BRITBASE - British Chess Game Archive
Tournament: 1st Aaronson Masters • 155 games
Venue: Imperial Hotel, London • Date: 23-29 March 1978 • Download PGN • uploaded
Saturday, 3 August, 2024 12:46 PM
1978 Aaronson Masters, 23-29 March, Imperial Hotel, London
1978 Aaronson Masters | Fed | Elo | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Aldo Haik | FRA | 2425m | 1/35 | ½/34 | 1/40 | 1/8 | 1/36 | 1/33 | ½/9 | 0/12 | ½/3 | 1/16 | 7½ |
2 | Michael J Franklin | ENG | 2315 | ½/68 | ½/38 | 1/56 | 1/39 | ½/21 | 1/22 | ½/3 | ½/5 | 1/10 | 1/6 | 7½ |
3 | Mark Diesen | USA | 2440m | 1/38 | 1/47 | ½/22 | 1/33 | ½/9 | ½/11 | ½/2 | ½/4 | ½/1 | 1/12 | 7 |
4 | William R Hartston | ENG | 2475m | 1/13 | 1/36 | 1/28 | ½/9 | 0/12 | 1/34 | ½/17 | ½/3 | 1/11 | ½/5 | 7 |
5 | Bela Soos | FRG | 2425m | ½/19 | ½/37 | ½/15 | 1/47 | 1/17 | 1/28 | ½/12 | ½/2 | 1/9 | ½/4 | 7 |
6 | Axel Ornstein | SWE | 2425m | ½/56 | 1/26 | 1/39 | 1/19 | 1/22 | 0/9 | ½/13 | ½/11 | 1/12 | 0/2 | 6½ |
7 | John DM Nunn | ENG | 2440m | 1/59 | 0/33 | ½/11 | 0/12 | 1/20 | ½/14 | 1/22 | ½/13 | 1/34 | 1/28 | 6½ |
8 | Richard Bailey | ENG | 2325 | ½/37 | 1/45 | 1/25 | 0/1 | ½/43 | ½/46 | 1/49 | ½/34 | ½/17 | 1/14 | 6½ |
9 | Andrew P Law | ENG | 2345 | 1/54 | 1/23 | ½/10 | ½/4 | ½/3 | 1/6 | ½/1 | ½/15 | 0/5 | ½/18 | 6 |
10 | Simon Webb | ENG | 2445m | 1/16 | 1/64 | ½/9 | 0/17 | ½/11 | 1/27 | 1/15 | ½/14 | 0/2 | ½/13 | 6 |
11 | Robert Bellin | ENG | 2415 | 0/23 | 1/53 | ½/7 | 1/44 | ½/10 | ½/3 | 1/31 | ½/6 | 0/4 | 1/41 | 6 |
12 | Michael J Basman | ENG | 2395 | 0/14 | 1/59 | 1/23 | 1/7 | 1/4 | ½/bye | ½/5 | 1/1 | 0/6 | 0/3 | 6 |
13 | Paul A Garbett | NZL | 2310 | 0/4 | 1/24 | ½/45 | 1/53 | ½/29 | 1/37 | ½/6 | ½/7 | ½/18 | ½/10 | 6 |
14 | Jeremy D Silman | USA | 2360 | 1/12 | 0/18 | 1/48 | 0/21 | 1/39 | ½/7 | 1/33 | ½/10 | 1/26 | 0/8 | 6 |
15 | George S Botterill | WLS | 2400 | ½/25 | ½/20 | ½/5 | 1/54 | 1/46 | ½/18 | 0/10 | ½/9 | ½/21 | 1/36 | 6 |
16 | Darko Supancic | YUG | 2335 | 0/10 | 1/58 | ½/37 | 1/30 | 0/25 | 1/23 | 1/27 | ½/17 | 1/29 | 0/1 | 6 |
17 | Terry B Bennett | ENG | 2270 | ½/42 | 1/61 | 1/67 | 1/10 | 0/5 | ½/21 | ½/4 | ½/16 | ½/8 | ½/24 | 6 |
18 | A Jonathan Mestel | ENG | 2450m | 1/53 | 1/14 | 0/33 | 0/22 | 1/45 | ½/15 | ½/19 | 1/24 | ½/13 | ½/9 | 6 |
19 | Jonathan Kinlay | ENG | 2300 | ½/5 | 1/21 | 1/65 | 0/6 | 0/23 | 1/62 | ½/18 | ½/26 | ½/37 | 1/35 | 6 |
20 | John G Nicholson | ENG | 2290 | ½/65 | ½/15 | ½/47 | 1/61 | 0/7 | ½/38 | 1/45 | ½/33 | ½/35 | 1/34 | 6 |
21 | Gert Ligterink | NED | 2440m | ½/27 | 0/19 | 1/60 | 1/14 | ½/2 | ½/17 | ½/24 | 1/35 | ½/15 | 0/33 | 5½ |
22 | Colin S Crouch | ENG | 2300 | 1/50 | 1/63 | ½/3 | 1/18 | 0/6 | 0/2 | 0/7 | ½/31 | 1/49 | ½/37 | 5½ |
23 | Boris Baczynskyj | USA | 2370 | 1/11 | 0/9 | 0/12 | 1/35 | 1/19 | 0/16 | 0/52 | 1/39 | 1/57 | ½/32 | 5½ |
24 | Michael J Valvo | USA | 2530 | 0/34 | 0/13 | 1/59 | ½/40 | 1/52 | 1/36 | ½/21 | 0/18 | 1/33 | ½/17 | 5½ |
25 | Daniel E Shapiro | USA | 2350 | ½/15 | 1/62 | 0/8 | ½/34 | 1/16 | 0/35 | ½/36 | 1/63 | ½/32 | ½/26 | 5½ |
26 | Jonathan S Speelman | ENG | 2410 | ½/44 | 0/6 | 1/68 | ½/37 | ½/62 | 1/41 | 1/29 | ½/19 | 0/14 | ½/25 | 5½ |
27 | David SC Goodman | ENG | 2320 | ½/21 | 1/56 | 1/63 | 0/36 | 1/32 | 0/10 | 0/16 | 1/38 | 0/28 | 1/52 | 5½ |
28 | Nigel D Short | ENG | 2225 | 1/69 | 1/68 | 0/4 | 1/67 | ½/33 | 0/5 | 0/35 | 1/64 | 1/27 | 0/7 | 5½ |
29 | Richard Britton | ENG | 2300 | 1/66 | ½/48 | ½/34 | ½/32 | ½/13 | 1/64 | 0/26 | ½/52 | 0/16 | 1/54 | 5½ |
30 | Bernard Cafferty | ENG | 2300 | ½/40 | ½/49 | ½/35 | 0/16 | 1/61 | ½/45 | ½/48 | ½/43 | 1/46 | ½/31 | 5½ |
31 | Michael Macdonald-Ross | ENG | 2265 | ½/48 | ½/51 | 0/36 | 1/71 | 1/50 | ½/49 | 0/11 | ½/22 | 1/52 | ½/30 | 5½ |
32 | Daniel J King | ENG | (2105) | 0/62 | 1/70 | 1/69 | ½/29 | 0/27 | 1/44 | ½/38 | ½/49 | ½/25 | ½/23 | 5½ |
33 | Paul E Littlewood | ENG | 2345 | 1/55 | 1/7 | 1/18 | 0/3 | ½/28 | 0/1 | 0/14 | ½/20 | 0/24 | 1/21 | 5 |
34 | Kevin J Wicker | ENG | 2305 | 1/24 | ½/1 | ½/29 | ½/25 | 1/41 | 0/4 | 1/46 | ½/8 | 0/7 | 0/20 | 5 |
35 | Nigel E Povah | ENG | 2350 | 0/1 | 1/43 | ½/30 | 0/23 | 1/47 | 1/25 | 1/28 | 0/21 | ½/20 | 0/19 | 5 |
36 | John J Carleton | ENG | 2280 | 1/58 | 0/4 | 1/31 | 1/27 | 0/1 | 0/24 | ½/25 | 1/46 | ½/41 | 0/15 | 5 |
37 | Andrew J Whiteley | ENG | 2385 | ½/8 | ½/5 | ½/16 | ½/26 | 1/66 | 0/13 | ½/64 | ½/42 | ½/19 | ½/22 | 5 |
38 | H Dugald Macpherson | ENG | 2315 | 0/3 | ½/2 | ½/66 | ½/52 | 1/57 | ½/20 | ½/32 | 0/27 | 1/63 | ½/42 | 5 |
39 | Dimo Werner | FRG | 2255 | 1/60 | 1/46 | 0/6 | 0/2 | 0/14 | ½/50 | 1/58 | 0/23 | ½/40 | 1/57 | 5 |
40 | Maxwell L Fuller | AUS | 2390 | ½/30 | 1/44 | 0/1 | ½/24 | 0/49 | ½/58 | 0/41 | 1/62 | ½/39 | 1/61 | 5 |
41 | Stephen Quigley | ENG | (2080) | 0/46 | ½/60 | 1/42 | 1/65 | 0/34 | 0/26 | 1/40 | 1/56 | ½/36 | 0/11 | 5 |
42 | Michael A Pagden | ENG | 2235 | ½/17 | 0/50 | 0/41 | 1/60 | ½/51 | ½/48 | 1/62 | ½/37 | ½/43 | ½/38 | 5 |
43 | Lars Erik Pettersson | SWE | (2325) | 0/47 | 0/35 | 1/55 | 1/56 | ½/8 | ½/66 | ½/63 | ½/30 | ½/42 | ½/51 | 5 |
44 | Richard C Lobo | ENG | 2370 | ½/26 | 0/40 | ½/51 | 0/11 | 1/71 | 0/32 | ½/55 | ½/61 | 1/59 | 1/56 | 5 |
45 | Gary M Clark | ENG | (2130) | 1/51 | 0/8 | ½/13 | 1/57 | 0/18 | ½/30 | 0/20 | ½/54 | ½/50 | ½/48 | 4½ |
46 | Peter J Sowray | ENG | 2205 | 1/41 | 0/39 | 1/62 | 1/49 | 0/15 | ½/8 | 0/34 | 0/36 | 0/30 | 1/67 | 4½ |
47 | Alan H Perkins | ENG | 2310 | 1/43 | 0/3 | ½/20 | 0/5 | 0/35 | 0/60 | ½/61 | 1/68 | 1/66 | ½/55 | 4½ |
48 | Gunnar Johnsen | NOR | 2280 | ½/31 | ½/29 | 0/14 | ½/51 | ½/65 | ½/42 | ½/30 | 0/57 | 1/60 | ½/45 | 4½ |
49 | Simon D Brown | ENG | (2080) | ½/67 | ½/30 | 1/71 | 0/46 | 1/40 | ½/31 | 0/8 | ½/32 | 0/22 | ½/50 | 4½ |
50 | Kenneth I Norman | ENG | (2250) | 0/22 | 1/42 | ½/61 | ½/64 | 0/31 | ½/39 | 0/56 | 1/58 | ½/45 | ½/49 | 4½ |
51 | Timothy D Harding | IRL | 2230 | 0/45 | ½/31 | ½/44 | ½/48 | ½/42 | 0/52 | ½/57 | ½/69 | 1/62 | ½/43 | 4½ |
52 | Simon JB Knott | ENG | 2205 | 0/71 | ½/69 | 1/72 | ½/38 | 0/24 | 1/51 | 1/23 | ½/29 | 0/31 | 0/27 | 4½ |
53 | Tor Kristiansen | NOR | 2320 | 0/18 | 0/11 | 1/58 | 0/13 | ½/55 | 0/57 | 1/71 | ½/60 | ½/61 | 1/63 | 4½ |
54 | William Goichberg | USA | 2525 | 0/9 | 0/57 | 1/70 | 0/15 | 0/58 | 1/72 | 1def | ½/45 | 1/64 | 0/29 | 4½ |
55 | Ervin R Middleton | USA | 2295 | 0/33 | 0/65 | 0/43 | 1/72 | ½/53 | ½/61 | ½/44 | 1/66 | ½/56 | ½/47 | 4½ |
56 | Emmanuel Rayner | WLS | 2345 | ½/6 | 0/27 | 0/2 | 0/43 | 1/69 | 1/67 | 1/50 | 0/41 | ½/55 | 0/44 | 4 |
57 | David H Cummings | ENG | 2230 | 0/61 | 1/54 | ½/64 | 0/45 | 0/38 | 1/53 | ½/51 | 1/48 | 0/23 | 0/39 | 4 |
58 | Glenn C Flear | ENG | (2240) | 0/36 | 0/16 | 0/53 | 1/70 | 1/54 | ½/40 | 0/39 | 0/50 | ½/65 | 1/69 | 4 |
59 | Peter G Large | ENG | 2275 | 0/7 | 0/12 | 0/24 | 1/68 | 0/63 | 0/69 | 1/72 | 1/65 | 0/44 | 1/64 | 4 |
60 | William N Watson | ENG | (2145) | 0/39 | ½/41 | 0/21 | 0/42 | ½/72 | 1/47 | ½/66 | ½/53 | 0/48 | 1/70 | 4 |
61 | Richard F Holmes | ENG | (2110) | 1/57 | 0/17 | ½/50 | 0/20 | 0/30 | ½/55 | ½/47 | ½/44 | ½/53 | 0/40 | 3½ |
62 | Chris W Baker | ENG | 2280 | 1/32 | 0/25 | 0/46 | 1/63 | ½/26 | 0/19 | 0/42 | 0/40 | 0/51 | 1/71 | 3½ |
63 | Stewart Reuben | ENG | 2270 | 1/70 | 0/22 | 0/27 | 0/62 | 1/59 | 1/65 | ½/43 | 0/25 | 0/38 | 0/53 | 3½ |
64 | William J Stirling | ENG | 2205 | 1/72 | 0/10 | ½/57 | ½/50 | 1/67 | 0/29 | ½/37 | 0/28 | 0/54 | 0/59 | 3½ |
65 | Douglas GA Shallcross | ENG | (2150) | ½/20 | 1/55 | 0/19 | 0/41 | ½/48 | 0/63 | 0def | 0/59 | ½/58 | 1/72 | 3½ |
66 | Tony Peterson | ENG | (2120) | 0/29 | ½/72 | ½/38 | 1/69 | 0/37 | ½/43 | ½/60 | 0/55 | 0/47 | ½/68 | 3½ |
67 | Friedrich Bachmann | FRG | 2220 | ½/49 | 1/71 | 0/17 | 0/28 | 0/64 | 0/56 | ½/68 | ½/70 | 1/69 | 0/46 | 3½ |
68 | John M Ripley | ENG | (2145) | ½/2 | 0/28 | 0/26 | 0/59 | 0/70 | 1/bye | ½/67 | 0/47 | 1/71 | ½/66 | 3½ |
69 | Ronald Blow | ENG | 2230 | 0/28 | ½/52 | 0/32 | 0/66 | 0/56 | 1/59 | 1/70 | ½/51 | 0/67 | 0/58 | 3 |
70 | Richard W O'Brien | IRL | (2040) | 0/63 | 0/32 | 0/54 | 0/58 | 1/68 | ½/71 | 0/69 | ½/67 | ½/72 | 0/60 | 2½ |
71 | David L Barasi1 | ENG | (2000) | 1/52 | 0/67 | 0/49 | 0/31 | 0/44 | ½/70 | 0/53 | ½/72 | 0/68 | 0/62 | 2 |
72 | Ian M Raindle | ENG | (2050) | 0/64 | ½/66 | 0/52 | 0/55 | ½/60 | 0/54 | 0/59 | ½/71 | ½/70 | 0/65 | 2 |
1 Now Paul Barasi
Bulletin Notes
IM Norms
MJ Franklin 7½/10, Cat 5 (2355) IM norm = 6½
R Bellin 6/10, Cat 6 (2378.6) IM norm = 6
GS Botterill 6/10, Cat 6 (2377.7) IM norm = 6
MJ Basman 5½/9, Cat 7 (2403) IM norm = 5½
AP Law 6/10, Cat 8 (2429.5) IM norm = 5½
PA Garbett 6/10, Cat 6 (2383.2) IM norm = 6
J Silman 6/10, Cat 6 (2376.8) IM norm = 6
The Aaronson Masters filled the gap in the British chess calendar, at Easter, left by the Bognor international opens of the 1950s and 1960s. How welcome it was is shown by the entry from leading players. The tournament was stronger than any British Championship for many years.
Victory for a veteran of 47 is a rarity in modern chess. Michael Franklin said of his lifetime best result that it was ‘just one of those occasions when everything went right!’ But he scored 3½/5 against the IMs, was alert to every opportunity, and the games show he owed little to luck.
Co-winner Aldo Haik (F) was rewarded for his inventive and original style. He likes to live dangerously but he is a strong all-round master and would not have been flattered by outright first place.
The other IMs varied in their results and approach. Soos and Ornstein came with ambitions to win, but Soos began too slowly and Ornstein, who led after five rounds, tired after several long endgames. Hartston and Diesen maintained their reputations, but Nunn and Webb were more inconsistent than usual.
Mestel and Ligterink, alongside IM Speelman, demonstrated that a strong event is good preparation for a still stronger one. They did indifferently in the Aaronson, but had fine results a week later in Lone Pine (USA) [23 grandmasters!]. Speelman, in particular, left London depressed about his form, but at Lone Pine he began with a superb win over Larsen and went on to clinch his IM title there.
Bellin, Botterill and Basman have been among the strongest British players for many years, and their IM norms were expected. Bellin is now qualified for the IM title, and the other two should not have to wait long for their final norms. Law registered a big advance — he met 7 IMs and had the hardest opposition of all. Silman had bad defeats from IMs, but showed his class by his good victories over Basman and Speelman. Since the other American players began badly (jet-lag?), it may be significant that Silman was acclimatised in England for many weeks before the start. Garbett of New Zealand, whose gritty defensive play earned him several half-points from inferior positions, was the surprise norm.
Bennett, Wicker, Kinlay and Littlewood got within striking distance of an IM result: the last two need to control their optimistic temperaments and learn to consolidate a good start in the middle rounds of a tournament. Fuller and Whiteley were horribly out of form, but Supancic, the Yugoslav junior, made a promising impression and will surely become an IM before long.
Public and media interest in the tournament centered on one player only. Nigel Short seriously attempted an IM norm at age 12; his experience was not up to that, but only the IMs were good enough to stop him. Against the rest, Nigel scored 5½/7 and a week later shared second place in the Jersey Open. His up-dated rating is 214 (2310 FIDE) which makes him very likely better than Capablanca or Reshevsky were at 12. Soos called him ‘master strength’ and compared his potential to Fischer, while Diesen remarked on his will to win - ‘very important’. Nigel’s games with Ripley and Stirling illustrate that his strategic vision and tactical imagination are already master standard; his openings lack some precision, as Hartston and Nunn showed. If the tournament bulletins ever become a collector’s item, it will be because the Aaronson Masters was Nigel Short’s first international tournament.
Nigel was not the only junior who did well. Most people think of talented British juniors as just Hodgson and Short, but Daniel King’s mature play and 5½ points at age 14 showed that he, too, is potentially world class. Britton was tactically sharp, Pagden again steady and consistent, while Clark and Brown made promising debuts in international chess. Notable was the 50% score by Quigley, who beat both Fuller and Rayner.
Two organisational features deserve a mention. The entry fee was on a sliding scale (free to non-English with FIDE ratings, £25 to those without a FIDE rating). Thus 57 entrants out of 72 had a rating of 200 (2200) or better, but the entry fee structure still made it possible for a few modestly rated amateurs to try their luck. David [Paul] Barasi, the outsider of the field and forecast by some to score zero, actually got a fine win in the very first round.
The Reuben pairing system, which aims to identify potential candidates for FIDE norms and ratings early in the tournament, proved its value. The system is too complex to describe fully here, and means a good deal of extra work for the controller. But the test is results, and all seven players who achieved IM level performances (2450 FIDE rating, equal to 231 British grade) qualified for a norm.
The Imperial Hotel was a pleasant venue, though the logistic difficulties of a split venue with nine floors between them proved considerable. London’s next major FIDE-rated event is the Lloyds Bank Masters at the Cumberland Hotel, Marble Arch, on 24-31 August 1978. There, all the play will be in one room and hopefully there will be a grandmaster norm. Details of this and future events in London are available from The London Chess Association (11 Haversham Close, Cambridge Park, Twickenham, Middlesex).
Finally, thanks again to Aaronson Brothers for their support. A regular high-quality event in London would be
a major advance for British chess.
Aaronson Brothers, the timber products and plastics laminate group, are famed as pioneers in do-it-yourself materials. Already this progressive company sponsors the open-to-all Aaronson weekend congress at the Harrow Leisure Centre. In its first year (1977) the Aaronson congress attracted 800 entrants, including GMs and IMs, a world record for a ‘first’ congress. Top prize is £1000. Managing director, Mr Ronald Aaronson, who personally visited the Aaronson Masters, takes a keen interest. Proceeds from the Aaronson Congress are channelled into the Aaronson Trust which helps young British players over a wide front.
The Aaronson Masters was made possible by the co-operation of Imperial Hotels Ltd. and the financial support of the London Chess Association (which also organised the event), the Friends of Chess and The Slater Foundation.
Mention must be made here of the devoted organisers, R.Beville (Chief controller), Stewart Reuben, J.Baker, T.S.Dunne, Daphne Lee, as well as J.Brown, A.Kinsman, R.Nye, A.Soane, and others.
File Updated
Date | Notes |
---|---|
4 October 2021 | First upload, with 150 games, which is four more than are generally available elsewhere. |
8 October 2021 | I am grateful to Gert Ligterink for his amendments to two scores from this tournament. Baczynskyj - Bellin (rd 1): 28 Rg5 was played and not 28 Rg6. In Franklin - Diesen (rd 7) the final move of the game is 15...Bxd8, not 15...Rxd8. Thanks, Gert. |
24 December 2023 | Added three more games: (1) G.Clark 1-0 T.Harding (rd 1); (2) G.Johnsen ½-½ T.Harding (rd 4); (3) S.Knott 1-0 T.Harding (rd 6). My thanks to Tim Harding for submitting the games. |
24 December 2023 | Added a further game: J.Silman 1-0 D.Werner (rd 5). Many thanks to Andy Ansel. |
3 August 2024 | Added the game B.Cafferty ½-½ N.Povah, Aaronson Masters (rd 3, 24.03.1978), kindly forwarded by Andy Ansel, for which many thanks. |