While we do not want in any way to endorse the magazine, our journalistic principles necessitate, after we had warned earlier, now to commend the Europa Rochade for acknowledging the composers of chess problems and studies now, thereby being mostly in accordance with the Codex for Chess Composition. This can be seen for fellow composers as an example that they should complain at such magazines.
Indeed, we would like to see the same kind of e-mail sent against the magazine ŠAH-MAT as we sent against the Europa Rochade. Unfortunately we have a language barrier there.
Friday, May 1, 2015
Tuesday, April 21, 2015
Milan Velimirović 64 Memorial Tourney (announcement)
Milan Velimirović 64 Memorial Tourney (21.04.2015 – 21.04.2016)
The Serbian Problem Chess
Society announces Memorial tourney devoted to Grandmaster Milan Velimirović.
There will be three sections in Milan’s
favourite thematic fields: direct #2 and #3, without fairy elements.
A) Single-phase #2
Judge: Barry Barnes (Great Britain).
B) Multi-phase #2 with
cyclic combination named Velimirović Attack
Judge: Touw Hian Bwee (Indonesia).
C) #3 – free theme
Judge: Hans-Peter Rehm (Germany).
With the selection of sections
and judges, whose work and friendship Milan
especially admired, we tried to remain faithful to his unique spirit.
Group A covers the field Milan loved and suggested
in his concept of the 7th WCCT theme, believing it would give composers many
hours of pleasure.
Group B is devoted to one of Milan’s favourite cyclic
invention. Contrary to group A, it will be a real challenge for composers to
compete with the small number of existing examples, all composed by Milan himself. The
definition and the name of the theme were suggested by him, in the article
published in Mat Plus Review Summer 2008”, pages 100-103:
“In tries White
self-invalidates two out of three thematic elements, which are almost
inevitably white lines. Each try provides compensation for one invalidation so
that black can utilize only the remaining one to reject the try. In this way
all thematic tries contain two degrees of attack, i.e. each one is at the same
time a correction and an error to be corrected.”
Group C represents the field
where Milan
produced some of his best known masterpieces. It is not devoted to cyclic
concepts only, because Milan
loved all kinds of attractive chess ideas.
The closing date, April 21st 2016 will mark
Milan’s 64th birthday – the
milestone he found to be the most appropriate one for a chess player or
composer.
The
method of entering originals for the tourney directly to the Mat Plus website
(with automatic confirmation) was created by Milan (click “Originals” on the main Mat Plus
Menu on the left side). It is one of his numerous sophisticated tools for the
benefit of chess composition. Composers unable to use it may send their entries
by e-mail to the Mat Plus administrator: borislav.gadjanski@gmail.com.
PLEASE REPRINT!
Saturday, April 18, 2015
Nur die Besten sterben Junge
Yesterday or today, 70 years ago, one of the greatest German chess players of all time fell in the last days of the madness brought upon Germany and the world by the nazi regime, the World War II.
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Klaus_Junge&oldid=641422473
If Germany ever could have had a world champion after Lasker again, Junge would have without a doubt been a contestant.
His gravestone can be seen here:
http://www.kwabc.org/archive/Home/graeber_02.htm
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Klaus_Junge&oldid=641422473
If Germany ever could have had a world champion after Lasker again, Junge would have without a doubt been a contestant.
His gravestone can be seen here:
http://www.kwabc.org/archive/Home/graeber_02.htm
Sunday, April 5, 2015
Just a thought
Where there is no hard evidence, only what history wants to remember will ultimately be considered the truth.
Monday, March 16, 2015
WCCT 10 Announcement
The WCCT 10 has been announced in memorial of the late Uri Avner. The announcement is available on the website of the WFCC:
http://www.wfcc.ch/10th-wcct-announcement/
http://www.wfcc.ch/competitions/composing/10-wcct/
Yours Truly hopes to be able to participate again. An article on section D will be written for eg with several more studies.
The themes unfortunately can't be copied easily without breaking their markup, resulting in ugly empty lines and other issues. For the full announcement, including regulations and examples, please visit the website given above and download/open the PDF document.
http://www.wfcc.ch/10th-wcct-announcement/
http://www.wfcc.ch/competitions/composing/10-wcct/
Yours Truly hopes to be able to participate again. An article on section D will be written for eg with several more studies.
The themes unfortunately can't be copied easily without breaking their markup, resulting in ugly empty lines and other issues. For the full announcement, including regulations and examples, please visit the website given above and download/open the PDF document.
Tuesday, March 10, 2015
An incredible move
We would like to draw attention to the game of Denis Khismatullin vs. Pavel Eljanov, played on 6 March 2015 in the European Individual Championship in Israel. After 43 moves, the following position was reached:
It did not matter that day. Khismatullin found an impossible way to win.
44.Kg1!!
Wait, what? The rook hangs with check, Black has an incredible passed pawn, and he still is lost? Indeed. The real depth of the trouble can be seen by the computer giving 44.-Rd5(!!) and 44.-Q:c6 as the best suggestions, both of which leave White with a big advantage but Black could fight for a draw. It really is difficult to give a question mark to the next move, although it objectively deserves one.
44.-Q:d1+?
This loses soon, but it is difficult to see why. Most likely Black assumed Khismatullin was going for a draw in style.
45.Kh2 R:c6 46.Qe7+ Kh6 47.Qf8+ Kg5
With a draw, after all, Eljanov might have thought.
48.Q:f7!!
As a postscriptum it should be added that both did not take a top rank. The tournament was won by Jewgeni Najer, in front of David Navara and Mateusz Bartel. If there was a beauty prize, however, this 44.Kg1 would have deserved it.
Thanks to fellow historian Wolfgang Pieper (Osnabrück) for telling me about the game!
White to move
There are five possible moves for White: 44.Ra1, 44.Re1, 44.f4+, 44.h4+ and 44.Qe7+. Let us analyze them.
- 44.Ra1 Rf6 45.f4+ Kh4 46.Qh6+ Kg3 47.Qg5+ Kh2 48.Q:f6 Qe2 mate (or 48.Qg4 h5 49.Qf3 Q:c6 or even stronger 49.-h4! and Black wins).
- 44.Re1 Rf6 45.f4+ Kh4 46.Qh6+ Kg3 47.Qg5+ Kh2 48.c7 Rc6! and Black wins, or 48.Q:f7 Q:g2 mate.
- 44.f4+ Kh4 45.Q:d6 Q:d1+ 46.Kf2 Qe2+ 47.Kg1 Q:e3+ 48.Kh2 Qg3+ 49.Kg1 Qe1+ 50.Kh2 leads to perpetual check.
- 44.h4+ Kh5 45.g4+ K:g4 leaves White in a difficult situation, where 46.Q:f7!! Q:d1+ 47.Kg2 leads to a draw, according to the computer.
- 44.Qe7+ Rf6 45.f4+ Kh6 46.Qf8+ Kh5 is dangerous for White, although here also 47.Kg1!! draws, according to the computer.
It did not matter that day. Khismatullin found an impossible way to win.
44.Kg1!!
Wait, what? The rook hangs with check, Black has an incredible passed pawn, and he still is lost? Indeed. The real depth of the trouble can be seen by the computer giving 44.-Rd5(!!) and 44.-Q:c6 as the best suggestions, both of which leave White with a big advantage but Black could fight for a draw. It really is difficult to give a question mark to the next move, although it objectively deserves one.
44.-Q:d1+?
This loses soon, but it is difficult to see why. Most likely Black assumed Khismatullin was going for a draw in style.
45.Kh2 R:c6 46.Qe7+ Kh6 47.Qf8+ Kg5
With a draw, after all, Eljanov might have thought.
48.Q:f7!!
Black to move
Black has every advantage in this position - active pieces, a rook up, a dangerous passed pawn - except one: The king's security. And as unfair as it is, no matter how good you have played and how many advantages you collected: if you are checkmated, you lose.
And Black will be checkmated sooner or later. The game lasted for another nine moves, which will be given without further comment.
An incredible position we have in this diagram, great play by Khismatullin!
48.-Rf6 49.f4+ Kh6 50.Q:f6 Qe2 51.Qf8+ Kh5 52.Qg7! h6 53.Qe5+ Kh4 54.Qf6+ Kh5 55.f5! g:f5 56.Q:f5+ Kh4 57.Qg6 and Black gave up.
As a postscriptum it should be added that both did not take a top rank. The tournament was won by Jewgeni Najer, in front of David Navara and Mateusz Bartel. If there was a beauty prize, however, this 44.Kg1 would have deserved it.
Thanks to fellow historian Wolfgang Pieper (Osnabrück) for telling me about the game!
Sunday, March 8, 2015
Warning against Europa Rochade
We must warn against the Europa Rochade, as it violates the codex of chess compositions, article 21 on pages 59 and 65 of the March 2015 issue by not naming the sources of the problems and studies presented.
UPDATE, 1 May 2015: The Europa Rochade now shows author's names everywhere, so that is enough of a win for us.
UPDATE, 1 May 2015: The Europa Rochade now shows author's names everywhere, so that is enough of a win for us.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)