At the end of the month of May, Google News served 95 stories about chess. Seven news sources accounted for two or more stories, as shown in the chart on the left.
As it has every single month since I started this monthly Yahoo series, Chess.com dominated the chess news. In second place for the eighth straight month was Chessbase. The chart shows five stories for Chessbase.com, but there were really six, with ChessBase India adding another story, just like last month.
Third place on the list went to a newcomer: YouTube. Of the five stories, the video title that caught my eye was:-
- 2023-05-30: Chess Champions to play in Germany in August (youtube.com; Citizen TV Kenya)
No, they're not talking here about the 'Dortmund Sparkassen Chess Meeting', which will take place at the end of June. The video description informed,
The Kenya National Chess Champions KCB Chess Club have begun their 2023 campaign on a high scooping 4 wins and a draw against Nacha Kings in the premier league opening match played at KCB Ruaraka Sports Club.
The German tournament in August will be the 'World Teams Championship'. I have more to say about this month's Yahoos, but first I have to attend to some important offline business. Yes, Virginia, there is a whole world offline.
[Yahoos (mainstream news stories about chess) are derived from Google News top-100 (or so) stories from the past month.]
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Later: As usual, I'm going with the stories that interest me the most. Other people will pick other stories, but since I'm writing the post, I get to choose. The first story is the latest development on a dark theme reported in a previous Yahoos' post, Downstreamer Yahoos (March 2023):-
- 2023-05-23: US Chess Final Statement About Alejandro Ramirez Investigation (uschess.org) 'US Chess launched an investigation in late 2022 when it received formal complaints from two individuals alleging sexual misconduct by GM Alejandro Ramirez.'
The second of my picks is related to a post on my World Championship blog, C30 Zonal Hybrid Events (March 2022), which itself was the culmination of a series of posts on hybrid tournaments:-
- 2023-05-10: Hess Asks FIDE To Address Suspicious Rating Gains In Hybrid Events (chess.com) 'The US Grandmaster and Chess.com commentator published a long post on Twitter regarding "hybrid" events, a format where games are played online, but the players themselves can be physically playing from a public place such as a club, federation headquarters, or a hotel, but supervised by an arbiter.'
The next story was the most interesting of the 44 stories that emanated from news sources with a single story for the month:-
- 2023-05-30: In Forex Trading, Do Chess Players Have an Edge? (kiplinger.com) 'Both require a significant amount of strategy and the ability to recognize patterns, manage risk and control impulses.' [Forex = Foreign Exchange; i.e. currencies]
Finally, my last choice was the start of a Chessbase series ('Wilhelm Steinitz') within a series ('Chess History in a Nutshell') within another series ('Understanding before Moving') that has been running on the site since late-2020:-
- 2023-05-28: Understanding before Moving 127: Chess history in a nutshell 9 (chessbase.com) 'Wilhelm Steinitz 1'
For the other stories in the same series, see Tag: Herman Grooten (ditto; 'Herman Grooten is an International Master, a renowned trainer and the author of several highly acclaimed books about chess training and chess strategy.').