Daniel J. King

Daniel King
Full name Daniel John King
Country England
Born 28 August 1963 (1963-08-28) (age 48)
London, England
Title Grandmaster
FIDE rating 2466 (July 2010)
Peak rating 2560 (July 1990)

Daniel John King (born 28 August 1963, Beckenham, England) is an English chess grandmaster, writer, coach, journalist and broadcaster.

Contents

Chess career

When at his most active as a player of the game, he made solid progress, picking up the International Master title in 1982 and the Grandmaster title in 1989. King won minor tournaments around the world and recorded promising results at some of the more prestigious events, for example 4th= at Bern 1987, 4th= British Championship 1987, 1st= (with Boris Gelfand) at the Sydney Open 1988, 5th= London 1988, 2nd= Dortmund 1988 and 2nd (after Bent Larsen) London 1989. At the Geneva Young Masters in 1990, he shared first place with the Australian, Ian Rogers. There then followed a parallel media career that spanned the presenter, commentator, reporter, analyst spectrum and this most likely impacted on his playing career, by limiting the opportunity for dedicated research and study. Nevertheless, as a professional player for more than 20 years, he has continued to play chess at a high level, including the top leagues of the Bundesliga and 4NCL. In 1996, he was the winner of the Bunratty Masters, an Irish tournament with an impressive list of previous winners, including John Nunn, Sergei Tiviakov and Peter Svidler.

King also achieved international team honours, representing England at the European Team Championship (Haifa 1989) and at the Reykjavik VISA Chess Summit of 1990, the latter being the scene of a celebrated victory over the Soviet team and a team silver medal.[1]

Generally known as 'Dan' or 'Danny', he is a well-respected trainer and a coach to many of the UK's brightest chess prospects. An author of more than 15 chess books, his subject matter has ranged from the preparatory Winning with the Najdorf to the self-tutoring How Good is your Chess and Test Your Chess.

Media interests

He became well known nationally for his coverage of the World Chess Championship 1993, live from the Savoy in London, on Channel 4 television. The programme, hosted by Carol Vorderman, contained expert commentary and analysis from King, Ray Keene, Jon Speelman and Fritz, the chess-playing computer program. Against all the odds, the show struck a chord with the British public and showed King to be a likeable, media-friendly personality. It was even reported that he had become the choice of 'thinking women' across the UK, as they watched in large numbers, whether chess-literate or not. Television work continued to come his way and he contributed to three further world championships broadcast by the BBC, ESPN, Eurosport, STAR TV (Asia) and other networks.[2] He covered the controversial Kasparov versus Deep Blue match in 1997 and for four months of 1999, provided daily MSN commentary on the high profile Kasparov versus The World game. In October 2002, he was a key part of the elite analytical team engaged in the prominent 'man versus machine' contest, Brains in Bahrain.[2]

His growing affinity with television created other opportunities too; he was a games consultant for the Cilla Black (ITV) show Moment of Truth, he scripted and presented two half hour chess documentaries on radio and has, over many years, produced instructional chess videos and DVDs for GM Video and ChessBase, among others. In the mid-nineties he appeared in the UK advertising campaign for Audi/Volkswagen cars.

In the field of journalism, King writes regular columns in CHESS magazine (How Good Is Your Chess?) and Schach 64, the leading journals of the UK and Germany. Since 2006, he has co-hosted a regular Monday chess column with Ronan Bennett in The Guardian, which seeks to be instructive, rather than topical. Through test positions taken from actual games, their amateur and expert assessments of the possible continuations are discussed and compared. It has been supposed that Nigel Short's column was axed to make way for the new feature and the justification for this change has been the subject of some debate in chess circles.[3] Daniel King lives in Teddington, Middlesex.

Selected Bibliography

Notes

References

External links