Archive for the ‘Chess’ Category

Koneru Humpy finishes 12th in blitz world championship – Times of India

MOSCOW: A hat-trick of losses in the last three rounds ended Koneru Humpy's hopes of a second title at the women's World Rapid and Blitz Championships as the Indian Grandmaster finished 12th overall in the two-day blitz competition here.

Kateryna Lagno of Russia and Norway's Magnus Carlsen defended their titles in the women's and men's blitz competition on Monday.

Humpy, who had claimed the World Women's Rapid Chess Championship title after drawing the Armageddon game against Lei Tingjie of China on Saturday, was placed second with seven points from nine rounds after the opening day of the blitz competition.

However, the 32-year-old Indian failed to continue in the same vein and ended the tournament with 10.5 points out of 17 games.

Humpy started the second day of the blitz competition by winning the first two games. She then shared the lead with Lagno after round 13 with two draws.

Following round 13, Humpy and Lagno had 10 points each but the Indian then drew against Russia's Alisa Galliamova in the 14th round to drop to the second position, half-a-point behind Lagno, who had claimed another crucial win.

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Koneru Humpy finishes 12th in blitz world championship - Times of India

Koneru Humpy’s belated World Rapid Chess Championship title nothing short of a resurrection – ESPN India

Minutes after her final Armageddon battle at the World Rapid and Blitz Chess Championship in Moscow, Koneru Humpy grabbed her jacket and phone and darted across the playing hall. The swarm of journalists waiting to get a word out of the newest women's rapid chess champion struggled to keep pace.

Back in Vijayawada, closing in on midnight, Humpy's husband Anvesh Dasari waited for his phone to beam to life. "I won!" the voice at the other end crackled, half in excitement, half in anticipation. Five years into marriage and Anvesh, an electrical engineer by profession, confesses to not being entirely hooked to the moving pieces and alphanumeric notations that make up Humpy's world. On Saturday night, though, he could not peel his eyes off the laptop screen.

"I know the pieces and how they move," Anvesh laughs, "But I still haven't been able to wrap my head around the sport. When she called me after the final game, she wasn't sure if I had got the news and she also wanted to check if our two-year-old daughter had slept. When I told her that I'd been following her games, she was quite surprised and overjoyed."

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Three years ago, Humpy went into a self-imposed break from the rigours of competitive tournaments, with motherhood taking over her life and waking hours. She hit the comeback trail at the 2018 Batumi Olympiad, an event she had skipped through a large part of her career, and went on to win her first major championship since her return at the Skolkovo leg of the FIDE Women's Grand Prix in September this year. For Humpy, the current World No. 3 among women behind Hou Yifan and Ju Wenjun, it's been an arduous wait for a world title. In the classical format, she made the semifinals in 2004, 2008 and 2010 and finished with a bronze medal in the rapid tournament in 2012.

Saturday's games were nothing short of a racy cliffhanger for Humpy. For someone who more than relishes her share of movie outings, the 32-year-old too might well agree. Following eight rounds of play over two days, four players - Irina Bulmaga, Tan Zhongyi, Lei Tingjie, and Mariya Muzychuk - shared first spot with 6.5/8 points, while Humpy was bunched in the second rung with Olga Girya, Kateryna Lagno, Harika Dronavalli, Ekaterina Atalik, and Anna Muzychuk at 6/8.

The standings were scrambled in the final round and Humpy soon found herself in a three-way tie for first place with Tingjie and Atalik.

"When I won my first game in the morning, I didn't have any expectations to finish first," says Humpy, "I thought finishing in the top three would be a great result. But when I reached the tiebreak, I thought this could be a wonderful chance to win my first world title."

She lost the first game on time, but mounted a comeback in the second. "It was a gamble," she reflects on her second game, "but I won. The final game turned out to be a comfortable win. People have been expecting me to win the classical world championship for many years now but each time I've lost in the knockouts. Surely, no one counted me among the likely rapid contenders. I was seeded 13th and have never been too good in this format. So it's really an unexpected win."

Her father Ashok Koneru, a former national chess player who introduced Humpy to the sport when she was five years old, quit his job as an applied science lecturer to be able to coach and accompany his daughter to tournaments. Originally named Hampi, it was later modified to its current version by her father to give it a Russian flavour. Aged six and seven respectively, she won the district and state-level tournaments and went on to lord over the national championships through her pre-teen years which culminated in the world junior title in 2001. "I picked up chess from my father who was a mathematician," Ashok tells ESPN, "His only condition to allow me to pursue it was if I could beat him in a game. I did. It happened all over again when Humpy defeated my father and then me when she was 10." She earned her International Master title at the age of 12, became a Grandmaster at 15 and by crossing a 2600 ELO in October 2007, turned into the second strongest female chess player in history after Judit Polgar.

Despite the glory and gold dust earned by women chess players, the gender gap in the sport remains yawning. Since its inception in 1886, the World Chess Championship, which is open to both sexes and has Magnus Carlsen as its reigning champion, has never in its history had a female winner. The gulf is telling in the ratings as well. The women's No. 1 player Hou Yifan has a current rating of 2664 in comparison to Carlsen's 2872.

For Humpy though, this belated world title is nothing short of a resurrection. Little more than a year ago she was, by her own admission, struggling to reorient herself with the travails of transit and the grind of tournament environment. "Whether she would return to the chess circuit again was never a question for us," says Anvesh, "We both knew she loved the sport too much to be able to stay away for too long. It's not easy as new parents, especially for her as a mother, to travel for tournaments leaving our daughter back at home. But we both decided to manage our schedules in a way that always one of us is there at home for her.

It's also brought about a perceptible shift in goals. Humpy is not chasing ratings and is now in it for herself. "She's also a lot calmer and mature at the board now," says Anvesh, "At least that's what she says, there's no way I could tell!"

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Koneru Humpy's belated World Rapid Chess Championship title nothing short of a resurrection - ESPN India

Raunak makes a positive move in World rapid chess championship – Times of India

LUDHIANA: Raunak Sadhwani got off to a positive start in the King Salman World Rapid and Blitz Chess Championships organized by the World Chess Federation (Fide) in Moscow, Russia.

The 13-year-old Grandmaster from city made his presence felt on the opening day of the 15-round rapid meet by winning three games and suffering couple of defeats to take a joint fourth position.

With three points in his kitty, the 180th ranked Raunak is going steady at the 74th position at the end of five rounds on day one.

A total of 207 participants from 45 countries including 158 GMs and 27 International Masters are in action.

In the opening round of the five-day event Raunak made a silly error with his black pieces to go down fighting against 77th seed and 2603 Elo Russian GM Alekseev Evgeny. Despite the defeat, the fighter in Raunak regained the momentum and powered his way back in the tournament by stunning higher seed GM from Hungary Ruck Robert utilizing the opening advantage with his white pieces.

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Raunak makes a positive move in World rapid chess championship - Times of India

Vladimir Kramnik and Boris Gelfand to train young chess players – The Hindu

Former World champion Vladimir Kramnik and World title challenger Boris Gelfand will share their knowledge at a coaching camp for 14 young chess players, including Grandmasters R. Praggnanandhaa and D. Gukesh.

The camp, organized by Microsense, will be held at East Cost Road here from January 8 to 18.

Apart from Praggnanandhaa and Gukesh, Raunak Sadhwani, Prithu Gupta, P. Iniyan, Arjun Erigaisi, International Masters and women International Masters Rakshitta Ravi and R. Vaishali are among the campers.

Gelfand, a World title Challenger and a contemporary of Anand said: India has a unique generation of talents and aspiring to become the superpower of the chess world.

Some of these juniors have already achieved incredible successes, others are about to follow. I am sure that during our camp theyll learn a lot about the way to think, to approach chess and improve their work ethic. I am very excited to join the project and have no doubts it would be a great experience for everyone.

Kramnik said he was excited to be back in India: After the first camp which we held in Chens-Sur-Leman, France, I am glad that we are having the camp once again.

This time it is even more exciting because it will be held in Chennai, and from six students [then], we will be having 14. I am also very excited that I will be joined by Boris Gelfand to train these youngsters. Incidentally, the last time I was in India was back in 1990s for a match against Boris! Once again I will be in India working alongside him.

Kramnik was grateful to Kailasanathan, Managing Director of Microsense Pvt. Ltd. for having the long-term vision and investing in the future of Indian chess. I am sure it will be of immense benefit to the youngsters. I would also like to thank my friend Frederic Friedel from ChessBase who came up with this idea and Sagar Shah and Amruta Mokal for managing the finer details.

Kailasanathan said coaching at the right time in a systematic manner is very important. The players have been selected from particular age group on existing ratings. We are also working on coaching camps for slightly older players and camps for the even younger talents covering a much larger group.

Our vision and mission are to build India as a powerful chess-playing nation.

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Vladimir Kramnik and Boris Gelfand to train young chess players - The Hindu

The sisters of Enrique Iglesias play chess in a bikini and show their perfect figure – themediatimes

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Cristina and Victoria Iglesias already have many fans on social networks

The twins Cristina and Victoria Iglesias, Daughters of the singer Julio Iglesias and Miranda Rijnsburger, made headlines last year when they reached the age of majority and attended the Dance of Debutants, the event attended by members of the high society.

But in their daily life, Enrique Iglesias Half-sisters like to share moments Instagram; Her publications show her great beauty, like the youngest, in which one plays chess by the sea in a bikini and the other in a white swimsuit.

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According to the message Cristina wrote next to the picture, she won the game. The girls have gradually become followers of this social network, showing their love of riding, fashion and wearing their bodies in bikinis, which reflects that beauty comes from the family.

Previous articleKarina Banda threw herself into the pool and exposed her best curves with a black bikini

The variety of video games always amazes him. He loves the hustle and bustle of OutRun as well as the tranquil walks of Dear Esther. Diving into other worlds is an incomparable feeling for him: he understood it when he first played in Shenmue.

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The sisters of Enrique Iglesias play chess in a bikini and show their perfect figure - themediatimes