European Individual Championship 2016
May 13, 2016
This is taking place in Gjakova, Kosovo from May 11 to May 24.
Kosovo declared its independence from Serbia in 2008 but is still a disputed territory and I was surprised to see that they were holding an international tournament there.
At any rate, the tournament is in the second day and there are 245 entrants. All appears to be going smoothly.
The championship is an 11-round Swiss system. The rate of play is 90 minutes for 40 moves followed by 30 minutes for the rest of the game, with an increment of 30 seconds per move, starting from move one. Default time is 15 minutes for each round.
The prize fund is 120 000 EUR, including main prizes and special prizes for the best performance and best senior players.
The European Individual Championship 2016 is a qualification event for the next World Cup.
http://eicc2016.com
The top seed is David Navara (CZE). Others are Wojtaszek, Vitiugov, Ponomariov, Vallejo Pons, Ragger, Matiakov, Fressinet, Kryvoruchko, Hammer and Jobava.
The first day all the 2600 and 2700s played opponents with ELOs 300 points below them. There are 60 players from Kosovo at the bottom of the entrant table.
Even so, David Howell (2671) found it hard going against Nderim Saraci (2275)
European Individual Championship 2016
Kosovo, Round 1, May 12, 2016
Saraci, Nderim – Howell, David
C11 French, Steinitz Variation
1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.e5 Nfd7 5.f4 c5 6.Nf3 Be7 7.Be3 O-O 8.Qd2 a6 9.Be2 b5 10.dxc5 Nxc5 11.a3 Bb7 12.O-O Qc7 13.Nd4 Nbd7 14.b4 Na4 $6 15.Nxa4 bxa4 16.Rac1 Qd8 $2 17.Rfd1 Nb6 18.f5 Rc8 $2 19.fxe6 f5 20.exf6 $6 Bxf6 21.c3 Re8 1/2-1/2
[ChessBase says that Black is in trouble - he is a pawn down and has no compensation. Black's position is so precarious indeed that Howell did not dare to play on trying to prove that he is the better player. White, a 20-year old untitled player from Kosovo, on the other hand, probably did not want to tempt fate and was happy to draw against a grandmaster.]
This from the EC Forum:
David took his opponent out of the book by deferring ...Nc6 and then played ...a6 (here ...b6 has been previously seen) and for a while it seemed to work but Stockfish online started to prefer White slightly when he played Nd4. Then David played the strange ...Na4 (engine strongly preferred ...Ne4 which could have been played earlier) and after f4-f5 Black was clearly worse. So I guess David found a way to make it a bit messy with his ...f5 and decided the better part of valour was to offer a draw, since objectively he must have been close to lost with 20 moves to make in 3 mins + increments while his opponent had a fair bit of time in hand.
In today’s action, Jobava had his usual entertaining game:
Round 2, May 13, 2016
Jobava, Baadur – Bogner, Sebastian
B28 Sicilian, O’Kelly Variation
1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 a6 3.g3 b5 4.a4 Bb7 5.d3 e6 6.Bg2 d6 7.O-O Nd7 8.Na3 Ngf6 9.Bf4 e5 10.Bd2 Bc6 11.b4 Be7 12.axb5 axb5 13.c4 Rb8 14.bxc5 Nxc5 15.cxb5 Bxb5 16.Nxb5 Rxb5 17.d4 Ncd7 18.Qe2 Qb8 19.Nh4 O-O 20.Nf5 Re8 21.g4 g6 22.Nh6+ Kg7 23.g5 Nh5 24.Ra8 Qxa8 25.Qxb5 Qd8 26.Ba5 1-0
Young Aryan Tari went up against Aleksey Dreev:
Round 2, May 13, 2016
Dreev, Aleksey – Tari, Aryan
D83 Grunfeld, Grunfeld Gambit, Capablanca Variation
1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.Nc3 d5 4.Bf4 Bg7 5.e3 O-O 6.Rc1 Be6 7.Nf3 dxc4 8.Ng5 Bd5 9.e4 h6 10.exd5 hxg5 11.Bxg5 Nxd5 12.Bxc4 Nb6 13.Bb3 Nc6 14.d5 Nd4 15.O-O Qd7 16.Re1 Rfe8 17.h4 Rad8 18.a4 Nxb3 19.Qxb3 c6 20.dxc6 bxc6 21.Qb4 Qd4 22.Bxe7 Qxb4 23.Bxb4 Rxe1+ 24.Rxe1 Rd4 25.Bc5 Rc4 26.Re8+ Kh7 27.Ne4 Nxa4 28.Ng5+ Kh6 29.Nxf7+ Kh5 30.Be3 Nxb2 31.Bg5 Bd4 32.Kh2 1-0
______
After two rounds there are 30 players tied for first place with two points. The first ten (by rating) are Ponomariov, Matiakov, Fressinet, Laznicka, Dreev, Jobava, Saric, Berkes, Hovhannisyan and Salgado.
Third round pairings at:
http://www.chess-results.com/tnr2065...flag=30&wi=821
May 13, 2016
This is taking place in Gjakova, Kosovo from May 11 to May 24.
Kosovo declared its independence from Serbia in 2008 but is still a disputed territory and I was surprised to see that they were holding an international tournament there.
At any rate, the tournament is in the second day and there are 245 entrants. All appears to be going smoothly.
The championship is an 11-round Swiss system. The rate of play is 90 minutes for 40 moves followed by 30 minutes for the rest of the game, with an increment of 30 seconds per move, starting from move one. Default time is 15 minutes for each round.
The prize fund is 120 000 EUR, including main prizes and special prizes for the best performance and best senior players.
The European Individual Championship 2016 is a qualification event for the next World Cup.
http://eicc2016.com
The top seed is David Navara (CZE). Others are Wojtaszek, Vitiugov, Ponomariov, Vallejo Pons, Ragger, Matiakov, Fressinet, Kryvoruchko, Hammer and Jobava.
The first day all the 2600 and 2700s played opponents with ELOs 300 points below them. There are 60 players from Kosovo at the bottom of the entrant table.
Even so, David Howell (2671) found it hard going against Nderim Saraci (2275)
European Individual Championship 2016
Kosovo, Round 1, May 12, 2016
Saraci, Nderim – Howell, David
C11 French, Steinitz Variation
1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.e5 Nfd7 5.f4 c5 6.Nf3 Be7 7.Be3 O-O 8.Qd2 a6 9.Be2 b5 10.dxc5 Nxc5 11.a3 Bb7 12.O-O Qc7 13.Nd4 Nbd7 14.b4 Na4 $6 15.Nxa4 bxa4 16.Rac1 Qd8 $2 17.Rfd1 Nb6 18.f5 Rc8 $2 19.fxe6 f5 20.exf6 $6 Bxf6 21.c3 Re8 1/2-1/2
[ChessBase says that Black is in trouble - he is a pawn down and has no compensation. Black's position is so precarious indeed that Howell did not dare to play on trying to prove that he is the better player. White, a 20-year old untitled player from Kosovo, on the other hand, probably did not want to tempt fate and was happy to draw against a grandmaster.]
This from the EC Forum:
David took his opponent out of the book by deferring ...Nc6 and then played ...a6 (here ...b6 has been previously seen) and for a while it seemed to work but Stockfish online started to prefer White slightly when he played Nd4. Then David played the strange ...Na4 (engine strongly preferred ...Ne4 which could have been played earlier) and after f4-f5 Black was clearly worse. So I guess David found a way to make it a bit messy with his ...f5 and decided the better part of valour was to offer a draw, since objectively he must have been close to lost with 20 moves to make in 3 mins + increments while his opponent had a fair bit of time in hand.
In today’s action, Jobava had his usual entertaining game:
Round 2, May 13, 2016
Jobava, Baadur – Bogner, Sebastian
B28 Sicilian, O’Kelly Variation
1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 a6 3.g3 b5 4.a4 Bb7 5.d3 e6 6.Bg2 d6 7.O-O Nd7 8.Na3 Ngf6 9.Bf4 e5 10.Bd2 Bc6 11.b4 Be7 12.axb5 axb5 13.c4 Rb8 14.bxc5 Nxc5 15.cxb5 Bxb5 16.Nxb5 Rxb5 17.d4 Ncd7 18.Qe2 Qb8 19.Nh4 O-O 20.Nf5 Re8 21.g4 g6 22.Nh6+ Kg7 23.g5 Nh5 24.Ra8 Qxa8 25.Qxb5 Qd8 26.Ba5 1-0
Young Aryan Tari went up against Aleksey Dreev:
Round 2, May 13, 2016
Dreev, Aleksey – Tari, Aryan
D83 Grunfeld, Grunfeld Gambit, Capablanca Variation
1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.Nc3 d5 4.Bf4 Bg7 5.e3 O-O 6.Rc1 Be6 7.Nf3 dxc4 8.Ng5 Bd5 9.e4 h6 10.exd5 hxg5 11.Bxg5 Nxd5 12.Bxc4 Nb6 13.Bb3 Nc6 14.d5 Nd4 15.O-O Qd7 16.Re1 Rfe8 17.h4 Rad8 18.a4 Nxb3 19.Qxb3 c6 20.dxc6 bxc6 21.Qb4 Qd4 22.Bxe7 Qxb4 23.Bxb4 Rxe1+ 24.Rxe1 Rd4 25.Bc5 Rc4 26.Re8+ Kh7 27.Ne4 Nxa4 28.Ng5+ Kh6 29.Nxf7+ Kh5 30.Be3 Nxb2 31.Bg5 Bd4 32.Kh2 1-0
______
After two rounds there are 30 players tied for first place with two points. The first ten (by rating) are Ponomariov, Matiakov, Fressinet, Laznicka, Dreev, Jobava, Saric, Berkes, Hovhannisyan and Salgado.
Third round pairings at:
http://www.chess-results.com/tnr2065...flag=30&wi=821
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