Friday, May 27, 2005

2005 Georgia State Championship

The Georgia State Championship was held this year at Emory University from April 29 to May 1. We had a decent turnout, fairly close to last year's numbers.


FM Miles Ardaman

FM Miles Ardaman won the championship section.

Lester Bedell won the U2000 section.

Hartley Chang won the U1600 section.

The GCA elections were held between the 4th and 5th rounds for the "member-at-large" position. Surprisingly, only one of the candidates, Steve Schneider, showed up to give a speech. Guess who won.


Steve Schneider

I played in the U2000 section and didn't have so great of a tournament.

My first game was quick and easy. It lasted 30 minutes, of which I spent 2 minutes on my 13th and final move (all my previous moves were known theory).

My second game was a Moller Attack where again my opponent wasn't up on the main line theory, and I was soon up a free pawn.

My third game was a bizarre Center-Game against the U2000 champ Lester Bedell, and I thought I handled the opening and early middlegame quite well. Then I made a few innacuracies and White equalized. Finally, amidst extreme fatigue I made a stupid one-move blunder and threw away the game.

In my fourth game I faced the French Rubinstein, and even though I managed to stay awake throughout this exciting opening, it resulted in a draw as Black had most likely planned.

My fifth game was another howler. I played well and then got tired and missed multiple opportunities to easily win, finally blundering the endgame and I lost.

I attribute the fatigue on my 3rd and 5th games to not having fully recovered from my flu a month ago, but there are still some valuable lessons in all of my games, so it was worth it.

The crosstables are here.

Three of my games are amongst those here.

Thursday, May 26, 2005

Xiao Cheng Wins Scholarship


Xiao Cheng
(Photo by Daniel Lucas)

Awards Given to Winners of "SuperNationals" Competition In Nashville Over the Weekend RICHARDSON, Texas (April 11, 2005) — The University of Texas at Dallas (UTD) awarded three separate full-tuition-and-fees, four-year scholarships to the top performers at the “SuperNationals” of chess competition held in Nashville over the weekend. The winners of the scholarships, each of which has a cash value of about $48,000 to non-Texas residents, were Joel Banawa, a 15-year-old from Los Angles, Ray Robson, a 10-year-old from Largo, Fla., and Xiao Cheng, a 15-year-old from Alpharetta, Ga. The only stipulation is that the winners must meet UTD’s rigorous entrance requirements at matriculation.

From GCA Web Site.

Monday, May 23, 2005

HB Global Chess Challenge Results

Lester Bedell scores highest of all people I've ever played with 7 points in the U2000 section.

Congrats, Lester!

Here's how players I've seen in Georgia tournaments did in this 9-round tournament:

Open
GM Wojtkiewicz, Alek - 6 points
lost to WGM Anna Zatonskih in round 2
lost to GM Gata Kamsky in round 8

FM Ardaman, Miles Ferdi - 6 points
lost to GM Alexander Stripunsky in round 2
beat GM Gregory Serper in round 7

FM Muhammad, Stephen A - 5.5 points
drew with GM Alexander Stripunsky in round 4
drew with GM Alexander Shabalov in round 5
beat GM Igor Glek in round 6
lost to GM Joel Benjamin in round 9

GM Becerra, Julio - 5 points

IM Burnett, Ronald - 5 points

Cheng, Xiao - 4.5 points
lost to GM Joel Benjamin in round 1

Gulamali, Kazim - 4.5 points
drew with GM John Fedorowicz in round 1
lost to GM Zviad Izoria (winner of open section) in round 3

GM Fedorowicz, John - 4 points
drew with Atlanta's own Kazim Gulamali in round 1

Pohl, Klaus - 4 points

FM Andrews, Todd D - 2.5 points
lost to GM Joel Benjamin in round 3
lost to WGM Anna Zatonskih in round 7

U2200

Francisco, Richard T - 6.5 points
White, Lawrence - 6 points
De Peaza, Terrence - 5.5 points
Widjaja, Muliadi - 5.5 points
Brookshear, Tim - 4.5 points

U2000
Bedell, Lester B - 7 points

U1800
Hoffa, Danny E - 5 points
Raman, Shanker - 4 points
Bledsoe, Spencer - 3.5 points
Burrus, Don A. - 2.5 points

Thursday, May 19, 2005

HB Global Chess Challenge


Maurice Ashley's super-tournament with a guaranteed $500,000 prize fund started yesterday in Minnesota. Looks like a lot of fun. I just can't see spending the money and time off from work at this time to make the trip. Someday maybe.

Some people I know from (or have seen in) Georgia tournaments who are playing in this tournament are:






No.NameRtg.Rnd1Score
53Stephen Muhammad2445X1.0
67Todd Andrews2404W2091.0
71Miles Ardaman2390W2131.0
139Ron Burnett2444L1000.0
168Xiao Cheng2249L21 (GM Joel Benjamin)0.0
192Klaus Pohl2214L450.0
Open




No.NameRtg.Rnd1Score
13Terrence De Peaza2157W1411.0
54Muliadi Widjaja2028W1221.0
151Tim Brookshear2023L230.0
157Lawrence White2006L290.0
U2200




No.NameRtg.Rnd1Score
11Danny Hoffa1780W1791.0
27Don Burrus1757W1911.0
54Shanker Raman1723W2131.0
96Spencer Bledsoe1630X1.0
U1800

Sorry if I missed anyone. Hundreds of names to sift through.

Friday, May 06, 2005

Friday Cat Blogging


My co-worker rolled over to the other side of the bed one morning and guess where she discovered her cat was sleeping?

In the fine tradition of Friday cat blogging, here are some random thoughts having nothing to do with Georgia tournament chess:



A Big Hello to some great friends from long ago: Clay, Brian, Curt, Jason. Just heard from them recently and I feel twenty years younger. We had the best rock band for a bunch of young teenagers. Spectrum forever!



Weird Clocks seem to be everywhere. From a prototype digital clock to Clocky, the digital alarm clock from MIT that intelligently finds a new hiding place each morning so you're forced to get out of bed to turn him off, to the creepy Death Clock.



The Purpose of the Ninja is to flip out and kill people. (Sound warning)



Infinite cats! Just what the Internet was made for.