The
Knoxville
News Sentinel
King of the
checkerboard
Halls
man, 79, takes game seriously as he takes on all comers
By AMY
MCRARY, amymcrary@comcast.net
October 6, 2005
NORRIS - Checkers seems like such a simple game - unless
your opponent is 79-year-old Robert Butler.
Play the Halls resident and
you're soon left with one, maybe two pieces trapped on the checkerboard.
He's got at least three kings on the board and a slight smile on his face.
That's the way
Butler beat one person after another Wednesday at the
Museum of Appalachia's
Tennessee Fall Homecoming. The Norris museum's old-time festival with more
than 150 craftspeople and bluegrass, folk, gospel and traditional music
performances continues through Sunday.
Butler
has come to homecoming for years. He sits at a table and plays checkers
against any and all challengers. He almost always wins.
On Wednesday, he needed
only minutes to beat each opponent. Few even earned a king; most were
victims of his double and triple jumps.
"They make mistakes. I
can't help where they move; they do it to themselves," he said. "If
your opponent doesn't make mistakes, you can't win."
Though he's won the
Tennessee
championship and the American Checkers Federation's major division, the
retired electrician downplays his skill. "I've lost a lot of games of
checkers. I don't claim to be great."
His strategy is
straightforward. "Swap down till you have two (pieces) and they have one."
Losing pieces to the other player doesn't worry him. "All you want to
do is win."
Most of
Butler's Wednesday challengers were children who came to the
festival's student day. He'll play all comers today
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J. MILES CARY
NEWS SENTINEL
Isaac
Wilson, 13, left, an eighth-grader from Corbin, Ky., studies the
checkerboard for his next move as Robert Butler, a former national checker
champ, finishes a move.
Butler’s
opponents and the size of the crowd of onlookers changed, but the outcome
remained mostly the same: The former champion cleared the board of his
opponents’ pieces in about a dozen moves.
through Sunday. Some
contests against adults won't last much longer than those played Wednesday.
"I play these kids kind of
hard," he said. "But it's a hard game and they might as well learn while
they are young."
Butler
began playing when he was about 9. Maybe checker smarts are genetic. His
grandfather was a Cocke County champ. And he started against two uncles who
also were top players.
"They beat me, like I'm
beating these kids, and they'd laugh at me. I told myself, 'Self, one day
I'm going to beat them.' "
So he studied the game,
read books about it and practiced by playing better players. "It took me 20
years, but I beat both my uncles."
Amy McRary may be reached
at 865-342-6437.
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