Saturday, February 13, 2010
Niles North, Glenbard West in lead at IHSA team championships
This is the last day of competition at the Peoria Civic Center. Standings are here. Two rounds remain: Whitney Young, Stevenson, and New Trier are among the schools still in contention for first. But the winner of the round 6 Niles North-Glenbard West match (going on right now!?) would have to be the favorite.
Friday, February 12, 2010
Andrew Karklins miniature
Here's a beautiful miniature by Andrew Karklins from one of Helen Warren's Midwest Masters tournaments. His victim, Kurt Stein, is another Chicagoland master.
White's 12th move allows Black to force mate in the finest Romantic fashion.
White's 12th move allows Black to force mate in the finest Romantic fashion.
Monday, February 8, 2010
Renaissance Knights hosts 50th Knights Quest
Again, look for the coverage on Chess Life Online!
And plan for the Greater Chicago Scholastic Championships (co-organized by Renaissance Knights and the Kasparov Chess Foundation) onMarch February 27th and 28th
And plan for the Greater Chicago Scholastic Championships (co-organized by Renaissance Knights and the Kasparov Chess Foundation) on
Sunday, February 7, 2010
Menon, Stamnov win Illinois Bltiz Championship
Results are here.
I really should have known better than to get into a theoretical "discussion" with Gopal Menon in the main line of the Be3, Rc1 Grünfeld.
I really should have known better than to get into a theoretical "discussion" with Gopal Menon in the main line of the Be3, Rc1 Grünfeld.
Friday, February 5, 2010
benefit tournaments Saturday day and Saturday night!
During the day Saturday, February 6, 2010, the Illinois Chess Association is holding benefit tournaments (open and scholastic) to benefit the Chicago Blaze and the ICA Warren Junior Program.
Fundraiser details here! Registration ends at 9 a.m.: please arrive a half-hour early!
Saturday night, it's the 2010 Illinois Blitz Championship!! Registration ends at 6 p.m.: please arrive a half-hour early! Both events are at the Student Union of Northeastern Illinois University, close to both the Edens and the Kennedy. You'll find detailed directions here.
View Larger Map
And here's a campus map.
Parking is free if you park on the 3rd or 4th floor of the campus parking garage only. If you can't make it on Saturday (as I write, that's tomorrow!) please consider making donations to both these worthy causes. You can donate to the Chicago Blaze on their homepage. Glenn Panner tells you why you should.
To donate to the Warren Junior Program, make checks payable to: Illinois Chess Association, Inc. and mail them to:
Fundraiser details here! Registration ends at 9 a.m.: please arrive a half-hour early!
Saturday night, it's the 2010 Illinois Blitz Championship!! Registration ends at 6 p.m.: please arrive a half-hour early! Both events are at the Student Union of Northeastern Illinois University, close to both the Edens and the Kennedy. You'll find detailed directions here.
View Larger Map
And here's a campus map.
Parking is free if you park on the 3rd or 4th floor of the campus parking garage only. If you can't make it on Saturday (as I write, that's tomorrow!) please consider making donations to both these worthy causes. You can donate to the Chicago Blaze on their homepage. Glenn Panner tells you why you should.
To donate to the Warren Junior Program, make checks payable to: Illinois Chess Association, Inc. and mail them to:
ICA Warren Junior Program
Carl Dolson, ICA Treasurer
6021 N Wickwood Rd
Peoria, IL 61614
Do you prefer credit cards? I'll put up a link to the ICA's PayPal address shortly.
Donations to the Warren Junior Program may be tax-deductible; donations to the Chicago Blaze won't be deductible in the general case. As always, ask your tax advisor.
This tax advisor will make a donation in lieu of attending the daytime fundraiser. But you'll see me there tomorrow night, pushing pawns at the blitz!
Thursday, February 4, 2010
Karsten Müller annotates Shirov-Kramnik
Shirov-Kramnik, Corus 2010
White to play
You can read and play through GM Müller's explanations at ChessBase. Shirov may only have taken second place, but he played the most spectacular chess at Wijk aan Zee. Don't try to understand all the moves: just enjoy the fireworks!
Oh yes, this is supposedly a Chicago chess blog....
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Cool podcast - St. Louis Chess Club
The Chess Club and Scholastic Center of St. Louis recently started regular iTunes podcasts, available here.
The January 26th podcast is an interview with IM John Donaldson, captain of the silver medalist US team at the World Team Championships.
Monday, February 1, 2010
Spassky at Gibraltar
This video is a whopping five hours long! To go directly to the spot where former World Champion Boris Spassky begins analyzing with GM Stuart Conquest, skip directly to 3:35 (that's 3 hours and 35 minutes remaining). Hat tip to ChessBase.
Sunday, January 31, 2010
Fire on Board
If you're rated at least 1600 and haven't already read Fire On Board: Shirov's Best Games
, please do yourself a favor and buy a copy. Even though Shirov has reached the ripe old age of 37, he hasn't lost his touch. His last round game against Dominguez (agreed drawn in a crazy time scramble) was pure genius.
Shirov-Dominguez, Corus 2010
After 21...h6; White to move
Black has the two bishops, the small pawn center (e6 and d6) that Sicilian players love, and a natural plan of attacking White's king. White has a monster pawn on g6 and the semi-open h-file, and it's his move: every move is vital in these opposite-side castling positions.
White's problem is that a direct sacrifice like 22.Rxh6?! gxh6 23.Qxh6 (threatening mate on h7) fails to 23...Bc8).
White can simply grab the d-pawn, but Rybka tells me that Black gets good activity for the pawn after 22.Qxd6 Qxd6 23.Rxd6 b4. It's possible that this is objectively the best line:--as of today, who knows?
So what move did Shirov find?
And if you can't stand the suspense, the full game is here.tactics from Corus: So-Giri
15-year-old Anish Giri's mother is Russian, his father is from Nepal, so naturally he plays for the Dutch federation. He'll be playing in the A section of Corus next year!
Here's the crucial position from Giri's game against another prodigy, Wesley So of the Phillipines:
Anish Giri: winner of the Corus B section
Here's the crucial position from Giri's game against another prodigy, Wesley So of the Phillipines:
So-Giri, Corus 2010
White to play: what's the best move?
A) 36.Ne2 B) 36.Qxd1 C.) 36.Qxd4 D) 36.Ra2
White is up two bishops (!) for a bunch of pawns. But getting mated would be bad.
Hint: one move probably wins, one move probably draws, one move definitely draws, and one move definitely loses.
Carlsen wins Corus
Carlsen takes a stroll
Here's the report from the organizers' fabulous website. And US Chess Online has a nice report up, too.
Carlsen overextended against fellow teenager Fabiano Caruana (who plays for Italy, but is also a US citizen). He bailed out and drew a very ugly knight ending with accurate defense. Caruana's -2 is an excellent début in a tournament of this caliber. We now expect Magnus to win every event.
Alexei Shirov played another amazing attacking game against Lenier Dominguez of Cuba. With two seconds left for each player, Dominguez offered a draw in a position where he was a piece up, yet losing by force by a combination neither player had time to see. So with another minute on the clock, Shirov would have been the co-winner. Great tournament for Shirov!
Vladimir Kramnik got nowhere against Karjakin: he too had a great event.
Hikaru Nakamura beat Sergey Tiviakov demonstrated the power of the two bishops in a beautiful textbook ending (two bishops vs. bishop and knight): his +2 shows he has the potential to crack the top ten very soon. (Once today's games are rated, Nakamura should move to #18 on the live rating list.)
Saturday, January 30, 2010
Genius Vishy
Anand has been playing a brilliant game against Kramnik, going on right now.
UPDATE: Anand won in style.
Post-mortem comments by the modest genius
UPDATE: Anand won in style.
Post-mortem comments by the modest genius
Friday, January 29, 2010
Thursday, January 28, 2010
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Kramnik as standup comedian
Oh yes, Corus. (I do have to work for a living.)
Would Kramnik-Carlsen be a more interesting match than Topalov-Anand?
“At the start of the game Magnus just sat there with his eyes closed to the point where I wondered whether he’d fallen asleep and I should wake him up,” Kramnik told reporters afterwards. “But, seriously, my guess is that Gary (Kasparov) called him beforehand and told him he should try 1. e4. In the end he came up with 1. d4, which was the wrong choice, I think. He should have avoided the Catalan, a line I have a great score with, no matter whether I play white or black.”Too bad there isn't a live ratings list for trash-talking. But Kramnik backing up his words: he's now clear #3 in the world, only one win away from (re-)breaking the 2800 barrier. Here's his win with Black against Carlsen.
Would Kramnik-Carlsen be a more interesting match than Topalov-Anand?
not-so-artificial intelligence
More on the Kasparov NYRB piece here at the Daily Dirt. (Corrected link.)
P.S. There was a feature on NPR this morning based on this WSJ article (subscription required?). For "emotional" (re chocolate cake), substitute "intuitive" (re chess intuition).
P.S. There was a feature on NPR this morning based on this WSJ article (subscription required?). For "emotional" (re chocolate cake), substitute "intuitive" (re chess intuition).
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