3/23/2009 – Last Saturday there was a press meeting of the Dutch Chess Federation to launch
a new Internet chess project, in partnership with Playchess.
We used the opportunity to visit the Hypercube Blitz tournament, which is held
in Utrecht every year. As chance would have it we barged into a controversy
on how many hands you can legally use in speed chess. Here are the graphic details.
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The Dutch Chess Federation takes on Internet Chess
The Dutch Chess Federation has joined forces with Playchess, the world's largest
chess server, to organise national Internet chess events – als well as
club activities, training and open tournaments. At a meeting of the KNSB last
Saturday the partnership was announced to the Dutch press in Utrecht, Holland.
Details are available on the special Internet
page of the Federation.
IM Hans Bohm hosts the meeting and press conference of the KNSB
Frederic Friedel spoke to the board members and journalist about Playchess
Playchess went online
in the third week of September 2001. On September 12th ChessBase launched its
database driven news service –
here is the
very first article we published in the new system – and Playchess
was switched on for the general public a week later. Heart-wrenching when you
think about it.
Here are some stats about Playchess:
Registered users: 230,000+
Total number of games played: 350,000,000+ (over 350 million games)
Number of tournaments conducted on the server: 150,000
Typically you have 6,000 to 10,000 members logged on any given evening. The
largest number of games by individual members is 175,000 (Roland Bühler)
and 165,000 (by Günther Koren). These are members who came in practically
on the day the Playchess server was started, and have played very actively ever
since.
With about 80 participants present Bohm played an blitz game against a young
Dutch chess talent on Playchess. The IM offered a draw and some useful advice
to the girl in a winning position.
We used the opportunity of the KNSB event to visit an interesting blitz tournament
which was being held in Utrecht. It is an annual event and has gained something
of a cult status in European circles.
Hypercube Blitz Chess Tournament
Since 1977 the Hypercube Snelschaaktoernooi is a blitz tournament
organised by the Schaakclub Utrecht. In the first year there were around forty
participants, but the event, which is sponsored by Hypercube
Business Innovation, gradually gained popularity and the numbers increased
to 150 and more. Here are the past winners of the tournament:
1990
Jeroen Piket
2000
Rafael Vaganian
1991
Bogdan Lalic
2001
Loek van Wely
1992
Michael Gurevich
2002
Manuel Bosboom
1993
Dimitri Reinderman
2003
Andrey Volokitin
1994
Dimitri Reinderman
2004
Jan Smeets
1995
Loek van Wely
2005
Vladimir Epishin
1996
Loek van Wely
2006
Daniel Fridman
1997
Manuel Bosboom
2007
Alexandre Dgebuadze
1998
Dimitri Reinderman
2008
Daniel Fridman
1999
Rafael Vaganian
2009
Andrei Orlov
This year's event was held on Saturday, 21st March, 2009. The prize fund was
just over € 3000, with a first prize of € 1000. The entry fee is €
5 and the time control five minutes per game per person.
The tournament venue was Den Hommel, in the J.F. Kennedylaan 9 in Utrecht...
...right next to a canal with bridges, and barges passing by just outside
the windows
There were eight grandmasters, twelve IMs and fourteen FIDE masters. The average
(!) rating of the 130 participants was 2100. The final standings of Group A
were:
1
GM Andrei Orlov
2525
15.0
11
IM Rafael Fridman
2460
10.0
2
GM Bogdan Lalic
2537
14.5
12
Tobias Kabos
2128
9.0
3
GM Vladimir Epishin
2587
14.5
13
GM Mihail Saltaev
2498
8.5
4
GM Alexandre Dgebuadze
2538
14.0
14
Henk Vedder
2336
8.0
5
GM Daniel Fridman
2627
12.5
15
FM Frank Erwich
2317
6.5
6
IM Dimitri Saulin
2435
12.0
16
FM Christov Kleijn
2336
6.0
7
GM Petar Popovic
2489
11.5
17
IM Chiel van Oostrom
2404
6.0
8
IM Manuel Bosboom
2412
11.5
18
WGM Anna Zatonskih
2458
5.5
9
FM Anish Giri
2457
10.5
19
FM Bonno Pel
2273
3.0
10
IM Wouter Spoelman
2488
10.0
20
Lukas Boutens
2158
1.5
The winner of the Hypercube Blitz: GM Andrei Orlov of Russia
Spectators watching one particularly exciting game: Anish Giri vs Manuel
Bosboom
Yes, it's our young annotator
of Linares playing against a very dangerous opponent
Anish is currently the world's
youngest grandmaster, having made a total of four valid norms and in possession
of enough rating points to get his title officially the next time FIDE announces
its awards. Above he is playing against Manuel Bosboom, a highly entertaining
and imaginative IM who, at 45, is also on track to get his GM title. The game
between the two ended in a furious draw: Bosboom offered the lad a draw, he
refused, and with only seconds each on the clock, Anish dropped a piece on the
floor. He stopped the clock, crawled under the table to retrieve it and emerged,
ready to play on. But then reason got the better of him and he offered Bosboom
a draw, which the Dutch IM laughingly accepted.
The incident
Grandmaster Vladimir Epishin, who won this tournament in 2005
In 2005 Epishin won the tournament by playing mainline variations he knew very
well, while this year he tried it with obscure lines, like 1.e4 d5 2.exd5 Qxd5
3.Nc3 Qd6 with black, or on 1.d4 he'd play 1...b6, followed by Bb7, c5 and after
white d5 he followed up with ...e6 and ...f5.
In his game against Anish Giri he played (with black) 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 c5 3.d5
e5 and soon found himself in a bit of trouble against a whisp of a lad, who
weighed at least three times less than him.
In this position Black (on the move) realised that his previous ...e4 was a
mistake and that he was losing a pawn. He quickly retreated his queen to b7
and e7 and a fairly chaotic situation arose, with both players in time trouble.
Suddenly Black lost his queen to a knight fork and Anish Giri was winning. At
this moment Epishin launched a protest: Anish had used both hands to execute
a move.
A lot of people were watching the game and amazingly Robert Beekman actually
captured the moment the move was executed. In the above picture Anish has the
captured piece in his left hand, while executing the move of the capturing piece,
his queen, with the right. He then went on to press the clock with his right
hand.
Epishin called the arbiter while pressing on his side of the clock. Anish tried
to press down on the lever, but did not have a chance against the burly Russian
GM. So he stopped the clocks, which then showed 26 seconds for Black and eleven
for White. The arbiter is summoned and decides that Giri should not have played
with both hands and that his opponent should receive two minutes of additional
time in compensation. Anish protests that he should get some extra time as well,
since his clock ran down to eleven seconds while his opponent had kept his side
pressed. He wanted 16 seconds, the arbiter proposed 14, Epishin was not happy
with anything. In this moment Anish offered Epishin a draw, which his opponent
immediately accepted.
Vladimir Epishin complaining to all and sundry about what had transpired
in the game
Anish shows us after the game approximately how he executed the capture
So what did I do wrong?
We have not spent too much time researching the subject, which is bound to
crop up again. Here for the moment are two sets of rules we found in a quick
search:
4.) Each player must press the clock with the same hand that moves the pieces.
4a) When castling
a player may use both hands.
4b) When capturing
or completing a promotion both hands may be used if it is
clear
that the clock is pressed after the move is determined.
4. Each player must push the clock button with the same hand he uses to move
his pieces. Exception: only during castling may a player use both hands. When
capturing only one hand may be used. The first infraction will get a warning,
the second a one minute penalty and the third will result in the loss of the
game.
Speed chess game between Hikaru Nakamura and Max Dlugy, 2006. You can see
both players using both hands to execute some of their moves. But this is lightening
chess (one minute for the game)...
If you search for blitz or speed chess in YouTube you will find lots of examples
of people playing quite blatently with both hands, especially at the end of
games. Do send us good links and additional material on the rules, if you find
them.
Photos by Robert Beekman, René Olthof and Frederic
Friedel
You will find a highly entertaining, illustrated report on the blitz tournament
by Robert Beekman here.
Unfortunately it is in Dutch. However, if you speak German you will discover
that with a little effort you can get the gist of things. Apart from that there
are always the translation programs like Babel
and Google Translate, which are not
perfectly but viable, reasonably understandable translation deliver many times
(if you can follow this kind of garbled English).
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