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Mind Sports Organisation

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Twixter (talk | contribs) at 23:46, 26 July 2009 (→‎External links: added a working link to a link for the 2009 Olympiad). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.


MSO logo
MSO logo

The Mind Sports Organisation (MSO) is a vehicle for promoting mental-skill games, including Contract Bridge, Chess, Go, Mastermind, and Scrabble. Since 1997 it has organised annual Mind Sports Olympiads in the UK, and has been involved in supporting a number of similar events elsewhere, in particular in Milan, Italy.

Structure

Initially the MSO was supported by some substantial corporate sponsorship, and was under the control of a company MSO Worldwide (MSOW), which had money advanced by venture capitalists (the money came mostly from Swedish sources). The second Mind Sports Olympiad saw the largest sponsor withdraw, and from that time onwards financial problems dogged the MSO . The board running it included David Levy, Tony Buzan, and Raymond Keene, David Levy being the original founder of the MSO concept.

A worsening financial position caused difficulties for MSOW, and schemes to become a leading force in games promotion worldwide came to little, as the invested money (exactly £1,000,000) was spent. This was the era of failed dotcoms, and MSOW went into voluntary liquidation in May 2001. At that point David Levy was the most important figure left in MSOW, Tony Buzan having withdrawn, and Ray Keene having acrimoniously split from the board early in 2000 . Keene was more interested in promoting high-profile events — he has been close to Garry Kasparov — and he left to organise the 2000 world chess championship between Kasparov and Kramnik .

Mind Sports Olympiads

The first Mind Sports Olympiad was held in London's Royal Festival Hall in 1997. Four more annual events were held in successive Augusts in London locations, with the largest being held at Alexandra Palace in 2000. The event moved to Loughborough in 2002, and then to Manchester in 2003-5. The 2006 event returned to London, 2007 saw a move to Potter's Bar just outside London, 2008 sees another return to London, this time at the Royal Horticultural Halls from 15 to 25 August.

The main 2004 event featured a separate event for schools, featuring competitions and activities in chess, Go, quizzes and intelligence puzzles. Smaller satellite events now include a popular meeting at Cambridge.

At MSO tournaments, the Decamentathlon is a composite event in which players compete in ten separate mind sports: memory skills, mental calculation, IQ, contract bridge, chess, othello, 8 by 8 draughts, Go, Mastermind, and creative thinking.

The MSO consists mainly of single event competitions in the above and other disciplines. Most of these are for the nominal title of Olympiad champion, though some trademarked games are authorised by the game designer and publishers as the official world championships. Medals, and more recently trophies, are awarded for gold, silver and bronze positions in each competition, with similar awards for the top juniors in each event. In early Olympiads sponsorship allowed for generous financial prizes to go with many of the events, in recent years such prizes have been limited to a very small number of events, usually as a result of specific outside sponsorship for that discipline.

See also

World Mind Sports Games

Wikipedia blocked me from providing a direct link or listing the URL, but the cz site is the only place on the Net which has the 2009 schedule and information. The official MSO domain has expired. --Twixter (talk) 23:45, 26 July 2009 (UTC)