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14th Monarch Assurance Isle of Man International
22 Sept - 2 Oct 2005

Last updated: Monday, August 21, 2017 6:38 PM
 
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Round 6 - 29 September 2005

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Coach trip to the Laxey Wheel
The morning of Round 6 was the traditional coach trip, this year to the
Laxey Wheel - the oldest working waterwheel in the world.

As is traditional, competitors had the chance to see some more of the glorious Isle of Man on a free coach trip laid on by our organiser. Dennis Hemsley very wisely checked the weather forecast before deciding on the day. The Manx weather is very unpredictable and can change in a matter of minutes. To be honest, it has not been great this week, with high winds blowing across the bay and a fair bit of rain besides. But Dennis's judgement was spot on and Thursday turned out to be perfect.

We stopped off briefly at Douglas Head, giving us a chance to look back towards the sea front at the Isle of Man's capital of Douglas - and, incidentally, the Villa Marina, the elegant refurbished building where this year's Smith and Williamson British Chess Championship was held less than two months ago. Then we moved on to see the Laxey Wheel - the world's oldest working water wheel and a popular tourist spot. We didn't have time to clamber up it this year as there wasn't too much time to spare. One good thing about the coach trip was the fact that the leading professional players found time from their preparation to come along - amongst them tournament leader Alexander Shabalov, avidly snapping away with his rather nice looking Sony digital camera.

Bradda Head with the Calf of Man in the distance
Bradda Head with the Calf of Man in the distance

The Isle of Man, and the immediate area of Port Erin, is a beautiful spot if you like the great outdoors. The day after the coach trip started brightly and was tempted to take another walk towards the Calf of Man (see last year's website for a nice photo). This year my plan was to check out the area from the birdwatching point of view. Back home I like to go birdwatching in Richmond Park, which is a nature reserve and offers quite a number of interesting species. But of course the Isle of Man has quite a different set of species from the environs of London.

You don't have to go more than a few metres from the hotel before you are seeing such species as jackdaws and pied wagtails. A bit further towards Bradda Head (see above and also here) and you start seeing a lot of stonechats and chaffinches. Going in the direction of Cregneash, as well as common species such as magpie I've seen hooded crows, kestrel, pheasant and grey partridge, as well as other smaller birds which I was unable to identify. All on a relatively short walk, and still more or less within view of the venue. This is additional to all the sea birds which you can see crossing the water and which are visible with binoculars from my room in the hotel. I have picked out various species of gull, as well as gannets and cormorants.

What I would really like to do is visit the bird sanctuary on the Calf of Man, but there never seems to be time to do it. But I can certainly recommend the area if you fancy combining chess playing with a bit of birdwatching or other country pursuits. I've only just scratched the surface here but there is a lot more about birds and animals on the Isle of Man at this excellent website.

One bird that humans have to be wary of here is the gull, which attacks humans for food. Don't worry, they don't eat people, they simply swoop down and snatch food from your plate if you are eating outdoors. At least one of our arbiters has lost his lunch to a swooping gull. The Cosy Nook Cafe in Port Erin Bay even has a sign saying that the management takes no responsible for food snatched by gulls at their outdoor tables. I'm not sure which species is the culprit - probably herring gull or great black-backed gull - but it would be more appropriate if it were the Sandwich tern.


That's enough sightseeing for now. The round six top board was 'Shaba' versus 'The Grinder'. The game ended in an early draw - and the the webmaster breathed a huge a sigh of relief when he realised that he wouldn't have too long a game to key in. There were quite a number of other draws but most of them features a genuine battle.

Once again it was the young Ukrainian Alexander Areshchenko who impressed the most.

Areshchenko,A (2625) - Postny,E (2559) [C66]
Monarch Assurance Port Erin IOM (6.2), 29.09.2005

1 e4 e5 2 Nf3 Nc6 3 Bb5 Nf6 [Since the Kasparov-Kramnik match of 2000, this has been popular with players playing for a solid position with Black.] 4 d3 d6 5 0-0 g6 6 d4 [Now Black has committed to the kingside fainchetto, White wants to open the position up a little.] 6...Bd7 7 d5 [Previous games have continued 7 Re1 but Areshchenko has something different in mind.] 7...Nb8 8 Bxd7+ Nbxd7 9 Re1 Nc5 [9...Bg7 is more solid, but White would retain a small edge.] 10 b4! Ncxe4 [Perhaps Black should swallow his pride and play 10...Ncd7 ] 11 Qd3 [The e4 knight has no move or additional defence.] 11...Bg7 12 Rxe4 Nxe4 13 Qxe4 0-0 14 Bb2 a5 15 b5 b6 16 a4 f5 17 Qc4 g5 18 h3 h6 [Black is banking on the strength of his pawns to negate White's small material advantage.] 19 Nbd2 Qd7 20 Re1 Rae8 21 Nf1 Qf7 22 Ng3 Re7 23 Qb3 Ree8 24 c4 Qg6 25 Qd1 Bf6 26 Nd2 [Any pawn advance by Black would leave a weakness in the line. It is really a defensive structure rather than an attacking posture by Black.] 26...Bd8 27 Bc3 Rf7?!

 








[Once again Black should probably retrace his steps with 27...Bf6 and carry on defending.] 28 c5! [Whichever black pawn captures on c5, White can regain the pawn with the prospect of a breakthrough.] 28...dxc5 29 Nc4 Bf6 30 d6! [White is more interested in achieving open lines and footholds for his rooks, rather than regaining the pawn.] 30...e4 31 Bxf6 Qxf6 32 dxc7 Rxc7 33 Qd5+ Rf7 [Probably best. The loss of the b6 and f5 pawns will spell the end for Black.] 34 Nd6 Re5 35 Qxf7+ Qxf7 36 Nxf7 Kxf7 37 Nf1 Rd5 38 Ne3 Rd4 39 Nxf5 Rxa4 40 Nd6+ Kg6 41 Rxe4 Rb4 42 Re6+ Kh7 43 Re7+ Kg8 44 Rb7 [The hallmark of a great player is when they make it look easy - as Areshchenko did in this game.] 1-0

I'm not quite sure how it happened, but all the eight women players in the open are currently in sync when it comes to colours. I'm not commenting on their fashion sense, merely pointing out that they all had Black in their round seven games (and have all drawn White in round eight). Three of them even sat on adjacent boards, facing three strong grandmasters. Joanna Dworakowska played Ehsan Ghaem Maghami. The current 'Manx Monarch' must have thought he was playing in a women's tournament, as this was his fourth game against a female player in six games, and his third in a row. He didn't succeed in beating either Anna Zatonskih and Tatiana Kononenko, but defeated Joanna Dworakowska in round six.

Tatiana KononenkoTatiana Kononenko (left) did well in round six, beating Daniel Fridman.

Fridman,D (2566) - Kononenko,T (2442)
Monarch Assurance Port Erin IOM (6.12), 29.09.2005

 








[White looks in reasonable shape here, but Black builds up some strong pressure.] 33...Rg6! 34 Rac1 h4 35 Re5? [This attempt to hold back Black's attack fails badly. Fritz prefers to try and meet the kingside onslaught with 35 Rc3!? Qg5 36 f4 Qxf4 37 Qxd5 etc, but Black still has pressure.] 35...Bxe5 36 dxe5 Qg5 37 Qb2 b5 38 Rc5 Rc8 39 c7 [39 Qxb5 looks better.] 39...b4 40 g4 Qe7 41 Rxa5 Qxc7 42 Rxd5

 








42...Rxg4+! [Very nice.] 43 fxg4 Qb7 [There is nothing to be done about the pin of the rook.] 44 Kh3 Qxd5 45 Kxh4 Qe4 46 Qd2 Qh7+ 47 Kg3 Rc3+ 0-1

Anna Katonskih also won with Black against a strong grandmaster, but her win was more fortuitous.

Yakovich,Y (2560) - Zatonskih,A (2435)
Monarch Assurance Port Erin IOM (6.13), 29.09.2005

 








[A fairly innocuous position but Yakovich makes a huge blunder...] 32 Na4?? [Simply 32 Ne4 is fine for White.] 32...Ra5 0-1 [The knight is lost.]

Overall the women drew their 'match' against the men 4-4, not a bad result considering the strength of the opposition.

Mannion,S (2331) - Sareen,V (2385)
Monarch Assurance Port Erin IOM (6.26), 29.09.2005

 








[Worried about the black queen invading his position via the a7-g1 diagonal, White decides to try his luck with the king and pawn ending.] 59 c5 Qxc5+! 60 Qxc5 dxc5 61 Kd3 f5 62 Kc4

 








[It is clear that White is winning his pawn back on the queenside - but what can Black do on the kingside?] 62...g5! [62...f4!? 63 gxf4 exf4 64 Kxc5 g5 65 e5 gxh4 66 Kd6 h3 67 e6 h2 68 e7 h1Q 69 e8Q Qxf3 may also win via a queen and pawn endgame but the text is more forcing.] 63 exf5 g4 64 fxg4 e4 [White's potential armada of pawns on the kingside looks more menacing than Black's motley collection of blocked and unsupported pawns - but it is an optical illusion.] 65 gxh5 e3 66 Kd3 c4+! 0-1 [67 bxc4 b3 68 axb3 a2 69 Kxe3 a1Q and the last of Black's 'magnificent seven' pawns survives the gunfight to save the village...]

Round  6

Bd  WHITE                      Result  BLACK                          PIN
  1 SHABALOV,Alexand 2593 (4½)  ½ - ½  KOBALIA,Mikhail  2614 (4)     9   3
  2 ARESHCHENKO,Alex 2625 (4)   1 - 0  POSTNY,Evgeny    2559 (4)     2  16
  3 KORNEEV,Oleg     2594 (4)   ½ - ½  GORMALLY,Daniel  2557 (4)     8  17
  4 IKONNIKOV,Vyache 2560 (4)   ½ - ½  MIKHALEVSKI,Vict 2572 (3½)   14  12
  5 BRODSKY,Michail  2554 (3½)  ½ - ½  TIVIAKOV,Sergei  2678 (3½)   19   1
  6 HOWELL,David W   2471 (3½)  ½ - ½  EPISHIN,Vladimir 2600 (3½)   29   5
  7 GALKIN,Alexander 2598 (3½)  1 - 0  BOBRAS,Piotr     2525 (3½)    6  25
  8 SULSKIS,Sarunas  2535 (3½)  0 - 1  ERENBURG,Sergey  2595 (3½)   21   7
  9 DAVID,Alberto    2579 (3½)  ½ - ½  ADLY,Ahmed       2503 (3½)   11  26
 10 NEELOTPAL,Das    2467 (3)   0 - 1  KRITZ,Leonid     2544 (3½)   31  20

 11 GHAEM MAGHAMI,Eh 2603 (3)   1 - 0  DWORAKOWSKA,Joan 2401 (3)     4  40
 12 FRIDMAN,Daniel   2566 (3)   0 - 1  KONONENKO,Tatian 2442 (3)    13  34
 13 YAKOVICH,Yuri    2560 (3)   0 - 1  ZATONSKIH,Anna   2435 (3)    15  36
 14 GLADYSZEV,Oleg   2436 (3)   ½ - ½  MALAKHATKO,Vadim 2556 (3)    35  18
 15 KUZUBOV,Yuri     2535 (3)   1 - 0  ROEDER,Mathias   2393 (3)    22  42
 16 ULYBIN,Mikhail   2529 (3)   0 - 1  COX,John         2385 (3)    23  45
 17 GREET,Andrew N   2425 (3)   0 - 1  WELLS,Peter      2529 (3)    37  24
 18 LALIC,Bogdan     2491 (3)   1 - 0  GUPTA,Abhijeet   2380 (3)    27  46
 19 ZUDE,Erik        2424 (3)   ½ - ½  KIDAMBI,Sundarar 2484 (3)    38  28
 20 NEUBAUER,Martin  2468 (3)   ½ - ½  NEGI,Parimarjan  2376 (3)    30  47

 21 KOLBUS,Dietmar   2416 (3)   1 - 0  KUNIN,Vitaly     2448 (3)    39  32
 22 AAGAARD,Jacob    2442 (3)   ½ - ½  GOLETIANI,Rusuda 2332 (3)    33  53
 23 KIRSCHBAUM,Gunna 2204 (2½)  0 - 1  KOGAN,Artur      2580 (2½)   65  10
 24 KLENBURG,Mikhail 2400 (2½)  1 - 0  ZOZULIA,Anna     2314 (2½)   41  55
 25 PALLISER,Richard 2389 (2½)  ½ - ½  ALLEN,Keith      2210 (2½)   43  62
 26 MANNION,Steve R. 2331 (2½)  0 - 1  SAREEN,Vishal    2385 (2½)   54  44
 27 ZIMMERMAN,Yuri   2375 (2½)  1 - 0  ADAMS,Phil       2138 (2½)   48  73
 28 GROFFEN,Hans     2210 (2½)  0 - 1  MIRZOEVA,Elmira  2223 (2)    63  60
 29 PEEK,Marcel      2373 (2)   ½ - ½  GRANT,Alan       2152 (2)    49  71
 30 HANLEY,Craig     2367 (2)   1 - 0  HICKMAN,John     2115 (2)    50  76

 31 HUGHES,Howard R  2194 (2)   ½ - ½  BOSBOOM-LANCHAVA 2363 (2)    67  51
 32 RADOVANOVIC,Jovi 2357 (2)   1 - 0  SPANTON,Tim      2032 (2)    52  84
 33 ASHTON,Adam      2294 (2)   0 - 1  HENRICHSEN,Jens  2075 (2)    56  80
 34 GOODGER,Martyn   2162 (2)   0 - 1  PERIC,Slavisa    2280 (2)    70  57
 35 WERNER,Gert      2047 (2)   0 - 1  DUHAYON,Yves     2230 (2)    83  59
 36 SPENCE,David     2218 (2)   1 - 0  FAIRBAIRN,Steve  2065 (2)    61  82
 37 BENNION,David A. 2074 (1½)  0 - 1  SMITH,Andrew P   2204 (2)    81  64
 38 VITOUX,Colomban  2264 (1½)  1 - 0  NICHOLSON,John   2000 (1½)   58  86
 39 DE LAGONTRIE,Jea 1988 (1½)  ½ - ½  DUNN,Andrew      2197 (1½)   87  66
 40 LOHOU,Stephane   2144 (1½)  1 - 0  MARTIN,Katie     1953 (1½)   72  89

 41 FRASER-MITCHELL, 2098 (1½)  1 - 0  FOX,Pierre       1815 (1½)   78  91
 42 WADEMARK,Helge   2182 (1)   ½ - ½  HEYL,Thomas      2101 (1)    68  77
 43 HUTCHINSON,Norma 2097 (1)   1 - 0  WALTHER,Cliff    2175 (1)    79  69
 44 RUSTON,Mark      2116 (1)   1 - 0  YOUNG,Mel        1971 (1)    75  88
 45 HENDERIKSE,Bert  2028 (1)   1 - 0  MARKS,Ian A      1889 (½)    85  90
 46 FOX,Anthony      2118 (½)   1 - 0  MCKENZIE,Mark    1249 (0)    74  92
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