It’s not really my inclination to write about non-quiz games, but I feel I should make an exception in the case of “Chess Masters – The Endgame” I mentioned it yesterday when complaining about the BBC postponing the last Mastermind semi-final while keeping this show in place. After all, it wasn’t me who decided to make this show the filling in a Mastermind – UC sandwich. If you don’t want me to comment on it then keep it the hell away from Quizzy Mondays.
Let me state my lack of chess credentials before I start.
Draughts was my game when I was five years old – nobody in the house could beat
me. Apart from my Dad, that is. I never once managed to beat him and Lord
knows, I tried. Mind you, he never beat me at Scrabble, so fair’s fair. I knew
about chess from reading “Alice Through The Looking Glass”, and I was desperate
to learn how to play it. Here I have to pay tribute to my father. He saved his
cigarette coupons and traded them in for a chess set. A family friend taught me
the moves and the point of the game, but this was a bit of a waste since nobody
else in the family could play.
I began playing against school friends and it didn’t take
that long to convince me that this was not necessarily going to be my game. I’ve
played sporadically since, but have never been much cop. So bear that in mind.
So let’s get down to Chess Masters – the Endgame. My first
thought was that this was a bit of a rum old show. Now that the final has been
and gone I see no reason to change this assessment. I mean, I’m not entirely
sure who it was for. Yeah, there was a spark of interest in the game when “Queen’s
Gambit” became an unexpected Netflix hit. But come on, that was five years ago!
Have I learned much more about chess? Well, I already knew that it is a
psychological game, a fact that all concerned with the show seemed desperate to
ram home with monotonous regularity. I can’t see that it will have convinced
many who don’t know much about the game, that it really is a great game – which
it is. But somehow I can’t see it having had great appeal for those who love and
understand the game either. In a nutshell:-
-
Although games were played in each show, you
got to see very little of each.
-
As much time as was given to the games was also
given to chess puzzles, used to eliminate some of the contenders. In case we
might be tempted to try to work it out for ourselves Grand Master David Howells
would explain the solution before even showing us the contenders giving it a
go.
-
There was a ridiculous attempt to ‘sex – up’
the games. Each of our contestants was given a nickname – The Unruly Knight –
The Chess Princess – Jet – Wolf (alright, those last two were really original
gladiators.) Co-expert, Anthony Mathurin so relentlessly oversold every move
that each contender made that you just wished someone would have chucked a
bucket of water over him and told him to calm down.
-
It was presented by Sue Perkins – undoubtedly an
intelligent and witty person, but she seemed to be in full frothy and light
Bake-off mode.
I felt, to be honest, a bit
patronised by the show. It seemed to me to say that we, the audience, do not
possess the attention span to be able to take more than five minutes of actual
chess at a time.
The sad thing is that a TV
chess competition is not actually a terrible idea. But if you’re going to do
it, then do one game per show, and credit the audience with having the attention
span to follow it for 20 – 25 minutes.
The BBC has an admirable
record of allowing a show a couple of series to find its audience, so Chess
Masters: The Endgame might be back for a second series. Without major surgery
to the format though I wouldn’t put money on it getting a third.
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