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Archive for July, 2009

American winners



CHESS CLASSIC / DAY 5 / SUMMARY

GRENKELEASING Rapid World Championship

Bad Start by the World Champion

By Johannes Fischer



Probably World Champion Vishy Anand has never had a worse start at the Chess Classic. On the first day of the GRENKELEASING Rapid World Championship he lost his first two games and now has to worry about qualifying for the final.



The first game already indicated that Anand was not in top shape. Playing with White against Aronian he used an unusual amount of time in the opening – which, however, seemed to be well invested: Anand managed to secure himself the bishop pair but, as he later explained in the press conference “things were a bit complicated. Therefore I was ready to draw but did not want to sit too passively. But with little time on the clock I went astray.” Which gave Aronian, who the day before had suffered a bitter defeat against Hikaru Nakamura in the final of the Chess960 Rapid World Championship, an important point and a confidence-booster.



Indeed, in chess there is hardly anything as motivating as winning a worse game. Ian Nepomniachtchi definitely knows how this feels. In his first round game against Arkadi Naiditsch he was on the brink of defeat, but Naiditsch found no way to push him over the edge, which allowed Nepomniachtchi to neutralize the enemy threats slowly to achieve a better endgame, which he finally won.



In the second round the young Russian had to face Anand with Black and again Fortune was on his side. Nepomniachtchi opted for the sharp Poisoned Pawn variation of the Najdorf Sicilian and as Anand later admitted in the press conference, „I did not quite know what I was playing and could not clearly remember what to do in this line.“ This blackout of the World Champion gave Nepomniachtchi a better endgame and a second point. With 0 from 2, Anand, however, could not have had a worse start.



That Arkadi Naiditsch did not fare any better was no real consolation. After his unfortunate loss in the first round the German number one lacked the energy to offer significant resistance against a revitalized Aronian. Immediately after the opening Naiditsch went astray and had to give a pawn to prevent worse – but his game was still practically lost.



Demoralized, he did not do much better against Anand in the third round. With White he chose a harmless line against the Caro-Kann and again he lost a pawn right after the opening. And even though Anand, as he remarked at the press conference with a grim sense of humor „almost managed to spoil even this game to a draw”, Black’s extra pawn permitted a certain degree of inaccuracy. Anand scored his first win – which he bitterly needed to keep up his hopes to qualify for the final.



Meanwhile, Nepomniachtchi and Aronian proceeded carefully in their third round game. The Russian in particular did not take any risks. Playing with White he played rather cautiously and it took a pawn sacrifice by Aronian to provide some excitement. However, as the balance was never seriously disturbed the game soon ended in a draw.



Halfway through the tournament Aronian and Nepomniachtchi are 1,5 points ahead of Anand. But despite this bad start one should not write the World Champion off. In the past he again and again proved how good he can cope with critical situations. And after all, Nakamura showed how to do it: after losing the first two games in the Chess960 World Championship he won seven games in a row. Saturday, 18:30, Anand has the chance to catch up. Live transmission on the website. Don’t miss it.



FInET Open / Livingston Chess960 computer world championship

Going once, going twice, going three times, Rybka!



In the FiNet Chess960 Open, Alexander Grischuk won his third Open title in Mainz and in the Livingston Chess960 computer world championship Rybka won her (remember, Rybka is a she) third world title. The program, developed by Vasik Rajlich won the four-game final on Friday 3-1 against Shredder and in the battle for third place DeepSjeng could secure third place in the mini-match against Ikarus.



In the preliminaries, Rybka crushed her opponents and scored an unbelievable “Fischer-like” score of 11,5/12 games. However, in the exhibition blitz Rybka lost her first game this week and it became obvious that the program is not unbeatable. In the first game of the final against Shredder, the German program possibly had a winning position, but Rybka found some tactical resources and even won the game in the end. Shredder-father Stefan Meyer-Kahlen commented: “The problem is that Rybka often finds these spectacular tactical escapes and in this game my opponent possibly searched deeper than Shredder”. In the other games Shredder had chances as well and all games were hard-fought. In the end Rybka won the final 3-1 (+2=2-0) and Rybka brainchild Vasik Rajlich received his third trophy from Chess Tigers treasurer Jürgen Wienecke.



In the fight for third place, DeepSjeng convincingly won two games and seemed to be in cruise-control mode in game 3 and 4. Ikarus won both games, equalized the score and therefore a blitz tie-break was necessary. DeepSjeng won both blitz games. It was another nice tournament, which took place in a friendly atmosphere. The Belgian referee and games expert Hans Secelle had no trouble leading the world championship. The programmers discussed various complicated aspects of chess programming for hours on end. We will see the result soon, because Rybka and Shredder will release new versions of their programs this year! Visit www.rybkachess.net and www.shredderchess.com for the latest information about the new releases.



Results of the final:



Rybka-Shredder 3-1

DeepSjeng-Ikarus 2-2 (Tie-break 2-0)



  1. Rybka
  2. Shredder
  3. DeepSjeng
  4. Ikarus

2009 SPNI top finishers


Top 10 finishers:

1. Yang Dai 6.0
2-3. Rachel Gologorsky, Epiphany Peters 5.0
4-7. Linda Diaz, Courtney Jamison, Samyukta Bhat, Joanne Koong 4.5
8-19. Alexandra Botez, Dana Hannibal, Victoria Bian, Julia Jones, Michelle Chen, Margaret Hua, Indira Puri, Rebecca Lelko, Apurva Virkud, Sayaka Foley, Autumn Douthitt 4.0

Full standings will be posted shortly.

Special thanks to Texas Tech University, the Susan Polgar Foundation, ChessCafe, DGT North America, American Chess Equipment, etc., for sponsoring more than $200,000 in chess scholarships and other prizes!

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Ursula Foster award co-winners


Rachel Gologorsky (2nd on tie-breaks) and Epiphany Peters (3rd on tie-breaks), co-winners of the $500 Ursula Foster award to the top player(s) under the age of 14! They will share the $500 prize! Congratulations to Rachel and Epiphany and special thanks to the family of Ursula Foster!

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2008 & 2009 SPNI Champions


Courtney Jamison, 2008 SPNI Champion, presents the cup to Yang Dai, 2009 SPNI Champion.

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Texas vs. Oklahoma


The last game of round 6 is between Michelle Farell of Oklahoma and Angel Bohanon of Texas.

The players were down to just a few minutes. Michelle was up by a pawn but Angel had counter play. At the end, time pressure was the factor and Angel won. Great fighting spirit by both players!

Michelle won the 2009 SPNI Miss Congeniality award! Congratulations!

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Yang Dai wins 2009 SPNI with 6-0 score!


Needing only a draw to clinch clear first, top seed Yang Dai (Virginia) still pushed hard for the win! Samyukta Bhat fought valiantly. The position was very close. But at the end, Yang emerged as the winner! Congratulations to a deserving champion!

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Support needed for Anand


Indians yet to awaken to Anand’s World chess final
Hari Hara Nandanan, TNN
31 July 2009, 03:27am IST

CHENNAI: It’s nearly nine months to go for the World Chess Championship match between Viswanathan Anand and the Bulgarian Veselin Topalov, and it seems Bulgaria has already stolen a march in mindgames.

The issue in question is that of hosting the April 2010 title bout. India is mulling a much-belated, last-ditch attempt even as Bulgaria is believed to have found enough sponsors to present a good bid.

Furthermore, with Bulgaria throwing in political might in good measure with their Prime Minister Boiko Borisov, a self-confessed chess lover, backing the bid, the chances of Anand playing a World championship final at home for the first time appear remote.

The deadline for presenting the bid to the World chess federation (FIDE) is September 30. The minimum prize fund for the match, prescribed by FIDE, is one million euros (apprx Rs 6.85 crore). The FIDE has to be paid 20 percent of the prize money (minimum Rs 1.35 crore) and other expenses could come to Rs 3 crore, making the total cost close to Rs 11.5 crore.

With the world champ himself expressing his keenness to take on Topalov at home, and the All India Chess Federation (AICF) only now awakening to the possibility, the mood in Sofia is upbeat with reports suggesting that the projected bid from the Bulgarian capital as host has found no opposition either from India or elsewhere.

However, AICF secretary DV Sundar seemed positive when he said the federation would write to NIIT, Anand’s biggest sponsor in the last two decades before making the official bid. “It is very difficult to get sponsors for chess unlike cricket or tennis and hockey,” lamented Sundar. “Unless the Government steps in, raising the bid amount will be tough.”

Meanwhile, speaking to TOI from Mainz, Anand said it would be up to the federation to put in the required bid. “I think it will be great to have the event in India. India has seen a lot of progress in the game. Hosting the event in india will be a big boost and will surely be followed closely by a very large audience.”

Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com

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TGIF chess tactic


White to move. How should White proceed?

Source: ChessToday.net

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2009 SPNI Blitz and Puzzle Solving Champion


L: Epiphany Peters of Michigan – She qualified for the 2009 SPNI as a member of the 2008-2009 SP All-Star chess team.

R: Round 6 top boards – Dai (VA) vs. Bhat (N. CA) and Koong (S. CA) vs. Jamison (TX)

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SPNI round 6 video


Emily and Mira were in the running for the biggest upset prize. Emily just edged out Mira to win the $100 prize, sponsored by Mr. Dewain Barber and American Chess Equipment. Congratulations to Emily! Job well done by both players though!


2009 SPNI round 6 video. Click here to view it.

In the coming days, we will upload many more pictures and videos from this event. Enjoy!

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U.S. Chess School Comes to the Marshall: Part II

Part II of E. Vicary’s article on the U.S. Chess School gives readers a glimpse into the chess training including Greg Shahade’s analysis of students’ games and Onischuk’s lesson on closed positions.

Armenian President urges chess


President Serzh Sargsyan is on the right with the red tie

Serzh Sargsyan is urged to develop chess rather than gambling
31 July 2009 [17:50] – Today.Az

Head of the Armenian Center for National and International Studies Richard Kirakosyan called on Serzh Sargsyan today to develop chess rather than gambling in the country.

He said it will benefit Armenia.The expert made the statement commenting on the government’s decision to return gambling houses to the resort centers and major hotels.

“In contrast to former President Robert Kocharian, who was known as a fan of winter sports, President Sargsyan is an advocate of the intellectual game of chess it and would better to contribute to their development.”

“Many officials played with the state budget. Serzh Sargsyan should pay more attention to his beloved game of chess and do not listen to those who most valued gambling,” Kirakosyan said.

Source: http://www.today.az

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Yang Dai Sweeps in Texas!

Yang Dai of Virginia swept the Susan Polgar National Invitational at Texas Tech with a perfect 6-0 score! Check out the winners list, including info on Jamison’s scholarship and the Ursala Foster Awards.

Pardubice Open 2009


Leaders after 7 rounds:


Rk.

Name

FED RtgI Pts.
1 UKR GM KOROBOV ANTON

UKR 2623 6,0
2 UKR GM MAXIMOV DMITRY

UKR 2485 6,0
3 RUS GM ZAKHARTSOV VIACHESLAV

RUS 2541 6,0
4 CZE GM LAZNICKA VIKTOR

CZE 2617 6,0
5 UKR GM KRAVTSIV MARTYN

UKR 2527 6,0
6 RUS IM KRIVOBORODOV EGOR

RUS 2442 5,5
7 ISR CM POPILSKI GIL

ISR 2392 5,5
8 AZE GM MAMEDOV RAUF

AZE 2645 5,5
9 CZE GM JANSA VLASTIMIL

CZE 2470 5,5
10 RUS GM LINTCHEVSKI DANIIL

RUS 2484 5,5

Full standings here.

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Nakamura Chess960 World Champ!

U.S. Champion Hikaru Nakamura is now a World Champion too- in chess 960! Nakamura demolished Aronian in the finals with three straight wins!

Overnight chess tactic


White to move. Is this a win for White, Black or draw?

8/5k2/3K1Ppp/5pP1/B2n4/8/8/8 w – - 0 1

Kling, 1851

Sofia to bid for Anand – Topalov WC match


Sofia Palace of Culture to Host Topalov vs Anand WCC Match

FRIDAY, 31 July 2009
Standart News

If Sofia bid to host the world chess championship match between Veselin Topalov and V. Anand with a prize fund of three million euro wins, the venue will probably be the National Palace of Culture. Unlike the match of Veselin against Gata Kamsky, which took place in Hall 6, this time the organization committee will use another hall that has no access to sunlight.

“The Bulgarian Chess Federation submitted the documents for the organization of the match to the Council of Ministers under the previous government, but now we will submit them again, as the previous documents were dated end-May,” said Stefan Sergiev, President of the Bulgarian Chess Federation.

Mr. Sergiev and Topalov’s manager, Silvio Danailov, are to be received by PM Boyko borissov by the end of next month.

If the government gives us a go, we will have to submit an application to FIDE by the end of September, including bank warranties and guarantees for the security of the players. The final decision will be announced during the 80th FIDE Congress in Kallithea, Halkidiki, Greece.

Maria Dimitrova

Source: http://paper.standartnews.com

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Chess and Macarena?


More fun SPNI activities! The participants of the SPNI received dancing lesson from Debra Hollowell and Josh Flores.

Here is the video clip of the Macarena. Here is another video clip from the session. Dancing clip #3 here.

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L’ami wins Dutch Open


Top finishers:

Rank Name Score M/F Rating TPR 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
1 GM L’Ami, Erwin 7.5 M 2593 2732


1 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 ½
2 GM Giri, Anish 7.0 M 2518 2689


1 1 1 1 1 ½ ½ 0 1
3 GM Timman, Jan H 7.0 M 2569 2624


½ 1 1 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 ½
4 FM Miedema, Roi 7.0 M 2432 2673


1 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ 1 1 ½
5 IM Brandenburg, Daan 6.5 M 2463 2566


1 1 0 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 ½
6 GM Ernst, Sipke 6.5 M 2598 2547


½ 1 1 ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ 1
7 Ootes, Lars 6.5 M 2261 2596


1 ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 1 0 1

Full standings here. Here is the official website.

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Rusz wins Superstar Chess World Championship


Superstar Chess World Championship
Pardubice, Czech Republic

Top finishers

Rk.

Name FED 1.Rd 2.Rd 3.Rd 4.Rd 5.Rd 6.Rd 7.Rd 8.Rd 9.Rd Pts.
1 ROU
Rusz Arpad ROU 15w1 8s0 17w1 12s1 4w1 2s1 9w½ 5w1 3s½ 7,0
2-4 HUN
Schenkerik Csaba HUN 13s1 12w1 8w½ 3s½ 10s1 1w0 4w½ 6s½ 9w1 6,0
2-4


Superstar Chess program
5w½ 6s1 15w½ 2w½ 11s½ 12s½ 10w1 9s1 1w½ 6,0
2-4 USA
Polgar Tom USA 21s1 10w½ 11s1 9w½ 1s0 7w1 2s½ 8w1 5s½ 6,0
5-7 CZE
Burdova Ksenia CZE 3s½ 7w1 9s0 14w1 15s½ 10w1 8w1 1s0 4w½ 5,5
5-7
HUN
Akots Gabor HUN 9s½ 3w0 7s1 15w0 18s1 16w1 12s1 2w½ 8s½ 5,5
5-7 HUN
Uzonyi Adam HUN 20w½ 5s0 6w0 -1 13s1 4s0 17w1 16s1 12w1 5,5
8-11 POL
GM Zezulkin Jurij POL -1 1w1 2s½ 10w½ 9s½ 11w1 5s0 4s0 6w½ 5,0
8-11
HUN
Palinkas Tamas HUN 6w½ 20s1 5w1 4s½ 8w½ 15s1 1s½ 3w0 2s0 5,0
8-11 HUN
Balog Gabor HUN 18w1 4s½ 19w1 8s½ 2w0 5s0 3s0 13w1 16w1 5,0
8-11 POL
Heba Krzsysztof POL 14w½ 16s1 4w0 19s1 3w½ 8s0 15w1 12w0 18s1 5,0
12-14 USA
Polgar Leeam USA 17w1 2s0 18s1 1w0 21s1 3w½ 6w0 11s1 7s0 4,5
12-14 HUN
Izstvan Vojan HUN 2w0 17s0 16w½ 20s1 7w0 18s1 14w1 10s0 15s1 4,5
12-14 RUS
Rasihtov Denis RUS 11s½ 19w0 20w1 5s0 16w0 17s1 13s0 18w1 -1 4,5
15 HUN
Indig Akos HUN 1s0 21w1 3s½ 6s1 5w½ 9w0 11s0 17s1 13w0 4,0
16 HUN
GM Varga Zoltan HUN 19s½ 11w0 13s½ 21w½ 14s1 6s0 18w1 7w0 10s0 3,5
17-18 RUS
Krainov Sergei RUS 12s0 13w1 1s0 18w0 19s1 14w0 7s0 15w0 -0 2,0
17-18 HUN
Pereszlenyi Gabriella HUN 10s0 -1 12w0 17s1 6w0 13w0 16s0 14s0 11w0 2,0

Source: Chessresults.com

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Howell, Jones, Trent lead British Championship


Top games: Round 5

1 Howell, David W L……. 2614 (3½) ….. Trent, Lawrence……… 2471 (3½)
2 Summerscale, Aaron…… 2454 (3) ….. Jones, Gawain C……… 2554 (3½)
3 Gordon, Stephen……… 2537 (3) ….. Palliser, Richard JD…. 2413 (3)
4 Wells, Peter………… 2498 (3) ….. Rendle, Thomas………. 2377 (3)
5 Cumbers, Paul……….. 2207 (3) ….. Gormally, Daniel…….. 2490 (3)

Official website: http://www.britishchess09.com/

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SPNI Final Round Pairings



6th Annual Susan Polgar National Invitational for Girls

Round 6 Final Pairings



Rd Bd Scr White Scr Black



06 101. xxx Dai,Yang (5.0,2057) xxx Bhat,Samyukta (4.5,1740)



06 102. xxx Koong, Joanne (4.0,1683) xxx Jamison,Courtney (4.0,1984)

06 103. xxx Botez,V Alexandra (4.0,1629) xxx Peters,Epiphany M (4.0,1797)

06 104. xxx Bian,Victoria (4.0,1534) xxx Gologorsky, Rachel (4.0,1704)

06 105. xxx Lam,Fiona V (3.5,1787) xxx Diaz, Linda V (3.5,1882)



06 106. xxx Chen,Michelle Xue (3.5,1821) xxx Lelko,Rebecca A (3.5,1689)



06 107. xxx Munoz,Claudia E (3.0,1474) xxx Jones, Julia E (3.0,1869)

06 108. xxx Farell,Michelle (3.0,1536) xxx Bohannon,Angel (3.0,1761)

06 109. xxx Sarna,Kristen She (3.0,1425) xxx Foley,Sayaka B (3.0,1707)

06 110. xxx Abderhalden,Kathe (3.0,1513) xxx Virkud,Apurva (3.0,1668)

06 111. xxx Douthitt,Autumn N (3.0,1363) xxx Wiener,Alexandra (3.0,1659)

06 112. xxx Hua,Margaret M (3.0,1586) xxx Lasley,Alexa E (3.0,1459)

06 113. xxx Mahowald,Morgan (3.0,1215) xxx Hannibal,Dana C (3.0,1517)

06 114. xxx Nguyen,Emily Quyn (3.0,862) xxx Roy,Ananya (2.5,1662)



06 115. xxx Chen,Kelly (2.5,1399) xxx Conley,Brianna (2.5,1507)

06 116. xxx Warren,Hannah (2.5,1033) xxx Tallo, Emily (2.0,1602)



06 117. xxx Deland,Rebecca (2.0,1100) xxx Patterson,Emily N (2.0,1501)

06 118. xxx Newell,Melanie L (2.0,1420) xxx Purdy,Hannah (2.0,1030)

06 119. xxx Wai,Marissa (2.0,1364) xxx Qureshi,Sadia (2.0,1006)

06 120. xxx Barkell,Erica Daw (2.0,1359) xxx James,Isabel Rebe (2.0,970)

06 121. xxx Fitch,Ann Marie E (2.0,833) xxx Folz,Caroline C (2.0,1181)

06 122. xxx Spencer,Nicole An (2.0,1157) xxx Wyzywany,Amelia F (2.0,960)

06 123. xxx Perez, Bernadette (2.0,848) xxx Cancio,Aiya (2.0,1129)

06 124. xxx Bryan,Margaret (1.5,1310) xxx Lopez,Natalia (2.0,551)



06 125. xxx Locker,Sara (1.0,nnnn) xxx Garza,Sarah (1.0,1250)

06 126. xxx Ensley-Field,Mira (3.0,1282) xxx Puri,Indira (3.0,1537)

06 127. xxx Alston, Jannette (1.0,492) xxx Chawla,Alisha (1.0,1145)

06 128. xxx Olvera,Georgia (1.0,1139) xxx Alston,Jannel (1.0,886)

06 129. xxx Ma, Jenny (1.0,1033) xxx Abdus-Shakoor,Diamond (1.0,987)



06 130. xxx Snowdeal,Kristen (0.0,686) xxx Garvin,Katherine (0.0,207)

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SPNI F and F Final



2009 SPNI Friends and Family Chess Tournament

Final Standings



Place Name/Team Rate Score MMed Solk Cum CumOp



1 Lopez,Armando E (1) 2082 4.0 8.0 10.0 10.0 27.0



2 Chen,Jifeng (3) 1778 3.0 8.5 9.0 8.0 21.0

3 Nguyen,Nam Van (6) 1427 3.0 8.0 9.5 7.0 24.0



4 Perez,Felix (16) 726 2.5 7.0 8.5 6.0 19.0



5 Lasley Sr,Matthew (5) 1441 2.0 5.0 9.5 7.0 23.0

6 Purdy,Dave (18) nnnn 2.0 5.0 9.0 6.0 22.0

7 Lasley Jr, Matthew (11) 1069 2.0 4.5 9.5 5.0 22.0

8 Nguyen,Anthony Qu (9) 1171 2.0 4.0 7.5 5.0 19.0

9 Deland,Donald W (8) 1315 2.0 3.5 7.0 4.0 15.0

10 Spencer,Tommy J (20) nnnn 2.0 3.0 5.5 5.0 16.0

11 Mahowald,Daa (4) 1572 2.0 1.5 3.5 7.0 7.0



12 Jamison,Helen (12) 1039 1.5 5.5 8.0 2.0 18.0

13 Watters,Chase Mil (2) 2048 1.5 0.0 1.5 5.0 2.0

14 Folz,Rodney J (7) 1341 1.5 0.0 1.0 5.0 2.0



15 Abdus-Shakoor,Abdul (19) nnnn 1.0 4.5 7.0 2.0 14.0

16 Newell,Lorenzo (10) 1124 1.0 4.0 6.0 3.0 14.0

17 Newell,David L (13) 1031 1.0 3.0 6.0 0.0 15.0

18 Cancio,Zak (14) 1030 1.0 3.0 5.0 1.0 15.0



19 Webb,Ben Travis (15) 940 0.5 0.0 3.0 1.0 7.0

20 Webb,Jake Allen (17) 320 0.5 0.0 3.0 1.0 7.0

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SPNI standings after 5 rounds



2009 Susan Polgar National Invitational for Girls

Standings after 5 rounds



Place Name/Team Rate Score MMed Solk Cum CumOp



1 Dai,Yang (1) 2057 5.0 14.0 16.0 15.0 51.0



2 Bhat,Samyukta (9) 1740 4.5 12.5 14.5 14.0 47.5



3 Jamison,Courtney (2) 1984 4.0 15.0 17.0 13.0 54.0

4 Gologorsky, Rachel (11) 1704 4.0 13.0 14.0 12.0 46.0

5 Botez,V Alexandra (17) 1629 4.0 12.0 14.0 12.0 46.0

6 Peters,Epiphany M (6) 1797 4.0 11.5 13.5 10.0 41.0

7 Bian,Victoria (22) 1534 4.0 11.5 12.5 11.0 40.5

8 Koong, Joanne (13) 1683 4.0 10.0 11.0 11.0 38.5



9 Diaz, Linda V (3) 1882 3.5 14.5 17.5 12.5 53.0

10 Lam,Fiona V (7) 1787 3.5 14.5 15.5 12.5 51.5

11 Lelko,Rebecca A (12) 1689 3.5 12.0 13.0 11.0 43.0

12 Chen,Michelle Xue (5) 1821 3.5 11.0 12.5 9.5 42.0



13 Jones, Julia E (4) 1869 3.0 14.5 16.5 11.0 54.0

14 Lasley,Alexa E (28) 1459 3.0 14.5 15.5 10.0 45.0

15 Hannibal,Dana C (23) 1517 3.0 14.0 17.0 11.5 51.0

16 Ensley-Field,Mira (36) 1282 3.0 14.0 16.0 11.0 50.0

17 Virkud,Apurva (14) 1668 3.0 13.0 15.0 11.0 47.5

18 Foley,Sayaka B (10) 1707 3.0 12.5 14.5 11.0 44.5

19 Nguyen,Emily Quyn (53) 862 3.0 12.5 14.5 9.0 44.5

20 Abderhalden,Kathe (24) 1513 3.0 12.5 14.5 9.0 41.0

21 Munoz,Claudia E (27) 1474 3.0 12.0 14.0 9.5 46.0

22 Bohannon,Angel (8) 1761 3.0 12.0 14.0 9.0 42.5

23 Farell,Michelle (21) 1536 3.0 12.0 13.5 11.0 46.5

24 Hua,Margaret M (19) 1586 3.0 12.0 13.0 10.0 37.0

25 Puri,Indira (20) 1537 3.0 11.5 13.5 9.0 39.5

26 Wiener,Alexandra (16) 1659 3.0 10.0 11.0 9.0 35.0

27 Douthitt,Autumn N (33) 1363 3.0 10.0 11.0 7.0 35.0

28 Mahowald,Morgan (38) 1215 3.0 10.0 11.0 6.0 32.0

29 Sarna,Kristen She (29) 1425 3.0 9.0 9.0 8.0 29.0



30 Warren,Hannah (46) 1033 2.5 9.0 14.5 8.0 41.0

31 Conley,Brianna (25) 1507 2.5 8.5 13.5 9.0 45.0

32 Chen,Kelly (31) 1399 2.5 6.5 12.5 5.5 32.5

33 Roy,Ananya (15) 1662 2.5 6.5 10.5 5.5 29.0



34 Fitch,Ann Marie E (55) 833 2.0 10.5 13.5 7.0 41.0

35 Newell,Melanie L (30) 1420 2.0 10.0 14.0 8.0 39.0

36 Wai,Marissa (32) 1364 2.0 10.0 14.0 6.0 40.0

37 James,Isabel Rebe (50) 970 2.0 9.5 13.5 6.0 37.5

38 Tallo, Emily (18) 1602 2.0 9.0 14.0 8.0 40.0

39 Barkell,Erica Daw (34) 1359 2.0 9.0 12.0 6.0 35.0

40 Folz,Caroline C (39) 1181 2.0 8.0 12.5 5.0 35.0

41 Cancio,Aiya (43) 1129 2.0 8.0 12.0 5.0 32.0

42 Perez, Bernadette (54) 848 2.0 8.0 11.0 5.0 31.0

43 Qureshi,Sadia (48) 1006 2.0 7.5 11.5 3.0 32.5

44 Patterson,Emily N (26) 1501 2.0 7.0 11.0 7.0 31.0

45 Wyzywany,Amelia F (51) 960 2.0 7.0 10.0 5.0 31.0

46 Purdy,Hannah (47) 1030 2.0 6.0 10.0 4.0 30.0

47 Deland,Rebecca (44) 1100 2.0 6.0 9.0 5.0 28.0

48 Lopez,Natalia (57) 551 2.0 5.5 8.5 5.0 21.0

49 Spencer,Nicole An (40) 1157 2.0 5.5 8.5 4.0 25.5



50 Bryan,Margaret (35) 1310 1.5 10.5 14.0 6.5 43.0



51 Garza,Sarah (37) 1250 1.0 8.5 12.5 4.0 34.5

52 Abdus-Shakoor,Diamond (49) 987 1.0 8.0 11.0 2.0 27.0

53 Olvera,Georgia (42) 1139 1.0 7.5 11.0 3.0 27.5

54 Ma, Jenny (45) 1033 1.0 7.0 10.0 3.0 26.0

55 Chawla,Alisha (41) 1145 1.0 6.0 10.0 4.0 31.0

56 Locker,Sara (60) nnnn 1.0 6.0 9.0 2.0 24.0

57 Alston,Jannel (52) 886 1.0 5.0 9.0 2.0 25.0

58 Alston, Jannette (58) 492 1.0 4.0 7.0 1.0 20.0



59 Snowdeal,Kristen (56) 686 0.0 6.0 8.0 0.0 22.0

60 Garvin,Katherine (59) 207 0.0 5.0 8.0 0.0 19.0

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A big hit with the girls


Chocolate making! Everyone got to learn how to make them, and sample them as well :)

Click here to view the chocolate making video.

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More SPNI Chess Videos


Click here to see the SPICE Chess Park Simul video. Here is the video from round 5.

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The upset artist


Mira Ensley-Field (Wisconsin), rated 1282, scored 3 wins (in 4 games) over players rated 1,797, 1659, and 1602!

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Pint-sized warrior


Emily Nguyen (Texas), who just turned 7 several weeks ago, rated 862, qualified for the 2009 by winning her section at the 2009 SP World Open for Girls in Las Vegas last month. In this SPNI, she won three consecutive games against opponents rated 1215, 1501, and 1659 in round 2, 3, and 4!

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Nakamura defeats Aronian in Chess960



Nakamura wins three in a row to become new World Champion

By Johannes Fischer



When Levon Aronian and Nakamura sat down to play the final of the Chess960 World Rapid Chess Championship it was difficult to name a clear favorite. In the preliminaries Aronian had dominated the first day, Nakamura the second. Both are known as extremely strong blitz and rapid players, and both had shown their Chess960 skills on more than one occasion.



Taking this into account, the match was surprisingly one-sided. Nakamura simply won the first three games to become new World Champion – in a very convincing manner.



In the first game Aronian opted with Black for an elastic, dynamic set-up. But when White managed to create weaknesses in Black’s camp, which he soon occupied with his pieces, Black seemed to be in trouble. In a bid for counterplay Aronian decided to give material but Nakamura defended coolly and sent his king from the queenside to the kingside, where it finally was safe. With his last swindling chances gone Aronian resigned.



The first game in the fight for third place between Bologan and Movsesian took a different course. Here it was Bologan who pressed with White and advanced his pawns early on. However, this gave Black good counterchances. He forced an exchange of queens and attacked the weak white pawns afterwards. Bologan found no good way to defend them and soon had a lost position, which Movsesian converted into a full point.



Inspired by this win Movsesian played a little brilliancy in the second game. Sacrificing an exchange, he pushed on the kingside, in the center and finally on the queenside, where he mated Black’s king.



While Movsesian was brimming with confidence Aronian appeared shaken after his loss in the first game. At any rate, it hard to find another explanation for the blunder he committed in the second game against Nakamura: After to a relatively simple oversight Aronian lost knight and game. “Probably I had a bad day”, he commented wryly in the press conference.



With Nakamura and Movsesian both leading 2-0 the final seemed to come to a swift end. The match Aronian vs. Nakamura in fact ended quickly. To get back into the match Aronian used lots of time in the third game – time which he later lacked. He got lost in the middlegame complications and fell victim to a surprising attack by White.



A convincing victory, which made Nakamura new Chess960 Rapid World Champion.



Now the fourth game between Aronian and Nakamura was just a formal affair, and maybe it was the lack of tension which made Aronian spoil an advantageous position into a draw which led to a final result of 3,5:0,5 for Nakamura.



Things went less smoothly for Movsesian. In the third round he was not able to cope with Bologan’s aggressive play and lost, which made the fourth game crucial. But Movsesian quickly recovered from the loss and played the fourth game in a very professional manner. Despite Bologan’s efforts to stir up trouble Movsesian managed to keep everything under control and steered the game into a completely drawn rook ending. After a couple of moves Bologan accepted the inevitable and agreed to a draw. Movsesian thus won the match 2,5:1,5 and became third in the Chess960 Rapid World Championship.



With only 2 draws from 20 games it was an altogether exciting World Championship, which may help to give Chess960 the popularity it deserves. As Levon Aronian remarked at the press conference: “Chess960 is healthy and good for your chess. If you get into it and not just move the pieces to achieve the known position it really improves your chess vision.”



Tomorrow, in the GRENKE LEASING Rapid World Championship, where he will meet Vishy Anand, Arkadij Naiditsch and Ian Nepomniachtchi Aronian has a chance to show how Chess960 improved his classical chess vision.

SPNI round 5


SPNI round 5. More pictures, results, and updates will be posted soon.

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Another special treat for the players


Earlier today, approximately 20 participants of the 2009 SPNI plus their families and coaches received an official tour of the beautiful and BIG Texas Tech campus. It is the second largest campus (in physical size) in the United States. Another campus tour took place 2 days earlier.

The players who already took the earlier tour got a chance to participate in simul against IM Antal (GM norms), member of the Texas Tech Knight Raiders, at the new SPICE Chess Park. IM Antal just arrived from Budapest late last night. He will soon head to Indianapolis to compete in the Collegiate Championship.

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Chess Trivia


Which grandmaster said the following:

“Karjakin I can handle, but Carlsen is a challenge.”

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Vachier-Lagrave wins Biel


Final standings:

1. Vachier-Lagrave, Maxime g FRA 2703











6
2-3. Morozevich, Alexander g RUS 2751











5½
2-3. Ivanchuk, Vassily g UKR 2703











5½
4. Alekseev, Evgeny g RUS 2714











5
5-6. Gelfand, Boris g ISR 2755











4
5-6. Caruana, Fabiano g ITA 2670











4

Official site: http://www.bielchessfestival.ch

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Dutch chess tactic


White to move. How should White proceed?

Source: ChessToday.net

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Howell and Jones lead British Championship


Top games: Round 4

Bd White Result Black
1 Jones, Gawain C……… 2554 (3) ….. Howell, David W L……. 2614 (3)
2 Trent, Lawrence……… 2471 (2½) ….. Williams, Simon K……. 2527 (2½)
3 Houska, Jovanka……… 2392 (2) ….. Wells, Peter………… 2498 (2½)
4 Conquest, Stuart…….. 2572 (2) ….. Hawkins, Jonathan……. 2325 (2)
5 Eggleston, David J…… 2341 (2) ….. Gordon, Stephen……… 2537 (2)

Full pairings and results here.

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