2019 Constitution State Open
Saturday May 18
$160-1st, $80-2nd. Guaranteed.Site: Mill Brook Place, 1267 Main St., Coventry, CT 06238
Across street from Bidwell Tavern is our stone building at rear of parking lot
Web Site: https://ConnecticutChess.blogspot.com/
E-mail: ConnecticutChess@Gmail.com
Lunch: 12:30 - 1:30. Four restaurants in immediate area.
Please bring your own equipment, especially digital chess clocks.
Joe Bihlmeyer won clear first place, 3-0, at the 2019 Greater Hartford Open. The tournament attracted 12 players to Coventry's Mill Brook Place.
A 4-way tie for 2nd place happened when Mark Wilkin, Michael Smith, Marvin Moss, and Dan Smith each finished with 2-1 scores. Rob Roy directed.
The next tournament in Coventry will be the 2019 Nathan Hale Open to be held on Saturday April 13.
36 tournaments held at Coventry Chess Club so far.
2019 GREATER HARTFORD OPEN - MARCH 16 - COVENTRY CT
----------------------------------------------------------------- Pair | Player Name |Total|Round|Round|Round| Num | USCF ID / Rtg (Pre->Post) | Pts | 1 | 2 | 3 | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | JOSEPH BIHLMEYER |3.0 |W 7|W 5|W 2| CT | 12686352 / R: 2022 ->2036 | | | | | | Q: 1967 ->1974 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 2 | MARK A WILKIN |2.0 |W 4|W 9|L 1| CT | 12462963 / R: 1916 ->1915 | | | | | | Q: 1670 ->1682 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 3 | MICHAEL SMITH |2.0 |D 6|D 7|W 11| CT | 16903342 / R: 1728P16->1741P19 | | | | | | Q: 1669P18->1668P21 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 4 | MARVIN MOSS |2.0 |L 2|W 8|W 6| MA | 12476109 / R: 1715 ->1737 | | | | | | Q: 1556 ->1588 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 5 | DANIEL SMITH |2.0 |W 11|L 1|W 9| RI | 12704934 / R: 1539 ->1547 | | | | | | Q: 1431 ->1447 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 6 | MARK BOURQUE |1.5 |D 3|W 10|L 4| CT | 12139250 / R: 1973 ->1945 | | | | | | Q: 1805 ->1776 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 7 | ARTHUR C NAGEL |1.5 |L 1|D 3|W 10| CT | 10264669 / R: 1722 ->1720 | | | | | | Q: 1496 ->1508 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 8 | JACKSON THURNER HALL |1.0 |L 10|L 4|W 12| VT | 16750417 / R: 1433P4 ->1310P7 | | | | | | Q: 1505P9 ->1422P12 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 9 | WILLIAM A COOK |1.0 |W 12|L 2|L 5| CT | 12898630 / R: 1283 ->1275 | | | | | | Q: 1316 ->1298 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 10 | JOHN N HOOPER III |1.0 |W 8|L 6|L 7| RI | 15532702 / R: 1167 ->1203 | | | | | | Q: 1096P15->1147P18 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 11 | CHRISTOPHER J HALL |1.0 |L 5|W 12|L 3| NH | 16973725 / R: Unrated->1123P3 | | | | | | Q: 1050P5 ->1059P8 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 12 | NICHOLAS WRONA-LYTWYN |0.0 |L 9|L 11|L 8| CT | 16967612 / R: 733P3 -> 733P6 | | | | | | Q: 733P3 -> 715P6 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
THESE ARE OUR DATES FOR THE REST OF THE YEAR
Apr 13 2019 Nathan Hale Open Coventry CT
May 18 2019 Constitution State Open Coventry CT
June 22 2019 Coventry Summer Open Coventry CT
July 13 2019 Connecticut Yankee Open Coventry CT
Aug 10 2019 Nutmeg State Open Coventry CT
Sept 28 2019 Charter Oak Open Coventry CT
Oct 19 2019 Connecticut Harvest Open Coventry CT
Nov 16 2019 Yankee Peddler Open Coventry CT
Dec 14 2019 Holiday Party Open Coventry CT
Upcoming Chess Tournaments for Connecticut
George Mirijanian Chess Player at Wachusett Chess Club
Chess Champion 8-year-old Homeless Refugee
Homeless Boy Nigerian Refugee Wins New York State Chess Championship
Chess should be in the Olympics
Coach Dan Starbuck Pelletier
Dan was born in Wilton, CT and moved to Louisville, KY at age 9 where he competed in state and national chess competitions, along with playing soccer for top premier clubs in the Louisville area.
Dan went on to play 4 years of college soccer at the University of Montevallo where he captained his team to win the Peach Belt Conference Tournament Championship. With an extensive and accomplished background, Coach Dan brought his chess and soccer skills back to his birth state of CT and founded DIG Inc. - helping players improve their fundamentals, fitness, and attitude. Having coached for many organizations including the Wilton Soccer Association and Beachside Soccer Club, Dan is a fully licensed coach with NSCAA Premier Diploma.
Dan loves soccer because of the relationships that he has built and is continually motivated by teaching and seeing players succeed. He currently plays for the Polonia Falcons in the CT Soccer League and is a supporter of @Arsenal in England and @ADAlcorcónsad in Spain.
MAY 4 2019 CSCA State Championship New Britain
REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN for the 3RD ANNUAL CHARITY CHESS CHAMPIONSHIP. This year, 100% of all net proceeds will benefit the David M. Rubenstein Center for Pancreatic Cancer Research at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center to fund research for the early detection and prevention of pancreatic cancer.
Registration and Event Details at http://www.charitychess.
When: Sunday June 2nd, 2019
Where: Columbia Grammar & Preparatory School
4 West 93rd Street, New York, NY 10025 (between Central Park West & Columbus Avenues)
Can't make it to the event and would like to donate? Donations can be made at www.charitychess.org or you can sponsor players or Grandmasters.
There will be Three Primary Events plus a Silent Auction:
1. 3-ROUND USCF-RATED QUADS / GAME 45, d/5
2. GRANDMASTER TANDEM SIMUL FEATURING GM JOEL BENJAMIN, GM JOHN FEDOROWICZ, & GM MICHAEL ROHDE
3. GRANDMASTER BLITZ TOURNAMENT
3-ROUND USCF-RATED QUADS / GAME 45, d/5
Open to adults and children. Non-Cash prizes awarded to Quads winners. Players will be paired in quads of 4, starting with 4 highest registered players based on their USCF May Ratings Supplement and continuing down. The 1st round will start at 9AM sharp! Please arrive by 8:30am, so we can begin Round 1 promptly at 9:00am.
CHECK IN BY 8:45AM is MANDATORY.
Approximate end time 2:30pm. Byes are not permitted. All players must be registered on site before 8:30am.
GRANDMASTER TANDEM SIMUL FEATURING GM JOEL BENJAMIN, GM JOHN FEDOROWICZ, GM MICHAEL ROHDE
Open to adults and children. Three of the top players in the US will be taking on all comers in an exhibition of their chess prowess! Do you have what it takes to upset them? Non-cash prizes awarded for wins. All players must be registered on site before 10:45AM. Starts at 11:00AM sharp. Approximate end time is 1:00pm.
GRANDMASTER BLITZ TOURNAMENT
7 Round, Swiss 3/2 – USCF BLITZ RATED
GM Marc Arnold
GM Maurice Ashley
GM Sergei Azarov
GM Oliver Barbosa
GM Joel Benjamin
GM John Michael Burke
GM Anatoly Bykhovsky
GM Pascal Charbonneau
GM Nicolas Checa
GM John Fedorowicz
GM Robert Hess
GM Irina Krush
GM Mackenzie Molner
GM Magesh Panchanathan
GM Mark Paragua
GM Arun Prasad
GM Michael Rohde
GM Vladimir Romanenko
WGM Jennifer Shahade
GM Alexander Stripunsky
With Special Guest IM JAY BONIN
Would you like to play in the Grandmaster Blitz tournament? We will be auctioning off wildcard spots in our Silent Auction! In addition, the winner of the highest-rated Quad will receive automatic entry into the GM Blitz tournament. Those are the only ways to enter to play with the GMs in the GM Blitz tournament. The GM blitz tournament will start at 2:30pm and the format is 7-Round, Swiss-System. 3 minutes/with 2 minute increment. USCF Blitz-Rated.
SILENT AUCTION & RAFFLE
Wildcard spots to play in the GM Blitz Tournament to be auctioned off. See other incredible items in the silent auction at: http://charitychess.org/
SPONSOR PLAYERS OR GRANDMASTERS at www.charitychess.org Prizes awarded to top three participant fundraisers.
QUESTIONS: Please contact championship@charitychess.org
Charity Chess Championship, Inc. is a 501(c)(3) organization
All donations are fully tax deductible to the extent permitted by law
Saturday, March 9, 2019
REPORT - EASTERN CONNECTICUT OPEN (Feb 23)
Hans Niemann, 15, of Weston is #88 in the world, 9th in the U.S.
Tournament attracts 160 kids to Manchester High School
Chess champ from Greenwich High sets a winning strategy
2019 DIG Scholastic attracts 38 kids to Weston CT
How A Game of Chess is Changing Lives
Derek Meredith and Mikhail Koganov dominate 2019 CT Senior Open
WATCH CT SENIOR PLAYOFF MATCH LIVE Sunday at 1p.m.
3/12 NM Derek Meredith concludes his lecture series at NBCC.
3/19 SM Rick Bauer to conduct training class and give Simul at NBCC.
CCM has not received reports from any other tournaments in Jan and Feb.
We encourage organizers to at least email us a list of winners for publication.
Former Wachusett CC champion Carissa Yip
beats ex-Women's World Champion Ushenina
Carissa Yip, the 2014 champion of the Wachusett Chess Club, got off to an excellent start in Round 1 in the Women's Division of the 2019 World Team Championship in Astana, Kazakhstan by defeating former Women's World Champion GM Anna Ushenina of Ukraine on Tuesday, March 5th. The 15-year-old Women's International Master from Andover, Mass. beat 33-year-old Ushenina with the black pieces on board 4 in the USA vs. Ukraine match, which ended in a 2-2 tie. Carissa scored the only win for the U.S. team, with fellow team mates WGM Tatev Abrahamyan losing on board 1, WGM Sabina Foisor drawing on board 2, and 12-year-old Woman Candidate Master Rochelle Wu splitting the point on board 3. -George Mirijanian
[Event " 2019 World Women's Team Championship"]
[Site "Astana, Kazakhstan"]
[Date "2019.03.05"]
[Round "1"]
[White "Ushenina, Anna"]
[Black "Yip, Carissa"]
[Result "0-1"]
[ECO "E73"]
[WhiteElo "2279"]
[BlackElo "2443"]
[PlyCount "80"]
[EventDate "2014.??.??"]
[SourceVersionDate "2019.03.05"]
1. c4 Nf6 2. Nc3 g6 3. e4 d6 4. d4 Bg7 5. Be2 O-O 6. Bg5 Nbd7 7. Qd2 c6 8. Nf3
e5 9. d5 Nc5 10. Qc2 a5 11. O-O Rb8 12. a3 cxd5 13. cxd5 Qc7 14. Nd2 Bd7 15.
Nb5 Bxb5 16. Bxb5 Rfc8 17. Rac1 Qd8 18. Qb1 a4 19. Be3 Qa5 20. Be2 b5 21. f3
Nfd7 22. Rc3 Bf6 23. Qc2 Bd8 24. Rb1 Qa6 25. Qd1 Ba5 26. Rc2 Bb6 27. Bf2 Kg7
28. Rbc1 Rc7 29. Qf1 Ba7 30. Rc3 Rcc8 31. Kh1 Qb7 32. R1c2 Rf8 33. b4 axb3 34.
Nxb3 Qa6 35. Bh4 Qa4 36. Qb1 b4 37. axb4 Qxb4 38. Qa2 Nxb3 39. Qxa7 Nd4 40. Qxd7 Qxc3 0-1
The blockade on c5 did an amazing job of blunting the doubled rooks on the c-file and bishop on the g1-a7 diagonal. Black's bishop activation g7-f6-d8-a5-b6 was the highlight for me. Had White done nothing, Black could have expanded on the kingside with f5 etc., but she paniced with b2-b4, axb3 ep, which left White with a weaker queenside than Black's (a3 vs b5) and gave White a tough position to hold. It is also interesting to see the engine award White an advantage out of the opening (space) but no clear way to maintain it.
Rick Bauer
Respectfully,
Coach Dan
502-468-6930
Game of the Week
It looks like the weak Black queenside pawns will be over-run. Amherst College student Alexander Deatrick’s crucial move to co-ordinate a rally was to place the Black knight on the worst-looking square on the king side, 20…Nh8, in this last round game that determined the winner of the 94th annual Western Massachusetts/Connecticut Pioneer Valley Chess Championships.
Robert Campbell(1946)-Alexander Deatrick(2134)
3/3/19
94th Western MA/CT Pioneer Valley Champs
Amherst, MA
round 5
1.d4 Nf6
2.c4 e6
3.Nc3 d5
4.Bg5 c6
5.e3 Nbd7
6.Nf3 Qa5
7.Nd2 Bb4
8.Qc2 O-O
9.Be2 e5
10.dxe5 Ne4
11.Ndxe4 dxe4
12.O-O Bxc3
13.Qxc3
13.bxc3 Nxe5 14.Qxe4 Ng6 15.Bf4 Bf5 15...Nf4 16.Qf4 Be6 17.Bg4 Bg4 18.Qg4 +0.19 Stockfish 16.Qf3 Nxf4 17.exf4 Rfe8 18.Rfe1 Be4 19.Qh3 g6 20.g4 Rad8 21.Bf1 c5 22.Re3 Bc6 23.Bg2 Rxe3 24.Qxe3 Re8 25.Qd2 Bxg2 26.Kxg2 Qc7 = Stockfish
13…Qxc3
14.bxc3 Nxe5
15.Bf4 Ng6?! +0.37/27
15...Nd3 -0.10/26 16.a4 Stockfish evaluates one of the three choices here as better than the game; 16. c5 Nxf4 17. exf4 Rd8 18. a4 Be6 19. Rfd1 Kf8 20. a5 Rd5 21. Rxd5 cxd5 22. a6 bxa6 = or 16.Bd3 ed 17. Rfd1 Rd8 18. Rd2 Be6 19. c5 Bc4 20. f3 b6 21. cxb6 axb6 22. Bc7 Rdc8 23. Bxb6 Ra3 24. Bc5 Rxc3 -0.16 Stockfish 16...Be6 17.Bd6 Rfc8 18.c5 b6 19.cxb6 axb6 20.Rfd1 Nb2 21.Rd4 Rd8 22.Ba3 Nxa4 23.Be7 Rxd4 24.cxd4 b5 25.Bb4 f5 26.f4 Re8 27.Rc1
16.Bd6 Rd8
17.c5 Be6
17...b6 18.Rfd1 Be6 19.a4 bxc5 20.Bxc5 a5 21.Rd4 f5 22.h3 Ne5 23.Bd6 Nd3 24.Bxd3 exd3 25.Rxd3 c5 26.Rdd1 Bb3 27.Rd2 +0.80 Stockfish
17...a6 18.Rfd1 a5 19.Rab1 Re8 20.h3 Nf8 21.Rd4 Ra7 22.Rb3 f5 23.a4 Be6 24.Rb2 Kf7 25.Bh5+ g6 26.Be2 +1.29 Stockfish
17...a5 18.Rfd1 Be6 19.Rd4 f5 20.a3 Rd7 21.Bg3 Rf7 22.Rb1 Nf8 23.h4 h6 24.Rb6 Re8 25.Bd6 Ng6 26.Bh5 Kh7 +1.03 Stockfish
18.a3
18.Rfd1 b6 19.a4 bxc5 20.Bxc5 a5 21.Rd4 f5 22.h3 Ne5 23.Bd6 Nd3 24.Bxd3 exd3 25.Rxd3 c5 26.Rd2 Kf7 27.f3 +0.72 Stockfish
18.a4 b6 19.Rfd1 bxc5 20.Bxc5 a5 21.Rd4 f5 22.Bd6 Bd5 23.Bg3 Nf8 24.Rd2 Bf7 25.Rb2 Nd7 26.Bc7 Re8 27.Bd6 Ne5 28.Rb6 Bc4 29.Bxe5 Bxe2 30.Bd4 Bd3 31.Rb7 c5 32.Bxc5 Reb8 33.Rd7 +0.94 Stockfish
18…b5
19.f4
19.a4 a6 20.c4 Bxc4 21.Bxc4 bxc4 22.Rac1 f5 23.Rxc4 Nh8 24.h4 Nf7 25.Bf4 Rd7 26.Rb4 a5 27.Rb6 Rc8 28.Rc1 Nd8 29.Ra6 Nb7 30.Be5 +1.02 Stockfish
19...f5
19...Nh4 20.g4 20.Be7 Rd2 21. Bxh4 Rxe2 22. f5 Bb3 23. Rfe1 Rc2 24. Rac1 Rd2 25. Rb1 Ba4 26. f6 Rd3 27. fxg7 Rxc3 -1.20 Stockfish 20...Re8 20...Nf3 21. Rxf3 exf3 22. Bxf3 Rac8 23. e4 Bb3 24. h4 Re8 25. f5 g6 26. e5 gxf5 27. gxf5 Bc2 28. Bg4 h5 29. Bh3 +0.67 Stockfish 21.Kf2 Nf3 22.f5 Bd5 23.Kg3 a6 24.h4 g6 25.fxg6 fxg6 26.a4 Bb3 27.axb5 axb5 28.Rxa8 Rxa8 29.Bxf3 exf3 30.Kxf3 Ra4 +0.57 Stockfish
20.g4 Nh8
21.gxf5 Bxf5
22.c4?! +0.11/26
22.a4 +0.62/27 22...a6 23.Rfb1 23. Rfd1 Nf7 24. Kf2 Be6 25. Rd4 Nxd6 26. cxd6 Rab8 27. h4 Kf8 28. axb5 axb5 29. Rxe4 Rxd6 +0.75 or 23.Bc7 Re8 24. Kf2 Nf7 25. Rfd1 Ra7 26. Bd6 bxa4 27. Rxa4 a5 28. h4 g6 29. Rd2 Rd8 30. Bc4 Rdd7 31. Bb3 Kg7 32. Ke2 Nxd6 33. cxd6 +0.71 Stockfish 23...Nf7 24.axb5 cxb5 25.c4 b4 26.Rxb4 Nxd6 27.cxd6 Rxd6 28.c5 Rc6 29.Ra5 Rac8 30.Bxa6 Rxc5 31.Bxc8 Rxa5 32.Bxf5 Rxf5 33.Rxe4 Rc5 34.Kf2 g5 35.Re5 Rc2+ 36.Kg3 gxf4+ 37.exf4 Kg7 38.h4 Rc1 39.Rd5 Rg1+ 40.Kf3 h6 41.Rd6
22.Be5 Nf7 23.Bd4 Nh6 24.Kf2 Be6 25.a4 a6 26.h4 +0.80 Stockfish
22…a6
23.a4
23.Rad1 Nf7 24.Kf2 Rd7 25.Rd4 g6 26.Rfd1 Rb7 27.Rb1 Rd7 28.Ke1 h5 29.Rbd1 Raa7 30.R1d2 Rab7 31.Bd1 bxc4 32.Rxc4 Rb1 33.Rb4 Ra1 34.a4 Nxd6 35.cxd6 +0.43 Stockfish
23.Rfd1 Nf7 24.Rd4 Rd7 24...Nd6 25. cxd6 c5 26. Rd5 Be6 27. Rxc5 Rxd6 28. cxb5 Rd2 29. Bf1 axb5 30. Rxb5 Ra2 31. Rxa2 Bxa2 32. Rb2 +0.88 Stockfish 25.Rad1 g6 25...Rad8 26. Kf2 Rb7 27. R1d2 g6 28. h4 Rc8 29. Rb2 Rd7 30. Ke1 Kg7 31. Rbd2 Rb7 32. Rc2 Rd7 33. Rc1 +0.45 Stockfish 26.Kf2 h5 27.Ke1 Raa7 28.Kd2 Nh6 29.Kc3 Ng4 30.Bxg4 hxg4 31.Be5 Rxd4 32.Rxd4 bxc4 33.Kxc4 Kf7 34.Rd8 Be6+ 35.Kd4 Bd5 +0.27 Stockfish
23…b4
24.a5 Nf7
25.Bc7?! -0.93/29
25.Rfd1 -0.13/25 25...Bh3 25...Be6 26. f5 Bxf5 27. Rab1 Nxd6 28. cxd6 c5 29. Rd5 Be6 30. Rxc5 Rxd6 31. Rxb4 Rd2 = or 25...Nd6 26. cxd6 c5 27. Rd5 Be6 28. Rxc5 Rxd6 29. Rb1 Rb8 30. Rb2 Bf7 31. Kf1 Rh6 32. Kg2 = or 25...Ra7 26. Kf2 g6 27. Rab1 Rb7 28. Rb2 Be6 29. Rd4 Nxd6 30. cxd6 c5 31. Rxe4 Rxd6 32. Re5 Rc7 = Stockfish 26.Rd2 26. Kf2 Be6 27. f5 Nxd6 28. Rxd6 Bxf5 29. Rxc6 Rdc8 30. Rb6 Rxc5 31. h4 Bg6 32. Bg4 Bh5 33. Be6+ Bf7 34. Bxf7+ Kxf7 35. Rxb4 Rf8 = Stockfish 26...Rd7 27.Bf1 Bxf1 28.Kxf1 Rb7 29.Rb1 Rd8 30.Ke1 h6
25…Rd2
26.Rf2 Ra7
27.Bb6? -3.23/25
27.Bd6 -1.00/27 27...Bh3 27...Nxd6 28. cxd6 c5 29. Rd1 Ra2 30. Rd5 Bd7 31. Bd1 Rxa5 32. Rfd2 Rb7 33. Bc2 b3 34. Bxe4 Ra1+ 35. Kf2 Ra2 -1.66 Stockfish 28.Bf1 Rxf2 29.Kxf2 Bxf1 30.Rxf1 Rb7 31.Rb1 Nh6 32.Rb3 Nf5 33.Be5 Nh4 34.Bd4 Nf3 35.Ke2 h5 36.h3 Kh7 37.Rb1 b3 38.Bb2 h4 39.Rd1 Rb4 40.Rd7 Rxc4
27…Rad7
28.Rb1 Bh3
29.Bh5?! -5.66/29
29.Ba7 -4.18/29 29...Rxa7 30.Bf1 Rxf2 31.Kxf2 Bxf1 32.Rxb4 Nd8 33.Rb8 Bxc4 34.Rxd8+ Kf7 35.Rd4 Bd3 36.Rd6 36. Kg3 Rb7 37. Kg4 Rb5 38. Rd7+ Kf8 39. Rd8+ Ke7 40. Rg8 Kf7 41. Rd8 Rxc5 42. f5 Rxa5 -7.53 Stockfish 36...Rc7 36... Rb7 37. f5 Rb1 38. h3 Rf1+ 39. Kg2 Re1 40. Kg3 Rxe3+ 41. Kf4 Rf3+ 42. Ke5 e3 43. Rd7+ Ke8 44. Rxd3 e2 45. Rxf3 e1=Q+ 46. Kd4 Qd2+ 47. Rd3 Qxa5 -9.71 Stockfish 37.Kg3 Bc4 38.f5 Bd5 39.Rd8 Ra7 40.Kf4 g6 41.Rb8 Kf6 42.fxg6 Kxg6 43.Rb6
29…g6
30.Rxd2 Rxd2
31.Bd1 Nh6
32.Ba4?? #-21/26
32.Bd8 -5.67/27 32...Rxd8 33.Bc2 Rb8 33...Bf5 34. Rxb4 Rd2 35. Rb8+ Kg7 36. Rb7+ Kf6 37. Ba4 Ng4 38. Bxc6 Rd1+ 39. Kg2 Nxe3+ 40. Kf2 Nxc4 41. Rb3 Rd2+ 42. Kg3 Rd3+ 43. Rxd3 exd3 -10.80 Stockfish 34.Ba4 Bd7 35.Rd1 b3 36.Rxd7 b2
32…Ng4
33.Bxc6 Rg2+
34.Kf1 Nxe3+
35.Ke1 Bg4 0-1
UPCOMING USCF CHESS TOURNAMENTS
REPORT - 2019 EASTERN CONNECTICUT OPEN
YELFRY TORRES of Enfield, and ROMAN RYCHKOV from NJ (student at UConn)
tied for first when each finished with 3-0 scores. 23 were entered
into the competition which was held Feb 23 in Coventry Connecticut.
Rob Roy served as TD. We thank Dan Smith, from Westerly RI, for arriving
extra early to help Rob set up all the tables and chairs. It is this
kind of generous spirit we would like to see more of from others.
We are hoping for a similar turnout for this Saturday, March 16, for the
2019 Greater Hartford Open.
----------------------------------------------------------------- Pair | Player Name |Total|Round|Round|Round| Num | USCF ID / Rtg (Pre->Post) | Pts | 1 | 2 | 3 | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | YELFRY TORRES |3.0 |W 7|W 8|W 6| CT | 14384402 / R: 2207 ->2214 | | | | | | Q: 2040P7 ->2055P10 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 2 | ROMAN RYCHKOV |3.0 |W 10|W 9|W 11| NJ | 12985662 / R: 2031 ->2039 | | | | | | Q: 1812 ->1826 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 3 | MATTHEW DEREK MEREDITH |2.0 |L 8|W 15|W 13| CT | 10031443 / R: 2099 ->2082 | | | | | | Q: 2040 ->2018 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 4 | JOSEPH BIHLMEYER |2.0 |L 9|W 17|W 15| CT | 12686352 / R: 2091 ->2072 | | | | | | Q: 2024 ->2004 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 5 | MARK BOURQUE |2.0 |L 14|W 19|W 17| CT | 12139250 / R: 1988 ->1965 | | | | | | Q: 1831 ->1805 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 6 | BENJAMIN HOVER AMAR |2.0 |W 13|W 14|L 1| ME | 14789400 / R: 1943 ->1943 | | | | | | Q: 1756 ->1759 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 7 | NATHAN HSICHEN CHANG |2.0 |L 1|W 16|W 19| CT | 14698034 / R: 1870 ->1868 | | | | | | Q: 1621 ->1625 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 8 | ISAIAH GLESSNER |2.0 |W 3|L 1|W 21| CT | 14336631 / R: 1778 ->1803 | | | | | | Q: 1475 ->1527 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 9 | MICHAEL SMITH |2.0 |W 4|L 2|W 20| CT | 16903342 / R: 1683P6 ->1776P9 | | | | | | Q: 1640P15->1669P18 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 10 | ROGER P BESSETTE |2.0 |L 2|W 20|W 22| CT | 12822966 / R: 1678 ->1675 | | | | | | Q: 1492 ->1488 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 11 | MATTHEW DAVID CHIN |2.0 |W 18|W 22|L 2| CT | 16945393 / R: 821P6 -> 935P9 | | | | | | Q: 821P6 -> 908P9 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 12 | TIM HOLAHAN |2.0 |L 17|B |W 23| CT | 12725671 / R: 621P4 -> 621P6 | | | | | | Q: 611P4 -> 611P6 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 13 | DANIEL SMITH |1.0 |L 6|W 18|L 3| RI | 12704934 / R: 1539 ->1539 | | | | | | Q: 1434 ->1431 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 14 | HAYES GOODMAN |1.0 |W 5|L 6|L 18| RI | 15207355 / R: 1526 ->1526 | | | | | | Q: 1399 ->1395 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 15 | LONNIE J DIXON |1.0 |W 22|L 3|L 4| CT | 13563614 / R: 1473P19->1470P22 | | | | | | Q: 1357P15->1356P18 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 16 | GABRIEL JORDEN WATSON |1.0 |W 21|L 7|F | CT | 16449073 / R: 1225 ->1229 | | | | | | Q: 1248 ->1248 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 17 | KYLE TRIPLETT |1.0 |W 12|L 4|L 5| CT | 16784034 / R: 1228P11->1229P14 | | | | | | Q: 1331 ->1329 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 18 | SHAWN B PARKER |1.0 |L 11|L 13|W 14| CT | 16757316 / R: 1228 ->1221 | | | | | | Q: 1031 ->1038 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 19 | ALEX BENJAMIN WOODBURY |1.0 |W 23|L 5|L 7| RI | 16606814 / R: 1206P19->1205P22 | | | | | | Q: 1157P19->1153P22 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 20 | ARGHO DAS |1.0 |B |L 10|L 9| CT | 16750340 / R: 1020P7 ->1020P9 | | | | | | Q: 826P7 -> 826P9 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 21 | NICHOLAS WRONA-LYTWYN |1.0 |L 16|W 23|L 8| CT | 16967612 / R: Unrated-> 733P3 | | | | | | Q: Unrated-> 733P3 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 22 | DAVID C BROWN |0.0 |L 15|L 11|L 10| CT | 16757296 / R: 433 -> 430 | | | | | | Q: 452 -> 447 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- 23 | ISAIAH WILLIAMS |0.0 |L 19|L 21|L 12| CT | 16942078 / R: Unrated-> 272P3 | | | | | | Q: Unrated-> 264P3 | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
Sept 28 2019 Charter Oak Open Coventry CT
Oct 19 2019 Connecticut Harvest Open Coventry CT
Nov 16 2019 Yankee Peddler Open Coventry CT
Dec 14 2019 Holiday Party Open Coventry CT
Saturday, February 16, 2019
CONNECTICUT HAS 36 TOURNAMENT DIRECTORS
Pitted against the machine programmed by humans, the machine’s machine now has a two game lead in the TCEC 14 Superfinal. There was a long series of draws from game 30 to 48 where it seems the neural network took the measure of its opponent.
Just like there were some interesting draws in the Carlsen-Caruana classical match, the programs gave us this 135-move game(the last fifty moves were omitted here because the machines just dance around an obviously drawn position). Each side is after the other’s king with a queen-led attack. It appears that Leela will have at least a perpetual check while the best Stockfish can hope for is a perpetual on the other side of the board. Both sides must calculate queen checks and king moves and pawn promotions. Incredibly, before either attack even develops, Stockfish has apparently seen the whole thing and on move 33 evaluates the position as equal, an opinion it maintains all the way to the finish.
As for what makes a human a good chess player, try
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/264290715_The_architecture_of_the_chess_player's_brain
LCZero(3411)-Stockfish(3451)
2/10/19
TCEC 14 Superfinal
game thirty-five
1.e4 e6
2.d4 d5
3.Nc3 Nc6?! +0.66/24
3...Bb4 +0.21/20 4.e5 Ne7 5.Bd3 c5 6.Nf3 cxd4
4.e5 Nb8 looks like one of my moves
5.a3?! +0.53/21
5.Qh5 +0.83/20 5...c5 6.dxc5 Bxc5 7.Nf3 Qb6 8.Qg4 Ne7 9.Qxg7
5.Be3 Nh6 6.Bd3 c5 7.dxc5 Nc6 8.Nf3 Ng4 9.Bg5 Qd7 10.O-O Ngxe5 11.Nxe5 Nxe5 12.b4 Nxd3 13.cxd3 +0.85 Stockfish
5…b6
6.Nce2?! +0.31/22
6.Qg4 +0.77/20 6...h6 6... c5 7. Nf3 Nc6 8. Bd3 c4 9. Be2 Nge7 10. b3 b5 11. O-O Rb8 12. Bd1 Nf5 13. Ne2 h5 +0.61 Stockfish 7.Bd3 Ba6 8.Bxa6 Nxa6 9.Nge2 Ne7 10.O-O c5 11.Be3 Ng6 12.f4 Qh4 13.Qf3 Qd8 14.Qf2 Nh4 15.dxc5 Bxc5 16.Bxc5 Nxc5 17.Nd4 Ng6
6.Nf3 c5 7.Bd3 Ne7 8.O-O Nec6 9.Bg5 Qd7 10.dxc5 bxc5 11.b3 h6 12.Bf4 a6 13.Bg3 Be7 +0.59 Stockfish
6…c5
7.Nf3?! +0.13/22
7.Ng3 +0.39/20 7...cxd4 8.Nf3 8. f4 Nc6 9. Nf3 g6 10. Bd2 Bd7 11. Bd3 a5 12. O-O Nh6 13. h3 Bc5 14. Rb1 O-O +0.50 Stockfish 8...Ne7 9.Nh5 Nd7 10.Bf4 Qc7 11.Bb5 Ng6 12.Bg3 a6 13.Bxd7+ Bxd7 14.O-O O-O-O 15.Re1 Kb8 16.Qxd4 Bc5 17.Qg4 Rdg8
7…Ba6
8.h4 Ne7
9.c3 Qd7
10.h5 h6
11.Rb1 c4
12.Nh4 Bb5
13.Be3 Ba4
14.Qd2 Nbc6
15.g4 g5
16.hxg6 fxg6
17.Ng2 Na5
18.Ng3 Nb3
19.Qe2 O-O-O
20.g5 Na5
21.Ra1 Kb8
22.gxh6 Re8
23.Qg4 Nf5
24.Nxf5 gxf5
25.Qg6 Bc2
26.Nf4 Nb3
27.Rd1 Bxd1
28.Kxd1 Na1
29.Ke1 Qb5
30.Bg2 Bxh6?! +0.82/24
30...Nc2+ 31.Kf1 Nxe3+ 31...Bxa3 32. bxa3 Qb2 33. Kg1 Nxe3 34. fxe3 Qxc3 35. Kf2 Qd2+ 36. Ne2 Reg8 37. Qg7 c3 38. Bf3 c2 39. Qf6 Re8 40. Rc1 Rh7 41. Qg6 Ree7 42. Kg3 Qxe3 +0.83 Stockfish 32.fxe3 Qd7 33.h7 Kc8 33...Bg7 34. Qg3 Bf8 35. Qh3 Qf7 36. Qh5 Qxh5 37. Rxh5 Kc8 38. Bf3 Bg7 39. Rh1 +2.83 Stockfish 34.Qf6 Bg7 35.Qg5 35. Qh4 Re7 36. Ng6 Rf7 37. Nxh8 Bxh8 38. Qg5 Rg7 39. Qf6 Kc7 40. Bf3 Qe7 41. Qxe7+ Rxe7 42. Rh6 +3.15 Stockfish The point is that, unlike Hiarcs and Leela, Stockfish sees the Qd7 defense is a loser and proceeeds the very well calculated(or perhaps it was a human-like optimism) Qb2. 35...Bf8 36.Qf6
31.Rxh6 After this capture, Stockfish thinks White is only ahead by 0.12 while Leela appraises it as +1.41
31…Qxb2
32.Rxh8 Rxh8
33.Qxe6 After 33.Qe6 Stockfish has it as 0.00 while Leela is still expecting a victory at +1.36
33.Kf1 Qc2 34.Kg1 Qd1+ 35.Bf1 Nc2 36.Ng2 b5 37.Bh6 Qg4 38.Qxg4 fxg4 39.Bc1 a5 40.Be2 Rh3 41.Ne3 b4 42.Bxg4 Rxe3 43.fxe3 bxa3 44.Bxa3 Nxa3 45.Bxe6 Nb1 46.Bxd5 Nxc3 47.Bxc4 a4 48.Kf2 a3 49.Kf3 Kc7 50.Kg4 a2 51.Bxa2 Nxa2 52.Kf5 It was a heckuva variation but now it's a database draw.
33...Nc2+
34.Kd1 Qb1+
35.Kd2 Qb2
36.Qd6+ Kc8
37.Qc6+ Kb8
38.Kd1 Qb1+
39.Kd2 Qb2
40.Qd6+ Kc8
41.Kd1
41.Qe6+ Kb8 42.Kd1 Qb1+ 43.Bc1 Na1 44.Qd6+ Kc8 45.Bxd5 Qc2+ 46.Ke1 Qxc1+ 47.Ke2 Qc2+ 48.Kf3 Qd1+ 49.Ne2 Qh1+ 50.Kf4 Qh4+ 51.Ke3 Qg5+ 52.f4 Rh3+ 53.Kf2 Qh4+ 54.Kf1 Rh1+ 55.Bxh1 Qxh1+ 56.Ng1 Nc2 57.Qf8+ Kb7 58.Qf7+ Kb8 59.Qg8+ Kb7 60.Qg3 a5 61.a4 Qe4 62.Qf3 b5 63.axb5 a4 64.e6 a3 65.e7 a2 66.Qxe4+ fxe4 67.e8=Q a1=Q+ 68.Kg2 Ne3+ 69.Kh1 Qe1 70.Qd7+ Kb8 71.Qh7 Qg3 72.Qh2 Qg4 73.f5+ Kb7 74.Qh7+ Kc8 75.Qh3 Qxh3+ 76.Nxh3 Nxf5 77.Kg1 Nd6 78.Ng5 e3 79.b6 Kb7 80.Kg2 Kxb6 81.Kf3 Kc6 82.Kxe3 After looking ahead 104 ply, Stockfish has it +0.09 but the position is a draw, very similar to the position at move 86 in the game. When Stockfish first went to +0.12 on move thirty, it seems likely that it had actually calcuated fifty moves ahead in these variations.
41...Qb1+
42.Bc1 Na1
43.Bxd5 Qc2+
44.Ke1 Qxc1+
45.Ke2 Qc2+
46.Kf3 Qd1+
47.Ne2 Qh1+
48.Kf4 Qh4+
49.Ke3 Qg5+
50.f4 Rh3+
51.Kf2 Qh4+
52.Kf1 Rh1+
53.Bxh1 Qxh1+
54.Ng1 Nc2
55.Qe6+ Kb7
56.Qd7+ Kb8
57.Qe8+ Kb7
58.Qf7+ Kb8
59.Qg8+ Kb7
60.Qf7+?! 0.00/25
60.Qg3 +0.59/25 60...a5 61.Kf2 61. e6 Qe4 62. Qf3 Ne3+ 63. Kf2 Ng4+ 64. Kg3 Nf6 65. Kh4 Kc7 66. Qxe4 Nxe4 67. Ne2 Kd6 68. d5 Nf6 69. Kg5 Nxd5 70. Kxf5 b5 71. Ke4 b4 72. axb4 axb4 73. cxb4 Nxb4 +0.09 Stockfish 61...Qe4 62.Qf3 Qxf3+ 63.Nxf3 Nxa3 64.Nh4 a4 65.Nxf5 Nb5 66.Ne3 a3 67.f5 a2 68.Nc2 Kc7 69.f6 Kd8 70.d5 Nxc3 71.d6 Ne4+ 72.Ke3 Ng5 73.Kd4 b5 74.Kc3 Kd7 75.Kb2 Ke6 76.Kxa2 Kxe5 77.d7 Nf7 78.Kb2
60...Ka8
61.Qg8+ Kb7
62.Qg3 a5
63.a4 Qe4
64.Qf3 b5
65.axb5
65.Qxe4+ fxe4 66.axb5 a4 67.Ne2 Ne3+ 68.Kf2 a3 69.Nc1 Nd1+ 70.Kg2 Nxc3 71.f5 Nxb5 72.d5 Nc3 73.d6 Kc6 74.f6 Nd5 75.Kf2 Nxf6 76.exf6 Kxd6 77.Ke3 Ke6 =
65…a4
66.e6 a3
67.Qxe4+ fxe4
68.e7 a2
69.e8=Q a1=Q+
70.Kg2 Ne3+
71.Kh1 Qe1
72.Qxe4+?! +0.03/26
72.Qc6+ +0.78/25 72...Kb8 73.Qb6+ Kc8 74.Qa6+ Kc7 74... Kb8 75. Qb6+ Kc8 76. Qe6+ Kc7 77. Qh6 Kb7 78. f5 Qf2 79. Qa6+ Kb8 80. Qd6+ Ka7 81. Qc7+ Ka8 82. Qd8+ Ka7 83. Qa5+ Kb7 = Stockfish 75.Qf6 Qg3 76.Qc6+ Kd8 77.Qd6+ Kc8 78.Qc5+ Kb7 79.Qc6+ Kb8 80.Qb6+ Ka8 81.Qd8+ Kb7 82.Qd7+ Kb8 83.Qd6+ Kc8
72.Qe7+ Kb8 73.Qh7 Qg3 74.Qh2 Qg4 75.f5+ Kb7 76.Qh7+ Kc8 77.Qh3 Qxh3+ 78.Nxh3 Nxf5 +0.09 Stockfish
72…Ka7
73.f5
73.Qe7+ Kb6 74.f5 Qf2 75.Qc5+ Ka5 76.Qa7+ Kxb5 77.Qb8+ Ka5 78.Qa7+ =
73…Qg3
74.Qe7+ Kb6
75.Qe6+ Kb7
76.Qc6+ Ka7
77.Qd7+ Kb6
78.Qe6+ Kb7
79.Qe4+ Ka7
80.Qf3 Qh4+
81.Qh3 Qe4+
82.Qf3 Qxf3+
83.Nxf3 Nxf5
84.Ng1 Ne3
85.Kh2 Kb6
86.Kg3 Kxb5 After the inevitable dreary computer maneuvering, the draw is agreed after move 135. The final position is white king on e4, knight on e3 and pawn on d5; black has a pawn on c4, knight on c3 and king on d6 ½-½
Roman Rychkov of New Jersey and Benjamin Amar of Maine, both students at UConn, tie for first at the Hartmayer Memorial. Daniel Zhou of EO Smith in Mansfield wins Leg 2 of the National Nominations Grand Prix and Jordan Lefkowitz, also from Mansfield, wins the K-12 U1000. Final results of the Open, K-12 Open and K-12 U1000; rating report and NNGP standings after Leg 2.
New Britain Chess Club
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LATEST CONNECTICUT CHESS NEWS
36 TDs living in CT
USCF ID, Name, Level, Location,
Contact Information, Chief, Sec, Asst.
10037905 ALDI, DAVID J Local CT dja21857@yahoo.com 4 9 0
16415284 AWASTHI, ROHAN Club CT 9 9 0
12139250 BOURQUE, MARK Club CT 30 45 0
12379190 BUDZINSKI, GLENN Local CT 5 8 0
14558024 BURTNESS, NORMAN Local CT nburtness@comcast.net 8 16 0
12564228 CASTANEDA, NELSON Club CT 1 1 0
12574159 CELONE, JIM Senior CT 3 8 0
16770123 CHEN, STEPHEN LI Club CT 1 1 0
12489098 CYR, ROBERT Local CT 3 6 0
12635265 DONOVAN, DAMIAN Club CT 0 0 0
10027977 FISKE, DOUGLAS E Local CT 1 1 0
12721790 HARRIS, IAN Local CT 29 61 0
14022774 HELMAN, EVAN DONALD Club CT 33 138 0
12431094 LAFOSSE, LAURENT Club CT 9 39 0
16216412 LU, DAVID Club CT 1 1 0
14732597 LU, MAXIMILLIAN Club CT 1 1 0
12534646 MADEJ, JOZEF Local CT 0 0 0
14176124 MAYO, ALEXANDER WILLIAM Club CT 6 0 0
10031443 MEREDITH, MATTHEW DEREK Local CT 0 0 0
14667931 OTCHIYEV, ARSLAN Club CT 0 0 0
12884893 PATRICK, MELVIN B Local CT 53 275 0
12730366 PELLETIER, DAN STARBUCK Club CT 1 4 0
12447193 POTTS, CHRISTOPHER F Local CT harrypatzer@optonline.net 1 1 0
16309936 RIVERA, ERNESTO Club CT 1 2 2
10574790 ROY, ROB Senior CT ConnecticutChess@gmail.com 12 12 0
15885301 RUTH, TONY Club CT 0 0 0
15470470 SHIRVELL, MATTHEW MARK Club CT 5 6 0
12628989 STRAUTS, ERIN Club CT StrautsChess@gmail.com 2 7 0
14140647 TANENBAUM, RICH Club CT 0 0 0
10033080 TOWNSEND, FREDERICK S, JR NTD CT 0 0 0
12560250 VAN DE MORTEL, JAN Senior CT jvdmortel@yahoo.com 8 22 0
16226582 WANG, EMILY (ZHIHAN) Club CT 0 0 0
14946263 WANG, GEORGE Club CT georgewangchess@gmail.com 1 5 0
14946257 WANG, JAKE Club CT chesshavenct@gmail.com 1 5 0
13824196 WANG, JULIAN CHING Club CT 12 21 0
12799878 ZIMMERMAN, KEVIN Club CT 0 0 0
TD activity shown is for the past 12 months. To see a more detailed record use the TD Directing Experience tool. The USCF does not endorse any TDs listed.
UPCOMING USCF CHESS TOURNAMENTS
Sept 28 2019 Charter Oak Open Coventry CT
Oct 19 2019 Connecticut Harvest Open Coventry CT
Nov 16 2019 Yankee Peddler Open Coventry CT
Dec 14 2019 Holiday Party Open Coventry CT
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Saturday, February 9, 2019
TCEC SUPERFINAL 100 game match Stockfish Vs. LCZero
21.Qc2 Bxf3+
22.Bxf3 Ng3+
23.Kxh2 Rb6
24.Kxg3 Bh4+
24...Rg6+ 25.Kf2 Re8 26.Nd2 Bh4+ 27.Kf1 Qf6 28.f5 Rg3 29.Re1 Rxe1+ 30.Kxe1 Rxf3+ 31.Ke2 Rf2+ 32.Kd1 Bg5 33.Bc3 Bxd2 34.Bxd2 Qxd4 35.Qc3 Qg4+ 36.Kc2 h5 -7.22 Stockfish
25.Kh2 Rg6
26.Nc3 Bg3+
27.Kg2 Bxf4+
28.Kf1 Qh4
29.Qe4 Qh2?! -1.50/25
29...Re6 -1.76/24 30.Qc2 30. Qf5 Rf6 31. Qh5 Qxh5 32. Bxh5 Bc1+ 33. Ke2 Bxb2 34. Rg1+ Kh8 35. Kd3 Bxc3 36. Kxc3 -3.11 Stockfish 30...Rfe8 31.Ne4 Be3 32.Re1 32. Rd1 Rxe4 33. Qg2+ Bg5 34. Bc3 Re3 35. Bd2 Rd3 36. Qg4 Rxd2 37. Qxh4 Rxd1+ 38. Bxd1 Bxh4 -9.34 Stockfish 32...Qf4 32... Rxe4 33. Qg2+ Kh7 34. d5 f6 35. Bc1 Qf4 36. Qg4 Bxc1 37. Rxe4 Rxe4 38. Qxf4 Rxf4 -9.47 Stockfish 33.Ke2 f5 34.d5 fxe4 35.Bh5 Qh2+ 36.Kd1 Qxh5+ 37.Qe2 Qg5 38.Qxe3 Qxe3 39.Rxe3 Rg6 40.Bc3 Rg1+ 41.Be1 h5 42.Rh3 Rg2 43.Rxh5 e3
30.Bg2? -4.39/26
30.Ne2 -1.50/25 30...Bg3 31.Nxg3 Qxg3 32.Rd1 Qg1+ 32...Qh2 33. Qe3 Qxb2 34. Qf2 Qc3 35. d5 Qd3+ 36. Qe2 Qf5 37. Qf2 Qh3+ 38. Bg2 Qd3+ 39. Qe2 Qd4 40. Qe3 Qf6+ 41. Qf2 Qg7 42. Bf3 Kh8 43. Re4 f5 44. Re6 Rxe6 45. dxe6 Qa1+ 46. Qe1 Qxe1+ 47. Kxe1 Re8 48. Bd5 c6 49. Bf3 Rxe6+ -4.02 Stockfish 33.Ke2 Qh2+ 34.Kd3 Qxb2 35.Qe2 Qxe2+ 36.Kxe2 Kg7 37.Kf2 Rd8 38.d5 Ra6 39.Rd2 c5 40.Kg2 Rg6+ 41.Kf2 Kf8 42.Bh5 Re6 43.Kg3 Rf6 44.Rg2 Rdd6
30…Be3
31.Ne2 Rf6+
32.Ke1 Re6
33.Qg4+ Bg5
34.Bf3 Rfe8
35.Kf1 Rf6
36.Qg2 Rxf3+
37.Qxf3 Re3
38.Qf2 Qh3+
39.Qg2 Qxg2+
40.Kxg2 Rxe2+
41.Kf3 Rxb2
42.d5?! -5.30/25
42.Ke4 -4.51/24 42...Rd2 42...Kg7 43. Kd5 Bf4 44. Ke4 Bh2 45. d5 h5 46. c5 Kf6 47. Rc1 Rxa2 48. d6 cxd6 49. c6 d5+ 50. Kxd5 -7.43 Stockfish 43.Rf1 43. Rg1 Rxa2 44. Kd5 Ra6 45. b4 Rd6+ 46. Ke4 Re6+ 47. Kf5 Kf8 48. Rg3 a6 49. Rb3 Ke7 50. b5 Rb6 51. d5 axb5 52. cxb5 Kd7 -7.46 Stockfish 43...Rxa2 44.c5 h5 44... Kg7 45. Kd5 Ra6 46. Rh1 Kg6 47. Kc4 f5 48. d5 f4 49. Rc1 f3 50. Rf1 Rf6 51. d6 cxd6 52. c6 Rf5 53. c7 Rc5+ 54. Kd4 Rxc7 55. Rxf3 h5 56. Kd5 h4 57. Kxd6 Rh7 -7.90 Stockfish
42…Kg7
43.c5 Rd2
44.d6?! -6.39/25
44.Ke4 -5.25/26 44...Kg6 45.Rh1 f5+ 45... Rxa2 46. b4 h5 47. Rd1 h4 48. Rh1 Rd2 49. Ke5 Re2+ 50. Kd4 Rc2 51. Kd3 Rc1 52. Rxc1 Bxc1 -10.25 Stockfish 46.Ke5 Be3 47.Rh3 Bxc5 48.Rg3+ Kf7 49.Kxf5 h5 50.Rc3 Bd6
44…cxd6
45.c6 Rc2 0-1
Alan Lasser
Hello Weston/Wilton parents,
We just started our ten weeks of free DIG Chess classes at the North Branch Bridgeport Public Library and it was a GREAT turnout. This program is funded by the Starbuck Foundation. The next nine Saturdays, Coach Erin will be there teaching from 11am to 1pm. Kelvin Green, a Weston DIG Chess player, was also there teaching.
Please let me or Coach Erin know if your son or daughter would like to go help teach. There are lots of beginners there that need individual attention regarding how the pieces move on the board so any help would be great.
UPCOMING USCF CHESS TOURNAMENTS
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Sunday, January 27, 2019NEW BRITAIN CHESS CLUB STORY - by Bob Cyr
Jithu Saveejan of Bristol Central High School won leg 1 of the National Nominations Grand Prix. Both events took place at the Raymond Library in East Hartford and were organized by Connecticut Chess Organization. Results/Rating report
Beatrice Low (center) playing Serena Evans
Girls & NNGP leg 1
ConnecticutChess.blogspot.com began May 2010, so far 164,000 total visitors. More players from CT, MA, RI, and NY to subscribe to our email newsletter.
Just like last week, former world champion Kramnik just wasn’t getting enough compensation for the two bishops at the Wijk ann Zee tournament. In this week’s game he has them once again, this time down a pawn against the two knights of another former world champion. The result is the same, the pawn is decisive.
GM Vladimir Kramnik(2777)-GM Viswanathan Anand(2773)
2019 Tata Steel Masters
1/19/19
15.O-O -1.02/22 15...Ne7 16.g5 hxg5 17.Bxg5 Nh7 18.Nf3 18. Bh4 Qd7 19. Qg4 Qxg4+ 20. hxg4 Ng6 21. Bg3 Nf6 22. Ra4 Rae8 -1.13 Stockfish 18...Qd7 19.Qd3 c6 19...Nxg5 20. Nxg5 g6 21. Qe4 Kg7 22. Rad1 Nc6 23. Rfe1 Nxa5 24. Bd5 c6 25. Ba2 Rae8 26. Qg4 Qxg4+ 27. hxg4 Rxe1+ 28. Rxe1 d5 -1.06 Stockfish 20.Bb3 d5 21.Bc2 Nxg5 22.Nxg5 Ng6 23.Qf3 Qd6 24.Rfe1 Qf425.Qxf4 Nxf4 26.Re7 f6
16...Rae8 -1.50/21 17.g5 Bxd4 18.Bxd5 18. cxd4 Qc6 19. Bxd5 Nxd5 20. Rh3 Qd7 21. Qf3 h5 22. Bd2 Qb5+ 23. Qd3 Re4 24. Qxb5 axb5 -2.89 Stockfish 18...Nxd5 19.Qxd4 Qc6 19...Re5 20. gxh6 Rfe8 21. Bf4 Nxf4 22. Qxf4 Qb5+ 23. Kg1 R8e6 24. Rh3 Rf6 -4.20 Stockfish 20.Rh3 h5 21.b3Ne7 22.Ra4 Qb5+ 23.Qc4 Qd7 24.Kg2 Nc6 25.Rg3 Qf5 26.Bf4 Re6 27.Qd3 Qc5 28.Qf3
17...Qc6 -1.07/22 18.Rh3 Rfe8 19.Bd3 Re6 19... Re5 20. Qa4 Qe8 21. Qxe8+ Raxe8 22. Bd2 Nxg4 23. c4 Ndf6 24. Re1 h5 25. Bc3 Rxe1+ 26. Bxe1 g6 -2.29 Stockfish 20.Bd2 Rae8 21.c4 Ne722.Bc2 Qd7 23.Bc3 Nc6 24.Qd3 Qd8 25.Qf5
18.g5 -0.40/21 18...Ng4 18...Nc6 19. Qd1 Ne4 20. Kg2 Qf5 21. f3 Nc5 22. Ba2 Rae8 23. Bb1 Qe5 24. b4 Qe2+ 25. Qxe2 Rxe2+ 26. Kg3 Nb3 -0.97 Stockfish 19.gxh6 Nf5 20.Qe4 Ngxh6 21.Bxh6Nxh6 22.Bd3 Rfe8 23.Qh7+ Kf8 24.Rh2 Qg4 25.Rg2 Qxh4 26.Qxg7+ Ke7 27.Qg5+ Qxg528.Rxg5 Kf6 29.Rh5 Ng4 30.Ra4 Ne5 31.Be4 c6 32.Rh6+ Ke7 33.Rh5 Nd7 34.Rb4 Nc5 35.Bf5Rg8
19...d5 -0.96/20 20.g5 hxg5 20...Qe6 21. Rh2 Ne4 22. gxh6 Nf5 23. Qd3 Nxh6 24. Qh3 Rae8 25. Qxe6 Rxe6 26. c4 dxc4 27. Bxc4 Rf6 -1.11 Stockfish 21.hxg5 Ne4 22.Bg4 f5 23.Bf3 f4 24.Rh5Rae8 25.c4 Qg6 26.Qe5 Rf5 27.Qxc7 Nxg5
36.c4 +0.27/22 36...dxc4 37.bxc4 Rbb8 38.Rxa5 38. Ba3 Rhd8 39. Rc3 Rh8 40. Rxa5 Rxh5 41. Bxc5 Nd7 42. Bb4 Rxa5 43. Bxa5 Nc5 +0.15 Stockfish 38...Ra8 39.Rxa8 Rxa8 40.Ra3 Rh8 41.h6gxh6 42.Ra7 Ke6 42... Rc8 43. Bxh6 Ke6 44. Ra6+ Rc6 45. Ra4 Nf5 46. Bf4 Rb6 47. Ra5 Rb2 48. Bxf5+ Kxf5 49. Bxe5 fxe5 50. Rxc5 = Stockfish 43.Ra6+ Kf7 44.Be3 h5 45.Bxc5 Rc8
39.Rg4 -0.54/22 39...Ne5 39... Rcc8 40. Rd4 Ra8 41. Bb3 Rhc8 42. Bxc4 Rxc4 43. Rxc4 dxc4 44. Rh4 Rc8 45. Rd4 Rc5 46. Ba3 Rg5+ 47. Kf3 Nc6 48. Rd7+ Kg8 49. Rc7 Ne5+ 50. Ke4 Rxh5 -0.85 Stockfish 40.Ba3 Rc4 41.Rgg3 Rc7 42.Bc1 Rcc8 43.Ba3 N7c6 44.Bc1 Nc4 45.Rd3 Ne7 46.Bb3
39.Rh1 Ra8 40.h6 g5 41.R4h3 Rh8 42.h7 Ng6 43.Kf1 Rc7 44.Rd3 Ne7 45.Rf3 Kg7 46.Rg3 a447.Bxa4 Ra7 48.Bc2 Ra2 49.Bb3 Ra1 50.Ke2 Rxh7 51.Rxh7+ Kxh7 52.Rg1 Ng6 -0.85 Stockfish
39...a4 -0.99/23 40.Rf3 a3 41.Bb3 Ra5 42.Ba2 Rc8 42... Ne5 43. Rfh3 Nf5 44. Rb4 Nd6 45. Bf4 Ke6 46. Rd4 Nf5 47. Rd1 Nc4 48. Rhh1 Re8 -1.62 Stockfish 43.Rd4 Rcc5 44.Kg1
42.Ba4 -0.58/21 42...Rhb8 42... Rhc8 43. Rd4 Rcb8 44. Rd1 Nb2 45. Bxb2 Rxb2 46. Ra1 Rb7 47. h6 g6 48. h7 Kg7 49. Re1 Rba7 -0.79 Stockfish 43.Bf4 Rg8 44.Bc1 Rgd8 45.Kh2
42.Bb3 Rac8 43.Rd4 Rc6 44.Rd1 Ra8 45.h6 a4 46.Bxa4 Rxa4 47.h7 Ng6 48.Rxd5 Nce5 49.h8=QNxh8 50.Rxh8 Rxc3 51.Bb2 Rd3 52.Rhd8 Rxd5 53.Rxd5 -0.49 Stockfish
47.Rg1 -1.18/22 47...Ne5 47...R8h4 48. Bc7 Nd2+ 49. Ke2 Rxg1 50. Rxg1 Rxa4 51. Kxd2 Ra2+ 52. Ke3 a4 -2.49 Stockfish 48.Bd1 Rxg1+ 49.Rxg1
47...Rb1 -1.86/23 48.Bc2 Rb2 49.Kd1 Nf5 50.Rg8 Nxg3 51.Rxh8 Ne4 52.Bxe4 dxe4 53.Bg3 a454.Rc8 Kd5 54...Nb6 55. Rc5 a3 56. Kc1 Re2 57. Kb1 Na4 58. Rc4 a2+ 59. Ka1 Nb2 60. Rc6+ Kd5 61. Rxf6 Nd3 62. Rd6+ Kc4 63. Rd8 Kxc3 64. Bd6 Rxf2 -3.61 Stockfish 55.Rd8+ Kc556.Rc8+ Kb5 57.Rb8+ Nb6 58.Bc7 Kc6 59.Bxb6 a3 60.Ra8 Kxb6 61.Rxa3 Rxf2 62.Rb3+ Kc563.Rb8 f5 64.Rc8+ Kd6
48.Bb3 -1.14/24 48...Ne5 49.Bxe5 fxe5 50.c4 a4 51.cxd5+ Kd6 52.Bc4 Rhh1 52...Rc8 53. R7g4 Rc1 54. Bd3 Nxd5 55. Kd2 Ra1 56. Rc4 Rxc4 57. Bxc4 Kc5 -1.99 Stockfish 53.Rf7 Nxd5 54.Bxd5Kxd5 55.Rd7+ Ke4 56.Re3+ Kf5 57.Rf7+ Ke6 58.Ra7 Ra2+ 59.Kf3 Rh2 60.Ke4 Rh4+ 61.Kd3Rxf2 62.Ra6+ Kf5 63.Ra5 a3 64.Rxa3
49.Kf3 -1.88/24 49...Ne5+ 50.Kg2 Rh4 50...Ra1 51. Bxe5 fxe5 52. c4 d4 53. c5 Rc1 54. Ba4 Rxc5 55. Bb3+ Kd6 -3.71 Stockfish 51.Bxe5 fxe5 52.Rf3 Rc2 53.Rff7 Rg4+ 54.Rxg4 Kxf7 55.Rg3 Rc156.Rf3+ Ke6 57.Rg3 Ra1 58.Rh3 a4
54.Bxg3 -3.36/23 54...a4 55.Rf7 55. c4+ Kxc4 56. Rc7+ Kb3 57. Rb7+ Ka2 58. Rb6 Rab1 59. Rxf6 a3 60. Ra6 Rb3+ 61. Kg2 Rc1 -4.73 Stockfish 55...Rh6 55... a3 56. Rxf6 a2 57. Ra6 Kc4 58. Be5 Rh5 59. Bd4 Rb5 60. Bg7 Rb7 61. Bh8 Kb3 62. c4 Re1 63. Bd4 Rf7+ 64. Kg2 Rf4 65. Rb6+ Kxc4 -7.31 Stockfish 56.Bf4 Rh3+ 57.Kg4 Rxc3 58.Rxf6 a3 59.Rd6+ Kc5
56.Rd7+ -4.97/24 The Hiarcs program doesn't realize how hopeless this position really is for White, Stockfish thinks that 56.Rd7 is -22.71 and the alternative 56.Kf5 is -17.42 56...Kc4 57.Rc7+Kb3 58.Rb7+ Kxc3 59.Rc7+ Kb4 60.Bd2+ Kb3 61.Rc3+ Ka4 62.Rc4+
TOP WINNERS USCF TOURNAMENTS - COVENTRY CHESS CLUB 1-12 2019 Coventry Open Derek Meredith, Joe Bihlmeyer, Dan Smith 2018 : 12-15 Holiday Party Derek Meredith 11-17 Yankee Peddler Derek Meredith and Joe Bihlmeyer 10-27 Conn Harvest Joe Bihlmeyer 9-30 Charter Oak Abe Mondal 8-11 Nutmeg State Nathan Chang 7-14 Conn Yankee Nelson Castaneda 6-23 Coventry Summer Rick Bauer and Derek Meredith 5-19 Constitution State Dan Smith 4-21 Nathan Hale Suhas Kodali and Jithu Sajeevan 3-17 Greater Hartford Suhas Kodali, Joe Bihlmeyer, and Jon Smucker 2-24 Eastern Conn Derek Meredith and Joe Bihlmeyer 1-13 2018 Coventry Open Joe Bihlmeyer
Most Active Players at the Coventry Chess Club: 13 Rob Roy 11 Art Nagel 11 Mark Bourque Thank you for your support.
UPCOMING USCF CHESS TOURNAMENTS IN CONNECTICUTby Rob Roy Online since May 2010 CHESS CLUBS IN CONNECTICUT
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2019 Constitution State OpenSaturday May 18$160-1st, $80-2nd. Guaranteed.Site: Mill Brook Place, 1267 Main St., Coventry, CT 06238 Across street from Bidwell Tavern is our stone building at rear of parking lot Web Site: https://ConnecticutChess.blogspot.com/ E-mail: ConnecticutChess@Gmail.com Lunch: 12:30 - 1:30. Four restaurants in immediate area. Please bring your own equipment, especially digital chess clocks.
------------------------------------------------------ The New Britain Chess Club of Connecticut Story
For over a century, the New Britain Chess Club of Connecticut (NBCC), our state’s largest and most historic chess organization, has had a strong reputation for its vital role in the development, promotion, and enrichment of this game to people of all ages and levels across the Northeastern United States. The NBCC has been built on many traditions and yet has become quite adaptable with the changing times. Our members and network of chess friends have also established numerous ties with other local chess institutions, which has been essential for our club’s growth. These solid foundations and key alliances have enabled our club to maintain its solid presence for chess in our community through the ages. Regardless of the challenges that our club has dealt with throughout Connecticut chess clubs. The NBCC began to re-emerut its history, our unwavering determination has always led “The Heart of Connecticut Chess” to brighter days for our family and for chess in Connecticut. With that background, here is the NBCC story. We begin our journey around the turn of the twentieth century. During that time, groups of chess men gathered at the YMCA and at other venues in the city to engage in casual play and spirited competition. As a new century dawned, a few leaders from that nascent chess community met to lay the grounds for the formation of our historic club. On January 26, 1901, thirty-three chess enthusiasts, led by John Kirkham, our club’s first president, met in a building in the downtown district to celebrate the official organization and birth of the NBCC. Judge Kirkham, who was also a prominent chess master and Connecticut chess champion, worked closely with other newly formed chess organizations in our state, such as Waterbury, Hartford, New Haven, and Bridgeport, to hold inter-club matches. These events drew a respectable amount of interest and ultimately helped promote our organization and Connecticut chess. In addition to these matches, the NBCC held smaller and more informal tournaments during its regular meetings. Membership levels remained fairly constant during the 1900s and early 1910s, but most chess activity came to a crashing halt as the nation entered WWI. Based on a lack of records, it appears that WWI caused the disbandment of many ge sometime in the late 1920s. Two of our club’s presidents over the next two decades worked zealously to re- energize our organization: Boleslaw Gryboski in the 1930s and Edmund Roman in the 1940s. These leaders were instrumental in rebuilding a membership base and creating a more structured schedule of activities, including organizing annual club and city championship events to boost membership. Our club also continued to hold joint events with the Hartford Chess Club to attract interest throughout our chess community. However, our leaders’ efforts to keep our club active proved to be quite challenging during these times. First, tragedy struck our club in the mid-1930s when a fire occurred at our meeting place at the United Building on Main Street, destroying many club records and forcing us to relocate. We soon moved to Nathan Hale Junior High School and then to Falcon Crest Hall in New Britain. Then, in 1941, the NBCC lost some of its members because of the draft during WWII. If there was any silver lining for our club during this war, it was that meetings were still held in despite of a decline in membership. After 1945, membership slowly rose, and it was the task of President Roman and others to ensure that our club would sustain in the second half of the twentieth century. In 1951, Arkadijs Strazdins, who would eventually become the NBCC’s greatest advocate and contributor and the most influential member in our club’s history, joined our organization. Our club saw many changes in leadership in the mid-to-late 1950s, and membership was still low. However, by the early 1960s, our club started exploring ways to get more involved on the state-wide scene in hopes of sparking more interest in our chess community. Mr. Strazdins, who began his life-long service to the NBCC, often worked with its officers throughout the 1950s and 1960s to arrange and host a variety of matches, simultaneous chess exhibitions, and tournaments, including the annual New Britain Summer Open Chess Championship, which started in 1966 and which would eventually become Connecticut’s grandest summer chess event. As our club continued to fulfill its most important mission of providing a facility and a social environment for chess, the level of membership rebounded. When the Bobby Fischer boom occurred in the early 1970s, membership soared to unprecedented levels. By 1973, the NBCC had 119 members - a record that would not be challenged until 2010 and later in 2017, when membership reached 101 and 104, respectively. Mr. Strazdins, who took the helm as president in 1970, led our club during one of its most prosperous periods. For nearly twenty years, between the mid-1950s and the mid-1970s, our club held its meetings at the General Holler Post in New Britain. Our club was grateful to Jan Cendrowski, a commander of the post and our club president in the 1960s, for securing that venue for so long. Unfortunately, due to extenuating circumstances, our club was forced to relocate from that site in 1975. The move came at a time when our club attained peak membership. Thankfully, Mr. Strazdins was able to find and secure a hall at the New Britain Quartette Club, where our club would stay for the next thirty-five years. With the relocation behind us, our club focused on playing a more pivotal role in the development of Connecticut chess. By 1980, the NBCC was the third-largest chess club in Connecticut behind Hartford and New Haven. Mr. Strazdins, who had won over fifty major club tournaments by then, worked tirelessly to promote our organization in his many capacities as officer, tournament director, and team captain. He worked countless hours to ensure that our club would remain vibrant in the coming decades. Due to Mr. Strazdins’ steadfast efforts, our club emerged as Connecticut’s largest chess organization by the mid-to-late 1980s. Mr. Strazdins continued pursuing his passion for and devotion to our club well into the 1990s by keeping its image alive and well. Around the turn of the century, Mr. Strazdins regrettably had to take a step back from club operations because of declining health. His son, Andris, who was our club’s treasurer since 1973, worked passionately with the other officers and tournament directors to ensure that his father’s vision for our club was fulfilled. The early years of the twenty-first century saw significant changes in leadership in our club, with the stepping down of Mr. Strazdins as president after serving thirty-one years. The new officers then and today were and have been inspired by Mr. Strazdins’ work for our club, and they have kept alive the traditions that he established during his five decades of service to our organization. Moreover, our administrators from 2001 to the present have created their own interesting and unique ideas to benefit our club’s growth, many of which have resulted in the biggest expansion of our club’s social network and have attracted many scholastic chess players.
In 2010, our club left the New Britain Quartette Club and relocated to the New Britain Assyrian Community Center, where we stayed for four years. In 2014, our club moved to our current venue at the Armenian Church of the Holy Resurrection in New Britain. During both relocations, our organization lost some members but still remained a leading voice for chess in Connecticut. The NBCC is extremely proud of its heritage and its positive impact on our chess community. In spite of the challenges that our club has faced (membership declines, relocations, and the stepping down of a leader of thirty-plus years), we endured every time. Because of this and because of our rich and diverse history, “The Heart of Connecticut Chess” will no doubt continue to thrive and flourish in the coming decades. The NBCC is very excited about its future, and we anticipate that future generations of chess players will continue to play an integral role in the advancement of our wonderful institution and Connecticut chess. If your travels ever bring you to Connecticut, please pay a visit to the NBCC. Meetings are held every Tuesday at the Armenian Church of the Holy Resurrection. For directions to and more information about our club, please visit www.newbritainchessclub.com.
Bob Cyr
------------------------------------------------------ Connecticut Chess Magazine is currently conducting an aggressive membership drive.
Top Ten CT Towns - Readers - Conn Chess Mag. 1. Bridgeport 118 (7.59%) 2. New Haven 101 (6.50%) 3. Hartford 82 (5.27%) 4. Coventry 80 (5.14%) 5. West Hartford 70 (4.50%) 6. Mansfield 68 (4.37%) 7. Stamford 46 (2.96%) 8. Bristol 39 (2.51%) 9. Avon 36 (2.32%) 10. Newington 34 (2.19%) ----------------------------------------------------
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