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Feb 08 2012

Dissapointing Bundesliga :(

Published by under Leagues

Gawain flew back into London Heathrow early Friday morning, 5.25am then we left in the afternoon for Bundesliga. Bundesliga this weekend was held in Solingen a town famous for it’s steel.

Gawain’s team unfortunately didn’t win a match this weekend. In the 8th Round of the league they drew 4:4 with Dortmund. The final game finished around 8.30pm but unfortunately the youngest player on our team IM Benjamin Bok didn’t manage to win I think a winning position. The endgame started our completely drawn so it was very impressive that he manage to outplay his opponent into something winning.

On Sunday,SC 1950 Remagen played SC Wattenscheid 1930. SC Wattenscheid Top 2 boards are very strong (Vitugov and Najer) then they drop to 2530. Gawain played Sebastian Bogner a 21 year old German GM. Looking at the team situation was dire – it looked like the team were going to lose 4.5-3.5 so Gawain decided to try for the win. Unfortunately that plan didn’t materialize and his opponent played sensibly, fast and well! This mean the final score was 5-3.

This is how the team has done so far. As you can see most of the matches has been fairly close and I think it’s well known that Remagen is a very unlucky team with matches normally decided by 1 or 2 games! At the moment we are Number 16 out of 16 but there is still 6 rounds to go. Fingers crossed!

 

 

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Feb 04 2012

Bundesliga

Published by under Leagues

Round 8 and 9 of the German Bundesliga has started earlier today. You can check out the live games here but I think there might be a slight delay on the server.

Gawain’s team plays Hansa Dortmund and tomorrow will play SV Wattenscheid. If you didn’t know how the Bundesliga teams work – 4 teams play in mini matches and two teams always travel together. In SC Remagen’s case they always travel with SC Solingen. Although I believe in the first weekends all teams met up and I guess maybe for the final rounds they will as well.

The playing conditions are spacious, light and airy. I hope the live games come back up soon or else I’ll have to walk down the road and see what’s going on..

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Feb 01 2012

Game of the Month – February 2012

While Sue’s been busy writing on our road trip I haven’t forgotten about my Game of the Month (actually I had but Sue emailed me to remind me!). I decided to choose one of my own games. Overall the tournament was a bit of a disaster from a rating point of view, losing to Chris Wallis, an Aussie FM already put me in a big rating hole. I can’t have many complaints about the game though –  my only serious mistake was declining to go into a drawn endgame instead choosing an unclear option, after which Chris played perfectly. The long time control certainly seemed to suit him. I also finished the tournament with a loss to the tournament victor Darryl Johansen. The Australian GM has had a good patch recently, also winning the Australian Championships. Again I got too ambitious, I miscalculated something when sacrificing a piece and should have simply repeated position for the draw (an option I had twice). Again after declining the draw my opponent played very well and didn’t give me any more chances.

However the tournament wasn’t all bad. From a social point of view it was great to meet up with our Kiwi friends and spending time in New Zealand again was very pleasant. I also played a couple of nice games – the one below won the Best Game prize, sponsored by Grant Kerr.

 

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Feb 01 2012

Roadtrip… Wellington to Queenstown.

Published by under Travel,Updates

Day 1: Fly Auckland to Wellington

We were greeted by our good friends Bill and Maria who will put us up and feed us. There is lots of Kapiti Ice-cream in the house for me.. (P.s I love ice-cream)

Day 2: Wellington to Christchurch via Picton on the ferry

We stopped at the Store (http://www.the-store.co.nz/) in Kekerengu which is a beautiful place to stop and a delicious place to eat! Driving down to Christchurch we passed Ohau Point (on the coast) which has masses of seals. You could see the baby seals staying away from the big males one. I’m told that  male seals are quite the dominant aggressive kind and if they feel threatened bye bye to you. Weather wise today was brilliant, lots of sun and if you ever head to NZ you’ll need to slip,slop,slap on your sunscreen!

Into Christchurch we arrived where we saw some of the devestation from the earthquake. Walking past houses where you can see the ground drop is quite astonishing. The houses in the area we were staying in would mostly need to be demolished due the liquefaction. Liquefaction just looked like sand but of course it means that the soil now is more like liquid then substance, definitely not what you want to be living on.

Day 3: Drive from Christchurch to Lake Tekapo.

You aren’t able to drive into the city centre but we drove past the Cathedral of the Blessed Sentiment where you can see the devastating effects of the earthquake. We drove past the city centre as vehicles are still not able to drive through.

A long drive to Lake Tekapo where we were going to go to the Mt John Observatory only to be told that the weather was too bad. Lake Tekapo has the cutest church overlooking the Lake and of course you can see some mountains behind.

Day 4: Lake Tekapo to Queenstown

Leaving Lake Tekapo we did have breakfast at the Astro Café  which is atop Mt John which gave amazing views of the Lake and mountains beyond. After breakfast we made our way to Mt Cook/Aoraki which is New Zealand’s highest mountain. A very beautiful place in the summer and I would love to go visit there in the winter time.

We made our way to Queenstown at a slow place stopping for lunch in Twizel where there was unfortunately no time for Mini golf.

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Jan 28 2012

Bye bye New Zealand…

Published by under Updates

Hi all,

I hope you all had a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.  If we have any Chinese readers Xin Nian Kuai Le( it won’t show the characters!)Now that we are getting married, I don’t receive any ang pau anymore :( and now will have to give but oh well.

I’m in Malaysia and borrowing my cousins laptop. The ipad is quite bad for trying to update the website, can’t upload photos, typing is difficult and there was some strange auto correct.

Ideally we would have updated round by round but that proved to be difficult time wise. We spent pretty much all mornings either hanging out with friends or my brother! Then lunch before the game starting at 3pm. Gawain played very long games and I did as well! Chess wise I’ll leave that up to Gawain, I felt I concentrated better even drawing with an IM Guy West with the black pieces. It’s a bit frustrating getting a better position but wimping out though.. fingers cross I’ll gain the confidence for next time.

Gawain is still in NZ while I head back to London. We did some amazing things and saw some amazing places and of course ate lots of yummy food.

Part 1: We road trip with our friends Ross, Lin (and doggies) , Bill and Maria: Drive down from Wellington to Queenstown

Part 2: Tournament. Gawain finished on 6/9 and I finished on 4.5/9

Part 3:Activities in Queenstown: Gondola,Luge,Disc golf, The remarkables.

Gawain returns to London next Friday and then we’ll head to Germany together for the Bundesliga. I’ll write more in London!

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Jan 21 2012

A quick note from the IPad

Published by under Updates

Having received the iPad as a Christmas present I have now taken to my new toy. It is very gadgety and highly addictive. The pros are that it is easy to use especially when you are travelling and the batlay lasts an amazing long time. There are some cons that come with the device such as the touch screen keyboard which is hard to type at times also as a chess player there is no chessbase although you can download the ICC appdot get your chess fix.

 

Its nearly the end of the tournament (today is round 7) and I’m sorrhave haven’t updated. Internet is scarce and we have been so busy catching up with friends. Ah the keyboard is very annoying so I will write more on a proper computer!

 

sue

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Jan 16 2012

Back in New Zealand!

Published by under Events,Games,Tournaments,Updates

Hello again everybody. After a few days in Malaysia eating delicious noodles and pork buns, we arrived into New Zealand very early Wednesday morning. A day spent with Andrew, Sue’s brother in the Sylvia Park shopping mall and some Burger Fuel before Sue and I flew to Wellington for the start of our roadtrip down to Queenstown.

We stayed the night with our good friends Bill and Maria before an early start and the ferry crossing across to Picton. On the ferry we met up with Ross and Lin and their three dogs: Ruby, Amber and Smudge who were all coming with us on the trip. We stopped at The Store for lunch and I got further sunburnt – the sun is very hot here! – before we stopped for the night in Christchurch. I had been to the city a few times before but this was the first time I’d been there since the earthquakes devastated the city. We stayed in a house belonging to Lin’s brother which is actually scheduled for demolition due to the earthquake damage. The CBD of the city is closed to cars but we saw lots of unoccupied houses, which had been split in the middle by the quakes.

The second day and we made the trip down to Lake Tekapo, a huge lake and the site for the largest observatory in the Southern Hemisphere. We had booked a night tour of the observatory but unfortunately it started raining and so instead we had to look round the tiny place for anywhere open to grab a drink!

The final day of the road trip took us to Queenstown but not before dropping in at Mount Cook (Aoraki in Maori), New Zealand’s highest mountain at 3754 metres. There was a fair bit of cloud around but it was still a stunning sight and maybe we’ll have to stay at the Hermitage in future.

When we arrived in Queenstown the weather wasn’t great but today it’s fabulous and it forced me to go for a run round the lake this morning and I’m looking forward to going into town soon and maybe grabbing some mutton bird for dinner. I’m just waiting for Sue to finish her game. She drew her first round game while I’m on 2/2, having beaten Andrew Janisz, an unrated but tricky opponent in round one and Andrew Bird, rated at 2216 today. The game was still around level until he made a big mistake with 22.Ne1? when he was in a lot of trouble.

Sue and I will try to update the site as often as we can but you can follow the games live at http://www.newzealandchess.co.nz/live/tfd_fourbds.htm and the results are updated at: http://chess-results.com/tnr63826.aspx?art=2&rd=2&lan=1

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Jan 02 2012

Game of the Month January 2012

Welcome to this year’s first GOTM! This was a tricky one to choose as so many tournaments are being played currently. I was also not very up to date as had not been online for ten days or so over Christmas. However I found the following very interesting.

Before we move on to the game I’ll just mention a few of the tournaments ongoing. In Italy the Reggio Emilia round robin is very strong and sees an in-form Hikaru Nakamura on 5/6 ahead of Alexander Morozevich on 3.5, Vassily Ivanchuk and Anish Giri on 3/6, Fabiano Caruana 2.5/6 and lastly Nikita Vitiugov on 1.

Meanwhile over in Spain the San Sebastian tournament is back with a very strong field and a twist. The organisers have chosen the top section to be a knockout of 64 players with those knocked out playing in an Open. However the interesting bit is that the two game matches are played simultaneously; one game with White and one with Black against the same opponent at the same time. At the time of writing Mamedyarov is the highest rated casualty, losing his round four match to the top Peruvian GM Granda Zuniga.

Back in England we have the Hastings Congress. Top seed Wang Yue’s rating has fallen in the past year from a huge high of 2756 but his 2694 rating is still impressive. He’s leading on 5.5/6 ahead of a strong Indian contingent on 5/6. With all this chess being played it’s hard to focus on annotating games and packing for New Zealand!

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Jan 01 2012

Happy New Year and Top 100!

Published by under Updates

We would like to wish all our readers a very Happy New Year for 2012. It will be a very busy year for us as we plan on getting married.

I’m pleased to announce that Gawain has cracked the Top 100 list for the first time. You can check out the January 2012 Top 100 players.

We are currently at Gawain’s grandparents and haven’t been online for the last week and a half but we are now heading back to London where Gawain will be doing a GOTM  update as soon as he can!

On Thursday, we start our journey out to New Zealand where we will play in the Queenstown Classic where Gawain is 2nd seed behind the Chinese player Li Chao B.

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Dec 24 2011

European Blitz and Rapid Championships

Published by under Tournaments,Travel,Updates

After a couple days off desperately writing my Chesspublishing update and annotating a couple of games for Chessbase I headed to Warsaw for the annual European Blitz and Rapid Championships. This year David Howell, Loz Cooper and Malcolm Armstrong also played which made it more of a social event than last year.

The trip started smoothly enough but then there were a couple of glitches including paying for our taxi twice and then getting hopelessly lost trying to find the Polish Chess Office (that turned out to be in a small building next to a big football stadium). However they were successfully navigated and we found ourselves in the Old Town for a very pleasant dinner. I think Malcolm and David were rather jealous of mine and Loz’s soup which came in a hollowed out piece of bread. As a lover of bread this was a great starter for me but I started struggling by the main course and was happy not to join the others for dessert. However Malcolm and David had their main course of a Polish stew in bread too, must be a speciality of the restaurant.

As it wasn’t too cold we decided to try and walk off some of the huge amounts of bread. It was a bit further than we thought and we weren’t even sure of the exact location of our hotel but managed it after just a couple of detours. Then to bed for a very early start to the chess.

The blitz came first and we were roused far too early to get the shuttle to the venue. The venue was definitely a step up from last year and was held in the very grand Palace of Culture and Science . The tournament was 13 double rounds of three minutes plus a two seconds increment per move, an extremely intense tournament!

I was fairly happy with my performance. I lost just one mini-match (1.5-0.5 in the last round to Alexander Riazantsev, a Russian 2710) and played three other 2700s, Judit Polgar, Etienne Bacrot and top seed Ian Nepomniachtchi, drawing each match 1-1. I finished in 18th place, slightly above my seeding of 20th. You can check out the standings here:

After 26 games we needed some relaxation. David decided to go straight back to the hotel and sleep but the rest of us grabbed some Polish beer (at an Italian restaurant!) before eating at Sphinx, a steakhouse type place that was pretty good. We arrived back at the hotel 11ish and I just had to quickly complete one of my annotations, send that off and then sleep before an even earlier start the following day.

For some reason the shuttle insisted on leaving at 8.15am for a 9.30 start, despite the fact it was less than a 10minute drive away. The fact that I was still mostly asleep can be proven by the way I played my first round. After a few moves of Chinese Dragon theory I moved my knight the wrong way. Luckily I managed to salvage my position with a questionable double pawn sacrifice followed up by an exchange sack and finally a couple of knights to mate.

The rest of that day went by around par for me. I managed to avoid losing but ceded three draws to players a couple hundred points and so was on 6.5/8 at the end of the first day. David was up on 7/8. After losing his round three game he’d come right back and even managed to defeat Judit with Black in the last round of the day. This tournament is all about stamina: towards the end of the day I witnessed many horrific blunders by strong players who were obviously simply too exhausted.

Malcolm had been scouting the area and had found the typical Irish bar and so we adjourned there for a couple pints before dinner. A live Polish band were there, playing covers of American songs such as Eye of the Tiger and it was extremely noisy! We found another steakhouse kind of place for dinner, this time a Brazilian themed one. I had their speciality ribs which was delicious but I wonder now if that was the root of my upcoming problems.

The Sunday morning was another very early start. I discovered my body wasn’t in top physical shape when it refused any breakfast. I made myself a sandwich but that simply ended up following me, sitting by my board all day. My stomach was disliking me and after eight toilet breaks within the first three games I was feeling pretty rough. A headache came to join the party and I knew it wasn’t going to be my year.

I lost the first game to a Russian GM but then managed to win a couple in a row. In the penultimate round I was paired with the local GM Robert Kempinski. I quite liked my chances but unfortunately blundered a whole rook. The last round was played in sheer agony but somehow my opponent, a young Armenian GM, failed to beat me from a wonderful position. A dash back to the hotel, where the taxi driver, evidently seeing my pain, ripped me off hugely, and then to sleep and to recover.

I finished on 9/13 and in 37th spot while David managed 9.5 and squeezed into the prizes in25th. Final standings

Despite the unpleasant final day I enjoyed my time in Warsaw and would like to thank the organisers for a well organised tournament and for putting up with lots of questions! Thanks too for the lunches we were invited to during the events, which were held inside the Palace in a rather grand side room. I highly recommend the tournament if you feel you want to get your fill of quick chess. A warning though: it will leave you exhausted!

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