2012 U.S. Championships News
IM Irina Krush got the full point against her toughtest opponent, IM Anna Zatonskih, in round 3 of the U.S. Women's Championship.
By FM Mike Klein
SAINT LOUIS (May 6, 2013) -- Two premium matchups were the top layer on a chess cake that featured 13 winners in 17 games in round three of the 2013 U.S. Championship and U.S. Women’s Championship. The only two men with perfect scores, GMs Gata Kamsky and Larry Christiansen, took center stage for the main championship. The ladies enacted their yearly fan-favorite ritual of numbers one versus two – IMs Anna Zatonskih and Irina Krush.
Both games went into the sixth hour before two winners emerged. Both Krush and Zatonskih drained their clocks down to less than one minute before Zatonskih’s king was caught in a mating net and she resigned. The final dozen moves of the game, she could do nothing but shuttle her pieces aimlessly, waiting for Krush to find a plan to break through. “You can’t blame her,” Krush said. “She didn’t have much to do in that position.”
Prior to the passivity, Krush surprised Zatonskih out of the opening, playing the King’s Indian Defense as black for the first time since 2009. The two have played so many times in recent years; including tiebreaks, they have now logged ten games head-to-head in the last three championships. In recent years, Krush has trotted out a variety of defenses to Zatonskih’s 1. d4, including a Queen’s Gambit Accepted, Catalan, Pirc, Benoni, and another King’s Indian in 2008. “It’s actually pretty difficult to prepare for me because you don’t know what I’m going to do,” Krush said after listing her previous battles.
Whatever experience was needed to play her position, Krush said she found from her numerous games on the opposite side. “You might need to know 20 or 25 moves out of the opening. But you also need experience as white. Today we were both uncomfortable, but she mixed up two lines that I both play as white, so I knew the ideas.”
At some point, I’ve got five pieces on the g-file. And hey! I’ve still got a rook on the queenside! That’s a good sign when you haven’t lost anything over there.”
Finishing just minutes before was Kamsky-Christiansen. The underdog Christiansen promised to bring the fight to top-rated Kamsky, but after 75 moves of creative play, Kamsky liquidated the last of black’s drawing chances. “I missed some of his strong moves and I was thinking, ‘Damn, this is going to be a really, really hard game,’” Kamsky said. Still just days after flying back from a super-tournament in Switzerland, Kamsky said he chose to rest more than study. “I was sleeping all day and not really preparing. Against Larry, I knew we were going to play a long game.”
The win makes Kamsky the only player on 3-0 and thus the last contender for the $64,000 Fischer Prize for an unblemished 9-0 score.
Falling off the pace but still controlling her own destiny in the women’s tournament was WGM Tatev Abrahamyan. She managed to draw as black against WFM Alena Kats, who is playing more cogent chess in her second go-round in St. Louis. Abrahamyan now sits alone in second place with 2.5/3.
She will face WIM Iryna Zenyuk in round four, who won today over WIM Viktorija Ni to get to 2/3. She is starting well as she did last year (in 2012 she had 2.5/3). In the first three contests, Zenyuk said her opening preparation has been paying off, “but it seems my opponents know [the openings] too.” Today she liked her position but struggled to decide when and how to open the pawn structure on the kingside. “I thought I had a comfortable edge the whole game, but then we got into a time scramble and it got crazy.” Both kings looked perilously close to being mated before the dust settled and Zenyuk’s extra pawns decided the issue for good.
WGM Anjelina Belakovskaia was the final player to retain a plus score today, as she got by WFM Sarah Chiang to also move to 2-1. Belakovskaia has arguably the toughest tournament beginning of anyone. Having already played Zatonskih as black in round one, her next big test comes tomorrow as she again gets black against front-runner Krush. WGM Sabina Foisor and Chiang will both try to get their first points of the event as they square off in round four.
The other big story coming from the U.S. Championship is undoubtedly the performance of two unheralded players. Collegiate GM Conrad Holt and FM John Bryant, both playing in their first championship, both scored their second upset wins to move to 2.5/3. The reward? In round four Holt will get white against Kamsky on board one, while Bryant “escapes” but still will be challenged mightily with black against Christiansen. To put the experience gap in perspective, together Kamsky and Christiansen have 34 appearances and six titles against Holt and Bryant’s three days in St. Louis. The total all-time games count is 359-6.
Today Holt dispatched GM Alejandro Ramirez in a Benko Gambit. Holt said he was surprised at the opening choice, precisely because Ramirez is such an aficionado. “He’s played tons of Benko Gambits,” Holt said. “He’s made a DVD about it. I thought he would want to surprise me.” At the end, both players are about to promote, but according to Holt “his king is completely toast.”
The galloping start has also surprised the newly-minted grandmaster. “All the time I start bad in tournaments,” he said. Like the other college students, who are mostly scuffling, Holt has plenty of school work due these next few weeks. His three finals and timed exam, to be taken on the tournaments only rest day, are not getting in the way for now.
Bryant, who miraculously escaped against one GM in round two, outplayed the veteran GM Gregory Kaidanov today. Though the Marshall Gambit has the potential to inflict pain on white’s king, Bryant said he never feared his position and welcomed the opening. He had only played against it once before (against fellow U.S. Championship player IM Sam Sevian) but declined the pawn offer that time. Since then, he has studied how to play the main lines. “Before this tournament I went back and looked at it,” he said. “I just thought I was never in trouble. I just think that white must have some advantage in any case.” Asked if he thought first place, his lofty pre-tournament goal, was becoming more attainable, Bryant replied, “I’m a moody player and the mood is really good right now.”
His exchange sacrifice 25. Rxd6 wrested the initiative away from black, while the pretty 30. f5! highlighted the coordination of white’s forces. Black resigned without waiting for tactics on the c-file to come to fruition.
Besides Christiansen, four other top GMs got themselves to 2-1 with positive results today. GM Alex Shabalov won his second in a row, with much less luck needed. After finding a tactic in an otherwise losing position yesterday, and spoiling his game in round one against Kamsky, Shabalov won today against Sevian without as much seesawing. Still, it did require two queens, but that is “typical Shabalov” Zenyuk said. “The loss against Gata was a bitter pill to swallow,” Shabalov said of the start to his tournament. He then was outplayed in the opening by FM Jorge Sammour-Hasbun yesterday, so he was not about to overlook his 12-year-old opponent today. “He’s a sensation this tournament,” Shabalov said. “Believe me, I was dead serious this game.” After narrowly avoiding a 0-2 start, Shabalov is back in the chase pack.
Two other pre-tournament favorites getting back into the hunt were third-seeded GMs Alex Onischuk and sixth-seeded Varuzhan Akobian. Onischuk had an equal game but broke through with his queen and bishop against GM Ben Finegold. In the final position, every piece of Onischuk’s occupied a dark square while all of Finegold’s army languished on the light squares.
Akobian handed IM Kayden Troff his second loss in a row. In other action, GM Joel Benjamin held second-seeded GM Timur Gareev to a solid draw. Past winner GM Yury Shulman proved his French Defense was once again impregnable, as GM Melik Khachiyan spend several hours preparing but said he could not find any way to combat it; the two played a static draw.
The only other winner was Sammour-Hasbun, who took the full point after losing his two opening games. “I was thinking how much talent I have at losing good positions,” he said. “It’s just a tough tournament. These guys don’t give anything for free. Today my goal was just to not lose. I said, ‘Please, not 0-3.’”
For round four live coverage and grandmaster commentary, tune in to www.uschesschamps.com at 1:00 Central, 2:00 p.m. Eastern.
2013 U.S. Championship Pairings: Round 4
Table | White | Score | Rating | Black | Score | Rating | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | GM Holt, Conrad | 2.5 | 2513 | GM Kamsky, Gata | 3.0 | 2741 | |
2 | GM Christiansen, Larry M | 2.0 | 2579 | FM Bryant, John Daniel | 2.5 | 2442 | |
3 | GM Shabalov, Alexander | 2.0 | 2544 | GM Onischuk, Alexander | 2.0 | 2666 | |
4 | GM Benjamin, Joel | 2.0 | 2534 | GM Akobian, Varuzhan | 2.0 | 2616 | |
5 | GM Shulman, Yury | 1.5 | 2570 | GM Gareev, Timur | 1.5 | 2674 | |
6 | GM Shankland, Samuel L | 1.5 | 2612 | GM Stripunsky, Alexander | 1.5 | 2570 | |
7 | GM Kaidanov, Gregory S | 1.5 | 2593 | GM Khachiyan, Melikset | 1.5 | 2518 | |
8 | GM Ramirez, Alejandro | 1.5 | 2551 | GM Hess, Robert L | 1.0 | 2595 | |
9 | GM Finegold, Benjamin | 1.0 | 2505 | Norowitz, Yaacov | 1.0 | 2451 | |
10 | FM Sammour-Hasbun, Jorge E. | 1.0 | 2463 | FM Sevian, Samuel | 1.0 | 2371 | |
11 | IM Troff, Kayden W | 1.0 | 2421 | GM Ivanov, Alexander | 0.5 | 2529 | |
12 | GM Robson, Ray | 0.5 | 2620 | GM Arnold, Marc T | 0.5 | 2538 |
2013 U.S. Women's Championship Pairings: Round 4
Table | White | Score | Rating | Black | Score | Rating | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | WGM Foisor, Sabina | 0.0 | 2300 | WFM Chiang, Sarah | 0.0 | 2098 | |
2 | IM Krush, Irina | 3.0 | 2470 | WGM Belakovskaia, Anjelina | 2.0 | 2263 | |
3 | WIM Ni, Viktorija | 1.0 | 2262 | IM Zatonskih, Anna | 2.0 | 2466 | |
4 | WGM Abrahamyan, Tatev | 2.5 | 2280 | WIM Zenyuk, Iryna | 2.0 | 2243 | |
5 | WGM Baginskaite, Camilla | 1.5 | 2278 | WFM Kats, Alena | 1.0 | 2144 |
GM Larry Christiansen will bring a perfect 2/2 score into his pivotal third-round match-up against GM Gata Kamsky.
By FM Mike Klein
After two rounds of the 2013 U.S. Championship and U.S. Women’s Championship, there are curiously more perfect scores remaining in the latter tournament, despite having fewer than half the players of the former. Only three women (IMs Irina Krush and Anna Zatonksih and WGM Tatev Abrahamyan) and two men (GMs Gata Kamsky and Larry Christiansen) have begun with two wins, which represents about 15 percent of the combined field.
The most hyped game of the day featured teenage IM Kayden Troff against the top-seeded Kamsky. Going into the game, Troff said Kamsky was the highest-rated player he had ever faced, however the youngster drew GM Michael Adams, who is just a few points below Kamsky.
The veteran was the one who was surprised right away. “I didn’t expect Qa4 in the opening,” Kamsky said. “That really took me by surprise.” He ruminated more about his languishing pieces. “I can tell you this was not the position I was looking for when I played the Dutch Defense. I didn’t want to open the position. Next time I will be more prepared.” Kamsky praised 15. c5, with the idea than 15…d5 is well met by 16. Bxd5! and if 16…cxd5 17. Nxd5 and the black queen is left without a home. Overall, Kamsky said he could have been in serious trouble if Troff had used his active pieces to attack the king more.
“Even though it’s Kamsky, I really hate to lose,” Troff said. “This is the first time I lost to a GM in the last eight games.” Troff spent 20 minutes on his 16th move, and many spectators wondered if he would find the interesting gambit 16. Nd5! with wild complications. He said he surveyed it, along with three other candidate moves, including sacrificing the bishop on d5, or playing more simply with h4 or Bxc5. He chose the last one, but missed his chance to be more aggressive. Kamsky said younger players should play more objectively against him instead of holding back.
Grandmaster Larry Christiansen, who won his first U.S. Championship in 1980 and his most recent in 2002, faced an uphill climb as he seeks to win a title in yet another decade. Facing second-seeded GM Timur Gareev as black, the veteran admitted that his opponent was better out of the opening. “I fought back,” he said. “When in doubt, go active! I hate passive positions – it’s not my style.” Christiansen has authored a pair of treatises on this exact idea, so he ditched his f-pawn to gain some initiative. In a balanced middlegame, he said Gareev pushed too hard to win. After the unbalanced endgame of queen for rook, bishop and some weak pawns, Gareev could not hold back the power of the queen. “Getting his bishop trapped for no reason, that was a major blunder,” Christiansen said.
Since they are the only players with two points, these two winners must play tomorrow even though their colors do not line up. Both players are due white, but Kamsky is higher rated and will get his due color. Christiansen insisted afterward he would still play aggressively as black. “Historically against [Kamsky] you want to play actively,” Christiansen said. “You have to.” Though he did not get his preferred color, Christiansen was happy their meeting will come so soon. “I’m glad this game is coming earlier rather than later. He’s got a 20-year age advantage and I might be tired later.” Additionally, Kamsky admitted he is still adjusting to the time zone after flying back from a tournament in Switzerland one day before the event began.
The U.S. Women’s Championship so far has been far more predictable. The top three seeds are motoring, as Zatonskih, Krush and Abrahamyan all won to go to 2-0. Zatonskih and Krush, the top two seeds and winners of the past seven titles, will face off tomorrow in their annual battle. The head-to-head matchup has served as the de facto championship in recent years. The two have played so many times that Zatonskih forgot who won in 2012 (it was a draw, but Krush won a dramatic tiebreak, which Zatonskih does remember vividly).
Today, Zatonskih had to use every facet of the game to narrowly edge the youngest player in the field, WFM Sarah Chiang. Her 34…b5 pawn lever complicated the game just enough to allow a decisive queenside breakthrough. “It is just equal,” Zatonskih said of the initial two-bishop endgame. “I needed to gamble with this move. With young players, you need to go to the endgame. I just proved this theory. I used to be like that; I could not play without a queen!”
Krush kept pace with what she called a better effort than her first round win. She played quickly, making the first 25 moves with less than five minutes ticking off her clock. WIM Iryna Zenyuk kept it close before blundering on her 40th and final move before making the time control. “It was a fight,” Krush said. “You want your opponents to put up resistance.” Krush said she used to have trouble getting motivated playing Zenyuk, who she called, “my closest female friend in the world ... She’s the one person I don’t want to play against.”
As for tomorrow’s battle between the two highest-rated players, Krush did not downplay the game as championship players often do. She called the game “critical” and said, “Everything hangs in the balance.”
Not to be outdone was Abrahamyan, who in recent years has been climbing up the ranks of the best female players in America. She needed only 19 moves to dispatch WGM Camilla Baginskaite. A knight retreat trapped the black queen, and there was no need to play on. “You don’t expect a quick win in that line,” Abrahamyan said of her opening, the Giuoco Piano, which translates to “quiet game” in Italian. Abrahamyan’s king weathered a brief storm before the tempest ended suddenly. “I’m not sure she objectively had anything but it looked really scary.”
“I didn’t recall what I’d been preparing,” Baginskaite said. “It is kind of silly. I am embarrassed.” Even if she did not hang her queen, Baginskaite would have had less than two minutes to make 22 more moves before time control. “Time pressure makes fools of us all,” grandmaster Maurice Ashley said in the live commentary.
The U.S. Championship may only have two perfect scores remaining, but a host of five other players are on 1.5/2 and lurking close behind. The most surprising among them is FM John Bryant, who played black and beat young phenom GM Ray Robson in a wild affair. With pieces on the edges of the board and pawns recklessly advancing, Bryant ignored all queenside problems and threw more fuel in the fire. After the computer had Robson at a +10 advantage, which is nearly always insurmountable, white played the reasonable but losing 27. Rb8, changing the evaluation to a whopping -18. The astonishing reversal was even more surprising since white got the first promotion, but black’s new lady was birthed with check. The forced mate was long but not complicated, and Bryant chased the white king toward his own to secure the point. “I got lucky in the end,” Bryant admitted. “I tried to come up with some tricks. I got the last attack in.”
Making another run this year is GM Gregory Kaidanov. Still seeking his first U.S. Championship, he started fast last year, co-leading after four rounds before faltering late. He had several unconventional material imbalances against GM Conrad Holt. Kaidanov’s rook and five pawns, four of which were connected and passed, at first had Holt’s three minor pieces in near zugzwang. Later the rook vanished and it looked for a while like the famed two knights versus king and pawn endgame would arise. Instead Holt forced a repetition in an equal endgame.
For Holt, he continues to score against higher-rated opposition and will get another challenge in round three against GM Alejandro Ramirez. Both players have a University of Texas at Dallas connection, where they both were awarded scholarships. Bryant and Kaidanov will match up.
The final player on 1.5/2 is GM Joel Benjamin. His return to the U.S. Championship continues to go well, as he tiptoed by GM Robert Hess in a tight rook-and-pawn endgame. He will get black against Gareev tomorrow.
A logjam of players have an even score; many have two draws in two games including third-seeded GM Alex Onischuk, who looks to get his first win tomorrow as white against hometown fan favorite GM Ben Finegold. Every player is now on the board except FM Jorge Sammour-Hasbun, whose armada of pawns could not get mobile before he was swindled in a better position against GM Alex Shabalov.
A quartet of promising college players are all on 0.5/2 and looking to get back to even, including GM Sam Shankland, GM Marc Arnold, Hess and Robson. All four have said they have had school work conflict with the tournament.
2013 U.S. Championship Pairings: Round 3
Table | White | Score | Rating | Black | Score | Rating | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | GM Kamsky, Gata | 2.0 | 2741 | GM Christiansen, Larry M | 2.0 | 2579 | |
2 | FM Bryant, John Daniel | 1.5 | 2442 | GM Kaidanov, Gregory S | 1.5 | 2593 | |
3 | GM Holt, Conrad | 1.5 | 2513 | GM Ramirez, Alejandro | 1.5 | 2551 | |
4 | GM Gareev, Timur | 1.0 | 2674 | GM Benjamin, Joel | 1.5 | 2534 | |
5 | GM Onischuk, Alexander | 1.0 | 2666 | GM Finegold, Benjamin | 1.0 | 2505 | |
6 | GM Akobian, Varuzhan | 1.0 | 2616 | IM Troff, Kayden W | 1.0 | 2421 | |
7 | GM Khachiyan, Melikset | 1.0 | 2518 | GM Shulman, Yury | 1.0 | 2570 | |
8 | FM Sevian, Samuel | 1.0 | 2371 | GM Shabalov, Alexander | 1.0 | 2544 | |
9 | GM Stripunsky, Alexander | 0.5 | 2570 | GM Robson, Ray | 0.5 | 2620 | |
10 | GM Ivanov, Alexander | 0.5 | 2529 | GM Shankland, Samuel L | 0.5 | 2612 | |
11 | GM Hess, Robert L | 0.5 | 2595 | Norowitz, Yaacov | 0.5 | 2451 | |
12 | GM Arnold, Marc T | 0.5 | 2538 | FM Sammour-Hasbun, Jorge E. | 0.0 | 2463 |
Besides the marquee match in the women’s tournament, WFM Alena Kats will look to make the first dent in Abrahamyan’s score. She felt her drawn game today went much better than in round one. “Viktorija (Ni) and I have played the same opening twice before, and for once my opening preparation paid off,” Kats said, explaining that she lost those first two encounters. “Last year it took me like four games to get into the tournament.”
Seeking to get on the board will be WGM Sabina Foisor, who gets black against Baginskaite, and Chiang, who also gets black against WGM Anjelina Belakovskaia, who today won her first game at the U.S. Women’s Championship since 2004.
U.S. Women's Championship Pairings: Round 3
Table | White | Score | Rating | Black | Score | Rating | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | WGM Baginskaite, Camilla | 0.5 | 2278 | WGM Foisor, Sabina | 0.0 | 2300 | |
2 | WFM Kats, Alena | 0.5 | 2144 | WGM Abrahamyan, Tatev | 2.0 | 2280 | |
3 | WIM Zenyuk, Iryna | 1.0 | 2243 | WIM Ni, Viktorija | 1.0 | 2262 | |
4 | IM Zatonskih, Anna | 2.0 | 2466 | IM Krush, Irina | 2.0 | 2470 | |
5 | WGM Belakovskaia, Anjelina | 1.0 | 2263 | WFM Chiang, Sarah | 0.0 | 2098 |
IM Kayden Troff, the reigning U-14 World Champion, scored a victory in his first-ever U.S. Championship appearance.
By FM Mike Klein
The action got a running start today as the majority of the first-round battles at the 2013 U.S. Championship and U.S. Women’s Championship produced a clear victor. Half of the men’s games and 80 percent of the ladies’ skirmishes gave decisive results, kicking off nine rounds of chess at the Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Saint Louis.
Two notable upsets highlighted the U.S. Championship in the opening round. A pair of tournament rookies, IM Kayden Troff and GM Conrad Holt, both defeated their higher-ranked grandmaster opponents.
`Troff, who will turn 15 later in the tournament, is the second-youngest player this year but is already a world champion, as he won gold at the Under -14 section of the 2012 World Youth Championship. Those credentials helped give him the confidence to snatch a pawn from Stripunsky, who sacrificed his b-pawn to get pressure on the open file and secure a tidy outpost on b5. Troff called the sacrifice typical and probably the best continuation for both sides. He said he studied a previous game in which Stripunsky pushed his queenside pawns to a6 and b5 to defeat IM Greg Shahade. “I said to myself, ‘I don’t want to run into that,’” Troff said.
The compensation dried up quickly, however, when Troff grabbed space with the critical 17…e5. Stripunsky admitted to Troff after the game that he simply missed the shot. From there Troff said he was probably better, and the extra b-pawn in the endgame could always be used to create a passed a-pawn. It turned out not to be necessary, as Troff pried open the kingside with ease to earn the point. This is the second straight year that Stripunsky has opened the championship with a loss as white.
Two collegiate grandmasters, Holt and Sam Shankland, gave the other upset of the opening round. Shankland’s higher rating and more championship experience made him the nominal pre-round favorite, but Holt had white and never let Shankland get in the game. Unlike Stripunsky’s offering, Holt’s pawn sacrifice to create an outpost and half-open file turned out to be a sage and theoretical maneuver. Shankland gave back his material and liquidated to an endgame, but Holt had all the chances with the pair of useful bishops and the only passed pawn on the board. Shankland’s knights could do nothing but roam in circles as Holt eventually pushed up for the point.
Other winners included three-time champion GM Gata Kamsky, who had white but chose not to play the Torre Attack for the third straight game against GM Alex Shabalov. Kamsky instead opened with 1. e4, explaining that he wanted to play a solid variation against the French. He planted a knight on e5 on move 21, and the rest of his position revolved around the dominating steed. A knight stood guard there for the remaining 23 moves, never having to leave its proud post as Kamsky broke through with his other pieces.
Another tournament favorite and colorful personality that fans wanted to see was GM Timur Gareev. Though seeded second, he played his first-ever U.S. Championship game, taking black against fellow newbie GM Marc Arnold.
Gareev had no problem dispatching his younger opponent, as there were too many open lines aiming at white’s king. Arnold had the disadvantage of writing a final African Studies paper shortly before his round. He also said he has not played competitively since August, 2012, and he was rusty. “I didn’t expect to play this badly,” Arnold said. “I just played like a disaster.” Gareev, whose recent regimen includes yoga and meditation, said, “I have this vision for this championship of just winning, winning, game after game.” He missed the pretty 14…Ng3+, which decimates white’ king, but even so he only needed nine more moves to force resignation. “I need to practice my tactics muscle,” Gareev joked.
Also winning in round one was GM Larry Christiansen, who defeated yet another rookie, Yaacov Norowitz. Recent U.S. Chess Hall of Famer GM Gregory Kaidanov, still seeking his first U.S. title, won against FM Jorge Sammour-Hasbun, who hung a piece in time pressure. “I was nervous obviously,” Sammour-Hasbun said about playing in his first championship in more than a decade and a half. “I think losing may be the best thing that happens to me. After losing you have to go all-out.”
The other six games in the U.S. Championship ended drawn, including the all-GM matchups Alex Onischuk-Joel Benjamin, Robert Hess-Ben Finegold, Alexander Ivanov-Ray Robson, and Varuzhan Akobian-Melik Khachiyan. Two non-grandmasters held GMs to draws – 12-year-old Sam Sevian against GM Alejandro Ramirez, and FM John Bryant, who pushed for 130 moves but conceded the split to former champion GM Yury Shulman.
2013 U.S. Championship Pairings: Round 2
Table | White | Score | Rating | Black | Score | Rating | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | IM Troff, Kayden W | 1.0 | 2421 | GM Kamsky, Gata | 1.0 | 2741 | |
2 | GM Gareev, Timur | 1.0 | 2674 | GM Christiansen, Larry M | 1.0 | 2579 | |
3 | GM Kaidanov, Gregory S | 1.0 | 2593 | GM Holt, Conrad | 1.0 | 2513 | |
4 | GM Khachiyan, Melikset | 0.5 | 2518 | GM Onischuk, Alexander | 0.5 | 2666 | |
5 | GM Robson, Ray | 0.5 | 2620 | FM Bryant, John Daniel | 0.5 | 2442 | |
6 | GM Finegold, Benjamin | 0.5 | 2505 | GM Akobian, Varuzhan | 0.5 | 2616 | |
7 | GM Benjamin, Joel | 0.5 | 2534 | GM Hess, Robert L | 0.5 | 2595 | |
8 | GM Shulman, Yury | 0.5 | 2570 | FM Sevian, Samuel | 0.5 | 2371 | |
9 | GM Ramirez, Alejandro | 0.5 | 2551 | GM Ivanov, Alexander | 0.5 | 2529 | |
10 | GM Shankland, Samuel L | 0.0 | 2612 | GM Arnold, Marc T | 0.0 | 2538 | |
11 | Norowitz, Yaacov | 0.0 | 2451 | GM Stripunsky, Alexander | 0.0 | 2570 | |
12 | GM Shabalov, Alexander | 0.0 | 2544 | FM Sammour-Hasbun, Jorge E. | 0.0 | 2463 |
With five spirited opening games, the four decisive results in the U.S. Women’s Championship came as no surprise, and the drawn game may have been the most exciting.
First to finish was WGM Camilla Baginskaite, who weathered the storm created by WIM Viktorija Ni’s thunderous 13…Ndxe5! The resulting king walk showed bravery, and eventually Ni cashed in her chips to reach an equal ending with a meaningless extra pawn.
The next game to finish was no less dramatic. WGMs Anna Zatonskih and Anjelina Belakovskaia, who have won seven titles combined, represented the battle between women who dominated in two different decades. Zatonskih’s 2000s were as good as Belakovskaia’s 1990s, but the two had never faced each other before this encounter.
With each woman in severe time pressure, having only one minute plus increment remaining for 21 more moves, a wild queen sacrifice left the commentators flummoxed. The smoke cleared quickly, as Zatonskih returned her lady, only to push her pawn to force a new one. The simplification earned the win.
Also winning was IM Irina Krush, who chastised herself for allowing her advantage to simmer for more than 80 moves before defeating WFM Alena Kats. Fellow WGMs and Olympiad teammates Tatev Abrahamyan and Sabina Foisor, the third and fourth seeds respectively, played a close struggle before Abrahamyan squeaked out a rook-and-pawn nail biter.
WIM Iryna Zenyuk survived an early onslaught from WFM Sarah Chiang that began with 15…Qd4. “I know about this idea but I forgot about it during the game,” Zenyuk said. Despite Chiang’s queen, rook and two bishops all aiming at white’s king, Zenyuk fought back the attack and invaded Chiang’s own king later in the game, forcing resignation.
2013 U.S. Women's Championship Pairings: Round 2
Table | White | Score | Rating | Black | Score | Rating | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | WGM Foisor, Sabina | 0.0 | 2300 | WGM Belakovskaia, Anjelina | 0.0 | 2263 | |
2 | WFM Chiang, Sarah | 0.0 | 2098 | IM Zatonskih, Anna | 1.0 | 2466 | |
3 | IM Krush, Irina | 1.0 | 2470 | WIM Zenyuk, Iryna | 1.0 | 2243 | |
4 | WIM Ni, Viktorija | 0.5 | 2262 | WFM Kats, Alena | 0.0 | 2144 | |
5 | WGM Abrahamyan, Tatev | 1.0 | 2280 | WGM Baginskaite, Camilla | 0.5 | 2278 |
For round two, the winners play the winners in the U.S. Championship, while the women continue their round-robin. Tune in to see who makes it to 2-0, and who crawls back into contention. Live games and grandmaster commentary will be streaming at www.uschesschamps.com daily at 1:00 p.m. Central, 2:00 p.m. Eastern.
GM Gregory Kaidanov was inducted into the U.S. Chess Hall of Fame at the Opening Ceremony of the U.S. Championships last night.
By FM Mike Klein
The opening ceremony of the 2013 U.S. Championship and U.S. Women’s Championship, held Thursday night at the Peabody Opera House in Saint Louis, determined the colors for the U.S. Championship and the round-by-round pairings for the U.S. Women’s Championship.
The 24 men and ten women were invited one-by-one on stage to be recognized and to hear who they would match up with in round one, which is scheduled to start today at 1:00 p.m. Central Time.
The “Drawing of Lots” for the U.S. Women’s Championship occurred first, with four-time and defending champion IM Irina Krush selecting the gift bag with a card revealing pairing number eight. The other nine women picking their random numbers in turn.
For the U.S. Championship, the first-round pairings were already set, but the men needed to determine their colors. Three-time champ GM Gata Kamsky selected the lucky white card from a gift bag, meaning the higher odd-numbered seeds, including himself, will enjoy the advantage of the first move. From there, they will play a nine-round Swiss tournament, while the women will play a traditional nine-game round robin.
U.S. Championship Pairings: Round 1
Table | White | Score | Rating | Black | Score | Rating | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | GM Kamsky, Gata | 0.0 | 2741 | GM Shabalov, Alexander | 0.0 | 2544 | |
2 | GM Arnold, Marc T | 0.0 | 2538 | GM Gareev, Timur | 0.0 | 2674 | |
3 | GM Onischuk, Alexander | 0.0 | 2666 | GM Benjamin, Joel | 0.0 | 2534 | |
4 | GM Ivanov, Alexander | 0.0 | 2529 | GM Robson, Ray | 0.0 | 2620 | |
5 | GM Akobian, Varuzhan | 0.0 | 2616 | GM Khachiyan, Melikset | 0.0 | 2518 | |
6 | GM Holt, Conrad | 0.0 | 2513 | GM Shankland, Samuel L | 0.0 | 2612 | |
7 | GM Hess, Robert L | 0.0 | 2595 | GM Finegold, Benjamin | 0.0 | 2505 | |
8 | FM Sammour-Hasbun, Jorge E. | 0.0 | 2463 | GM Kaidanov, Gregory S | 0.0 | 2593 | |
9 | GM Christiansen, Larry M | 0.0 | 2579 | Norowitz, Yaacov | 0.0 | 2451 | |
10 | FM Bryant, John Daniel | 0.0 | 2442 | GM Shulman, Yury | 0.0 | 2570 | |
11 | GM Stripunsky, Alexander | 0.0 | 2570 | IM Troff, Kayden W | 0.0 | 2421 | |
12 | FM Sevian, Samuel | 0.0 | 2371 | GM Ramirez, Alejandro | 0.0 | 2551 |
U.S. Women's Championship Pairings: Round 1
Table | White | Score | Rating | Black | Score | Rating | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | WGM Abrahamyan, Tatev | 0.0 | 2280 | WGM Foisor, Sabina | 0.0 | 2300 | |
2 | WGM Baginskaite, Camilla | 0.0 | 2278 | WIM Ni, Viktorija | 0.0 | 2262 | |
3 | WFM Kats, Alena | 0.0 | 2144 | IM Krush, Irina | 0.0 | 2470 | |
4 | WIM Zenyuk, Iryna | 0.0 | 2243 | WFM Chiang, Sarah | 0.0 | 2098 | |
5 | IM Zatonskih, Anna | 0.0 | 2466 | WGM Belakovskaia, Anjelina | 0.0 | 2263 |
Rex Sinquefield, President and Chairman of the Board of the Chess Club and Scholastic Center of St. Louis, said this is the first time that one city has hosted the championship five years in a row. In addition to the $180,000 prize fund for the U.S. Championship and $65,000 in prize money for the U.S. Women’s Championship, there will once again be a $64,000 “Fischer Prize” to go to any man who runs the table and wins all nine games in the main event. Fischer’s feat was accomplished 50 years ago at the 1963/64 U.S. Championship.
After the pairings were finalized, several players were honored by induction into the U.S. Chess and World Chess Halls of Fame. GM Gregory Kaidanov received a standing ovation from his competitors as he was inducted into the U.S. Chess Hall of Fame for his numerous Olympiad and World Team performances. He joins GMs Joel Benjamin and Larry Christiansen as the other players competing this year who have been so honored.
“This is a huge honor and the culmination of my professional chess life,” Kaidanov said.
Also inducted into the U.S. Chess Hall of Fame was the late Mona May Karff, seven-time U.S. Women’s Champion. The World Chess Hall of Fame inducted three new members, including the founder of the Russian Chess School, Mikhail Chigorin. Also inducted were former Women’s World Champions Elisaveta Bykova and Nona Gaprindashvili, the first women to achieve the grandmaster title.
This year the tournaments will have three commentators, one more than usual. WGM Jennifer Shahade and GM Yasser Seirawan will offer their insights, while GM Maurice Ashley will be telestrating in his signature style. Tony Rich, executive director of the club, said, “If you’ve ever seen John Madden with the arrows and the circles, it’s just like that.”
The tournament runs every day from May 3-12, with May 8 a rest day and May 13 reserved for a possible tiebreak. The tournaments will also be carried live by Fox Sports Midwest, with a one-hour special to after the conclusion.
IM-elect Sam Sevian, 12, is the youngest player ever to participate in the U.S. Championship.
By FM Mike Klein
For a good percentage of the field at the 2013 U.S. Championship and U.S. Women’s Championship, victory would mean fame, a huge payday, and a soft-drink with dinner. That’s because many competitors of both tournaments are first-time contenders, some still in their teens and precociously competing against battle-tested veterans.
Some of the younger competitors had qualification as their goal many months ago. For FM John Bryant, “that was the whole point of playing in the (2012) U.S. Open.” His last round win and victory on tiebreaks over American stalwart GM Dmitry Gurevich netted Bryant an automatic invite. Calling him an FM is technically true, though hardly indicative of his strength. Considering he earned two grandmaster norms last year and said he wanted to get his third and final norm at this year’s championship, Bryant is not simply happy to be competing. He will attempt to blitz through another grandmaster-laden field this year, just as he did in Vancouver, Washington, in 2012. Although he will be ranked in the bottom third of the field, he does not lack confidence. Asked what would constitute a successful event for him, Bryant said, “First place.”
One player who was completely surprised at the invitation was WFM Sarah Chiang. Though she is a veteran of competing for the U.S. in World Youth Championships, and has already trained under two world champions, this will also be her first championship. “I thought playing in this year’s U.S. Women’s Championship was out of reach since I was ranked 19th on the women’s list,” Chiang said. The 15-year-old received a wild-card invite, and she offers some new blood in an event that traditionally has less turnover than the U.S. Championship. Surprisingly, she has never played any of the other nine women in a tournament.
She said she expects there to be more pressure in Saint Louis than when she competes internationally. “There are fewer players in the field, which means that each player will receive more attention than at a tournament like the World Youth,” she explained. Chiang is right – her games will be broadcast in real time all over the world, and players traditionally come down to give live interviews and game analysis with the broadcast team.
Unlike Bryant, Chiang does not have a specific goal regarding wins, norms, or standing. She said the tournament will be a “learning experience” and that “I’m not trying to think of the tournament in terms of number of the number of points I get since that’s only going to distract me from playing well.”
Going down the age list, 14-year-old IM Kayden Troff is fresh off a gold medal at the previous World Youth Championship. Like many of the other juniors, he’s been to Saint Louis before and has nothing but praise for the host Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Saint Louis. ”I think it is great to see the club and the way those involved are actively seeking to popularize chess,” Troff said.
Troff comes from Utah, a state not usually known for producing chess prodigies. He’s happy to buck the mold, which he did with a focused dedication to the game. “For me, I would say I definitely have some natural talent, but I think putting in a lot of work is probably the main reason I am where I am today.” Many strong juniors have had strong chess-playing fathers to guide them (Bryant’s stepfather is GM Enrico Sevillano), but Troff’s dad actually got better simply to teach his son. Troff credits his father’s dedication for his own success (Dan Troff does not compete much but has a provisional rating in the 1300s, while several of Kayden’s brothers have achieved modest chess success as well).
As for tournament goals, Troff took a middle road as compared to Bryant and Chiang. In the group of two dozen, he thinks a good result for him would be in the low teens, just like his age. “With a very strong field I would think that placing in the top 10/15ish would be pretty great!” And whereas Chiang is deciding between a career in chess or becoming a pediatrician, Troff is not as conflicted. He already produces chess videos, is planning a chess-themed song, and seems to still be devoted to the game for quite a while. “I hope I have the best chance of becoming a chess professional. That is definitely the path I am seeking! But who knows where chess is going in the next few years. Maybe one day I will have my own chess television series and then sing my own theme song, which will make me partially all three.”
But if underdogs are your thing, look no further than newly-minted IM Samuel Sevian. Not yet even a teenager, the 12-year-old wunderkind has had his rating rise in nearly every supplement since he began playing. With nearly 200 points gained in the last 18 months, Sevian is on a tear. Like Troff, he won gold at the last World Youth (Troff in the under-14, Sevian in the under-12). He was once the youngest-ever American master until his record was broken recently by a matter of days. “I won't be original here, the records are meant to be broken,” he said. “Good for the breakers. As to the GM records, if I break them it will be good and if I don't I will not cry about it.”
It doesn’t hurt that he comes from good stock. Sevian’s ancestry is Armenian, which could perhaps be the most chess-infused country in the world. Their national team has won gold at three of last four Chess Olympiads, their president flies home the grandmasters in his personal plane, and chess is mandatory in the school system.
Although he has lived all of his life in the U.S., Sevian’s work ethic holds chess in similar esteem. In this sense he is not entirely different than the other youngsters. By his estimates, Sevian spends six or seven hours a day training (he also does physical conditioning too). Troff is homeschooled and puts in a similar amount of time. Chiang attends school online but still spends a few hours daily on her chess. She is thinking of taking a year off after high school to focus on chess; Bryant is currently on break from college to devote himself to the game.
There are several other first-timers at the 2013 U.S. Championships. These young guns look to be the future of American chess, and fans may one day look back on this year as the moment when one or two of them graduated from scholastic superstar to top-level American player.
Sevian’s willingness to “play up” in the open and master section from an early age means he has already been battle tested against many of his other competitors. “I actually played some of the players in the lower half of the field and have more or less 50% score against them combined,” he said. “Would really like to play some of the sharks in the upper half.”
Of course this time he will be come into the tournament ranked 24th, last in a crowded field of grandmasters and other promising juniors. Sevian has been in this exact situation before. At the 23rd Metropolitan Chess FIDE Invitational in December, Sevian, the only untitled player, was ranked last in the ten-player field. He promptly scored an undefeated 6/9, tied for first, and became an International Master.
GM Alexander Onischuk is seeking his second U.S. Chamionship title.
By Brian Jerauld
You are the new head coach at Texas Tech, in the wake of Susan Polgar’s highly publicized departure to Webster University. Will you speak on how that departure affected the Texas Tech program? What are your goals for its next chapter?
In six years as the head coach and the director of the TTU chess program, Susan set the bar very high. Texas Tech has won a number of very prestigious collegiate chess events. Susan has done many wonderful things. I don’t think, however, that her departure has affected the chess program that much. In fact, the program has never been stronger than it is now.
My goal is to attract more young and talented students to Texas Tech and to help them to get better in chess.
Over five years of competition in the U.S. Championships, you went 49 straight games without a loss. That streak ended in 2010 - in a game where Gata Kamsky actually offered you a draw. What are your thoughts on that game, and that streak, three years later? Does that draw decline still haunt your sleep?
I did not accept a draw in that game because I thought I was better. I missed the b5 move. I knew that it was my chance to win the game and to get close to winning the title. If I had this situation today, I would do the same. This was a pure chess mistake, so I don’t regret my decision at all.
What makes you so difficult to win against?
I think many factors, but probably the most important one is a deeper positional understanding.
You are a father of twins – that’s like a built-in opponent. Is chess in your kids’ future? Do you have any thought about chess being integrated into U.S. education?
I want my kids to play chess. Children that play chess perform better academically; it is almost a fact. My older son plays some chess and I can see how it benefits him. It would be nice if we had more before and after school chess programs in the U.S.
You are also an Ironman tri-athlete. Can you speak on these competitions? Is training and running the Ironman the ultimate balance to sitting in a chair for hours?
Triathlon is my huge hobby; once I discovered this sport I became addicted to it. So far the longest race I have done is the 70.3 Ironman (1.2 mile swim, 56 mile bike and 13.1 run) and I also ran one marathon. Unfortunately, with little kids I cannot train at full strength, but my dream is to finish the full Ironman one day. I believe triathlon training improves my endurance and maybe it even helps my chess.