Links

This form does not yet contain any fields.
    1948 World Chess Championship 1959 Candidates 1962 Candidates 2.c3 Sicilian 2.f4 Sicilian 2011 European Team Championship 2011 Russian Championship 2012 Capablanca Memorial 2012 Chess Olympiad 2012 European Women's Championship 2012 London Chess Classic 2012 U.S. Junior Championship 2012 U.S. Women's Championship 2012 US Championship 2012 Women's World Chess Championship 2012 World Rapid and Blitz Championships 2013 Alekhine Memorial 2013 Beijing Grand Prix 2013 European Club Cup 2013 European Team Championship 2013 FIDE World Cup 2013 Kings Tournament 2013 London Chess Classic 2013 Russian Championship 2013 Tal Memorial 2013 U.S. Championship 2013 Women's World Championship 2013 World Blitz Championship 2013 World Championship 2013 World Rapid Championship 2013 World Team Championship 2014 Capablanca Memorial 2014 Chess Olympiad 2014 London Chess Classic 2014 Petrosian Memorial 2014 Rapid & Blitz World Championship 2014 Russian Team Championship 2014 Sinquefield Cup 2014 Tigran Petrosian Memorial 2014 U.S. Championship 2014 U.S. Open 2014 Women's World Championship 2014 World Blitz Championship 2014 World Championship 2014 World Junior Championships 2014 World Rapid Championship 2015 Capablanca Memorial 2015 Chinese Championship 2015 European Club Cup 2015 European Team Championship 2015 London Chess Classic 2015 Millionaire Open 2015 Poikovsky 2015 Russian Team Championship 2015 Sinquefield Cup 2015 U.S. Championship 2015 Women's World Championship KO 2015 World Blitz Championship 2015 World Cup 2015 World Junior Championship 2015 World Open 2015 World Rapid & Blitz Championship 2015 World Team Championships 2016 2016 Candidates 2016 Capablanca Memorial 2016 Champions Showdown 2016 Chess Olympiad 2016 Chinese Championship 2016 European Club Cup 2016 Isle of Man 2016 London Chess Classic 2016 Russian Championship 2016 Sinquefield Cup 2016 Tal Memorial 2016 U.S. Championship 2016 U.S. Junior Championship 2016 U.S. Women's Championship 2016 Women's World Championship 2016 World Blitz Championship 2016 World Championship 2016 World Junior Championship 2016 World Open 2016 World Rapid Championship 2017 British Championship 2017 British Knockout Championship 2017 Champions Showdown 2017 Chinese Championship 2017 Elite Mind Games 2017 European Team Championship 2017 Geneva Grand Prix 2017 Grand Prix 2017 Isle of Man 2017 London Chess Classic 2017 PRO Chess League 2017 Russian Championship 2017 Sharjah Masters 2017 Sinquefield Cup 2017 Speed Chess Championship 2017 U..S. Championshp 2017 U.S. Junior Championship 2017 Women's World Championship 2017 World Cup 2017 World Junior Championship 2017 World Rapid & Blitz Championships 2017 World Team Championship 2018 British Championship 2018 Candidates 2018 Chess Olympiad 2018 Dortmund 2018 European Championship 2018 European Club Cup 2018 Gashimov Memorial 2018 Gibraltar 2018 Grand Chess Tour 2018 Grenke Chess Classic 2018 Grenke Chess Open 2018 Isle of Man 2018 Leuven 2018 London Chess Classic 2018 Norway Chess 2018 Paris 2018 Poikovsky 2018 Pro Chess League 2018 Shenzhen Masters 2018 Sinquefield Cup 2018 Speed Chess Championship 2018 St. Louis Rapid & Blitz 2018 Tal Memorial 2018 Tata Steel Rapid & Blitz 2018 U.S. Championship 2018 Wijk aan Zee 2018 Women's World Championship 2018 World Championship 2018 World Rapid & Blitz Championship 2019 Abidjan 2019 Aeroflot Open 2019 Biel 2019 Capablanca Memorial 2019 Champions Showdown 2019 Dortmund 2019 Du Te Cup 2019 European Championship 2019 Gashimov Memorial 2019 GCT Paris 2019 GCT Zagreb 2019 Gibraltar 2019 Grand Chess Tour 2019 Grand Prix 2019 Grenke Chess Classic 2019 Karpov Poikovsky 2019 Lindores Abbey 2019 Moscow Grand Prix 2019 Norway Chess 2019 Norway Chess blitz 2019 Pro Chess League 2019 Riga Grand Prix 2019 Russian Team Championship 2019 Sinquefield Cup 2019 St. Louis Rapid & Blitz 2019 U.S. Championship 2019 Wijk aan Zee 2019 Women's Candidates 2019 World Rapid & Blitz Championships 2019 World Team Championship 2020 Banter Blitz Series Final 2020 Candidates 2020 Champions Chess Tour 2020 Chess Olympics 2020 Chess.com Speed Chess Championship 2020 Clutch Chess 2020 FIDE Online Nations Cup 2020 Grand Chess Tour 2020 Magnus Carlsen Invitational 2020 Norway Chess 2020 Russian Championship 2020 Skilling Open 2020 St. Louis Rapid & Blitz 2020 U.S. Championship 2021 Aimchess U.S. Rapid 2021 Champions Showdown 2021 Chess.com Speed Chess Championship 2021 Chessable Masters 2021 Croatia Grand Prix 2021 Croatia Rapid and Blitz 2021 European Team Championship 2021 FIDE Grand Swiss 2021 FTX Crypto Cup 2021 Goldmoney Asian Rapid 2021 Grand Chess Tour 2021 Leon 2021 Magnus Carlsen Invitational 2021 Meltwater Tour Finals 2021 New in Chess Classic 2021 Norway Chess 2021 Opera Euro Rapid 2021 Paris Rapid & Blitz 2021 San Fermin Masters 2021 Sinquefield Cup 2021 St. Louis Rapid & Blitz 2021 Superbet Chess Classic 2021 Tal Memorial Blitz 2021 U.S. Championship 2021 Wijk aan Zee 2021 World Chess Championship 2021 World Cup 2021 World Rapid & Blitz Championships 2022 American Cup 2022 Candidates 2022 Chess Olympics 2022 Chessable Masters 2022 FIDE Grand Prix 2022 Grand Chess Tour 2022 Meltwater Tour 2022 Norway Chess 2022 Superbet Chess Classic 2022 Superbet Rapid & Blitz 2022 Wijk aan Zee 2022 World Chess Championship 2024 Chess Olympics 22014 Sinquefield Cup 22014 U.S. Championship 22016 Chess Olympiad 22019 GCT Zagreb 22019 Wijk aan Zee 2Mind Games 2016 2Wijk aan Zee 2017 60 Minutes A. Muzychuk A. Sokolov aattacking chess Abby Marshall Abhijeet Gupta Abhimanyu Mishra Accelerated Dragon achieving excellence ACP Golden Classic Adams Aeroflot 2010 Aeroflot 2011 Aeroflot 2012 Aeroflot 2013 Aeroflot 2015 Aeroflot 2016 Aeroflot 2017 AGON Agrest Airthings Masters Akiba Rubinstein Akiva Rubinstein Akobian Akshat Chandra Alejandro Ramirez Alekhine Alekhine Defense Aleksander Lenderman Aleksandra Goryachkina Alekseev Alena Kats Alex Markgraf Alexander Alekhine Alexander Beliavsky Alexander Grischuk Alexander Ipatov Alexander Khalifman Alexander Moiseenko Alexander Morozevich Alexander Niktin Alexander Onischuk Alexander Panchenko Alexander Stripunsky Alexander Tolush Alexandra Kosteniuk Alexei Dreev Alexei Shirov Alexey Bezgodov Alireza Firouzja Almasi AlphaZero Alvin Plantinga Amber 2010 Amber 2011 American Chess Magazine Amos Burn Anand Anand-Carlsen 2013 Anand-Gelfand 2012 Anand-Gelfand World Championship Match Anand-Topalov 2010 Anastasia Bodnaruk Anatoly Karpov Anders Ericsson Andrei Volokitin Andrew Martin Andrew Paulson Andrey Esipenko Android apps Anish Giri Anna Muzychuk Anna Ushenina Anna Zatonskih Anti-Marshall Lines Anti-Moscow Gambit Anti-Sicilians Antoaneta Stefanova Anton Korobov Anton Kovalyov apps April Fool's Jokes Archangelsk Variation Arianne Caoili Arjun Erigaisi Arkadij Naiditsch Arkady Dvorkovich Arne Moll Aron Nimzowitsch Aronian Aronian-Kramnik 2012 Arthur Bisguier Arthur van de Oudeweetering Artur Yusupov Arturo Pomar Ashland University football Astrakhan Grand Prix 2010 attack attacking chess Austrian Attack Averbakh Awonder Liang Baadur Jobava Bacrot Baku Grand Prix 2014 Baltic Defense Bangkok Chess Club Open Baskaran Adhiban Bazna 2011 Becerra beginner's books Beliavsky Ben Feingold Benko Gambit Bent Larsen Berlin Defense Biel 2012 Biel 2014 Biel 2015 Biel 2017 Bilbao 2010 Bilbao 2012 Bilbao 2013 Bilbao 2015 Bilbao 2016 Bilbao Chess 2014 bishop endings Bishop vs. Knight Blackburne Blaise Pascal blindfold chess blitz blitz chess Blumenfeld Gambit blunders Bob Hope Bobby Fischer Bogo-Indian Bohatirchuk Bologan Book Reviews books Boris Gelfand Boris Ivkov Boris Spassky Borislav Ivanov Borki Predojevic Boruchovsky Botvinnik Botvinnik Memorial Branimiir Maksimovic Breyer Variation brilliancy British Championship British Chess Magazine Bronstein Bronznik Brooklyn Castle Browne Brunello Bu Xiangzhi Budapest bullet chess Bundesliga California Chess Reporter Camilla Baginskaite Campomanes Candidates 2011 Candidates 2011 Candidates 2012 Candidates 2013 Candidates 2014 Capablanca Carlsen Caro-Kann cartoons Caruana Catalan Cebalo Charles Krauthammer Charlie Rose cheating Cheparinov chess and drugs chess and education chess and marketing chess books chess cartoons chess documentaries chess engines chess history chess in fiction chess in film chess in schools Chess Informant chess lessons chess openings chess politics chess psychology chess ratings chess strategy chess variants Chess24 Chess960 ChessBase DVDs ChessBase Shows ChessLecture Presentations ChessLecture Videos ChessLecture.com ChessUSA ChessUSA blog ChessVibes ChessVideos Presentations Chigorin Variation Chinese Chess Championship Chithambaram Aravindh Christian faith Christiansen Christmas Colin Crouch Colle combinations Commentary computer chess computers correspondence chess Corsica COVID-19 Cristobal Henriquez Villagra Cyrus Lakdawala Dan Parmet Danailov Daniel Parmet Daniil Dubov Danny Kopec Danzhou Danzhou 2016 Danzhou 2017 Dave MacEnulty Dave Vigorito David Anton David Bronstein David Howell David MacEnulty David Navara Davies Deep Blue Deeper Blue defense Dejan Antic Delchev Denis Khismatullin DGT errors Ding Liren Dirk Jan ten Geuzendam Dmitry Andreikin Dmitry Gurevich Dmitry Jakovenko Dmitry Svetushkin Dominic Lawson Donald Trump Dortmund 2010 Dortmund 2011 Dortmund 2012 Dortmund 2012 Dortmund 2013 Dortmund 2014 Dortmund 2015 Dortmund 2016 Dortmund 2017 Doug Hyatt Dragoljub Velimirovic draws dreams Dreev Dunning-Kruger Effect Dutch Defense DVD Reviews DVDs Dvoirys Dvoretsky Easter Edouard Efimenko Efstratios Grivas Eltaj Safarli Emanuel Lasker Emory Tate en passant endgame studies endgames Endgames English Opening Ernesto Inarkiev Erwin L'Ami Esserman Etienne Bacrot European Championship 2015 European Club Cup 2012 European Club Cup 2014 European Individual Championship 2012 Evgeni Vasiukov Evgeny Bareev Evgeny Najer Evgeny Sveshnikov Evgeny Tomashevsky Exchange Ruy expertise Fabiano Caruana Falko Bindrich farce FIDE FIDE Grand Prix FIDE politics FIDE Presidential Election FIDE ratings Fier fighting for the initiative Finegold Fischer Fischer-Spassky 1972 football Francisco Vallejo Pons Fred Reinfeld French Defense Fritz 15 Ftacnik Gadir Guseinov Gajewski Gaprindashvili Garry Kasparov Gashimov Gashimov Memorial 2017 Gata Kamsky Gawain Jones Gelfand Gelfand-Svidler Rapid Match Geller Geneva Masters Genna Sosonko Georg Meier Georgios Makropolous GGarry Kasparov Gibraltar 2011 Gibraltar 2012 Gibraltar 2013 Gibraltar 2014 Gibraltar 2015 Gibraltar 2016 Gibraltar 2017 Giorgios Makropoulos Giri Go Grand Chess Tour Grand Chess Tour 2017 Grand Chess Tour Paris 2017 Grand Prix 2014-2015 Grand Prix Attack Greek Gift sacrifice Grenke Chess Classic 2013 Grenke Chess Classic 2015 Grenke Chess Classic 2017 Grigoriy Oprain Grinfeld Grischuk Grob Groucho Marx Gruenfeld Defense Grünfeld Defense Gukesh Dommaraju Gulko Gunina Guseinov Gustafsson Gyula Sax Hannes Langrock Hans Berliner Hans Niemann Hans Ree Harika Dronavalli Hastings Hawaii International Festival Haworth Hedgehog helpmates Hennig-Schara Gambit Henrique Mecking HHou Yifan highway robbery Hikaru Nakamura Hilton Hjorvar Gretarsson Hort Horwitz Bishops Hou Yifan Houdini Houdini 1.5a Howard Staunton humor Humpy Koneru Ian Nepomniachtchi Icelandic Gambit Ignatius Leong Igor Kovalenko Igor Kurnosov Igor Lysyj Igors Rausis Iljumzhinov Ilya Makoveev Ilya Nyzhnyk Imre Hera Informant Informant 113 Informant 114 Informant 115 Informant 116 Informant 117 Informant 118 Informant 119 Informant 120 Informant 121 Informant 122 Informant 124 Informant 125 Informant 126 Informant 127 Informant 128 Informant 129 Informant 130 Informant 131 Informant 132 Informant 133 Informant 134 Informant 135 insanity Inside Chess Magazine IOC Ippolito IQP Irina Bulmaga Irina Krush Irving Chernev Isaac Kashdan Ivan Bukavshin Ivan Sokolov Ivanchuk J. Polgar Jacek Oskulski Jacob Aagaard Jaenisch Jaideep Unudurti Jakovenko James Tarjan Jan Gustafsson Jan Timman Jan-Krzysztof Duda Jay Whitehead Jeffery Xiong Jennifer Yu Jeremy Silman Jim Slater Jimmy Quon Joe Benjamin Joel Benjamin John Burke John Cole John Grefe John Watson Jon Lenchner Jon Ludwig Hammer Jonathan Hawkins Jonathan Penrose Jonathan Speelman Joop van Oosterom Jorden Van Foreest Jose Diaz Jose Raul Capablanca Ju Wenjun Judit Polgar Julio Granda Zuniga junk openings Kaidanov Kaido Kulaots Kalashnikov Sicilian Kamsky Karen Sumbatyan Karjakin Karpov Karsten Mueller Kasimdzhanov Kasparov Kateryna Lagno Kavalek Keanu Reeves Ken Regan Keres KGB Khalifman Khanty-Mansiysk Grand Prix Kim Commons king and pawn endings King's Gambit King's Indian King's Tournament 2010 Kings Tournament 2012 Kirsan Ilyumzhinov KKing's Gambit KKing's Indian Klovans Komodo Komodo 11 Komodo 12 Komodo Dragon Korchnoi Kramnik Krishnan Sasikiran Kunin Kurt Stein Lajos Portisch Larry Christiansen Larry Evans Larry Kaufman Larry Parr Lasker Lasker-Pelikan Latvian Gambit Laurent Fressinet Laznicka Lc0 Le Quang Liem LeBron James Leinier Dominguez Leko Leon 2017 Leonid Kritz lessons Leuven Rapid & Blitz Leuven Rapid & Blitz 2017 Lev Psakhis Levon Aronian Lilienthal Linares 2010 Linder Liviu-Dieter Nisipeanu Loek van Wely Lombardy London 2009 London 2010 London 2011 London Grand Prix London System Lothar Schmid Lu Shanglei Lubosh Kavalek Luke McShane Macieja Magnus Carlsen Maia Main Line Ruy Malakhov Malcolm Gladwell Malcolm Pein Mamedyarov Marc Arnold Marc Lang Marin Mariya Muzychuk Mark Crowther Mark Dvoretsky Mark Glickman Mark Taimanov Markus Ragger Marshall Marshall Gambit Masters of the Chessboard Mateusz Bartel Matthew Sadler Maurice Ashley Max Euwe Max Judd Maxim Matlakov Maxim Rodshtein Maxime Vachier-Lagrave McShane Mega 2012 mental malfunction Mesgen Amanov Michael Adams Miguel Najdorf Mikhail Antipov Mikhail Botvinnik Mikhail Golubev Mikhail Osipov Mikhail Tal Mikhail Zinar Mikhalchishin Miles Mind Games 2016 Minev miniatures Miron Sher Miso Cebalo MModern Benoni Modern Modern Benoni Moiseenko Morozevich Morphy Movsesian Müller Murali Karthikeyan music Nadareishvili Naiditsch Najdorf Sicilian Nakamura Nana Dzagnidze Nanjing 2010 Natalia Pogonina Navara NDame football Negi Neo-Archangelsk Nepomniachtchi New In Chess Yearbook 104 New York Times NH Tournament 2010 Nigel Short Nihal Sarin Nikita Vitiugov Nikolai Rezvov Nils Grandelius Nimzo-Indian Nino Khurtsidze NNotre Dame football Nodirbek Abdusattarov Nona Gaprindashvili Norway Chess 2013 Norway Chess 2014 Norway Chess 2015 Norway Chess 2016 Norway Chess 2017 Notre Dame basketball Notre Dame football Notre Dame Football Notre Dame hockey Nov. 2009 News Nyback Nyzhnyk Oleg Pervakov Oleg Skvortsov Olympics 2010 Open Ruy opening advice opening novelties Openings openings Or Cohen P.H. Nielsen Pal Benko Palma Grand Prix 2017 Parham Maghsoodloo Parimarjan Negi Paris Grand Prix Paris Rapid & Blitz passed pawns Paul Keres Paul Morphy Paul Rudd Pavel Eljanov pawn endings pawn play Pawn Sacrifice pawn structures Pentala Harikrishna Pesotskyi Peter Heine Nielsen Peter Leko Peter Svidler Petroff Philadelphia Open Philidor's Defense philosophy Phiona Mutesi Pirc Piterenka Rapid/Blitz Polgar Polgar sisters Polugaevsky Ponomariov Ponziani Potkin poultry Powerbook 2011 Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu Prague Chess Train problems progressive chess prophylaxis Puzzle Rush Qatar Masters 2015 QGD Tartakower QQueen's Gambit Accepted queen sacrifices Queen's Gambit Accepted Queen's Gambit Declined Queen's Indian Defense Rabat blitz 2015 Radjabov Radoslaw Wojtaszek Ragger rapid chess Rapport Rashid Nezhmetdinov Rathnakaran Kantholi rating inflation ratings Ray Robson Raymond Smullyan Regan Reggio Emilia 2010 Reggio Emilia 2011 Reshevsky Reti Reuben Fine Rex Sinquefield Reykjavik Open 2012 Reykjavik Open 2017 Richard Rapport Richard Reti Robert Byrne robot chess Robson Roman Ovetchkin rook endings RReggio Emilia 2011 rrook endings RRuy Lopez RRuy Lopez sidelines Rubinstein Rubinstein French Rudolf Loman Rudolf Spielmann rules Ruslan Ponomariov Russian Team Championship Russia-Ukraine war Rustam Kasimdzhanov Ruy Lopez Ruy Lopez sidelines Rybka Rybka 4 S. Kasparov S.L. Narayanan sacrifices Sadler Saemisch Sakaev Sam Collins Sam Sevian Sam Shankland Samuel Reshevsky Sanan Sjugirov Sao Paulo/Bilbao 2011 Sao Paulo/Bilbao 2012 satire Savchenko Savielly Tartakower Schliemann Scotch Four Knights Searching for Bobby Fischer Seirawan self-destruction Sergei Tiiviakov Sergei Tkachenko Sergey Erenburg Sergey Fedorchuk Sergey Karjakin Sergey Kasparov Sergey Shipov Sevan Muradian Shakhriyar Mamedyarov Shamkir 2015 Shamkir 2016 Shamkir 2017 Shankland Sharjah Grand Prix 2017 Shenzhen 2017 Shipov Shirov Short Shreyas Royal Sicilian Sinquefield Cup sitzfleisch Slav Smith-Morra Gambit Smyslov So-Navara Spassky spectacular moves Speelman sportsmanship Spraggett St. Louis Chess Club St. Louis Invitational St. Louis Rapid and Blitz 2017 stalemate Staunton Steph Curry Stephen Hawking Stockfish Stockfish 4 Stonewall Dutch stupidity Suat Atalik Super Bowl XLIV Susan Polgar Sutovsky Sveshnikov Sveshnikov Sicilian Svetozar Gligoric Svidler Svidler-Shankland match sweeper sealer twist Swiercz tactics Tactics Taimanov Tal Tal Memorial 2009 Tal Memorial 2010 Tal Memorial 2011 Tal Memorial 2012 Tal Memorial 2012 Tani Adewumi Tanitoluwa Adewumi Tarjan Tarrasch Tarrasch Defense Tashkent Tashkent Grand Prix Tbilisi Grand Prix 2015 TCEC TCEC Season 10 TCEC Season 11 TCEC Season 12 TCEC Season 13 TCEC Season 14 TCEC Season 15 TCEC Season 19 TCEC Season 20 TCEC Season 21 TCEC Season 22 TCEC Season 8 TCEC Season 9 TED talks Teimour Radjabov Terekhin The Chess Players (book) The Simpsons The Week in Chess Thessaloniki Grand Prix Three knights Tibor Karolyi Tigran Gorgiev Tigran Petrosian Tim Krabbé time controls time trouble Timman Timur Gareev Timur Gareyev Tomashevsky Tony Miles Topalov traps Tromso Olympics 2014 TTCEC Season 14 TWIC Tyler Cowen types of chess players Ufuk Tuncer Ultimate Blitz Challenge underpromotion Unive 2012 University of Notre Dame upsets US Championship 2010 US Championship 2011 US Chess League USCF ratings USCL V. Onischuk Vachier-Lagrave Valentina Gunina Vallejo value of chess van der Heijden Van Perlo van Wely Varuzhan Akobian Vasik Rajlich Vasily Smyslov Vassilios Kotronias Vassily Ivanchuk Vassily Smyslov Velimirovic Attack Vera Menchik Veresov Veselin Topalov video videos Vidit Gujrathi Vienna 1922 Viktor Bologan Viktor Korchnoi Viktor Moskalenko Vincent Keymer Viswanathan Anand Vitaly Tseshkovsky Vitiugov Vladimir Fedoseev Vladimir Kramnik Vladimir Tukmakov Vladislav Artemiev Vladislav Kovalev Vladislav Tkachiev Vlastimil Hort Vlastimil Jansa Vugar Gashimov Vugar Gashimov Memorial Walter Browne Wang Hao Wang Yue Watson Wei Yi Welcome Wesley So Wijk aan Zee 1999 Wijk aan Zee 2010 Wijk aan Zee 2011 Wijk aan Zee 2012 Wijk aan Zee 2013 Wijk aan Zee 2014 Wijk aan Zee 2015 Wijk aan Zee 2016 Wijk aan Zee 2017 Wil E. Coyote Wilhelm Steinitz William Golding William Lombardy William Vallicella Willy Hendriks Winawer French Wojtkiewicz Wolfgang Uhlmann women in chess Women's Grand Prix Women's World Championship World Champion DVDs World Championship World Cup World Cup 2009 World Cup 2011 World Cup 2011 World Junior Championship World Senior Championship WWesley So WWijk aan Zee 2012 Xie Jun Yasser Seirawan Yates Yermolinsky Yevseev Yoshiharu Habu Yu Yangyi Yuri Averbakh Yuri Dokhoian Yuri Razuvaev Yuri Vovk Yuri Yeliseyev Yuriy Kuzubov Zaitsev Variation Zaven Andriasyan Zhao Xue Zhongyi Tan Zug 2013 Zukertort System Zurab Azmaiparashvili Zurich 1953 Zurich 2013 Zurich 2014 Zurich 2015 Zurich 2016 Zurich 2017
    Thursday
    Aug122010

    The NH Tournament, Round 1

    In round 1 the young guys had White, but were unable to prove any superiority. The Rising Stars' top seed, Hikaru Nakamura, did manage to beat the Experience team's lowest board, but with difficulty. Three games were drawn, and in the fifth game the Experience #1, Boris Gelfand, defeated the Rising Stars' least-"risen" teammate to equalize the match.

    The tournament site is here, and you can find the games here, with my brief comments.

    Wednesday
    Aug112010

    The Daily Update: The World Junior, Women's Grand Prix, Russia vs. China and the Gyorgy Marx Memorial

    A big batch of tournaments ended this weekend, but there are plenty more underway. (And of course, there's the NH Rising Stars vs. Experience tournament starting Thursday.) Here are some of the biggies:

    (1) World Junior Championship. We're just past the halfway point (7 rounds of 13 have finished), and Russian Dmitry Andreikin leads with 6 points. Only two players - Jacek Tomczak (POL) and Sanan Sjugirov (RUS - from Kalmykia) are within half a point, but 17 more have 5 points including the well-known players Jon Ludvig Hammer of Norway and Parimarjan Negi of India.

    (2) 5th Women's Grand Prix. With one round to go, Hou Yifan of China has 7.5/10 and leads former women's champ Antoneta Stefanova of Bulgaria by half a point. Fortunately for Stefanova, she has White against Hou in the last round of this very strong women's event in Ulan Bator, Mongolia.

    (3) Russia vs. China. The Russian women have held their own against their Chinese counterparts and then some, but the Chinese men have been pounding their Russian opponents pretty hard. The overall score so far is 27-23, China.

    (4) 8th Gyorgy Marx Memorial. This six-man, double round-robin event has reached the halfway mark; here are the standings so far:

    1. Laznicka 4/5 (2867 TPR)

    2. Z. Almasi 3

    3. F. Berkes 2.5

    4-5. Robson, Timman 2

    6. Acs 1.5

    Good practice for America's youngest GM!

    Wednesday
    Aug112010

    Svidler vs. Nielsen: Videos

    Speaking of Peter Svidler (see the previous post), you can see the man in action against his namesake, Peter Heine Nielsen, from their recent rapid & blitz match. Have a look.

    Monday
    Aug092010

    Peter Svidler's Website

    Here.

    HT: Srinivas Patri

    Monday
    Aug092010

    Endgame Blunders at the Rapid World Championship

    Two games from this weekend's Grenke Rapid World Championship caught my eye as examples of what can happen to a player who is pressing for the win and gets excited about his chances - so excited he loses his sense of danger. Have a look.

    Monday
    Aug092010

    Ramirez Wins the US Open

    Whether by consent or coincidence, almost all the top games finished in draws, and the result was that GM Alejandro Ramirez took clear first with an impressive 8/9. Varuzhan Akobian, Alexander Shabalov, Julio Catalino Sadorra and Daniel Naroditsky tied for second half a point back, and then a whopping group of 18 more players finished with 7/9.

    More info here.

    Monday
    Aug092010

    Anand in the NY Times

    Not terribly interesting, except perhaps to Indian readers who may rightly be excited about the NIIT initiatives in place there. But still, it's nice to have the world champ in the papers - it beats "Toiletgate" coverage.

    HT: Chris Falter

    Sunday
    Aug082010

    Emanuel Lasker, by Isaak and Vladimir Linder: A Review

    Isaak and Vladimir Linder, Emanuel Lasker: 2nd World Chess Champion (Foreword by Andy Soltis, Game Annotations by Karsten Müller. (Russell Enterprises 2010.) 264 pp. $24.95.

    This is by the same authors as the recently reviewed Capablanca volume, but while the first book was a solid, workmanlike effort but not really so special, the Lasker volume makes a significant contribution to the chess world. First of all, there isn’t much that’s available in English on Emanuel Lasker. There’s the J. Hannak hagiography originally published in 1959, Kasparov’s chapter in volume 1 of My Great Predecessors (2003) and then in 2005 Soltis’s Why Lasker Matters presents 100 of the second world champion’s games, but without any biographical material. So there’s a huge gap in the literature, and considering that Lasker was world champion for 27 years and continued to compete at the highest level into his mid-to-late 60s, he’s a worthy figure.

    Additionally, he lived a very interesting life: he obtained a Ph.D. in mathematics, wrote broadly philosophical material, was an expert in other games like bridge and even wrote a play. He was born in Germany but also lived for significant periods in England, Russian and the United States.

    So the Linders have a very rich subject for their work, and they handle it in a very interesting way. Rather than giving a traditional chronology of his life, interspersed with accounts of his matches and tournaments, they present a series of encyclopedia-like chapters.

    Chapter 1, “Life”, begins as one might expect with a section called “Childhood and Adolescence”. But that’s where business as usual comes to a screeching halt. The next section is “Family”, then “Personality”, “Mathematician”, “Teacher”, “Dissertation”, “Philosopher”, “Einstein and Lasker”, “Politics”, “Curiosities”, “Humor”, “England”, “Holland”, “Russia” and “USA”. In general the narrative follows a chronological thread, but not always.

    So where’s the chess? It’s mostly in the very long chapter 2, which might be thought of as its own book. It is labeled “Matches, Tournaments and Opponents”, and that’s just what it is. It starts with an entry on Alekhine, then “Berlin Tournaments, 1890, 1918”, “Bird”, “Bird-Lasker Matches, 1890, 1892”, and so on, all the way to the letter Z (for Zürich 1934). When a subsection is devoted to a player, that person gets his own mini-bio and sometimes the accompanying game(s) doesn’t feature Lasker! It’s quite unusual for a chess biography, but it presents a fascinating picture of the chess world around Lasker during his career.

    Many of us have a pretty good sense of the players he faced in world championship matches and after losing the title, but many of his early opponents are just names to us. So in addition to telling us a lot about Lasker, we get a broader education thrown in for free.

    Within the chapter is a mini-chapter, “Matches”, which is dominated by a sub-mini-chapter, Matches for the World Championship. It’s well-done, and I should add that these entries don’t replace the entries on the match opponents. (That is, Capablanca has his own entry, and then there’s the further section on the Capablanca-Lasker match.)

    Chapter 3, “Chess Works – His Games and Discoveries”, is another hodge-podge. Sections include Aesthetics, Aphorisms, Endgame Studies, Losses, Neo-Romanticism and Psychology.

    Chapter 4, “Writer and Journalist”, gives a quick run-through of his efforts as a chess journalist and author, and the final chapter, “Impervious to Time”, briefly discusses his final years and death, books and other memorials to his life and work, and presents a series of quotations from other champions about Lasker. (It’s the sort of thing Kasparov does throughout My Great Predecessors, at the end of each champion’s biography, but he got the idea from the Linders and not the other way around.) The book then concludes with a series of indexes.

    As for annotated games, while this work doesn’t replace Soltis’s Why Lasker Matters, the chess content isn’t trivial. There are 82 games and game fragments (mostly games), and they are annotated by German GM Karsten Müller. Sometimes the analysis is rather light, but on the whole the games are covered quite well.

    I really liked this book, and can heartily recommend it to chess fans of all sorts.

    (Purchasing info here.)

    Sunday
    Aug082010

    The Daily Update: Kamsky, Eljanov and Kobalia are Tournament Winners

    (1) Mainz. Gata Kamsky demonstrated his tremendous potential once again by winning the extremely strong Grenke Rapid world championship. He won his first nine games and drew his last two, finishing half a point ahead of Gashimov, Aronian and Bareev and a full point ahead of a larger group that included Karjakin, Grischuk and Shirov. Along the way Kamsky beat Aronian, Karjakin and Kasimdzhanov (and two other GMs) while holding off Gashimov and Grischuk in the last two rounds.

    (2) Politiken Cup. It took him the whole event to wind up in clear first, but since the finish line is what counts, the tournament was a success for top seed Pavel Eljanov. His 8.5/10 put him half a point clear of Maxim Rodshtein, Konstantin Landa and Bartlomiej Macieja and probably kept his enormous 2755 rating more or less intact.

    (3) Arctic Circle Challenge. Mikhail Kobalia defeated top seed Loek van Wely in the last round of this strong annual open in Tromsø, Norway, and came in first. His score of 7.5/9 tied him with with Manuel Leon Hoyos, but Kobalia was the official first-prize winner based on tiebreaks. (An aside: I dislike the idea of someone winning a tournament based on tiebreaks, as if the fact that X's very weak first-round opponent got discouraged and played really badly while Y's very weak first-round opponent played a little better and had some luck later on really made any difference to the value of X's and Y's tournament performances. If it's so dreadfully important to call one player the winner, then have a blitz playoff.)

    (4) U.S. Open. There's just one round to go and Alejandro Ramirez leads with 7.5/8, half a point ahead of Varuzhan Akobian, Julio Sadorra and Daniel Naroditsky. 10 players are a further half a point behind, including Indianan Jim Dean.

    Saturday
    Aug072010

    The Daily Update: Mainz, Day 1 (and More)

    Lots of events are underway, and many of them are in crunch time as they'll end tomorrow.

    (1) Mainz. This event has some superstars, and after five of eleven rounds in this rapid competition there's a 12-way tie for first. The following players are 5-0 (this is given in tiebreak order, not rating order): Kempinski, Bareev, Gustafsson, Markowski, Grischuk, Karjakin, Gashimov, Bologan, Inarkiev, Aronian, Kamsky and Kasimdzhanov. You could have a fantastic round-robin tournament with those players alone! A further 10 players are just half a point back, including Shirov and former superstar Ulf Andersson.

    (2) Politiken Cup. There's one round to go, but the field hasn't stratified very much. After nine rounds, five players lead with 7.5, six more players have 7 and at least 15 more have 6.5. The leaders are Eljanov, Landa, Rodshtein, Macieja and Ganguly. Hungarian legend Lajos Portisch (eight times a Candidate, for starters) is among the 7-pointers - not bad for a 73-year old!

    (3) Arctic Circle Challenge. After eight of nine rounds, there are two leaders: Loek van Wely and Manuel Leon Hoyos, both with 7 points. Three players are half a point back, including Bartosz Socko. He had been leading almost all the way, but lost in round 8 to Leon Hoyos.

    (4) U.S. Open. All the sections have finally merged, and going into tonight's penultimate round Alejandro Ramirez and Alex Shabalov lead with 6.5/7, half a point ahead of 10 others and a full point ahead of 18 more.

    (5) Other events are going on too, but as they continue past the weekend I'll turn to them later. One major event starting late this upcoming week is the NH Chess Tournament in Amsterdam, a double-round Scheveningen team tournament between the "Rising Stars" and "Experience" squads. The biggest prize in all of this is for the top scorer on the Rising Stars team, as he'll win automatic entry to next year's Amber rapid & blindfold tournament. Here are the lineups:

    Experience: Gelfand, Svidler, PH Nielsen, van Wely, Ljubojevic.

    Rising Stars: Nakamura, Caruana, So, Giri and Howell.