Thursday, July 30, 2009

ONGC Asian Youth Chess Championship starts on Sunday

New Delhi (30 Jul 09) :- Riding on the success of World Champion Vishwanathan Anand, the Indian Chess is on an all-time high with its players tasting success regularly at the international chess events. The chess fever is certain to grip the country as the ONGC Asian Youth Chess Championship 2009, which would be hosted by the Delhi Chess Association at ‘Tivoli Garden Resort’ from 02nd to 9th August 2009 has attracted 235 players till date with entries still pouring in. Competitions will be held in six age groups — U-8, U-10, U-12, U-14, U-16 and U-18 separately for boys and girls. So far, Vietnam, Iran, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Bhutan, UAE, Indonesia and Mongolia are among the nations who have confirmed the participation.

The strong Indian squad with 65 players is expected to reap a big harvest from the event that offers 36 medals. In the last edition at Tehran, India won 6 gold, 5 silver and 10 bronze. India is hoping clean sweep in some category but players from Iran and Vietnam can shatter Indian dreams as they fielded strong players. The Indian Challenge will be spear headed by ONGC sponsored World Under-14 Champion Vidit Santosh Gujarathi and World Under-12 Champion Sayantan Das. Grand Master Salem A. R. Saleh of UAE who won Under-16 category in last edition will start as favourite in Under-18 category this year.

The championship will be inaugurated by Shri. Ajay Maken, Minister for State Home Affairs, Government of India on 02 Aug 09 at 1830 hrs.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

-17 FIDE License Trainers for India

The first ever Orientation Workshop for Coaches which was held from 20-22 June 2009 at the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium in Chennai, India and conducted by FIDE Trainer Peter Long and FIDE Instructor Praful Zaveri, was a big success. Originally a National Instructor Level Workshop, a FIDE Instructor Level Examination was also offered on 23 June 2009 with the approval of FIDE General Secretary Ignatius Leong.

A total of 57 participants attended the three day Workshop, of which 17 became candidates for Certification, 10 for the FIDE Instructor title and 7 for the National Instructor title.

The Workshop included the following topics:


• Role of Trainers & FIDE Trainer System
• Organizing & Implementing Scholastics Chess Programs
• Teaching Beginners
• Offering a Foundation of Tactics, Combinations & Strategy of Attack
• Mating Motifs & Tactics Lesson Construction
• Use of Computer Software & Tools
• Endings
• How to Teach Chess Openings
• Teaching with Classical Games
• Professional Trainer's Workshop


Titles Awarded is given below

S.No.
Name of the Participant State Title Awarded
1.
Jayant Gokhale Maharshtra FIDE Instructor
2.
Kalyan Kumar Andhra Pradesh FIDE Instructor
3.
Kasi A.L. Tamilnadu FIDE Instructor
4.
S.K. Khasim Andhra Pradesh FIDE Instructor
5.
Sundarrajan K.P. Tamilnadu FIDE Instructor
6.
Raj Sen West Bengal FIDE Instructor
7.
Muthukumar.M. Tamilnadu FIDE Instructor
8.
Lakshmi Priya T.T. Tamilnadu FIDE Instructor
9.
Srinivasa Rangan Tamilnadu National Instructor
10..
Parivel M. Tamilnadu National Instructor
11.
Singhai Niklesh Jain Madhya Pradesh National Instructor
12.
Suresh Kumar.A. Tamilnadu National Instructor
13.
Brahmam S.K. Andhra Pradesh National Instructor
14.
M.R. Ananthan Tamilnadu National Instructor
15
Vivek M. Tamilnadu National Instructor
16
Rajinder Sharma Punjab Developmental Instructor
17
Venkatesh Krishnamurhty Karnataka Developmental Instructor

Monday, July 27, 2009

Memorable fortnight For Indians

India's best week in nine months happened with many of our players winning titles and making title norms all over the world. Summer in Europe is an active time for our players looking for Elo and norms.

Parimarjan Negi's Politiken Cup title today along with Arun Prasad's Scottish Championship title five days before and M.R.Lalith babu's Title triumph at Laeidan open makes this the best fortnight for Indian chess in nine months. Next only after five Indians winning the World Title at Vietnam and Viswanathan Anand retaining the World Crown at Bonn last year after Diwali. Arun Prasad overcame Magesh Chandran for the title in the final round. International Master M.R. Lalith Babu of Vijayawada won the Leiden Open in the Netherlands ahead of seven Grand Masters to win a Euro 1750 prize money.

Events are clashing not only in India but also in Europe with Biel Chess Festival, Copenhagen Chess Festival, Andorra all happening. Nobody likes to wait for others events as players travel during the main vacation period which is now.

Later this week, Viswanathan Anand will be defending his World Rapid Chess title at Mainz which runs from July 27 to August 2. This is part of the Chess Classic in Germany run by Hans-Walter Schmitt. Rapid chess and chess960 invented by Robert James Fischer are the main items in the agenda there.

In the 27th Andorra International Open, Grand Master Edouard Romain of France took first place with 7.5/9. India's WGM Eesha Karavade of Pune started as the 27th seed and finished 22nd and would neither losing nor gaining Elo points for her push performance of 6/9.

Final placings: 1 GM Edouard Romain (Fra) 7.5/9; 2-4. GM Mihail Marin (Rom), GM Manuel Martinez (Esp), GM Branko Damljanovic (Srb) 7 each; Indians: 22 WGM Eesha Karavade 6; 32 Chinmay Kulkarni 5.5; 40 WIM P. Priya 5.5; 51 Abhishek Kelkar 5; 56 Shiven Khosla 5; 57 WIM Sai Meera 5; 63 Aniruddha Deshpande 5; 76 Anuprita Patil 4.5...153 players

Norms achieved by our Indian players

S.No. Name Norm
1. Udeshi Aditya IM norm
2. Debashis Das IM norm
3. Devangi Patankar WIM norm
4. WCM Shalmali Gagare WIM norm

Friday, July 17, 2009

GM Kiril Georgiev of Bulgaria takes the lead

GM Kiril Georgiev of Bulgaria with 4 points takes the lead at the end of the fourth round of the XIV International Chess Tournament at Balaguer, Spain. Udeshi Aditya (3) playing his favourite Tarrash defence against white’s queen pawn opening tried to steer the game for active play. But the grand master took the black to the endgame and won the game .
Bharathi .R of Tamilnadu with white won a rook for a minor piece and two pawns against the Bulgarian Intenational Master Ivanov Jordan in the Sicilian defence. But the advanced connected passed pawns on the queenside forced her to take perpetual check to draw the game.


Deepthamsh Reddy of Andhra Pradesh employing the Sicilian defence lost a pawn in the middle game against the Bulgarian FM Berbatov Kiprian. After that white did not give any chance to Black to recover and finally white won the game. Shalmali Gagare (2) got a slight edge from the English opening against the Spanish International Master Ipatov Aleander . During the game she refused her opponent’s draw offer and this offer lulled her sense of danger on the kingside which eventually cost her game also.


J.Saranya lost her game against the International Master Kovacevic Slobodan. Priyadharshan (2.5)of Madurai won against the Spanish women International Master Robles Garcia Clandia. Debashis Das of Orissa also won against the Spanish player Ramon Solams Albert . Girish A Koushik lost his game against WFM Rucha Pujari . Pallabi Roy lost her game against the GM Westerined Heikki of Finland. Rakesh Kulkarni and Shristy J Shetty won easily against their respective opponents.

Fenil Shah of Gujarat’s opponent Enterria Galguera of Spain came to the tournament hall after 50 minutes and without making a move from the black side he resigned the game. The score sheet was duly singed. Whereas in the Devangi Patankar board, her opponent FM Colas Longares Rafael of Spain did play the game and after seeing that he was losing a piece he just went away from the hall. White had to wait and claimed the win on lost on time rule.

4th round results
GM KIRIL GEORGIEV BEAT UDESHI ADITYA (3)
SHALMALI GAGARE (2) LOST TO IM IPATOV ALEXANDER
WIM ROBLES GARCIA CLANDIA LOST TO PRIYADHARSHAN K (2)
RAMON SOLAMS ALBERT LOST TO DEBASHIS DAS (2.5)
LLOP LLOP JOSHEP LOST TO RAKESH KULKARNI (2)
WFM RUCHA PUJARI (2) BEAT GIRISH A KOUSHIK (1.5)
FM BERBATOV KIPRIAN BEAT DEEPTHAMSH REDDY (1.5)
IM KOVACEVIC SLOBODAN BEAT SARANYA J (2)
BHARATHI R (2.5) DREW IM IVANOV JORDAN
PALLABI ROY (1.5) LOST TO GM WESTERINEN HEIKKI
SHRISHTI J SHETTY (2) BEAT FEBRERO PEREZ LLUIS
GM MATEO RAMON LOST TO GM G N GOPAL (3)
FENIL SHAH (2.5) BEAT ENTERRIA GALGUERA JOSE ANTONIO
DEVANGI PATANKAR (3) BEAT FM COLAS LONGARES RAFAEL

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Najer wins Maccabiah rapid

Maccabiah 2009Evgeny Najer won the strong Maccabiah rapid tournament in Netanya, Israel yesterday with a score of 9.5/12. The Russian grandmaster finished a full point ahead of his compatriot Ian Nepomniachtchi. Veteran Alexander Beliavsky finished on a fine third place in a field that included Boris Gelfand and Judit Polgar.

The 18th Maccabiah Games are held July 12-23, 2009 at the Blue-Bay Hotel in Netanya, Israel. The Maccabiah Games have included chess tournaments for more than 30 years. This year a number of elite chess players from all over the world participate.

The festival includes several events: a very strong international rapid tournament with players like Boris Gelfand, Judit Polgar and Pavel Eljanov; an invitational tournament with norm opportunity, an open tournament, a youth tournament for players who were born between 1991 and 1994 and several simultaneous exhibitions by the three players mentioned above.

The sponsor of the festival is Richard Riordan. From the organizers:

RiordanIn 1981, successful lawyer, businessman, hi-tech investor and venture capitalist Richard Riordan created the Foundation that bears his name. His simple goal: enable people to acquire skills necessary to compete successfully in society. He had an equally simple plan: teach children to read and write at an early age, and nurture leadership skills in young adults. The Riordan Foundation has an impressive record of computer-based, early childhood literacy programs across America and youth development and leadership programs with over 2,400 graduates. Its signature Rx for Reading programs have distributed over 25,500 computers to over 2,140 schools in 40 states and provided funds for over 172,000 books purchased for elementary schools.

Richard Riordan won a decisive election victory in Los Angeles in 1993, and quickly became one of the most successful and admired of big city mayors in the USA. He won a second term by a landslide in 1997, and had he not himself imposed the consecutive-terms limit, he would undoubtedly have been Mayor after 2001. For 8 years, he accepted a salary of exactly $1 per year. In 2003, he was the natural choice to serve as California Secretary of Education in Governor Schwarzenegger’s first cabinet.

It will not surprise any chess player to learn that Richard Riordan, the confirmed believer in the power of early education, is also a lifelong aficionado of chess and a friend of many leading players. When his advisor and friend Steve Soboroff formed the Los Angeles Committee of 18, Richard Riordan was moved to sponsor the 18th Maccabiah Chess Festival in recognition of Maccabi World Union’s encouragement of young chess players in many countries.

The rapid tournament, proudly called “Super-Tournament” by the organizers, took place July 12-14. The rate of play was (15 minutes per person per game + 5 seconds increment per move). Evgeny Najer, who won the World Open in Philadelphia recently, was again successful, winning the event with 9.5 out of 12.

The tournament had a strange finish. In the final round Najer was totally crushed by tailender Emil Sutovsky, who had played a dreadful tournament until then. This meant that Ian Nepomniachtchi, who we’ll also see in Mainz later this month, could still catch him but… the Russian also lost quickly, to Avrukh.

Richard Riordan Rapid 2009 Final Standings

Maccabiah 2009

Below are the games. As so often, they’re retrieved from TWIC, where Mark Crowther is still doing a tremendous job after all those years (this can and should be said, every now and then). He notes that the PGN hasn’t been fully sorted out yet, and that the games Golod-Gelfand and Fridman-Sutovsky could in fact be the other way round as they are unlabeled on the website.

[click here for games and pictures]

[Report by: ChessVibes]

Monday, July 13, 2009

Changes to Title and Rating Regulations effective from July 1st 2009


regulations
Registration of Tournaments

All tournaments have to be pre-registered one month before the tournament; exceptions to this may be decided by the QC Chairman.
The intention is to publish registered tournaments in a calendar on the FIDE web page immediately after registration. This is to inform the participating players that the tournament will be rated.
A tournament registration may be rejected, if the tournament seems to be suspicious. FIDE has also the right not to rate a tournament. The organizer may appeal against these decisions.

Rating Period


The rating period will be shortened from three months to two months. The list dates will be January 1, March 1, May 1, July 1, September 1 and November 1.
The closing date, it is the date on or by which a competition must be finished to be included on the list, will be seven days before the list date. The official FIDE competitions will be taken on the list if they finish even on the day before the list date.

Coefficient K


The change of K as decided in Dresden was not confirmed by the PB. The K values stay as they are.
Also the value of 0.5 point in a new player's rating calculation will stay as 12.5 (half of the highest K value).

The K is determined based on the rating at the beginning of the tournament, not based on the rating at the time the ratings are calculated (the practice now)

Rating of Previously Unrated Players

Games against unrated players are rated in round-robin tournaments, as they have been rated so far. It is, if a previously unrated player scores at least 1 point in the event, the rating will be calculated. For the previously rated players all games, also the games against previously unrated players are rated.

In the Swiss tournaments, the rating of a previously unrated player is calculated, if the player plays against at least three rated opponents, scores at least 1 point against the rated opponents, and the rating calculated based on these games is at least the rating floor.

The rating of games of a rated player against unrated opponents was not confirmed by the PB, but the issue was returned to the QC.

Rating Floor

The rating floor will be 1200 from 1.7.2009. It means that a first result giving a rating at least 1200 for an unrated player is taken into account when calculating the unrated player's first published rating.

Changes in the Calculation of the Unrated Player's Rating

The new player's first published rating will be calculated in a cumulative way. Until 30.6.2009: The rating is calculated as a weighted average of tournament ratings (at least three rated opponents in a tournament) when the total number of games against rated players is at least 9. From 1.7.2009: The rating will be calculated as if all games had been in one tournament. Example: An unrated player has played three tournaments as follows: 3 games with a result 1.5/3 against opponents with an average rating of 2000, 4 games 1/4 against 2100 and 5 games 4/5 against 2200. Until 30.6.2009: The partial ratings would be 2000, 1907 and 2238, weighted average is 2068. From 1.7.2009: The average rating of all opponents is 2142, the total result is 6.5/12, so the new player's rating is 2142+12.5=2155.

Maximum Rating Difference

The maximum rating difference used in the calculations will be 400 points instead of 350. If the rating difference between players is more than 400 points, 400 points is used. It means that the highest expected result in a game will 0.92 instead of 0.89 and the lowest expected result will 0.08 instead of 0.11.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Villa De Benasque,Spain- Final day report

R. Bharathi

R.Bharathi (7) won the Best Women prize after scoring a thumping victory over Rodriguez Fernandez of Spain after the last round of the Villa De Benasque Chess tournament at Benasque, Spain. Shalmali Gagare (7) of Maharashtra drew with FM Espinosas Angel of Spain to get a 10 games IWM norm.

Shrishti Shetty (6) and Pallabi Roy (6) won against Gomez Jorge and Asier Etxagiel respectively. J.Sharanya (5.5) suffered her third consecutive loss against Garcia Ortega of Spain. Rucha Pujari (5.5) went down fighting against Justin Horton of England.

Devangi Patankar (6) of India received a 9 games IWM norm in this tournament. Bharathi and Shalmali Gagare won the rating category prizes.

K. Priyadarshan (7.5) drew with IM Starostits Ilmars with Black pieces. Aditya Udeshi ( 7) scored a smooth victory with White pieces against lowly rated Fernandez Juan of Spain. Debishish Das (7) of Orissa drew with IWM Fandino Reyes of Cuba from black side of King's Indian Attack.

Girish Kaushik (7) won a nice game against Prats Rodriguez of Spain. Deepthamesh Reddy (6.5) played well to hold IM Ole Jackobson of Denmark to a draw. Rakesh Kulkarni (6.5) was unlucky to lose to IM Carrasco Martinez of Spain.

Aditya Udeshi won the category prize.

GM Mihai Marin of Romania won the tournament with 9 points. Indian GM G.N.Gopal tied for the first with 9 points but was placed fourth on tie break. Top seed GM Kiril Georgiev of Bulgaria finished second and GM Andriasian Zaven from Armenia finished third with 9 points each.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

-Dozen titles for India

The FIDE Presidential Board met and approved many titles and at the end of it, India added its grandmaster strength by one. Sundararajan Kidambi of Bharat Petroleum, Chennai was awarded the highest grand master title by FIDE. India got 12 titles in the FIDE Meetings that took place from June 15-18.

Kidambi, 26, made his three GM norms at the Canadian Open 2005, Badalona Open 2008 in Spain and the final norm at Dubai on May 5 this year. His GM title has been ratified and awarded by FIDE after the latest communique was received by the AICF from FIDE.

Shivarame Gowda Thej Kumar of Mysore in Karnataka was formally awarded the International Master title by FIDE. He was earlier called M.S. Thej Kumar by us and he has made the requirement of GM norms as well.

M.S. Gopakumar of Delhi was awarded the International Arbiter title. Further, nine FIDE Arbiter titles were awarded and it went to R. Guruswamy, M. Muthukumar (both TN), Saripalli Jotsna (Goa),B.T. Sethuraman, R. Bhuvana (TN), Deepak Tandel, P.B. Bhilare (Mah), Madhav Vitthal Baba (all Mah), Sunil Kumar ( Del).

Seven consecutive victory for Padmini Rout in Asian Junior at colombo

Padmini Rout of India scored her seventh consecutive victory to remain alone at the top at the end of the seventh round of the Asian Junior Girls’ Chess Championship in Colombo, Sri Lanka today. Ashwin Jayaram, also of India dropped half a point for the first time in the tournament to his Kazakhstan opponent Amanov Zhanibek. He has secured 6.5 points and still managed to stay one point ahead of Amanov and M.R. Lalith Babu, another international master from India.

With two more rounds to go and having met most of the strong players, it may not be a problem for Padmini to capture the tile. The game between Ashwin and Lalith Babu will be crucial in the penultimate round and Ashwin, the defending champion has an edge over the last year runner up Lalith. In the girls section, Hejazipour Mitra of Iran and Soumya Swaminathan of India are on the second and third spot with 6 and 5 points

Round 9 on 2009/07/07 at 09.00 AM

Bo. No. Name Pts. Result Pts. Name No.
1 6 IM Shyam Sundar M IM Ashwin Jayaram 5
2 8 IM Amanov Zhanibek 6 Golizadeh Asghar 10
3 4 IM Lalith Babu M R FM Chua Zheng Yuan Terry 16
4 13 Anwesh Upadhyaya 5 5 IM Toufighi Homayoon 1
5 9 IM Narayanan Srinath 5 5 Faghirnavaz Ali 17
6 18 Subramaniam Sumant 5 5 FM Vishnu Prasanna V 12
7 37 Subasinghe K R K C IM Adhiban B 2
8 3 IM Karthikeyan P FM Tologontegin Semetey 34
9 22 Amarasinghe A A C B Saravana Krishnan P 14
10 21 Kuruwitage Yasas Kalana 4 4 FM Minhazuddin Ahmed 7
11 25 Jayasundara P K U M 4 4 Darini Pouria 11
12 15 Shreyansh Daklia 4 4 Munasinghe Lahiru 24
13 23 Amarasena Kaveesha Hapuarachchi H L M 19
14 20 Danushka M A N Vithanage Tharindu 33
15 28 Dissanayake R D A C 3 3 Munasingha D G S D 26
16 30 Munasinghe Shanaka 3 3 Pinto Semuthu 27
17 29 Law Mark 3 3 Jayasuriya Dinushka 35
18 36 Kodisinghe Hirushika 3 Chen Pin-Hung 32
19 39 Widyalankara Sandalu N 2 Weerakoon B D 38
20 31 Duwal Nikesh bye

Round 8 on 2009/07/06 at 03.30 PM

Bo. No. Name Pts. Result Pts. Name No.
1 5 IM Ashwin Jayaram 1 - 0 IM Lalith Babu M R 4
2 16 FM Chua Zheng Yuan Terry 5 ½ - ½ IM Amanov Zhanibek 8
3 1 IM Toufighi Homayoon ½ - ½ Subramaniam Sumant 18
4 10 Golizadeh Asghar 1 - 0 IM Karthikeyan P 3
5 14 Saravana Krishnan P 0 - 1 IM Shyam Sundar M 6
6 17 Faghirnavaz Ali ½ - ½ FM Vishnu Prasanna V 12
7 34 FM Tologontegin Semetey 4 ½ - ½ 4 IM Adhiban B 2
8 11 Darini Pouria 4 0 - 1 4 IM Narayanan Srinath 9
9 13 Anwesh Upadhyaya 4 1 - 0 4 Shreyansh Daklia 15
10 19 Hapuarachchi H L M 0 - 1 Subasinghe K R K C 37
11 22 Amarasinghe A A C B 1 - 0 Danushka M A N 20
12 7 FM Minhazuddin Ahmed 3 1 - 0 3 Law Mark 29
13 26 Munasingha D G S D 3 0 - 1 3 Kuruwitage Yasas Kalana 21
14 24 Munasinghe Lahiru 3 1 - 0 3 Munasinghe Shanaka 30
15 27 Pinto Semuthu 3 0 - 1 3 Jayasundara P K U M 25
16 31 Duwal Nikesh 0 - 1 Amarasena Kaveesha 23
17 35 Jayasuriya Dinushka ½ - ½ Dissanayake R D A C 28
18 38 Weerakoon B D 2 0 - 1 2 Kodisinghe Hirushika 36
19 32 Chen Pin-Hung 1 - 0 Widyalankara Sandalu N 39
20 33 Vithanage Tharindu 1 bye

Round 9 on 2009/07/07 at 09.00 AM

Bo. No. Name Pts. Result Pts. Name No.
1 14 Abeywardana Navindi 4 WIM Padmini Rout 2
2 6 WFM Hejazipour Mitra 7 Asgarizadeh Minoo 9
3 3 WIM Kiran Manisha Mohanty 6 WGM Soumya Swaminathan 1
4 4 CM Bhakti Kulkarni 5 Raghavi N 7
5 11 Premanath Dinushki 4 4 WFM Uthra P 8
6 15 Abeywickrama S S P 4 4 Cooray Sakuni 17
7 20 Premasiri Vimasha 2 4 Preethi R 5
8 19 Kottahachchi As 3 Abeywardana Naduni 13
9 10 Ranasinghe S D Khamboo Monalisa 18
10 16 Batawala Nethmi 0 Wang Hsin Jung 12

Round 8 on 2009/07/06 at 03.00 PM

Bo. No. Name Pts. Result Pts. Name No.
1 2 WIM Padmini Rout 7 ½ - ½ CM Bhakti Kulkarni 4
2 8 WFM Uthra P 4 0 - 1 6 WFM Hejazipour Mitra 6
3 5 Preethi R 4 0 - 1 5 WGM Soumya Swaminathan 1
4 7 Raghavi N 4 ½ - ½ 4 WIM Kiran Manisha Mohanty 3
5 9 Asgarizadeh Minoo 4 ½ - ½ Premanath Dinushki 11
6 14 Abeywardana Navindi ½ - ½ 3 Ranasinghe S D 10
7 17 Cooray Sakuni 3 1 - 0 3 Kottahachchi As 19
8 18 Khamboo Monalisa 0 - 1 3 Abeywickrama S S P 15
9 12 Wang Hsin Jung 0 - 1 1 Premasiri Vimasha 20
10 13 Abeywardana Naduni 1 - 0 0 Batawala Nethmi 16

Monday, July 6, 2009

Kramnik beats Naiditsch, shares lead with Carlsen

KramnikIn a very good fourth round of the Sparkassen Chess Meeting in Dortmund, Kramnik beat Naiditsch with the black pieces. The Russian now shares the lead with Carlsen who drew with Bacrot, the same result as in Jakovenko-Leko.

The Sparkassen Chess Meeting takes place July 2-12 in Dortmund, Germany. Carlsen (2772), Jakovenko (2760), Kramnik (2759), Leko (2756), Bacrot (2721) and Naiditsch (2697) play a double round-robin.

Round 4

On the day that Roger Federer broke Pete Sampras’ Grand Slam record, Vladimir Kramnik got rid of a strange statistic of his own: he hadn’t won a classical game with Black since fall 2006! The Russian actually managed to win in a Petroff, which already speaks books: it wasn’t Arkadij Naiditsch’s day.

The German grandmaster, who scored a crushing victory with White against Kramnik last year, this time went for an innocuous line in which Black can comfortably develop his pieces. There wasn’t even time for a Nc3-e2-g3 regrouping as Kramnik had already thrown in a textbook bishop sac on h3 which couldn’t be accepted. Soon after that White was already dead lost anyway.

Bacrot-Carlsen was not bad either, as one of the most spectacular lines of the already quite spectacular Botvinnik Variation came on the board. If Ivanchuk-Shirov rings a bell, than you know already that we’re talking about the famous Qg4-g7 sacrifice. However, then you probably also know that Shirov had refuted the line himself in a later game against Ponomariov. Bacrot went for it anyway and soon found himself fighting for a draw, but this turned out to be not such a difficult task.

Leko played his fourth short draw in a row, this time with the black pieces against Jakovenko, who apparently didn’t have much faith in the middlegame position after 22 moves. This is the kind of game we’ve seen too often already, but luckily there was only one of those this time.

[Report by: Chess Vibes]

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Obama to meet Kasparov in Moscow

Barack Obama and Garry Kasparov.  Collage by kasparov.ruPresident Barack Obama has invited several prominent members of the Russian opposition, including United Civil Front leader Garry Kasparov, for a meeting in Moscow. Boris Nemtsov, a chair of the Solidarity opposition movement, has also been invited to the meeting, set to take place on July 7th at the Ritz Carlton hotel. The format of the event was still unclear.

“Of course, this will be interesting,” Kasparov said on the Ekho Moskvy radio station. “The previous American administration didn’t dare to do this.”

A number of other prominent figures have also been invited, including Pravoe Delo (Right Cause) co-chair Leonid Gozman, Communist Party leader Gennady Zyuganov, attorney Yelena Lukyanova, and Federation Council chairman Sergey Mironov.

Obama will travel to Moscow on July 6th for meetings with the Kremlin as well as business and civil society leaders. A meeting with Russia’s leading human rights advocates has been scheduled at the Metropol hotel, the location of a consultation between representatives from NGOs in the US and Russia.

Earlier, Boris Nemtsov argued that it was essential for Obama to meet with opposition forces in Russia. “If the White House agrees to Putin’s suggestion to speak only with pro-Putin organizations… this will mean that Putin has won, but not only that: Putin will become be assured that Obama is weak,” he said.

Nemtsov, who spoke at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York, said the American administration should lay their stakes on President Dmitri Medvedev, and not Prime Minister Putin.

“I believe that if Medvedev finally takes power into his own hands, we will have a chance to return to a political thaw, to democratization,” he went on. “We are being given the chance to return to rule of law and the Russian Constitution. Clearly, much depends on the opposition, on its energy… Which is why we alone are responsible for our future, and not Obama.”

Friday, July 3, 2009

Important Decisions taken by the AGM of AICF on 29.06.2009

1. It was decided, with a view to encourage talents in the age group and also the State Chess Associations which produce National Championship medalist, extra seeding in the succeeding age group National championships may be given to the State which produces a Gold / Silver / Bronze medal winners in the respective age group National Championships in the ratio 3 : 2 : 1. And these nominations from the State Associations shall be given only from the Rank list of their respective State championships with proof and not to any body else.

2. Many parents produce date of birth certificate of players registered after several years after their birth and in some cases registered only a few days before the National championships. To curb the age fraud menace it was resolved that in all future National Championships, date of birth certificates registered with in 1 year of the birth of the child alone will be recognized and allowed to participate in age group National Championships. No State Association shall recommend any player who doesn’t come under the above criteria. Any player who is aggrieved by this stipulation can appeal to the Central Council of AICF with proper documentary proof and the AICF’s decision will be final and binding. All other rules which are in force to curb age group frauds shall continue.

3. It was also decided that in future, in all the National Championships the tie break will be decided by Bucholoz system only. Members to the appeals committee will be nominated by the AICF/organizers. Further, it was decided that the pairings should be done only in Swiss Manager.

4. All the National Championships(except National challengers & National Premium) will have two rounds per day, on not more than two days and will be played on 11 rounds Swiss irrespective of number of entries

5. It was decided that the National “A” & National Women “A” Championships will be called as Premier National Championships and the National “B” / National Women “B” to be called the National Challengers

6. It was decided that the eligibility qualifications for Premier National Chess Championships shall be as follows :

    1. From National Challengers - 30 Players
    2. From Previous National “A”

( Premium Nationals ) Including GM’s - top 06 Players

    1. All GMS
    2. National Junior Boys and Girls Champions - 02 Players
    3. National “A” women - top 02 Players
    4. AICF Secretary nominee - 02 Players

The above Nationals will be held as 13 rounds Swiss irrespective of the number of entries, with one round per day .

7. It was decided that eligible qualifications for Premier National Women Chess Championship shall be as follows:

    1. From National Women challengers - 20 Players
    2. From Previous National Women “A” ( Premier )

Including WGM’s - top 06 Players

    1. All WGMS
    2. National Junior Girls Champion - 01 Players
    3. AICF Secretary nominee - 02 Players

The above National will be held as 11 rounds Swiss irrespective of the number of entries, with one round per day.

8. It was decided that selections criteria for the Indian senior teams to participate in team events/ Asian Individual apart from the other rules in force, the Premier National Champion may be seeded along with players with 2650 / 2500 (women) Elo and above. Players below 2650 / 2500 (Women) Elo need to participate in National Challengers / Premier in order to be eligible for consideration for selections.

9. It was also decided that “zero tolerance” will be implemented in all National Championships. In other words any player not present at the time of starting the clock will forfeit his game.

10. Mr.Narinder Singh President of Punjab State Chess Association was co-opted as the Vice President of the All India Chess Federation in place of Mr.Sameer Salgaocar who resigned for personal reasons.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

-The new Laws of Chess: what has changed?

Laws of Chess July 2009As of today, July 1st, 2009 our beloved game of chess has a new edition of its official rules: the Laws of Chess. The best known, and most-feared change is the so-called “zero-tolerance” rule: a player who arrives just a few seconds late at his board, loses the game. We asked top arbiter and chairman of the FIDE Rules and Tournament Regulations Committee, Geurt Gijssen: what has changed, and why?

Every four years the official Laws of Chess may be revised and improved by the General Assembly of FIDE after a proposal of the FIDE Rules and Tournament Regulations Committee. The current version took effect July 1st, 2005 and this means that as of today, July 1st, 2009 there’s a new version (although at the moment of writing the old text is still on the FIDE website).

Geurt Gijssen, chairman of the FIDE Rules and Tournament Regulations Committee, explained to us that the four-year process always starts with many suggestions from different directions: “I always receive many proposals for rule changes, from arbiters, organizers… this time I think 122 in total. Of all that I receive, I make one big document. Yes, quite often I also include suggestions from my column at Chesscafe.”

“I ask which members of the Committee want to look at this preliminary document, and this time six members voted about all collected suggestions, by filling out a form. Please note that I don’t vote myself; I only act as, let’s say, a secretary. All suggestions for changes that are agreed upon 5-1 or 6-0 were included, and I threw away all suggestions that were rejected 0-6 or 1-5.

All suggestions that were answered with different proportions were put together in a new document and taken to the Rules Committee which came together at the Olympiad in Dresden this time. There, many arbiters interested in the subject were present, and they were allowed to join the meeting - a total of about 85.

I let everyone vote, and the results I treated as a first poll of opinions. In cases where some proposals were met with big majorities agreeing with the changes, I included them for the next draft; only in cases where there where big differences of opinion I let the Rules Committee vote and decide. Sometimes I started with the Rules Committee and then the whole meeting to vote.

The results of such a meeting at an Olympiad, which often include new suggestions, is taken to Executive Board, who discuss everything but usually don’t propose new changes. The final draft version is taken to the General Assembly, who give their final vote. This time it went a bit differently as the General Assembly couldn’t come to an agreement about rule 6 [the "zero-tolerance" rule - PD] and let the Presidential Board decide during its meeting in Istanbul, March 2009.”

New Laws of Chess - what has changed?

We’ll start by discussing the infamous change of arriving late at the board, the so-called “zero-tolerance” rule: a player who arrives just a few seconds late at his board, loses the game.

Arriving (late) at the board

Old rule:

6.6 If neither player is present initially, the player who has the white pieces shall lose all the time that elapses until he arrives; unless the rules of the competition specify or the arbiter decides otherwise.

6.7 Any player who arrives at the chessboard more than one hour after the scheduled start of the session shall lose the game unless the rules of the competition specify or the arbiter decides otherwise.

New rule:

6.6 a. Any player who arrives at the chessboard after the start of the session shall lose the game. Thus the default time is 0 minutes. The rules of a competition may specify otherwise.

b. If the rules of a competition specify a different default time, the following shall apply. If neither player is present initially, the player who has the white pieces shall lose all the time that elapses until he arrives, unless the rules of the competition specify or the arbiter decides otherwise.

This rule was already tested at the Olympiad in Dresden, November 2008, where the one-hour margin was changed to zero, which was possible because the October 2005 Laws of Chess already state that it’s possible to arrive late one hour unless the rules of the competition specify or the arbiter decides otherwise.

The “zero-tolerance” rule was widely criticized after it became clear that the arbiters were applying it a bit over-enthousiastically. For example, a player who had already been at his board, but was away looking for a pen, was forfeited. Something similar happened at the recent Chinese Championship, where Hou Yifan was forfeited despite the fact that she was in the playing hall.

Geurt Gijssen

Geurt Gijssen

According to Gijssen, the rule in fact didn’t change that much. “Tournament organizers are still allowed to change the rule. Whether the basic text says one hour or zero time, in both cases an organizer can decide to make it, let’s say, fifteen minutes.”

The critical part of the “zero-tolerance” rule, “Any player who arrives at the chessboard after the start of the session shall lose the game”, might still lead to debate since it’s not clear whether a player should actually sit behind his board until the round has officially started. According to journalist IM Stefan Löffler, “for the German chess federation presence in the tournament area is enough, which includes toilets, catering or refreshment areas.” Organizers are recommended to include some clarification about this in their tournament rules.

Gijssen continues: “I’d like to point out that the most important change, in my opinion, is that in the new Laws of Chess the part is deleted where it says …or the arbiter decides otherwise. This means that an arbiter cannot decide anymore that it was a case of force majeure, in an exceptional situation, which would allow someone to play even after arriving late for more than an hour.”

“By the way, the mentioned ‘or the arbiter decides otherwise’ is applicable in case both players arrive too late. Example: the rules of the tournament stipulate that a player shall lose his game if he arrives 15 minutes after the start of the round. Suppose both players arrive after 10 minutes. In this case the arbiter can deduct 5 minutes of both players’ time instead of only 10 minutes of White’s time.”

It may be expected that many organizers of tournaments or even competitions won’t bother checking all details of the Laws of Chess, and will simply hold an event in which “FIDE Laws of Chess apply”. In a worst-case scenario, a club player will travel for several hours to play a team match somewhere far away, arrives two minutes late, gets a zero and can take the next train back home.

Gijssen: “True, but one shouldn’t blame the Laws of Chess, one should blame the organizer for not thinking for himself and the arbiter of the event, who did not point out that there is from July 1 a new situation. In general I think organizers will have to think more about how to apply the rules from now on. Take rule 9, for instance, which means for the first time the Laws of Chess officially allow the so-called Sofia Rule. A tournament organizer has to decide for himself whether he wants to apply the Sofia Rule.”

Optional: no short draws
In the July 1, 2009 version of the Laws of Chess, Article 9, which is about the drawn game, starts with a new, extra rule:

9.1 a. The rules of a competition may specify that players cannot agree to a draw, whether in less than a specified number of moves or at all, without the consent of the arbiter.

This means that the Sofia Rule hasn’t become part of the Laws of Chess (yet) but at least it has now been specified that organizers are allowed to include measures to prevent short draws.

Besides, the rule about incorrectly claiming a draw is now a bit simpler:

Old rule:

9.5 If a player claims a draw as in Article 9.2 or 9.3, he shall immediately stop both clocks. He is not allowed to withdraw his claim.

1. If the claim is found to be correct the game is immediately drawn.
2. If the claim is found to be incorrect, the arbiter shall add three minutes to the opponent`s remaining time. Additionally, if the claimant has more than two minutes on his clock the arbiter shall deduct half of the claimant`s remaining time up to a maximum of three minutes. If the claimant has more than one minute, but less than two minutes, his remaining time shall be one minute. If the claimant has less than one minute, the arbiter shall make no adjustment to the claimant`s clock. Then the game shall continue and the intended move must be made.

New rule:

9.5 b. If the claim is found to be incorrect, the arbiter shall add three minutes to the opponent’s remaining thinking time. Then the game shall continue. If the claim was based on an intended move, this move must be made as according to Article 4.

Gijssen: “Many found this rule too complicated and they might be right. Now in case of an incorrect claim, only the opponent receives three minutes extra. In my opinion someone who comes with an incorrect claim should be punished himself as well, like in the old rules, but OK, this is how it will be.”

Mobile phones
The most famous story about a player losing his chess game because his phone rings is still that of Ruslan Ponomariov. His phone sounded during a match between Ukraine and Sweden at the European Team Championships, Plovdiv 2003.

The article about mobile phones needed a change as well, since the 2005 version of the Laws of Chess did not sufficiently deal with fact that phones sometimes make a sound even if they’re switched off, which happened to no-one less than Nigel Short at the 2008 European Union Championship.

Old rule:

12.2 b. It is strictly forbidden to bring mobile phones or other electronic means of communication, not authorised by the arbiter, into the playing venue. If a player`s mobile phone rings in the playing venue during play, that player shall lose the game. The score of the opponent shall be determined by the arbiter.

New rule:

12.3 b. Without the permission of the arbiter a player is forbidden to have a mobile phone or other electronic means of communication in the playing venue, unless they are completely switched off. If any such device produces a sound, the player shall lose the game. The opponent shall win. However, if the opponent cannot win the game by any series of legal moves, his score shall be a draw.


Blitz and rapidplay

The Laws of Chess also include Appendices, in which special subjects are treated, like rapidplay, blitz, algebraic notation, quickly finishes when no arbiter is present and rules for play with blind and visually handicapped players.

In general one could say that rapid, but especially blitz competitions, need special rules because almost always there are not enough arbiters around. At blitz tournaments with many boards, many small incidents happend during every round which aren’t even considered incidents, like an illegal move, or a flag that falls.

In classical chess an arbiter should be called in such a situation, but this would be impossible in a blitz tournament, and that’s why an illegal move instantly loses at blitz, for example, to prevent the need of many more arbiters.

However, Gijssen and many others of the Rules Committee agreed that for example a (Blitz) World Championship shouldn’t be decided by something trivial like an illegal move played by accident. In general, they asked themselves, why can’t a (Blitz) World Championship be played according to the normal rules? What if we just assign one arbiter per board?

Therefore, the following changes have been made.

APPENDICES

Rapidplay

Old rule:

B2. Play shall be governed by the FIDE Laws of Chess, except where they are overridden by the following Laws of Rapidplay.

New rule:

A.3 Where there is adequate supervision of play, (for example one arbiter for at most three games) the Competition Rules shall apply.

Blitz

Old rule:

C2. Play shall be governed by the Rapidplay Laws as in Appendix B except where they are overridden by the following Laws of Blitz. The Articles 10.2 and B6 do not apply.

New rule:

B.2 Where there is adequate supervision of play, (one arbiter for one game) the Competition Rules and Appendix A.2 shall apply.

Another change is the section on Adjourned Games. These days there’s probably not a single tournament left where games are adjourned, but an organizer might want to. Besides, there are situations in which a game simply cannot be continued, and has to be resumed at a later stage. For this, guidelines for adjourned games have been included in the Appendices.

Chess960
Introduced for the first time in the Laws of Chess are the rules for Chess960, also called Fischerrandom. We quote the articles in full:

F. Chess960 Rules

F.1 Before a Chess960 game a starting position is randomly set up, subject to certain rules. After this, the game is played in the same way as standard chess. In particular, pieces and pawns have their normal moves, and each player’s objective is to checkmate the opponent’s king.

F.2 Starting position requirements
The starting position for Chess960 must meet certain rules. White pawns are placed on the second rank as in regular chess. All remaining white pieces are placed randomly on the first rank, but with the following restrictions:
a. the king is placed somewhere between the two rooks, and
b. the bishops are placed on opposite-colored squares, and
c. the black pieces are placed equal-and-opposite to the white pieces.
The starting position can be generated before the game either by a computer program or using dice, coin, cards, etc.

F.3 Chess960 Castling Rules
a. Chess960 allows each player to castle once per game, a move by potentially both the king and rook in a single move. However, a few interpretations of standard chess games rules are needed for castling, because the standard rules presume initial locations of the rook and king that are often not applicable in Chess960.

b. How to castle
In Chess960, depending on the pre-castling position on the castling king and rook, the castling manoeuvre is performed by one of these four methods:
1. double-move castling: by on one turn making a move with the king and a move with the rook, or
2. transposition castling: by transposing the position of the king and the rook, or
3. king-move-only castling: by making only a move with the king, or
4. rook-move-only castling: by making only a move with the rook.

Recommendation
1. When castling on a physical board with a human player, it is recommended that the king be moved outside the playing surface next to his final position, the rook then be moved from its starting to ending position, and then the king be placed on his final square.
2. After castling, the rook and king’s final positions are exactly the same positions as they would be in standard chess.

Clarification
Thus, after c-side castling (notated as O-O-O and known as queen-side castling in orthodox chess), the King is on the c-square (c1 for White and c8 for Black) and the Rook is on the d-square (d1 for White and d8 for Black). After g-side castling (notated as O-O and known as king-side castling in orthodox chess), the King is on the g-square (g1 for White and g8 for Black) and the Rook is on the f-square (f1 for White and f8 for Black).

Notes
1. To avoid any misunderstanding, it may be useful to state “I am about to castle” before castling.
2. In some starting positions, the king or rook (but not both) do not move during castling.
3. In some starting positions, castling can take place as early as the first move.
4. ll the squares between the king’s initial and final squares (including the final square), and all of the squares between the rook’s initial and final squares (including the final square), must be vacant except for the king and castling rook.
5. In some starting positions, some squares can stay filled during castling that would have to be vacant in standard chess. For example, after c-side castling (O-O-O), it’s possible for to have a, b, and/or e still filled, and after g-side castling (O-O), it’s possible to have e and/or h filled.

With this article we hope to have provided our readers a basic idea of the changes in the official Laws of Chess that come to effect as of today. In general we’d like to say that it’s highly recommended to take some time and study the Laws thoroughly, at least once in your life! From experience we know that it can save you from losing half or even full points, and from many heated debates in the playing hall…

[Report by: ChessVibes]