www.britbase.info
© 1997-2024
John Saunders

 

BritBase.Info - British Chess Game Archive

11th Monarch Assurance Isle of Man Chess International 28 Sept - 6 Oct 2002

Round 3 - 30 September

John Saunders reports: Round Three Results

Zapata, Alonso           -  Stocek, Jiri             1/2   27  B86  Sicilian
Kogan, Artur             -  Epishin, Vladimir        1/2   19  E12  Queen's indian
Dautov, Rustem           -  Hebden, Mark             1-0   54  E62  Kings Indian
Ulibin, Mikhail          -  Goloshchapov, Alexander  0-1   56  B47  Sicilian
Neverov, Valeriy         -  Miezis, Normunds         0-1   73  A40  Queen's pawn
Tyomkin, Dimitri         -  Fridman, Daniel          1/2   11  D46  Queen's gambit
Ward, Christopher        -  Shulman, Yuri            1-0   56  D45  Queen's gambit
Lalic, Bogdan            -  Marchand, Francois       1-0   50  A52  Benoni
Palus, Ryszard           -  Felgaer, Ruben           0-1   29  D10  Slav defence
Rotstein, Arkadij        -  Rayner, Francis          1-0   34  C00  French
Blackburn, Jonathan L    -  Sulskis, Sarunas         0-1   46  A44  Old Benoni
Burrows, Martin          -  Peralta, Fernando        1-0   34  B07  Pirc
Kunte, Abhijit           -  Dougherty, Michael       1-0   40  A07  Reti (1 Nf3)
Grant, Alan              -  Grunberg, Mihai          1/2   51  A10  English 1 c4
Palliser, Richard        -  Gordon, Stephen J        1-0   34  E11  Bogo-Indian
Vuilleumier, Alex        -  Ledger, Andrew           0-1   42  B12  Caro-Kann
Ansell, Simon            -  Fox, Anthony             1/2   61  A07  Reti (1 Nf3)
Van Kemenade, Rudy       -  Gladyszev, Oleg          0-1   62  B45  Sicilian
Hinks-Edwards, Thom      -  Harborne, Matthew        1-0   43  D41  Queen's gambit
Ellison, Derek George    -  Pert, Richard G          1/2   26  A25  English 1 c4 e5
Brady, Stephen           -  Hanley, James L          1-0   37  B22  Sicilian 2 c3
Cafolla, Peter           -  Cooper, Lawrence         0-1   56  A32  English 1 c4 c5
Lutton, J.Ezra           -  Daly, Colm               0-1   34  A00  Irregular
Lutton, E Josiah         -  Orr, Mark J L            1/2   53  C10  French
Hanley, Craig            -  Bennion, David           1-0   38  C17  French Winawer
Purton, Ben              -  Williams, Simon          0-1   27  B23  Sicilian Closed
Cioara, Andrei Nestor    -  Goodger, Martyn          1/2   39  C43  Petroff Defence
Kelly, David             -  Welling, Gerard          0-1   36  C30  King's Gambit
Spanton, Timothy         -  Hutchinson, Norman       0-1   45  A17  English 1 c4
Collins, Sam             -  Ormsby, Alan             1-0   51  B13  Caro-Kann
Shepherd, Michael        -  Waugh, Jonathon C        1/2   52  E73  Kings Indian
Cross, Glenn             -  Cheshire, Paul L         1/2   22  E61  Kings Indian
 
 
Chris WardAlonso ZapataRustem DautovAlex GoloshchapovNormunds Miezis
The leaders... Ward, Zapata, Dautov, Goloshchapov, Miezis...
Three Lions on a Shirk

Thus far we haven't heard much about the English grandmasters, have we? That is probably fair enough as our 'three lions' (Ward, Lalic and Hebden) spent round two as lions will: snoozing peacefully under a bush waiting for easy prey to come along. Well, not literally, but you get the picture. Round three was no easier for two of them, but all three were involved in some decisive chess in a round which produced relatively few short draws. After round three there are five joint leaders on 2½/3: Chris Ward, Alonso Zapata, Rustem Dautov, Alexander Goloshchapov and Normunds Miezis.

Round 3 General View
Foreground: Lalic v Marchand, (obscured) Ward v Shulman, Tyomkin (looking towards camera) v Fridman

Bogdan Lalic had the easiest pairing of the three English lions, against FM Francois Marchand of France, rated 2237. The Frenchman's decision to surrender the two bishops looked doubtful and Bogdan soon had him in a half-nelson, and despite lasting 50 moves there was never really any doubt that Bogdan would win. Lalic-Marchand.

Hebden had Black against Rustem Dautov, now of Germany but a typical product of the old Soviet school. Dautov refused Mark's draw offer on move 24 though the position was fairly equal. Dautov indulged in masterly inactivity until after the time control when he launched a long-planned b4 assault. Mark should probably have played cxb4 but instead tried to work up some play against Dautov's king. This proved to be insufficient and Dautov managed to break through to Hebden's king first. Dautov-Hebden.

Ward had a surprisingly easy passage against Belarussian (but US resident) GM Yuri Shulman. Ward's aggressive intentions were obvious as he castled long and pointed his pieces at Black's king but Shulman could not seem to find a viable defence against this 'route one' approach. Ward found a tactic to exploit Black's weakened defences and won queen for rook and piece. Though Black played on for a long time, there was never really any doubt that White would win through. A good result for the former British Champion, who will be gratified to wake up this morning to a new FIDE rating of 2513. Ward-Shulman.

Martin BurrowsFernando PeraltaThe surprise of the round was Martin Burrows' excellent win against IM Fernando Peralta. The Argentinian's choice of 10...e6 looked very suspect and Burrows correctly opted for an immediate attack. He successfully defused Peralta's tactical attempts to get back in the game and then exploited the manifold weaknesses of Black's position. A great scalp for the 28-year-old English amateur. Burrows-Peralta.

Last year's winner Mikhail Ulibin suffered defeat at the hands of Alexander Goloshchapov. Ulibin turned down the Ukrainian GM's draw offer early in the game but offered the draw a few moves later. But the Ukrainian wanted to play on, and proved his point as he got his rook to the seventh rank and marginalized Ulibin's knight. This was a very fine display of technical chess by Goloshchapov; I'm not sure I can do it justice in the time available, but have a good look at it in the play-through window. It would be a mistake to discount Ulibin's chances, however, as last year he suffered an even more painful defeat to Danny Gormally in round two and bounced back to take first prize. Ulibin-Goloschapov.

Valeriy NeverovThe last game to finish ended with a huge blunder. Valery Neverov of Ukraine was trying to win an interminable double rook ending with an extra pawn, but, when down to his last two minutes, got in a tangle and allowed Normunds Miezis to win a whole rook. The two players were a contrast in appearance: Miezis is expressionless and like a statue at the board whereas Neverov is a bundle of nerves, rocking back and forth in his chair and twiddling his fingers in the air. Some consolation for the Ukrainian this morning: his October rating is 2601 taking him into the world's top 100. Neverov-Miezis.

There was an unofficial England-Ireland match this round: Ansell-Fox, Brady-J.Hanley, Cafolla-Cooper, J.Lutton-Daly, E.Lutton-Orr. Ratings suggested a 3-2 win for the Irish and so it was to prove. Another Irishman, Sam Collins, took on Manxman Alan Ormsby and it took a hard fight for the Irish champion to get his first point on the scoreboard. Collins-Ormsby.

Crosstable | Tournament Home Page