Thursday, 29 December 2022
Project 50 Results Update
Thursday, 22 December 2022
Project 50 Christmas Quiz 2022
Dave Baillie is the new champion, with a fabulous score of 62 points from a possible 65.
The team of Matt, Florence and Clementine Piper finished in second place, with 56 points. Peter Harker and Stephen Ollis shared third place with 53 points.
Monday, 19 December 2022
Project 50: Results Update
13th Mike Closs Memorial Tournament
Final Scores
5/6: Sean Marsh
3.5/6: Matt Jackman
2.5/6: Dave Baillie
1/6: Richard Harris
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2nd Mike Closs Memorial Tournament, 2011
3rd Mike Closs Memorial Tournament, 2012
4th Mike Closs Memorial Tournament, 2013
5th Mike Closs Memorial Tournament, 2014
6th Mike Closs Memorial Tournament, 2015
7th Mike Closs Memorial Tournament, 2016
8th Mike Closs Memorial Tournament, 2017
9th Mike Closs Memorial Tournament, 2018
10th Mike Closs Memorial Tournament, 2019
11th Mike Closs Memorial Tournament, 2020
Thursday, 27 October 2022
Project 50
Project 30 recently concluded and has now been replaced by Project 50, which promises to shine even more brightly.
Project 30, which was created as a celebration of my first 30 years of teaching chess in schools, brought five years of hugely enjoyable chess events, featuring players from novice juniors to Grandmasters. We even switched to online events during the lockdown years.
The mathematicians amongst us may have expected Project 30 to be replaced by Project 35.
In fact, the new project name marks 50 years since I received my first chess set. This was on Christmas morning, 1972. Shops had plenty of chess sets back then, as they riding on the wave of publicity created by the big World Chess Championship match between the reigning champion, Boris Spassky, and his challenger, Bobby Fischer.
Fischer's eccentricities, indulged by most of the world who just wanted to see him play, together with the context of USSR versus the USA, guaranteed big chess headlines throughout 1972.
I still consider Bobby Fischer to be the greatest of all chess players (so far), despite 50 years having flown by since he finally achieved his goal of becoming World Chess Champion.
There will be many events over the course of the year. Indeed, we have already had the inaugural Women's Invitation Tournament, which was a great success.
We have three main events which will run throughout the year and the 10 players have been confirmed.
David BaillieSean Cassidy
John Garnett
Peter Harker
Richard Harris
Matt Jackman
Sean Marsh
Stephen Ollis
Royce Parker
Kevin Waterman (Blitz and Rapidplay; not Classical)
Here are basics.
Rapidplay Tournament (All-play-all; two games against each opponent with 30 minutes on each clock. A 1-1 result does not require a tiebreaker. The champion will be the player with the most points.)
Blitz Event (All-play-all; 10 games against each opponent with five minutes on each clock. NO increments. Three points per match win; two points each if 5-5; one point per match defeat. All 10 games do not need to be played in a single sitting. The champion will be the player with the most match points, with 'goal difference' used as the tiebreaker - so please play all 10 games, even if the match has already been decided before then.)
Full-length games (36 moves in 90 minutes and then 15 extra minutes each for the remainder of the game. All-play-all; random draw for colours immediately prior to the game. Drawn games do not require a replay. The champion will be the player with the most points.)
All games will be unrated, so we can focus on the games themselves and enjoy chess without inhibitions.
Please arrange your games with each opponent (I won't do a formal round-by-round draw). Start as soon as you like.
The venue can be anywhere you like. Face-to-face chess is the default setting, but online encounters are OK if both players agree.
All three tournaments have a deadline of the end of May 2023.
Wednesday, 31 August 2022
English Chess Federation BOOK of the YEAR 2022 Short List
BOOK of the YEAR 2022
Short List
Many of the high quality books received this year concentrated on chess training. Perhaps reflecting current anxieties the emphasis was not only on chess positions, but also on how the chess mind
works in actual play. Three have been selected. The exception was the final volume in a trilogy on one of the greatest players who ever lived.
Analyzing the Chess Mind Gulko and Sneed Quality Chess pp 224 £26.99
Gulko is an extremely strong grandmaster who uniquely has won both the Soviet and US championships, while Sneed is a Professor of Psychology. Together they are very well placed to consider chess mind issues in a well – chosen selection of games and positions. Two sample subjects: Losing winning positions and Problems in self- confidence. This book is both instructive and very readable.
Emanuel Lasker Volume Three
Subtitled, Labours and Legacy Chess, Philosophy and Psychology this third volume which covers Lasker’s life from 1914 to his death in New York in 1942. Lasker was a complex man with a myriad of interests and occupations outside chess. It has needed three large volumes to adequately cover all aspects of Lasker’s life. This volume, with the two previous volumes, (both of which featured in earlier Short Lists), are the work of many experts over more than a decade. They and the books do full justice to a world champion of 27 years. An outstanding trilogy in every way.
Improve Your Chess Calculation
This is the book for anyone who wishes to improve their calculation abilities and work their way through this substantial volume. But it is much more than that as many other aspects of chess improvement are touched upon throughout the text. Ramesh is a very gifted coach and writer. He was coach to the Indian “B” team consisting of young players, most of whom are his pupils, to a bronze medal at the recent Olympiad, ahead of the Indian “A” team. No wonder that this book is already a best seller.
Think Like a Super-GM
Adams, a super-GM himself, and Hurtado who has an engineering scientific, statistical background, have teamed up to produce a most interesting book which works on several levels. Players of varying abilities from amateur to GM were asked to examine 40 selected positions, find the best and follow up moves, whilst their time taken and thoughts were recorded, which were then analysed and compared. Readers can test themselves and calculate their performance. Adams provides analysis and after each puzzle “Adams Insight”. Both authors provide interesting essays on aspects of what makes (or does not) a super-GM. Quality Chess deserve credit for investing in the work behind the book and it is produced to their usual high standards.
Ray Edwards Jovanka Houska Sean Marsh 31 August 2022
Tuesday, 30 August 2022
On the Brink of Year 35
Every year, I have the same thoughts and questions, including:
'Can I still teach as well as I did last year?'
'What new obstacles will I find in my way this time?'
'How much can I achieve with all of my schools and pupils?'
'Will this year be the last?'
There has also been much I have had to endure, with some people trying their hardest to stand in the way of progress. I try not to suffer fools at all, let alone gladly; something I have been working on in recent times - and very successfully, too.
Also, what passes for normal behaviour in the classroom has changed dramatically and alarmingly for the worse. One day, I will reveal all of the extremes, but most of it will be unbelievable to anyone who does not work in schools.
I don't need to prove anything about the benefits of chess. They should be too obvious. The important detail is that the skills we encourage to develop are definitely transferable.
Strong chess players can make very poor tutors. Great teachers can be novice chess players. Which is the better combination of the two? The one with the great teacher - every time. Great teachers can teach virtually anything. Strong chess players can really struggle to find the most suitable level to be able teach chess successfully.
What does teaching chess in schools entail? A plethora of skills one wouldn't normally suspect were required. Lifting and rearranging furniture - and making sure it is all back in the correct place afterwards. Making sure children are collected by their parents at the end of an after-school session. Not really the chess tutor's job, but who else is going to do it?
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One learns to avoid the more obvious traps, over time.
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Working in schools is a proven way to build up resilience and moral fibre.
The largest class I've ever had? Over 65 - in a Secondary School. They had messed up the internal timings and sent three groups at once (send three groups at once in 2022 and the number of children could well exceed 100).
The smallest room I've ever been expected to use? A broom cupboard - and I still had to share with the brooms and buckets.
The journey continues. The remarkably good people still outnumber the remarkably bad ones; an important yardstick. Although the winds of change continue to blow. David Hardy and Richard Harding, two of my closest friends, retired from frontline chess teaching this year and my own world will be a poorer place now that I will no longer be able to work alongside them.
In recent times, there has been an unexpected pandemic through which to navigate. It could have destroyed most of what it took so many years to build up and maintain, yet by retraining to accommodate the option of online delivery enough continuity was retained to keep on going and to pick up the fragments afterwards.
We continue to lurch from crisis to crisis. Will schools still be able to fund 'luxury items' now that their power bills are quadrupling? Indeed - will any of us manage to keep on going and still be able to pay the bills? Serious consequences will have to be endured as we are forced to pick up the tab for the extreme profiteering of others.
Project 30 Results Update: Both Tournaments Have Now Concluded
KO Championship
Semi-finals
Dave Baillie 0-1 Sean Marsh
Matt Jackman 1-0 Richard Harris
Final
Sean Marsh 1-0 Matt Jackman
Sean Marsh 3-1 John Garnett (1,1,1,0)
Final
Matt Jackman 2-4 Sean Marsh (1,0,0,0,0,1)
KO Championship
Round One
Sean Cassidy 0-1 Richard Harris
Kevin Waterman 0-1 Stephen Ollis
Round Two
Sean Marsh 1-0 John Garnett (the first game was a draw and we required a replay)
Dave Baillie 1-0 Peter Harker
Matt Jackman 1-0 Royce Parker
Richard Harris 1-0 Stephen Ollis
Confirmed semi-finalists
Sean Marsh
Dave Baillie
Matt Jackman
Richard Harris
The draw will be made soon.
Rapidplay Championship
The top two players from each group will advance to the semi-finals (winner of group A vs. runner-up of group B and vice versa.)
The semi-finals will be four Rapidplay games and the final will be six games.
Group A
Sean Marsh
Matt Jackman
Richard Harris
Kevin Waterman
Sean Cassidy
Matt Jackman 2-0 Richard Harris
Matt Jackman 2-0 Sean Cassidy
Matt Jackman 0-2 Sean Marsh
Matt Jackman 1-1 Kevin Waterman
Sean Cassidy 0-2 Sean Marsh
Kevin Waterman 0-2 Sean Marsh
Kevin Waterman 0-2 Sean Cassidy
Kevin Waterman 1-1 Richard Harris
Richard Harris 0-2 Sean Marsh
Richard Harris 1.5-0.5 Sean Cassidy
Final Group Standings
Sean Marsh 8/8
Matt Jackman 5/8
Sean Cassidy 2.5/8
Richard Harris 2.5/8
Kevin Waterman 2/8
Group B
Dave Baillie
John Garnett
Royce Parker
Peter Harker
Stephen Ollis
Dave Baillie 1.5-0.5 John Garnett
Dave Baillie 1.5-0.5 Stephen Ollis
Dave Baillie 1-1 Royce Parker
Dave Baillie 2-0 Peter Harker
John Garnett 2-0 Stephen Ollis
John Garnett 2-0 Peter Harker
John Garnett 1-1 Royce Parker
Peter Harker 2-0 Stephen Ollis
Peter Harker 0-2 Royce Parker
Royce Parker 1.5-0.5 Stephen Ollis
Final Group Standings
Dave Baillie 6/8
John Garnett 5.5/8
Royce Parker 5.5/8
Peter Harker 2/8
Stephen Ollis 1/8
Play-off:
John Garnett 1.5-0.5 Royce Parker
Confirmed Semi-finalists
Sean Marsh - John Garnett
Monday, 14 February 2022
Project 30 Results Update: Semi-finals Now Completed
Semi-finals
Dave Baillie 0-1 Sean Marsh
Matt Jackman 1-0 Richard Harris
Final
Matt Jackman vs. Sean Marsh
Sean Marsh 3-1 John Garnett (1,1,1,0)
Final
Matt Jackman vs. Sean Marsh
The two finals have a provisional deadline of the end of April 2022.
KO Championship
Round One
Sean Cassidy 0-1 Richard Harris
Kevin Waterman 0-1 Stephen Ollis
Round Two
Sean Marsh 1-0 John Garnett (the first game was a draw and we required a replay)
Dave Baillie 1-0 Peter Harker
Matt Jackman 1-0 Royce Parker
Richard Harris 1-0 Stephen Ollis
Confirmed semi-finalists
Sean Marsh
Dave Baillie
Matt Jackman
Richard Harris
The draw will be made soon.
Rapidplay Championship
The top two players from each group will advance to the semi-finals (winner of group A vs. runner-up of group B and vice versa.)
The semi-finals will be four Rapidplay games and the final will be six games.
Group A
Sean Marsh
Matt Jackman
Richard Harris
Kevin Waterman
Sean Cassidy
Matt Jackman 2-0 Richard Harris
Matt Jackman 2-0 Sean Cassidy
Matt Jackman 0-2 Sean Marsh
Matt Jackman 1-1 Kevin Waterman
Sean Cassidy 0-2 Sean Marsh
Kevin Waterman 0-2 Sean Marsh
Kevin Waterman 0-2 Sean Cassidy
Kevin Waterman 1-1 Richard Harris
Richard Harris 0-2 Sean Marsh
Richard Harris 1.5-0.5 Sean Cassidy
Final Group Standings
Sean Marsh 8/8
Matt Jackman 5/8
Sean Cassidy 2.5/8
Richard Harris 2.5/8
Kevin Waterman 2/8
Group B
Dave Baillie
John Garnett
Royce Parker
Peter Harker
Stephen Ollis
Dave Baillie 1.5-0.5 John Garnett
Dave Baillie 1.5-0.5 Stephen Ollis
Dave Baillie 1-1 Royce Parker
Dave Baillie 2-0 Peter Harker
John Garnett 2-0 Stephen Ollis
John Garnett 2-0 Peter Harker
John Garnett 1-1 Royce Parker
Peter Harker 2-0 Stephen Ollis
Peter Harker 0-2 Royce Parker
Royce Parker 1.5-0.5 Stephen Ollis
Final Group Standings
Dave Baillie 6/8
John Garnett 5.5/8
Royce Parker 5.5/8
Peter Harker 2/8
Stephen Ollis 1/8
Play-off:
John Garnett 1.5-0.5 Royce Parker
Confirmed Semi-finalists
Sean Marsh - John Garnett
Wednesday, 26 January 2022
The Ali Ghiassi Memorial Junior Chess Tournament
General Information
Entry Fee: £2.00 per player (cheques payable to ‘Joanne Hutchinson’). Closing date for entries: Wednesday 16 February 2022
Prizes include trophies, medals and certificates. Sections may be combined, depending on the number of entries.
We cannot offer full supervision outside of the playing hall and children must be accompanied by an adult throughout the day. Basic refreshments will be available on the day but please bring a packed lunch.
ECF Arbiter Jo Hutchinson is the tournament organizer and controller. The controller's decision, in all matters regarding the tournament, is final. All enquiries to: johutchinsonchess@gmail.com
Tuesday, 25 January 2022
Project 30 Results Update
KO Championship
Round One
Sean Cassidy 0-1 Richard Harris
Kevin Waterman 0-1 Stephen Ollis
Round Two
Sean Marsh 1-0 John Garnett (the first game was a draw and we required a replay)
Dave Baillie 1-0 Peter Harker
Matt Jackman 1-0 Royce Parker
Richard Harris 1-0 Stephen Ollis
Confirmed semi-finalists
Sean Marsh
Dave Baillie
Matt Jackman
Richard Harris
Rapidplay Championship
The top two players from each group will advance to the semi-finals (winner of group A vs. runner-up of group B and vice versa.) The semi-finals will be four Rapidplay games and the final will be six games.
Group A
Sean Marsh
Matt Jackman
Richard Harris
Kevin Waterman
Sean Cassidy
Matt Jackman 2-0 Richard Harris
Matt Jackman 2-0 Sean Cassidy
Matt Jackman 0-2 Sean Marsh
Matt Jackman 1-1 Kevin Waterman
Sean Cassidy 0-2 Sean Marsh
Kevin Waterman 0-2 Sean Marsh
Kevin Waterman 1-1 Richard Harris
Richard Harris 0-2 Sean Marsh
Richard Harris 1.5-0.5 Sean Cassidy
Final Group Standings
Sean Marsh 8/8
Matt Jackman 5/8
Sean Cassidy 2.5/8
Richard Harris 2.5/8
Kevin Waterman 2/8
Group B
Dave Baillie
John Garnett
Royce Parker
Peter Harker
Stephen Ollis
Dave Baillie 1.5-0.5John Garnett
Dave Baillie 1.5-0.5 Stephen Ollis
Dave Baillie 1-1 Royce Parker
Dave Baillie 2-0 Peter Harker
John Garnett 2-0 Stephen Ollis
John Garnett 2-0 Peter Harker
John Garnett 1-1 Royce Parker
Peter Harker 2-0 Stephen Ollis
Peter Harker 0-2 Royce Parker
Royce Parker 1.5-0.5 Stephen Ollis
Dave Baillie 6/8
John Garnett 5.5/8
Royce Parker 5.5/8
Peter Harker 2/8
Stephen Ollis 1/8
Play-off
John Garnett 1.5-0.5 Royce Parker
Sean Marsh - John Garnett
Matt Jackman - Dave Baillie