the constant switch from a full contact
sport to a thinking sport, round after round. After three minutes of boxing,
pulses are racing, yet the opponents have to face each other at the chessboard
barely having taken a break, and have to then perform with calm and think
tactically. This switch becomes increasingly hard for the athlete as the fight
goes on and he becomes tired.
In order to train these skills, a specialised chessboxing
training is used, in which physical interval training forms are combined with
blitz or speed chess games. Thereby the fighters adapt the rhythm of a
chessboxing bout. For instance exercises like "track chess" and
"stair chess" in which training partners will play an 18-minute game
of speed chess over six rounds with intensive running exercises in between e.g.
400m sprints or stair sprints. Other common methods of training combine speed
chess games with strength exercises such as push-ups. The classic chessboxing
training is a box sparring combined with a game of speed chess.
Champions
Between 2003–2013, the chessboxing world championships were
organised by the WCBO. As of 2013, they take the form of professional events
under the auspices of Chess Boxing Global.
WCBO (2003–2012)
World champions
·
2003: Iepe Rubingh Netherlands - Middleweight, in Amsterdam against Jean
Louis Veenstra Netherlands
European champions
·
2005: Tihomir
Dovramadjiev Bulgaria – Light heavyweight, in Berlin against Andreas
Dilschneider Germany
CBG (starting 2013)
Major organisations
World Chess Boxing Organisation
The World Chess Boxing Organisation e.V. (WCBO) is the leading umbrella organisation
for international amateur chessboxing. It is based in Berlin, Germany and
legally recognized as a non-profit organisation by the German Government. Iepe
Rubingh founded the World Chess Boxing Organisation directly after the first
chessboxing fight in 2003. Its goal was, and still is, to establish the WCBO as
the worldwide organisation for the sport of chessboxing. The WCBO’s aim is to
collect and link all of the active chessboxing clubs worldwide under one roof.
It was legally recognised as a registered association by Berlin’s district
court in 2014. The WCBO was the official organizer of the chessboxing world
championships until it recognised Chess Boxing Global, in accordance with its
statute, as the exclusive marketing agent for professional chessboxing fights,
in 2013. Since then, the WCBO has been focusing on the organisation of the mass
sport chessboxing and its further development. Chessboxing inventor and WCBO
founder Iepe Rubingh, is
also the current chairman. The first honorary member became Comic book artist Enki Bilal, whose
comic provided the inspiration behind the invention of chessboxing.
WCBO member associations
·
Chess Boxing Club
Berlin (CBCB)
·
Chess Boxing Organisation
of India (CBOI)
·
Chess Boxing
Organisation of Iran (CBOIR)
·
Italian Chess Boxing
Federation (FISP)
·
China Chessboxing
(CBCN)
·
USA Chessboxing
·
Russian Chess Boxing
Organisation
·
Mexican Chess Boxing
Organisation
World Chess Boxing Association
The World Chessboxing Association (WCBA) is a legally recognized umbrella
organisation for chessboxing. It was founded in 2013 and is based in London,
England. English heavyweight chessboxing champion, Tim Woolgar, is its
current president. The World Chessboxing Association originated from the London
Chessboxing Club after having separated from the World Chess Boxing
Organisation (WCBO). It was founded by Tim Woolgar in 2013 in order to
accelerate the development of chessboxing. WBCO champions are also managed and
recognised by the WCBA.
WCBA member
·
UK Chessboxing
Association
·
Russian Chessboxing
Organisation
·
Italian Chessboxing
Federation
·
Spanish Chessboxing
Association
London Chessboxing
London Chessboxing is a brand under which the sport of chessboxing has been
promoted since 2008 in London, United Kingdom.
Although the sport has been practiced in London since 1978, the home of Chessboxing in London today is
Islington Boxing Club where London Chessboxing host regular training
sessions.
The first ever Chessboxing event hosted in the UK under the
brand was at Bethnal Green Working Men's club in Hackney by Tim Woolgar on the 15th of August 2008. Other notable
venues include Chelsea Old Town Hall, The Grange Hotel in St Pauls and the Royal
Albert Hall. Presently their events are hosted at Scala, King’s Cross,London and York
Hall, London.
Chess Boxing Global
Chess Boxing Global (CBG) is a marketing agency responsible for
professional chessboxing fights and all commercial activities affiliated with
the sport of chessboxing. It is officially the only marketing agency for
professional chessboxing recognised by the WCBO and takes on
assignments such as organizing world championships for and marketing the
profiles of professional athletes. Shortly after being founded by Iepe Rubingh
in Berlin in 2013, CBG gained attention thanks to Enki Bilal auctioning off one
of his paintings in Paris on February 23, 2013. The auctioned painting, that
shows an artistic depiction of a chessboxer, was able to generate 174,000 Euro
for CBG. The first world championship under the auspices of Chess Boxing Global
took place in Moskow, Russia in 2013 before 1200 spectators. Professional
athletes from all over the world fight each other under the slogan, “A quest
for the smartest and toughest man on the planet.
Current champions (as of October 2014)
·
Featherweight: Greg
Foakes United
States
·
Middleweight: Sven
Rooch Germany
·
Light heavyweight:
Leonid Chernobaev Belarus
·
Heavyweight: Nikolay
Sazhin Russia
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