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Monday, December 29, 2008

Ulster Rapidplay Championship 2008

Since the Ulster Championship proper migrated to warmer climes in 2005, the rapidplay version has occupied the Christmas/New Year slot. The fourth in this series, all held at Belfast Boat Club, was played 28th December 2008 and featured Stephen Scannell, winner for the last two years plus Gareth Annesley and John Cairns, two of the three joint champions from the 2005/6 event. Also among the top seeds were Michael Holmes, making a welcome return to tournament chess, and Timothy Douglas, home from Germany for the holiday season.

There were also a number of young players who regularly compete in the monthly Saturday Children's tournaments at Methodist College. Amongst these was Harshith Maruthireddy, recently arrived from Wales, where he was Cardiff and Valleys under 9 and under 10 schools champion for the last two years. The young players showed they were not out of their depth as early as Round 1 when Radhika Gupta, winner of an important girls' competition in Manchester earlier this year, and Kiran Robbin recorded victories over battle-hardened adult opponents.

Six rounds with 30 minutes each player per game were on the menu but I only arrived to spectate midway through Round 5. A quick glance at the results showed that Scannell was in the lead with 4/4 with Holmes, Cairns, Ulster Schools Champion Ananda Srinivasan, Douglas, Mark Newman and Annesley, all with 3 points, in hot pursuit. My attention was drawn to the board one game between Holmes (white) and Scannell - this was a cagey encounter with Holmes probably having a slight advantage due to his better-placed bishops. Scannell started to drift behind on the clock, and this was to prove decisive with Holmes winning on time. In the meantime, Cairns had defeated Srinivasan, while Annesley had got the better of Douglas. Newman, although floating down to the players on 2.5 points, was now out of the running after losing to Calum Leitch.

The final round saw four players - Annesley, Cairns, Holmes and Scannell - entering it in the lead on four points. Cairns checked what would happen in the event of a tie. When told that title and prize money would be shared, I anxiously asked him if we might see two quick draws on the top boards, but he assured me that this was most unlikely - and so it proved, but here was also to be a final twist to the tale.

Leitch defeated Douglas on board three with a sacrificial attack that caught his opponent's King in the centre to finish on 4.5 and with a chance of sharing the title if the two top games ended in draws. This however did not seem very likely. Cairns Grand Prix Attack against Holmes's Sicilian Defence produced a won King and pawn endgame for Cairns, but he wandered too far up the board with his King and suddenly there was a pawn race. Both players were now blitzing out their moves and when the smoke cleared each had only King and promoted Queen left. A draw was agreed, so they joined Leitch at the top of the leaderboard. Cairns was visibly disappointed to have let his opportunity to slip.

Now all attention was on Scannell versus Annesley. The latter's Pirc Defence had not gone well and at one point Scannell was ten minutes up on the clock with a strong kingside attack. However Annesley did not panic and Scannell then consumed a lot of time looking for the knock-out blow. Suddenly Annesley got counterplay on the queenside and with an active Queen and Rook, it was now Scannell's King that was under pressure. However Scannell remained with just enough threats of his own to stay in the game and a number of pieces got swapped off. There were now no obvious winning attempts for either player with both having less than a minute left on the clock. Annesley - with slightly more time and marginally better position - offered a draw.

Scannell is famous for grinding out wins in unpromising positions, but even he was not prepared to hazard the lottery of just aimlessly blitzing out moves until one of the players' flags fell (well that's a piece of artistic licence because they were actually using a digital clock). He accepted the draw offer and Cairns immediately commented, "That makes me feel a lot better now." So it all ended in an unlikely five-way tie, with Holmes, Scannell, Cairns, Annesley and Leitch all finishing on 4.5 points.

Srinivasan and Richard Gould shared the under 1600 grading prize while the rapidly improving Aaron McCully took the one for under 1300s. Kevin Robbin, a P7 pupil at St Brides, Belfast and younger brother of Kiran, won the prize for the best unrated player. Full standings and crosstable are at the Ulster Chess Chronicle.

Wednesday, December 03, 2008

Annesley wins Kilkenny Major

Kilkenny used to be the biggest annual congress in the whole of Ireland, but in recent years it has ceded that title to Bunratty. Indeed this year only 205 competed in Kilkenny's four sections, quite a bit down on the usual numbers - signs of the credit crunch biting? Still there was still a good sprinkling of GM talent in the Masters, won by English GM Tony Kosten.

There were two Belfast players in the 44-player Major for those rated between 1600-1999. Gareth Annesley (pictured left) started the final round half-a-point behind the leader Liam Porter but then beat him to secure undisputed first place with five points from his six games. Danny Mallaghan failed to repeat his 2006 victory in this event, losing his final two games to finish on 2.5.

The only other Northern raider was Cathal Murphy, competing in the under 1200 Challengers. He finished on four points, with both his losses being against two of the joint-winners.

You can find a report on the event and crosstables for all four sections at the Irish Chess Union website.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

QUB October Blitz

University chess impresario, Chris Millar, put on another super show last Wednesday. He hosted a 5-round blitz (10 minutes each player) tournament in the Bunatee Bar, located in the bowels of the QUB Students' Union. Next door to the Bunatee Bar is the Mandela Hall, which over 30 years ago and then still named the McMordie Hall, I can recall as the venue for the Ulster Championship. Alcoholic refreshments, music playing in the background and atmospheric lighting made the October Blitz as different as night and day to those cerebral affairs from the 1970s.

The tournament saw a heavyweight cast of many of Belfast's best players taking part, but they were augmented by a large presence from the host club, many of whom were competing for the titles of QUB Freshers' Champion and QUB Womens' Champion. Ulster chess has always suffered from a scarcity of female players, so it was good to see so many of them competing in this event.

My own tournament started with a tough game against one of Ulster's best fast-time-limit players, Stephen Morgan. I managed to get some play going on the queenside, but all this did was to force Stephen to launch a kingside attack, which ended in him checkmating me. Still my concentration levels must have been good, because I wasn't aware of the music.

The rounds came thick and fast and it was hard to keep up-to-date with who was going best, but one thing was clear - with 36 players in the mix and even with an accelerated draw, dropping a point would be fatal to chances of overall victory. Come the last round, fittingly there were only two players on maximum points, so it was to be a shoot-out for the first prize between Morgan and Ulster champion, Steve Scannell, with the latter coming out on top to add one more to a long list of tournament victories.

My own last round game was against QUB fresher, Nina Harker, and in a reversal of my first round game, this time it was my opponent who had the queenside pressure which I countered by securing checkmate on the other side. Despite this loss Harker then went into an Armageddon tie-break, a Millar speciality, against Ciara Pugh to decide the QUB Women's title, while most of the other players watched on. No pressure then! Pugh emerged as the victor after a tense, hard-fought game. The QUB Freshers' title went to Scott Colhoun, whom I seem to remember playing a few years ago at Hillsborough Chess Club, before its move to Derriaghy.

Millar had already staged a blitz tourney in the Students' Union during the summer and after this second successful outing he promises more to come. Bring them on!