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Archive for December, 2009

Best player of Cuba


Dominguez named best chess player of Cuba

HAVANA, Dec. 31 (Xinhua) — Leinier Dominguez, the only Cuban with more than 2,700 Elo (system to measure chess players) points, was named the best chess player of Cuba in 2009, local press said on Thursday.

Dominguez, who lead the ranking in America and is 21st place of the world rankings, has 2,719 Elo points after winning the Capablanca Memorial tournament and taking part in three Grand Slam championships.

Dominguez was also among the top 10 athletes of Cuba.

In women’s category, GM Maritza Arribas, nine times national champion, was chosen the best female chess player of Cuba.

Source: http://news.xinhuanet.com

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Just an average teen


Chess champ ‘just average’
December 31, 2009 Edition 1

OSLO: The chess world’s new No 1, 19-year-old Magnus Carlsen, plots 20 moves ahead and can remember matches he played six years ago move for move, but insists he is pretty much an average teenager.

The brightest talent in a generation, according to his Russian coach, chess great Garry Kasparov, Norway’s Carlsen will officially become the youngest top-ranked player when new rankings come out at the start of next year.

Dubbed the “Mozart of chess”, Carlsen plays with a healthy dose of natural intuition on top of deep analysis and pursues other interests he believes help his game.

He brushes aside comparisons with the world’s troubled chess geniuses, such as champion Bobby Fisher, a prodigy who became engulfed by chess and detached from the rest of the world.

“The difference between him and me, for example, is that he was obsessed with chess in a way that is not healthy and that’s a line I don’t intend to cross,” said Carlsen.

“I try not to mix chess with life. When I don’t play I more or less do normal things for a teenager.”

Carlsen finished high school this year and has become a household name in Norway, where he has won a number of person of the year honours.

He began playing at the age eight, mainly to beat his older sister, which took him “a few weeks”. Within a year he was regularly defeating his father, who plays club-level chess, and at 13 he had a shock speed chess win against world champion Anatoly Karpov, and a draw against Kasparov.

Here is the full story.

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Nyzhnyk wins Groningen, earns GM norm


Final leaders:

1. Nyzhnyk, Illya 7.5


2494 2741 +2.75
2. Werle, Jan 6.5


2565 2670 +1.28

Reinderman, Dimitri 6.5


2575 2662 +1.11
4. Chadaev, Nikolai 6.0


2567 2555 -0.03

Greenfeld, Alon 6.0


2559 2571 +0.23

Nijboer, Friso 6.0


2561 2545 -0.12

Brandenburg, Daan 6.0


2481 2573 +1.22

Baklan, Vladimir 6.0


2655 2549 -1.04

Giri, Anish 6.0


2585 2582 +0.04

Deviatkin, Andrei 6.0


2608 2503 -0.82

Poetsch, Hagen 6.0


2361 2410 +0.70
12. Ernst, Sipke 5.5


2587 2432 -1.55

Meijers, Viesturs 5.5


2488 2456 -0.29

Kleijn, Christov 5.5


2383 2461 +0.99

Pruijssers, Roeland 5.5


2413 2434 +0.35

Saravanan, V 5.5


2356 2499 +1.78

Podzielny,Karl-Heinz 5.5


2456 2425 -0.18

Hoffmann, Michael 5.5


2509 2365 -1.47

Caspi, Israel 5.5


2423 2402 -0.09

Official website: http://www.schaakstadgroningen.nl

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4 tie for 1st in Pamplona


Final standings:

1-4. Meier, Georg g GER 2653









6
1-4. Granda, Julio
g PER 2640









6
1-4. Laznicka, Viktor g CZE 2637









6
1-4. Georgiev, Kiril g BUL 2672









6
5. Reinaldo Castineira, Roi m ESP 2488









5
6-7. Lopez Martinez, Josep Manuel g ESP 2589









6-7. Mirzoev, Azer g AZE 2617









8. Alsina Leal, Daniel m ESP 2523









9. Recuero Guerra, David m ESP 2494









10. Huerga Leache, Mikel m ESP 2435









1

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

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Rilton Cup Update


Leaders after 4 rounds:

Rk. Name FED Rtg Pts.
1 GM Rozentalis Eduardas LTU 2611 3,5
2 IM Richter Michael GER 2412 3,5
3 GM Shimanov Aleksandr RUS 2535 3,5
GM Miezis Normunds LAT 2530 3,5
5 GM Ivanov Sergey RUS 2530 3,0
6 GM Wojtaszek Radoslaw POL 2637 3,0
GM Mcshane Luke ENG 2615 3,0
8 GM Handke Florian GER 2513 3,0
9 GM Cramling Pia SWE 2525 3,0
IM Lauber Arnd GER 2503 3,0
11 GM Lysyj Igor RUS 2609 3,0
GM Evgeny Gleizerov RUS 2566 3,0
IM Yuneev Alexey RUS 2428 3,0
14 IM Ponkratov Pavel RUS 2575 3,0
15 Jacobsen Bo DEN 2306 3,0

4 lead Reggio Emilia


Round 3 results:

Almasi, Zoltan - Jobava, Baadur 1-0
Kamsky, Gata - Godena, Michele ½-½
Landa, Konstantin - Safarli, Eltaj ½-½
Vocaturo, Daniele - Caruana, Fabiano 1-0
Bologan, Viktor - Brunello, Sabino 1-0

Standings after 3 rounds:

1. Almasi, Zoltan g HUN 2704 2
2. Godena, Michele g ITA 2537 2
3. Kamsky, Gata g USA 2695 2
4. Safarli, Eltaj g AZE 2592 2
5. Caruana, Fabiano g ITA 2652
6. Landa, Konstantin g RUS 2664
7. Jobava, Baadur g GEO 2696
8. Vocaturo, Daniele m ITA 2500 1
9. Bologan, Viktor g MDA 2692 1
10. Brunello, Sabino m ITA 2507 ½

Official website: http://www.ippogrifoscacchi.it/tornei_capodanno/52/default.asp

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Practical chess tactic


Black to move. How should Black proceed?

Source: ChessToday.net

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The Mozart of Chess


A Bold Opening for Chess Player Magnus Carlsen
By Eben Harrell / London Monday, Jan. 11, 2010

Vladimir Kramnik, former world chess champion and current No. 4, is playing in the first round of the London Chess Classic, the most competitive chess tournament to be played in the U.K. capital in 25 years. Tall, handsome and expressionless, he looks exactly as a man who has mastered a game of nearly infinite variation should: like a high-end assassin. Today, however, he is getting methodically and mercilessly crushed.

His opponent is a teenager who seems to be having difficulty staying awake. Magnus Carlsen yawns, fidgets, slumps in his chair. He gets up and wanders over to the other games, staring at the boards like a curious toddler. Every now and then, he returns to his own game and moves one of his pieces, inexorably building an attack so fierce that by the 43rd move Kramnik sees the hopelessness of his position and resigns. (See the top sports stories of 2009.)

Genius can appear anywhere, but the origins of Carlsen’s talent are particularly mysterious. In November, Carlsen, then 18, became the youngest world No. 1 in the game’s history. He hails from Norway — a “small, poxy chess nation with almost no history of success,” as the English grand master Nigel Short sniffily describes it — and unlike many chess prodigies who are full-time players by age 12, Carlsen stayed in school until last year. His father Henrik, a soft-spoken engineer, says he has spent more time urging his young son to complete his schoolwork than to play chess. Even now, Henrik will interrupt Carlsen’s chess studies to drag him out for a family hike or museum trip. “I still have to pinch my arm,” Henrik says. “This certainly is not what we had in mind for Magnus.”

Here is the full article.

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Pan Am Photo Gallery: Fun & Games in South Padre Island

Check out Luciana Morales’ photo gallery from the Pan-American Championships in South Padre Island featuring team and individual winners, beach football and blitz.

It’s official!


Top players (January 2010)


Rank Name Title Country Rating Games B-Year
1 Carlsen, Magnus g NOR 2810 16 1990
2 Topalov, Veselin g BUL 2805 4 1975
3 Anand, Viswanathan g IND 2790 9 1969
4 Kramnik, Vladimir g RUS 2788 16 1975
5 Aronian, Levon g ARM 2781 17 1982
6 Gelfand, Boris g ISR 2761 25 1968
7 Gashimov, Vugar g AZE 2759 21 1986
8 Ivanchuk, Vassily g UKR 2749 13 1969
9 Wang, Yue g CHN 2749 8 1987
10 Svidler, Peter g RUS 2744 27 1976
11 Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar g AZE 2741 19 1985
12 Leko, Peter g HUN 2739 9 1979
13 Ponomariov, Ruslan g UKR 2737 25 1983
14 Eljanov, Pavel g UKR 2736 14 1983
15 Grischuk, Alexander g RUS 2736 8 1983
16 Radjabov, Teimour g AZE 2733 13 1987
17 Morozevich, Alexander g RUS 2732 19 1977
18 Vachier-Lagrave, Maxime g FRA 2730 21 1990
19 Jakovenko, Dmitry g RUS 2730 17 1983
20 Shirov, Alexei g ESP 2723 19 1972
21 Karjakin, Sergey g RUS 2720 12 1990
22 Malakhov, Vladimir g RUS 2716 15 1980
23 Wang, Hao g CHN 2715 10 1989
24 Bacrot, Etienne g FRA 2713 18 1983
25 Dominguez Perez, Leinier g CUB 2712 4 1983
26 Almasi, Zoltan g HUN 2710 7 1976
27 Navara, David g CZE 2708 15 1985
28 Nakamura, Hikaru g USA 2708 7 1987
29 Movsesian, Sergei g SVK 2708 2 1978
30 Tomashevsky, Evgeny g RUS 2705 14 1987
31 Vallejo Pons, Francisco g ESP 2705 10 1982
32 Jobava, Baadur g GEO 2704 15 1983
33 Alekseev, Evgeny g RUS 2703 13 1985
34 Kasimdzhanov, Rustam g UZB 2702 2 1979



Rank Name Title Country Rating Games B-Year
1 Polgar, Judit g HUN 2682 4 1976
2 Koneru, Humpy g IND 2614 8 1987
3 Hou, Yifan g CHN 2590 14 1994
4 Stefanova, Antoaneta g BUL 2545 7 1979
5 Kosintseva, Nadezhda m RUS 2533 9 1985

Fighting till the bitter end


Even though the Texas Tech University Knight Raiders A team only needed a tie in the final round to make the Final Four, our players fought hard all the way until the end. The game between Elliot Liu (Stanford) and Davorin Kuljasevic (TTU) was the next to last to finish in the last round. Kuljasevic won and Texas Tech beat Stanford 3.5 – 0.5.

Here is the link to 84 pictures from round 6 and prize giving ceremony.

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UMBC, TTU, UTB, UTD in Final Four


UTB-TSC to return to Final Four of Chess
December 30, 2009 9:31 PM

2009 PAN-AM INTERCOLLEGIATE TEAM CHESS CHAMPIONSHIP AWARD WINNERS

Teams going to The President’s Cup, also known as the Final Four of Chess, in April at UTB/TSC:

The University of Maryland, Baltimore County
The University of Texas at Dallas
Texas Tech University
UTB/TSC

International teams:

First place: University of the West Indies, Bridgetown, Barbados
Second place: University of Toronto “A” Team
Third place: University of Toronto “B” Team

Division winners:

Division I: The University of Maryland, Baltimore County “B” Team
Division II: UTB-TSC “B” Team
Division III: Yale University
Division IV: Texas Tech University “B” Team

Board winners:

Board 1: Leonid Kritz, University of Maryland, Baltimore County; Davorin Kuljasevic, Texas Tech University “A” Team, Bogdan Vioreanu, Yale University
Board 2: Sergey Erenburg, University of Maryland, Baltimore County “A” Team
Board 3: Axel Bachmann, UTB-TSC “A” Team and Gergely Antal, Texas Tech University “A” Team
Board 4: Sasha Kaplan, University of Maryland, Baltimore County “A” Team
Alternate: Daniel Yeager, The University of Texas at Dallas “B” Team

SOUTH PADRE ISLAND – The University of Texas at Brownsville and Texas Southmost College will return to The President’s Cup, also known as the Final Four of Chess, when the tournament takes place in the spring.

UTB-TSC will face Texas Tech University, The University of Texas at Dallas and The University of Maryland, Baltimore County to determine the top collegiate chess team in the United States from April 9-11 at UTB-TSC.

Source: Brownsville Herald

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The Final Four


Final top 10 standings:

# Name Rtng Team Rd 1 Rd 2 Rd 3 Rd 4 Rd 5 Rd 6 Tot


1 UMBC-A 2559 UMBC-A W14 [4.0] W13 [3.5] W12 [3.5] W2 [3.0] W5 [2.5] W7 [4.0] 6.0


2-4 UTD-A 2574 UTD-A W7 [4.0] W8 [3.0] W3 [2.5] L1 [1.0] W6 [3.5] D5 [2.0] 4.5


2-4
Texas Tech University – Team A 2429 TXTECA W26 [4.0] W9 [4.0] L2 [1.5] D4 [2.0] W10 [4.0] W8 [3.5] 4.5


2-4 UTD-B 2498 UTD-B W18 [4.0] W10 [3.5] D5 [2.0] D3 [2.0] D8 [2.0] W12 [2.5] 4.5


5-7 UTB-A 2577 UTB-A W17 [4.0] W6 [3.5] D4 [2.0] W12 [3.5] L1 [1.5] D2 [2.0] 4.0


5-7
UMBC-B 2258 UMBC-B W11 [3.0] L5 [0.5] W17 [2.5] W15 [2.5] L2 [0.5] W13 [2.5] 4.0


5-7 UTB-B 1988 UTB-B L2 [0.0] W27 [4.0] W28 [4.0] W20 [3.5] W9 [2.5] L1 [0.0] 4.0


8-10 Stanford University 2260 STANFO W19 [3.0] L2 [1.0] W20 [4.0] W13 [3.0] D4 [2.0] L3 [0.5] 3.5


8-10
Princeton University 2072 PRINCE W23 [4.0] L3 [0.0] W21 [3.0] D10 [2.0] L7 [1.5] W18 [3.5] 3.5


8-10 University of Texas at Austin 2189 UTA W22 [4.0] L4 [0.5] W14 [2.5] D9 [2.0] L3 [0.0] W15 [3.5] 3.5


www.CollegeChess.org

UMBC, UTD, Texas Tech University, and UTD qualified for the Final Four.

Texas Tech Knight Raiders A team:

Davorin Kuljasevic (Graduate student – Finance)
Gergely Antal (Senior – Economic)
Gabor Papp (Senior – Finance)
Chase Watters (Graduate PhD – Microbiology)

Texas Tech Knight Raiders B team

Zachary Haskin (Freshman – Spanish)
Josh Osbourn (Sophomore – English)
Konstantin Parkhomenko (Final year – Law)
Brett James (Freshman – Engineering)
Shail Shah (Graduate student – Biotechnology)

Texas Tech Lady Knight Raiders

Lilia Doibani (First year – Law)
Rebecca Lelko (Freshman – Math)
Stephanie Ballom (Just graduated – Psychology)
Ananya Roy (Freshman – Poli-Sci)

Attacking chess


White to move. How should White proceed?

Source: ChessToday.net

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Karpov Chess School Wraps up 2009


Anatoly Karpov International School of Chess
106 South Main, Lindsborg, KS 67456 – 785-227-2224
www.anatolykarpovchessschool.org

Release: Immediate

Contact: Wes Fisk – 785-342-1009

Photos Available: Yes – 1 attached – Caption: President Marck Cobb with Anatoly Karpov in Poikovski, Russia

Karpov Chess School Wraps up 2009

The Ninth Annual Lindsborg Open, held on December 19, marked the end of scheduled activities for the Karpov Chess School in Lindsborg. In an unusual turn of events, 16 year-old Thorton Bonner, of Spring Valley, Kansas decided to enter the Lindsborg tournament, although he had never played in a U.S. Chess Federation (USCF) sanctioned event. After five grueling rounds, Bonner found that he tied for first place, along with fellow Kansans Taimoor Noor, Jason Wawrzaszek, and Vladimir Inglesias.

“This is the ninth consecutive year that we have held the Lindsborg Open,” said Chess School Director Tom Brownscombe. “It is always held around Christmas, so it’s now established as part of the chess tradition in the Midwest.”

Noor won the first place trophy, based on tiebreaks, and Bonner took home the trophy for best result by an unrated player. Chess players typically compete in their own rating category, determined by USCF ratings, to assure they are paired with players with similar skill levels. Kansas Chess Association treasurer Laurence Coker, Overland Park, and James Smith of Missouri shared first place for players rated under 1800.

Fifth grader Brian Jiang of Sunrise Christian Academy in Wichita earned 3 points to win the first place trophy for players rated under 1600. C.J. Armenta, who traveled from Missouri, also scored 3 points to earn first place in the under 1500 category.

The Purdy family from Oxford, Kansas, have become well known in chess circles by winning numerous team and individual championships in scholastic tournaments. Gabriel Purdy took home the trophy for the best performance by a player rated under 1300. His sister Hannah, who is the current Kansas Girl’s Champion, won the first place trophy for best performance by a female.

Lindsborg fifth grader Tristan Donaldson won the trophy for best performance by a player rated under 1000. “It’s good to see local students compete in our tournaments,” said Marck Cobb, president of the International Chess Institute of the Midwest (ICIM). “We hope to increase this number in the upcoming year.” ICIM, a non-profit charitable corporation, owns and operates the Karpov Chess School.

Scholarships and Chess Camps

Through the generosity of donors, the chess school awarded 17 scholarships to area students to attend the two chess camps held at the Karpov School in July. Many students would not have been able to attend without the scholarships. Students attending the weeklong camps were treated to instruction by one of the top chess grandmasters in the United States. Grandmaster Var Akobian, winner of the 2007 World Open, not only taught the students chess, but also showed them the finer points of soccer during their free time. The chess school’s director, Tom Brownscombe, worked alongside Grandmaster Akobian and Chris Purdy to provide instruction to the 49 students from throughout the United States who attended the camps.

President Marck Cobb and Karpov in Russia

In June, Marck Cobb and his son Layton, at their own expense, boarded a plane to Moscow; at the same time Mikhail Korenman and three other families from Chicago also boarded a plane for Moscow. The combined group of seven adults and seven young people became known as the “American Delegation.” The group had a their photo taken in Red Square before going to meet Anatoly Karpov. Karpov and the American Delegation boarded another plane to Surgut, arriving around midnight. Upon getting off the plane, they were greeted by a display of Northern Lights. “We couldn’t see any darkness between sunrise and sunset,” said Cobb. After a couple of bus rides, the group arrived in Poikovski, a small town in Siberia where Karpov has a chess school. Some in Lindsborg may recall, it was Poikovski that sent a number of their young people to Lindsborg to compete and get to know their host families.

Poikovski boasts a cultural center that serves 22 smaller surrounding communities. Their cultural center employs seven instructors, who in turn provide instruction to about 500 students.

Over the next few days, students from both countries competed with one another, and despite language difficulties they managed to make some friendships. Another Lindsborg alumni flew in to join the main tournament; Grandmaster Alexander Onischuk visited Lindsborg on several occasions, where he taught at the chess school. Other grandmasters from throughout the world also arrived for the competition. The American student team placed fifth out of several teams in the Poikovski Youth Tournament.

Upon leaving Poikovski, the Americans made their way to St. Petersburg and Moscow where they relaxed and toured. The Russians were holding another tournament in the city of Voronezh, the 13th International Chess Festival. The Americans took the train to Voronezh and played several matches with Russian students. Karpov Chess School president Marck Cobb offered a scholarship to any student who would fly to Lindsborg.

“It was a wonderful experience for students from different countries to get to know one another,” said Cobb “It’s all possible because of chess.”

Director Brownscombe and Area Schools

Director Tom Brownscombe expanded the chess school’s reach by teaching chess in the local schools, such as St. Mary’s in Salina, Canton-Galva, and the Lindsborg Virtual School. Tom also officiated at several national tournaments during 2009.

Brownscombe won the Kansas State Chess Championship in July. The Kansas championships have been held in Lindsborg for several years. This is the second Kansas Championship win for Brownscombe. He previously won it in 2007. He is also the former Nevada State Champion.

Social Chess

The Karpov Chess School hosts social chess nights every first and third Thursday of each month at 7p.m. Beginners are welcome. More information can be obtained by going to the school Website: www.anatolykarpovchessschool.org or call 785-227-2224.

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FIDE President receives award


FIDE President awarded to the Prize of Government of Russian Federation
Tuesday, 29 December 2009 07:50

On December 25, FIDE President, Head of Republic of Kalmykia Kirsan Ilyumzhinov took part in a solemn ceremony of prizegiving in the field of science and technology of the Government of Russian Federation. Among the prizewinners – Kirsan Ilyumzhinov. Head of Republic of Kalmykia awarded to the prize as the head of the creative team which developed and implemented sustainable production system of obtaining beef through Russian breeds of beef cattle. Together with the Head of Kalmykia the Prize of the Government of Russian Federation awarded to other members of the creative team: Candidate of Veterinary Sciences, General Director of the open corporation “Plant Breeding of A. Chapchaeva” Ivan Erendzhenov, doctor of agricultural sciences, professor, pro-rector of the state educational institution of higher vocational education “Kalmyk State University” Anatoly Arilov, academician of Russian Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Deputy Director of the state scientific institution “All-Russia Research Institute of Animal Russia Academy of Agricultural Sciences” Nikolai Strekozov etc.

Source: FIDE.com

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Wednesday chess tactic


Black to move. How should Black proceed?

Source: ChessToday.net

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Grandmaster draws


UTB A and UTD A are the first teams to finish the final round. All games were drawn very quickly. In the mean time, even though UMBC are leading and only need a draw to win the PanAm, they are going all out for the match win. Texas Tech also needs only a draw to make the final four but our players are fighting all the way. This is the first time Texas Tech sends an A team to the PanAm.

More updates to come…

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University of Maryland Balitmore County Wins Pan-Ams!

The University of Maryland Baltimore County defended their title at the Pan-American Championships in South Padre Island, Texas. The team earned a perfect 6-0 score.

Justus Williams Takes Empire State

11-year-old Justus Williams prevailed this weekend at the Empire State Open, winning clear first with 4.5/6 and raising his rating 60 points to a personal best of 2140.

Nyzhnyk leads Groningen with 1 to go


Leaders with 1 round to go:

1. Nyzhnyk, Illya 6.5 38.0 30.25 30.5 2494 2702 +2.09
2. Reinderman, Dimitri 6.0 42.0 30.75 31.0 2575 2669 +1.00
Werle, Jan 6.0 42.0 30.00 29.0 2565 2686 +1.25
Deviatkin, Andrei 6.0 32.5 24.50 23.0 2608 2573 -0.16
5. Chadaev, Nikolai 5.5 39.5 24.25 26.0 2567 2551 -0.02
Greenfeld, Alon 5.5 38.0 24.25 26.0 2559 2572 +0.22
Nijboer, Friso 5.5 37.5 24.00 26.5 2561 2554 -0.01
Baklan, Vladimir 5.5 35.5 24.25 24.0 2655 2546 -0.93
Giri, Anish 5.5 35.0 23.00 26.0 2585 2585 +0.07
Brandenburg, Daan 5.5 34.5 23.50 26.0 2481 2575 +1.11

Official website: http://www.schaakstadgroningen.nl

I have to double check but I believe this might be the final GM norm for 13 year old Illya Nyzhnyk.

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The Norwegian King


Norwegian teenager to be crowned new chess king
Wed Dec 30, 2009 11:25am GMT

By Wojciech Moskwa

OSLO (Reuters Life!) – The chess world’s new number one 19-year-old Magnus Carlsen plots 20 moves ahead and can remember matches he played six years ago move-for-move, but insists he is still pretty much your average teenager.

The brightest talent in a generation according to his Russian coach and chess great Garry Kasparov, Norway’s Carlsen will officially become the world’s youngest ever top ranked player when new rankings come out at the start of 2010.

Dubbed the “Mozart of chess,” Carlsen plays with a healthy dose of natural intuition on top of deep analysis and pursues other interests that he believes help his game.

He brushes aside comparisons with the world’s troubled chess geniuses such as Bobby Fisher, a prodigy and champion who became engulfed by chess and detached from the rest of the world.

“Bobby Fischer was obviously one of the greatest chess players of all time — one of the inventors,” Carlsen told Reuters in an interview.

“The difference between him and me, for example, is that he was obsessed with chess in a way that is not healthy and that’s a line I don’t intend to cross.”

“I try not to mix chess with life. When I don’t play I more or less do normal things for a teenager,” said Carlsen, who this year graduated from high school and become a household name in Norway, winning a number of person of the year honors.

Carlsen started playing chess as an 8-year-old mainly to beat his older sister, which he says took him “a few weeks.”

Within a year he regularly beat his father, who plays club-level chess in Norway, and at age 13 he had a shock win in a speed chess competition against world champion Anatoly Karpov and a draw against Kasparov.

Carlsen believes his fluid style is well suited to speed or blitz chess, shorter versions of the game played with a clock giving each player only a few minutes to complete their moves, rather than deliberating at length over a single movement.

Asked about a tournament match he played, as a 12-year-old, against a club player and Reuters correspondent Oskar von Bahr, Carlsen said he could probably replay that match move-for-move and admitted that at one point he was in trouble.

Here is the full article.

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Down time


Down Time

Finding time to relax key to victory in chess
December 29, 2009 9:06 PM
By Daniel Perry, Special to the Herald

SOUTH PADRE ISLAND — Zachary Sundt can typically be found reading a few pages of a book before he begins playing a competitive chess match.

“I use that time to take my mind off what will happen,” said Sundt, a member of The University of Texas at Brownsville and Texas Southmost College Chess Team. “It’s kind of a little break time.”

The schedule for the 2009 Pan-Am Intercollegiate Team Chess Championship, at the Sheraton South Padre Island Beach Hotel and Condominiums, has competitors from more than 20 collegiate teams from North America and the Caribbean. The championship ends today.

Some matches during the four-day tournament lasted at least four hours, making for mid-afternoon lunches and late evenings for some players.

“Just going out to eat is fun enough,” said David Lee Valdez II, a sophomore member of the UTB-TSC Chess Team from Brownsville.

Valdez said he and other players go over their games, see their mistakes and what moves could have been made after each round.

Players also do some research after each round. While teams find out who they will play an hour after each round is completed, individual players might not know who they will face off with until chess coaches turn in rosters an hour before rounds begin.

Here is the full article.

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Practical endgame


White to move. How should White proceed?

Source: ChessToday.net

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The 2009 Golden Nugget


Right moves: So is chess gold nugget in ’09
12/29/2009 01:40 PM

Being described as a “gold nugget” by the chess-crazy Russians during the 2009 World Chess Cup in Khanty-Mansiyk, Russia is proof enough of a sterling year for the Philippines’ top woodpusher Wesley So.

The 16-year-old So carved RP chess history by making it to the 16-player fourth round of the world’s biggest individual chess competition, surpassing the achievements of GMs Joey Antonio and Mark Paragua, who reached as far as the second round. Asia’s first GM Eugene Torre qualified as far as the quarterfinal stage but in a different world championship elimination format.

And So did it in style, claiming the scalps of two elite players along the way.

After opening his World Cup campaign with a 4-1 win over GM Gadir Guseinov of Azerbaijan, So stunned former world championship contender Vassily Ivanchuk of the Ukraine (ELO 2739), 1.5-.5, and 2008 World Cup titlist Gata Kamsky of the US (ELO 2695), 1.5-.5 to reach the Last-16 round.

He fell short of a quarterfinal berth, though, losing to GM Vladimir Malakhov (ELO 2706) of Russia, 1-4.So’s strong performance against more-experienced rivals earned praise from the Russian hosts.

“It is obvious: a new fantastic “gold nugget” has been found in Khanty Mansiysk now,” the hosts wrote about So in the World Cup’s website. “Most probably in the nearest future, he will aspire for a place among the chess elite. And this is clear: no one from the high-class favourites can defeat him here.

“Tournament commentator GM Sergey Shirov added: “The fact that Wesley So was born and grew up in a non-chess country, the Philippines, speaks about his fantastic talent.”

Here is the full article.

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Tough competition at South Padre Island


El Centro chess club prepares for tough competition at South Padre tournament
12:00 AM CST on Monday, December 28, 2009
By JON NIELSEN / The Dallas Morning News jnielsen@dallasnews.com

Felipe Jesse Cruz doesn’t lose many matches. So when a 19-year-old opponent steals Cruz’s queen in 15 minutes, chess coach Darrell Cook takes notice.

Confident. Cunning. Calm. The virtues of a budding chess master.

The mysterious teen who slips into the El Centro chess club meeting is one of the best Cook has ever seen. He’s far superior to anybody in the club, including Cruz, the club’s best player. But when Cook tries to talk to him, the boy dressed in black with a wave of oil black hair seems rushed. Says he has to go. And just like that, he’s gone.

The vanishing act is typical in Cook’s quest to guide a team of hardscrabble unknowns into the Pan American Intercollegiate Team Chess Championship, the World Series of collegiate chess.

Finding players tests Cook’s patience and persistence.

Here is the full article.

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Pan Am Collegiate Championship


Final round matchups:

Bd Team Res White Team Res Black
1 UMBC-A UMBC-A (5.0) UTB-B UTB-B (4.0)
2 UTB-A UTB-A (3.5) UTD-A UTD-A (4.0)
3 STANFO Stanford University (3.5) TXTECA Texas Tech University – Team A (3.5)
4 UTD-B UTD-B (3.5) NYU New York University (3.0)
5 UTD-C UTD-C (3.0) UMBC-B UMBC-B (3.0)
6 UTA University of Texas at Austin (2.5) MIAMI Miami Dade College (3.0)
7 PRINCE Princeton University (2.5) TXTECL Texas Tech University – Ladies (2.5)
8 TORONA University of Toronto – Team A (2.5) YALE-A YALE-A (2.5)
9 YALE-B YALE-B (2.0) BARBAD University of West Indies – Barb (2.0)
10 UTB-C UTB-C (2.0) CHICAG University of Chicago (2.0)
11 RIDER Rider University (2.0) TXTECB Texas Tech University – Team B (2.0)
12 LONEST Lonestar (1.5) ATLANT Florida Atlantic University (1.5)
13 CENTRA University of Central Florida (1.0) TORONB University of Toronto – Team B (1.5)
14 ELCENT El Centro College (1.0) UTAH University of Utah (1.0)

www.collegechess.org

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Five Tie in Vegas; Akobian Top on Tiebreaks

At the North American Open in Las Vegas, five GMs tied for first, Varuzhan Akobian, Josh Friedel, Victor Mikhalevski, Alex Shabalov and Alex Yermolinsky with Akobian prevailing on tiebreaks.

Photos from PanAm


Here is the link to 64 pictures from round 4 and 5.

Click here for 64 pictures from day 2 (round 2 and 3) of the 2009 PanAm.

Here is the link to 64 pictures from round 1 of the 2009 PanAm Collegiate Championship in South Padre Island.

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Slow start for Bologan at Reggio Emilia


Round 2 results:

Safarli, Eltaj - Kamsky, Gata ½-½
Caruana, Fabiano - Almasi, Zoltan ½-½
Godena, Michele - Vocaturo, Daniele 1-0
Jobava, Baadur - Bologan, Viktor 1-0
Brunello, Sabino - Landa, Konstantin ½-½

Standings after 2 rounds:

1. Safarli, Eltaj g AZE 2592
2. Kamsky, Gata g USA 2695
3. Caruana, Fabiano g ITA 2652
4. Godena, Michele g ITA 2537
5. Jobava, Baadur g GEO 2696
6. Almasi, Zoltan g HUN 2704 1
7. Landa, Konstantin g RUS 2664 1
8. Brunello, Sabino m ITA 2507 ½
9. Bologan, Viktor g MDA 2692 0
10. Vocaturo, Daniele m ITA 2500 0

Official website: http://www.ippogrifoscacchi.it/tornei_capodanno/52/default.asp

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Rilton Cup Update


Leaders after 3:

1 GM Rozentalis Eduardas LTU 2611 3,0 6,0 0,0
2 GM Ulibin Mikhail RUS 2548 2,5 5,5 0,0
GM Ivanov Sergey RUS 2530 2,5 5,5 0,0
GM Åkesson Ralf SWE 2454 Västerås SK 2,5 5,5 0,0
IM Richter Michael GER 2412 2,5 5,5 0,0
6 GM Wojtaszek Radoslaw POL 2637 2,5 5,0 0,0
GM Mcshane Luke ENG 2615 2,5 5,0 0,0
GM Popov Valerij RUS 2588 2,5 5,0 0,0
GM Shimanov Aleksandr RUS 2535 2,5 5,0 0,0
GM Miezis Normunds LAT 2530 2,5 5,0 0,0
11 GM Handke Florian GER 2513 2,0 5,0 0,0
12 GM Ionov Sergey RUS 2545 2,0 4,5 0,0
GM Cramling Pia SWE 2525 Sollentuna SK 2,0 4,5 0,0
IM Lauber Arnd GER 2503 2,0 4,5 0,0
GM Karlsson Lars SWE 2491 SK Rockaden 2,0 4,5 0,0
IM Semcesen Daniel SWE 2460 Lunds ASK 2,0 4,5 0,0
17 GM Lysyj Igor RUS 2609 2,0 4,0 0,0
GM Hammer Jon Ludvig NOR 2588 2,0 4,0 0,0
GM Evgeny Gleizerov RUS 2566 2,0 4,0 0,0
IM Yuneev Alexey RUS 2428 2,0 4,0 0,0
IM Gorovykh Eduard RUS 2410 2,0 4,0 0,0
22 IM Ponkratov Pavel RUS 2575 2,0 4,0 0,0
IM Grandelius Nils SWE 2540 Lunds ASK 2,0 4,0 0,0
IM Gavrilov Alexei RUS 2481 2,0 4,0 0,0
IM Berczes Csaba HUN 2379 2,0 4,0 0,0
de Verdier Michael SWE 2270 Eksjö SK 2,0 4,0 0,0
27 IM Cramling Dan SWE 2408 SK Passanten 2,0 3,5 0,0
Markevich Ilya RUS 2162 2,0 3,5 0,0
29 WIM Molchanova Tatjana RUS 2368 2,0 3,0 0,0
Jacobsen Bo DEN 2306 2,0 3,0 0,0
Vaarala Eric SWE 2032 Horndals SK 2,0 3,0 0,0

Full results here.

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Grischuk edged Svidler to win Russian Championship


Final round results:

Vitiugov, Nikita - Khismatullin, Denis 1-0
Alekseev, Evgeny - Grischuk, Alexander ½-½
Jakovenko, Dmitry - Sjugirov, Sanan 1-0
Tomashevsky, Evgeny - Svidler, Peter 0-1
Timofeev, Artyom - Riazantsev, Alexander 0-1

Women’s results:

Gunina, Valentina - Galliamova, Alisa ½-½
Kosintseva, Tatiana - Kosintseva, Nadezhda ½-½
Zaiatz, Elena - Pogonina, Natalija 1-0 (F)
Bodnaruk, Anastasia - Romanko, Marina 1-0
Stepovaia, Tatiana - Manakova, Maria 1-0

Final standings:

1. Grischuk, Alexander g RUS 2736 * ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ 1 1 ½ 1 2852
2. Svidler, Peter g RUS 2754 ½ * ½ ½ ½ 1 1 1 1 0 6 2809
3. Vitiugov, Nikita g RUS 2694 ½ ½ * ½ 1 1 0 ½ 1 0 5 2733
4. Alekseev, Evgeny g RUS 2715 ½ ½ ½ * 0 ½ 1 ½ ½ ½ 2688
5. Jakovenko, Dmitry g RUS 2736 0 ½ 0 1 * ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 2686
6. Khismatullin, Denis g RUS 2643 ½ 0 0 ½ ½ * 1 ½ 0 1 4 2653
7. Riazantsev, Alexander g RUS 2661 0 0 1 0 ½ 0 * ½ 1 1 4 2651
8. Tomashevsky, Evgeny g RUS 2708 0 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ * ½ 1 4 2646
9. Timofeev, Artyom g RUS 2651 ½ 0 0 ½ ½ 1 0 ½ * ½ 2615
10. Sjugirov, Sanan g RUS 2612 0 1 1 ½ 0 0 0 0 ½ * 3 2574

Women’s standings:

1. Galliamova, Alisa m RUS 2460 * ½ ½ ½ 1 1 1 1 1 1 2709
2. Kosintseva, Nadezhda m RUS 2518 ½ * 1 ½ 1 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 7 2649
3. Gunina, Valentina wf RUS 2446 ½ 0 * ½ 0 1 1 1 1 1 6 2562
4. Kosintseva, Tatiana m RUS 2522 ½ ½ ½ * 1 0 1 1 ½ ½ 2509
5. Zaiatz, Elena m RUS 2390 0 0 1 0 * ½ 1 1 1 0 2444
6. Bodnaruk, Anastasia wg RUS 2372 0 0 0 1 ½ * 0 1 1 1 2446
7. Pogonina, Natalija wg RUS 2501 0 ½ 0 0 0 1 * 0 1 1 2351
8. Stepovaia, Tatiana wg RUS 2384 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 * 1 1 3 2319
9. Manakova, Maria wg SRB 2344 0 ½ 0 ½ 0 0 0 0 * 1 2 2229
10. Romanko, Marina m RUS 2449 0 0 0 ½ 1 0 0 0 0 * 2164

Official website: http://tal.russiachess.org

Final crosstable courtesy of TWIC

Interview with the brain of Rybka


Mirror 1: http://www.rybkachess.com/free/A%20Conversation%20With%20Vasik%20Rajlich.wmv
Mirror 2: http://chessok.com/download/A%20Conversation%20With%20Vasik%20Rajlich.wmv
Mirror 3: http://www.megaupload.com/?d=LHRJ4BS9 (revised link)151 MB, 64 minutes

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Giri chess tactic


White to move. How should White proceed?

Source: ChessToday.net

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4 tie for lead in Pamplona

Rank SNo. Nombre Elo FED 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Pts Sonen Res.
1 1 GM MEIER, Georg 2653 GER * ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 1 ½ 1 20,00 0
2 7 GM GRANDA ZUÑIGA, Julio E. 2640 PER ½ * 1 ½ 0 1 ½ 1 1 18,50 0
3 4 GM LAZNICKA, Viktor 2637 CZE ½ 0 * ½ 1 1 ½ 1 1 18,00 0
4 3 GM GEORGIEV, Kiril 2672 BUL ½ ½ * ½ ½ ½ 1 1 1 17,25 0
5 2 GM LOPEZ MARTINEZ, Josep Manuel 2589 ESP ½ ½ 0 ½ * ½ ½ 1 1 14,25 0
6 8 IM REINALDO CASTIÑEIRA, Roi 2488 ESP 0 1 0 ½ * ½ ½ ½ 1 4 13,25 0
7 6 GM MIRZOEV, Azer 2617 AZE 0 0 ½ ½ ½ * 1 ½ 1 4 11,50 0
8 9 IM ALSINA LEAL, Daniel 2523 ESP ½ ½ 0 ½ ½ 0 * ½ ½ 3 11,00 0
9 5 IM RECUERO GUERRA, David 2494 ESP ½ 0 0 0 0 ½ ½ ½ * 2 8,25 0
10 10 IM HUERGA LEACHE, Mikel 2435 ESP 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ½ * ½ 1,50 0
Official website: http://www.chesspamplona.com
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