Friday, November 09, 2007

Chessboxing heavyweight wins by checkmate

An unlikely simile, but one that could well be the motivational motto of Frank Stoldt who has just been crowned world champion of a unique hybrid sport: chessboxing.

Stoldt, a 37-year-old German, defeated American David "Double D" Depto in front of 1,200 raucous fans in Berlin this week in what is being touted as the ultimate in physical and mental combat.



After parrying the American's punches in the ring, Stoldt, a policeman known to his fans as "Anti-terror", clinched the light-heavyweight title with a checkmate late in the seventh round.



The rules of the game are simple. Bouts are composed of a maximum of 11 alternating rounds of chess and boxing, with checkmates or knock-outs resulting in instant victory.

Fighters can also triumph if the boxing match is stopped by the referee, or if their opponent times-out at the chess board. Chess rounds last 4 minutes each, and each player has a maximum of twelve minutes to make all their moves.

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