Showing posts with label Olympiad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Olympiad. Show all posts

Wednesday, 26 November 2008

Mauritius final results

Mauritius finished the Olympiad with seven match points; their eleven matches produced wins against Seychelles, Surinam and Jersey, with a draw against South Korea.

Roy Phillips got 5 out of a possible 11 (four wins, two draws, five losses) for a rating loss of 1.6 points.

Thursday, 20 November 2008

More Mauritius Results

Mauritius lost their round 5 match against Honduras, but won their round 6 match against Surinam. Roy Phillips got wins in both matches, and here they are.



Sunday, 16 November 2008

Mauritius update

Mauritius's Olympiad results so far:

Round 1: lost 4-0 to Turkmenistan.
Round 2: won 4-0 against Seychelles
Round 3: lost 3½-½ to Brazil.
Round 4: lost 3-1 to Lebanon.

Roy Phillips's results so far:

Round 1: lost to IM Amanmurad Kakageldyev 2449
Round 2: beat Kurt Meier, 2037
Round 3: drew with GM Darcy Lima, 2488
Round 4: lost to IM Fadi Eid, 2388

Nothing especially thrilling so far for player or team. If Roy gets some good results in the next few rounds, there's still a reasonable chance he could get an IM norm.

Friday, 14 November 2008

Unreasonable Alternatives

I believe it was Andrew Soltis who said that "most chess players blunder when faced with a choice of two reasonable alternatives". The reasoning is clear: when you've only got one reasonable move you can make, you just play it and, if it loses, you were losing anyway. When, however, you've got more than one, you've got to analyse all of them, and occasionally the process short-circuits, and you pick the wrong one.

The diagram above, taken from today's Mauritus-Seychelles match in the Olympiad, is a good example. Roy Phillips, playing white here, has just played 11.e5 to try to exploit his lead in development. How could his opponent respond?

Well, one obvious choice is to play 11...Nh6, hoping that the king will not come under too much fire if white goes in for 12.exd6 exd6 13.Re1+. The other option is to try to keep the centre closed with 11...d5, hoping that won't weaken the c5 pawn too much.

In the game, Kurt Meier decided that his best option was to keep the centre closed with 11...d5?, but he soon wished he hadn't. The game continued 12.Na4 Rb5 13.c4 Ra5 14.b3 e5 15.Bd2, giving us the position on the right. It is now clear that black will have to give up material, the c5 pawn is still weak, and he has ended up opening a vital file for white's rooks anyway.

Now this line is not very difficult to calculate, in and of itself. It's also not particularly guaranteed by the general nature of the position; had black's e-pawn already been on e6 in the first diagram, his choice of move would have been perfectly fine, because he would have been able to defend the c-pawn with ...Bf8. Which I think explains why the blunder happened: the move played made sense, and would have been the right move in a similar position. It just so happened that the specific features of the actual position were such that the move itself was a losing blunder.

2008 Olympiad

The 2008 Olympiad has started, and on this blog I will be providing coverage of one of the teams. Not, as you might have guessed, one of the six federations that make up the British Isles, but instead the island nation of Mauritius. Of course, the reason for this is that this is the team with a North Devon connection: former Barnstaple player Roy Phillips is on top board.

The team did not make the best of starts, losing 4-0 to Turkmenistan; Roy lost to IM Amanmurad Kakageldyev (2449). In round 2 they face another African side, Seychelles - this match looks highly winnable.