Ahmed Adly and Jesse February win African Chess Championship
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The Egyptian Chess Players dominated the 2021 African Individual Chess Championship, taking four top places in the open section. The event was held from May 17-28, 2021 in Lilongwe (Malawi). The last championship took place in 2019 before the pandemic. The defending champion, GM Ahmed Adly retained his title in fierce competition with his compatriots. He scored an equal amount of points (8/9) with his fellow countryman and the top-rated participant GM Amin Bassem, but the tiebreaks (average rating of the opponents) favoгred the second-rated player of the competition. GM Fawzy Adham and GM Hesham Abdelrahman (both Egypt) finished in third and fourth places respectively. All four qualified for FIDE the FIDE World Cup 2021 that will take place in Sochi, Russia from July 10, 2021, to August 3, 2021. Final standings open: 1 Adly Ahmed EGY 2615 8 2 Amin Bassem EGY 2701 8 3 Fawzy Adham EGY 2473 7½ 4 Hesham Abdelrahman EGY 2400 6½ 5 Mwale Joseph MAW 2148 6 6 Bellahcene Bilel ALG 2508 6 7 Chipanga Chiletso MAW 2043 6 8 Bwalya Gillan ZAM 2405 6 9 Silva David ANG 2296 6 10 Barrish Daniel RSA 2306 6 In the women’s section, WIM Jesse Nikki February emerged as the winner. The 24-year old from South Africa clinched the championship, finishing a half-point ahead of her main rivals. This result also earns her the Woman Grandmaster (WGM) title – she needs to fulfill FIDE title requirements, by attaining the rating of 2100. WIM Lina Nassr tied for second with WIM Ayah Moaataz but took silver thanks to better tiebreaks. Final standings women: 1 WIM February, Jesse Nikki RSA 7 2 WIM Nassr, Lina ALG 6½ 3 WIM Moaataz, Ayah EGY 6½ 4 WFM Mwango, Lorita ZAM 6 5 WGM Wafa, Shahenda EGY 6 6 WCM Charinda, Kudzanayi ZIM 6 7 Shriyan, Santosh MAW 5½ 8 WFM Marape, Naledi BOT 5½ 9 WFM Mongeli, Sasha KEN 5½ 10 WFM Staal Michaela Francis RSA 5½ The Closing Ceremony of the 2021 African Individual Chess Championships took place on Thursday 27th May 2021 at Golden Peacock Hotel, Lilongwe. In attendance were Ulemu Msungama, Malawi’s Minister of Youth and Sport; Kezzie Msukwa, Malawi’s Minister of Lands, Housing and Urban Development; Lewis Ncube, President, African Chess Confederation, Susan Namangale President of Chess Association of Malawi and many more dignitaries. Kudos to the African Chess Confederation (ACC) and Chess Association of Malawi on the successful organization of the 2021 African Individual Chess Championships. Our sincere appreciation goes to Mrs. Susan Namangale and the media department at the AICC for providing us with pictures of the event. Text: Fawole John Oyeyemi, bruvschessmedia.com
“The Queens’ Festival”: Connecting Women in Chess
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The Global Women’s Online Chess Challenge “The Queens’ Festival”, a series of continental and global women’s online chess tournaments and educative side events, will start on June 11, 2021. The festival organized by the FIDE Commission for Women’s Chess in cooperation with the FIDE Events Commission and with the support of the Asian Chess Federation, African Chess Confederation, European Chess Union, and Confederation of Chess for Americas is a unique all-inclusive event aiming at developing a strong global community of women in chess and enhancing the participation of women in all aspects of chess life. Built on the recent success and appeal of the Netflix series “The Queen’s Gambit”, this event promotes female players, organizers, arbiters, influencers, leaders, and rising stars of all levels, backgrounds and countries. Players from Africa, Asia, Europe and the Americas will first be able to participate in the Continental Online Blitz Qualification Tournaments and those who qualify will advance to the Queens’ Online Individual and Team Finals. You can view the Regulations here. Registrations for the tournaments are made by the National Federations by filling this Excel file and sending it to the organizers’ email address: queensfestival@fide.com For those interested in various chess-related topics, we prepared seminars and networking events with special guests including Dana Reizniece-Ozola, Dinara Saduakassova, Jennifer Shahade, Susan Namangale, Regina Pokorna, Sarkhan Gashimov, Dr. Gnounewou Fopa Seraphin and others. Registration for side events is here. More information about the event can be found at queensfestival.fide.com We invite all female chess enthusiasts to participate, play, learn and connect. Doing what we love, together we can make a difference in our global chess community! Eva Repkova, Chair of FIDE WOM Commission
Round 6: Valentina’s vultures
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Zhansaya Abdumalik (KAZ) and Mariya Muzychuk (UKR) are the co-leaders going into the rest day of the Gibraltar leg of the FIDE Women’s Grand Prix which took place at the Caleta Hotel on 27 May 2021. Zhansaya and Mariya drew their game to move to 4½ out of 6, and are followed by Kateryna Lagno (RUS) on 4. The round started quietly but we were in for a rousing finale when Elisabeth Paehtz (GER) and Valentina Gunina (RUS) played out an exciting second session. We’ll save it for last. The first game to finish was a quiet draw in a Grünfeld between Dinara Saduakassova (KAZ) and Kateryna Lagno (RUS). Dinara has had a tough tournament and perhaps wants to refocus on the rest day and see what she can achieve in the final five rounds. Kateryna is playing cautiously, with one eye on her rivals for the Candidates’ place that is sure to be available from the Gibraltar tournament. A second draw was sealed in the game between Antoaneta Stefanova and Anna Muzychuk. This started life as a QGD, with some resemblance to a 2.c3 Sicilian in due course. A cagey game ensured, with both players steering clear danger. The third game to end was the clash between the two tournament leaders, Zhansaya Abdumalik and Mariya Muzychuk. In Rossolimo Sicilian, both players castled kingside, with Mariya (Black) advancing her kingside pawns nevertheless, and Zhansaya countering in the centre. Material gradually disappeared from the board and the players agreed to a draw as the game moved towards a level rook endgame. Finally, after around three hours’ play, we saw a couple of decisive outcomes. I think it’s fair to say that both came as a result of blunders and perhaps some tiredness after six solid days of uncompromising chess. Alina Kashlinskaya, after playing a Petroff Defence, miscalculated a long variation and was stunned when Gunay Mammadzada played a temporary queen sacrifice to win material. Or perhaps Alina missed an intermezzo check in an even longer variation. This was another blow for the Russian player who has had a nightmare tournament. Let’s hope she can recover after the rest day. At the same time, we must congratulate Gunay for her tactical opportunism and energetic play. She followed up her win of material accurately and efficiently. Nana Dzagnidze tried an unusual line of the Sicilian against Irina Bulmaga and it paid off handsomely as she emerged with a comfortable position from the opening. Nana said she didn’t like Irina’s move 10.Qd3. It was interesting that analysis engines disagreed with her at first, but then came round to Nana’s way of thinking after a few more moves. Nana felt confident she was better after she placed her bishop on e5. Irina’s position kept worsening the move and she tried a piece sacrifice with 20.Bxd5, but it achieved little and the rest of the game proved to be a technical mopping up operation. The game of the day was also the longest. Elisabeth Paehtz’s encounter with Valentina Gunina began with an unusual line of the Caro-Kann. After queens were exchanged, Elisabeth emerged with a spatial advantage which she maintained well into the middlegame. Her prospects looked promising but then she played 32.b6. This might have been a little hasty as Valentina responded with a very clever exchange for pawn sacrifice which received the analysis engine’s seal of approval. As the players reached the time control, Black was arguably a little better, with two passed pawns ably supported by two bishops. The game still might have turned out a draw, but Elisabeth made a further mistake and Valentina’s demon bishops started to menace her king like vultures. White’s king found itself herded to the side of the board as the black bishops and rook circled. The problem for Elisabeth was that she was so short of time and her defensive moves rather harder to find than Valentina’s attacking ones. Sure enough, as her time ebbed away, Valentina found a way through Elisabeth’s various tactical tricks to escape the net and mated the white king. It was an exhausting game for both players. Even in victory, Valentina was still in shock as she left the playing hall and didn’t utter a word until I began the interview. Candidates Tournament: Qualification Possibilities As we reach the halfway mark of the tournament, it’s time to give consideration to the principal reward of the Women’s Grand Prix series: qualification for the Candidates Tournament. The full current standings after three tournaments can be found here. Aleksandra Goryachkina (RUS), with 398 points, has already secured the top place in the Grand Prix but she has also qualified for the Candidates via a different route as world championship runner-up. So that means the two people to qualify for the Candidates via the Grand Prix will be numbers two and three in the Grand Prix overall points table. Before the Gibraltar tournament, Humpy Koneru, who is not playing here, was in second place with 293 points. Three Gibraltar contestants, Nana Dzagnidze (180), Kateryna Lagno (180) and Anna Muzychuk (165) can still pass her score with a first or second place, but that would only push the Indian grandmaster down to third place, which still qualifies. Thus it would need two of the above names to finish first and second or share first place, to deprive Humpy Koneru of a spot in the Candidates. Another Gibraltar non-participant, Alexandra Kosteniuk, currently has 193 Grand Prix points to be in third place. But, to qualify, she would need all three Gibraltar participants cited above to score fewer than 13 points. Sadly for Alexandra, this is not mathematically possible as the player who finishes last in Gibraltar scores 10 Grand Prix points but, fatal to Alexandra’s aspirations, the 11th placed finisher scores 20 points. Even if two of the above players were to tie for last, they would still score 15 points each and overtake Alexandra. This means that at least one player currently in the Gibraltar line-up must overtake Alexandra and qualify for the Candidates from Gibraltar. Together with Nana, Kateryna and Anna, a fourth player in the line-up has a theoretical chance of qualifying for