Wika Para sa Lahat

  Magandang araw! Magandang hapon! Magandang gabi! If you understood any of the words or phrases I used, chances are that you know they come...

Looking for Something Here?

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Searching for Joey

Hi there!

This week has been very busy for me. 2 days before the school break, everybody feels it should be a break already. Unfortunately, this is the last push, submission of reports, moving up ceremonies and other legalities and formalities that would safeguard the highest ideals of the International Baccalaureate Organization, the governing body for all certified and would be certified international school around the globe.

Anyways, Filipino GM Rogelio "Joey" Antonio did not join the Super GM tournament in the US? Everybody's searching for him after all the publicity news that went out three weeks ago. Titled articles like "GM Joey joining super GM tournament in the US" and other catchy ones, here we are, trying to get hold of the truth... where is GM Joey?

In another news, the US-bound MCC-MILO Checkmate team is on its final week of preparation as they are set to leave for the Las Vegas Open Chess Tournament to be held from June 5-11, 2007. The team is made up of 14 and Under kiddies who have qualified thru a series of tournaments last January 2007. More on this in our future posts. Oh by the way, the team will be chaperoned by MCC Director, WNM Mila Emperado and three others. Good luck to all of you! Bring home the rich experience and memory of travelling with your friends and the learnings you get from this trip!

More on 14 and Under kids, today, there is an on-going chess tournament at the Quezon City Memorial Circle, sponsored by The Quezon City Memorial Chess Club. Although I see this as Summer's last hoorah, the people behind this event and the club has a lot of activities prepared for the whole year. Great work guys! May your deeds be blessed and inspire others to work for the common good, specially, the good of chess in the Philippines.

On the foreign shore, I received this text last night from Xavier "doods" Busig who is based in Ireland now:

"chessmates, my score now is 9-0, we had 4 rounds last Sunday. Few more rounds this coming weekend...there is a championship roundfor ranks 1, 2 and 3. They have a different format here, different style"


Well, good luck to all of us, mere chess addicts and professionals! Of course, my heart goes to the future superstars, the kiddies and the juniors. May the guidance of discipline and the power of determination bring you to the highest ranks of chess!

Kids, stay humble! Don't let it overwhelm you! Rememver the BANG's words on this...

"...chess is suppose to make you a better person"


With that, till then!

Monday, May 28, 2007

Short moments with Pichay

Hi guys!

Had a good night with friends last night. Before this post, I thought I'd be able to "ambush" for a short interview our present NCFP President, Congressman Prospero Pichay Jr.

It was so, so short, the moment I had with him. Two photos for my camera and 3 sentences from him...

Kiko: Sir, good evening! I'm a chess fan and a friend of the bride. Glad to see you here. Nicole, the bride, jokingly told me he invited you as her ninong specially for me, because she knows I'm a big fan of chess, Philippine Chess.

Congressman Pichay: Hahahahahha!

Kiko: Thank you for supporting chess all the way. Thank you for your love for the game. We appreciate your efforts!

Congressman Pichay: Ah! Mahilig ka pala sa chess ha! Ano man ang mangyari sa atin, ituloy natin ang suporta natin jan! (Oh, your into chess! Whatever happen to us, we'll continue our support for chess!)

Kiko: Di pa naman final and results di ba? (The result is still incomplete?)

Congressman Pichay: Oo! Baka makapasok pa tayo sa magic 12!


Shutters out... we said thank you's and good lucks... and then the usual greetings from other guests...

And here we have two shots together with our school finance officer, Ms. Veronica Rait.




So guys, there's his assurance for us chess addicts and fans in the Philippines and around the globe.

Senator Manny Villar arrived late, around 9PM together with Joe De Venecia. Wish I had the time and chance to ask him about the Villar Cup...

And here's some more of the shots...




And the famed PUT3SKA-Brownbeat All Star vocalist, and now called Starlet...



And my date for the night...




Sorry guys for the non chess related pictures.Anyways, do you know this who this one is? If you happen to see her, please report immediately to the police authority. Armed and dangerous, can melt you in seconds with her smiles and naughty-weird ideas! Beware!

Sunday, May 27, 2007

Chess wind

Hi guys!

While waiting for my carpool for the wedding of our colleague, Ms. Nicole Zialcita, I decided to log in and try to post some from the Weekender by Manny Benitez. Of course, I'll try to link some chess news from the subscriptions I receive on a weekly basis.

Also, I read the BusinessWorld article of The BANG, titled, Scandinavian Melts, version hard copy courtesy of my mom's forgetfulness. I liked the article to tell... I just hope it is included in the issue of The Weekender this week. Or maybe I read the old issue of Chess Piece? We will see.

Kiddies’ tourney set on May 30

CALLING all boys and girls in Quezon City and neighboring cities and towns!

The Quezon Memorial Circle Chess Plaza Club will hold its first tournament for children, aged 14 and below, this coming Wednesday, May 30.

It will be a five-round rapid tournament with 25 minutes for each player to finish a game. Winners will receive books as prizes.

Players must register with the QMC Chess Plaza caretaker, Efren Arguelles. Registration is free. It will start today and close at 10 a.m. on Wednesday. Games will begin at 1 p.m.

One of the very first to register was 2005 Asean blitz gold medalist Paulo Bersamina, 9, whose father Norlito emailed the Weekender to signify Pau’s intention to play at the tournament for kids.

All age-group champions, past or incumbent, are welcome for as long as they are not over 14 years old.

The QMC club’s board thought of this tournament as part of its monthly activities in order to give a chance to children in Metro Manila to “warm up” for the first leg (National Capital Region) of the Shell National Youth Active Chess Championships scheduled for June 23-24 at SM Manila, behind City Hall.

Meanwhile, 13-year-old International Master Wesley So of Bacoor, Cavite, will stage a simultaneous exhibition against 30 players at Meralco in Pasig City on Saturday, June 2.

A brainchild of the elder Bersamina, the event is being organized by the Manila power company to help raise funds for the training of Wesley in his quest for the grandmaster’s title. He already has a GM norm to his credit.

It is also part of the Meralco chess team’s preparation for a match against the rest of the Lopez Group of Companies to be held sometime next month.

So is not expected to take part in the QMC kiddies’ tournament on Wednesday as he is also busy preparing for the “Battle of Shell Champions” to be held from June 18 to 20 on the ground floor of SM Mega Mall’s Atrium A in Mandaluyong City.

The event will mark the 15th anniversary of the two-tier—juniors (18 and below) and kiddies (14 and below)—Shell National Youth Active Chess Championships, the longest-running annual event for boys and girls in the country today.

Wesley was Shell kiddies champion in 2003. He was then nine years old and a Grade IV Pupil at Jesus Good Shepherd elementary school in Bacoor.

Albeit the youngest finalist at the time, he won the title by beating Mindanao’s Sneider Nebato in the final round.

Now an IM with one GM norm, Wesley will be in sophomore high school at St. Francis de Assisi College in Bacoor.

He currently holds two national crowns—that of the 2006-07 Pichay Cup National Open and of the 2007-08 National Juniors.

Cash prizes and trophies await Shell’s “champion of champions” and his runners-up.

It was Pilipinas Shell Petroleum Corporation that built the concrete tables and benches for the Quezon Memorial Circle Chess Plaza in the late nineties.

The QMC Chess Plaza is said to be the only one of its kind, with its concrete tables and benches sheltered from the elements


QMC chess club registration starts

THE QMC Chess Plaza Club will start collecting the P100 registration fee from its members next week.

Payments must be made to Ms Cynthia “Chi” Nazario, club treasurer, tel. 453-0537


Little-known Naranja jewels

INTERNATIONAL Master Renato Naranja is probably best known today for his fantastic performance in the 1970 Palma de Mallorca Interzonal where he drew with such titans as all-time great Bobby Fischer of the United States, Lajos Portisch of Hungary and former world champion Vassily Smyslov of the Soviet Union.

Not only that. Naranja, a computer expert who at that time was working for Meralco, had also five wins, one of which was against another all-time great, former US champion Samuel Reshevsky, the most famous child prodigy the world had seen.

Born in 1940 in Negros Occidental, Naranja caught national attention when he became the Philippine junior champion in 1958 and won the adult crown the following year at 19.

A studious player, he mastered the finer points of the English Opening with which he was almost invincible in local tournaments. With Black he would usually opt for the King’s Indian Defense.

During the martial-law regime, the self-assured computer wizard from Negros Occidental migrated to the United States, where he is still working as such in New York and occasionally still plays at the famous Marshall Chess Club in New York City.

I featured Naranja’s win over Reshevsky and draw with Fischer in this series last August. Today let’s take a look at two of his less-known wins in the Olympiad, where he represented the Philippines six times, 1964-74, missing only the 1972 Olympiad because of the proclamation of martial law.

In three of these global events, he played on board one (1964, 1966 and 1970).

• Uwe Kuettner (2183) - Renato Naranja (2420)
Rd. 1, World Under 20 Ch., Muenchenstein/Basel 1959
King’s Indian Defense (E65)

1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.g3 Bg7 4.Bg2 0–0 5.Nc3 d6 6.Nf3 c5 7.0–0 Nbd7 8.d5 Rb8 9.e4 a6 10.a4 b6 11.Ne1 Ne5 12.Qe2 Ne8 13.h3 e6 14.f4 Nd7 15.dxe6 fxe6 16.Nf3 Bb7 17.Ng5 Qe7 18.Bd2 Nc7 19.Rae1 Rbe8 20.Qd3 Bd4+! 21.Kh2 Qg7 Missing 21...Bf6 22.Rd1, with equality 22.Nf3 Bc6 23.Ne2 e5 24.fxe5 Nxe5 25.Nxe5 dxe5 26.b3 Ne6! 27.Bf3 Rd8 28.Qc2 h5 29.Qc1 Not 29.Nxd4?? because of 29...Nxd4 30.Qc3 Nxf3+ 31.Rxf3 Rxf3 32.Qxf3 Rxd2+ 33.Re2 Qd7! Kh7 30.g4 Rf7 31.gxh5 Rdf8 32.h6 Qf6 33.Bg2 Bf2!! 34.Be3?? Nf4?? Missing 34...Qh4 35.a5 Bxe4 36.Bxe4 Qxe4! 35.Rxf2! Qh4 36.Nxf4 Missing 36.Ref1! g5 37.Qc3!, and wins exf4 37.Ref1 Qg3+ 38.Kh1?? f3! 39.Bxf3??

After 39.Bxf3??

The final mistake 39.Kg1! was best, e.g., 39...Bxe4 40.Qc3!, with equal chances Now comes three whammies.

39…Rxf3! 40.Rxf3 Bxe4! The point of the exchange sac 41.Qd1 Rxf3! The coup de grace, and White resigns. 0–1

• Renato Naranja (2420) - Rene Letelier Martner
16th World Olympiad, Tel Aviv 1964
Symmetrical English (A35)

1.c4 c5 2.Nc3 Nc6 3.Nf3 g6 4.d4 cxd4 5.Nxd4 Bg7 6.e3 Nf6 7.Be2 0–0 8.0–0 d5 9.cxd5 Nxd5 10.Nxd5 Qxd5 11.Bf3 Qc4 12.Nxc6 bxc6 13.Be2 Qc5 14.Qa4 Rb8 15.Bf3 Rb5 16.Rb1 Bf5 17.e4 Equalizing Be6 18.b4 Qc4 19.a3 g5 20.h3 h5 21.Bxh5 Better than 21.Qxa7 g4 22.a4 Rbb8! Qxe4 22.Bb2 Bxb2 23.Rxb2 g4 24.Bxg4 Bxg4 25.hxg4 Rg5? 25...a5! was the saving resource 26.Qxa7! Qxg4 27.f4 Rh5 [27...Rg6!?+-] 28.Qxe7 Kg7 29.Rf3 Rfh8 30.Kf2 Rf5 31.Rbb3 Rh6?? A horrible blunder under pressure 32.Rg3!

After 32.Rg3!

32…Rxf4+ Mere momentum 33.Kg1! No more checks, and Black resigns as his queen will now fall for a rook. 1–0


Kotov’s ‘Think Like a Grandmaster’

ONE book I like but which I haven’t read with total absorption because I bought it when I was in my late 60s is Alexander Kotov’s Think Like a Grandmaster. Besides, I never thought he was such a great player.

I have changed my mind after journalist Ignacio “Iggy” Dee gave the Weekender his views of Kotov both as author and as player.

“Kotov's book is designed to make a human player calculate with the accuracy of a machine. He makes use of his ‘tree of analysis’ method where the alternatives are pictured as branches of a tree.

“All possible continuations from a given position can be visualized as a tree in which variations and sub-variations are represented as branches and twigs,” writes Dee, a former varsity player (UST).

He also quotes from John Nunn’s Secrets of Practical Chess, to wit: “The tree of analysis can be inefficient. Sometimes one forgets to analyze a line completely and then you can confuse (it with) similar lines.”

Dee also cites former Soviet and now Polish GM Mikhail Krasenkov (quoting IM Boris Zlotnik) in Attack and Defense, by Dvoretsky and Yusupov as saying:

“In complex positions it is difficult to compile the list of candidate moves at the very outset of your calculations. In practice the candidates come to light during the process of fathoming the position..."

“A fine point in the analysis of one variation often dawns on you in the course of calculating a different line.”

As a player, Kotov had a distinguished record: former Moscow champion, Interzonal champion and two-time world title candidate.

Two of his finest games ought to describe best Kotov’s playing ability.

• Alexander Kotov - Paul Keres
Budapest 1950
Nimzo-Indian Defense, Saemisch (E24)

1.c4 Nf6 2.d4 e6 3.Nc3 Bb4 4.a3 Bxc3+ 5.bxc3 Nc6 6.f3 b6 7.e4 Ba6 8.e5 Ng8 9.Nh3 Na5 10.Qa4 Ne7 11.Bd3 0–0 12.Bg5 h6 13.Bh4 d5 14.Bb1 g5 Not 14...Bxc4 because of 15.Qc2 g6 16.Bf6!, and White has a clear edge 15.Qc2² Ng6 16.Nf4 gxh4? 16...Qe8 was better 17.Nxg6! White is now way ahead Re8 18.Nh8! Re7 Of course not 18...Kxh8 because of 19.Qh7#! 19.Qh7+ Kf8 20.f4! Nxc4 20...Nb3 21.Ra2 Bxc4 22.f5 gives White a huge advantage 21.f5 exf5 22.0–0 Bc8 23.Bxf5 Bxf5 24.Rxf5 Ke8 25.Rxf7! The start of a mating attack, better than 25.Qxh6?, e.g., 25…Kd7 26.Rxf7 Qxh8 27.e6+ Kc6 28.Qxh8 Rxh8 29.Rxe7 Kd6 30.Rd7+ Kc6. Take note of how White conducts the attack Kd7 26.Qf5+ Kc6 27.Qf6+ Kd7 28.e6+ Kc6 29.Rxe7 Not 29.Qxe7 because of 29…Qxe7 30.Rxe7 Rxh8, and Black would have active counterplay Qxh8 30.Rxc7+!!

After 30.Rxc7+!!

Decisive, e.g., 30…Kxc7 31.Qe7+ Kc6 32.Kd7#!; if 31…Kb8/Kc8 32.Rf1, threatening to win Black’s queen.

30…Kb5 31.Qe7 a5 32.Qd7+ Ka6 33.Rb1! The encirclement is complete and mate is inevitable. Try it out on the board! 1–0

• Yuri Averbakh - Alexander Kotov
Zurich 1953
Old Indian Defense (A55)

1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 d6 3.Nf3 Nbd7 4.Nc3 e5 5.e4 Be7 6.Be2 0–0 7.0–0 c6 8.Qc2 Re8 9.Rd1 Bf8 10.Rb1 a5 11.d5 Nc5 12.Be3 Qc7 13.h3 Bd7 14.Rbc1 g6 15.Nd2 Rab8 16.Nb3 Nxb3 17.Qxb3 c5 18.Kh2 Kh8 19.Qc2 Ng8 20.Bg4 Nh6 21.Bxd7 Qxd7 22.Qd2 Ng8 23.g4 f5 24.f3 Be7 25.Rg1 Rf8 26.Rcf1 If 26.gxf5 gxf5 27.exf5 Rbe8! Rf7 27.gxf5 gxf5 28.Rg2 f4 29.Bf2 Rf6 30.Ne2??

After 30.Ne2??

A big blunder. Best was 30.h4!, ensuring equality. Now comes a deeply conceived double whammy from Black.

30…Qxh3+!! 31.Kxh3 Rh6+ 32.Kg4 Nf6+ 33.Kf5 Nd7 34.Rg5 Rf8+ 35.Kg4 Nf6+ 36.Kf5 Ng8+ 37.Kg4 Nf6+?? Now it’s Black’s turn to blunder. Better was 37...Bxg5 38.Qe1 Nf6+ 39.Kf5 Ng4+ 40.Kxg4, with Black still ahead, however 38.Kf5 Nxd5+ 39.Kg4 Nf6+ 40.Kf5 Ng8+ 41.Kg4 Bxg5 42.Kxg5 Rf7 43.Bh4 Not 43.Qxa5?? because of 43...Rg7+ 44.Kf5 Rf6#! Rg6+ 44.Kh5 Rfg7 45.Bg5 Rxg5+ 46.Kh4 Nf6 47.Ng3 Rxg3 48.Qxd6 R3g6 49.Qb8+ Rg8! 0–1


And, The BANG's 2 articles...

Aronian beats Kramnik

WORLD CUP champion GM Levon Aronian of Armenia defeated world champion Vladimir Kramnik in a rapid match held last May 4 to 6 in Yerevan, Armenia. The time control was 25 minutes for the whole game with an increment of 10 seconds per move. Two games were played every day.

Aronian and Kramnik exchanged wins on day one but then Aronian surprised the chess world with two victories on the second day. Thereafter he needed only half a point from the remaining two games to win the match. On the final day Kramnik threw caution to the winds and made a determined effort catch up. However, the Armenian was up to the task and fought back from two losing positions to cement the match win. Final score: 4-2 (three wins, two draws, one loss) in favor of Aronian.

Vladimir Kramnik (born June 25, 1975) is currently world champion and recognized as one of the strongest rapid players in the world, having won the Amber Blindfold and Rapid tournament in Monaca earlier this year, and an eight-game rapid chess match against Peter Leko just shortly before this match.

Levon Aronian (born October 6, 1982) is no slouch either—he is a great talent who is recognized for his skill in virtually all time controls, be it standard, rapid or blitz. He is also the world FischerRandom champion.

The fourth game saw Aronian defeat Kramnik with the Shabalov Gambit. For those of you as Black who have the Semi-Slav in their opening repertoire, you might appreciate a quick round-up of the latest theory on this very dangerous line.

Aronian,Levon (2759) - Kramnik,Vladimir (2772) [D45]
Rapid Match Yerevan ARM (4), 05.05.2007
Semi-Slav, Shabalov Gambit

1.d4 d5 2.c4 c6 3.Nf3 Nf6 4.Nc3 e6 5.e3 Nbd7 6.Qc2 Bd6 7.g4
Fifteen years ago this move was usually preceded by 7.h3, but then Shirov played 7.g4 immediately against Thorhallsson in Reykjavik 1992 and everybody realized that Black couldn't risk taking that pawn anyway, and pushing the g-pawn right away saved a tempo.

Even Garry Kasparov has given his stamp of approval to White's treatment—he himself used it in matches against the computer programs Deep Junior and X3D Fritz.

By the way, Shirov himself wrote that the move was Shabalov's idea, and that justified the name "Shabalov Gambit".

7...dxc4

We don't have enough space to take them up, but both 7...Nxg4 and 7...Bb4 followed by 8...Ne4 have their adherents, with the latter being this writer's personal choice.

8.Bxc4

[8.g5 Nd5 9.Bxc4 e5 transposes into the line given in the next note]

8...Nd5

Apart from this move Black has mainly tried 8...e5 9.g5 Nd5 10.Bd2 (10.Bxd5 cxd5 11.Nxd5 0–0 12.Bd2 Re8 Black's initiative is well worth the pawn. Browne,W (2456)-Shabalov,A (2624)/ Stratton Mountain 2004 0–1 (28); 10.Nxd5? cxd5 11.Bxd5 Qa5+ loses a piece) 10...exd4 11.Qe4+ Ne7.

At first glance the impression you will get is that Black is behind in development and White should be able to find a forceful way of getting an advantage. However, it is not so easy ... 12.Qxd4 Nf5 13.Qe4+ Ne7 14.Qc2 (14.0–0–0 Nc5) 14...Nb6 15.Be2 Bf5 See? White has problems on where to put his king.

9.Ne4

Pinoy candidate-GM Roland Salvador has tried 9.Bd2 intending to play e3-e4 and to recapture with the bishop after ...Nxc3.

After 9...N7b6 10.Be2 f5 11.e4! fxe4 12.Nxe4 Qc7 13.Nxd6+ Qxd6 14.Ne5 Nb4 15.Qb3 Qd5 16.Qxd5 N4xd5 (16...exd5?? 17.Bxb4) 17.0–0 0–0 18.f4 Nd7 19.Nd3 N7f6 Black had a cramped position. 1–0 Salvador,R (2455)-la Manna,F (2119)/ Arco Op A 2006 1–0 (45).
9...Be7 10.Bd2 b6 11.Ng3

The move 11.0–0–0 is more usual here. Aronian's idea is to chase away the d5-knight.

11...0–0

Black cannot delay castling anymore. If he plays 11...Bb7 for example there could follow 12.e4 Nb4 13.Qb3 a5 (if 13...c5 14.a3 Nc6 15.d5! Nce5 16.dxe6 fxe6 17.0–0–0! White has a deadly bind) 14.a3 a4 15.Qc3 Na6 16.Nh5! White's edge is dangerous. Wells,P (2490)-Supatashvili,K (2435)/ Oberwart 1994 1–0 (40).

12.e4 Nb4 13.Qb3 c5

Compare this position with that of the previous note. Now, with Black's king castled, 14.a3 no longer works: 14...Nc6 15.d5 is met by 15...Nce5 16.dxe6 fxe6 17.Nxe5 (17.0–0–0?? Nxf3) 17...Nxe5 with a more than satisfactory position for Black.

14.Bxb4!? cxb4 15.0–0 a6

I can't understand all this prophylaxis. Perhaps 15...Bb7 is simpler and better.
16.Qe3!

Shifting to the attack. This will be followed up by Bd3, g4-g5 and Qf4. In the post-game conference Kramnik admitted that after he saw this move he knew that White had the advantage.

16...b5 17.Bd3 Bb7 18.g5 Rc8 19.Rad1 Qb6 20.Bb1 Rfd8

The idea is to play ...Nf8 to guard h7 against mating threats on the diagonal b1–h7.

21.h4 Nf8 22.h5 Rc7 23.Qf4 Bd6

Trying to induce White to push his e-pawn, after which Black's control of the long diagonal gives him fighting chances.

24.e5 Be7 25.Be4 Bc8 26.Bb1 Bb7 27.Be4 Bc8 28.Kh2 Rcd7 29.Bb1 Bb7 30.Ne4 Bxe4 31.Bxe4

Aronian’s plan is to simply play Rg1 and g5-g6!

31...g6 32.hxg6 Nxg6 33.Qe3 Bf8 34.Kg2

White's attack will be carried out on the h-file. He has to double rooks on the h-file.

34...Bg7 35.Rh1 Qb8 36.Rc1

Forever getting rid of threats associated with ...Bxe5!

36...Qa7 37.Rh3 Rxd4 38.Rd1! Nf4+ 39.Kh2 Ne2!?

After 39...Ne2

Desperation. 39...Nxh3 40.Kxh3 leaves White with a huge material advantage.

40.Rd2!

Black's position keeps getting worse.

40...Bxe5+ 41.Nxe5 Qc7 42.Bxh7+ Kf8 43.Rxe2 1–0

Gossip: There was a pre-match dinner buffet to draw the colors for the first game as well as some sort of opening festivities. This was a formal sit-down affair and several dignitaries were present. There was FIDE President Kirsan Ilyumshinov, the President of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic Arkady Ghukasyan and the President of the Armenian Chess Federation Serge Sargsyan.

If you pay attention to the pictures in the match website you will see that GM Vladimir Kramnik is accompanied by his wife of four months, French journalist Marie-Laure Germon. Aronian is not yet married, but brought along his girl friend, Filipino-Australian chess player WIM Arianne Caoili!

When they were spotted dancing during the Turin Olympiad both of them said they were just acquaintances from their world youth competition days who both decided to go to the Bermuda Party together. Now it looks like it is getting serious. Abangan!

Scandinavian Melts

NO, we are not talking about the Scandinavian Defense dissolving into nothingness—our topic for today is the Melts Variation of the Scandinavian, named after the Correspondence IM Michael Melts who wrote a book in 2001 about this new weapon. This line has since been used heavily by GM Sergei Tiviakov with good results.

Many years ago, during the 1998 Yangon zonal, GM Antonio’s bid to qualify for the interzonals was jeopardized when he lost the following game:

Antonio,Rogelio Jr (2540) - Roca,Petronio (2365) [B01]
zt 3.2 Yangon MYA (4), 11.12.1998

1.e4 d5 2.exd5 Qxd5 3.Nc3 Qa5 4.d4 c6 5.Bc4 Nf6 6.Qe2 Bf5 7.Bd2 Qc7 8.Nf3 e6 9.Ne5 Nbd7 10.h3 Nxe5 11.dxe5 Nd7 12.0–0–0 Qxe5 13.Qf3 0–0–0 14.Bg5 Re8 15.Rhe1 Qa5 16.Nb5 cxb5 17.Qxf5 Be7 18.Bxe6 fxe6 19.Qg4 Bxg5+ 20.Qxg5 Kb8 21.Qxg7 Nb6 22.Rxe6 Rxe6 23.Qxh8+ Nc8 24.a3 Qc7 25.Rd3 Qf4+ 26.Kb1 Re1+ 27.Ka2 Qc4+ 28.Rb3 a5 29.Qc3 Qf1 30.Qg3+ Ka7 31.Rd3 Nb6 32.Kb3 Re4 33.Ka2 Re1 34.Kb3 Nd5 35.a4 Re4 36.c3 bxa4+ 37.Kc2 Re1 38.Qg4 Qxf2+ 39.Rd2 Ne3+ 40.Kd3 Qf1+ 0–1

This story had a happy ending, GM Joey won his last three games (vs Myo Naing, Utut Adianto and Dao Thien Hai) to tie for first with Sharavdorj (Mongolia) and Liu Dede (Indonesia), and he even came up on top after the tie-breaks.

Back in the Philippines, this was also the time when I was intensively studying the Scandinavian, and GM Joey requested a study session to better acquaint himself with the tactical subtleties of this neglected but dangerous counter-attacking defense. We studied the lines for several weekends, after which, as was his wont, GM Joey retired to his bedroom for his own analysis. I know that he tested his conclusions by playing hundreds of blitz games under an anonymous name in the Internet Chess Club (ICC).

One day several weeks later I asked him what he thought of the Scandinavian, and to my surprise he broke into a big smile and told me that his conclusion was that the best way to play the Scandinavian is 1.e4 d5 2.exd5 Qxd5 3.Nc3 Qd6!?

Now, I was aware that 3...Qd6 is very popular in the ICC, but that was only blitz and popularity cannot be equated with soundness for over-the-board competition, but GM Joey assured me that he analyzed and tested quite a lot of the possible ways by which White could try and refute the move, and Black always retained a playable position with counter-attacking chances.

This was the early part of 1999, the move 3...Qd6 was hardly ever seen then, and I just dismissed his remarks on its merits.

In 2001 Melts’ book came out and slowly players from all over the world embraced its playability. I remember scanning the games from Hotel Benidorm (Bali, Indonesia) and being impressed at the way Kurajica upset the ELO-favorite Judit Polgar:

Polgar,Judit (2685) - Kurajica,Bojan (2548) [B01]
Benidorm Hotel Bali (1), 29.11.2002
1.e4 d5 2.exd5 Qxd5 3.Nc3 Qd6 4.d4 Nf6 5.Nf3 a6 6.Ne5 Nc6 7.Nxc6 Qxc6 8.Bf4 Be6!?

A surprise, but it has a good idea. Black intends to continue with ...g6, ...Bg7 and either 0–0–0 or 0–0. In the main line Black usually coninues 8...Bg4 9.f3 Be6, but Kurajica goes straight to e6 because he wants White's f-pawn to stay where it is, since now white's f1–bishop cannot move because of ...Qxg2.

9.Qd3 0–0–0 10.0–0–0 g6 11.Be2 Bg7 12.Be5 Rhe8 13.Bf3 Bh6+ 14.Kb1 Qc4 15.Qxc4 Bxc4 16.d5 Nd7 17.Bg3 Bg7 18.Ne4 Nf6 19.Nxf6 Bxf6 20.b3 Bb5 21.Rhe1 Bd7 22.c4 e6 23.d6 e5! 24.dxc7 Bf5+ 25.Kc1 Rxd1+ 26.Rxd1 Kxc7 27.Bd5 Bg5+ 28.Kb2 f6 29.f3 Be3 30.b4 g5 31.Be1 Bd4+ 32.Bc3 Bxc3+ 33.Kxc3 e4 34.Re1?

Here is where Judit errs. 34.g4 Bg6 35.fxe4 Bxe4 36.Rf1 Bxd5 37.cxd5 Re2 looks equal.

34...exf3! 35.Rf1 Re3+ 36.Kd2 Re2+ 37.Kc3 fxg2 38.Bxg2 Bg6 39.Bd5 f5 40.a4 f4 41.a5 Be4 42.Kd4 Bxd5 43.Kxd5 Rxh2 44.b5 axb5 45.cxb5 Ra2 46.Rc1+ Kb8 47.Kc5 Re2 48.Rd1 Re5+ 49.Kb6 Re6+ 50.Kc5 Rf6 51.Rd8+ Kc7 52.Rh8 Rf5+ 53.Kb4 Rf7 54.Kc5 b6+ 55.axb6+ Kb7 0–1

The upset result was not the only thing—it was the evenness of the struggle. Kurajica did not have to struggle through opening difficulties and equalize through a mistake by his opponent. Rather, he equalized early and fought on even terms until Judit erred.

The Melts Variation was on its way to GM acceptance, and Tiviakov’s advocacy of it worked wonders for its popularity. In the 2007 MTel Masters the Romanian GM Liviu Dieter Nisipeanu pulled off a major upset over former world champion Veselin Topalov using the Melts.

Topalov,Veselin (2772) - Nisipeanu,Liviu Dieter (2693) [B01]
MTel Sofia BUL (1), 10.05.2007

1.e4 d5 2.exd5 Qxd5 3.Nc3 Qd6
GM John Emms wrote a well-received book on the Scandinavian in the late 90s, and he had this to say about the text: "The queen is unfavorably placed on d6, compared to a5. First, there is no useful pin on the c3 knight, second the queen can be harassed by Bf4."

The way I see it the Black queen is no less vulnerable to attack on a5 as against d6.

4.g3

The most popular way to continue is 4.d4 Nf6 5.Bc4, intending to follow-up with Nge2 and Bf4. In my opinion Black should play 5...a6 6.Nge2 b5 7.Bb3 Bb7 8.Bf4 Qb6! (8...Qd8 also looks ok) 9.f3 e6 10.Qd2 c5 It looks like Black has equalized here. 11.dxc5 Bxc5 12.0–0–0 0–0 13.Kb1 Nc6 I am sure you will agree that Black has the better prospects - what more can you ask from an opening? Chulivska,V (2262)-Stanislavskaya,K/ Alushta 2005 1/2 (37).

4...Nf6 5.Bg2 c6 6.d4 g6 7.Bf4 Qb4 8.Nge2 Bg7

Taking the pawn now is too dangerous. One possible line: 8...Qxb2 9.d5! Nxd5 10.Bxd5 cxd5 11.Rb1 Qa3 12.Nb5.

9.Qc1 0–0 10.0–0 Bg4 11.a3 Qa5 12.h3 Bxe2 13.Nxe2 Nbd7 14.c4 e5 15.b4 Qc7 16.dxe5 Nxe5 17.Qc2 a5 18.Rae1 axb4 19.axb4 Rfe8 20.c5 Nd5 21.Bd2 Nd7 22.Qc4 N7f6 23.g4

Threatening 24.g5 forcing the knight away, after which 25.Bxd5 wins a pawn.

23...h5!?

Black does nothing to prevent White's threat! It turns out that 24.g5 Nh7 25.Bxd5 cxd5 26.Qxd5 Red8 forces 27.Bf4 Rxd5 28.Bxc7 Nxg5 and Black has the better endgame due to white's split pawns.

24.Ng3 hxg4 25.hxg4 Qd7 26.g5 Rxe1 27.Rxe1 Ne8 28.Bf3 Nec7 29.Bg4 Qd8 30.Kg2 Nb5 31.Rd1 Ra1! 32.Rxa1 Bxa1

Nisipeanu now deftly maneuvers his pieces and takes over the center.

33.Bf3 Be5 34.Ne2 Ndc7 35.Be3 Ne6 36.Bg4 Nbc7 37.Qe4 Bg7 38.f4 Qd1 39.Kf2 Bc3 40.b5!?

White is playing too hard to win. Safer is 40.Nxc3 Qxg4 41.Qe5 but, of course, Topalov is not after "safer".

40...Qe1+ 41.Kg2 Nd5 42.bxc6 bxc6 43.Qd3?

After 43.Qd3

Here is the mistake. Black to play and win.

43...Bd4!

The bishop is quite safe from capture because of the potential fork ...N(any)xf4+

44.Bxe6 Nxe3+ 45.Kh2
[45.Kf3 Qh1+ 46.Kf2 Qg2+ 47.Ke1 Qf1+ 48.Kd2 Qd1#]
45...Qf2+ 46.Kh3 Qf3+ 47.Ng3 Qg2+

The following sequence is forced: 48.Kh4 Qh2+ 49.Bh3 Ng2+ 50.Kg4 Qxh3+ 51.Kxh3 Nxf4+ with a frivolous win. 0–1


Geeh! Thank God it's there!

FROM MY SWIVEL CHAIR
Thank you all for your support


I WISH to thank readers who sent me words of encouragement as regards my present personal problems and the Weekender. I have chosen some that have lifted up my spirits and firmed up my resolve to continue publishing my newsletter.
—0—
FROM Leo Ausan Jr. of the Department of Foreign Affairs:

“Thanks a lot for Weekender69. As always, great job!

“I am sorry I also didn't notice the missing p11 in the last issue until you sent it. More thanks though for mustering additional effort just to complete the previous issue. I am touched at the sense of responsibility that the simple gesture manifests, something that can only emanate from one seasoned in responsible journalism.

However, I am more touched upon knowing that the Weekender may soon come to an end due to pressing personal circumstances you are currently in. Regrettably, from my end, I can only fervently hope and pray that these circumstances improve so that Weekender can stay much longer. Rest assured, whatever happens to the Weekender in the near future I shall forever cherish the moments when I received, read and got entertained by it. For these moments, I shall always remember you though we've just known each other and became friends briefly.

“But then for all we know God works in wondrous ways and maybe, just maybe, someone may finally decide to pick up wherever you may eventually decide to momentarily stop the Weekender.”
—0—

FROM Norlito Bersamina, father of Paulo:

“Maraming salamat ho sa Weekender, kahit marami kayong problems na hinaharap, you still find time to make it and send it to us.
“May our Good Lord bless you and your family always!”
—0—

FROM Jody Navarro, moderator of Butuan Yahoo Group:

“Just opened my email here in Butuan. If I had been home in Alabang and not travelling, I would have noticed the missing page. I read everything that you publish every issue because I choose which ones to post in our own CHESS CORNER in the BGForum discussion board.

“We would love to continue getting your CHESS WEEKENDER but please decide on what's best for you. You need to do what relaxes you and does not tax your energies….”
—0—

FROM Atty. Florand Garcia, father of Jan Emmanuel:

“Hope you will continue the publication just for the love of writing. I believe this will keep you active and sharp mentally. Wishing you and your family good health.”
—0—

I CAN only hope and pray for better health and strength so I can continue the Weekender and that in the event I have to shut it down, somebody else will pick up where I may have left off. It is also my hope that the NCFP’s Caravan will continue to serve the chess community “without fear or favor.”


Chess quotes

"The only thing chess players have in common is chess." —Lodewijk Prins, interview with Max Pam, 1972

“The development of beauty in chess never depends on you alone. No matter how much imagination and creativity you invest, you still do not create beauty. Your opponent must react at the same highest level…. I believe every chess player senses beauty, when he succeeds in creating situations, which contradict the expectations and the rules, and he succeeds in mastering this situation.” —GM Vladimir Kramnik, world champion


And we now try to scan the net news for chess...

The Candidates Matches is about to start, in 15 minutes. First round pairings were drawn from 2 chests, concealing a black and white sheep. Board 1 for round 1 match, Aronian vs. Carlsen. And here is the Official site for the updates and live games.

Ooooppps! Need to go now. By the way, Nicole, the soon-to-be-wedded friend of ours will tie the knot with Christian Javier, the son of Pastor Sixto Rufo Javier Jr. and Mrs. Violeta R. Javier. Nicole's parents, by the way, Congressman Eduardo C. Zialcita and Mrs. Claudine D.C. Zialcita.

Nicole told me, jokingly, she invited Surigao Del Sur Representative Congressman Prospero Pichay Jr. for me. Hahahah! The fact is, he is one of the sponsors (ninong) along with President GMA, Former President FVR and other congressmen and city mayors.

Anyways, let's see if can take a photo with him...

Friday, May 25, 2007

Announcements and Clubs

And this one, I received thru my mobile, from The Chess Arbiters Association of the Philippines:

CAAP Officers, Members and Advisers

There will be a special meeting on saturday, May 26, 2007 at 3 PM at ramon Magsaysay High School Cubao.Please attend! Important matters to be discussed!

Also, we have the following announcement:
FILIPINO CHESS ASSOCIATION IN KUWAIT

Hotline Restaurant, Chess & Billiards Center, Salhiya Tower, Kuwait City
TEL # 2411484
+965 6467580

HTTP://FCAK-KUWAIT.TRIPOD.COM
email: esygpuara@yahoo.com


ULRIKE's Chess Center
ULRIKE's Restaurant and Boarding House
Escoda St., near cor. Gen. Luna St., Paco , Manila (in front of CHINA BANK)
Tel. No.: 4981827/ 0910 5321398


Of course, we will be including all your club contacts, announcments in our directory and posts. keep sending them.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Recent happenings

Hi there!

Some of the local news, as posted by GM Big J of NCFP Forum:

1st. ULRIKE's ACTIVE CHESS TOURNAMENT (1900 BELOW)

VENUE: ULRIKE's Restaurant & Boarding House
1056 Escoda cor. General Luna Street Paco, Manila
(in front of China Bank)

DATE : May 20, 2007 Sunday 9:00 AM
FORMAT: Five (5) Round Swiss System
25 minutes per player to finish the game

PRIZES: Champion: P1,500 + medal
2nd. Place: P1,000 + medal
3rd. Place: P 500 + medal
Top Senior (60 yrs. old above): P300 + medal
Top Kiddie: P300 + medal

ENTRY FEE: P200 inclusive of food

CONTACT: Reinhard Orth, Restaurant Owner
489-1827 or 0910-5321398 or 0928-6109644

***LIMITED TO 30 PARTICIPANTS ONLY


And the result:

Hi Guys!

Here's the result of the 1st. ULRIKE's Active Chess Tournament:

1. Montes, Norman 4.5 pts.
2. Hernandez, Lourescel 4.0
3. Manzanero, Stephen 4.0
4. Tunguia, Eduardo 3.5
5. Domaycos, Rene 3.0
6. Cocjin, Joel 3.0
7. Salubre, Junrie 3.0
8. Estallo, Joseph 2.5
9. Tuplano, Roland 2.0
10. Aquino, Rodrigo 2.0
11. Pascual, Orly 2.0
12. Gonzales, Oscar 2.0
13. Geriane, Francis 1.5
14. Orth, Reinhard 1.5
15. Tumlos, Rex 1.5
16. Ando, Julie Ann 1.0

Despite the low turn-out of participants, the tournament was generally successful. Thanks to the organizer, Mr. Reinhard Orth. Good food. Great place!
Nice officiating by NAPCA!


Another announcement from GM Big J:

ULRIKE's Executive Non-Master 2060 and below Active Chess Championship

-ULRIKE's Chess Center, Escoda near cor. Gen. Luna, Paco ,Manila

-May 26, 2007 Saturday 10 am

-5 rounds Swiss System

-Registration fee: 700 Php (Free lunch, merienda and coffee break)

-Prizes: Champion P 6,000 + trophy
2nd place P 4,000
3rd place P 2,000
4th place P 1,500
5th place P 1,000

* End of registration: 10 am, May 26, 2007


The registration fee, is that right? or a typographical err? if it is correctly posted, geeh! way expensive.

Announcement from National Association of the Philippines for Chess Arbiters:

NAPCA Trainers and Coaches Seminar

-June 12, 2007 Tuesday 9am to 5pm

-ISEC Training Room (aircon)
Shaw Blvd., Pasig City (beside SEAOIL)

-Speaker: Atty. Rommel Tacorda, IA and FIDE Licenced Trainer

-Registration Fee: 600 Php (inclusive of food)

-Requirements: 1. Participant must be a NAPCA member
2. Must be 20 years old and above
3. Must be an average-strength chess player

-For inquiries contact: Joseph Estallo (02) 8826288/ (0922) 8914199


I first heard about NAPCA from the former president of CAAP, NA Boyet Tordesillas somtime in December 2006. Then I found out, through Ms. Edna Suede, the secretary of CAAP that NA Boyet is no longer connected with them.

Although I smell something which is not good between the two groups, I believe having two associations for Chess Arbiration Development is better than one. At least options for the would be arbiter is available.

I just wish I can see the trained and certified arbiters' deployment in all NCFP and other tournaments in our country. That is one way of course, of putting all the learned theories in practice. Last NCFP National Age Group and Juniors Championship, there were a lot of players but so few, 3 arbiters. Observations by the parents cannot and should not be ignored. Again, we have 2 groups for chess arbiters traning and certification, NCFP and other tournament organizers, get their services!

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Elsewhere in the world

Hi there!

Since there's not much happening in the Philippines with chess (after the 10 day National Age Group and Juniors Championship)we will take a look at the international scene. Have not read up on the news items that come in but lately, I found it helpful for me since there's not much, really nothing to read on the local scene.

First stop, my copy of ICC newsletter headlined Another Indian Sign in their recent issue, Vol II - Issue XVII - May 18, 2007. Something the world awaits from our side, Asian... aside of course from the superpowers, Chinese!

We also have the Chessville Weekly where we saw and read (heard?)Susan Polgar speak out.

Of course,FIDE News, the chess news of all news!

Till then guys!

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Blogging, friends and chess

Hi there!

Yesterday, I did something I have long wanted to do so. To give tribute to the major sites I found helpful for me and for my chess students. Here at PCC, I almost always go for the spur of the moment, unplanned writing style (the truth is, inspiration!), no edit, just pure head to hand to computer method.

Blogging nowadays is one of the silent forces changing and shaping society on the global level. We bloggers find satisfaction when we know that our thoughts, ideas and jumbled up letters are being read and appreciated.

But I really believe the reason behind the increase among bloggers is simple, we gain friends, establish friendships and find those others who share the same passion.

Today, I received a thank you note from someone I wrote about yesterday. The sender happens to be working in the same field that I do, Special Education... helping people, teaching people. He further told me that my favorite movie, Stand by me was shot near his hometown in Oregon. Small world indeed! he said.

While I was reading his note, I was having goosebumps because I felt the sincerity he had while writing for me. Ironically, he was thanking me when in fact, I was the one whose suppose to thank him.

Here in our country, I met people, consider them as my chess friends, who, I believe won't be in my friends list had I not started this blog. These are people from all walks of life. National masters, writers, businessmen, fellow chess addicts and others. In Cavite (hometown of mine), I was lucky enough to be part of a chess association (because of PCC) that hopefully will live up to it's advocacy, improve lives thru chess!

I was even interviewed thru email by a student writer of De La Salle University-Dasmarinas because of our blog...

A lot of reasons to blog... And the only reason I find worth looking at is friendship.

Chess, blogs and friendships.

Bye for now! Got to go look for an enemy on the board! hahahahah!

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Chess Resources Online

Hi there again!

So much infos, so little time to have them all! That's how I see the internet, cyberspace, or online resources. It's an oceanful of resources for all sorts of stuff! It is D' Library of all library. You need to know something? go online... You want to find outthe latest line of an opening? go online!

Most of these resources are for free, just like our beloved Philippine Chess Chronicles Blog. That makes the cyberspace even more powerful, FREE!

And for chess, yes, chess! We have a lot of stuff for us. I am discussing those sites that I have used and abused for my addiction (playing and paying for it!).

I'd like to start with Chess Kids Academy...

If you will look for it thru any of the search engines available online, it can easily be located with the easy to remember address, www.chesskids.com. Ad line says "Teach your kids how to play chess with our free online chess course". I am telling you, IT IS ABSOLUTELY FOR FREE! Ok, I want to clear this now, the site has a store where you can find a good list of resources from books to videos and yes, I have to tell you this too, the ads they have do not and will not pop-up to remind you to buy their products unlike other half-for-free-half-for-a-pay site.

Enough of what they won't do to your online time. Let's go to what they have for you (and make your time worth it!).

Let's start with their drop down menus. They have 9 and all of them would lead you to a good-read-and-learn-about-chess stuff! The usual HOME stuff, c'mon guys, who in the world will not post their homepage link in their site? Next we have ABOUT stuff. FAQ and About us are there. Frequently asked questions like, are you for free? what the hell are you talking about? why the site is there? for what reason? purpose? are you going to sue us if we copy your site or not? who was your first kiss? when ws the last time you fell in love? (oooppsss! sorry!). Next is the KIDS Section. Here, the page shows a superhero (good way to present chess among children di ba?) wearing the ala-superman attire but with the name ChessKid! The page says:

Welcome to chessKIDS academy, a website where kids can learn and play chess.

It takes a SUPERHERO to play chess well. If you click here you can find out how you can train to become chessKID, the greatest superhero of all time.

If you prefer just to go to school and have some lessons you can click here.

Or choose what you want to do from the menu at the top of the page.

Have fun and play well!

Before you go any further, please read the
TERMS AND CONDITIONS for kids using this website.


Also on this page, we get the drop down menu with titles like BEGINNERS, THINKING SKILLS, IMPROVERS, SCHOOL, and OTHER RESOURCES.

And there is the GROWN-UP SECTION. Click it and you'll get Parents, Teachers and The ChessKid Project. It is self-explanatory of what you will find there.

Next is the RESOURCES Section. Yahoooo! Here, I call this the Chess Paradise for Chess Teachers!!! It is! Don't you believe me? Go there to check it yourself! I call it paradise...

Okay okay! I'll let you in on it. Free books by Richard James. His works Move 1 and Move Two has helped a lot of chess students in England and all over the world. There is also the Simple Opening Guides. Books for Chess Parents and yes, Beginners Guide To Chess... If you still disagree with me, then you don't know what paradise mean!

Of course, the next section is the Chess Store. One way of helping these free sites online is to buy your chess needs and addiction to them, online! The usual line, proceeds of the sales help maintain the site is truly (madly!) appreciated.

Advice is the next section. I need this too. It's a bit techie (goodness Kiko! use computers and your on the techie side!) Explains how to further or maximize their free resources. I want to call this section as the guide to proper abuse of chesskids site! Hahahahah!

Second to the last one is the SUPPORT section. Donate and Link to us. Now, I've done the link to us part... let's donate to this site!

The last one says Legal! this might go against the section I call abuse chesskids but don't get me wrong. If you plan to use chesskids in any manner against the laws of your land, you'll be sorry! Because you ought to be good boys and girls when you become a chesskids academy student or teacher!

And before I forget, I'd like to tell you all that they have interactive trainings and lessons. You can hook-up with your smart board or LCD Projector. Go there now! Hassle free!ChessKids Academy..

The next one is a site I never expected would have an owner as generous as the sun during the summer season in the Philippines and as giving as the rains during the months of June to November.

The owner wants to be called as Professor Chester Nuhmentz. Read it on a 180 KPH speed and you'll get the idea, PROFESSOR CHESS TOURNAMENTS! What do they have there? Downloadable materials, some are for free and some you can have for a very minimal fee. Chess Vision Exercises, Chess Club Sites, Discussion Forum for Coaches, Player Biographies, Subscription Information, Question, Problem and Suggestion, Tales from the Diary of King Gustafon, Chess Puzzles tips and solutions, Customized Forms and Certificates and Online Chess Quizzes.

Hey! I missed one part, the RECON 64 section of the site. This is one of the strenght of the site when we talk about training for its susbscribers and visitors. What does it do then? Basically, it is a move prediction exercise with a few twist. Players may make up six guesses to anticipate a move. The twist? an imaginary money or wager is placed on each prediction!

By the way, Prof. Chester Nuhmentz is Jim Mitch in real life and here's his great work, Professor Chess.

Next site I'd like to share is the recent link I have, Chess Videos. Full of stuff for chess instructions using videos, diagrams and forums full of yes, videos. Yes! You do not have to pay for anything to register. You have to register to enjoy the full benefits of membership. Here are the other Free Chess Utilities you can avail of: Chess Diagram Generator, PGN Game Replayer, Chess Puzzle Creator and Chess Qoute of the day. What else can we ask for? we mere mortals...

The forums are very great! They have sections/threads for a lot of chess stuff. We have General Chess Discussion, Intermediate or Advance Chess Strategy Videos, Beginners Chess Startegy Videos and of course, Chess Game Replays and Analysis!

Forums with videos titled "Winning vs Pawn on 7th Rank" is a killer! Advanced Level Video called "Isolated Queen Pawn Struggle" is a great one. There is this book club recently started which aims to discuss 2 chapters of a nominated and won book every week. Meaning, in the forum, you get to read and discuss a book chosen by the forum members. I think they have started to discuss End Game Manual by Dvoretsky.

Here, you check it out...Chess Videos..



Oh boy! I'm lost for words but still can't get enough of the resources available online.

And yes, please check out the right side panel board of our blog. there, you can find lots of links for chess federations, play chess sites, scholastic and training chess sites.

Guys, it's worth your cybertime! Gotta go now! Oooops! Before I go, I'd like to make a disclaimer... I am not paid to write such stuffs! It's a voluntary thing for me becuase those sites i wrote about and the ones I linked with helped me so much for free. So this is also for free!

Ciao!

Easy moments

Hi there!

Just came back from snack time with my grade 3 students. I shared the table with the following boys: Cris and Shawn (both my private chess students), Dylan and Guarav. Here is something that made me laugh aloud inside the cafeteria:

Cris: Did you kow the fattest guy in the world could not get up his bed for 5 years?

Boys: Really?

Cris: Yes!

Shawn: What happened on the sixth?

Cris: He got up!

Mr. Francis: What made him decide to do so?

Cris: I don't know, maybe he didn't like the bed anymore!


My goodness! It took six years to know he didn't like it! Hahahahah! I was laughing on my own, smiling inside my head and heart on my way back to my office!

Sorry for me!

Over the weekend (a long one!), I got the chance to play against Fritz 7 on my worn-out laptop. I have not won a game against it unless I would switch it off (but still remembers the last position/game we had though!)

There was one game I could not forget because I was up with a K + R + N against K + R. I was handling white pieces... My daughter was watching and my wife and they were quietly hoping I could win so that I 'll hand over the laptop for them to play their Dinner Dash 2 thingy...

And then the disappointment...

W: Kiko Goodventure
B: Fritz 7
Venue: Imus Cavite
Date: May 11, 2007



You could imagine the disappointment I shared with my wife and Patricia. On my part, I was ahead and thought I would finally beat Fritz... on their part, it took 3 more games before I quit and handed the computer to them. Imagine the ooohhs! and aahhhs! I heard afterwards.

Hehehehe!

Monday, May 14, 2007

Election day!

This was to be posted yesterday, I don't know what happened why when I checked now, it did not register... anyways, sad election day story I saw on the news this morning! My God! There was one guy shown on TV harrassing a female inside a Spa trying to look for an evidence for election cheating... so cheap!


Hi there!

Today is May 14, 2007, election day in our country, the Philippines! I have just voted, an hour ago and I am taking this time to post before heading back home to Baranggay Bayan Luma 3, one of the oldest baranggay in Imus Cavite (the name!).

To start things off,I received another text message from our friend is based in Ireland, Xavier "doods" Busig (NCFP rating 1987) saying:

"chessmates, my score update, 5-0. Every saturday lang ang games namin, so next week again. 4 more rounds remaining...Looks like it's in the bag na!!! heheheh!"

Congratulations to you my friend!

And, I received The Weekender yesterday and got to open only today... really a great work from Sir Manny... let's go check them all...

AFTER WINNING 2ND NAT’L CROWN
Wesley in dilemma over career, studies


Mom bewails lack of proper training, funding support BACOOR wonder boy Wesley So is “ready to compete for our country” anywhere in this world, and the only constraints are where to get proper training and financial support, according to his parents.

“As I have observed, Wesley loves chess,” said his mother Leny in reply to our query about his plans for the immediate future.

“He looks determined, focused and happy (when playing chess)… As long as he is happy, leads a balanced life as a teenager and takes care of his studies, then that’s fine with us (Leny and her husband, William).”

In short, should it be studies first before career for the country’s most gifted youngster and reigning national champion?

The Weekender interviewed Mrs. So by email after Wesley captured the national junior crown on Thursday, barely five months after topping the Pichay Cup National Open last December.

He made history both times as the youngest ever to win the National Open and the National Junior championships.

An international master with already one grandmaster’s norm to his name, the 13-year-old prodigy is seen as the country’s best hope for a world crown.

Wesley went through the National Juniors undefeated, but was not too sure of getting the top place entering the ninth and final round.

Fortunately for Wesley, his closest rival, Julius Joseph de Ramos, 18, who had been ahead of him on tiebreak points after the penultimate eighth, lost with White in the ninth to unheralded Kim Steven Yap from Cebu.

Wesley and Julius Joseph had drawn their game when they met in an earlier round.

In his final test, Wesley also faced tough opposition from little-known James Bulicatan of Davao.

In a rook-and-bishop ending, however, Wesley gradually gained a pawn and nursed it to victory.

He scored 8.5 points from eight wins and one draw, a full point clear of Yap and de Ramos, who shared the second and third prizes.

With the junior championship trophy, Wesley went home P15,000 richer.

Five others ended up in a tie for fourth to eighth places with 7.0 points each—Luffe Magdalaga, Ivan Gil Biag, Andrew Delfin, Mari Joseph Turqueza (he is the son of the QMC Chess Club president, Gene Turqueza), and Luke Farre.

Five players led by Richelieu Salcedo followed them with 6.5 each for the ninth to 13th places. The four others were Emmanuel John Salazar, Lelu Dan Laceste, Joseph Mercado and James Ryan Fernandez.

In the under-20 girls’ division, Aices Salvador, a 17-year-old La Salle business management student, scored 8.0 points to win the P10,000 cash prize pluys trophy.

She was also a full point ahead of her closest rivals—Jan Jodilyn Fronda, Cherry Lin Guiang and Marie Angeli Dimakiling, who shared the second to fourth prizes.

Marie Angeli is the younger sister of last year’s Turin Olympiad veteran, IM Oliver Dimakiling.

The NCFP story written by pool reporter Ed Andaya said Fronda outclassed WNM Kimberly Jane Cunanan, Guiang trounced Annie Montales and Dimakiling whipped Rulp Ylem Jose in the ninth and final round.

Ylem Jose, Christy Bernales and Jedara Docena had 6.5 points each to tie for fifth to seventh places, followed by nine other girls with 6.0 each.

• Wesley So - Jimson V. Bitoon
Sicilian, Maroczay Bind (B38)

1.e4 c5 2.Nf3² Nc6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 g6 5.c4 Bg7 6.Be3 Nf6 7.Nc3 d6 8.Be2 0–0 9.0–0 Bd7 10.Qd2 Nxd4 11.Bxd4 Not 11.Qxd4 because of 11…Ng4 12.Qd3 Nxe3 13.Qxe3 Qa5, and Black has equalized Bc6 12.f3 Nd7 13.Be3 a5 14.b3 Nc5 15.Rab1 Qb6 16.Rfc1 Rfc8 17.Rc2 Qd8 18.Bf1 b6 19.a3 h5 19...Be5 20.b4 Nd7 21.Bg5 would have restored the balance 20.Qf2² Kh7 21.Nd5 Bxd5 22.exd5 Qh8 23.g3 Rc7 24.Kh1 Rb7 25.f4 f5 Best was 25...Qc8! 26.Bg2 Bf6 27.Bf3 Nd7 28.Qe2 Kg7 29.Kg2 Rc8 30.h3 Rbc7 31.g4 Kf8 32.gxh5 gxh5 33.Bxh5 b5 34.Kh2 a4 35.bxa4 Bd4? 35...bxc4 was better 36.Bxd4 Qxd4 37.Qe6 Qxf4+ 38.Kg1 Ne5 39.Rf1 Qe3+ 40.Kh2 Kg7 41.Qxf5 Missing the more decisive 41.Rg2+!, e.g., 41...Kh8 42.Rxf5 Ng4+ 43.Bxg4 Qxe6 44.Rh5+ Qh6 45.Rxh6+ Kg7 46.Rh5! Kh8 42.axb5 Kg8 43.Bg4 43.Bf7+ would have led to mate, e.g., 43…Kg7 44.Rg2+ Qg3+ 45.Rxg3+ Ng4+ 46.Qxg4+ Kf8 47.Qg7#! Nf3+ 44.Qxf3! 1–0

All systems go for inaugural clinic

IT’S all systems go for the first clinic to be held at the Quezon Memorial Circle Chess Plaza by its newly formed club under its president, lawyer Gene Turqueza.

The clinic will be conducted by Juan Tapel Jr., who trained the reigning 12-year-old girl champion of Caloocan City, Joymee O. Morales.

Among those who have enrolled in the eight-session course for beginners is Adrian “Adi” Maronilla Jr., 6, the whiz kid from Mindoro who astounded the nation with his mental feats like naming all constellations in the heavens and the capital cities of almost all nations.

Adi, who will be in Grade IV at the Headway School of the Gifted in Diliman, Quezon City next month, has been playing occasionally at the plaza with grown-ups.

He was taught at five how to move pieces on the board by his mother, Mary Nol, a relative of GM Joey Antonio.

Among his classmates will be Samantha Grace Planas Maceda, adopted daughter of a niece of former Quezon City vice mayor Charito Planas, well-known civic leader who heads the Quezon City Parks Development Foundation, Inc., which administers the Quezon Memorial Circle.

Another early enrollee is Jonathan Aragones, six-year-old son of lawyer Jerome Aragones, who also is a habitué of the QMC Chess Plaza Club.

Registration is still open. Class starts at 3:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 20, at the Plaza to last until 5 p.m. Sessions will be held for eight successive Sunday afternoons.

The Plaza opens at 9 a.m. every day under caretaker Efren Arguelles, a highly rated non-master from Tanauan Batangas, and his assistant, Ricardo “Boying” Medillo.

Interested parents may contact Alfredo V. Chay at the QCFPDI offices, tel. No. 4353603, for details.

Registration fee for the entire course, which will be held at the QMC Plaza, is P1,500.

Shell Youth active chess series to start June 23-24

THIS year’s edition of the National Youth Active Chess Championship series gets under way in the fourth weekend of next month with the two-tier elimination tournament for players aged 20 and below (juniors) and 14 and below (kiddies) in the National Capital Region.

The June 23-24 NCR qualifier will be held at SM City Manila, just behind City Hall.

The NCR elimination tournament will kick off the nationwide search for the best young players of the land.

The Shell active chess series will consist of eight legs, to be held in the various major regions of the archipelago.

Interested parties may contact chief national coordinator Alex Dinoy for details at 744-1644 or 0922-8288510.

Regional coordinators are Mariano Cabugos at 078 844-2894 Tuguegarao; German Francisco, 0919-5658981 Dagupan; Joselito Castro, 043 723-2568/723-4246 Batangas; NM Cesar Mariano, 033 336-6205/0919-2833826 Iloilo; Odilon Badilles, 0926-5187156 Cebu; NA Ronnie Tabadlong, 082 300-4260 or 0918-3590531 Davao; and Engr. Carlos Florendo, o920-6279784 Zamboanga.

The Shell Youth series is the longest-existing annual event in the country.

It has produced such stalwarts as GMs Mark Paragua and Nelson Mariano II.

The final stage of the nationwide series will take place at SM Megamall in October

REVOLUTION IN THE GRASSROOTS
The Pichay Chess Caravan


THERE is a silent revolution going on in the grassroots and it was not initiated by a radical leftist group like the insurgent NPA but by an innovative engine of discovery: the Pichay Chess Caravan, which is now on a great roll in the countryside.

Since its launch last year by the National Chess Federation of the Philippines under Surigao del Sur Rep. Prospero Pichay Jr., the Chess Caravan has had 60 legs on its barangay-to-barangay tour of Metro Manila and nearby provinces like Bulacan, Rizal, Cavite, Laguna, Pampanga, Tarlac and Pangasinan.

Nothing like it has happened before in the entire history of the Philippines—or perhaps of the world—as it has reawakened both city and rural folk to the urgent need of embracing and popularizing chess as the mind sport where “brainy” Pinoys will certainly excel.

Congressman Pichay launched the project long before the start of the political campaign not to promote his own bid for the Senate but to regain lost ground in this “game of kings and king of games.”

Win or lose, he said he would continue supporting the Chess Caravan, a ragtag band of chess enthusiasts, masters and non-masters alike, that has drawn warm and enthusiastic response and support from the people in all places it has visited

Everywhere it went, despite its meager resources, the Pichay Chess Caravan endeared itself to the common tao, whether in crowded urban cities or in sparsely populated
barangays in mountainous and hilly areas or the central plains of Luzon.

The Caravan’s crewmen have risked life and limb going to all sorts of places just to spread the gospel of Caissa, unmindful of the risks they are taking, all for the sake of Philippine chess.

Even now as you read this, the Pichay caravan is likely crisscrossing Metro Manila in fulfillment of its mission to visit neighborhoods in the National Capital Region.

This week alone it has visited six places:

• Monday—Don Bosco in Tondo, Bgy. 116, Zone 9 covered court, with Cris Mangilaya as coordinator;
• Tuesday—Project 4, Quezon City, Bagumbayan Covered Court, with Mrs. Fopalan as coordinator.
• Wednesday—Bagong Barrio Covered Court, Caloocan City, with Juancho Caunte as coordinator.
• Thursday—Santolan, Pasig City, with Dennis San Juan as Coordinator.
• Friday—Parola, Tondo, Manila, Covered Court, with Rading Moje as coordinator.
• Saturday—Bago Bantay, Quezon City, Covered Court, Romblon/F. Santiago Sts., Bgy. Santo Cristo, with Judy Erazo as coordinator.

The Quezon Memorial Circle Chess Plaza hosted the Pichay Caravan’s visit on Easter Sunday, with Alfredo V. Chay as coordinator.

It was one of the best-attended events in the country’s premier chess plaza—ever.

One of the objectives of the Caravan’s barangay visits is to discover young talents who may someday be champions of this game of kings.

The main activities of the Caravan during a visit include a chess clinic, simultaneous exhibitions by the masters and a mixed tournament for non-masters, grown-ups and youngsters of both genders alike.

Chess as a challenging intellectual sport is known to be a powerful attraction to the youth and a potent antidote to drug abuse and other vices.

Even as this is written, a future world champion is likely waiting to be discovered in a nondescript neighborhood somewhere in the country.—Based on a press release from the NCFP Chess Caravan

And of course, Sir Bobby's 2 articles from Chess Piece...

Consolation Prize

THE “Subic Massacre” is over. In the just-concluded Subic Open, the Chinese GMs took home 90% of the prize fund, occupied the first 5 places and outclassed our local top players, let us take stock, what good came out of organizing the Subic Open?

Senatoriable Prospero Pichay, the current President of the National Chess Federation of the Philippines (NCFP), was clearly not happy last year during the closing ceremonies of the First GMA Cup when our Pinoy chessers were pushed to the background by the foreign GMs. It would be interesting to speculate on what was his reaction given that we performed even worse this year.

But wait! Let us put this in the proper perspective.

If you list down the players according to their respective ELO numbers, you will see that the highest rated Pinoy, GM Joey Antonio, has 2539, which is ranked no. 10, meaning that we really were not expected to contend for the top prizes. So why the disappointment?

I guess it is because of the fantasy most Pinoys carry that the Filipinos are very strong players who have not had a chance to play in tournaments abroad, we are under-rated, and the foreign players coming here toting high ELO numbers are going to lose a lot of these when they meet up against our local masters.

That may be true before, but not anymore. Just go to India or Vietnam to see the hordes of promising young players, and you will see coaches going around the boards, trying to spot new talent. Singapore has chess in its school curriculum. There are chess schools which house grandmasters and international masters from all around the world, and they deploy these players to the various schools and teach their elementary students chess. Promising players are identified and assigned to higher-level instructors. One of these, IM Enrique Paciencia, once remarked to me that already he sees that in a few more years even Singapore will overtake the Philippines in the regional chess hierarchy.

In other words, this trend is not going to change. All the prize money in these international opens will continue to be won by foreign GMs if we continue to rely on our old guard. It might be a good idea to concentrate NCFP money on our juniors for the next two years and see how they pan out. To paraphrase an old saying, “if it’s broke, we have got to fix it.”

Lecture is over. Let us take a few moments to look at the consolation prizes we got out of the Subic Open.

FM Julio Catalino Sadorra got his third and final IM norm and is now a full-fledged International Master. Congratulations Ino!

Seven years ago, Ino, John Paul Gomez and Oliver Barbosa were the strongest batch of 14-year-olds ever in the Philippines. I am afraid that this is a perfect illustration of just how much we have messed up. At that time I had proposed to organize a training team of these youngsters, perhaps to include Roderick Nava, Joseph de Ramos, Vic Neil Villanueva, Dino Ballecer and a few others, train them intensely and these people will be the ones who will carry the honor of the country in five or six years. This plan was to be underwritten by the Philippine Chess Society.

The idea was relegated to the trash can (“just give us the money and we will take care of it”) and now, seven years later, the only one among this batch who is an International Master is Ino Sadorra. Ironic too, because his whole family migrated to Singapore five years ago and that is where he got his norms and tournament experience I’d also like to congratulate NM Ernesto Fernandez of Pagadian City for a great performance. He scored 5/9 against very strong opposition. Some people told me that Fernandez got an IM norm, but I am quite skeptical about this report, for his foreign opponents were from China and Indonesia, while a norm requirement is that they must be from three different federations.

Here is his victory over GM Joey Antonio.

Antonio,Rogelio Jr (2539) - Fernandez,Ernesto [B31]
Phil Open Subic Bay Freeport Zone (7.8)
Sicilian Defense, Rossolimo Variation

1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 Nf6 4.Nc3 g6 5.0–0 Bg7 6.h3 0–0 7.Bxc6 bxc6 8.d3 d6 9.Be3 Re8 10.Qd2 Nd7 11.Bh6 Bh8 12.Ng5 Rb8 13.Rab1 Qa5 14.Qf4 Ne5 15.Qg3

Obviously GM Joey intends to push his f-pawn down the board, so Black has to counter right away.

15...f6 16.f4 fxg5 17.fxe5 Bxe5 18.Qxg5 Be6 19.Kh1

Most players would play 19.h4 without a second thought, but GM Joey realizes that the cunning Fernandez had prepared 19...Rb7! and White would be routed if he continues with 20.h5? Bd4+ 21.Kh1 Bf6! 22.Rxf6 exf6 23.Qxf6 c4!

19...Qc7 20.Qd2 Bg7 21.Bxg7 Kxg7 22.e5 d5 23.Na4 Qxe5

Forced. Protecting the pawn with 23...Rb5 allows the White queen to assume a threatening position on f4.

24.Nxc5 Qd6 25.Qc3+ Kg8

Not 25...d4?? 26.Qxd4+ Kg8 (26...Qxd4 27.Nxe6+ Kg8 28.Nxd4 wins a knight and a pawn) 27.Nxe6 Qxe6 leaves white a pawn up. In the light of Black's fractured pawn structure and his exposed king, I would say white has enough to win.

26.d4 Rf8 27.b4 Bf5 28.Rbe1 Rf6 29.Kg1 Rbf8 30.a3 Bc8 31.Qe3 R8f7 32.c3 Kg7 33.a4 h6 34.a5 g5 35.Rxf6 exf6 36.Qe8?

White did not realize that Fernandez is not yet out of tricks. He should have played 36.Re2 first.

36...Bxh3! 37.Ne6+
[37.gxh3 Qg3+ draw]
37...Bxe6 38.Rxe6 Qd7?

[38...Qf4! is the saving move, threatening perpetual check. If White goes back with the rook, 39.Re1 then 39...g4! and it is White who is in trouble]

39.Qxd7 Rxd7 40.Rxc6 h5 41.a6?

It is GM Joey’s turn to err. 41.b5 followed by b5-b6 is much better, for this way he can threaten to advance the pawn without giving up the c-file. See the next note.

41...Kg6 42.b5 Kf5 43.Kf2

This is what I meant in the previous note. If White wants to advance his pawn he has to play 43.b6 and now 43...axb6 44.Rxb6 Black gets the c-file: 44...Rc7! to continue the line further 45.Rb7 Rxc3 46.a7 Ra3 Black wins.

43...h4 44.Rc8 g4 45.Rb8 Rc7 46.Rb7 Rxc3 47.Rxa7 g3+ 48.Ke2?

GM Joey is trying too hard to win. 48.Ke1 is best. Things could get complicated, though, with 48...Rc1+ 49.Kd2 Rg1 then 50.Re7! Rxg2+ 51.Re2 h3 52.a7 I don't know who is winning.

48...Rc2+ 49.Kd3 Rxg2 50.Rg7 Ra2 51.a7

After 51.a7

51...Rxa7! 52.Rxa7 g2 53.Rg7 h3 54.b6 h2 55.b7 g1Q 56.Rxg1 hxg1Q 57.b8Q

Black had to visualize several moves back that this position is won for him.

57...Qd1+ 58.Ke3 Qe1+ 59.Kf3 Qe4+ 60.Kg3 Qg4+ 1-0

Black's next move is 61...Qf4+, transposing into a won pawn endgame.

Subic Epilogue (part 2)

BEFORE we finally leave the topic of the Subic Open let me show to you two games of interest. First is the gigantic hammer-and-tongs fight between the tournament winner and Indonesian legend Utut Adianto, and second, by insistent popular demand, is GM Eugene Torre’s win over GM Varuzhan Akobian of the USA.

Wang Yue (2656) - Adianto,Utut (2587) [D26]
Phil Open, Subic Bay Freeport Zone (4.29)
Queen's Gambit Accepted.

At the insistent prodding of Raul Sol Cruz of Meralco, from now on I will put in the English name of the Opening in addition to the ECO Code.

1.d4 d5 2.Nf3 Nf6 3.c4 dxc4

The Queen's Gambit Accepted is Adianto's main weapon against the d4 openings. As the leader of the Indonesian school of chess most of his countryman also have this same opening in their repertoire. In other words, if you are going to play chess in Asia you had better be prepared to face the QGA.

4.e3 a6 5.Bxc4 b5

The classical line goes 5...e6 6.0–0 c5. The text is Adianto's specialty, lately also taken up by China's Wang Hao.

6.Bd3 Bb7 7.0–0 e6 8.Qe2 Nbd7 9.a4 b4 10.e4 Be7

Black would like to play 10...c5 but then 11.d5 exd5 12.e5 followed by e5-e6 is quite dangerous.

11.Nbd2 c5 12.e5

[12.d5 does not look so threatening anymore: 12...exd5 13.e5 Nh5 14.g3 (14.e6 fxe6 15.Qxe6 Nf4 is the complete answer) 14...g6 15.e6 fxe6 16.Qxe6 Ng7 17.Qh3 0–0 18.b3 Bf6 19.Ra2 Ne5 20.Nxe5 Bxe5 21.Rd1 Qf6 22.Nf1 Qf3 23.Be2 Qxf2+ 0–1 Dydyshko,V (2581)-Cernousek,L (2369)/ Cartak 2004]

12...Nd5 13.Nb3 cxd4

Almost forced. The incautious 13...0–0 is met by 14.dxc5 Nxc5 15.Nxc5 Bxc5 16.Bxh7+! Kxh7 17.Ng5+ Kg8 (17...Kg6? 18.Qe4+ f5 19.exf6+ Kh5 20.Qh7+ Kg4 21.Qh3#) 18.Qc2 g6 19.Qxc5 Rc8 20.Qa7 White is a pawn up and Black's king position is still not yet secure. Levin,F (2475)-Vadasz,L (2320)/ Budapest 1997 1–0 (31).

14.Bd2 0–0 15.Rac1 Qb8 16.a5 Qa7 17.Nfxd4 Nc5 18.Nxc5 Bxc5 19.Nf3

It is now clear that White will be attacking on the kingside featuring an h-pawn advance.

19...Be7 20.h4 Rad8 21.h5 Rd7 22.Ng5 Bxg5 23.Bxg5 h6 24.Bd2 Rfd8 25.Bb1 Qd4

Now the dam breaks.

26.Bxh6!? gxh6 27.Rc4 Qa7 28.Rg4+ Kf8 29.Qd2 Ke7?

[29...Ne3! forces off the queens, and after 30.Qxe3 Qxe3 31.fxe3 Rd2 I don't see any advantage any more for White]

30.Qxh6 Rc7 31.Qg5+ Kd7 32.h6 Rcc8 33.Qg7 Rf8 34.h7 Qc5 35.Rd1 Kc7 36.Bd3 Qxa5 37.Qxf8!

Always a pleasure to make moves like this.

37...Rxf8 38.Rg8 Nf4!

Adianto takes the move which gives more practical chances. He sees that 38...Qc5 39.h8Q Rxg8 40.Qxg8 Qe7 allows him to escape with only quality down, but two more moves forward ... 41.Rc1+ Kb6 42.Qb8! Black is paralyzed.

39.h8=Q
[39.Rxf8 Qd5 40.Rxf7+ Kb6 41.Rg7 Nh3+!? (41...Nxg2? 42.Be2 forces resignation) 42.Kf1 Nxf2 brings unwanted complications]

39...Qd5 40.Rc1+ Kb6 41.Bf1 Qd2?!

It appears that best chances come from 41...Rxg8! 42.Qxg8 Nh3+ 43.Kh2 Qxe5+ 44.Qg3 (44.Kxh3? Qh5+ 45.Kg3 Qe5+ draw) 44...Nxf2! Black still has drawing chances
42.Rc4!

[42.Rxf8? Qxc1 43.Qh4 Ka5 44.Rxf7 Bxg2 45.Rxf4 Qxf1+ 46.Kh2 Bd5 unclear]

42...Ng6 43.Qg7 Rxg8 44.Qxg8 Nxe5 45.Rh4 a5 46.Qg3 f6 47.Rf4 f5 48.Rh4 Ng4 49.Rh7 e5

After so many tactical adventures White's attack has evaporated and Black's offensive has kicked in.

50.f3? Qd4+ 51.Kh1 Qd1 52.fxg4 Qxf1+ 53.Kh2 f4 54.Qh3 Be4?
[54...Qf2 is correct, getting the b2-pawn. Adianto did not see Wang Yue's 63rd move]

55.Re7 f3? 56.Rxe5 fxg2

The crucial position. Can White mate Black before he gets mated himself?
57.Qe3+ Ka6 58.Qh6+ Ka7 59.Re7+ Bb7 60.Qe3+ Ka6 61.Re6+ Kb5 62.Rb6+ Ka4

After 62...Ka4

There! The checks will soon run out and Black wins, right?
63.Qa3+!!

Wrong. After 63...bxa3 64.b3 is mate. 1–0

GM Varuzhan Akobian is a native Armenian who emigrated to the USA as a child. He grew up in the Los Angeles area and played most of his chess there. On the gossipy side, he is known for an incident during the Bahamas party at the 2006 Turin Olympiad. You will recall that Fil-Australian beauty Arianne Caoili showed up with the Armenian top board Levon Aronian. When they started dancing the heart-broken Englishman Daniel Gormally came over and shoved Aronian to the ground. Shocked at this gross disrespect to the leader of Armenian chess, Varuzhan Akobian ran over and swung at Gormally. He was the one that American captain Yasser Seirawan restrained to restore order.

Aren’t you glad you read “Chess Piece”?

Torre,Eugenio (2532) - Akobian,Varuzhan (2574) [D00]
2007 Subic Int'l Open Subic, Olongapo City (6), 16.04.2007
Reversed Chigorin

1.d4 d5 2.Bf4 c5 3.Nc3 e6 4.e3 a6 5.Nf3 Nf6 6.a3 Nbd7 7.Bd3 b5 8.0–0 Bb7 9.Ne5 Be7 10.Qf3 0–0 11.Rad1 Nxe5 12.dxe5 Nd7 13.Qh3 g6 14.Bh6 Nxe5!

Akobian correctly assesses that the minor pieces are more valuable than the rooks in this position.

15.Bxf8 Qxf8 16.Rfe1 Bf6 17.e4 d4 18.Nb1 c4 19.Bf1 Qc5 20.Nd2 h5

The chances are all on Akobian's side, but it would be an exaggeration to say that he is already winning.

21.Nf3 Rd8 22.Nxe5 Bxe5 23.Qh4 Rd7 24.g3 Kg7 25.Qg5 Qc7 26.Qd2 Qb6 27.Kh1 h4 28.f4 Bf6?

A mistake, allowing 29.g4. Akobian should have played 28...Bc7!? and now if 29.g4 then 29...Qd6 and the two bishops rule.

29.g4! d3 30.cxd3 cxd3 31.g5 Bd4 32.Qxd3 Bc6 33.Qc2 e5 34.Bh3 Rc7 35.f5 Bb7 36.Qe2 Rc4 37.f6+ Kg8 38.Qg4 Bf2? 39.Re2 Bc8 40.Qf3 Bxh3 41.Qxh3

[41.Rxf2? may look interesting, getting rid of the f2- bishop which protects the h4-pawn, but Black will then get a nice tactical shot in, 41...Bg4! 42.Qxg4 Qxf2 Black wins]

41...Bd4 42.Qxh4 Qc5 43.Qh6 Qf8 44.Qxf8+ Kxf8

White's winning chances lie in advancing his kingside pawn majority.

45.Kg2 Ke8 46.h4 Kd7 47.Kf3 a5 48.Kg4 Ke6 49.h5 gxh5+ 50.Kxh5 Rc8 51.Kh6 a4 52.Kg7 Rc7 53.Rf1 1–0

Akobian resigns. GM Torre will simply play g5-g6 followed by pushing his f-pawn forward.

FROM MY SWIVEL CHAIR
Players pin hopes on Pichay, Pimentel


PLAYERS all over the country pin their hopes on the election to the Senate of candidates Prospero “Butch” Pichay and Aquilino “Koko” Pimentel as true and tested friends of chess. I join them in praying for their victory in tomorrow’s national election. I hope that, once elected, they will join forces in promoting chess.

—0—

I BELIEVE that Butch Pichay’s greatest contribution to the game of kings is the Chess Caravan, which is going great guns popularizing the game we all love in the grassroots, the barangays. If every barangay has a chess club, the future of the Philippine chess is assured.

—0—

AS regards Koko Pimentel, he and his father have long been associated with chess. Nene Pimentel is a former president of the Philippine Chess Federation while Koko used to be a top varsity player for the Ateneo and UP. He has promised to propose bills that will benefit chess and other sports in general.

—0—

IT is every decent citizen’s hope that tomorrow’s elections will be fair, honest and above all peaceful. Vigilance is the price of liberty, and this is most needed during the casting and counting of votes, the very heart of a genuine democracy. Chess players, do your part as civic-spirited citizens!

—0—

THE media have the most important role to play. It should keep watch, not to take sides but to see to it that the law prevails in the exercise of the right of suffrage. The TV camera is the biggest deterrent to fraud and violence, and a vigilant press can help keep the elections free, honest and fair. Journalists, be fair too!

—0—

IT is sad that in both the Age-Group and Junior Championships at the Marketplace, divisive politics surfaced, such that only one of the two rival factions of the NCFP was involved. I saw only the faces of the “ruling faction” officers at the playing hall. What example are these
“leaders” giving the youth?

—0—

DITTO with journalists. Those identified with “the other” faction were also conspicuously absent,and a number of newspapers did not carry any news about either event. That’s carrying factionalism too far. A journalist who is petty and partisan is no journalist at all. He should be shunned and ostracized by the rest.

—0—

I WAS shocked to hear about the supposed payola, said to run in the thousands of pesos, one should give to media people in order to have an event publicized. I never expected that would come to pass in the post-martial law and -EDSA I era. How can a corrupt press be an effective guardian of freedom?

—0—

I PREFER to think that what I heard was just that—hearsay. But supposing it’s true, as, shall we say, a matter of individual “practice,” should it be condoned or taken as just a “sign of the times”? The bigger papers should take the lead in cleaning up the institution of the press. It stinks!

—0—

I SAY all this because, as the saying goes, “The pen is mightier than the sword!”


------

There goes TW for this issue. envelope journalism discussed in the swivel chair by sir Manny? Subic Swindling? or Subic Fiasco? well, the state of Philippine chess...On the competitive level, I head someone say Fiipinos are feared for in the International scene because of the unorthodox manner we play... but hey! In life and in sports, you get to give that monstrous greatness by winning every games and tournaments you join, not by playing out of text!

Play chess, chess play!

Saturday, May 12, 2007

Blogging

Hi guys!

Been awhile since I last posted here, I guess it was 2 or 3 days ago...yes! It's a long for a blog addict like me. Well, somehow, things have been quite taxing here at work since we are on our last month of our schoolyear and we have (I especially!) to write down all our reports, meet deadlines and parents as well. Yup! Special Education requires the Parent-School-Teacher collaboration. These are some of the reasons why I have not had the chance of writing for PCC lately.

Anyways, I'd like to direct you to some updates I found on the net regarding our beloved chess in the Philippines...

For further news, go to Paragua joins in Central Luzon Rapid Chess.

Also here,we'll see the resumption of NCFP Chess Caravan in Quezon City.

Aside from that, there's not much news except of course those real thing that happens in chess... those players who keep the chess flame in their lives by playing them, in parks, sideroads, under the overpass etc.

Hmmmm? why don't I take shots of these people and post them here?

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Email from a chess friend

From a chess friend, I believe the chess community could give this a serious consideration, of course specially the organizers of big tournaments...


Given my gripes about how tournaments are organized here, I read this earlier today and thought I'd share with you and your blog.

______________________________

ORGANISERS of Bahrain's first international chess tournament last night vowed to host many more events of the same calibre in the near future.

Bahrain Chess Club (BCC) vice-president Ahmed Haddad said this competition is a breakthrough for the chess community in the Kingdom and hopes that it acts as a catalyst for the development of the sport.

"This is definitely the first step in returning chess to its glory days of the 1980s when the local scene was just unbelievable," Haddad told the GDN.

"We held at least one tournament every month, but sometimes there would be more, so we ended up having maybe 14 or 15 tournaments a year, which is really a lot.

"Hopefully this tournament will contribute in getting the players back to that level of activity, and most importantly raise the locals' interest in chess and also enhance the quality of Bahrain's local players," he added.

BCC treasurer and vice-president of the tournament's organising committee Jamal Abdulghaffar agreed, saying that Bahraini youngsters should make the most of this tournament where four GMs and three IMs are in action.

"We can all learn a lot from them," Abdulghaffar explained. "We can get an insight into new techniques, strategies and styles from them. They study chess, and they live for chess."

The organising committee has received a lot of praise for the smooth conduct of the tournament, not only from Bahrain residents but also visiting players and officials.

"This is a very nice tournament to play in, and Bahrain is a very pleasant place to visit," said GM Arnaud Hauchard from France said. "I like the country very much. The people are very relaxed and polite. It's perfect for me, it feels like paradise."

"Everything has been great from the word 'go'," added Indian IM Sriram Jha. "I've been really tired the past few days, having travelled from Iceland to Italy and now straight to Bahrain for three successive tournaments, but it's been very relaxing here. It's been a wonderful experience so far."

__________________________________



And to think it's their FIRST international chess tournament. It doesn't give details, though, on the venue of the tournament, where the players stayed, etc.

Best wishes,

John Sy

National Juniors

Hi there!

After the experimentation with the slideshow and where I'd put it, I've finally settled with the idea that it stays on the right-side control panel. Also, I decided I will remove our beloved Philippine Flag and Flickr badge becuase both contents can be included in our newly installed slideshow. Aside from that, everything is the same.

So we go now to chess news...

National Juniors end today with of course, Philippine's brightest hope (assuming he does not make a Thorpe Act) Wesley So leading the pack. For further news, go to Journal Online.

For the Bicol Open, Bagamasbad on top!

Aside from that, these nasty issues surrounding my workplace is really draining the life in me...

Guess I need to go and play for awhile at Chess MSN Zone. This bloated rating zone gives me a 1900+ as of the moment which I feel is far from my RedHot Pawn correspondence chess rating of 1500+, which by the way, is also way above my ICC 14 day trial rating of 1300+. Heheheehe!

Chess, chess and more chess!

Slideshow update

Hi there!

Yesterday I discovered slideshow.com and it made me consider letting go of flickr. I have not decided yet what design to use for the template but I guess the position where I'll put it is right below our blog's heading name.

I hope you guys would like the additional feature of our blog. Nothing is final yet but hopefully I'll get some feedbacks from you guys, fellow chess fans all over the world.

Till then!

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

Trial Slideshow'

Philippine Election '07

Hi there!

May 14 2007, Monday. Election day for us, registered voting age 18 years old and above...

Chess and election? Politics and chess? Superb mix? chess, election, war, battle, psychological warfare? Well, it's not just chess where we see the monstrous effect of the mix-up between chess and politics. Basketball, Football, Swimming...

All the National Sports Association (NSA) here in our country will do better if politicking between their members and officers veer away from such activities. To be or not to be? Or the age-old instinct, stay away from it all, live your own life, don't mind them, and earn your living!

But... yes, there's the big but. Not your double lettered t at the end of the word but. But I believe, chess has also benefitted from politics (politicos) who sincerely has the love for the game.

As one of the NM's I chatted with some days ago, chess players and the chess community itself has three candidates this coming May 14... We have of course, NCFP's President and (saviour daw po!) Surigao del Sur Representative, Prospero Pichay Jr, Matt Defensor, whom I have always associated with chairmanship post of our country's chess federation and yes, Koko Pimentel. Pichay and Pimentel are running for a senate post and Matt Defensor I think (not really sure!) is running for a congressional seat in Quezon City.

AS for the residents of Imus Cavite and neighboring towns, we have the incumbent vice-mayor, Manny Maliksi, who has the distinction of being the Founding Chairman of the Imus Chess Association, Inc. We saw last year, together with ICAinc's adviser, IA Gene Poliarco, how much effort Manny has out in and given for chess and other sports in cavite, specially Imus.

Guys, I don't intend to preach that we go and vote for these guys, I only want you, just like me, to see with our clear vision what they have done for chess.

Anyways, come May 14, let's go out and vote responsibly. Again, there will be confusion and disorganization expected, let's keep in mind though that we can help clear and clean these mess. Let's be part of the solution, not the problem.

Vote wisely!

Tuesday, May 8, 2007

Of draws and men!

Hi there!

You think I'd be posting about drawn games? You think I like that? What's there in a draw anyway? Two players agreeing to a draw, both thinking they’re on the winning side? Or both trying to escape defeat?

Why would I post or write something about it? Is it because it is one of the up and coming issues in the chess world? Is it because there is one group planning to write their agenda against fighting draws to the World Chess Federation? That they really believe draws should be outdated? Outlawed in the land of the lawful chess land? La la la? draw? draw?

Ok! I give up! I am writing this post about drawn games in our beloved game called ajedrez! (in espanol? sa espanya?)

Heheheheh! I wanted to fool myself into thinking that I write comically, like the famous author of A B N K K B S N P L A KO? Alamat ng gubat, Stainless longganisa and his 2nd work which escapes my memory , Bob Ong.

Anyways, let’s go back to chess draws. Why go for zero when you can half the point against your enemy on the board? Assuming your on the losing side. And why agree to a draw when you know you’re on the winning side? And why in the world famous chess greats saw draws as the end of the royal game itself?

FIDE has not made any major reply about this, but there is a growing number of people concerned about draw, especially, fighting draws.

Sorry guys ha! But am not as great as I think I am when it comes to explaining concepts in chess. But you can ask me about special education and my theory about the behaviors of wives of chess playing-(actually addicts) husbands, maybe I can shed some light. But with fighting draws, I know drawn games have been fought also, same with lost and won games di ba? All games are fought, either lopsided or hard fought, they are still fighting games. Heheheheh! Fight! Fight! Fight!

Seriously now, although I am serious the whole time I was writing, again, it's just that I feel like I want to write this way today...funny? corny? Tangential? intangential? senseless?

Take two, seriously, there is a drawn game I saw in the 1st GMA Cup which until now makes me wanna' cry and kneel towards the escape artist named Sander Sevillano. Guess which round? Tan-tara-tan-tan-tan! His round 1 game. I was fortunate enough to be there, at the right time and moment, to catch upon this game. Man oh man! Sander was losing. He was down with (of course!) a King and two pawns against his mighty opponents (of course again!) King, 2 rooks and other pawns. Sander forced a draw! How he did it, sorry I don't have a copy of the notation... If ever you have one, send it to me please. That, for me, is an amazing draw from an amazing FM, Sander Sevillano!

And here is from The Weekenders' article about drawn games...

Amusing and amazing draws
I’M sure many players have savored the satisfaction of pulling off a draw in the face of what looked like certain defeat. I’m also sure many more have tasted the bitterness of frustration after being held to a draw in what they thought was a sure win.

Journalist Ignacio Dee has been searching for such games and have found what I believe are archetypes of draws that can tickle your funny-bone and even draw a chuckle, or raise one skeptical eyebrow or even startle both eyes wide open in utter disbelief.

Let’s start with the most amusing but at the same time unbelievable happenstance.

• Mark Taimanov (RUS) - Bent Larsen (DEN)
Rd. 9. Leningrad Interzonal 1973
Queen’s Indian Defense (E15)

1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3 b6 4.g3 Bb4+ 5.Bd2 Bxd2+ 6.Qxd2 Ba6 7.Na3 Bb7 8.Bg2 d6 9.0–0 Nbd7 10.Nh4 Bxg2 11.Nxg2 0–0 12.Rad1 c6 13.f3 d5 14.Rc1 c5 15.cxd5 Nxd5 16.Rfd1 Qe7 17.e4 N5f6 17...Nb4 18.dxc5 Nxa2 19.Ra1 leads to drawing lines 18.dxc5 Nxc5 19.Qd6 Qxd6 20.Rxd6 Rfc8 21.Rd2 g5 22.Ne3 Ncd7 23.Rxc8+ Rxc8 24.Nac4 b5 25.e5 bxc4 26.exf6 Nxf6 27.Rc2 c3 28.Nd1 28.Kf2 Kf8 would just keep the balance Nd5! 29.Nxc3 Kg7 30.Kf2 h5 31.Rc1 g4 32.f4 Kg6 33.Ne2 Rh8 Not 33...Rxc1 because of 34.Nxc1 f6 35.a3! 34.Nc3 Rb8 35.b3 Rc8 36.Ne2 Rxc1 37.Nxc1 Kf5 38.Nd3 Ke4 His Royal Highness wades into the fray to help his cavalry and foot soldiers win the battle 39.Ne5 f6 40.Nc6 a6 41.Nb8 Nb4 42.a3 Nd3+ 43.Kf1 h4 44.gxh4 Better than 44.Nxa6 because of 4…hxg3 45.hxg3 Kf3! Nxf4 45.Nxa6 Kf3 46.Nb4 e5 47.Nc2 e4

After 47…Ne4

Clearly an unbalanced game, but White accepted Black’s draw offer nevertheless. ½–½

Here is Iggy’s account in an email:

“According to Kotov in the tournament book, Larsen offered a draw before playing 47…e4. Taimanov replied: ‘Make your move and I’ll think about it.’ After about half an hour’s thought, Taimanov accepted Larsen’s offer.
“But White has two relatively simple winning moves: 48.a4 and 48.b4—48.a4 e3 49.Ne1+ Ke4 50.a5 Kd5 51.Nc2! (the move Taimanov missed) e7+ 52.Kf2 Kc5 53.b4+ Kb5 54.Nd4, and wins; 48.b4 e3 Nxe3! Kxe6 50 b5, and the twin threats of b and h pawns are decisive.”
Dee quoted Kotov as saying: “A rare form of chess blindness.” An understatement, indeed!
In the next game, two titans collide mightily in the annual Wijk aan Zee tournament in the Netherlands, with Black, facing certain defeat, being able to force a draw via repetition of moves with a pawn sac.

• Portisch Lajos (HUN) - Kavalek Lubomir (USA)
Wijk aan Zee 1975
King’s Indian, Saemisch Variation (E80)

1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.Nc3 Bg7 4.e4 d6 5.f3 c6 6.Be3 a6 7.Bd3 b5 8.e5 Nfd7 9.f4 0–0 10.Nf3 Nb6 11.b3 N8d7 12.a4 bxc4 13.bxc4 c5 13...d5!? would allow Black to play on: 14.cxd5 Nxd5 15.Nxd5 cxd5! 14.a5 cxd4 15.Nxd4 dxe5 16.Nc6 Qe8 17.axb6 If 17.Bxb6? Nxb6 18.Nxe5 Nd7! exf4 Not 17...Bb7 because of 18.Nxe5 Nxe5 19.fxe5 Bxg2 20.Rg1 Bxe5 21.Qc2, and White surges on 18.Nd5 fxe3 19.Nc7 Bc3+ 19...Bb7 won’t do, either: 20.Nxe8 Rfxe8 21.Na5 Bxg2 22.Rg1! 20.Kf1 Bb7 21.Nxe8 Bxc6 22.Nc7 Rad8 23.Rc1 Stronger was 23.Rxa6 Ne5 24.Nd5 Bxd5 25.cxd5 Rxd5 Bd2 23...Bb2 would be worse, e.g., 24.Rb1 Bxd5 26.cxd5 Rxd5 27.Rxb2 Nxd3 28.Rb1 24.Nd5 Better was 24.c5 Ne5 25.Bxa6 Bxc1 26.Qxc1 Rd2 Bxd5 25.cxd5 Nxb6 26.Rc5 Nxd5 27.g3 Rd6 28.Kg2 Not 28.Qb3 because of 28…Rf6+ 29.Kg2 Rf2+ 30.Kh3 e6 31.Bxa6 e2 32.Bxe2 Rxe2! Rfd8 29.Rxd5 29.Qf3 Nf4+ 30.Qxf4 Rxd3 was also playable Rxd5 30.Bc4 If 30.Bxa6 Kg7 Rf5 [30...R5d6 31.Rf1 e6 32.Qf3±] 31.Qb3 [¹31.Rf1!? Ba5 32.Qa4 Rd2+ 33.Kh3 Rxf1 34.Bxf1+-] 31...Rf2+ 32.Kh3 Rd6 33.Qb8+ Kg7 34.Qa7 On 34.Qb2+ Rff6! g5! Restoring the balance 35.Qxe7 35.Bxa6?? loses to 35...Rh6+!, leading to mate, 36.Kg4 f5+ 37.Kxg5 e2+ 38.Qe3 Bxe3#! g4+!!

After 35…g4+!!

A deflecting pawn-sacrifice that ensures the draw.

36.Kxg4 Rg6+ 37.Kh3 Rh6+ 38.Kg4 Rg6+ ½–½

----

Indeed! a drawn game is a won game when your handling the black pieces. Hay! Hay! Hay! Another post which gives me a sense of gratitude for the gift of words!

Hope you liked it!

Scholastic Basketball Camp

1st Founders' Cup

Scholastic Basketball Camp-1st Founders' Cup

16 & Under Division Ranking 2019

School Rank Wins
SV Montessori 4th 0
La Trinidad Academy Champion 5
Charis Christian Institute 2nd 4
La Camelle School 3rd 1

12 & Under Division Ranking 2019

School Rank Wins
SV Montessori 5th 0
La Trinidad Academy-Team A Champion 6
Charis Christian Institute 2nd 5
La Camelle School 3rd 4
La Trinidad Academy-Team B 4th 1