Issue # 1-23, August 15, 2013 - The Chess Federation of Canada

Transcription

Issue # 1-23, August 15, 2013 - The Chess Federation of Canada
THE “Independent” Voice for Canadian Chess
Covering Toronto Chess News and Beyond!
www.TorontoChessNews.com
“Chess IS Life!” – GM Bobby Fischer
Issue # 1- 23 – August 15, 2013
English GM Nigel Short – Can. Open Champion
2
Toronto Chess News
Table of Contents
Page
Articles, etc.
FIDE August 1, 2013 Regular Rating List – Open/Women
Can. Olympiad Selection Ratings - National
Can. Olympiad Selection Ratings – Women’s
Canadian Junior Players in Top 50 in the World
Canadian Girl Wins USA Chess Scholarship
Malmsten on Chess - Chess at the CNE Part 3: Spassky 1971
FIDE August 1, 2013 Regular Rating List – Canadian – Open/Women
Teaching Classic Games of Chess – Double Knight Sacrifice – Jung
Ken’s Chess Trivia
TCN Readers’ Lead Article Invitation
TCN Readers’ Chess “Sightings”
TCN Readers Have Questions
TCN Readers’ Feedback
TCN’s “Readers’ Opinion” Column – Smith
23
65
66
66
68
70
77
98
103
106
107
107
107
107
Tournament Reports
FIDE World Chess Cup, Norway
2012-3 FIDE Grand Prix # 5 (Beijing)
46th Biel Chess Festival, Switzerland
Sparkassen Chess Meeting, Dortmund, Germany
100th British Chess Championships 2013
USA Open, St. Louis
Canadian Open, Ottawa
Canadian Seniors’ Championship, Kitchener
Canadian Amateur Championships, Kitchener
2013 CYCC Tie-breaks, Ottawa
Quebec Open, Montreal
Maritime Open, PEI
4
8
17
18
21
22
35
49
53
64
93
97
Organizations with News Reports
Chess Federation of Canada ( CFC )
Aurora Chess Club
Hamilton City Chess Club
Kitchener-Waterloo Chess Club
Toronto Chess News
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89
91
91
3
Tournament Notices
Mississauga Open
Toronto Labour Day Open
108
110
Community Bulletin Board
111
NOTE re GAME ANALYSIS
I use Fritz 13 in my game analysis. My research, using Fritz for many years, establishes
that Fritz 13 evaluates 1.e4, 1.d4, and 1.Nf3 as a “ slight “ advantage to White, whereas
historically, these positions were generally considered equal. Many still dispute this
evaluation. Though W has "initiative", some/many ( ? ) feel Bl., with best play, equalizes.
But in my research on the three W openings where Fritz gives +/= after W's first move,
Bl never should equalize, as long as W does not make a mistake (a general operational
principle). And true enough, even into the middlegame of my " perfect " games, Bl.
remains +/=!!. So the computer has now convinced me to switch camps, where I used to
believe in " Black equality ". However, it may be that the "horizon effect" will yet
establish equality for Black when the "perfect game" is taken far enough. But, since I am
using Fritz 13, I therefore follow its lead, and so have felt it necessary to make some note
re these first moves. In the past, I gave this explanation above in annotations to these
three first moves. But, for regular readers of my analyzed games, I know this annotation
became irksome; but people who are new, come to my analyzed games on the TCN
Website, or where a TCN newsletter has been forwarded to them, and, for them, an
explanation of this unusual Fritz 13 feature is required, to understand what I am doing.
However, I agree with some readers who suggested a general explanation would be
preferable to the annotation in every game starting with these three moves ( which is
most of them ). I appreciate my repeat readers' patience ‘til this change. I therefore began
using this other format of a general explanation after the table of contents, to explain this
interesting computer phenomenon ( and not insert it into the actual annotated game ). In
the game score, I will just note the symbolic and numerical evaluation by Fritz on these
first moves. I hope this small change improved the quality of TCN for all subscribers.
Toronto Chess News
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INTERNATIONAL
Tournaments
2013 World Chess Cup
This tournament of 128 of the world’s best players in a knockout format is being
held in Tromso, Norway. Rd. 1 took place Sunday, Aug. 11 & Mon. Aug. 12.
Rd. # 1 – Two upsets were Judit Polgar (Hungary), highest rated woman player, losing
against Cuban GM Isan Reynaldo Ortiz. Ian Nepomniachtchi (Russia) was knocked out
by 14-year-old Wei Yi (China). Two surprises were Anna Ushenina (Ukraine), Women’s
World Champion, beating Peter Svidler (Russia) in Game # 2, to take it into tie-breaks,
where she then lost, and former Women’s World Champion, Hou Yifan, drawing both
games against Alexei Shirov, and then losing on tie-break.
Canadian Participation:
Canadian Champion, GM Bator Sambuev,
won in Game # 1 against the higher-rated and well-known Alexander Morozevich
(Russia), with an unsound R-sac, but Alexander later blundered. But Alexander won
Game # 2, to force it into tie-breaks.
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Here is the tie-break system: two (2) tie-break games with 25 minutes for each player
with an addition of 10 seconds after each move; 2 games with a time control of 10 minutes plus
10 seconds increment after each move; 2 games with a time control of 5 minutes plus 3 seconds
increment after each move. If still there is no winner, one sudden-death game will be played.
In the tie-break, Alexander won 1.5 - .5.
Here are the two games, and the winning tie-break game (Annotations by Bob
Armstrong, using Fritz):
Game # 1:
Sambuev, Bator (2524) − Morozevich, Alexander (2739) [D87]
FIDE World Cup 2013 Tromso NOR (1.16), 11.08.2013
[Armstrong, Robert ]
1.d4² 0.34 1...Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.Nc3 d5 Grunfeld Defence 4.cxd5 Nxd5 5.e4 Nxc3 6.bxc3 Bg7
7.Bc4 0-0 8.Ne2 c5 9.0-0 Nc6 10.Be3 Qc7 11.Rc1 b6 12.h4 Bb7 13.h5 e6 [13...Rad8 14.h6
Bf6²] 14.hxg6?!= [14.h6 Bh8 15.Nf4 (15.Bg5 Qd7²) 15...Na5²] 14...hxg6 15.Nf4 Na5 16.Bd3 e5
17.Nh3 Rad8?!² [17...exd4 18.cxd4 c4 19.Qg4 Rfd8=] 18.d5 c4 19.Bc2 Bc8 20.g4?!= [20.Rb1
Bxh3 21.gxh3 Qe7²] 20...Nb7?!² [20...Bf6 21.Kg2 Kg7=] 21.Kg2 Nd6 22.g5 [22.Rh1 f6 23.a4
Rde8²] 22...Rfe8 [22...Nb5 23.Ba4 Nd6²] 23.Rh1 Kf8 24.Ng1?!= [24.f3 Ke7 25.f4 Kf8²] 24...Ke7
25.Rh7 [25.Nf3 Rh8 26.Nh4 Rh5=] 25...Rh8 26.Rxg7 Bator goes up a B 26...Ne8 [26...Kf8 27.f4
Kxg7=] 27.Rxf7+?!³ wrong P; a slightly unsound sac [27.Rxg6! fxg6 28.Qf3 Rh4=] 27...Kxf7
Alexander is up the exchange, but Bator has a P compensation 28.f4?-+ Alexander gets a
"winning" advantage [28.Kf1 Kg8 29.Qf3 Qe7∓] 28...Kg8 29.Qf3 29...Qh7 30.Kf1 Ng7 31.Ke1
Rf8 32.Kd2 exf4 Alexander is up the exchange 33.Bf2 Qh2 34.Rf1 Rh4?!∓ [34...Rh5 35.Qe2
Qg2-+] 35.e5 Rg4 36.e6 Rxg5 Alexander is up the exchange + P 37.Kc1 Bb7 38.Be4 Qh5 39.e7
Re8 40.d6
XABCDEFGHY
8-+-+r+k+(
7zpl+-zP-sn-'
6-zp-zP-+p+&
5+-+-+-trq%
4-+p+Lzp-+$
3+-zP-+Q+-#
2P+-+-vL-+"
1+-mK-+RsN-!
xabcdefghy
Qxf3??+− a blunder; Bator gets a "winning" advantage [40...Bxe4 41.Qxe4 Rd5∓] 41.Nxf3 Bxe4
42.Nxg5 Alexander is up a P, but Bator has 2 connected, passed P's, one on the 7th and one on
the 6th 42...Bc6 43.Bd4 Nf5 44.Be5 Rc8?+− 10.82 [44...Nxe7 45.dxe7 Rxe7+− 2.41] 45.Rf2?+−
9.60 [45.d7 Nxe7 46.dxc8Q+ Nxc8+− 11.12] 45...Nh6??+− leads to mate [45...Nxd6 46.Bxd6
Bd7+− 10.40] 46.Rxf4 material equality 46...Bd7?+− mate in 5 moves [46...Nf5 47.Rxc4 Nxd6
48.Bxd6 Re8+− mate in 11 moves] 47.Ne4??+− 6.78 missing the mate [47.Rf6 Bf5 48.d7 Rb8
49.Rf8+ Rxf8 50.exf8Q+ Kxf8 51.d8Q#] 47...Bf5??+− mate in 38 moves [47...Nf5 48.Nf6+ Kf7
49.Nxd7 Ke6 50.Rxf5 Kxd7+− 10.70(50...gxf5?? 51.Nf8+ Kf7 52.d7 Re8 53.d8Q Rxe7 54.Bd6+−
Toronto Chess News
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mate in 8 moves) ] 48.Rh4 Ng4??+− mate in 2 moves [48...Kf7 49.Rxh6 Ke6+− mate in 32
moves] 49.Rh8+ Kf7 50.Ng5# 1-0
Game # 2:
Morozevich, Alexander (2739) − Sambuev, Bator (2524) [D41]
FIDE World Cup 2013 Tromso NOR (2.16), 12.08.2013
[Armstrong, Robert]
1.c4= e6 2.Nf3 d5 3.d4 Nf6 4.Nc3 c5?!² [4...Nc6?! 5.e3 Be7²; 4...Bb4 5.Bd2 dxc4=] 5.cxd5
Nxd5 [5...cxd4 6.Nxd4 Nxd5²] 6.e4 Nxc3 7.bxc3 cxd4 8.cxd4 Bb4+ 9.Bd2 Bxd2+ 10.Qxd2 0-0
11.Bc4 [11.Rc1 b6 12.Bb5 Bb7²] 11...Nd7 12.0-0 b6 13.Rfe1?!² Bb7 14.a4 Rc8 15.Bb5 Nb8
16.Rad1 Qd6 17.d5 e5?!± Alexander gets a "clear" advantage [17...exd5 18.e5 Qe7²] 18.Qb2 f6
19.Nd2 Rfd8 20.h4 Rc5?!+− Alexander gets a "winning" advantage [20...Qc5 21.Rc1 Qd6±]
21.Nc4 Qf8 22.Ne3 Ba6 23.Rd3 [23.Qe2 Bc8 24.h5 Nd7+−] 23...Bc8 24.Red1?!± [24.Ra1 Na6
25.Qb3 Kh8+−] 24...Qd6?!+− [24...Qf7 25.Qa3 Bd7±] 25.h5 Qf8 26.d6?!± [26.Qe2 g6 27.Qf3
f5+−] 26...Be6 27.d7 Bf7?!+− [27...Qf7 28.Rd6 h6±] 28.h6 g6 29.Rd6 Qe7 30.a5 Be6?+− 4.85
[30...Rc7 31.f4 Rdxd7 32.Bxd7 Nxd7+− 4.09] 31.axb6 axb6 32.Ba4 b5 33.Bb3 Bxb3 34.Qxb3+
Qf7?+− 13.38 [34...Kh8 35.Qe6 Qf8 (35...Qxe6? 36.Rxe6 Rcc8 (36...Nxd7?? 37.Rxd7! Rcc8+−
Mate in 17 moves) 37.dxc8Q Rxc8 38.Rxf6 Kg8+− 25.47) 36.Nd5 b4+− 10.74; 34...Kf8? 35.Re6
Rc3 36.Rxe7 Rxb3 37.Rxh7 Rxd7 38.Rh8+ Ke7 39.Rxb8 Rxd1+ 40.Nxd1 Rb1 41.h7 Rxd1+
42.Kh2 Rd8 43.Rxd8 Kxd8 44.h8Q+ Ke7+− 18.03] 35.Nd5?+− 6.03 [35.Re6 Kf8 36.Ng4 Nxd7
37.Nxf6 b4+− 17.67] 35...Kh8 36.Rxf6 10.84 Alexander goes up a P 36...Qg8 37.Qg3 Nxd7
material equality 38.Rd6 Qf8??+− mate in 27 moves [38...Rxd5? 39.R1xd5 Qe8+− 22.45;
38...Rf8?? 39.Rxd7 Qe6+− mate in 22 moves; 38...Qf7 39.Rxd7 Qxd7 40.Qxe5+ Kg8 41.Nf6+ Kf7
42.Rxd7+ Rxd7 43.Qxc5 Kxf6+− 16.54] 39.Nf6??+− 5.27 missing the mating line [39.Rxd7! Re8
(39...Rxd7?? 40.Qxe5+ Kg8 41.Qe6+ Kh8 (41...Rf7?? 42.Nf6+ Kh8 43.Qxf7! Qxf7 44.Rd8+ Qf8
45.Rxf8#) 42.Qxd7 Rc4+− mate in 4 moves) 40.Nc7 Kg8+− mate in 15 moves] 39...Rc1 40.Qd3
5.26 [40.Rxc1? Qxd6 41.Nxd7 Qxd7 42.Qxe5+ Kg8+− 2.63] 40...Rdc8 41.Nxd7 Alexander goes
up an N 41...Qxh6? 6.25 [41...Rxd1++− 42.Qxd1 Qxh6 43.Nxe5 Qc1+− 4.97] 42.Nxe5 Qf4??+−
mate in 10 moves [42...Rxd1+ 43.Qxd1 Qc1+− 5.38] 43.Rd8+??+− 5.42 missing the mating line
again [43.Nxg6+! Kg8 (43...hxg6 44.Qd4+ Kh7 45.Rd7+ Kh6 46.Qg7+ Kh5 47.R7d5+ Qf5
48.Rxf5+ gxf5 49.Qh7+ Kg5 50.f4+ Kg4 51.Qxf5+ Kg3 52.Qg5#) 44.Nxf4 Rf8 mate in 7 moves]
43...Rxd8 44.Qxd8+ Kg7 45.Qe7+ Kg8 46.Rxc1 Qxc1+ 47.Kh2 Qf4+ 48.Kh3 Qxf2??+− mate in
17 moves [48...Qf8 49.Qe6+ Kg7 50.Kg3 Qf6 6.33] 49.Ng4+− mate in 12 moves 1-0
Tie−break Rapid Game # 1:
Sambuev, Bator (2530) − Morozevich, Alexander (2736) [D03]
World Cup 2013 Tromso (3.16), 13.08.2013
1.d4² 0.34 1...Nf6 2.Nf3?!= verified depth 20 [2.Nc3²] 2...g6 3.Bg5 Bg7 [3...Ne4 4.Bf4 Bg7=
(4...d5?!²) ] 4.Nbd2 [4.Nc3 d5 5.e3 0-0=] 4...d5 5.e3 0-0 6.Be2 Nbd7?!² [6...h6 7.Bh4 Be6=] 7.00 c5 8.c3 b6 9.Qa4 Bb7 10.Rfd1 a6 11.Qa3?!= [11.h3 Nh5 12.Ne1 Qe8=] 11...h6 12.Bh4 Rc8
13.Rac1 b5 14.h3 Re8 15.Bg3 c4?!² [15...Qb6 16.Bh2 Rf8=] 16.b3 Nb6 17.Ne5 Nfd7 18.Ndf3
Nf6 19.Nd2 Nfd7 20.Nxd7 Nxd7 21.bxc4 dxc4 22.Bf3?!= [22.Qb2 Nb6 23.Qc2 Bc6²] 22...Bxf3
23.Nxf3 Qb6 24.e4 [24.Qb2 e5 25.dxe5 Nxe5 26.Bxe5 Bxe5=] 24...Qb7 25.Re1 Nf6 [25...e5
26.Bxe5 Bxe5 27.Nxe5 Nxe5 28.dxe5 Rxe5=] 26.Nd2 Nh5 27.Bh2 e5 28.g4?∓ for the first time in
the game, Alexander gets the advantage, a "clear" advantage [28.d5 Nf6 29.Rb1 Nd7=]
28...exd4! [28...Nf6? 29.Bxe5 h5±] 29.gxh5 dxc3 Bator is up N vs 2 P's 30.Nf1 b4 31.Qa5?!-+
Alexander gets a "winning" advantage [31.Rb1 a5 32.Qa4 Rxe4∓] 31...Qb5 32.Qxb5 axb5 33.e5
b3 34.Rxc3 Bator is up N vs P 34...b4
Toronto Chess News
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Position after 34…b4
XABCDEFGHY
8-+r+r+k+(
7+-+-+pvl-'
6-+-+-+pzp&
5+-+-zP-+P%
4-zpp+-+-+$
3+ptR-+-+P#
2P+-+-zP-vL"
1+-+-tRNmK-!
xabcdefghy
35.Rxc4 − 2.28 Bator decides to sac to stop the P's [35.Rce3? bxa2 36.Nd2 Red8-+ − 4.08]
35...Rxc4 36.axb3 Alexander is up the exchange, but Bator has a P compensation 36...Rc3
37.hxg6 fxg6 38.Nd2 Rd3 39.Re2 Kf7 40.Kg2 Ke6 41.Ne4 Rc8 42.h4 Rxb3 Alexander is up the
exchange 43.f4?-+ − 5.84 [43.Nd6 Rc6 44.Re4 Rb1-+ − 4.04] 43...Rd3?-+ − 3.66 [43...Ra3
44.Bg1 b3-+ − 6.33] 44.Bg1?-+ − 5.14 [44.h5 gxh5 45.Nd6 Rb8-+ − 3.44] 44...Bf8 45.h5 gxh5
Alexander is up the exchange + P 46.Ng3 b3 47.f5+ Kd5 48.Nxh5?-+ − 13.66 Alexander is up
the exchange again [48.Nf1 h4 49.e6 Rc2-+ − 8.69] 48...Rc2 49.Nf4+ Kc4-+ − 15.30 0-1
The other Canadian GM playing, Eric Hansen (qualified through the Americas
Continental Championship),
Toronto Chess News
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was defeated in Rd. 1 by Vladimir Malakhov, 1.5 -.5. Here is the losing game:
Malakhov, Vladimir (2707) − Hansen, Eric (2584) [A05]
FIDE World Cup 2013 Tromso NOR (1.31), 11.08.2013
1.Nf3² Nf6 2.g3?!= [2.d4 d5 3.c4 dxc4²] 2...g6 3.b3?!³ [3.c4 Bg7 4.d4 d5=] 3...Bg7 4.Bb2 0-0
5.c4 c6?!= [5...d5 6.Bg2 Nc6³] 6.Bg2 d5 7.0-0 Bg4 8.h3 Bxf3 9.Bxf3 Nbd7?!² [9...Qd7 10.h4
d4=] 10.d4 Ne4 11.Nc3 Ndf6 12.Qd3 Nxc3 13.Bxc3 Qd7 14.Bg2?!= [14.Kg2 Qe6 15.Rac1
Ne4²] 14...Ne4?!² [14...Qe6 15.Rac1 Rac8=] 15.Bxe4 dxe4 16.Qxe4 Qxh3 17.Qxe7?!= Vlad
goes up a P [17.Rad1 e6 18.Rd3 Rfd8²] 17...Rae8 18.Qxb7 Vlad goes up 2 P's 18...Re3!
XABCDEFGHY
8-+-+-trk+(
7zpQ+-+pvlp'
6-+p+-+p+&
5+-+-+-+-%
4-+PzP-+-+$
3+PvL-tr-zPq#
2P+-+PzP-+"
1tR-+-+RmK-!
xabcdefghy
19.Qxc6?!³ refusing the draw, and sacking the B [19.fxe3 Qxg3+ 20.Kh1 Qh3+ 21.Kg1 Qg3+=;
19.Bb2 Rxg3+ 20.fxg3 Qxg3+ 21.Kh1 Qh3+ 22.Kg1 Qg3+=] 19...Rxc3 Vlad has 3 P's vs B 20.e3
Bh6?!= [20...Qg4 21.c5 Rd3³] 21.Qh1 Qxh1+ 22.Kxh1 Rc2 23.Kg1 Rd8 [23...Re8 24.c5 Kf8=]
24.c5 Kf8 25.b4 Ke7 26.b5 Ke6 27.a4 Kd5?± Vlad gets a "clear" advantage [27...Kd7 28.a5
Bg5=] 28.a5 a6?!+− Vlad gets a "winning" advantage [28...Bg5 29.Rfc1 Rb2±] 29.b6?² Vlad is
losing his advantage [29.bxa6 Bg5 30.Rfb1 Ra8+−] 29...Kc6 30.Rfb1 Kb7?+− Vlad gets back a
"winning" advantage [30...Bg7 31.b7 Kc7²] 31.Rc1 Rxc1+ 32.Rxc1 Kc6 33.Rb1 Rb8 34.Kf1 f5
[34...Bf8 35.Ke2 Kb7+−] 35.Ke2 Bg7 36.Kd3 Rd8?+− 5.44 [36...Bf6? 37.Kc4 Bd8+− 5.64;
36...Bf8 37.Kc4 Kb7+− 3.62] 37.Kc4?+− 5.04 [37.b7 Kc7 38.Rb6 h5+− 5.97] 37...h5 5.47
[37...Kb7 38.d5 Kb8+− 5.56] 38.Rd1?+− 3.10 [38.b7 Kc7 39.Rb6 Rb8+− 6.81] 38...Rd5?+− 6.14
[38...Kb7 39.d5 Be5+− 4.34] 39.f3?+− 4.12 [39.b7 Rd8 40.Rb1 Kc7+− 6.71] 39...g5 40.e4+− 4.97
1-0
Thanks to both Bator and Eric for so admirably representing Canada!
2012-3 FIDE Grand Prix # 5 (Beijing)
(Adapted from TWIC) The FIDE Grand Prix # 5 (Beijing) took place 4th to 16th
July 2013. Opening ceremony 3rd July. Players: Boris Gelfand (Israel), Anish Giri
(Netherlands), Alexander Grischuk (Russia), Vassily Ivanchuk (Ukraine), Gata Kamsky
USA), Sergey Karjakin (Russia), Peter Leko (Hungary), Shakhriyar Mamedyarov
(Azerbaijan), Alexander Morozevich (Russia), Veselin Topalov (Bulgaria), Hao Wang
Toronto Chess News
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(China), Yue Wang (China - replacing Teimour Radjabov). The prize fund to be shared
by the players is 170,000 EUR.
Shakhriyar Mamedyarov
won the event with 7/11 half a point clear of Alexander Grischuk. Mamedyarov moves
second in the Grand Prix and if the calculations of Mark Crowther of TWIC are correct,
only a Caruana or Grischuk win in the final Grand Prix (venue formerly Paris but now
not known) can deny him a Candidates place. Veselin Topalov's final round win gave
him a share of third place which means victory in the Grand Prix series and that he is the
first qualifier for the 2014 Candidates.
In Rd. 2, Sergey beat Hao to move to 2/2, alone in first. The remaining games on the second
day were drawn, leaving Alexander and Veselin tied 2nd/3rd. Here is Sergey’s game. (Annotations by
Bob Armstrong, using Fritz):
Karjakin, Sergey (2776) − Wang Hao (2752) [B09]
FIDE GP Beijing Beijing CHN (2), 05.07.2013
1.e4² 0.35 1...d6 2.d4 Nf6 3.Nc3 g6 4.f4 Austrian Attack in the Pirc Defence 4...Bg7 5.Bd3
[5.Nf3 0-0 6.Be2 c5²] 5...e5 [5...Nc6 6.Nf3 0-0²] 6.dxe5 dxe5 7.Nf3 exf4 8.Bxf4 0-0 9.Qd2 Nc6
10.0-0-0 Be6 11.h3 Nd7 12.Bg5 Bf6?!± Sergey gets a "clear" advantage [12...f6 13.Bf4 Nce5²]
13.h4 h5 [13...Qe7 14.Bb5 Qc5±] 14.Qf4 [14.Bb5 Bxg5 15.hxg5 Qe7±] 14...Bxg5 15.hxg5 Qe7
16.Bb5 Nb6?!+− Sergey gets a "winning" advantage [16...Qc5 17.Bxc6 Qxc6±] 17.Bxc6 bxc6
18.Ne5 Nc4 19.Nxc4 Bxc4 20.g4 Rab8 21.gxh5 Sergey goes up a P 21...Qb4 22.Rd4?!±
[22.Na4! Qe7 (22...Qxa4?? 23.hxg6 Qxc2+ 24.Kxc2 Bb3+ 25.Kb1 Rfd8 26.axb3 Rxd1+ 27.Rxd1
mate in 4 moves) 23.Qh4 Kg7+− 4.05] 22...Qxb2+ material equality 23.Kd2 Rfd8?!+− 2.34
[23...Rbd8 24.Qf6 Rxd4+ 25.Qxd4 c5±] 24.Qf6 Rxd4+ 25.Qxd4 Qb6 26.Qxc4 Sergey is up an N
26...Rd8++− 3.56 [26...Qf2+ 27.Qe2 Qg3+− 2.68] 27.Kc1 Rd4 28.Qe2 Qc5 29.Nb1 Qxg5+
Sergey is up N vs P 30.Nd2+− 3.58 1-0
Standings after Round Three
Karjakin 3
Mamedyarov 2
Grischuk 2
Topalov 2
Toronto Chess News
10
Giri 1.5
Wang Yue 1.5
Leko 1.5
Kamsky 1
Ivanchuk 1
Morozevich 1
Wang Hao 1
Gelfand .5
In Rd. 5, Alexander G. defeated Shakhriyar to take over second place. Here is the
game (Annotations by Bob Armstrong, using Fritz):
Grischuk, A (2780) − Mamedyarov, S (2761) [A29]
FIDE GP Beijing Beijing CHN (5), 09.07.2013
1.c4= Nf6 2.Nc3 e5 3.Nf3 Nc6 4.g3 d5 5.cxd5 Nxd5 6.Bg2 Nb6 7.0-0 Be7 8.a3 0-0 9.d3 Be6
10.Be3 Nd5 11.Nxd5 Bxd5 12.Qa4 Re8 13.Rac1 a6 14.Rfd1 Bf8 15.Rc3 h6 16.Rdc1 both
players have maintained equality from the start to here 16...Rc8?!² [16...Rb8 17.Nh4 g6=]
17.Bh3 Rb8 18.Bf5 g6 19.Be4 19...Bxe4 [19...f5²; 19...Qd7²] 20.dxe4 Qd7 21.Kg2 Qe6 22.b4
Qg4 23.Qc2 Qe6 24.Qa4 Qg4 25.Qc2 Qe6 26.h3 g5 27.Qa4 Qg6 [27...Red8 28.R1c2 Nd4²]
28.Nd2 Rbd8 29.Rxc6 [29.b5 Nd4 30.bxa6 Qxa6 31.Qxa6 bxa6 32.Rxc7 Nxe2²] 29...bxc6
30.Rxc6 Alexander goes up a P 30...Re6 31.Rc4 h5 32.Nf3?!= [32.Qc2 c6 33.Nb3 Be7²]
32...Be7 33.Nd2 g4 [33...Kg7 34.Qc2 c6=] 34.h4 Bf8?!² [34...Rdd6 35.Nf1 Kh7=] 35.Qc2 c6
36.Nf1 Red6?!± Alexander gets a "clear" advantage [36...Rc8 37.Bg5 Rd6²] 37.Bg5?!² [37.Bc5
Re6 38.Ne3 Kh7±] 37...R8d7 38.Be3 Re6 39.Rc3 Rd8 40.Nd2 Bg7?!± [40...Ra8 41.Nb3 Kh7²]
41.Rc5 Bf8 42.Ra5 c5 43.bxc5 Alexander goes up 2 P's 43...Rc6 44.Ra4 Qe6 45.Rc4 Rc7
46.Nb3 Qc6 47.a4 Rb8 48.Qc3 Qe6 49.Nc1 Rb2?!+− This loses another P. Alexander gets a
"winning" advantage [49...f6 50.a5 Rc6±] 50.Qxb2 Qxc4 51.Qxe5 Alexander goes up 3 P's
51...Rc6?+− 3.35 [51...Rd7 52.Nd3 Qe6+− 1.97] 52.Qd5?+− 2.12 [52.Bd4 Rh6 53.Nd3 Qxa4+−
3.54] 52...Qxa4 Alexander is up 2 P's 53.Nd3 Re6 54.Bd4 Bg7 55.e5?!± [55.Bxg7 Kxg7 56.Ne5
Qe8+−] 55...Bh6?!+− [55...Qc6 56.e4 Qe8±] 56.Nf4 Bxf4 57.gxf4 Qc2 58.e4 Qd1 59.f5 Re8?+−
4.30 [59...Qf3+ 60.Kg1 Qd1+ 61.Kh2 g3+ 62.fxg3 Re7+− 3.39] 60.e6 Qf3+ 61.Kg1+− 11.83 1-0
Standings after Round 5 ( Tues., July 9) – Sergey still in clear first
Karjakin 4
Grischuk 3.5
Mamedyarov 3
Topalov 3
Giri 3
Leko 2.5
Ivanchuk 2.5
Morozevich 2.5
Wang Yue 2.5
Wang Hao 1.5
Gelfand 1
Kamsky 1
Toronto Chess News
11
In Rd. 6 (Wed., July 10), Shakhriyar defeated the leader, Sergey. Thus Alexander,
Sergey and Shakhriyar were tied for first. Here is the game (Annotations by Bob
Armstrong, using Fritz):
Karjakin, Sergey (2776) − Mamedyarov, S (2761) [C42]
FIDE GP Beijing Beijing CHN (6), 10.07.2013
1.e4² 0.35 1...e5 2.Nf3 Nf6 3.Nxe5 d6 4.Nf3 Nxe4 5.Nc3 Nxc3 6.dxc3 Be7 7.Be3?!= [7.Bd3 0-0
8.0-0 Bf6²] 7...Nc6 [7...0-0 8.Bc4 Nc6=] 8.Qd2 Be6 9.0-0-0 Qd7 10.Kb1 h6 11.h3 a6 12.g4 h5
13.gxh5 (verified depth 22) [13.g5 Ne5 14.Nd4 (14.Bg2?! Qc6²) 14...Bd5=] 13...Rxh5 14.Rg1?!³
[14.Be2 Rh8 15.Nd4 0-0-0=] 14...Bf6 15.Bg5 0-0-0 16.Bxf6 gxf6 17.h4 Ne5 18.Qe3 Kb8
19.b3?!∓ Shakhriyar gets a "clear" advantage [19.Be2 Re8 20.Qd4 Nc6³] 19...Bg4 20.Be2 Bxf3
21.Bxf3 Rxh4 Shakhriyar goes up a P 22.Bg2 Qf5?!³ [22...Re8 23.c4 Qf5∓] 23.Rd4 Rg4?!=
[23...Rh2 24.Rb4 d5³] 24.Rxg4 Nxg4 25.Qd4?-+ Shakhriyar gets a "winning" advantage [25.Qh3
Re8 26.Bxb7! Re2=] 25...Qxf2 Shakhriyar goes up 2 P's 26.Qxf2 Nxf2 27.Rf1 Ng4 28.Bh3 Ne5
29.Rxf6 Shakhriyar is up 1 P 29...c6 30.Rf2 Rg8 31.c4 Rg3 32.Bf5 Kc7 33.Rh2 Rf3 34.Rh5
a5?!∓ [34...b5 35.cxb5 axb5-+] 35.Kb2 Rg3 36.Rh7 Kb6 37.Bc8 Rg8 38.Bf5 Kc5 39.Rh4 Rg2
40.Rf4 Rg3 41.Bc8 b6 42.a3 Rf3 43.Rxf3 Nxf3 44.Kc3 d5 45.b4+ axb4+ 46.axb4+ Kd6
47.cxd5 cxd5 48.Kd3 Ne5+ 49.Ke3 Nc6 50.c3 Ke5 51.Kd3 Ne7 52.Bb7 Nf5 53.Bc8 Nd6
54.Bg4 f5 55.Bf3 f4 56.Bh5 Nc4 57.Bf3 Ne3 58.Be2 Ng2 59.Bg4 Ne3 [59...Kd6 60.Kd4 Ne3∓]
60.Be2 Nc4 [60...Ke6 61.Bf3 Kd6∓] 61.Bf3 Nd6 [61...Na3 62.Ke2 Nb5∓] 62.Bh5 Ne4 63.c4
d4?!³ Shakhriyar is losing his advantage [63...dxc4+ 64.Kxc4 Nd6+±] 64.Bf3 Ng5 65.Bg4?-+
Shakhriyar gets back a "winning" advantage [65.Bh1 Ne6 66.Bc6 Nc7²] 65...f3 66.c5 f2 67.Ke2
bxc5 68.bxc5 Kf4 69.c6 Kg3 70.c7 Kg2 71.c8Q f1Q+ So both Q's are back on the board, and
Shakhriyar is still up a passed P (last one on the board). Can he queen it? 72.Kd2 Ne4+ 73.Kc2
d3+ 74.Kb2?-+ − 13.47 [74.Kb3 Qb1+ 75.Ka3 Qa1+ 76.Kb3 Nd2+ 77.Kb4 Qd4+ 78.Kb5 Ne4-+ −
3.16] 74...Kg3?-+ − 1.54 [74...Qf2+ 75.Ka3 Qa7+-+ − 14.17] 75.Qf5 Qg2+?!∓ [75...Qe1 76.Qf3+
Kh4 77.Qxd3 Qb4+-+] 76.Ka3 Qh1?= Shakhriyar has lost his advantage. It is now a draw.
[76...Nf2 77.Bh5 Qa8+∓] 77.Bd1 Qxd1 78.Qxe4 Qe2 79.Qg6+ Kf2 80.Qf6+ Qf3 81.Qd4+ Ke2
82.Qe5+ Kf2 83.Qd4+ Kf1 84.Qa1+ Kg2 85.Qg7+ Qg3 86.Qb7+ Kf2 87.Kb2 Ke2 88.Qe4+ Qe3
89.Qg2+ Qf2 90.Qe4+ Kd2 91.Kb3??-+ a blunder − the losing move. Shakhriyar gets back his
"winning" advantage [91.Qb7 Ke2 92.Qc6 d2=] 91...Qb6+ 92.Kc4 Qa6+ 93.Kb3??-+ leads to
mate [93.Kb4 Kc2 94.Qd5 Qb6+-+ − 4.96] 93...Qb5+ 94.Ka2?-+ mate in 8 moves [94.Ka3 Kc3
95.Qe1+ Kc2 96.Qb4 Qxb4+ 97.Kxb4 d2-+ mate in 11 moves] 94...Kc3 95.Qe1+ Kc2-+ mate in 5
moves 0-1
In Rd. 7, Sergey lost and Alexander G and Shakhriyar won, leaving them now
tied for first. Here is Alexander G’s win over Yue (Annotations by Bob Armstrong, using
Fritz):
Grischuk, A (2780) − Wang Yue (2705) [A07]
FIDE GP Beijing Beijing CHN (6), 10.07.2013
1.Nf3² 0.29 1...d5 2.g3?!= [2.d4²] 2...Nf6 3.Bg2 c6 [3...c5 4.0-0 Nc6=] 4.0-0 [4.d4 g6 5.c4 dxc4=]
4...g6 5.d3 Bg7 6.Nbd2 0-0 7.e4 a5 8.a4 Bg4 9.e5 Nfd7 10.d4 c5 11.h3 Bxf3 12.Nxf3 cxd4 Yue
goes up a P 13.e6?!³ [13.Qxd4 e6 14.Bf4 h6=] 13...fxe6 14.Nxd4 Nc5 15.Re1 Ra6 16.c3 Nbd7
17.Be3 Kh8?!= [17...Ne5 18.Nb5 Qc8³] 18.Nb5 Qc8 19.Rc1 [19.Qc2 Ne5 20.Rad1 Kg8=]
19...Rd8?² [19...Ne5 20.Re2 Kg8=] 20.b4 [20.Re2 Ne5 21.b3 Nf7²] 20...Ne4 21.c4 axb4 22.cxd5
Nc3 23.Nxc3 bxc3?!± Alexander gets a "clear" advantage [23...Bxc3 24.Bd4+ Nf6²] 24.Bd4
Bxd4 25.Qxd4+ e5 26.Qb4 Qc5 27.Qxc5 Nxc5 28.Rxc3 material equality 28...Nd7 29.Re4?!²
[29.Rc7 Rxa4 30.Rxb7 Kg8±] 29...Rd6 30.Rc7 b6 31.Re1 Kg7?!± [31...Kg8 32.Bf1 Kf7²] 32.f4
exf4 33.Rxe7+ Kf6 34.Rxh7 fxg3 35.Rc3 Ne5 36.Rxg3 Alexander goes up a P 36...Rc8
37.Rh4?!² [37.Re3?! Rc4 38.Ra3 Rd4²; 37.Rb3?! Rc4 38.Ra7 Nd7²; 37.Ra3 Rc4 38.Rh8 Nd7±]
Toronto Chess News
12
37...Rc4?!± [37...Rc1+ 38.Kh2 Rc2²] 38.Rxc4 Nxc4 39.Kf2 g5 40.Rg4 Ne5 41.Rd4 Ng6 42.Kg3
Ke5 43.Rg4 Kf6 44.Rc4 Ne7 45.Rc3 Kg7 46.Rd3 Rh6?!+− Alexander gets a "winning"
advantage [46...Kf6 47.Kg4 Nf5±] 47.Kg4 Kf6 48.d6 Rh4+ 49.Kg3 Nf5+ 50.Kf3?!± [50.Kf2 Rf4+
51.Ke2 Nd4+ 52.Kd2 Ne6+−] 50...Nd4+ 51.Kf2 Ne6 52.d7 Ke7 53.Bc6 Nd8?!+− [53...Rd4
54.Re3 Kf6±] 54.Bb5 g4 55.hxg4 Rxg4 56.Rh3 Kd6 57.Rc3 Rb4 58.Ke3 Ke7 59.Rc8
XABCDEFGHY
8-+Rsn-+-+(
7+-+Pmk-+-'
6-zp-+-+-+&
5+L+-+-+-%
4Ptr-+-+-+$
3+-+-mK-+-#
2-+-+-+-+"
1+-+-+-+-!
xabcdefghy
Rxb5??+− 3.80 the losing move, though the game was already in trouble − an unsound
exchange sac [59...Rb1 60.Kf3 Rd1+− 2.46] 60.axb5 Kxd7 Alexander is up the exchange 61.Rb8
Kc7 62.Ra8 Ne6 63.Ke4 Kd6 64.Rc8 Nc5+ 65.Kd4 Nb3+ 66.Kc3 Na5 67.Rh8 Kc5 68.Rh5+
Kd6 69.Rg5 Kc7 70.Kd4 Nb3+ 71.Kd5 Na5 72.Rg7+ Kc8 9.06 73.Kd6 Kb8??+− leads to mate
[73...Nc4+ 74.Kc6 Kd8+− 9.49] 74.Rc7 Ka8 75.Rc8+ Kb7 76.Kd7 14.89 76...Ka7 77.Kc7+− mate
in 30 moves 1-0
In Rd. 9 (Sun., July 14), Shakhriyar defeated Anish. Here is that game
(Annotations by Bob Armstrong, using Fritz):
Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar (2761) − Giri, Anish (2734) [D90]
FIDE GP Beijing Beijing CHN (9.5), 14.07.2013
1.d4² 0.34 1...Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.Nc3 d5 4.Nf3 Bg7 5.Qa4+?!= [5.cxd5 Nxd5 6.e4 Nxc3 7.bxc3 c5²]
5...Bd7 6.Qb3 dxc4 7.Qxc4 0-0 8.Bf4 c6 9.e4 b5 10.Qb3 c5?!² [10...Qa5 11.Bd2 b4=] 11.dxc5
Shakhriyar goes up a P 11...Qa5 12.Bd2 b4 13.Nd5 Nc6 14.Bd3 [14.Qc4 Rad8 15.Nxb4 Nxb4
16.Bxb4 Qc7²] 14...Be6 15.Ng5?³ for the first time in the game, Anish gets the advantage [15.0-0
Rad8 16.Bc4 Nxe4 17.Nxe7+ Nxe7 18.Bxb4 Bxc4 19.Qxc4 Qa4²] 15...Rad8??+− Shakhriyar
gets a "winning" advantage [15...Bxd5 16.exd5 Ne5³] 16.Nxe6 fxe6 17.Nxb4 Shakhriyar goes up
2 P's 17...Nd4 18.Qc4 Nd7 2.37 19.Nc6 Qxc5 20.Nxd8 Shakhriyar is up R + P 20...Ne5?+− 3.78
[20...Rxd8 21.Bf4 Qxc4 22.Bxc4 Nc2+ 23.Ke2 Nxa1 24.Bxe6+ Kf8 25.Rd1 Nc2 26.Bc7 Nd4+
27.Rxd4 Bxd4 28.Bxd8 Nc5+− 2.03 Shakhriyar would be up 2 P's] 21.Nxe6 Shakhriyar is up R +
2 P's 21...Qd6
Toronto Chess News
13
Position after 21…Qd6
XABCDEFGHY
8-+-+-trk+(
7zp-+-zp-vlp'
6-+-wqN+p+&
5+-+-sn-+-%
4-+QsnP+-+$
3+-+L+-+-#
2PzP-vL-zPPzP"
1tR-+-mK-+R!
xabcdefghy
22.Nxd4+! a Q−sac 22...Nxc4 23.Bxc4+ Shakhriyar is up R + B + N + 2 P's vs Q 23...Kh8
24.Ne6 Rc8 25.Bd5 Bxb2 Shakhriyar is up R + B + N + P vs Q 26.Rb1 Rc2?+− 6.94 [26...Bc3
27.Bxc3+ Rxc3 28.0-0 h5+− 5.10] 27.Rxb2??+− 4.16 an unsound exchange sac [27.Kd1 Rxd2+
28.Kxd2 Bf6+− 7.32 Shakhriyar would be up 2 R's + N + P vs Q] 27...Rxb2 Shakhriyar is up 2 B's
+ N + P vs Q 28.Bc3+ Kg8+− 4.21 1-0
In Rd. 10, Alexander M defeated the leader, Shakhriyar. Here is that game
(Annotations by Bob Armstrong, using Fritz):
Morozevich, Alexander (2736) − Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar (2761) [D78]
FIDE GP Beijing Beijing CHN (10.3), 15.07.2013
1.Nf3² 0.29 1...Nf6 2.c4?!= [2.d4²] 2...g6?!² [2...Nc6 3.d4 e6=] 3.g3?!= [3.Nc3?! c5 4.e4 (4.d4
cxd4 5.Nxd4 Nc6=) 4...Bg7=; 3.d4 Bg7 4.Nc3 c5²] 3...Bg7 4.Bg2 0-0 5.d4 c6 [5...c5 6.d5 Qa5+
7.Bd2 Qa6=] 6.0-0 d5 7.Qb3 dxc4 8.Qxc4 Qd5?!² [8...Na6 9.Nc3 Be6=] 9.Nbd2?!= [9.Qa4 Qd8
10.Nc3 Nbd7²] 9...Qxc4 10.Nxc4 Be6?!² [10...Nbd7 11.Rd1 Nb6=] 11.b3 Bd5 12.Ba3 Re8
13.Rac1 Nbd7 14.Na5 Rab8 15.Rfd1 Bf8?!± Alexander gets a "clear" advantage [15...Bh6 16.e3
Nf8²] 16.Ne5 Bxg2 17.Kxg2 e6 18.Bxf8 Kxf8 19.Nec4 Ke7 20.b4 Rec8 21.a3 g5 22.Nb2?!²
[22.f3 g4 23.e4 b6±] 22...Ne8 23.Nd3 f5 [23...Nd6 24.Nb3 Rd8²] 24.h4 g4 25.Nf4 Nef6 26.Rc2
Nd5 27.Nd3 Rf8 28.e3 Rfe8 29.Re1 N5f6 30.Rb1 Rec8 31.Rbc1 Rd8?!± [31...Nb6 32.Nc5 Rc7²]
32.a4 Ne4?!+− Alexander gets a "winning" advantage [32...Rh8 33.b5 cxb5 34.axb5 Nd5±] 33.b5
cxb5 Shakhriyar goes up a P 34.Rc7 Nd6 35.Nc5 bxa4?+− 2.75 Shakhriyar goes up 2 P's
[35...Ne8 36.Rxb7 Rxb7 37.Nc6+ Kf6 38.Nxb7 Rc8 39.axb5 Rc7+− 1.44] 36.Ncxb7 Shakhriyar is
up a P 36...Nxb7 37.Nxb7 Rf8 38.R1c6 Rf7 39.Nc5 Ke8 40.Rxe6+ material equality 40...Kd8
41.Rec6+− 2.63 Shakhriyar resigned. He must lose material 41...Ke8 42.Nxa4 Nf6 43.Rc5 Rxc7
44.Rxc7 a6 45.Ra7 Ne4 46.Rxh7 Rb4+− Alexander would be up 2 P's, with 2 passed P's to
Shakhriyar's 1 passed P 1-0
In the final Rd. 11, Veselin defeated Alexander M, to tie for third and guarantee
himself a place in the 2014 Candidates’ Tournament. Here is that game (Annotations by
Bob Armstrong, using Fritz):
Topalov, Veselin (2767) − Morozevich, Alexander (2736) [C41]
Toronto Chess News
14
FIDE GP Beijing Beijing CHN (11.5), 16.07.2013
1.e4² 0.35 1...d6 2.d4 Nf6 3.Nc3 e5 4.Nf3 Nbd7 [4...exd4 5.Nxd4 Be7²] 5.Bc4 [5.Be2 Be7 6.0-0
0-0²] 5...Be7 6.0-0 0-0 7.a4 [7.h3 c6 8.Re1 b5²] 7...c6 8.Re1 a5 [8...h6 9.a5 Re8²] 9.h3 Nb6
10.Bb3 Nfd7 11.Be3 exd4 12.Nxd4 Nc5 13.Qf3 Nxb3 14.cxb3 Be6?!± Veselin gets a "clear"
advantage [14...Nd7 15.Rad1 Ne5²] 15.Rad1 Nd7 16.Qg3 Ne5 17.Re2 Ng6 18.f4?!² [18.Nf5
Bxb3 19.Nxe7+ Qxe7 20.Rxd6 Be6±] 18...c5?!± [18...Bd7 19.Bf2 f5²] 19.Nf5?!² [19.Nxe6 fxe6
20.Qg4 Qc8±] 19...Bxb3 Alexander goes up a P 20.Rdd2 Rc8?!± [20...b6 21.Rf2 Qb8±] 21.Rf2
Kh8 22.h4 Rg8?!+− Veselin gets a "winning" advantage [22...Bxh4 23.Nxh4 Qxh4 24.Qxh4
Nxh4±] 23.h5 Nf8
XABCDEFGHY
8-+rwq-snrmk(
7+p+-vlpzpp'
6-+-zp-+-+&
5zp-zp-+N+P%
4P+-+PzP-+$
3+lsN-vL-wQ-#
2-zP-tR-tRP+"
1+-+-+-mK-!
xabcdefghy
24.Nxd6! an N−sac; material equality 24...Bxd6 Alexander is up a B, but the B is pinned
25.e5?!± [25.Nb5 Rc6 26.e5 f6+−] 25...f5?!+− [25...Qe8 26.Rxd6 Bxa4±] 26.Rxd6 material
equality 26...Qe8 27.Qh3 Be6 28.Rfd2 h6 29.Nb5 Nd7 30.Qf3 b6?+− 4.25 [30...Nf8 31.Rb6
Rb8+− 3.17] 31.Qd1 Nf8 32.Rxb6 Veselin goes up a P 32...Qe7 33.Qf3 Nd7 34.Rb7 Rb8 35.Ra7
Rgd8 36.Rd6 Qf7 37.Nc7 Bc4 38.e6 Qe7 39.Rxd7 Veselin is up N + P 39...Rxd7 40.exd7 Qxd7
Veselin is up an N 41.Nb5 Qe6 42.Qg3+− 6.92 1-0
Here is the final cross-table:
FIDE GP Beijing Beijing CHN Thu 4th Jul 2013 - Tue 16th Jul 2013
Leading Final Round 11 Standings:
Rk Name
1
2
3
4
GM AZE 2761 *
0
1
½ 1
2
Grischuk, Alexander GM RUS 2780 1
*
½ ½ ½ 1
3
Topalov, Veselin
½ *
1
Mamedyarov,
Shakhriyar
Ti
FED Rtg
GM BUL 2767 0
5
½ 1
6
7
8
9
½ 0
1
½ 1
½ ½ 0
½ 1
Toronto Chess News
0
1
10 11 12 Pts TB1 TB2
1
½ 7
½ ½ 1
0
6½ 0
½ ½ ½ 6
½
37
35.25
31.75
15
4
Leko, Peter
GM HUN 2737 ½ ½ ½ *
1
½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 6
5
Karjakin, Sergey
GM RUS 2776 0
*
½ 1
6
Wang, Yue
GM CHN 2705 ½ 0
7
Morozevich,
Alexander
½ 0
0
½ ½ ½ *
1
½ 0
½ 0
½ *
½ 1
½ 0
½ ½ *
Giri, Anish
GM NED 2734 0
9
Gelfand, Boris
GM ISR
2773 ½ 1
0
½ ½ ½ 0
10 Wang, Hao
GM CHN 2752 0
½ ½ ½ 0
0
11 Ivanchuk, Vassily
GM UKR 2733 0
½ ½ ½ ½ 1
12 Kamsky, Gata
GM USA 2763 ½ 0
½ ½ ½ 0
½ 1
0
½ 1
28.75
0
1
5½ 1½
28.75
½ 0
1
5½ 1
29.75
½ 1
5½ 1
28.75
1
0
*
½ 1
½ *
1
½ 0
0
0
32.75
½ ½ 5½ 2½
½ ½ ½ 1
GM RUS 2736 1
8
½ 1
½
1½
27.75
5
1
26
0
5
½
28.25
*
3½ 0
19.75
(Paris
2013)
Best 3
total
½ 1
½ *
½ 0
½ 5
1
12 players
Here are the updated Grand Prix standings after 5 events:
Criteria
London
2012
Name
Fed
Topalov
BUL Rating
140
Mamedyarov
AZE Rating
140
Grischuk
RUS World Cup
90
Caruana
ITA
FIDE
President
Tashkent
2012
80
Zug
2013
Thess.
2013
Beijing
2013
170
45
100
410
170
390
20
85
80
100
Toronto Chess News
125
140
x
315
x
305
16
Morozevich
RUS AGON
140
75
Karjakin
RUS Rating
140
50
Wang Hao
CHN AGON
Ponomariov
UKR World Cup
Leko
HUN AGON
Dominguez
70
140
50
100
80
50
50
CUB AGON
35
20
Nakamura
USA Rating
15
Kamsky
USA Replacement
Gelfand
ISR
Match
25
10
140
30
Kasimdzhanov UZB AGON
35
80
Giri
NED AGON
15
Svidler
RUS World Cup
Ivanchuk
UKR World Cup
Wang Yue
CHN Replacement
Adams
ENG Replacement 55
Bacrot
FRA Replacement
Radjabov
AZE AGON
65
280
65
x
255
30
x
240
x
235
85
100
230
170
x
225
140
60
x
215
75
125
10
30
20
65
10
200
185
45
55
x
70
50
50
210
30
x
130
x
95
x
95
65
65
55
25
20
Toronto Chess News
25
x
20
17
46th Biel Chess Festival, Switzerland.
(adapted from TWIC) The 46th Biel Chess Festival 2013 took place 22nd July to
2nd August 2013. The main GM event took place in honour of Olivier Breisacher the
organizer who died just after last year's event. Indeed it has been a sad year for the event
with the loss of Hans Suri, Lucio Barvas and Rino Castagna who were all closely
associated with the tournament. The 6 players in the double round-robin were: Ian
Nepomniachtchi (Russia); Etienne Bacrot (France); Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (France);
Richard Rapport (Hungary); Alexander Moiseenko (Ukraine); Ding Liren (China).
In the last round, Maxime defeated Liren to make a 4-way tie for first after regular
play. So there was a 4 way play off Fri. Aug.2 (Semi-Final 5m+2spm; Final
15m+10spm).
Maxime Vachier-Lagrave
beat Liren Ding 2-0 in a blitz (5 min. + 2 seconds per move) semi-final and Alexander
Moiseenko 1.5-0.5 in a rapid (15 min. + 10 seconds per move) final to win the first
Breisacher Memorial as part of the 46th Biel Chess Festival. Final
Here is Maxime’s win in the rapid final, game 1, against Alexander (Annotations
by Bob Armstrong, using Fritz):
Vachier−Lagrave, Maxime (2719) − Moiseenko, Alexander (2699) [B30]
Breisacher Memorial Playoff Biel SUI (2.1), 02.08.2013
1.e4² 0.35 1...c5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.c3?!= [3.Bb5²] 3...d5 4.exd5 Qxd5 5.d4 Bf5 6.Be3 Nf6 7.Na3
cxd4 8.Bc4 Qa5 9.Nxd4 Nxd4 10.Bxd4 e5 11.Bb5+ Bd7 12.Bxd7+ Nxd7 13.Nc4 Qd5?!²
[13...Qc7 14.Qe2 0-0-0=] 14.Qe2 Be7?!± Maxime gets a "clear" advantage [14...f6 15.f4 b5²]
Toronto Chess News
18
15.Nxe5 Maxime goes up a P 15...Nxe5 16.Qxe5 Qxg2 material equality 17.Qb5+ Kf8 18.0-0-0
Qg5+ 19.Qxg5 Bxg5+ 20.Kc2 Be7?!+− Maxime gets a "winning" advantage [20...b6 21.Rhg1
f6±] 21.Rhe1?!± [21.Be3 b6 22.Rd7 g5+−] 21...f6?!+− 2.88 [21...b6 22.Bxg7+! (22.Be5 Rg8±)
22...Kxg7 23.Rxe7 Rhe8±] 22.Bxa7 Maxime goes up a P again 22...Rd8?+− 5.62 [22...Rxa7
23.Rd7 Bc5 24.Rd8+ Kf7 25.Rxh8 Bxf2+− 3.08]
XABCDEFGHY
8r+-+-mk-tr(
7vLp+-vl-zpp'
6-+-+-zp-+&
5+-+-+-+-%
4-+-+-+-+$
3+-zP-+-+-#
2PzPK+-zP-zP"
1+-+RtR-+-!
xabcdefghy
23.Bc5!+− 5.71 Alexander resigned. He must lose material 23...Rxd1 24.Bxe7+ Kf7 25.Kxd1
Rc8+− Maxime would be up B + P 1-0
Standings: 1st Maxime Vachier-Lagrave, 2nd Alexander Moiseenko, 3rd Etienne Bacrot
(on Sonneborn-Berger from Ding), 4th Ding Liren, 5th Ian Nepomniachtchi and 6th
Richard Rapport.
Sparkassen Chess Meeting, Dortmund, Germany
After 6 rounds, both Vladimir Kramnik, 14th World Champion, and Michael
Adams, top English player, had 5 points.
They met in the final round 9. Adams leading by ½ pt.. Mickey won the 41st
Sparkassen Chess Meeting in Dortmund after playing a quick draw with Vladimir in
Sunday's final round. The 41-year-old Englishman finished on 7/9 (TPR 2923) which was
half a point more than Vladimir Kramnik ( who had won ten times in Dortmund, but not
in 2012 and not in 2013).
Toronto Chess News
19
Mickey Adams
Here is Michael’s round 3 win against Italian Fabiano Caruana, no. 3 in the world
(Annotations by Bob Armstrong, using Fritz):
Caruana, Fabiano (2796) − Adams, Michael (2740) [C67]
41st GM Dortmund GER (3.4), 28.07.2013
1.e4² 0.35 1...e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 Nf6 4.0-0 Nxe4 5.d4 Nd6 6.Bxc6 dxc6 7.dxe5 Nf5 8.Qxd8+
Kxd8 9.h3 Bd7
[9...Be6 10.g4 Ne7²] 10.Rd1 Kc8?!± Fabiano gets a "clear" advantage
[10...Ke8 11.Nc3 Be7²] 11.g4 Ne7 12.Ng5 Be8 13.f4?!² [13.Nc3 b6 14.e6 fxe6 15.Nxe6 Bf7±]
13...h5 14.Kf2 b6 15.f5 Kb7 16.Nc3 [16.c4 f6 17.exf6 gxf6²] 16...hxg4 [16...Nd5 17.Nxd5 cxd5²]
17.hxg4 Rh2+?!± [17...Nd5 18.Nxd5 cxd5 19.Bf4 (19.Rxd5? Rh1 20.Kg2 Bc6 21.Kxh1 Bxd5+
22.Kh2 f6³) 19...Be7²] 18.Kg3 Rxc2 Mickey goes up a P 19.Nh7?!² [19.e6 f6 20.Nh7 Ng6!
21.Nxf8 Nxf8±] 19...c5 20.Nxf8?!= Fabiano is up N vs P [20.e6 fxe6 21.Nxf8 exf5²] 20...Bc6
21.f6?∓ for the first time in the game, Mickey gets the advantage, a "clear" advantage [21.Nd7
Rg2+ 22.Kf4 Rg8=] 21...Rg2+ 22.Kf4?!-+ Mickey gets a "winning" advantage [22.Kh3 gxf6
23.Bh6 f5∓] 22...gxf6 [22...Rxf8?! 23.fxe7 Re8±] 23.exf6 Rf2+ 24.Ke3 24...Rxf6 Fabiano is up
N vs 2 P's 25.Nh7 Rf3+ 26.Kd2 Rd8+ 27.Kc2
XABCDEFGHY
8-+-tr-+-+(
7zpkzp-snp+N'
6-zpl+-+-+&
5+-zp-+-+-%
4-+-+-+P+$
3+-sN-+r+-#
2PzPK+-+-+"
1tR-vLR+-+-!
xabcdefghy
Toronto Chess News
20
Rxc3+! nice sac 28.bxc3 − 3.13 Fabiano is up R vs 2 P's compensation [28.Kxc3 Rxd1-+ − 4.04]
28...Ba4+ 29.Kb2 Rxd1 Mickey is up 2 P's 30.Bg5 − 3.62 30...Nc6 31.Rxd1 Bxd1 32.Bf4 Bxg4
Mickey is up 3 P's 33.Nf6 Bf3 34.Ne8 Na5 35.Nxc7 Mickey is up 2 P's 35...Bc6 36.Kc2 Kc8
37.Kd3 Kd7 38.Kc2 Nc4 39.Na6 Bb7 40.Nb8+ Kc8 41.Kd3 b5-+ − 6.04 0-1
Here is the final cross-table:
41st GM Dortmund (GER), 26 vii-4 viii 2013
cat. XIX (2709)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
0
½ ½ 1
1
½ 1
1
1
½ 7
1
1
½ 1
1.
Adams, Michael
g ENG
2740
*
2.
Kramnik, Vladimir
g RUS
2784
½ *
1
½ 0
3.
Leko, Peter
g HUN
2737
½ 0
*
4.
Naiditsch, Arkadij
g GER
2710
0
½ 0
5.
Andreikin, Dmitry
g RUS
2727
0
6.
Meier, Georg
g GER
7.
Caruana, Fabiano
8.
6½
2866
1
½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 4½
2705
*
1
0
½ 4½
2708
1
½ 0
*
½ 0
½ 4
2664
2610
½ 0
½ 1
½ *
½ ½ 4
2677
g ITA
2796
0
0
½ ½ 1
0
½ 1
4
2656
Wang, Hao
g CHN
2752
0
0
½ 0
*
0
1
4
2661
9.
Khenkin, Igor
g GER
2605
0
½ ½ 0
½ ½ 1
*
½ 3½
10.
Fridman, Daniel
g GER
2629
½ 0
½ 1
1
½ ½ ½ ½ 0
Toronto Chess News
1
½ 1
½ 0
½ *
½ 1
0
1
2925
0
½ *
3
2640
2592
21
100th British Chess Championships 2013
The 100th British Chess Championships took place 29th July to 10th August
2013. The winner was David Howell, with 9.5/11, With one round to go, he had already
won the Championship..
Here were the top players after 10/11 rounds (from chessgames.com):
100th British Championship Tournament
9/10 (+8 -0 =2) [view games]
David Howell
Mark Hebden
7.5/10 (+5 -0 =5)
[view games]
Gawain Jones
7.5/10 (+5 -0 =5)
[view games]
Yang-Fan Zhou
7/10 (+5 -1 =4)
[view games]
Bogdan Lalic
7/10 (+4 -0 =6)
[view games]
Glenn Flear
7/10 (+5 -1 =4)
[view games]
Peter K Wells
7/10 (+6 -2 =2)
[view games]
Stephen Gordon
7/10 (+5 -1 =4)
[view games]
Keith Arkell
7/10 (+6 -2 =2)
[view games]
Gyula Meszaros
7/10 (+5 -1 =4)
[view games]
Daniel Gormally
7/10 (+7 -3 =0)
[view games]
Richard J Palliser
6.5/10 (+5 -2 =3)
[view games]
Alexander Longson
6.5/10 (+4 -1 =5)
[view games]
Ameet Ghasi
6.5/10 (+5 -2 =3)
[view games]
Dietmar Kolbus
6/10 (+3 -1 =6)
[view games]
Jonathan Hawkins
6/10 (+4 -2 =4)
[view games]
Charles H Storey
6/10 (+5 -3 =2)
[view games]
Jean-Luc Weller
6/10 (+4 -2 =4)
[view games]
Andrew P Horton
6/10 (+5 -3 =2)
[view games]
Richard A Bates
6/10 (+5 -3 =2)
[view games]
John Emms
6/10 (+3 -1 =6)
[view games]
Marcus R Harvey
6/10 (+4 -2 =4)
[view games]
Christopher Ward
6/10 (+5 -3 =2)
[view games]
Simon Kim Williams
6/10 (+5 -3 =2)
[view games]
Jack Rudd
6/10 (+6 -4 =0)
[view games]
Daniel Howard Fernandez
6/10 (+6 -4 =0)
[view games]
Simon J B Knott
6/10 (+4 -2 =4)
[view games]
Dominic Mackle
6/10 (+5 -3 =2)
[view games]
Toronto Chess News
22
Neil Carr
6/10 (+5 -3 =2)
[view games]
(107 players total; 79 players not shown. Click here for longer list.)
Here are the final top finishers:
100th ch-GBR 2013 Torquay ENG Sun 28th Jul 2013 - Sat 10th Aug 2013
Leading Final Round 11 Standings:
Rk Name
Ti
1
Howell, David W L
2
FED
Rtg
1
2
3
4
5
GM ENG
2639
1
1
1
1
½ 1
Jones, Gawain C B
GM ENG
2643
1
½ ½ ½ 1
½ 1
3
Hebden, Mark L
GM ENG
2555
1
½ 1
1
1
½ ½ 1
4
Gordon, Stephen J
GM ENG
2521
1
1
1
1
½ ½ 0
5
Gormally, Daniel W
GM ENG
2496
1
1
1
0
0
6
Lalic, Bogdan
GM CRO
2489
1
½ 1
½ 1
½ ½ 1
7
Wells, Peter K
GM ENG
2479
1
½ 1
1
1
0
8
Zhou, Yang-Fan
IM
ENG
2469
1
1
1
0
½ 1
½ ½ 1
9
Flear, Glenn C
GM ENG
2456
½ ½ 1
0
1
1
½ 1
10 Arkell, Keith C
GM ENG
2444
1
½ 1
1
1
1
0
6
1
7
8
9
10 11 Pts
½ 1
1
1
½
9.5 2768
½ 1
½
8.0 2514
½ ½
½
8.0 2593
1
½ ½
1
8.0 2574
1
0
½
7.5 2459
½ ½
½
7.5 2440
½ 1
½
7.5 2483
½
7.5 2474
½ 1
½
7.5 2372
1
½
7.5 2468
1
0
1
1
0
1
½
½
TPR
USA Open, St. Louis
Going into the last round, Alex Lenderman led with 7.5/8, and 5 were tied for
2 /5 with 7/8.
nd
th
Overall winners were GMs Julio Sadorra and Joshua Friedel and IM Mackenzie
Molner on 8.0/9, with Friedel taking the US Open title on tie-break..
Tournament Website: http://www.alchess.com/chess/13/usopen/
Toronto Chess News
23
Articles
FIDE August 1, 2013 Regular Rating List – Open/Women’s
Open
Magnus Carlsen ( Norway ), # 1 for most of 2010 & 2011, all of 2012 , and all of
2013 so far (now the player with the most # 1’s), the youngest player ever to hold this
position, and the highest rated human ever, sits with a rating of 2862 (had a peak rating of
2872 – is it really possible he may one day be the first to break the 2900 barrier?). The
second player over 2800 is Armenian Levon Aronian, at 2813. [ Garry Kasparov
( Russia ), 13th World Champion, retired March, 2005, was the first player to break 2800
( peak rating - July 1999 – 2851 – 2nd highest rated player ever ); Kramnik was the
second player; Veselin Topalov, 2005 FIDE World Champion, was the third;
Viswanathan Anand, 15th and current World Champion was the fourth; Magnus Carlsen
was the fifth; and Levon Aronian is the sixth. ].
Besides these 2 in the 2800’s, there are 44 players in the 2700’s ( same as last
list ).
The top players are ( birth date of younger players [Under 22 yrs. as of Jan. 1 =
born in or after 1991] in brackets, after country ) :
# 1 : Magnus Carlsen (Norway), rated 2862;
Toronto Chess News
24
# 2 : Levon Aronian ( Armenia ) – rated 2813;
# 3: Fabiano Caruana (Italy – 1992), rated 2796 (up 22 points!!) .
# 4: Alexander Grischuk (Russia), rated 2780.
Toronto Chess News
25
# 5 : Vladimir Kramnik ( Russia ), 14th World Champion, rated 2784.
# 6: Shakhriyar Mamedyarov (Azerbaijan), rated 2775 (up 14 points);
# 7: Viswanathan Anand ( India ), 15th and current World Champion, rated 2775 (up
from # 8);
Toronto Chess News
26
# 8: Sergey Karjakin (Russia), rated 2772;
# 9: Hikaru Nakamura ( USA ), rated 2772..
# 10: Veselin Topalov ( Bulgaria ), rated 2769;
Toronto Chess News
27
# 54 : Judit Polgar ( Hungary ), the strongest women’s player in the world, with 2696
( over 2700 from October – December, 2012 lists – last time before that was on the
July/12 list ) – ( in 2005, she was in the top 10 with a rating of 2735. She has taken
periods off to have children and had dropped below 2700 for a while, before going back
over 2700 again for a while).
.
Some other past World Champions/FIDE World Champions still in the top 100,
and their current ratings are :
# 13: 2002 FIDE World Champion, Ruslan Ponomariov ( Ukraine ) at 2756;
# 47 : 2004 FIDE World Champion, Rustam Kasimdzhanov ( Uzbekistan ) at 2699.
Here are the younger ( Under 22 as of Jan. 1 ) players we’re watching - not in the
top ten, but in the top 30, ( birth date in brackets after country )[ note: “ juniors “ = U 20
yrs. as of Jan. 1 ]:
# 20 : Anish Giri ( Netherlands – 1994 ) – 2737.
# 28 : Ding Liren (China – 1992 – Chinese surname first) – 2718 (lost 16 pts.)..
Women
Four women have broken the 2600 barrier: first: GM Judit Polgar ( Hungary ) –
also only woman to break 2700; second: Humpy Koneru ( India ); third: Hou Yifan
( Chinese surname first ) – former Women’s World Champion and 2013 Women’s
Championship Challenger, against Women’s Champion Anna Ushenina ( Ukraine ) );
fourth: Anna Muzychuk ( Slovenia ).
The top 10 women in the world are :
# 1 : GM Judit Polgar ( Hungary ), rated 2696 ( first woman player in history to break
2700; peaked at 2735 in the July 1, 2005 rating list; was back in the 2700 club briefly on
the July/12 list, after a number of years in the 2600’s; dropped down again, and was
briefly back again from Oct. – Dec./12 );
Toronto Chess News
28
# 2 : GM Hou Yifan ( China – 1994 ), rated 2600;
# 3: GM Humpy Koneru ( India ) – 2607;
# 4 : IM Anna Muzychuk ( Slovenia ) -2594
.
Toronto Chess News
29
# 5: GM Nana Dzagnidze ( Georgia ) – 2569 (up 11 pts.);
# 6: GM Zhao Xue ( China ) – 2562 (up 9 points);
# 7: GM Kateryna Lagno ( Ukraine ) – 2542;
Toronto Chess News
30
# 8: WGM Ju Wenjun (China), rated 2535.
# 9: GM Nadezhda Kosintseva (Russia), rated 2531;
# 10: GM Tatiana Kosintseva (Russia) – rated 2528
Toronto Chess News
31
NATIONAL
Organizations
Chess Federation of Canada ( CFC )
Website: http://www.chess.ca/
Chess Discussion Forum: http://www.chesscanada.info/forum/forumdisplay.php?f=2
(by TCN Liaison for CFC, Bob Armstrong, CFC Public Relations Coordinator)
2013-4 CFC Governors
1. Provincial Rep. Governors – 40 + 1 Vacancy
(YT – entitled to1 governor - vacant; NWT and Nunavut have no members and so are
not entitled to a governor)
Note – all executive who are provincial representative governors or past presidents,
except President and Past President, remain such.
AB 5
Rick Pedersen
Simon Ong (Vice-President)
Vlad Rekhson
Terry Seehagen
Edward Porper
BC 5
Lyle Craver (Secretary)
Peter Yee
Paul Leblanc (Rating Auditor)
Alonso Campos
Valer Demian
MB 2
Ken Einarsson
Steven de Groot
NB 2
Ken Craft
George Hensel
NL 1
Alick Tsui
Toronto Chess News
32
NS 1
Chris Felix
NU 0
NWT 0
ON 19:
GTCL – 9
Michael Barron
Ilia Bluvshtein
Egis Zeromskis
Marcus Wilker
Evgeni Tobolovsky
Bob Armstrong (Public Relations Coordinator)
Nikolay Noritsyn
Chris Field
Bindi Cheng
SWOCL – 5
Lee Hendon
Chris Mallon
Garvin Nunes
Patrick McDonald
Hal Bond (FIDE Rep)
EOCA – 4
Aris Marghetis
William Doubleday
Garland Best
David Gordon
NOCL – 1 (updated)
Ellen Nadeau
PEI 1
Fred McKim
QC 3
Hugh Brodie
Felix Dumont
Marc Poulin
SK 1
Robert Sasata
YT 0 ( Vacant – 1 )
2. Governors at large – 21 + 3 vacancies
A - Executive – 3
Toronto Chess News
33
President – Vladimir Drkulec
Immediate Past President – Mark Dutton
Youth Coordinator – Frank Lee
B. – Non-Executive Officers – 3 + 1 vacancy
Masters' Representative – Deen Hergott
Women's Coordinator – Liza Orlova
Tournament Coordinator – Richard Berube
Director of Fund-raising – vacant;
( Note: Public Relations Coordinator ( Armstrong ) and Rating Auditor ( Leblanc ) are
prov. reps.)
Toronto Chess News
34
C – Other Organizations – 1 + 1 vacancy
Chess Foundation of Canada - Lynn Stringer
Canadian Correspondence Chess Association - vacant
D - Canadian Champion and Runner-Up – 2
Bator Sambuev
Anton Kovalyov
E – Former CFC Presidents ( some Life Governors ) – 12
( i ) Life Governors – 9
• Phil Haley
• Les Bunning
• Terry Fleming
• Francisco Cabanas
• Peter Stockhausen
• Maurice Smith
• Yves Farges
• Halldor Palsson
• Bruce D Thomas
( ii ) Presidents in the past 5 years ( Excluding the Past President ) – 3 + 1 vacancy
2012-3 – holds the governor-at-large position of “Past President”
2011-2 – vacant (Michael von Keitz declined to hold the position)
2010 – 1 Bob Gillanders
2009-10 Eric Van Dusen
2008-9 David Lavin
3. Total Governors – 61 + 4 vacancies
Note: You can see from the above:
1. There are 9 former president life governors ( 2 consecutive term presidents, or
appointed );
2. The President, when elected, is no longer a Provincial Representative governor – on
becoming president, he becomes a governor-at-large. He has the power to appoint a
replacement governor for himself from his home Province, if elected as a Provincial Rep
initially.
This list is complete as of 13/08/09.
Tournament Reports
(Note: if you play in a tournament, and have a good game, send it on for us to consider
publishing with our tournament report)
Toronto Chess News
35
Canadian Open
GM Nigel Short (ENG) and GM Eric Hansen finished with 7.5/9, with the title going to
GM Nigel Short on tie-breaks.
1st GM Nigel Short (7.5/9) $4000
2nd GM Eric Hansen (7.5/9) $4000
=3rd-7th (7/9) ($1060 each)
GM Ivan Sokolov,
GM Lazaro Bruzon,
IM Aman Hambleton,
Toronto Chess News
36
IM Edward Porper,
IM Arthur Calugar
=8th-14 (6.5/9) ($100 each)
GM Elshan Moradiabadi,
GM Bator Sambuev,
IM Artiom Samsonkin,
IM Raja Panjwani,
GM Ioan Cristian Chirila,
GM Luis Manuel Perez Rodriguez,
IM Keaton Kiewra, Rodney Perez Garcia
U2400
1st (6.5/9) ($1200)
FM Roman Sapozhnikov
=2nd-7th (6/9) ($190 each)
FM Kevel Oliva Castaneda,
Evgeny Miller,
FM Michael Dougherty,
Kevin Pacey,
Victor Plotkin,
Alex Yam
U2200
1st-2nd (6/9) $850 each
Stijn De Kerpel,
Agastya Kalra
3rd-7th (5.5/9) $55 each
Digeng Du
Steve Demmery
Yevgeni Nahutin
Ramon J Cova
James Chan
NB: Qiyu Zhou tied with 5.5/9, but is was eligible for a more valuable prize.
U2000
1st-2nd (5.5/9) $700 each
Toronto Chess News
37
Saeid Sadeghi
Dmitry Chernik
3rd-10th (4.5/9) $40
Jeremy Hui
James Currie
Gordon Giacomin
Adam Adriaanse
Max Gedajlovic
Amos Kuttner
Mateusz Dydak
Paul Leblanc
U1800
1st-3rd (4.5/9) $458 each
Nathan Farrnt-Diaz
Guy Piche
Matt Morabito
U1600
1st-3rd (4/9) $383
Edward Selling
Jill Ding
Rinna Yu
UNRATED
1st (4.5/9) $250
Vitaliy Matytsyn
2nd (2.5/9) $150
Ken Douglas
WOMEN
1st (5.5/9) $400
Qiyu Zhou
Toronto Chess News
38
2nd (5/9) $200
WCM Alexandra Botez
JUNIORS (U18)
1st (6.5/9) $400
IM Richard Wang
2nd (6/9) $200
Michael Song
SENIOR (+60)
1st-2nd (5.5/9) $300 each
William Doubleday
IM Leon Piasetski
Top Prize Section Games
In Rd. 3, James Fu upset Can. IM Bindi Cheng. Here is the game (Annotations by
Bob Armstrong, using Fritz):
Fu, James (2257) − Cheng, Bindi (2516) [B25]
Canadian Open 2013 Ottawa (3), 14.07.2013
1.e4² 0.35 1...c5 2.Nf3 g6 3.g3?!= [3.d4 cxd4 4.Qxd4 Nf6²] 3...Bg7 4.Bg2 Nc6 5.0-0 Nf6 6.Nc3
0-0 7.Re1 d6 8.d3 Bg4 9.h3 Bxf3 10.Bxf3 Rb8 11.Bg2 Nd7 12.Nd5 e6 13.Ne3 b5 14.a4?!³
[14.e5 d5 15.f4 Rc8=] 14...b4 15.Nc4 Nb6 16.Nxb6?!∓ Bindi gets a "clear" advantage [16.Nd2
Nd4 17.Rf1 Qd7³] 16...Qxb6 17.Rb1 17...b3?= [17...Qa5 18.Bf4 Rfd8∓] 18.c3 Qa5 [18...Qa6
19.Bf4 Ne5=] 19.Bf4 e5 20.Be3 Qxa4 Bindi goes up a P 21.Ra1 Qb5 22.Ra3 a5 23.Bf1 Qb6
24.Qg4 Kh8 25.Be2?!³ [25.Qe2 Rb7 26.Qd2 Rfb8=] 25...f5 26.exf5 gxf5 27.Qh4 f4 28.gxf4 exf4
29.Bxf4 material equality 29...Nb4 30.d4 [30.Rd1 Nc2 31.Ra4 Qc6³] 30...Rbe8 31.Bd2 31...Rg8
[31...Bf6? 32.Qh6 Rg8+ 33.Bg4 Bg7³] 32.Kh2 Qc6 33.f3?-+ Bindi gets a "winning" advantage
[33.Bg5 cxd4 34.cxb4 Re4³] 33...cxd4 34.Rxa5 d3??+− a blunder into an attack; James gets a
"winning" advantage, after being down all game. [34...d5 35.Kh1 dxc3 36.Bxc3 Bxc3 37.bxc3
Nc2-+] 35.Rh5?= James has lost his advantage [35.Bxd3 Nxd3 36.Rh5 Be5+ 37.Rexe5! Rg7
38.Rxh7+ Rxh7 39.Qf6+ Rg7+−] 35...Be5+ 36.Kh1 Rg7 37.Bd1 Nc2 38.Re4 Rf7 39.Rh6 Qa8
40.Qh5 Ree7?!² [40...Ref8 41.Rg6! Rf5 42.Qh4 Rxf3 43.Bxf3 Rxf3=] 41.Rg6
Toronto Chess News
39
Position after 41.Rg6
XABCDEFGHY
8q+-+-+-mk(
7+-+-trr+p'
6-+-zp-+R+&
5+-+-vl-+Q%
4-+-+R+-+$
3+pzPp+P+P#
2-zPnvL-+-+"
1+-+L+-+K!
xabcdefghy
Qa1?+− James gets a "winning" advantage [41...Qf8 42.Reg4 Bg7²] 42.Reg4?!± [42.f4 Bg7
43.Rxe7 Rxe7 44.Rxd6 Rf7!+−] 42...Bg7?!+− [42...Rf8 43.Rg1 Qa8±] 43.Rg1 Ne1?+− 9.93
[43...Qa6 44.Bh6 Qa8+− 1.59] 44.Bxb3 James goes up a P 44...Re5??+− leads to mate.
[44...Qa8 45.Bxf7 Rxf7 46.Rxe1 Rxf3+− 12.04] 45.Qg4?+− 8.85 missing the mating line [45.Qh6!
Rg5 46.R6xg5 Qa8+− mate in 12 moves] 45...hxg6 46.Bxf7 Qa8 47.Rxe1+− 9.08 James is up B
+ P 1-0
In Rd. 4, Eric beat GM Reynaldo Vera of Cuba. Here is the game (Annotations by
Bob Armstrong, using Fritz):
Hansen, Eric (2587) − Vera, Reynaldo (2514) [B52]
Canadian Open Ottawa (4), 15.07.2013
[Event "Canadian Open [Site "Ottawa"] [Date "2013. 07. [Round "4"] [White "Hansen,
Eric"] [Black "Vera, Reynaldo"] [Result "1-0"] [ECO "B52"] [WhiteElo "2587"] [BlackElo
"2514"] [PlyCount "79"] [SourceDate "2013. 07. 1.e4² 0.35 1...c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.Bb5+ Bd7
4.Bxd7+ Qxd7 5.c4 Nf6 6.Nc3 g6 7.d4 cxd4 8.Nxd4 Bg7 9.f3 0-0 10.Be3 Nc6 11.0-0 e6 12.Rc1
Rfd8 13.Kh1?!= [13.Qd2 Qe7 14.Nxc6 bxc6²] 13...Ne5?!² [13...Rac8 14.Nxc6 bxc6=] 14.Qe2
[14.b3 Rac8 15.Qe2 a6²] 14...d5 15.cxd5 exd5 16.f4 Nc6 17.e5 Ng4?!± Eric gets a "clear"
advantage [17...Nxd4 18.Bxd4 Ne4²] 18.Nxc6?!² [18.Bg1 Nxd4 19.Bxd4 Nh6±] 18...bxc6 19.Bg1
Re8 20.Na4 h5?!± [20...Bf8 21.Qa6 Rec8²] 21.Qa6 Rec8 [21...Rac8 22.Nc5 Qe7±] 22.Nc5 Qe7
23.Nb3 c5?!+− Eric gets a "winning" advantage [23...Qd7 24.Na5 c5±] 24.Rxc5 Eric goes up a P
24...Rxc5 25.Bxc5 Qd7 26.Bg1 Rc8 27.Nc5 Qe8 28.Qd3 Bf8 29.Nb3 Qa4 30.Qxd5 Eric goes up
2 P's 30...Qa6 31.Rd1 Rc2 32.Rd2 Rc4 33.h3 Nh6 34.Nd4 Rc1 35.Kh2 Qf1 3.21 36.Nf3
Bc5?+− 9.96 [36...Nf5 37.e6 Bd6+− 2.92] 37.Qd8+ Kh7??+− leads to mate [37...Bf8 38.e6 Re1
39.exf7+ Nxf7 40.Qf6 Be7 41.Qxg6+ Kf8+− 12.17] 38.Ng5+ Kg7 39.Ne6+??+− 12.04 missing the
mate [39.Qf6+ Kg8 40.Rd8+ Bf8 41.Rxf8+ Kxf8 42.Ne6+ Ke8 43.Qd8#]
Toronto Chess News
40
Position after 39.Ne6+??
XABCDEFGHY
8-+-wQ-+-+(
7zp-+-+pmk-'
6-+-+N+psn&
5+-vl-zP-+p%
4-+-+-zP-+$
3+-+-+-+P#
2PzP-tR-+PmK"
1+-tr-+qvL-!
xabcdefghy
39...fxe6??+− Reynaldo is up N vs 2 P's, but gives Eric back a mate [39...Kh7 40.Bxc5 Qh1+
41.Kg3 Nf5+ 42.Kf3 Qf1+ 43.Bf2 Qa6+− 14.23(43...fxe6? 44.Rd7+ Ng7 45.Qe7 Qd1+ 46.Rxd1
Rxd1+− 17.17) ] 40.Qf6++− Reynaldo resigned. It is mate 40...Kh7 41.Rd7+ Be7 42.Rxe7+ Nf7
43.Rxf7+ Kh6 44.Qg7# 1-0
In Rd. 5, the two eventual winners, Nigel and Eric, drew. Here is that game
(Annotations by Bob Armstrong, using Fritz):
Short, Nigel (2697) − Hansen, Eric (2587) [C47]
Canadian Open 2013 Ottawa (5), 16.07.2013
1.e4² 0.35 1...e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Nc3?!= [3.Bb5²] 3...Nf6 4.d4 exd4 5.Nxd4 Bb4 6.Nxc6 bxc6
7.Bd3 d5 8.exd5 0-0?!² [8...cxd5 9.0-0 0-0=] 9.0-0?!= [9.dxc6 Re8+ 10.Be3 Bxc3+ 11.bxc3
Ng4²] 9...cxd5 10.h3 c6 11.Qf3 Bd6 12.Bf4 Rb8 13.b3 Qc7?!² [13...Rb7 14.Rae1 Bxf4 15.Qxf4
Re7=] 14.Bxd6 Qxd6 15.Rad1?!= [15.Qg3 Qxg3 16.fxg3 Re8²] 15...Re8 16.Na4 Be6 17.Rfe1 c5
18.Bf5 Bxf5 19.Qxf5 g6 20.Qf3 Nd7 21.Re2 Rxe2 22.Qxe2 Nb6 23.Nb2 Qf6 24.c4 dxc4?!²
[24...Rd8 25.g3 Kg7=] 25.Nxc4 Nxc4 26.Qxc4 Qe5 27.g3 Rb4 28.Qd5 Qe2 29.Rd2 Qe1+
30.Kg2 Re4 31.Rd3 Re5 32.Qc4 Rf5 33.Rd8+ Kg7 34.Qc2 Qe7 35.Qc3+ Rf6 36.Rd2 Qe4+
37.f3 Qb4 38.Rc2?!= [38.Qc2 Re6 39.Qb2+ f6²] 38...Qxc3 39.Rxc3 Ra6 40.a4 Rb6 41.g4
Kf6?!² [41...Rc6 42.Kg3 Kf6=] 42.Rxc5 Rxb3 43.Rc7 a6 44.Rc6+ Kg7?!± Nigel gets a "clear"
advantage [44...Ke5 45.Rxa6 f5²] 45.Rxa6 Nigel goes up a P 45...g5 46.Ra5 h6 47.Rf5 Ra3
48.a5 Ra2+ 49.Kg3 Kg6 50.h4 f6 51.h5+ Kg7 52.Rb5 Kg8 53.Rb8+ Kg7 54.Rb7+ Kg8 55.Ra7
Kh8 56.Ra8+ Kg7 57.Ra7+ [57.Ra6 Kf7 58.Ra7+ Kg8±] 57...Kh8 58.Rf7 Rxa5 59.Rxf6 Kg7
60.Rg6+ Kh7 61.Re6 Ra2 62.Re1 Kg7 63.Rf1?!² [63.Re7+ Kg8 64.Rc7 Rd2±] 63...Ra3 64.Rf2
Rb3 65.Rd2 Ra3?!± [65...Rb6 66.Ra2 Kf6²] 66.Kf2?!² [66.Rd7+ Kg8 67.Rb7 Ra8±] 66...Ra7?!±
[66...Ra6 67.Rd8 Re6²] 67.Rd4?!² [67.Rd6 Rb7 68.Rg6+ Kh7±] 67...Re7?!± [67...Ra6 68.Ke3
Re6+²] 68.Re4 Ra7 69.Re6 Ra3 70.Ke2 Rb3 71.Re7+ Kg8 72.Rd7 Ra3 73.Rd3?!² [73.Rc7
Ra2+ 74.Kd3 Ra3+±] 73...Ra6 74.Ke3 Re6+?!± [74...Kg7 75.Ke4 Kf6²] 75.Kd4 Re7 76.Rc3 Kg7
77.Rc8?!² [77.Rc6 Rf7 78.Ke4 Re7+±] 77...Rf7 78.Ke4 Rf4+?!± [78...Re7+ 79.Kd3 Rd7+²]
79.Ke3 Rf7 80.Re8 Ra7 81.Ke4?!² [81.Re6 Ra3+ 82.Kf2 Ra2+±] 81...Ra4+ 82.Kd5 Ra5+
83.Ke6?!± [83.Kd4 Ra4+ 84.Ke5 Ra5+²] 83...Ra6+ 84.Kf5 Rf6+ 85.Ke4 Rf4+ [85...Kf7 86.Rh8
Rf4+±] 86.Ke3 Ra4 87.Re7+ Kg8 88.Rd7 Rf4± ½-½
As well in Rd. 5, Can. IM Aman Hambleton
Toronto Chess News
41
drew GM Lazaro Bruzon of Cuba. Here is that game (Annotations by Bob Armstrong,
using Fritz):
Hambleton, Aman (2580) − Bruzon Batista, Lazaro (2758) [E32]
Canadian Open 2013 Ottawa (5), 16.07.2013
1.d4² 0.34 1...Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3?!= [3.Nf3²] 3...Bb4 4.Qc2 d6 5.a3 Bxc3+ 6.Qxc3 Nbd7?!²
[6...Nc6 7.Nf3 0-0=] 7.f3?³ [7.g3 c5 8.Nf3 b6²] 7...e5 8.dxe5 Nxe5 9.e4 0-0 10.Bg5 Re8
11.Ne2?!∓ Lazaro gets a "clear" advantage [11.h4 Be6 12.Nh3 h6³] 11...Nxe4! Lazaro goes up a
P 12.Bxd8 Nxc3 13.Bxc7 material equality 13...Nxe2 14.Kxe2 Be6 15.Kf2 Bxc4 16.Bxd6 Bxf1
17.Bxe5 Bxg2 Lazaro goes up a P 18.Rhe1 Bh3 19.Bd4 Red8 20.Rad1 h6 21.Rg1 f6 22.Be3
h5 [22...Rxd1 23.Rxd1 b6∓] 23.Rxd8+ Rxd8 24.Rc1 a6 25.Rc7 b5 26.Rc6 Ra8?!³ [26...Bc8
27.Kg3 Kh7∓] 27.Rc7 Bf5 28.h4 Kh7 29.Ra7 Rc8 30.Bd4 Rc6 31.Bc3 [31.b4 Rd6 (31...Re6?!
32.Bc5 Kh6=) 32.Bc5 Rd2+³] 31...Bd3 32.Rd7?!∓ [32.Bb4 Rc2+ 33.Ke3 Bc4³] 32...Bc4 33.Bb4
Be6?!³ [33...Kh6 34.f4 Be6∓] 34.Rd6?!∓ Rc2+ 35.Rd2 Rc1 36.Bc3 Rh1 37.Rd4 Kg6 38.Kg2
Rb1 39.Re4 Bd5 40.Re1 Rxe1 41.Bxe1 Kf5 42.Kf2 g5 43.Ke3 Bb3 44.Bf2 Bd1 45.Be1 Ke6
46.f4 gxh4 47.Bxh4 Kf5 48.Kf2 Bb3 49.Kg3 a5 50.Kf3 Bd5+ 51.Kg3 a4 52.Kh2∓ ½-½
Also in Rd. 5, Can. IM Richard Wang,
Toronto Chess News
42
defeated GM Walter Arencibia of Cuba. Here is the game (Annotations by Bob
Armstrong, using Fritz):
Arencibia, Walter (2610) − Wang, Richard (2484) [B53]
Canadian Open 2013 Ottawa (5), 16.07.2013
1.e4² 0.35 1...c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Qxd4 Nc6 5.Bb5 Bd7 6.Bxc6 Bxc6 7.c4?!= [7.Nc3 Nf6
8.Bg5 e6²] 7...Nf6 8.Nc3 g6 9.0-0 Bg7 10.Qd3 0-0 11.Nd4 Rc8 12.b3 Nd7 13.Bb2 a6 14.Rac1
Qa5 15.Rfd1 Nc5 16.Qe2 Rfe8 [16...e6 17.Rc2 Rc7=] 17.Rc2 e6 18.Nxc6 Rxc6 19.Nb1 b5
20.Bxg7 Kxg7 21.e5 bxc4 22.exd6 Rd8 23.b4?∓ Richard gets a "clear" advantage [23.Rxc4
Rcxd6 24.Rxd6 Rxd6=] 23...Qxb4 24.Rxc4 Qb6 25.Rcd4?!-+ Richard gets a "winning"
advantage [25.Rdc1 Rdxd6 26.g3 Nd7∓] 25...f6 26.d7 Rc7 27.Rd6
XABCDEFGHY
8-+-tr-+-+(
7+-trP+-mkp'
6pwq-tRpzpp+&
5+-sn-+-+-%
4-+-+-+-+$
3+-+-+-+-#
2P+-+QzPPzP"
1+N+R+-mK-!
xabcdefghy
Rcxd7! Richard goes up a P 28.Rxb6 − 1.69 [28.Rxd7+ Rxd7 29.Rxd7+ Nxd7-+ − 1.71]
28...Rxd1+ 29.Qf1 e5 30.f3 Rxf1+ 31.Kxf1 Rd7 − 1.48 [31...Rd1+ 32.Ke2 Rg1-+ − 2.18] 32.Ke2
Rb7 33.Rxb7+ Nxb7 34.Kd3 Kf7 35.Kc4 Ke6 36.Nc3 f5 37.Nd5 Kd6 38.Nb4 Nc5 39.Nd5 Na4
40.Nf6 Nb6+ 41.Kb3 h6 42.g4 Ke7?-+ − 1.78 [42...Ke6 43.g5 hxg5 44.Nh7 g4-+ − 3.24] 43.Ng8+
Kf7 44.Nxh6+ material equality 44...Kg7 45.g5 Nd5 46.Kc4 Nf4 47.h4 Ng2 48.Kd5?!-+ − 3.80
[48.h5 Ne1 49.Kd5 Nxf3 50.hxg6 Kxg6 51.Nxf5 Kxf5 − 3.14] 48...Nxh4 49.Kxe5 Nxf3+ Richard
goes up a P again 50.Kf4 Nd4 51.Ke5 Nc6+ 52.Kd6 − 4.46 52...Nb4 53.a4 53...a5 54.Kc5
Nc2?-+ − 5.16 [54...Nd3+ 55.Kd4 Nb2-+ − 6.29] 55.Kd5 Ne3+ 56.Ke6?-+ − 14.53 [56.Ke5 Nc4+
57.Ke6 Nb2-+ − 5.60] 56...f4-+ − 14.53 0-1
In Rd. 6, Eric defeated GM Elshan Moradiabadi of Iran. Here is the game
(Annotations by Bob Armstrong, using Fritz):
Hansen, Eric (2587) − Moradiabadi, Elshan (2557) [C65]
2013 Canadian Open Ottawa (6.2), 17.07.2013
1.e4² 0.35 1...e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 Nf6 4.d3?!= [4.0-0 Bc5 5.Nxe5 Nxe5 6.d4 a6 7.Be2 Bxd4
8.Qxd4 Nc6²] 4...Bc5 5.c3 0-0 6.0-0 d6 7.h3 a6 8.Bxc6 bxc6 9.Re1 Re8 10.Nbd2 d5?!² [10...h6
11.d4 Bb6=] 11.Nb3?!= [11.d4 exd4 12.cxd4 dxe4 13.dxc5 exf3 14.Rxe8+ Nxe8 15.Qxf3 Be6²]
11...Bf8?!² [11...Bd6 12.c4 dxc4 13.dxc4 c5=] 12.exd5?!= [12.Bg5 Qd6 13.Na5 Rb8²; 12.Bd2
Rb8 13.exd5 Qxd5²] 12...Qxd5 13.c4 Qd6 14.Be3 Nd7 15.d4 [15.Qe2 a5 16.Nbd2 Qe6=] 15...e4
16.Nfd2 a5 17.a4 f5 18.c5 Qe6 19.Bf4 Nf6 20.Be5?!³ For the first time in the game, Elshan gets
Toronto Chess News
43
the advantage [20.Bxc7 Nd5 21.Be5 Nb4=] 20...Nd5?!= [20...Qf7 21.f3 exf3 22.Qxf3 Be6³]
21.Nc4 Qg6 22.Qd2 Be7 23.Ra3?!³ [23.Nbxa5 Bg5 24.Qe2 Ba6=] 23...Bg5 24.Qe2 Bf4?!=
[24...f4 25.Qxe4 Bf5³] 25.Nbxa5?!³ Eric goes up a P [25.Qc2 Bxe5 26.Nxe5 Qh6=] 25...Bxe5
26.dxe5 Nf4 27.Qf1 Ba6 28.Rg3 Qe6 29.b3 Rad8 30.f3 Nd3?!= [30...Rf8 31.Kh2 Nd3³]
XABCDEFGHY
8-+-trr+k+(
7+-zp-+-zpp'
6l+p+q+-+&
5sN-zP-zPp+-%
4P+N+p+-+$
3+P+n+PtRP#
2-+-+-+P+"
1+-+-tRQmK-!
xabcdefghy
31.fxe4! Eric goes up 2 P's [31.Rd1? f4 (31...Nxe5? 32.Rxd8 Rxd8 33.fxe4 Nxc4 34.Nxc4 Qxe4=)
32.Rg4 (32.Rg5?! Nb2-+) 32...Nxe5 33.Rxd8 Rxd8 34.Rxf4 exf3 35.gxf3 Rd3∓] 31...Nxe1
32.Qxe1 Elshan is up the exchange, but Eric has 2 P's compensation 32...fxe4 33.Qxe4
33...Qd5 34.Qf5 Qxc5+ 35.Kh2 Bxc4 Elshan is up R vs P 36.Nb7 Be6??+− blundering the Q;
Eric gets a "winning" advantage [36...Qe7 37.Nxd8 Bd5 38.Nb7 c5=] 37.Rxg7+! nice sac
37...Kxg7 Elshan is up 2 R's vs 2 P's 38.Qf6+ Kg8 39.Nxc5 Eric has Q + 2 P's vs 2 R's 39...Bd5
40.e6 Rb8?+− 11.61 [40...Rc8 41.a5 Ra8 42.a6 Rad8+− 10.30] 41.Qg5+?+− 10.18 [41.Qf7+ Kh8
42.Nd7 Bxe6 43.Qf6+ Kg8 44.Nxb8 Rxb8 45.Qxe6+ Kf8+− 16.01] 41...Kh8 42.Qe5+?+− 10.79
[42.Nd7 Rxe6 (42...Rbd8?? 43.Qf6+ Kg8 44.Qf7+ Kh8 45.Nf6 Be4 46.Nh5 Re7 47.Qxe7 Rg8
48.Qf6+ Rg7 49.Qxg7#) 43.Nxb8 Rg6+− 11.66] 42...Kg8 43.Qxc7?+− 6.46[43.Qg3+ Kh8 44.Nd7
Rxe6 45.Nxb8 Rg6+− 11.46] 1-0
In Rd. 8, the eventual winner, Nigel, helped his cause with a win over
Moradiabadi. Here is that game (Annotations by Bob Armstrong, using Fritz):
Short, Nigel D (2697) − Moradiabadi, Elshan (2557) [D55]
2013 Canadian Open Ottawa (8), 19.07.2013
1.c4= e6?!² [1...e5=] 2.Nc3 d5 3.d4 Be7 4.Nf3 Nf6 5.Bg5 [5.cxd5 exd5 6.g3 Nc6²] 5...h6 6.Bxf6
Bxf6 7.e3 0-0 8.Rc1?!= [8.Qb3 c5 9.cxd5 cxd4 10.Nxd4 exd5 11.Qxd5 Nc6 12.Qxd8 Rxd8
13.Nxc6 bxc6²] 8...Nc6 9.a3 b6 10.cxd5 exd5 11.Bd3 Ne7 12.0-0 c5 [12...Be6 13.Ne5 Bxe5
14.dxe5 c5=] 13.h3 [13.b3?! Bg4 14.dxc5 bxc5=; 13.Ne5 Bxe5 14.dxe5 Be6=] 13...Be6 14.Bb1
Rc8 15.Qa4 a5 16.Rfd1 c4 17.e4 g6 18.e5 Bg7 19.Qc2 Qd7?!² [19...Bd7 20.a4 Nc6=] 20.a4
Nc6 21.Qd2 Na7 22.Re1 b5 23.axb5 Nxb5 24.Na4 Qa7 25.Bc2 Rfe8 26.Ra1 Bf8 27.Nc3
Nc7?!± Nigel gets a "clear" advantage [27...Nxc3 28.bxc3 Rb8²] 28.Ra2 Qb6 29.Rea1 Ra8
30.Ne2?!² [30.Na4 Qb7 31.Nc5 Qb4±] 30...Qb4?!± [30...Bd7 31.Rb1 a4²] 31.Qe3 Reb8
32.Nf4?!² [32.h4 Bg4 33.Qf4 h5±] 32...Qe7?+− Nigel gets a "winning" advantage [32...Bd7
33.Nh2 h5²] 33.b3 cxb3 34.Bxb3 Rb5 35.Bc2 Qb4 36.Ra4 Qe7 37.Bd3 Rb3 38.Rxa5 Nigel
goes up a P 38...Rxa5 39.Rxa5 Qb4 40.Ra1 Bf5 41.Qc1 Rc3 42.Qd1 Ne6
Toronto Chess News
44
Position after 42….Ne6
XABCDEFGHY
8-+-+-vlk+(
7+-+-+p+-'
6-+-+n+pzp&
5+-+pzPl+-%
4-wq-zP-sN-+$
3+-trL+N+P#
2-+-+-zPP+"
1tR-+Q+-mK-!
xabcdefghy
43.Nxd5!+− 1.85 offering the B [43.Rb1?! Qa3 44.Bxf5 Nxf4±] 43...Rxd3 Elshan is up B vs 2 P's
44.Nxb4?!± [44.Qxd3 Bxd3 45.Nxb4 Bxb4+− 1.79 Nigel would be up R + 2 P's vs 2 B's]
44...Rxd1+ 45.Rxd1 Bxb4 Nigel is up R + 2 P's vs 2 B's 46.d5 Nf8 47.Nd4 Bd7 48.Nc6 Bc3
49.Rc1 Bb2 50.Rc2 Ba1 51.f4 Kg7 52.g4 h5 53.Nb8 Ba4 54.Rc7 Kg8?+− 2.94 [54...Bd4+
55.Kh2 Bb3+− 1.66] 55.Kh2 Bd4?+− 4.45 [55...Bb3 56.d6 hxg4 57.hxg4 g5+− 2.95] 56.Rc4+−
4.46 1-0
In Rd. 9, unfortunately, Eric met Aman (they are good friends and will be sharing
a residence in Spain as they advance their chess careers), and they drew. Here is that
game (Annotations by Bob Armstrong, using Fritz):
Hambleton, Aman (2580) − Hansen, Eric (2587) [D85]
2013 Canadian Open Ottawa (9.2), 20.07.2013
1.d4² 0.34 1...Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.Nc3 d5 4.cxd5 Nxd5 5.Bd2?!= [5.e4 Nxc3 6.bxc3 Bg7²] 5...Bg7
6.e4 Nxc3?!² [6...Nb6 7.Be3 0-0=] 7.Bxc3 0-0 8.Qd2 c5 [8...Qd6 9.Be2 Qc6²] 9.d5 e6 10.Bc4
[10.Bxg7 Kxg7 11.Bc4 exd5 12.Bxd5 Nc6²] 10...exd5 [10...Bxc3 11.bxc3 exd5 12.Bxd5 Nc6²]
11.Bxd5 Nd7 12.Nf3?!= [12.Bxg7 Kxg7 13.0-0-0 Nb6²] 12...Nf6 13.0-0 Nxd5 14.exd5 Qd6
15.Bxg7 Kxg7 16.Qc3+ Kg8 17.Ne5 Re8 18.Rfe1
Toronto Chess News
45
Position after 18.Rfe1
XABCDEFGHY
8r+l+r+k+(
7zpp+-+p+p'
6-+-wq-+p+&
5+-zpPsN-+-%
4-+-+-+-+$
3+-wQ-+-+-#
2PzP-+-zPPzP"
1tR-+-tR-mK-!
xabcdefghy
Qxd5= Eric goes up a P but it is now a draw by repetition [18...Bf5?! 19.g4 Bd7²] 19.Rad1 Qxa2
Eric goes up 2 P's [19...Qe6?? 20.Nxg6! hxg6 (20...Qxg6?? 21.Rxe8#) 21.Rxe6 Bxe6 22.Qxc5
Bxa2+− 2.71 Aman would be up Q vs R + B] 20.Ra1 Qd5 21.Rad1 Qa2 22.Ra1 Qd5 23.Rad1
Qa2= ½-½
U 1600 Prize Section Games:
Although I try to control myself on publishing my own games (editor conflict of
interest?), I (Bob Armstrong)
have two wins that are somewhat tactical, and I think they will be enjoyable to go over.
As well I have a loss to junior David Itkin, where he executes a nice R for P sac. Here
they are (Annotations by Bob Armstrong, using Fritz):
Toronto Chess News
46
- a nice B-sac
Zhou, Aiden (1136) − Armstrong, Robert (1590) [B08]
Canadian Open Ottawa (6), 17.07.2013
1.e4² 0.35 1...g6 2.d4 Bg7 3.Nf3 d6 4.Nc3 Nf6 5.Bc4 Nxe4 (depth 21 − Fritz' 1st choice)
6.Bxf7+ [6.Nxe4 d5 7.Bd3 dxe4 8.Bxe4 0-0²] 6...Kxf7 7.Nxe4 Re8 (verified depth 19) [7...Rf8
8.h4 Kg8² (depth 20)] 8.0-0 Kg8 9.c3 d5 10.Ng3?!= [10.Nc5 b6 11.Nd3 Nc6²] 10...Nc6
11.Re1?!³ [11.h3 e5 12.dxe5 Nxe5 13.Nxe5 Bxe5=] 11...e5?!= [11...Bg4 12.h3 Bxf3 13.Qxf3 e5³]
12.Be3?!³ [12.Nxe5 Nxe5 13.dxe5 Rxe5=] 12...e4 13.Nd2 Ne7?!= [13...Qd6 14.Ne2 a5³]
14.b4?!³ [14.Qb3 a5 15.a4 (15.Ngxe4?? a4 16.Qa3 dxe4-+) 15...Kh8= (15...c6!! 16.Ngxe4! h6+−)
] 14...Nf5 15.Nxf5 Bxf5 16.Nb3 b6 17.a4 Rf8 18.a5 Qh4 19.Qd2 Qh5 20.h3
XABCDEFGHY
8r+-+-trk+(
7zp-zp-+-vlp'
6-zp-+-+p+&
5zP-+p+l+q%
4-zP-zPp+-+$
3+NzP-vL-+P#
2-+-wQ-zPP+"
1tR-+-tR-mK-!
xabcdefghy
Bxh3! a sound sac [20...Rf7 21.Qa2 (21.g4?? Qxh3 22.Qe2 (22.gxf5? Rxf5 23.Qd1 Rh5 24.Qxh5
gxh5-+ − 7.69) 22...Bxg4 23.Qf1 Qh4-+ − 6.00) 21...Be6³] 21.gxh3 Aiden is up B vs P 21...Rf3!
to stop f3 or f4, and W freeing up his defences 22.Qe2 Bf8?² wrong follow−up [22...Qh4 23.Qf1
Rxh3 24.Qg2 Rf8³] 23.Nd2 Qxh3! offering an exchange sac 24.Nxf3??-+ Aiden wrongly decides
he can get away with winning the exchange; the losing move. [24.Qf1 Qf5 25.axb6 cxb6 26.Nxf3
exf3²] 24...exf3 25.Qxf3! [25.Qf1?? Qg4+ 26.Kh1 Bd6 27.Bf4 Bxf4 28.Re8+ Rxe8 29.axb6 Qh4+
30.Qh3 Qxh3+ 31.Kg1 Qg2#] 25...Qxf3 I am up Q + P vs R 26.axb6 cxb6 27.Ra6?-+ − 18.23
[27.Bd2 Bd6 28.Re3 Qg4+ 29.Kf1 Bf4-+ − 13.11] 27...Bd6 − 18.06 [27...Re8? 28.Bd2 Rxe1+
29.Bxe1 Qd1 30.Kg2 (30.Kf1?? Qd3+ 31.Kg1 Qxa6-+ − 20.30) 30...Qxe1-+ − 16.08] 28.Rea1??+ leads to mate. This cannot be "seen" by Fritz from this distance − too far ahead to calculate; but
it is known by reverse projection. 28...Rf8! looking to continue the mating plan [28...Qh3?
29.Rxa7 Bh2+ 30.Kh1 Bb8+ 31.Kg1 Rxa7-+ − 20.53] 29.Rxa7 I am now up Q vs R 29...Rf5!
[29...h5? 30.Ra8 h4 31.Kf1 h3 32.Ke1 h2-+ − 15.22] 30.Ra8+ Bf8 keeping to the mating line
31.Rxf8+! an unfortunate necessary exchange sac, which doesn't alter Aiden's fate. [31.Kf1??
Qxe3 32.Rxf8+ Rxf8-+ mate in 8 moves.] 31...Kxf8 I am up Q vs B; mate in 28 moves [31...Rxf8
32.b5 Rf5-+ mate in 25 moves] 32.Ra8+ Ke7 33.Ra7+ 33...Ke6 mate in 23 moves [33...Kf6
34.Rxh7 Rh5-+ mate in 19 moves] 34.Rxh7 I am up Q vs B + P 34...Rh5 35.Rxh5 gxh5
36.Kh2?-+ mate in 4 moves [36.Bf4 h4 37.Kf1 h3 38.Ke1 Qxf4-+ mate in 6 moves] 36...h4
37.Kg1 h3 38.Kf1 h2?-+ not concentrating much at this point, I miss the one−move mate!
[38...Qd1#] 39.Ke1 h1Q+ 40.Kd2 Qhd1# 0-1
Toronto Chess News
47
- a miniature, with a nice R-sac, though not decisive
Armstrong, Robert (1590) − Douglas, Ken [E81]
Canadian Open Ottawa (7), 18.07.2013
1.d4² 0.34 1...d6 2.c4 Nf6 3.Nc3 g6 4.e4 Bg7 5.f3?!= King's Indian Defence − Samish Line
[5.Nf3²] 5...0-0 6.Be3 Nbd7 7.g4!? not one of Fritz' top 4 choices, but playable [Fritz' 1st choice
7.Nge2 a6 8.Qc2 c5=; Fritz' 2nd choice 7.Qd2 c5 8.Nge2 a5=] 7...e5 8.d5 Kh8?± I've got Ken
thinking defensive now; I get a "clear" advantage. My attack will have wings! [8...Nc5 9.h4 h5=
the right defence] 9.Nge2 [9.h4 h5 10.g5 Ng8±] 9...Re8 [9...Nc5 10.Ng3 a5±; 9...h5 10.h4! hxg4
(depth 19) 11.h5! Kg8±] 10.Ng3 Ng8?!+− too passive for the building pressure; I get a "winning"
advantage [10...Nc5 11.h4 a5±] 11.h4 a6 12.Qd2 Nf8?+− 3.19 [12...h6 13.0-0-0 Nc5+− 1.85]
13.h5 Nd7 14.hxg6?!+− 2.38 [14.0-0-0 Ne7 15.Kb1 Kg8+− 2.94; 14.Qh2 g5 15.h6 Bf8+− 2.80]
14...fxg6 15.Bd3?!+− 2.23 [15.g5 Re7 16.Qf2 (depth 22) 16...Rf7+− 2.21] 15...Rf8 2.25 [15...Nc5
16.Be2 Bd7+− 2.50] 16.0-0-0?² sacking the fP and looking for an R−sac on h7, and then bringing
the second R to the h−file; but an inferior plan. I am losing my advantage. [16.Qh2 h6 17.Be2
Rf4!+− 2.17] 16...Rf7?+− 2.06 wrongly playing defensive [16...Rxf3 17.Rdg1 Nc5²] 17.Rh3?!±
[17.Be2 b5 18.cxb5 axb5 19.Bxb5 Rxf3+− 1.91] 17...Rxf3 Ken goes up a P
XABCDEFGHY
8r+lwq-+nmk(
7+pzpn+-vlp'
6p+-zp-+p+&
5+-+Pzp-+-%
4-+P+P+P+$
3+-sNLvLrsNR#
2PzP-wQ-+-+"
1+-mKR+-+-!
xabcdefghy
18.Rxh7+! +/− a sound sac! Ken may have prematurely resigned (??), thinking he was mated or
must lose material (and I thought so too ). But W only has a "clear" advantage, and winning may
still be difficult [18.Be2 Rf7 19.Kb1 Bf8±]. The game could have continued 18...Kxh7 Ken would
be up a R 19.Rh1+ Nh6 20.Bxh6 I would be down the exchange 20...Bf6 [20...Qf8 21.Bxg7+
Kxg7 22.Nf5+! gxf5 I would be down a R 23.Qg5+ Kf7 24.Rh7+ Ke8 25.Be2 fxe4 26.Bxf3 Qf4+
27.Qxf4 exf4 28.Bxe4 Ne5± material equality] 21.Kc2 no B move, leading to a discovered check,
is helpful 21...Nc5 W has 2 pieces hanging! 22.Be2 Rxg3 23.Bf4+ Kg7 24.Bxg3 Bg5± material
equality 1-0
-
a nice R-sac by David:
Itkin, David (2173) − Armstrong, Robert J. (1590) [B08]
Canadian Open Ottawa (1), 13.07.2013
1.e4² 0.35 1...g6 2.d4 Bg7 3.Nc3 d6 4.Nf3 Nf6 5.Be3 0-0 [5...Ng4 6.Bg5 c5 (6...h6?! 7.Bh4 0-0±)
] 6.Qd2 a6 7.a4 Nbd7 8.Be2 e5 9.0-0 exd4 10.Nxd4 Re8 11.f3 Ne5 12.Rad1 Be6?!± David gets
a "clear" advantage [12...Bd7 13.Bg5 Nc6²] 13.b3?!² [13.Nxe6 Rxe6 14.g4 Nc6±] 13...Qd7?!±
Toronto Chess News
48
[13...Bd7 14.b4 b6²] 14.Bg5 Kh8 15.Kh1?!² [15.Qf4 Nh5 16.Qe3 f5±] 15...Ng8?+− David gets a
"winning" advantage [15...Nc6 16.Nxe6 Qxe6²] 16.f4 Nc6 17.Nxe6 fxe6 18.e5 d5 19.Bg4?²
David is losing his advantage [19.Ne4! Qc8 20.Nf6 Rf8+−] 19...Nge7?+− David gets back a
"winning" advantage [19...Nh6 20.Bf3 Nf7²] 20.Ne4! h6?+− 4.66 [20...b6? 21.Nf6 Bxf6 22.exf6
Nf5+− 4.37; 20...Nf5 21.Bxf5 exf5+− 2.67] 21.Nf6?+− 1.50 [21.Nc5 Qd8 22.Nxe6 Qc8+− 6.17]
21...Bxf6 22.Bxf6+ Kh7 23.Rf3 Ng8 24.Rh3 Nce7 25.Qf2 [25.c4 Nxf6 26.exf6 Ng8+−] 25...Nxf6
I am up an N
XABCDEFGHY
8r+-+r+-+(
7+pzpqsn-+k'
6p+-+psnpzp&
5+-+pzP-+-%
4P+-+-zPL+$
3+P+-+-+R#
2-+P+-wQPzP"
1+-+R+-+K!
xabcdefghy
26.Rxh6+! A sound R−sac; I am up N vs P [26.exf6? Ng8 27.Qh4 Rf8=] 26...Kxh6 I am up R + N
vs P 27.exf6 I am up R vs P again 27...g5+− 2.32 [27...Kh7 28.Qh4+ Kg8 29.Qh6 Nf5 30.Qxg6+
Kf8+− 2.36; 27...Nf5? 28.Bxf5 Kh7 (28...gxf5?? 29.Qh4+ Kg6 30.Qg5+ Kh7 31.Rd3 Kh8 32.Rh3+
Qh7 33.Qg7#) 29.Qh4+ Kg8 30.Bxg6 Rf8+− 18.71; 27...Ng8?? 28.Qh4#] 28.fxg5+ I am up R vs 2
P (connected and passed) 28...Kg6 29.f7 Nf5! [29...Rf8?? 30.Qf6+ Kh7 31.Qh6#] 30.fxe8Q+
Rxe8 David is up a P (2 connected & passed) 31.c4 d4 32.Bxf5+ exf5 33.Rxd4 David goes up 2
P's 33...Re1++− 2.85 [33...Qxd4? 34.Qxd4 Re1+ 35.Qg1 Rxg1+ 36.Kxg1 Kxg5+− 4.90] 34.Qxe1
Qxd4 35.h4 Qd3?+− 4.59 [35...Kf7 36.a5 b6+− 3.42] 36.Qe8+ Kg7 37.Qe5+ Kg6 38.Kh2 Kh5
39.Qg3?+− 4.29 [39.g3? Qf1 40.Qe8+ Kg4 41.Qe3 Kh5+− 3.69; 39.g6 Kxg6 40.Qg3+ Qxg3+
41.Kxg3 Kh5+− 9.66] 39...Qd4?+− 8.37 [39...Qd8 40.g6 f4 41.Qxf4 Kxg6+− 4.64] 40.g6 Kh6
41.g7?+− 7.01 [41.Qg5+ Kg7 42.h5 Kf8 43.g7+ Kg8+− 10.36] 41...Qxg7 David is up a P
42.Qxg7+ Kxg7 43.Kg3+− 11.38 1-0
Toronto Chess News
49
Canadian Senior's 2013 Championship - The Fourth Annual
(left to right, back row): John Ellis, Russell Super, Pierre Maheux, Bradley Willis, Doug
Gillis, Thomas Verny, Bill Doubleday, Ralph Deline, Andre Zybura; (front) Petr Helis,
Istvan Kiss, Richard Glew (2 players missing)
This Canadian championship was played at the Kitchener City Hall from August
2- 5, 2013, and was a swiss of 7 rounds. Time control was Game/90 + 30 sec.. The
winner represents Canada (free room and board) at the World Seniors.
The winner was Istvan Kiss – he has indicated he intends to attend the World
Seniors to represent Canada – congratulations Istvan.
Here are some comments by K-W Member, Kai Gauer, who is TCN’s roving
reporter for many SWOCL tournaments:
“The Canadian Seniors’ Championship event attracted 14 players ( up 27% in attendance
from last year’s 11 contestants, and more than double from 2 years ago). Possibly the
marathon event format of hosting the slightly longer 7 rounds is attracting interest in the
players in being able to be frequently paired fairly near to their running performance
rating. An interesting calculation for the inquiring reader may be to calculate R(perf.) –
R(perf. Opp.), for each round, and compare the variability to other sectioned swisses.”
Here is a game from the tournament (Ralph is a former Can. Seniors’ Champion):
Toronto Chess News
50
Deline, Ralph − Solis, Jaime [C45]
Canadian Seniors' Championship Aurora, Ontario, 08.2013
1.e4² 0.35 1...e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.d4?!= [3.Bb5²] 3...exd4 4.Nxd4 Qf6?!² [4...Nf6 5.Nxc6 bxc6 6.Bd3
d5=] 5.Be3?!= [5.Nf3 Bb4+ 6.Nbd2 Nge7²] 5...Bc5 6.c3 Nge7 7.Bc4 0-0 8.Qd2?!³ [8.0-0 d6
9.Nxc6 Nxc6 10.Bxc5 dxc5=] 8...h6?!= [8...Ne5 9.Be2 d5³] 9.0-0 Bb6?!² [9...Ne5 10.Qe2 Nxc4
11.Qxc4 b6=] 10.f4?!= [10.Na3 Nxd4 11.Bxd4 Bxd4 12.cxd4 d5²] 10...d6?!² [10...d5 11.e5 Qg6=]
11.Qf2?!= [11.Na3 Nxd4 12.Bxd4 Be6²] 11...Bd7?!² [11...Rd8 12.Bb3 d5=] 12.Nd2 Rac8
13.Rad1 Bg4 14.Rde1 Nd8?+− 3.21 Ralph gets a "winning" advantage [14...Rcd8? 15.f5 Nxd4
16.Bxd4 Bxd4 17.cxd4 Bh5+− 1.52; 14...Rfd8 15.h3 Nxd4 16.Bxd4 Bxd4 17.cxd4 Bd7²] 15.f5 d5
16.exd5 Ralph goes up a P 16...c5?+− 7.26 [16...Re8 17.Ne4 Qe5+− 4.98] 17.dxc6?+− 4.57
[17.Ne4 Qe5 18.Bf4 Qxe4 19.Rxe4 cxd4 20.b3 Nxd5 21.Bxd5 Bxf5 22.Re7 dxc3+− 7.38]
17...Ndxc6 18.Ne4 Qe5 19.Bf4?+− 2.03 [19.f6 Nxd4 20.Bxd4 Rxc4 21.Bxe5 Bxf2+ 22.Rxf2 Nd5
23.fxg7 Rfc8+− 6.42] 19...Bxd4 20.cxd4 Qxf5??+− 3.95 blunder − material equality, but loses
the exchange [20...Qxd4 21.Nd6 Qxf2+ 22.Rxf2 Rcd8+− 2.28] 21.Nd6 Qf6 22.Nxc8 Bxc8 Ralph
is up the exchange 23.Be3?+− 3.31 [23.d5 Na5 24.Bc7 Nxc4 25.Qxf6 gxf6 26.Rxe7 Kg7+− 4.65]
23...Nf5 24.d5?+− 2.69 [24.Bd3 Ncxd4 25.Bxd4 Nxd4 26.Qxf6 gxf6 27.Rxf6 Kg7+− 3.37]
24...Nce7?+− 8.54 [24...Ne5 25.Be2 Nxe3 26.Qxe3 Qd6+− 2.80] 25.Bc5 Re8? 10.17 [25...Ng6
26.Bxf8 Nxf8+− 8.88] 26.d6 the e7N is pinned 26...b6 10.24 27.Ba3 Be6 10.47 [27...a6? 28.Qxb6
Kh7+− 11.81] 28.Bxe6 fxe6 29.dxe7 11.50 Ralph is up a R 29...Qf7 30.Qe2 14.80 [30.Qc2 g6
31.Qc6 Nxe7 32.Qxe6 Qxe6 33.Rxe6 a5+− 15.14] 30...Qf6 15.74 [30...g6? 31.g4 h5 32.Rd1
hxg4+− 17.91] 31.Qxe6+ Ralph is up R + P (passed and on the 7th rank) 31...Qxe6 32.Rxe6
Kf7?+− 17.72 [32...Nxe7 33.Rxe7 Rxe7 34.Bxe7 Kh7+− 15.73] 33.Re5?+− 17.01 [33.Rc6 g6
34.g4 h5+− 21.22] 33...g6 34.g4 Kf6??+− leads to mate [34...a5?? 35.gxf5 Kf6 36.Re6+ Kf7+−
mate in 21 moves; 34...b5 35.gxf5 g5+− 18.34] 35.Re2?+− 17.60 missing the mating line [35.gxf5
h5 36.Re6+ Kg7+− mate in 14 moves] 35...Kg5??+− mate in 26 moves [35...h5 36.gxf5 gxf5+−
18.04] 36.gxf5 gxf5 Ralph is up R + B 37.Ref2 Kf6 38.Rxf5+ Ralph is up R + B + P (passed and
on the 7th rank) 38...Ke6 39.Rf6+ Kd7 40.Rd1+ Kc7 41.Rf8 Rxe7 42.Bxe7 Ralph is up 2 R's + B
(is it not time for a resignation?) 42...a5 43.a4 h5 44.Rfd8 Kc6 45.Rc1+ Kb7 46.Bd6 b5 47.Rc7+
Kb6 48.Rb8++− Jaime finally resigned. It is mate 48...Ka6 49.axb5# 1-0
Here is the final cross-table:
# Name 1 Istvan Kiss Rtng Post Rd 1 Rd 2 Rd 3 Rd 4 Rd 5 Rd 6 Rd 7 Tot TBrk[H] TBrk[P]
1792 1858 D4 L6 W14 W5 W2 D3 W7 5.0 100 2 William G Doubleday 2184 2161 W10 W5 D8 W3
1831 1909 W7 D4 W6
1887 L1 D4 W9 5.0 99 1878.5
L2 W8 D1 W11 5.0 99 1876.5
3 Ralph Deline 4 Bradley J Willis 2097 2076 D1 D3 W9 D8 D6 D2 W10 4.5 100 1887.5
5 Ian Finlay 1892 1885 W12 L2 D10 L1 W14 W6 W13 4.5 100 1732.5
6 Richard Glew 7 Petr Helis 8 Andre Zybura 2053 2002 W11 W9 D2 D4 L3 9 Pierre Maheux 1832 1812 W14 L8 10 Thomas R Verny 11 Jaime Solis 1714 1758 H‐‐‐ W1
L3 W10 D4 L5 W14 4.0 100 1846.5
1405 1577 L3 D11 W12 D13 W10 W8
L1 4.0 100 1725.5
L7 D12 3.5 100 1834 L4 D12 W13 D11 L2 3.0 100 1713 1822 1782 L2 W13 D5 L6 L7 W12 L4 2.5 100 1811.5
1716 1675 L8 D7 D13 D14 D12 D9 L3 2.5 100 Toronto Chess News
1714 51
12 John W Ellis 1653 1624 L5 D14 L7 D9 D11 L10 D8 2.0 100 13 Doug Gillis 1620 1584 H‐‐‐ L10 D11 D7 L9 D14 L5 2.0 100 1707.5
14 Russell Super 1343 1369 L9 D12 L1 D11 L5 D13 L6 1.5 100 1723.5
Jaime Solis – deep in thought
Toronto Chess News
1723 52
Ian Finlay (left) – Russell Super (right)
Istvan Kiss (Kitchener) left Plays Petr Helis (Toronto) on board 1 in round 7!
Bradley Willis (Edmonton) left plays Thomas Verny (Stratford), board 4, round 7.
Toronto Chess News
53
Photos: by K-WCC
Website: http://www.chessfest.ca
More Pictures (Deline): http://ralphsattic.blogspot.ca/2013/...ival-2013.html
Canadian Amateur Championships
Played at the same time as the Canadian Seniors, this Canadian championship was
played at the Kitchener City Hall from August 2 - August 5, 2013, and was a swiss of 7
rounds. 92 players took part in four sections. Time control was Game/90 + 30 sec..
Here are the final standings in the 4 sections
Canadian Amateur Over 2000 Section
# Name Rtng Post Rd 1 Rd 2 Rd 3 Rd 4 Rd 5 Rd 6 Rd 7 Tot TBrk[H] TBrk[P]
1 Konstantin Semianiuk 2290 2305 W7 D10 W9 D2 W4 D3 D6 5.0 100 2258 2 Digeng Du 2247 2259 D5 W13 W10 D1 D9 D6 D3 4.5 100 2217.5
3 Jackie Peng 2219 2230 L9 W7 D12 W14 W10 D1 D2 4.5 100 2201.5
4 Andrew Peredun 2324 2324 H‐‐‐ D6 W11 D9 L1 W10 W13 4.5 100 2178 5 Geordie Derraugh 2312 2301 D2 D12 W15 L10 D6 W14 W7 4.5 100 2116 6 Gordon Olheiser 2115 2153 H‐‐‐ D4 D8 W12 D5 D2 D1 4.0 100 2251 7 Guannan Terry Song 2140 2160 L1 L3 B‐‐‐ W15 W11 W9
L5 4.0 100 2155 8 L9 D6 D11 L12 W15 W14 4.0 100 2062 Brian Profit 2001 2028 B‐‐‐
9 Michael Humphreys 2303 2288 W3 W8
10 Adam Cormier 11 Simon Gladstone 12 Dmitry Chernik 2251 2241 W15 D1 L2 W5
Aaron Both 15 Wenlu Yu L3 L4 B‐‐‐ 3.5 100 2218.5
2175 2155 H‐‐‐ W14 L4 D8 L7 B‐‐‐ D9 3.5 100 2168 2056 2069 H‐‐‐ D5 D3 L6 W8 L13 W15 3.5 100 2099.5
13 Yuetong [Davy] Zhao 2018 2008 H‐‐‐
14 L1 D4 D2 L7 D11 3.5 100 2250.5
L2 L14 B‐‐‐ H‐‐‐ W12 L4 3.0 100 2188.5
2007 2003 H‐‐‐ L11 W13 L3 W15 L5 2011 1943 L10 B‐‐‐
L5 L7 L14
L8 2.5 100 2067 L8 L12 1.0 100 2138 Here are some games from this section, submitted by Kai Gauer of the K-WCC
(not in the games database):
Digeng Du vs Konstantin Semianiuk 1. e4 d6 2. d4 Nf6 3. Nc3 g6 4. Nf3 Bg7 5. h3 O‑O
6. Be3 c6 7. a4 Qa5 8. Qd2 Nbd7 (black had 2 wins with 8... e5:
http://www.chessgames.com/perl/explorer?node=4267907&move=9&moves=e4.d6.d4.N
f6.Nc3.g6.Nf3.Bg7.h3.O-
Toronto Chess News
54
O.Be3.c6.a4.Qa5.Qd2.e5&nodes=21720.152636.152637.218034.177462.987959.987936.
987937.987938.987960.987961.987962.990268.993778.1002613.4267907
but
an
improvement
in
the
opening
might
have
been
http://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1222944
1-0, 2001 with 8... b5 or else earlier deviations back to shorter opening variations might
be necessary) 9. Be2 e5 10. O‑O Re8 11. dxe5 dxe5 12. Bc4 Qb4 13. b3 Nb6 14. Bxb6
axb6 15. Ng5 Be6 16. Nxe6 fxe6 17. Rad1 Nh5 18. Qe3 Re7 19. Rd2 Nf4 20. g3 Nxh3+
21. Kg2 Nf4+ 22. gxf4 exf4 23. Qxf4 Qxc3 24. Rfd1 Rae8 25. Rd8 Qe5 26. Qxe5 Bxe5
27. Rxe8+ Rxe8 28. Rd7 h5 29. Rxb7 Bd4 30. Rd7 Bc5 31. Rc7 Rd8 32. Bxe6+ Kh8 33.
Rc8 Rxc8 34. Bxc8 Bd4 35. f4 Kg7 36. Kf3 Kf7 37. Bb7 c5 38. e5 g5 39. fxg5 Bxe5 40.
Ke4 Bd4 41. Kd5 Kg6 42. Kc4 Be3 43. Kb5 c4 44. Kxc4 Kxg5 45. Kd5 Kf4 46. b4 Bd2
47. Kc6 Ke5 48. Kxb6 Bxb4 49. Kb5 Bd2 50. c4 Kd6 51. c5+ Kc7 52. Bf3 h4 53. a5 Kb8
54. Kb6 Bg5 55. a6 Bd8+ 56. Kc6 h3 57. Kd7 Ba5 58. Bh1 Ka7 59. Bb7 1/2-1/2
Jackie Peng vs Michael Humphreys 1. e4 c6 2. d4 d5 3. Nc3 dxe4 4. Nxe4 Bf5 5. Ng3
Bg6 6. Nf3 Nd7 7. h4 h6 8. h5 Bh7 9. Bd3 Bxd3 10. Qxd3 e6 11. Bd2 Ngf6 12. O‑O‑O
Be7 13. Ne4 Nxe4 14. Qxe4 Nf6 15. Qe2 Qd5 16. c4 Qe4 17. Rde1 Qxe2 18. Rxe2 Rd8
19. Bc3 b5 ( http://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1606037 instead saw 19...
0-0 and eventually 0-1 as well) 20. b3 O‑O 21. Ne5 Rc8 22. g4 bxc4 23. bxc4 c5 24. g5
hxg5 25. h6 gxh6 26. f4 cxd4 27. Bxd4 Ng4 28. Rc2 Nxe5 29. Bxe5 f6 30. Bd4 Bc5 31.
Bxc5 Rxc5 32. Rxh6 gxf4 33. Rg2+ Rg5 34. Rxg5+ fxg5 35. Rg6+ Kf7 36. Rxg5 Rc8 01
Peredun vs Semianiuk 1. c4 c6 2. e4 d5 3. exd5 cxd5 4. d4 Nf6 5. Nc3 dxc4 6. Bxc4 e6 7.
Nf3 Nc6 8. O‑O Be7 9. Bg5 O‑O 10. Re1 b6 11. a3 Bb7 12. Ba2 Nd5 13. Bxe7 (follows
http://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1377073 0-1 for instance) Ndxe7 14.
Re3 Ng6 15. etc {black eventually overpowers white's choice of a transposition to an IQP
Nimzo-Indian in about 50 moves} 0-1
Canadian Amateur Over 1600 Section
# Name Rtng Rd 1 Rd 2 Rd 3 Rd 4 Rd 5 Rd 6 Rd 7 Tot TBrk[H] TBrk[P]
1 Jeffrey Xu 1868 W26 D7 W8 W13 W2 W5 D3 6.0
100 1846.5
2 Hanyuan Ye 1875 H‐‐‐ W10 W7 W18 L1 W13 W14 5.5
100 1846.5
3 Yury Cheryachukin 1674 H‐‐‐ W6 L13 W9 W8 D7 D1 4.5
100 4 Hugh Siddeley 1928 L7 W11 W10 W5 L13 D15 W16 4.5
100 1836.5
5 Robert Li 1793 W20 D13 W19 L4 W12 L1 W7 4.5
99 1832 6 Mate Milinkovic 1780 D18 L3 W21 W19 D14 D16 W13 4.5
99 1785.5
7 Jason Cai 1747 W4 D1 L2 W22 W17 D3 L5 4.0
100 1901 8 Robert Bzikot 1874 W27 W22 L1 D12 L3 W17 D11 4.0
100 1777.5
9 Robert Gillanders 1794 H‐‐‐ D16 D22 L3 D24 W20 W19 4.0
100 1748.5
Toronto Chess News
1859 55
10 Richard Guo 11 Sasha Chuchin 1714 W23 L2 1764 L13
L4 W27 L15 W21 W18 4.0
L4 W27 W21 W18 D14 D8 4.0
100 1732 100 1723.5
12 Alex Kitaygorodsky 1810 L22 W27 W16 D8 L5 D18 W15 4.0
100 1720 13 Vladimir Drkulec 1987 W11 D5 W3
L6 3.5
100 1953 L1 W4
L2 14 Mario Piccinin 1923 D16 H‐‐‐ H‐‐‐ W24 D6 D11 L2 3.5
100 1858 15 Eric Song 1754 H‐‐‐ L18 D24 W23 W10 D4 L12 3.5
100 1755 16 Corin Schneider 1741 D14 D9 L12 W25 W20 D6 L4 3.5
100 1747.5
17 Eugene Hua 1798 W21 D19 L18 W20 L7 100 1721.5
18 David Flitton 1605 D6 W15 W17 L2 L11 D12 L10 3.0
100 19 Rachel Tao 1628 W25 D17 L5 100 1713.5
20 Mark Brauer L8 W23 3.5
L6 W22 D23 L9 3.0
L9 W26 3.0
100 1710 21 Constance Wang 1636 L17 W25 L6 L11 W26 L10 W22 3.0
100 1704 22 1655 W12 L8 D9 L7 L19 W25 L21 2.5
100 1733 23 Michael Von Keitz 1919 L10 W26 L20 L15 W25 D19 L17 2.5
100 1676 24 Louay Sakka 1682 H‐‐‐ H‐‐‐ D15 L14 D9 U‐‐‐ U‐‐‐ 2.0
100 1759.5
25 Don Gareau 1782 L19 L21 W26 L16 L23 L22 W27 2.0
100 1615.5
26 Harmony Zhu 1676 L1 L23 L25 B‐‐‐ L21 W27 L20 2.0
99 1654 27 Benito Surya 1695 L8 L12 L11 L10 B‐‐‐ L26 L25 1.0
100 1719 Tim Knechtel 1631 L5 B‐‐‐ W23 L17 L16
1844 Again, a game/comment submitted by Kai (Annotations by Bob Armstrong):
Piccinin, Mario − al − Sakka, Louay [B07]
Canadian Amateur Champ. (Over 1600) Kitchener, Ontario, 08.2013
1.f4= d6 2.Nf3 g6 3.e4 Bg4?!² [3...Nf6 4.Nc3 Bg7=] 4.Be2 Nc6 5.d3?!= [5.d4 Bg7 6.Be3 e6²]
5...Nf6 6.c3 Bg7 7.0-0 Qd7 8.a4 0-0-0 9.Nbd2 h5 10.b4 Nh7?!± Mario gets a "clear" advantage
[10...h4 11.b5 Na5²] 11.Qb3 Bxf3?!+− Mario gets a "winning" advantage [11...h4 12.d4 Nf6±]
12.Nxf3 e5 13.a5 a6 14.b5 axb5 15.Qxb5 exf4 Louay goes up a P 16.Rb1 Qe7?+− 6.68
[16...Rdg8 17.Qxb7+ Kd8+− 3.08]
Toronto Chess News
56
Position after 16…Qe7?
XABCDEFGHY
8-+ktr-+-tr(
7+pzp-wqpvln'
6-+nzp-+p+&
5zPQ+-+-+p%
4-+-+Pzp-+$
3+-zPP+N+-#
2-+-+L+PzP"
1+RvL-+RmK-!
xabcdefghy
17.a6 Bxc3?+− 8.63 Louay goes up 2 P's [17...Kd7 18.axb7 Qe8+− 7.94; 17...bxa6? 18.Qxc6
Qe8+− 8.56] 18.axb7+ Louay is up a P 18...Kd7 19.Bb2 Bxb2 20.Rxb2 Ke6?! 11.52 abandoning
the pinned N [20...Qf6?! 21.d4 Ke7 22.Qxc6 Ng5+− 11.27; 20...Rb8 21.Nd4 Qe5 22.Qxc6+ Ke7
23.Qxc7+ Kf6+− 10.83] 21.Qxc6 Mario is up B (with a passed P on the 7th rank) vs P
21...Qd7?+− 13.17 [21...Rb8 22.Qc4+ Kd7+− 12.14] 22.Nd4+ Ke7 23.Rxf4 Mario is up a B
23...Rhf8??+− leads to mate [23...Rhe8 24.Bd1 Ng5+− 14.60] 24.b8Q??+− 12.58 missing the
mating line [24.Qd5 f5 25.exf5 g5+− mate in 19 moves] 24...Rxb8 Mario is up B vs P 25.Rxb8
Rxb8? 23.12 Mario is up B vs P, and now will win Louay's Q [25...Qxc6 26.Nxc6+ Ke6 27.Rxf8
Nxf8+− 14.30 Mario would be up R + B vs P] 26.Rxf7+! 28.16 nice sac to win the Q; Mario will be
up Q + B vs R 1-0
Gauer: Louay had to miss the first few rounds, but had paid and was
consequently entered into the tournament. Mr Piccinin (former K-WCC President) seems
to think that an ideal set-up to combat the so-called Rat set-up with the Bird’s is pawns
at: a2, b2, c3, d3, e4, f4 – so it appears that white is very happy in this opening.
Louay was originally mistakenly seeded into 2 (! – before corrections were made) other
sections, including the 2000+ section in the 2nd round. Based on my luck (after I had
withdrawn due to bad luck in not being able to reconstruct a position for my opponent based off of a bad score sheet), I may have been more well off in instead accepting that
1st round original pairing if it had been rated. It is unfortunate to see that he had to
withdrawal, but only 3 players total decided to call it quits early!
Canadian Amateur Over 1200 Section
# Name Rtng Rd 1 Rd 2 Rd 3 Rd 4 Rd 5 Rd 6 Rd 7 Tot TBrk[H] TBrk[P]
1 Kristen Li 1476 W16 D2 W5 W3 W14 W7 W8 6.5 100 2 Gary Hua 1574 W9 D1 W14 W15 W3 W8 D4 6.0 100 1509.5
3 Dennis Shamroni 1464 W6 W10 W17 L1 Toronto Chess News
L2 W14 W9 5.0 100 1510 1496 57
4 Nicholas Vettese 1524 L14 W20 D7 D5 W18 W15 D2 4.5 100 1452.5
5 James Mourgelas 1306 H‐‐‐ W18 L1 D4 W20 D9 W14 4.5 100 1420.5
6 Lee Hendon 1567 L3 D22 W11 W17 L8 W20 W7 4.5 100 1395 7 Avery Jones 1395 H‐‐‐ D8 D4 W19 W10 L1 L6 3.5 100 1471 8 Henry Zhang 1363 D11 D7 D19 W22 W6
L1 3.5 100 1455 9 David Fletcher 1471 L2 W16 W22 L14 W17 D5 L3 3.5 100 1446 10 George Dragasanu 1566 W20 L3 D15 D18 L7 D12 W17 3.5 99 1421 11 Barry Forsyth 1558 D8 L17
L6 W13 L12 W16 W15 3.5 99 1413 12 Dinesh Dattani 1386 H‐‐‐ L15 L13 H‐‐‐ W11 D10 W21 3.5 99 1358.5
13 Janet Peng 1517 L17 L21 W12 L11 D22 W19 W18 3.5 99 1294.5
14 Richard Morrison L5 3.0 100 1535 15 Aahil Noor Ali 1357 W4 W19 L2 W9
L1 L2 L3 1236 H‐‐‐ W12 D10 L2 W19 L4 L11 3.0 100 1436.5
16 Manojh Sivapathasundaram 1221 L1 L9 L20 B‐‐‐ W21 L11 W22 3.0 100 1340.5
17 Robin Johnston 1347 W13 W11 L3 18 Adam Gaisinsky 1400 H‐‐‐
19 John R Brown 20 L6 L9 D18 L10 2.5 100 1419 L5 W21 D10 L4 D17 L13 2.5 100 1404.5
1501 W21 L14 D8 L7 L15 L13 W20 2.5 100 1382 Joey Befurt 1414 L10
1382 21 Ethan Zheng 1247 L19 W13 L18 L20 L16 W22 L12 2.0 22 Kylie Tan L4 W16 W21 L5 1228 H‐‐‐ D6 L9 L6 L19 2.0 100 99 1282.5
L8 D13 L21 L16 1.5 100 1365 Dinesh Dattani,
Toronto Chess News
58
playing in this section, won this interesting game, that sees a couple of nice tactical
themes (Annotations by Dinesh, using Fritz):
Dattani, Dinesh (1386) − Zheng, Ethan (1247) [B32]
Kitchener Chess Festival (7), 05.08.2013
B32: Sicilian: Löwenthal and Kalashnikov Variations 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 e5
5.Nxc6 bxc6 last book move 6.Be2 d5 [6...Nf6 7.Qd3 Bb4+ 8.Nc3 0-0=] 7.c3 Controls b4
[¹7.exd5!? and White is still in the game 7...Qxd5 8.0-0=] 7...Nf6³ 8.Nd2 Bc5 [8...dxe4?! 9.Qa4
e3 10.fxe3=] 9.Bf3 [9.exd5 cxd5 10.Nb3 Bb6∓] 9...0-0 10.0-0 Bb7 11.Qc2 Re8 12.Nb3 [12.Re1
Bf8³] 12...Bb6∓ 13.Bg5 Qd6 [¹13...h6!? 14.Bxf6 Qxf6∓ (‹14...gxf6 15.Rfd1²) ] 14.Rad1= Rad8
[14...d4 15.cxd4 exd4 16.Bxf6 Qxf6 17.Nc5=] 15.c4² DDD: Threatening c5! 15...Qe6 16.exd5
cxd5 17.Bxf6 DDD: Removed one defender of d5 square. 17...Qxf6 DDD: And another, else
Black loses the R or doubles K−side pawns. 18.Bxd5 Bxd5 19.Rxd5 White can be proud of that
piece 19...Rc8? [19...Rxd5 20.cxd5 e4 21.Nc5=] 20.Nd2 [20.c5 Bc7+−] 20...Bd4 The black
bishop on an outpost [20...Qe6!? should be investigated more closely 21.Qb3 Rb8²] 21.b3 Red8
22.Rxd8+ Rxd8 23.Qe4 [23.b4 Qa6±] 23...Qe6 24.Qf3 [24.Nf3!?±] 24...Bb6 [24...f5 25.Rb1=]
25.Nb1 [25.Ne4!? should be considered 25...f5 26.Qh3²] 25...e4= 26.Qe2 e3 [26...Qe5!?= must
be considered] 27.fxe3± DDD: 27. f3 was considered− thwarts Black's ambitions by closing the
lines to the White K, but at the cost of long−term headaches of the Black p on e3, with no hope of
getting rid of it easily. 27...Bxe3+ 28.Kh1 Qh6 [28...Qe5!?±] 29.Qf3+− DDD: The Rd8 cannot
leave last rank, in light of Qa8 mate. Also, attack on the f7 pawn. 29...f6 30.Rd1 [30.Nc3 Bc5+−]
30...Re8 [30...Rxd1+ 31.Qxd1 Kf8 32.Nc3±] 31.Qd5+ [31.Nc3 Qf4+−] 31...Kh8 [31...Kf8 32.Qd6+
Kf7 33.Nc3±]
XABCDEFGHY
8-+-+r+-mk(
7zp-+-+-zpp'
6-+-+-zp-wq&
5+-+Q+-+-%
4-+P+-+-+$
3+P+-vl-+-#
2P+-+-+PzP"
1+N+R+-+K!
xabcdefghy
32.Qe6 DDD: First of the two Q sacs resulting in Black getting mated. [32.Qf7 Qg6 33.Qxg6
hxg6+−] 32...Rg8 [32...Qh5!? 33.g4 Rxe6 34.gxh5 Kg8±] 33.Nc3 [¹33.g3+−] 33...Qf4?? simply
worsens the situation [¹33...Bf4 34.Qh3 Qxh3 35.gxh3 Be5+−] 34.Nd5 Rd8 35.Qxe3 DDD:
NxQf4 is greedy and loses at once: Rxd1 mate!. NxBe3 also loses − Rxd1, Nxd1, Qf1 mate!.
[35.Nxe3?? Rxd1+ 36.Nxd1 Qf1#] 35...Qd6 [35...Qxe3 is no salvation 36.Nxe3 Rxd1+ 37.Nxd1+−
] 36.Re1 a5 [%tqu "","","",Qe8+,"",10] [36...Qd7+− otherwise it's curtains at once]
Toronto Chess News
59
Position after 36…a5
XABCDEFGHY
8-+-tr-+-mk(
7+-+-+-zpp'
6-+-wq-zp-+&
5zp-+N+-+-%
4-+P+-+-+$
3+P+-wQ-+-#
2P+-+-+PzP"
1+-+-tR-+K!
xabcdefghy
37.Qe8+! DDD: The second queen sac. 37...Qf8 [37...Rxe8 38.Rxe8+ Mate attack] 38.Qxf8+
Rxf8 39.h3 [39.c5 keeps an even firmer grip 39...f5+−] 39...Ra8 [39...h6 is still a small chance
40.c5 Rc8 41.Rc1+−] 40.Rc1 a4 41.b4 h6 42.c5 Kg8 43.c6 Kf8 44.c7 Rc8 45.Nb6 DDD: Black
resigns. 1-0
:
Here is another game from this section, submitted by Kai –
James Mourgelas
vs
Toronto Chess News
60
Nicholas Vettese
(Photos by Egis Zeromskis)
(Annotations by Bob Armstrong):
Mourgelas, James − Vettese, Nicholas [E00]
Canadian Amateur Champ. (Over 1200) Kitchener, Ontario, 08.2013
1.d4² 0.34 1...d5 2.c4 e6 3.a3?!= [3.Nc3²; 3.Nf3²] 3...Nf6 4.Nc3 c6?!² [4...c5 5.cxd5 cxd4
6.Qa4+ Nbd7 7.Qxd4 Bc5=] 5.Bg5?!= [5.Nf3?! dxc4 6.e4 b5=; 5.e3 c5 6.Bd3 dxc4 7.Bxc4 Nc6²]
5...h6?!² [5...dxc4 6.e3 (6.e4?! b5³) 6...b5=] 6.Bh4?³ [6.Bxf6 Qxf6 7.e3 Be7²] 6...Be7?² [6...dxc4
7.Bxf6 Qxf6 8.e3 b5³] 7.e3 0-0 8.Nf3 Nbd7 9.Bd3 Re8 10.0-0 a6 [10...b6 11.cxd5 exd5²]
11.Rc1 [11.Qc2 b6 12.Bg3 (12.e4 Nxe4 13.Bxe7 Qxe7 14.Bxe4 dxe4 15.Qxe4 Bb7²) 12...Bb7²]
11...b5 12.cxd5 exd5 [12...cxd5 13.Ne5 Nxe5 14.dxe5 Nd7²] 13.Bg3 [13.Qc2 Bb7 14.Ne2
Nb6²] 13...Bf8 [13...c5 14.dxc5 Nxc5²] 14.Re1 Ne4 15.Ne2?!= [15.Bxe4 dxe4 16.Nd2 f5²]
15...Nxg3?!² [15...Bb7 16.Nc3 c5=] 16.Nxg3 Qb6 17.Bb1 Bd6?!± James gets a "clear"
advantage [17...Bb7?! 18.Qc2 g6± (18...Nf6?!+−) ; 17...b4 18.Qa4 bxa3 19.bxa3 Qb5²] 18.Qc2
Nf6 19.Nf5?= [19.Qxc6 Qxc6 20.Rxc6 Bb8±] 19...Bxf5 20.Qxf5 Rac8?!² [20...Re6 21.Re2 g6=]
21.Ba2?!= [21.Ne5 Rc7 22.Red1 Re6²] 21...Rc7 22.Re2 Ne4 23.Nd2 Nxd2 24.Rxd2 Re6
25.Bb1 Rg6?± [25...g6 26.Qf3 b4=] 26.Qf3?!² [26.g3 a5 27.Bd3 b4±] 26...Rf6 27.Qh5² ½-½
Canadian Amateur Rookie Section
# Name Rtng Rd 1 Rd 2 Rd 3 Rd 4 Rd 5 Rd 6 Rd 7 Tot TBrk[H] TBrk[P]
1 Ellen Tao 1151 W23 W19 D11 W17 D7 W8 W4 6.0 100 967 2 Lynda Lei unr. W7 D4 W3
1086 3 Jaden Michno 4 Aaron Kong 1013 W20 D2 W5 W9 D8 W15 L1 5.0 100 1065.5
5 Catherine Li 1151 H‐‐‐ W22 L4 D6 D13 W17 W12 4.5 100 1012 H‐‐‐ W6
L8 W9 W12 W15 5.5 100 L2 W20 W11 W7 W8 5.5 Toronto Chess News
99 1033.5
1010 61
6 James Tan 7 8 unr. H‐‐‐
L3 W10 D5 W24 D11 W13 4.5 100 983.5
Matthew Tang 1031 L2 W26 W25 W19 D1 L3 W16 4.5 100 969.5
Rebecca Zhang 1157 W10 W13 D9 W2 D4 L1 9 Matthew Chertkow 998 W16 W12 D8 L4 L3 4.0 100 1140.5
L2 D10 W19 4.0 100 unr. L8 D16 L6 W14 W19 D9 W11 4.0 99 1079 10 Sid Gandhi 974 11 David Xu 12 Howard Xu unr. W18 L9 D15 W22 W17 L2 L5 3.5 100 996 13 Allyson Xu 982 W25 L8 L17 W26 D5 W18 L6 3.5 100 881.5
14 Soroush Ghodsi 1012 D21 L17 L19 L10 B‐‐‐ W23 W20 3.5 100 876 15 Peter Downie 16 Gian Racca 966 W24 W15 D1 D18 L3 D6 L10 3.5 100 1007.5
1160 W27 L11 D12 W16 W18 L4 L2 3.5 99 1024 unr. L9 D10 W26 L15 W22 W25 L7 3.5 99 847 L5 D18 3.0 100 996 18 Sasha Chertkow 988 L12 B‐‐‐ W20 D11 L15 L13 D17 3.0 100 968 19 Brandon Kong 783 W28 L1 W14 L7 L10 W24 L9 3.0 100 869.5
20 Andrew Moses unr. L4 W24 L18
L3 D23 W22 L14 2.5 100 855.5
21 Andrew Nichols unr. D14 U‐‐‐ U‐‐‐ U‐‐‐ U‐‐‐ W26 W24 2.5 100 636 22 Rahul Gangolli 975 H‐‐‐
L5 W23 L12 L16 L20 W25 2.5 99 845.5
23 Ahmed Hussain unr. L1 L25 L22 B‐‐‐ D‐‐‐ L14 W26 2.5 99 652 24 Dieter Whittingham unr. L11 L20 B‐‐‐ W25 L6 L19 L21 2.0 100 904.5
17 Haotong Hazel Guo 951 H‐‐‐ W14 W13 L1 L12
25 Steve Vettese unr. L13 W23 L7 L24 W26 L16 L22 2.0 99 752 26 Roger Guo 636 H‐‐‐
L7 L16 L13 L25 L21 L23 0.5 100 842.5
27 Bill Chang 1027 L15 U‐‐‐ U‐‐‐ U‐‐‐ U‐‐‐ U‐‐‐ U‐‐‐ 0.0 100 1024 28 Kai Gauer 1185 L19 U‐‐‐ U‐‐‐ U‐‐‐ U‐‐‐ U‐‐‐ U‐‐‐ 0.0 100 936 Team Standings XuVeZhYe Jeffrey Xu Nicholas Vettese Yuetong Zhao O1600 O1200 O2000 O1600 0.5 1.0 1.0 1.0 0.0 1.0 1.0 5.5 Peredunes Chess Academy Andrew Peredun O2000 Dennis Shamroni O1200 R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6 R7 0.5 0.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 0.0 0.0 1.0 1.0 19.0 Total 4.5 5.0 Hanyuan Ye R1 1.0
0.0
0.5
R2 0.5
1.0
0.0
R3 1.0
0.5
0.0
Toronto Chess News
R4 1.0
0.5
1.0
R5 1.0
1.0
0.5
R6 1.0 1.0 1.0 R7 0.5 0.5 0.0 Total 6.0 4.5 3.0 62
Souroush Ghodsi Rookie 0.5 0.0 0.0 0.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 3.5 Jaden Michno Rookie 0.5 1.0 0.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 5.5 O2000 O2000 O1600 Lee Hendon O1200 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.0 0.0 1.0 1.0 Kitchener Knightmares Ralph Deline Istvan Kiss Mario Piccinin Seniors Seniors O1600 Peter Downie Rookie 1.0 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.0 0.0 0.0 O1600 O2000 O2000 O1600 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.0 Seniors Seniors O1600 Adam Cormier O2000 1.0 0.5 0.0 1.0 0.0 0.0 1.0 Tricky Knights Corin Schneider Mark Brauer Terry Song O1600 O1600 O2000 O2000 0.5 0.0 1.0 0.0 1.0 0.0 0.0 The Mates Ian Finlay Pierre Maheaux Tim Knechtel Seniors Seniors O1600 Robin Johnson O1200 1.0 1.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.5 0.0 2.5 Amazing Knights R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6 R7 12.5 Total DeDuKiHe Geordie Derraugh Digeng Du Alex Kitaygorodsky NoName5 Vlad Drkulec Brian Profit Simon Gladstone Bob Gillanders A‐Team Bill Doubleday Andre Zybura Michael von Keitz Aaron Both R1 0.5
0.5
0.0
R1 1.0
0.5
0.5
R1 1.0
1.0
0.5
R1 1.0
1.0
0.0
R1 0.5
0.0
0.0
R1 1.0
1.0
1.0
R2 0.5
1.0
1.0
R2 0.5
0.0
0.5
R2 0.5
0.0
1.0
R2 1.0
1.0
1.0
R2 0.5
1.0
0.0
R2 0.0
0.0
0.0
R3 1.0
1.0
1.0
R3 1.0
1.0
0.5
R3 1.0
0.5
0.0
R3 0.5
0.5
0.0
R3 0.0
1.0
1.0
R3 0.5
0.0
0.5
Toronto Chess News
R4 0.0
0.5
0.5
R4 0.0
1.0
1.0
R4 0.0
0.5
0.5
R4 1.0
0.5
0.0
R4 1.0
0.0
1.0
R4 0.0
0.5
0.0
R5 0.5
0.5
0.0
R5 1.0
1.0
0.5
R5 1.0
0.0
0.0
R5 0.0
0.0
1.0
R5 1.0
0.0
1.0
R5 1.0
1.0
0.0
R6 1.0 0.5 0.5 R6 0.5 0.5 0.5 R6 0.0 1.0 1.0 R6 0.5 0.0 0.5 R6 0.5 0.0 1.0 R6 1.0 0.5 1.0 R7 1.0 0.5 1.0 R7 1.0 1.0 0.0 R7 0.0 1.0 0.5 R7 1.0 0.5 0.0 R7 0.0 1.0 0.0 R7 1.0 0.0 0.0 18.5 Total 4.5 4.5 4.0 4.5 17.5 Total 5.0 5.0 3.5 3.5 17.0 Total 3.5 4.0 3.5 4.0 15.0 Total 5.0 3.5 2.5 3.5 14.5 Total 3.5 3.0 4.0 2.5 13.0 Total 4.5 3.0 2.5 63
Benito Surya O1600 Manojh Sivapathasundaram O1200 Matthew Tang Rookie 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 1.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 1.0 1.0 0.0 1.0 0.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 0.5 0.0 1.0 1.0 3.0 4.5 O1600 1.0 0.5 0.0 1.0 1.0 0.5 0.0 4.0 O2000 O1600 O1600 R1 1.0
0.0
1.0
R2 1.0
1.0
1.0
R3 0.0
1.0
0.0
R4 0.5
1.0
0.5
R5 0.5
0.0
0.0
R6 0.0 0.5 1.0 R7 0.5 1.0 0.5 12.5 Total 3.5 4.5 4.0 0.0 O1200 Seniors Seniors R1 1.0
0.0
0.0
R2 0.0
0.5
0.5
R3 0.5
0.0
0.5
R4 0.0
0.5
0.5
R5 0.0
0.5
0.5
R6 0.0 0.0 0.5 R7 1.0 0.5 0.0 12.0 Total 2.5 2.0 2.5 Don Gareau O1600 0.0 0.0 1.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 1.0 2.0 Friday Knights Adam Gaisinsky Henry Zhang O1200 O1200 R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6 R7 0.5 0.0 1.0 0.5 0.0 0.5 0.0 0.5 0.5 0.5 1.0 1.0 0.0 0.0 9.0 Total 2.5 3.5 0.0 Jason Cai GrandPatzers Michael Humphreys Hugh Siddeley Robert Bzikot NoNames John R. Brown John W. Ellis Jaime Solis 0.0 6.0 Family Standings Name Kristen Li Catherine Li Section O1200 Rookie R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6 R7 Total 1.0 0.5 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 6.5 0.5 1.0 0.0 0.5 0.5 1.0 1.0 4.5 Name Eugene Hua Gary Hua Section O1600 O1200 R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6 R7 1.0 0.5 0.0 1.0 0.0 0.0 1.0 1.0 0.5 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 0.5 11.0 Total 3.5 6.0 Name Section Konstantin Semianiuk O2000 Petr Helis Seniors R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6 R7 1.0 0.5 1.0 0.5 1.0 0.5 0.5 0.0 0.5 1.0 0.5 1.0 1.0 0.0 9.5 Total 5.0 4.0 R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6 R7 1.0 0.5 1.0 0.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.0 0.0 0.0 9.0 Total 5.5 3.5 Name Linda Lei Howard Xu Section Rookie Rookie Toronto Chess News
64
David Xu Rookie 1.0 1.0 0.5 0.5 0.0 0.5 0.0 3.5 Allyson Xu Rookie 1.0 0.0 0.0 1.0 0.5 1.0 0.0 3.5 Name Rachel Tao Section O1600 9.0 R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6 R7 Total 1.0 0.5 0.0 0.0 1.0 0.5 0.0 3.0 Ellen Tao Rookie 1.0 1.0 0.5 1.0 0.5 1.0 1.0 6.0 Name Aaron Kong Section Rookie 9.0 R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6 R7 Total 1.0 0.5 1.0 1.0 0.5 1.0 0.0 5.0 Brandon Kong Rookie 1.0 0.0 1.0 0.0 0.0 1.0 0.0 3.0 Name Janet Peng Section O1200 8.0 R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6 R7 Total 0.0 0.0 1.0 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.0 3.5 Jackie Peng O2000 0.0 1.0 0.5 1.0 1.0 0.5 0.5 4.5 Section Name Matthew Chertkow Rookie 8.0 R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6 R7 Total 1.0 1.0 0.5 0.0 0.0 0.5 1.0 4.0 Sasha Chertkow Rookie 0.0 1.0 1.0 0.5 0.0 0.0 0.5 3.0 Name Kylie Tan Section O1200 7.0 R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6 R7 Total 0.5 0.5 0.0 0.0 0.5 0.0 0.0 1.5 James Tan Rookie 0.5 0.0 1.0 0.5 1.0 0.5 1.0 4.5 Name Hazel Guo Section Rookie 6.0 R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6 R7 Total 0.5 1.0 1.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.5 3.0 Roger Guo Rookie 0.5 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.5 3.5 By Kai Gauer – The Kitchener Chess Festival also included a Blitz Tournament: Finally,
a 7-round open swiss blitz attracted 3 dozen players on Saturday night. Two sections had
more than 2 dozen players each (more than what the weekly club night attracts on many
nights).
2013 CYCC Tie-Break Results
U 8 Open – Rowan James defeated Jonathan Zhao to take third.
U 8 Girls – Mysha Gilani and Claire Radin, by agreement, shared second.
Toronto Chess News
65
U 10 Open – 2. Rohan Talukdar 3. Shawn Rodrigue-Lemieux ( Thomas Guo and Kai
Richardson finished out of the top 3)
U 10 Girls - 2. Allison Tsypin 3. Cindy Qiao (Kylie Tan finished out of the top 3).
U 12 Open - 1. Kevin Wan 2. Yuanchen Zhang 3. Jeffrey Xu (Daniel Zotkin finished out
of the top 3).
U 12 Girls – An Nguyen came third (Yekta Saremi and Constance Wang finished out of the top
3).
U 14 Open - 1. Jason Cao 2. John Doknjas 3. Wenlu Yu (Ananda Saha finished out of the
top 3)
U 14 Girls - 2= Erica Forshaw, Rachel Tao (by agreement, Erica and Rachel chose to
share 2nd)
U 16 Open - 1. Adam Dorrance 2. Agastya Kalra 3. Richard Wang, Ryan Lo
U 16 Girls - 1. Rebecca Giblon 2. Joanne Foote
U 18 Open – Nikita Kraiouchkine third (David Itkin, Michael Ivanov, Mate Marinkovic
and Konstantin Semianiuk finished out of the top 3)
U 18 Girls - 1. Alice Huanyi Xiao 2. Alexandra Botez 3. Regina-Veronicka Kalaydina
Articles
Olympiad Selection Ratings - National
Code:
Olympiad starts August 1, 2014
Highest ratings starting February 2, 2013
Ratings for August 1, 2013
Players
Title
Kovalyov A
GM
Argentina
Sambuev B
GM
Bluvshtein M
GM
Hansen E GM
2584
Spraggett K
GM
Hambleton A
IM
Lesiege A
GM
Charbonneau P
GM
Noritsyn N
IM
Tyomkin D
GM
Gerzhoy L
IM
Krnan T
IM
Samsonkin A
IM
Zugic I
IM
Porper E IM
2454
Panjwani R
IM
FIDE
2606
CAN
2650
AVE
2628
Games
9
Elig
No
Place
1
2530
2590
2634
2577
2500
2528
2505
2467
2489
2469
2439
2415
2462
2508
2413
2696
2632
2609
2571
2616
2577
2585
2616
2570
2571
2568
2564
2516
2481
2549
2613
2611
≥20
2574
2558
2553
2545
2542
2530
2520
2504
2490
2489
≥20
2481
≥20
0
Yes
10
≥20
0
0
≥20
9
≥20
14
14
0
Yes
≥20
Yes
No
4
Yes
Yes
No
No
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
15
Yes
2
3
Toronto Chess News
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
16
WNE
NEG
NEG
NEG
NEG
NEG
66
Roussel-R. T
Cheng B
Teplitsky Y
Wang R
Quan Z
Thavandiran S
GM
IM
IM
IM
IM
FM
2476
2421
2448
2419
2431
2357
2478
2523
2473
2496
2462
2514
2477
2472
2461
2458
2447
2436
9
≥20
0
≥20
0
≥20
No
Yes
No
Yes
No
Yes
17
18
19
20
21
22
NEG
AVE
2278
2210
2157
2140
2131
2113
2100
2073
2072
2063
2056
0
2049
2044
2035
19
2002
1990
1985
1978
1960
1951
1941
1902
1855
Games
14
0
0
≥20
≥20
0
0
5
0
0
≥20
No
0
0
≥20
Yes
0
0
0
0
0
0
18
0
0
Elig
Yes
No
No
Yes
Yes
No
No
No
No
No
Yes
12
No
No
Yes
16
No
No
No
No
No
No
Yes
No
No
Place
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
NEG
13
14
15
WNE
NEG
NEG
Olympiad Selection Ratings - Women
Code:
Olympiad starts August 1, 2014
Highest ratings starting February 2, 2013
Ratings for August 1, 2013
Players
Yuan Y
Khoudgarian N
Starr N
Botez A
Peng J
Khaziyeva D
Charest J
Kazakevich A
Kagramanov Di
Benggawan A
Zhou Q
Barron I WF
Belc D
Smith H
Agbabishvili L
Orlova Y WCM
Lacau-Rodean I
Charbonneau A
Du J
Roy M
Kalaydina R
Yun C
Xiao A
Kagramanov Da
Xiong S
Title
WM
WM
WM
WCM
WF
WM
WM
WM
WFM
2043
WF
WF
1942
FIDE
2220
2136
2175
2076
2035
2115
2088
2033
2067
2062
1935
2063
2044
2037
1958
2119
1989
2006
1885
1985
1958
1897
1874
1868
1864
CAN
2336
2284
2138
2204
2227
2110
2111
2113
2076
2064
2177
2053
2054
2051
2111
2031
2014
1973
2084
1971
1962
2004
2007
1935
1845
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
NEG
NEG
NEG
NEG
NEG
NEG
NEG
NEG
NEG
NEG
NEG
NEG
NEG
NEG
NEG
NEG
NEG
NOTE: Regina-Veronicka Kalaydina (FIDE - 1958; CFC – unavailable ‘til membership
renewed) is missing from the list because her CFC membership expired after the July CYCC.
She will renew for the NAYCC. Her eligibility will be YES. She has already played 11
games this year.
Canadian junior players in top 50 in the World
(post by Andrei Botez on CMA’s Chesstalk)
Based on [FIDE] August rating, Canada has 6 players that are in top 50 in their
age/gender sections:
Toronto Chess News
67
#1 Preotu, Razvan
U-14 Rank (active players): 16
#2 Wang, Richard - IM
U-16 Rank (active players): 18
(see picture earlier – Can. Op. Report)
#3 Zhang, Yuanchen
U-12 Rank (active players): 26
#4 Song, Michael
U-14 Rank (active players): 28
Toronto Chess News
68
#5 Zhou, Qiyu
Female U-14 Rank (active players): 35
#6 Awatramani, Janak
U-14 Rank (active players): 37
(no file picture)
Just as a note, looks like under 8 and under 10 players are not ranked (even if they have a
FIDE rating)
Canadian Girl Wins USA Chess Scholarship
Toronto Chess News
69
Posted by Andrei Botez on CFC Chess News:
“At this tournament [the10th Annual Susan Polgar Foundation Girls' Invitational
Chess Championship - July 21 to 25], there were 5 Canadians [the first time top girls
invited from outside USA].:
Jackie Peng 4.5/6 (also tied for 1st in Puzzle competition with 20/20)
Alexandra Botez 4.5/6
Andrea Botez 4/6 (also tied for 1st in Puzzle competition with 20/20 and tied for 1st in
under 13 section)
Sasha Konovalenko 3.5/6
Janet Peng 3/6
After the tournament Susan Polgar and Webster University [of St. Louis, USA] offered
both Jackie and Alexandra a scholarship.”
Junior Girl Jackie Peng is a former Canadian Women’s Olympiad Team member.
There were 61 players in total in her section. Jackie finished fourth place overall, with
4.5/6, and received a $52K Webster University Scholarship, which she accepted!
Alexandra Botez declined the scholarship, since she already has won one
previously to a different USA university.
Congratulations Jackie and Alexandra!
Jackie with Susan Polgar
Alexandra
Toronto Chess News
70
Malmsten on Chess
( by part-time columnist, Erik Malmsten )
Chess at the CNE Part 3: Spassky 1971
When I was a child, I attended the CNE every year. My mom often
worked there and I have a few times as well. The Food Building was my favourite
building as they presented new foods and free samples. The only rides I liked were the
bumper cars or go-karts because I was in control. The only game I liked was the fish
pond because there always was a prize. In the buildings one could buy interesting things
from around the world and I cherished my Russian hand puppets, Newfoundland penny,
and orange JOFA hockey stick. At the Hockey Hall of Fame I got Ken Dryden's
autograph. At the Grandstand I found Jack Kochman's Hell Drivers circling on two side
wheels interesting. In 1971 there was a special Quebec Pavilion, Western Rodeo Show
and a free concert by Lighthouse. The CNE had big spectacles: Aquarama water skiers,
Horse Show, Air Show, the Bob Hope Show, concerts like chum-chart topper the
Osmonds or the Jackson 5, and nightly fireworks.
In 1969 Walter [Vlad] Dobrich, soon to be the new Star chess columnist, gave a
simul at the USSR Bazaar, Coliseum East Annex, scoring +46=1-0, having a close game
with an unnamed 14-year old. And again in 1970 outdoors near the Dufferin gate +39=38. I saw that one. Anybody recognize any of the players in the photos?
Toronto Chess News
71
The CNE Open on Labour Day 1971 was in the “Leisure Time Pavilion,” the new
name for the Automotive Building. Near musical organ sales and golf games. The CNE
had donated $2,000. The entry fee of $20, $10 unrated, included a 3-day pass to the CNE
(worth $4.50). It was unexpectedly popular and more tables had to be found delaying the
first round two hours. There were 247 players including the PDP 10-50 computer, rated
1460. The largest and strongest weekend tournament in Canadian history, all in one
section. A month earlier the US Open had 400 players won by Walter Browne and Larry
Evans, 10-2.
Toronto Chess News
72
Tournament organizer Dobrich promoted the event at the Canadian Open in
Vancouver; bringing back 30 players to Toronto, including Boris Spassky – how often
does one get to play a World Champion! Likely the only time a World Champion has
played in a weekend swiss. The Telegram quoted Victor Dzera, 18, “My first grand
master.” Dzera was ranked the 17th top junior in Canada and these days has been playing
in the World Opens. Another junior, Ray Stone, wrote in the Windsor Star, “Spassky was
pleasant and interesting in conversation. His English is excellent. Throughout the
tournament he remained cool and imperturbable.” Spassky had been to Canada before for
the Winnipeg Grandmaster Tournament in 1967.
Toronto Chess News
73
Toronto Chess News
74
Spassky tied with Hans Rees for first in the Canadian Open, 9-1. Here he didn't
win after drawing with Lawrence Day of Ottawa, only tying for third with IM Leslie Witt
who defeated Day in the last round. $1,500 first and second prize were split between 43years-old New Yorkers GMs Pal Benko and Robert Byrne 6-0. Benko defeated the top
two Canadians: Bruce Amos and Zvonko Vranesic. The latter game was an important
theoretical battle which made it into his books The Benko Gambit 1973 and Pal Benko:
my life, games, and compositions 2003. Byrne took off Ivan Theodorovitch and Denis
Allan; two of his games were published in Horowitz's New York Times column and he got
Toronto Chess News
75
married five days after the tournament. Byrne later became the New York Times
columnist, lost a Candidates Match to Spassky in 1974 and died earlier this year.
GM Arthur Bisguier lost to Jean Delva (1962), and GM Walter Browne (2500)
only had 3.5 (the same as Joe Smolij). John Wright 4.5 won top junior, Peter Nurmi 3.5
top under 16, Stephen Boyd 4 Top C class, and Toronto High School Champion Mike
Williams 4 (1657) defeated Toronto Closed co-Champion George Kuprejanov (2255).
Other top juniors were with 4.5 Peter Matsi; with 4: Mohan Rajagopal, Sam Kleinplatz,
Victor Dzera and Ray Stone; with 3.5 Dave MacLeod, Harry Kaminker and John
[Childey-] Hill. And a new kid Bryon Nickoloff 2. Ruth Cardosa of Brazil won the
women's prize with 4. Among the large Montreal contingent were Leslie Witt 5.5;
Jacques Labelle and Leo Williams 5; Ignas Zalys and Robert Lebel 4.5; Eric Leimanis
and Andris Leimanis 4; and Gilles Angers, Hugh Brodie and Larry Bevand 3.
Toronto Chess News
76
The new Chess Canada magazine published six games. Spassky didn't play crushing
chess and played a horrible blunder against York student Harry Posner.
Day, Lawrence – Spassky, Boris
17. Bxg7 Kxg7
XIIIIIIIIY
9r+-wqr+-+0
9+-+lsn-mkp0
9pzpnzp-+p+0
9+-zp-+psN-0
9-+-+PzP-+0
9+-sNP+-+-0
9PzPPwQ-+LzP0
9+-+-tRRmK-0
xiiiiiiiiy
White has the advantage.
Lipnowski, Irwin – Browne, Walter
25. Rf2 ...
XIIIIIIIIY
9-+-+-tr-+0
9+-+lsn-mkp0
9-+-zp-zp-+0
9+-zp-zpPzp-0
9qzp-snP+NsN0
9+-+P+-zP-0
9rzPP+-tRLzP0
9+-wQ-tR-+K0
xiiiiiiiiy
Who's winning this one?
Toronto Chess News
77
Chess Life and Review published two games in an article by Manhattan CC Champion
Arthur Feuerstein. He enjoyed the clean and safe city.
Bowerman, Robert –Feuerstein, Arthur
33. Rxh8+ Kg5
XIIIIIIIIY
9-+-+-+-tR0
9+-+pwQ-+-0
9-wqlzP-zpp+0
9zp-+-+-mk-0
9-+-zp-+-+0
9+P+-+-zP-0
9P+r+-+LzP0
9tR-+-+-+K0
xiiiiiiiiy
White is up a rook but Black has strong threats.
Ed. - I played in this 1971 CNE Weekend Swiss. Two memories:
1. Spassky sometimes would come down into the hall and roam around randomly looking
at games. At one point in one of my games, I looked up to see him staring at our position!
2. In that tournament, I played my first IM - USA Donald Byrne (brother of GM Robert).
He had been having a bad tournament, obviously, if he was playing me! I lasted equal
material to the 40 move time control. Then we adjourned to seal the next move in the
envelope. I saw I was going to lose a P. I was somewhat embarrassed to think I might
drag him back the next day to play the adjournment, and then he'd just win. So, I guess
out of some kind of respect, I decided to resign, rather than seal.
All true - to the best of my recollection (which admittedly has become somewhat creaky
with old age).
FIDE August 1, 2013 Regular Rating List – Canadian Rankings Open/Women’s
The 10 highest FIDE rated Canadians ( active in the last 24 months,
internationally or in Canada ) are :
Toronto Chess News
78
# 1 : GM Eric Hansen at 2584. (up 3 points);
# 2 : GM Kevin Spraggett, 4 times Canadian Champion ( last in 1996 ), at 2568 ( has
been over 2600 ) – now playing out of Portugal – excellent staying power, given he was
58 years old on Nov. 10, 2012;
Toronto Chess News
79
# 3. GM Bator Sambuev at 2524 – 2012 Canadian Champion (& 2011 ) – down 6 pts.;
# 4 : GM Pascal Charbonneau, 2002 & 2004 Canadian Champion, at 2505 – now
working in USA;
# 5 – IM Aman Hambleton, rated 2500 (up 39 pts.!!.);
Toronto Chess News
80
# 6 : GM Thomas Roussel-Roozmon at 2476.
# 7: IM Leonid Gerzhoy, rated 2466 (has been over 2500);
# 8: IM Nikolay Noritsyn at 2459.
Toronto Chess News
81
# 9 – IM Edward Porper, rated 2454.
# 10: Tomas Krnan, rated 2439.
There are two Canadian GM’s with another federation : 18 year old GM Wesley
So ( Philippines citizen; plays for that federation; Canadian permanent resident ) at 2710
( # 34 in the world) – the top-rated Canadian!; GM Anton Kovalyov ( citizen of the
Ukraine; Canadian permanent resident; plays for Argentina ) at 2606 ( briefly went into
the 2500’s from Sept. – Nov./12 ) ( he has now started the process to change federations
to Canada, but there is a waiting period ).
There is one previously inactive GM, Dimitri Tyomkin ( his last rated game in
Canada was August 2005 ; and after playing only 2 FIDE rated games in Europe between
Jan. 1, 2006 and the end of 2010, in 2011/2/3 Dimitri has played a few games for teams
in the Spanish Team Championships; he is rated 2473 ).
Canada has 3 inactive GM’s : Mark Bluvshtein (had been over 2600), Alexander
Le Siege; and Duncan Suttles.
Toronto Chess News
82
The top 10 FIDE rated Canadian women players are ( active in the last 24 months,
internationally or in Canada ) :
# 1 : WIM Yuanling Yuan ( 1994 ) at 2201 (down 19 pts.; currently at university in
USA ) ;.
# 2 : WIM Natalia Khoudgarian, current 2012 Canadian Women’s Champion ( and
2006, 2007 & 2011 ), at 2136.
# 3 : WCM Alexandra Botez, at 2076 (up 30 pts.!).
Toronto Chess News
83
# 4 : WFM Daniela Belc, at 2044;
( no file picture )
# 5 : Anastasia Kazakevich, rated 2019;
# 6: WFM Jackie Peng at 2012( down 23 pts.!);.
Toronto Chess News
84
# 7 : Iulia Lacau-Rodean, rated 1989;
# 8: Myriam Roy, rated 1985;
# 9: Regina Veronika Kalaydina, rated 1958.
Toronto Chess News
85
# 10: Yelizaveta Orlova, rated 1942.
There are 6 inactive Canadian WIM’s : Nava Starr; Vesma Baltgailis; Johanne
Charest; Dinara Khaziyeva; Diane Mongeau, Smilja Vujosevic.
The highest FIDE-rated Canadian woman is WFM Valeriya Gansvind, at 2246,
who plays for another federation - Estonia. Another highly rated Canadian woman in
Hong Kong, who plays under the Canadian flag, is WFM Yamei Wang, rated 2045 ( but
since 2004 she’s only played infrequently in Hong Kong, against one opponent 1866, and
a few others in the 1700’s ).
Provincial Tournaments & Chess Clubs/Organizations
TCN offers chess clubs and chess organizations a “ news section ”. As a
club/organization accepts, TCN is developing “TCN Liaisons” in these groups in
Toronto, the GTA and beyond, whereby one member at each club/organization will take
responsibility for submitting their news to TCN on a regular basis for this section. For
clubs, this will include club games from club tournaments when possible. We have 3
chess organizations and 9 clubs now with news sections of the newsletter opened for
them. We hope to slowly increase this number as time passes. We also intend to extend
coverage outside of Ontario, our starting province.
If you are in a club, or know someone in another club, and think the club might
like to take out a news section, please have them contact us to discuss it – we are trying to
present a format where chess organizations can promote themselves, and chess.
We also hope to develop ongoing relationships with GTA (and beyond)
tournament organizers, so they will consider sending in reports and some of the more
interesting games from their tournaments. Depending on time available, TCN will try to
annotate some of the unannotated games submitted by organizers and clubs.
Depending on time available, TCN will try to annotate some of the unannotated games
submitted by organizers and clubs.
Toronto Chess News
86
ONTARIO
GREATER TORONTO AREA
Tournament Reports
(Note: if you play in a tournament, and have a good game, send it on for us to consider
publishing with our tournament report)
(tournament name)
Chess Organization News
From the GTCL Perspective
-
The Greater Toronto Chess League ( GTCL ) has a 6 person executive and
currently a 9 person board of directors (can be larger)
Coordinating chess in the Greater Toronto Area (Toronto, Halton, Peel, York &
Durham)
Website: http://www.torontochess.org/drupal/
(by TCN Liaison for GTCL, Egis Zeromskis)
-
no news report filed
Chess Institute of Canada
Toronto Chess News
87
Photo Credit: Jordynn Colosi
At the Chess Institute of Canada, we bring chess to life!
( by Jessica Yared, TCN Liaison for CIC )
CIC won’t have any news for the summer, so our next submission won’t be until midAugust or beginning of September at the earliest.
Chess Club News
TORONTO
Scarborough Chess Club News
Meets Thursdays – 7:00 – 10:45 PM
Location: Birkdale Community Ctre, 1299 Ellesmere Road (between Midland Ave. and
Brimley Road)
Toronto Chess News
88
SCC e – mail : [email protected]
SCC Website : http://www.ScarboroughChessClub.ca
(by Ken Kurkowski, TCN Liaison for SCC)
Scarborough Chess Club is taking the summer off (closed July & August) and won't
resume ‘til September
Annex Chess Club News
Meets Monday evenings
Location: 918 Bathurst St., Toronto (north of the Bathurst Subway Station)
Annex CC website: http://annexchessclub.com/
(by TCN Liaison for Annex CC, Marcus Wilker)
Toronto Chess News
89
-
no news report filed
Willowdale Chess Club News
Meetings: Tuesday, 7:00 – 10:00 PM (generally casual play)
Location: Earl Bales Community Centre (Bathurst St./Sheppard Ave.)
(by TCN Liaison, Mike Ivanov ).
I haven't been at the club lately so no report from us since most of the members are gone
for the holidays
YORK
Aurora Chess Club News
Meetings: Mondays in the Cafeteria of Aurora High School, from 6pm until 10:30pm!
Website: www.aurorachessclub.ca
For info: contact founder, Graeme Knight : [email protected]
(by TCN Liaison for Aurora CC, Graeme Knight)
Toronto Chess News
90
Summer for AuCC has been a ying and yang journey of club-rated tournament and
forfeits in said tournament. The July 6 week re-match came to a conclusion with its final
round last night. Results will be posted soon, but it’s clear that the top players are those
who didn’t head to cottage country on the spur of the moment. It’s interesting to observe
the summer habit of a chess player. Some play consistently and attend the many
tournaments that there are, and others grumble about their game getting weaker and not
being able to beat kids. Is there a pattern? The rematch took an interesting format – 45
minutes per side, and two games in an evening. I’ve never heard the club so quiet!
After two more sessions in our summer facility, I’m very happy to announce that we will
once again be at Aurora High School. September 9th will start strong with a Welcome and
a Rapid. Although the schedule hasn’t been posted yet, we are likely to have a ‘quick’
CFC rated tournament as a warm up before the Aurora Fall Open!!
Given the success of the Summer Open, we have decided to host another weekend event
as soon as physically possible. We have some pre-registered big-guns in the top section
already and lower sections are starting to fill up. We can only hope that October 19th/20th
will be as successful as our tournament this past July. It seems to be a great deal of work
for those involved, but it is also a fantastic feeling to give back to the chess playing
community. Those who started the AuCC did so after grumblings of not enough chess. So
it’s only right and proper that they now swallow their words and make chess happen!
We’ve had a number of members ask for more CFC rated tournaments within the club –
last year we managed two but this year? Who knows … we can only hope that they
happen often and that we can drive forward with our commitment to competition!
DURHAM
Ajax Chess Club News
-
meet every 1st, 3rd and 5th Fridays of the month
7:00-8:30 pm for juniors and adults play up to 11:00 pm.
location: 115 Ritchie Ave, Ajax
currently, tournaments are not CFC-rated: no club members have CFC
membership
For further information, contact David Ho at [email protected]
( by TCN Liaison for Ajax CC, David Ho)
Toronto Chess News
91
Ajax chess club is taking the summer off and won't resume ‘til September
SOUTH-WESTERN ONTARIO
Chess Club News
Hamilton City Chess Club News
Meetings: Friday Nights
Website: http://chesshamilton.mygamesonline.org/news.php
Email: [email protected]
Location: Sir Winston Churchill Secondary School
1715 Main Street East (near Parkdale)
Hamilton, Ontario
(by TCN Liaison for Hamilton City CC, Michel Vasquez)
Damir Baizhiyenov has won the Hamilton Summer Series 2013! His score was 4 out of 5.
Congratulations also goes to Alex Friedman who came second place with 3.5.
The fourth round of the current tournament will be this Friday. Our local master was
upset by Bob Gillanders in the third round.
We are preparing for the Mississauga Open, August 24-25.
Kitchener-Waterloo Chess Club News
Toronto Chess News
92
Meetings: Tuesdays – regular meeting
Tuesday night: 6:00 – 7:30 PM – Youth Club
Location: Kitchener City Hall ( located in the heart of downtown Kitchener at 200 King
Street West ), the 'Conestoga Room' behind the rotunda on the main floor, and in the
'Learning Room' on the 2nd Floor.
Website: www.kwchessclub.com/
( by TCN Liaison for K-W CC, Kai Gauer )
From K-WCC club organizer, Ralph Deline: People have been asking for a FIDE rated
tournament so we are moving in that direction. Mark this on your calendar. If successful
we will continue with FIDE rated tournaments in the future and likely expand to a FIDE
rated tournament in the spring or early summer. It's up to you. If you want FIDE rated
tournaments, spread the word, attend, and most of all, have fun.
Kitchener-Waterloo Labour Day Open
Date: 31 August & 1,2 September 2013
Location: Kitchener City Hall, Kitchener, Ontario
Type: 6 round Swiss, 2 games/day
Sections: Open, U2100, will be FIDE and CFC rated.
U1900, U1600 will be CFC rated only.
TC: 90 minutes + 30 sec (Fischer),
Saturday, Sunday, Monday: 10:00 am and 3 pm,
Entry Fee: Titled Players are free if pre-registered 3 weeks prior to tournament,
otherwise $35.
All others pay $70 but if pre-registered by 30 August there is a $10 discount.
Juniors and seniors pay $60 with no further discounts.
Juniors are those who are still under 18 years of age by 31 December 2013. Seniors are
Toronto Chess News
93
those who are 60 years of age by 31 December 2013.
Byes permitted for rounds 1 - 3 if notified in advance.
Registration: by email: Contact Ralph Deline,[email protected], and please
include "KW Labour Day Open Open" in the "Subject" heading so it will not get deleted
as junk mail.
Or registration at the door at 9:00-9:30 on Saturday (cash only)
Note: To play up a level, you must be within 100 rating points and pay an extra $20 that
will go towards the Olympiad fund.
CFC Membership req'd.
Chess sets and clocks provided.
Quebec
Quebec Open
This tournament is one of the biggest in Canada, and was played in Montreal from
July 21 – 28. 14 GM’s were registered. There were 55 players in the top “Invitational”
Section. There were 4 Canadians in the top 9 finishers, the highest being GM Anton
Kovalyov of Quebec, who finished 2nd/4th with 6.5/9, ½ pt. behind the winner, Cuban
GM Lazaro Bruzon.
Here is the Quebec organizer report:
The favorite, GM Lazaro Bruzon (7/9, $4000), from Cuba,
Toronto Chess News
94
won the Invitational Section, the strongest ever in a Quebec Open (+2350 average FIDE
rating). He finished half a point ahead of two other undefeated grandmasters, Eduardas
Rozentalis (Lithuania-$1583) and Elshan Moradiabadi (Iran- $1083). On the last round,
the latter two drew on the first board while Bruzon beat IM Gerzhoy (5,5/9)
in a very high-stake game Bruzon needed to win to secure the tournament whereas
Gerzhoy needed to draw to obtain his Grandmaster title (he already had all the
requirements, missing only one norm). GM Anton Kovalyov (6,5/9) [Ed. Can. Permanent
resident; Ukraine citizen, currently playing for Argentina – in process of changing
federation to Canada]
shared the second place ($833) with Rozentalis and Moradiabadi, adding up the
Gowlings Prize (best player from Quebec – $1500). Although many norms were missed
by a few performance points, FM Aleksandr Ostrovsky (US) was the only one to secure
his IM norm. His 5/9 score against 5 GMs and 4 IM’s is very impressive.
He is not the only one who played well against titled players. IM’s Aman Hambleton (see
picture earlier – Can. Op. report) and Bindi Cheng
Toronto Chess News
95
both scored 2,5/4 against GMs. IM’s Raja Panjwani (2,5/5) and Richard Wang (1,5/3)
held their own, as well as IM Arthur Calugar and Razvan Preotu, who respectively
scalped Kovalyov and Sambuev (1st round).
In the other sections :
( complete standings )
Open : Thierry Libersan (7/9, $1000) got 3,5 points out of his last four games, pulling
himself ahead of the experienced master Arkadiusz Luksza (6,5/9 , $550) and the young
James Fu (6,5/9, $550).
U2000 : Roman Sarrazin-Gendron (7/9, $800), who managed to create himself a fullpoint lead after seven games, collapsed and only salvaged half a point in his last two
games. However, it was enough to secure the first place, half a point ahead of second
place finishers Jonathan Turcotte and Alexis Langlois-Rémillard (6,5/9, $400).
U1700 : This section ended with a three-way tie for the first place. David Zhou (who won
the U1800 World Open) and Yang Tian Jiao Shi share the first place with Sam Selmani,
who finished the tournament with 5 wins in a row. They win $400.
U1300 : Alain Ouimet (7,5/9 , $400) won all the 7 games he played (two byes, including
a zero point one). Runner-ups Zi Yu Gan and Pierre Dimov both scored 7/9 and earned
$250.
Side Events
Blitz Tournament :
GM Anton Kovalyov and IM Bindi Cheng share the first prize, half a point ahead of
Bruzon. 71 players participated. Here is the head of the standings :
Toronto Chess News
96
1. GM Anton Kovalyov 10/12 – 350$
2. IM Bindi Cheng 10/12 - 350$
3. GM Lazaro Bruzon Batista 9,5/12 – 200$
4. GM Reynaldo Vera 9/12 – 50$
5. IM Mackenzie Molner 9/12 – 50$
Bughouse tournament :
12 teams played in the first Quebec Bughouse Championship. It was a 5 double rounds
tournament with no guaranteed prizes, and it is a success for a first edition :
1. IM Bindi Cheng and IM Arthur Calugar (120$ from registration fees), 8/10
2. IM Aman Hambleton and GM Eric Hansen, 8/10 (lost tie-breaks)
3. FM Lefong Hua and GM Ioan Cristian Chirila, 7/10
4. IM Richard Wang and Ryan Lo, 7/10
Arencibia Simul. : Cuban GM Walter Arencibia gave a simul on July 22, against 15
players. Only one managed to draw ; Christine Gao, who also got the only draw at the
Canadian Open’s simul (against Reynaldo Vera).
Mini-COQ : This small four rounds tournament took place on the first weekend on the
Quebec Open. 1st : Jeroen Struben 4/4 - $300 . 2nd : Roman Sarrazin-Gendron and Sang
Kil Kay, 3,5/4 - $150
Pictures and Games
Rene Preotu took wonderful pictures of the venue :
https://picasaweb.google.com/1059778...MDex9LgvaWWswE
Alan Luo, one of the best North American pianists of his age category, played a Haydn
sonata before the 9th round : https://picasaweb.google.com/1059778...85166700462034
All the games from the invitational section :
http://canbase.fqechecs.qc.ca/cbv/20102019/2013_coq.pgn
Here were the top finishers:
R
k.
1
Name
Bruzon
G
Batista
M
Lazaro
Rt FE
g D
3b
268 CU 26w 36b 33w 25b
5w1
½
9 B
½
1
1
1
Rozentali
G
261 LT
2
s
M
9 U
Eduardas
3
1.R 2.R 3.R 4.R 5.R 6.R 7.R 8.R 9.R
d
d
d
d
d
d
d
d
d
4w
½
TB TB TB
1
2
3
26. 35.
2b 10w
7.0
5 50
½
1
3b
½
6.5
29. 34.
0 75
G Moradia 255
2w
35b 15w 16b 23 14b 1w 10b
7w1
IRI
M badi
½
1
½
½ w1 1
½ ½
1
6.5
26. 34.
5 75
1w
11w 4b
36w 52b 22w
9w1
8b1
½
½ ½
½
1
1
Toronto Chess News
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Elshan
4
G Kovalyov 260 AR 34b 44w 31b 18
2w
6b1
M Anton
6 G
0
1
1 w1
½
5
G Sulskis
M Sarunas
255 LT
9 U
6
G Sokolov
M Ivan
27. 30.
12b 8w 33b 15w
10w 5b
265 NE 31b
6.0
4w0
9w1
5 75
½ ½
1
1
½ ½
0 D
1
1b 17w 5b
½
1
½
6.5
26. 33.
5 75
19w 7b 10b 4w
30w 23b 13w 6w
1b0
1
½ ½ ½
1
1
1
½
6.0
27. 31.
5 75
7 IM
17b
26. 29.
Hamblet 248 CA 46w 8b 27w 10b 21w 13b 5w
3b0
6.0
on Aman
0 N
1
½
1
0
1
1
½
1
5 00
8 IM
Cheng
Bindi
9 IM
24.
11b 14w
50w 38b 27w 20w
Panjwani 240 CA 39w
6.0
2b0
6b0
5
1
½
½
1
1
1
Raja
9 N
1
26. 29.
240 CA 37b 7w 17b 2w 19b 28w 6b 18w 20b
6.0
0 50
6 N
1
½
1
0
0
1
½
1
1
Prince Edward Island
Maritime Open
(report by Fred McKim)
Turnout of 29 players in Charlottetown this past weekend (July 26-28). Accelerated
pairings were used for the first two rounds with 16 (1) and 13 (0). Regular pairings were
resumed for round 3.
1st - Elias Oussedik (4/5) $250.
Draws with Tom (Rd4) and Justin (Rd5).
2nd&3rd - Tom O'Donnell, Joe Horton, Adam Dorrance, Justin Gulati, Jason Manley,
and Zach Burrows (3.5) $41.67 each.
Toronto Chess News
98
Top Under 2000 - Chris Felix and Anthony Banks (3.5) $50 each.
Top Under 1800 - Kyle Creamer, Ryan Sowa, Dennis Bradbury, and Ed Keunecke (2.5)
$25 each.
Top Under 1600 - Iain Crowell (3) $100.
I am hoping to have the results submitted to the CFC office in time for this week's rating
update. Go to http://chess.ca on Thursday to check out your new rating and the crosstable
of the event. If you don't know how to do this drop me a line and I will send you the
exact link when the ratings are done.
Next year's Maritime Open will most likely be in New Brunswick, back on the traditional
Thanksgiving weekend.
TCN Readers’ Section
Teaching Classic Games of Chess: by Columnist FM Hans Jung, chess
coordinator, City of Kitchener, Ontario.
Introduction
This series of columns is for the lover of great, exciting games of chess. It is constructed
as a guide for chess teachers and students at all levels of chess (beyond beginner) to
provide short, enjoyable “teaching” games. The mostly tournament games are models of
perfect play and highlight the abilities of one piece coordinating with other pieces. These
models illuminate the mind and provide guiding examples at critical points of a chess
player's play.
What I understood a long time ago in my own learning path in chess is that playing
through the best games of the great masters stirs a feeling inside which I now identify as
a passion for the beauty and excitement of exceptional chess ideas. This is the path to the
love of chess. The true chess lover seeks those ideas and absorbs them. Everything else is
a quick fix or poor simulation. The mind becomes bored with repetition of technical ideas
Toronto Chess News
99
and poor imitation. However, these great games never fail to awaken the passion for the
beauty of chess!
This collection of quality games was a long process of collecting teaching chess games
and, initially, just committing them to memory. After years of frustration in constantly
looking up most of the games in obscure, old-fashioned chess books and often dealing
with old, stilted annotations (if indeed there were any annotations at all at critical points
of these games!), I decided the only way to relieve these frustrations was to write my own
annotations.
A major feature of this column is that the important ideas and turning points, as well as
major tactical and strategic themes, are pointed out and identified both for the teacher and
the student. This enables clear identification for further research. Nowhere else in chess
literature have I found this clear, listed identification of strategic and tactical themes.
Every game shows the excitement and beauty of a unique conception — a marvellous
idea of coordination of pieces brought to fruition in an exciting finish of perfection by the
hand of a master. Chess players, at their most enthusiastic, speak of brilliant games they
recall and sparkling ideas forever lodged in their subconscious. I hope you will find the
game presentations illuminating and enjoyable.
Game 13 — Double Knight Sacrifice
Dandridge – Kreiman
Chicago, Illinois, USA, 1993
1. Nf3
Developing the knight first. This move does not stand alone, becoming a part of many complicated opening
systems. (It has been often labelled as a quality waiting move, waiting for Black to show a developing
idea.)
1... c5
2. c4 Nf6
3. Nc3 e6
4. e3 Nc6
XIIIIIIIIY
9r+lwqkvl-tr0
9zpp+p+pzpp0
9-+n+psn-+0
9+-zp-+-+-0
9-+P+-+-+0
9+-sN-zPN+-0
9PzP-zP-zPPzP0
9tR-vLQmKL+R0
xiiiiiiiiy
Diagram 13.1
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The opening is now a Symmetrical English position (note both sides are developed exactly the same).
5. d4
White chooses to challenge the center first with the d-pawn lever. Black soon follows with the same lever.
5... cxd4
6. exd4 d5
7. Bd3 Be7
8. O-O O-O
9. cxd5 Nxd5
XIIIIIIIIY
9r+lwq-trk+0
9zpp+-vlpzpp0
9-+n+p+-+0
9+-+n+-+-0
9-+-zP-+-+0
9+-sNL+N+-0
9PzP-+-zPPzP0
9tR-vLQ+RmK-0
xiiiiiiiiy
Diagram 13.2
Black now has an isolated pawn on d4 as a target to aim for; White has more freedom for the pieces.
10. a3
A quality waiting move to see where Black will try to direct the play.
10... Bf6
11. Re1 b6
If 11... Nxd4?? 12. Nxd4 Bxd4 13. Bxh7+ Kxh7 14. Qxd4 Black’s king position is crippled and bishops of
opposite colour with queens on the board means excellent attacking chances on Black’s king.
12. Bb1
XIIIIIIIIY
9r+lwq-trk+0
9zp-+-+pzpp0
9-zpn+pvl-+0
9+-+n+-+-0
9-+-zP-+-+0
9zP-sN-+N+-0
9-zP-+-zPPzP0
9tRLvLQtR-mK-0
xiiiiiiiiy
Diagram 13.3
12... Bb7?
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Natural but careless. Black had the opportunity to play 12... Nxc3 13. bxc3 Bb7
XIIIIIIIIY
9r+-wq-trk+0
9zpl+-+pzpp0
9-zpn+pvl-+0
9+-+-+-+-0
9-+-zP-+-+0
9zP-zP-+N+-0
9-+-+-zPPzP0
9tRLvLQtR-mK-0
xiiiiiiiiy
subDiagram 13.4
Followed by Rc8 and Na5 with lasting pressure against the c- and d-pawns. Those pawns are called
hanging pawns in chess because from Black's point of view they are on open files with easy access by the
rooks and so there will always be pressure on them.
13. Ne4!
XIIIIIIIIY
9r+-wq-trk+0
9zpl+-+pzpp0
9-zpn+pvl-+0
9+-+n+-+-0
9-+-zPN+-+0
9zP-+-+N+-0
9-zP-+-zPPzP0
9tRLvLQtR-mK-0
xiiiiiiiiy
Diagram 13.5
Now White takes over the play (called the initiative in chess) where White's pieces will always be
threatening first and forcing Black on the defensive.
13... Be7
14. Qd3 g6
15. b4 Nf6
16. Neg5 Rc8
17. Ra2!
A nice way of developing the rook to doubling up on the e-file (also the quickest way).
17... Qd6
18. Rae2 Nd8
19. Ne5 Qd5
20. Qh3
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XIIIIIIIIY
9-+rsn-trk+0
9zpl+-vlp+p0
9-zp-+psnp+0
9+-+qsN-sN-0
9-zP-zP-+-+0
9zP-+-+-+Q0
9-+-+RzPPzP0
9+LvL-tR-mK-0
xiiiiiiiiy
Diagram 13.6
The Queen defends checkmate. White has placed his knights on good squares and is aiming for a kingside
checkmate. (Remove the defending knight on f6 and Qxh7 is checkmate.)
20... Rc3!
If. 20... Qxd4?? 21. Bb2 Qf4 22. Nxg6 fxg6 23. Bxf6 Rf7 24. Bxg6.
However Black finds this resourceful rook move causing White problems.
21. Be3?
Now a comedy of errors results. If 21. Qxc3?? of course Qxg2 checkmate. Or 21. f3 Qxd4+ 22. Kh1 Rxc1
23, Rxc1 Qf4 loses a piece. So 21. Re3 is the most logical.
21... Qd6?
The simple 21... Rxa3 is possible. 22. Ng4 h5! Defending and Black is suddenly winning.
22. Qh6 Re8
23. Nxh7!
XIIIIIIIIY
9-+-snr+k+0
9zpl+-vlp+N0
9-zp-wqpsnpwQ0
9+-+-sN-+-0
9-zP-zP-+-+0
9zP-tr-vL-+-0
9-+-+RzPPzP0
9+L+-tR-mK-0
xiiiiiiiiy
Diagram 13.7
23... Nxh7
24. Nxf7!
Removing the pawn defence so that . . .
24... Nxf7
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25. Qxg6+!
XIIIIIIIIY
9-+-+r+k+0
9zpl+-vln+n0
9-zp-wqp+Q+0
9+-+-+-+-0
9-zP-zP-+-+0
9zP-tr-vL-+-0
9-+-+RzPPzP0
9+L+-tR-mK-0
xiiiiiiiiy
Diagram 13.8
. . . is possible.
25... Kf8
26. Bh6+
Black resigned. If Nxh6 27. Qxh6+ Kf7 (27... Kg8 28. Bxh7+ Kh8 29. Bg6+ Kg8 30. Qh7+ Kf8 31. Qf7#)
28. Bg6+ Kg8 (28... Kf6 29. Bh5+ Kf5 30. g4#) 29. Qxh7+ Kf8 30. Qf7#.
1-0
Review of Game 13
Strategic Themes
Opening idea of Nf3. Play in symmetrical opening positions (try to
challenge the center first with a pawn lever — make sure it works
tactically).
Creating an isolated pawn target (planning).
Creating hanging pawns – note after 12... Bb7
Playing with active pieces – notes after 13. Re4 and 17. Ra2.
Goal of kingside attack – notes after 20. Qh3 and from 23. Nxh7 to 25.
Qxg6+.
Tactical Themes
Overlooking threats – notes after 21. Be3.
Double knight sacrifice setting up
checkmate – notes from 23. Nxh7
onwards.
Ken’s Chess Trivia
(questions/presentations researched by columnist Ken Kurkowski,
Toronto Chess News
104
Scarborough CC Treasurer, and TCN Liaison for SCC)
Rules for the TCN Trivia Quiz
In order to be fair to ALL subscribers, anyone who answers correctly within 24 hours of
the release of the Issue (whenever that might be), will be considered a winner (there can
be co-winners) and each will be awarded one point!!. The problem we are meeting with
this is the regular unavailability of some subscribers when there was a regular newsletter
release time – some simply could not get to the Issue immediately – problems were
geographical - on the east coast, subscribers are in bed sleeping at the usual release time
of the Issue (usually between 10 – 11:59 PM on the night before the publication date) –
and the problem of conflicting fixed schedules - regular bed-times, work, school, etc.
See below for the cumulative TCN Chess Trivia Grand Prix.
Last Issue’s Chess Trivia was the Question:
An opponent of a well-known GM was about to Queen his pawn in a couple of moves
and, in preparation for doing so, grabbed a Queen from a neighbouring board. The GM
got upset and proceeded to grab the Queen and toss it away. Who was the GM in
question?
The Answer is:
U.S. GM Walter Browne ( Source: Chess Canada 1971)
TCN Bragging Rights:
I managed to stump the hordes of TCN readers with this one! No winner.
The TCN Chess Trivia Grand Prix
TCN will keep track of the points of the winners/co-winners each Issue from June 1/13 to
and including Dec. 15/13. The player with the most points at the end of the year, wins! In
the case of a tie, TCN will declare co-winners (no tie-break by : bingo machine, roulette
wheel, coin toss, names in a hat or Armageddon game!).The Winner(s) will get TCN
Bragging Rights (very valuable) + Picture published + a few autobiographical chess facts,
if the winner is willing – the winner will be announced in the Jan. 1/14 Issue.
Here are the ongoing standings:
Pino Verde, Scarborough CC member – 3 – June 1; 15; July 1.
Toronto Chess News
105
Ken Craft, New Brunswick CFC Governor – 3 – June 1; 15; July 1.
Hugh Brodie, Quebec CFC Governor – 1 – July 1.
Toronto Chess News
106
Michael von Keitz, CFC Executive Director, and past CFC President – 1 – June 1;
No Winner – 1 – July 15.
Today’s Trivia Question is :
On the annual CFC rating list in 1961 there were only 6 masters, i.e.
over 2300 (the then standard) - who were they?
You can use any resource available to answer the question ! Just find and submit it within
24 hours and send it in before the 24 hour deadline, by e-mail, to Ken:
[email protected] . The Winner’s/Co-winners names will be posted in the next
Issue, along with any personal chess autobiographical details (one or two) they might
wish to provide.
Thanks for playing !!
Chess History is fun !!
Also write Ken if you have any chess trivia questions or presentations you’d like him to
consider for his column. We will give credit to the author if we use your suggestion.
TCN Readers’ Lead Article Invitation
Besides you intrepid editor writing lead articles from time to time, TCN extends an
ongoing invitation to freelancers to submit topical chess articles for our lead article. Send
on your article and we’ll review it with you, with a view to using it ( we may suggest
some editing, but generally very minor ). You will get full credit in the publication. We
will also post a bit of personal information on the freelancer, if they are agreeable.
Toronto Chess News
107
TCN Readers’ Chess “Sightings”
This column invites readers to submit situations where they unexpectedly have come
upon a “chess theme” (e.g. in advertising, big outside chess sets, etc.)
TCN Readers Have Questions
This column invites readers to submit to TCN any type of chess question they wish (e.g.
What does FIDE stand for?), and TCN will try to find the answer.
TCN Readers’ Feedback
Former Scarborough CC member, Ron Venning, kindly wrote in after the July 15
Issue:
“Always enjoy your monthly magazine; thanks for all that you do for the Canadian chess
scene,”
Thanks Ron – always helps to know we are doing good things with the content of
the newsletter.
( TCN welcomes your feedback – compliments or constructive criticisms.}
TCN’s “Readers’ Opinion” Column
Last Issue, our lead article concerned the FIDE “ Zero Tolerance” Rule, on being
late for a game. Former CFC President, and former CFC FIDE Rep., Maurice Smith,
Photo by Dinesh Dattani
Toronto Chess News
108
was moved by our article, to toss his own opinion into the hopper. Here is what he wrote
us:
“I read with interest your article on FIDE's zero tolerance policy. Their position is that if
a player is late for a tournament game he is automatically forfeited even if he misses the
starting time by just a few minutes. I am sure that this policy comes right from the top
people at FIDE. When I was FIDE Rep. for Canada for a few years about ten years ago
now, I listened to President Ilyumzhinov's speeches and he had a vision. This vision was
that mind games would replace physical games such as soccer, hockey, basketball etc.
and people would watch games such as chess on television. Players would wear suits and
ties {male players anyway} and everything would be first class. So I can see how any
player being late would be strictly dealt with. I thought then, and I think so now that this
is an unreachable goal and it is not realistic. Mind games do not capture the imagination
of most people. They still and will always I believe like the excitement of physical
games. While chess has come a long way in the last century, the number of actual
tournament players worldwide is minimal. In Canada we have around 2,000 out of 33
million people. There are more girls registered for soccer in Scarborough than all
tournament chess players in Canada. The present system of forfeiting a player if he is one
hour late is reasonable in my opinion. The recent Canadian Open had a thirty minute
deadline. I can live with that. Zero tolerance is good when it concerns drunk drivers. For
chess players, I believe FIDE should lighten up a bit.”
Has Maurice got it right? What do you think? Let us know and we’ll publish your opinion
to keep the debate going!
Ed.: Got a chess issue that has been bothering you for a while? Got a favourite chess
topic that you’ve always wanted to share with other chess players? Read something in
TCN that you profoundly agreed with, or maybe (surely not !) disagreed with?
We are very open to publishing freelance articles and comments from our readers.
Drop us a line, and we’ll read it over, and let you know if we’d like to use it.
Also, if you would like us to cover some topic, send us your idea, and we’ll see if
we can write something up on it.
Finally, we love to hear from our readers on how we’re doing, good, bad or
indifferent. Drop a line to the editor, and give us your suggestions, comments and general
feedback.
Tournament Notices
Mississauga Open 2013
August 24-25
$2000 dollars minimum in guaranteed prizes!
Mississauga and Hamilton Chess Clubs presents a 5 round Swiss on August 24 & 25
Toronto Chess News
109
University Of Toronto, Mississauga Campus
3359 Mississauga Road, Faculty Lounge, 3rd Floor
Mississauga, Ontario
Schedule:
Please Confirm Your Registration Saturday August 24 at 9:00 am
(Players arriving after 9:20 may NOT be paired for round 1)
Game Times
Saturday - 9:30 am, 2:00 pm and 6:30 pm
Sunday - 11:00 am and 4:00 pm
Sections and Prizes
$2000 minimum in guaranteed prizes!!
Sections will be: Top Guns, U2000 and U1600
Top Guns and U2000 will play for cash prizes U1600 will play for trophies
To play in the top guns section you must be 1900 or higher
To play in the U2000 section you must be 1500 or higher
Please Note: Unrated players are not eligible for the U2000 prize
(Unrated players may play in the Top Guns or U1600 section if they want to be eligible
for prizes)
Fees:
Top Guns and U2000 $55.00 U1600 $25.00 cash only
Email us by August 23 to receive $5.00 discount
Titled Players who commit to playing by August 11th will receive a major discount
Please note that parking on campus is 6 dollars per day
CFC membership required
Time Control: Round 1, 60+30
Rounds 2-5 90+30
Rules And Equipment:
Although we will provide some equipment please bring your
Chess sets, Boards & Digital Clocks Just in Case
Please turn off your cell phones
TD rulings based on the CFC/Fide Handbook are final
Questions, Concerns and Pre-Registration
Email us at: [email protected]
Visit our Chess Talk thread for the latest info: http://tinyurl.com/kwtxhhd
Organizers: Garvin Nunes, Bob Gillanders, Paul Roschman
Toronto Chess News
110
Toronto Labour Day Open
August 31-September 2, 2013 (Sat, Sun, Mon)
At the Macedonian Community Centre, 76 Overlea Blvd, Toronto
Style:
6 round Swiss in 5 sections: Open, U2200, U2000, U1800, U1600
Rounds:
11 AM & 5 PM Saturday & Sunday, 10 AM & 4 PM Monday
Time Control: 40/2, SD/1 for all sections.
Registration: by mail to Bryan Lamb, 95 Ferncliffe Crescent, Markham Ontario,
L3S 4N6 or by email to [email protected].
Membership: Registrants must be current CFC members or renew before playing.
Entry Fees:
$80 with advance notice, $100 cash only on site.
Playing Up a Players within 100 points of section floor play up at no charge.
Section:
Otherwise, an extra $10 per 100 rating points (max. 300 pts total)
Discounts:
Byes:
$20 less: junior (under 18) senior (60+), women, FM
$30 less for IM. One discount per player.
Maximum of 2 in rounds 1-5 if requested in advance.
Byes requested during event are 0-point.
1
2
3
4
PRIZES: $7,000
(Based on 150 players)
1st place in Open Section - $800 minimum Guaranteed!
Prize distribution:
Open U2300 U2200 U2000 U1800 U1600
$1200
$300
$400
$400
$400
$400
$800
$200
$300
$300
$300
$300
$600
$200
$200
$200
$200
$300
Other Info: Please bring chess sets and clocks. Plenty of free parking.
Organizer:
Macedonian Chess Club at St. Clement of Ohrid Macedonian Church
Bryan Lamb 905-554-4548
T.D.:
Toronto Chess News
111
Community Bulletin Board
Queens & Kings Juniors Chess School - group classes and private coaching - contact:
Mike McArthur - [email protected]
Seneca Hill Chess Club - Small group lessons and weekly tournaments - North York and
Markham/Richmond Hill -http://senecahillchess.com
[ if you would like to add your chess school, club or private coaching to our free bulletin
board, just contact us.]
________________________________________________________________________
NOTES:
A - Contact Bob Armstrong, editor. , at Canadian Chess Consulting Service
([email protected]) to :
1. Be added to the free e-mail list;
2. Submit content (fact, opinion, criticism, recommendations!).
B – The opinions expressed here are those of the editor, and not necessarily those of Canadian Chess
Consulting Service;
C - To review this newsletter after it has been deleted, or some of the archived newsletters, visit our own
TCN official website at: www.TorontoChessNews.com
D – Please notify us if you wish to be removed from the free subscription list..
Editor: Bob Armstrong.
Publisher: Canadian Chess Consulting Service.
Canadian
Chess
Consulting
Service
Coordinator: Bob Armstrong
Toronto Chess News
112
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Bob’s LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/profile/edit?trk=hb_tab_pro_top
CCCS Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Canadian-Chess-Consulting-Service/164065437044857
Volunteers: TCN is a chess community based, volunteer run e-newsletter. No one is
paid. TCN wants to thank all its volunteers who donate their time to chess promotion:
Ken Kurkowski, full-time columnist (and also Scarborough CC TCN Liaison); Hans
Jung, full-time columnist; Erik Malmsten, part-time columnist; Marcus Wilker, Annex
CC TCN Liaison; Mike Ivanov, Willowdale CC TCN Liaison; Graeme Knight, Aurora
CC TCN Liaison; David Ho, Ajax CC TCN Liaison; Kai Gauer, Kitchener-Waterloo CC
TCN Liaison; Egis Zeromskis, GTCL TCN Liaison; Jessica Yared, Chess Institute of
Canada TCN Liaison; Michel Vasquez, Hamilton City Chess Club TCN Liaison; former
TCN Liaisons: Bob Gillanders; various freelancers who have provided articles free: Phil
Haley, Maurice Smith, Harmony Zhu, Yuanling Yuan, Zoltan Sarosy, Erwin Casareno,
Andre Zybura, Hedi Stroempl, and others; Steve Karpik, technical support; another
helpful technical maintainer who asks to remain anonymous; and your editor, Bob
Armstrong (also Chess Federation of Canada TCN Liaison). Thanks to all for helping to
promote chess and contributing to making TCN such a successful e-newsletter.
Toronto Chess News