Nordic backgammon competition hailed as the world’s toughest

Home players are always a challenge, says visiting Brit

Yesterday marked the fourth and final day of the 27th Nordic Open backgammon tournament, which this year was held at the Radisson Blu hotel in Amager, Copenhagen. The Denmark-hosted event, claims one of its competitors, is recognised as being the  “toughest tournament” on the world circuit.

“All the Danish players are really good at backgammon, so you know you’re going to be playing competitors playing for a lot of money and prestige within the backgammon world,” explained Cecilia Sparke, a runner-up in one of the plate tournaments who travelled from the UK to play, to the Weekly Post.

High stakes
In the end, Norwegian player Dagfinn Snarheim surprised the favourites (all of whom are Japanese) to win the main tournament, taking home prize money of 300,000 kroner.

A large crowd of competitors stayed on to witness the climax of his contest, which he eventually edged 21-20 thanks to a lucky pair of doubles right at the end of the deciding game.

More than luck is needed
However, Sparke, who was knocked out of the main tournament on Friday before ending up in Monday’s plate, is dismissive of how much luck is involved in backgammon.

“The dice are random, but what you do with them isn’t,” she said. “There’s always a chance you’ll get lucky, but the longer the match, the more a person’s skill can outweigh the luck factor.”

Doubling up, in which players can raise the stakes of an ongoing game at an opportune moment, is another element of backgammon often overlooked, contends Sparke.

Sparke, who paid just under 1,500 kroner to take part in the advanced tournament, eventually walked away with four times that amount.

She lost her first match, thereby putting her in a second-chance tournament on Saturday, and then lost her first match again to end up in the third-chance tournament. Thereafter, five victories saw her qualify for a final that she eventually lost 5-1.

 




  • Becoming a stranger in your own country

    Becoming a stranger in your own country

    Many stories are heard about internationals moving to Denmark for the first time. They face hardships when finding a job, a place to live, or a sense of belonging. But what about Danes coming back home? Holding Danish citizenship doesn’t mean your path home will be smoother. To shed light on what returning Danes are facing, Michael Bach Petersen, Secretary General of Danes Worldwide, unpacks the reality behind moving back

  • EU Foreign Ministers meet in Denmark to strategize a forced Russia-Ukraine peace deal

    EU Foreign Ministers meet in Denmark to strategize a forced Russia-Ukraine peace deal

    Foreign ministers from 11 European countries convened on the Danish island of Bornholm on April 28-29 to discuss Nordic-Baltic security, enhanced Russian sanctions, and a way forward for the fraught peace talks between Kyiv and Moscow

  • How small cubes spark great green opportunities: a Chinese engineer’s entrepreneurial journey in Denmark

    How small cubes spark great green opportunities: a Chinese engineer’s entrepreneurial journey in Denmark

    Hao Yin, CEO of a high-tech start-up TEGnology, shares how he transformed a niche patent into marketable products as an engineer-turned-businessman, after navigating early setbacks. “We can’t just wait for ‘groundbreaking innovations’ and risk missing the market window,” he says. “The key is maximising the potential of existing technologies in the right contexts.”

  • Gangs of Copenhagen

    Gangs of Copenhagen

    While Copenhagen is rated one of the safest cities in the world year after year, it is no stranger to organized crime, which often springs from highly professional syndicates operating from the shadows of the capital. These are the most important criminal groups active in the city

  • “The Danish underworld is now more tied to Scandinavia”

    “The Danish underworld is now more tied to Scandinavia”

    Carsten Norton is the author of several books about crime and gangs in Denmark, a journalist, and a crime specialist for Danish media such as TV 2 and Ekstra Bladet.

  • Right wing parties want nuclear power in Denmark

    Right wing parties want nuclear power in Denmark

    For 40 years, there has been a ban on nuclear power in Denmark. This may change after all right-wing parties in the Danish Parliament have expressed a desire to remove the ban.

Connect Club is your gateway to a vibrant programme of events and an international community in Denmark.