Jude Acers: Difference between revisions
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|image= Jude Acers.jpg |
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|birthname = Jude Frazier Acers |
|birthname = Jude Frazier Acers |
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|country = |
|country = United States |
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|birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1944|4|6}} |
|birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1944|4|6}} |
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|birth_place = [[Long Beach, California]],<br/> United States |
|birth_place = [[Long Beach, California]],<br/> United States |
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|death_date = |
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|title = [[Chess master]] |
|title = [[Chess master|Master]] |
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|worldchampion = |
|worldchampion = |
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|womensworldchampion = |
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|rating = 2226 (September 2009) |
|rating = 2226 (September 2009) |
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|peakrating = 2399 (USCF) |
|peakrating = 2399 (USCF) |
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'''Jude Frazier Acers'''<ref>[http://judeacers.com/?page_id=9 Acers website]</ref> (born April 6, 1944 [[Long Beach, California]]) is a [[chess]] player best known for playing against all comers in a [[New Orleans]] downtown gazebo while wearing a red beret. A longtime resident of Louisiana, he claims to have been the first New Orleans native [[chess master]] of comparable strength since [[Paul Morphy]].{{Citation needed|date=January 2009}} |
'''Jude Frazier Acers'''<ref>[http://judeacers.com/?page_id=9 Acers website]</ref> (born April 6, 1944 [[Long Beach, California]]) is a [[chess]] player best known for playing against all comers in a [[New Orleans]] downtown gazebo while wearing a red beret. A longtime resident of Louisiana, he claims to have been the first New Orleans native [[chess master]] of comparable strength since [[Paul Morphy]].{{Citation needed|date=January 2009}} |
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Revision as of 02:27, 29 October 2013
Jude Acers | |
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Full name | Jude Frazier Acers |
Country | United States |
Born | Long Beach, California, United States | April 6, 1944
Title | Master |
FIDE rating | 2226 (September 2009) |
Peak rating | 2399 (USCF) |
Jude Frazier Acers[1] (born April 6, 1944 Long Beach, California) is a chess player best known for playing against all comers in a New Orleans downtown gazebo while wearing a red beret. A longtime resident of Louisiana, he claims to have been the first New Orleans native chess master of comparable strength since Paul Morphy.[citation needed]
In addition to being a player, he has written or contributed to several chess books. In 2008 he is working on The Road which will be a book about his chess tours. He is also known for being a great showman, touring the country giving simultaneous chess exhibitions. He was twice the world record holder of having played the most opponents in a simultaneous exhibition. First against 117 opponents (1973, Lloyd Center, Portland, Oregon), then against 179 opponents (1976, Mid Island Plaza, Long Island, New York). The records were certified by the Guinness Book of World Records.
Questions have arisen concerning his actual strength at chess. He got his U.S. Chess Federation (USCF) rating up to 2399, just one point below Senior Master, by playing matches against players who had never played rated chess before. This led the USCF Executive Director Ed Edmondson to freeze his rating at 2399 until he played in an open tournament.[citation needed]
In 1995, a new rating statistician, apparently unfamiliar with the "Jude Acers Rule", added one point to his rating, giving him a rating of exactly 2400. [citation needed]
Ever since, for the last nearly 40 years, Acers has not played in a rated open tournament until the World Senior Championship held in September 2007 in Gmunden, Austria. Acers defeated veteran master Bill Hook of the British Virgin Islands in the first round. Acers' recent result at the 17th World Senior Chess Championship, with a FIDE performance of 2289, should help to confirm his playing strength.
Acers barely survived Hurricane Katrina and lived in a displaced persons camp for some time. As the city recovered, he returned to New Orleans and resumed his customary chess table in the French Quarter.
He annotated many American master-level games, along with Louis Ciamarra, for the Yugoslav-published series Chess Informant.
Books
The Italian Gambit (and) A Guiding Repertoire For White - E4! ISBN 1-55369-604-2
References
External links
- Jude Acers rating card at FIDE
- Jude Acers player profile and games at Chessgames.com
- Jude Acers results at the World Senior Championship
- Jude Acers USCF rating
- American chess icon hit by Katrina from Chessbase.com
- The Amazing & Slightly Irregular Jude Acers by Derek Bridges Extensive biographical portrait