Monday, January 28, 2013

Red Deer Open


I played in the Red Deer Open last weekend.  I had to travel to Calgary for meetings on Monday so I was able to go down one day early and play.  I left home at 8:30 AM on Saturday, drove for 4.5 hours, had some lunch, and was ready for round 2 at 2 PM.

My round 2 game was as black against an unrated opponent Harry Peralta.  It was his first tournament but he was obviously a strong player tactically.  He had beaten Bill Bently (1859) in round 1 and finished with 3/5 and will probably have an initial rating of close to 1900.  He made a mistake in the opening that I should have seen and have been winning after 4 moves but I missed it.  Then I just played passively and badly and had a hopelessly cramped position.  Luckily he made a mistake while playing quickly and I was able to equalize and then sac some pawns to free myself then force a checkmate.  1.5/2.



My round 3 game was as white against Adam Harris (1772).  I tried to play a Closed Sicilian too aggressively and Adam was able to force the exchange of pawns in the center.  After that it was an open Sicilian and he played the position much better than me and eventually won.  After the game it was obvious talking with him that he had a lot of theoretical knowledge on the Sicilian lines.  He had a great tournament beating the top rated Vlad Rekson (2189) in round 1 and finishing with 3.5/5 with a bye and should gain many points.  1.5/3.



My round 4 game was as white against Neyef Daher (1804).  It was an even game throughout until we got down to a same color bishop and pawns endgame.  I turned down two draw offers and pressed on until he made a mistake.  I was able to win a pawn and then two and won soon after.  2.5/4.



My round 5 game was as black against Aaron Sequillion (2080) who was having a good tournament and tied for 1st with 3.5/4.  I have played Aaron before and was surprised when he played 1.d4.  We played a Kings Indian and I ended up with the better position after the opening.  After that the game went back and forth several times and was very tactical.  My king was completely exposed but I was up a pawn.  Near the end he had a completely won position but we both missed the winning move.  The computer says that it was a draw on the last move when Aaron blundered his Rook into a mate in 2.



So I finished with 3.5/5 and tied for second with Aaron Sequillion and Adam Harris.  Lukas Beaudry won with 4.5/5.  Itohan Gold, Atheer Jawad and Harry Peralta had 3/5.  This was probably my best result but I felt that I missed a lot at the board.  I feel I played better in my last tournament than this one overall but only scored better because luck was with me and not against me – then again there is no luck in chess.

Sunday, January 13, 2013

WBXmas Team Tournament


Once again I entered a tournament at the last possible moment.  The Weekend Before Xmas tournament is the last tournament of the year in the Alberta chess calendar.  The format is different than all the other tournaments because it is a team tournament.   I have never participated in a team event before and I was curious as to what it would be like.  Teams are made up of three players with an average rating of 2000.  A couple of days before the start there were two players that still needed a board two player around my rating so I volunteered and joined Rocket Rob Gardner and David Yao on team “???”- we never got around to agreeing on a name.

Round 1:

Friday night the round one pairings were posted and I saw we were paired against the top rated team consisting of Jack Yoos (2360), Micah Hughey (2084), and Zach Kirsch (1563) so I would be playing Micah Hughey as white.  Micah was the highest rated board 2 player so it he would be my toughest opponent.   I have played him several times before and he always played aggressive openings against me so I decided to try something aggressive against him – The King’s Gambit!?  I was pleased with how I played and I was happy with the result – a draw.  Unfortunately my teammates both lost so the result was 0.5-2.5.



Round 2:

We were paired against IM EdwardProper’s (2487) team with Jamil Kassem (1917) and Armine Arzumanyan (1490).  I played young Jamil in July and was lucky to beat him.  He definitely has the potential to be a great player.  I have noticed that during this game and the previous game he spends a lot of time not looking at the board while it’s his turn.  Either he analyzes moves in his head or he is getting distracted.  I played another good game and was able to simplify the position into what I knew should be a winning king and pawn endgame for me.  Unfortunately, due to poor understanding of how to play the position, I wasn’t able to convert and had to take a draw.  My teammates both lost their games so the result was another 0.5-2.5 and overall 1.0-5.0.



Round 3:

We were paired against the lowest rated team of Terry Seehagen (1753), George Sponga (1797), and Andu Mihulescu (1632).  My wife had come with me to Edmonton to do some Christmas shopping on the weekend.  I asked the organizer if he knew of anyone that could fill in for me on Saturday night so my wife and I could have a night on the town.  He was able to get Ron Erikson (1886) to fill in.  Unfortunately Ron's opponent, George, had to go to the hospital that night and so some rearranging to the pairings had to be done.  I found out the next day that George had to withdraw from the tournament but I hear he is fine now.  I think we ended up winning both games that were played.  2.0-0.0 and overall 3.0-6.0.

 Round 4

Paired against the team of Richard Wang (2454 and Canada Junior champion), Harris Wang (1855), and Tristan Tan-Ly (1500).  I was feeling pretty good about my play but cautious of my opponent as he is Richard’s brother and probably stronger than his rating. I played a good game down to an equal Knight and pawns endgame.  At that point I was confident it was a draw and honestly I stopped thinking.  My opponent didn’t and I blundered into a loss.  Both my teammates also lost so it was 0.0-3.0 and overall 3.0-9.0



Round 5:

We were paired against FM Vladimir Pechenkin (2438), Rob Brazeau (1825), and Joseph Young (1665).  I played the opening horribly against Rob and I spent all my time unsuccessfully trying to remember lines that I had studied 3 months earlier.  When the middle game came I was short on time and down a pawn.  I tried to open up the Kingside and was successful.  I even managed to get a winning position but was too short of time and too frustrated to see the winning lines.  I think if I was playing online blitz I would have played the position better.  The Rocket drew his game against Vlad but David lost so we were once again 0.5-2.5 and overall finished at 3.5-11.5



My last game was frustrating and a couple of late game blunders spoiled what could have been a good result for me (possibly 3-1 instead of 1-3) but I can’t say I was disappointed with my level of play.  Our team result was pretty bad (we ended up second last out of ten teams) but I was amazed at how much I enjoyed the experience.  Having teammates definitly puts a different feel into your games - more than I expected.  You are not only fighting for yourself but also for your teammates.  I would definitely do it again.

The Tourney was won by my fellow Lloydminster-ite Jamin Gluckie’s (2200) team of Lukas Beaudry (2047) from Calgary, and Jason Danner (1702) from Saskatoon with 11.0 points.  I didn’t find out until Sunday that Jamin and Jason were in a roll-over on Friday on their way into Edmonton.  The accident wrote off Jamin’s truck and sent them both to the hospital for X-rays.  They were in pain all weekend with multiple bruises but still were able to play great chess.  My wife and I gave them a ride back to Lloydminster on Sunday night and she was amazed that they still played in the tournament after a serious accident.  I am glad she got to see that I am not the most chess-crazy person she has met. lol.

Any comments are welcome - especially critical comments about my games.