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November, 2008
(scroll down for most current news)
II November, 2008 
III November, 2008  
IV November, 2008 

November 7, 2008:

Darlings!  Here is my entire November, 2008 column that I prepared for Chessville for you to enjoy!  No advertising!

November 1, 2008

Home for Thanksgiving

Americans celebrate Thanksgiving Day on the 4th Thursday in November every year.  This year, Thanksgiving falls on November 27, 2008, a mere two days after the end of the Dresden Chess Olympiad.  Will our players be back home in time to celebrate with their families and loved ones?  I sure hope so - and here's hoping for a fantastic showing for Teams USA (okay, I'm biased, I admit it).  

I'm waiting for Xena and her new horse to arrive back home on a slow boat from China (maybe they'll be here by Thanksgiving Day). You wouldn't believe the rigamarole we had to go through with Customs, import/export rules, live-animal rule, etc. etc.  Horsey is pissed off extremely incensed and upset that he has apparently been dumped in favor of this imitation Tang Dynasty Model.  Well, this imitation Tang Dynasty Model certainly is beautiful - I just love that cheesy horse smile, don't you? - and he certainly is BIG!  Xena's feet don't reach the stirrups, but she doesn't give a rip about that.  Is this the end for Horsey?  Is Horsey being sent into ignominious retirement?  Will Xena switch back to her harem pants to ride her new Monster Horse?  She's positively indecent trying to ride in that dress (fortunately, the Tang-style saddle with high pommel hides a lot).  (Photo:  Xena and Monster Horse, taken somewhere on the northwestern steppes of Mongolia, just over the Chinese border).  

Recent Events:

European Club Cup
October 16 - 24, 2008
Here are the final rankings of all the chess femmes who participated, according to Performance Rating:

1 IM Ovod Evgenija 2429 Spartak Vidnoe 2859 3,0 3 100,0 4 (Like - Wow!  Very impressive!)
2 IM Dzagnidze Nana 2503 Cercle d'Echecs Monte Carlo 2707 6,0 7 85,7 2
3 GM Stefanova Antoaneta 2548 Spartak Vidnoe 2694 5,0 6 83,3 1
4 IM Harika Dronavalli 2462 Economist SGSEU Saratov 2689 4,0 5 80,0 2
5 IM Muzychuk Anna 2508 T-com Podgorica 2649 5,5 7 78,6 1
6 GM Koneru Humpy 2618 Cercle d'Echecs Monte Carlo 2646 4,5 6 75,0 1
7 IM Ushenina Anna 2496 Economist SGSEU Saratov 2541 4,5 7 64,3 1
8 GM Chiburdanidze Maia 2489 MIKA Yerevan 2523 3,0 5 60,0 1
9 GM Lahno Kateryna 2488 MIKA Yerevan 2519 4,0 6 66,7 2
10 IM Kosintseva Tatiana 2513 Spartak Vidnoe 2507 4,5 6 75,0 3
11 WGM Sharevich Anna 2322 EPAM 2504 3,5 4 87,5 4
12 IM Maric Alisa 2405 T-com Podgorica 2494 4,5 7 64,3 2
13 IM Zatonskih Anna 2440 EPAM 2485 3,5 6 58,3 1 (US Women's Champion)
14 GM Hoang Thanh Trang 2483 EPAM 2482 3,0 6 50,0 1
15 IM Khurtsidze Nino 2417 MIKA Yerevan 2479 3,5 5 70,0 4
16 GM Zhao Xue 2518 Spartak Vidnoe 2475 3,0 5 60,0 2
17 IM Korbut Ekaterina 2459 Finek St. Petersburg 2471 3,0 6 50,0 1
18 IM Cmilyte Viktorija 2512 Finek St. Petersburg 2469 3,5 6 58,3 1
19 IM Matveeva Svetlana 2411 EPAM 2462 2,5 5 50,0 3
20 IM Mkrtchian Lilit 2443 MIKA Yerevan 2460 3,5 5 70,0 3
21 IM Kovalevskaya Ekaterina 2439 T-com Podgorica 2458 5,5 7 78,6 4
22 WGM Motoc Alina 2313 CS Cotnari-Politehnica Iasi 2452 6,0 7 85,7 3
23 WGM Hou Yifan 2578 Spartak Vidnoe 2448 2,0 4 50,0 1
24 WIM Cherenkova Kristina 2245 Aspropirgos Attikis 2423 4,5 7 64,3 2
25 IM Skripchenko Almira 2455 Cercle d'Echecs Monte Carlo 2422 3,0 4 75,0 4
26 IM Foisor Cristina Adela 2365 Radnicki Rudovci 2419 5,5 7 78,6 2
27 GM Cramling Pia 2550 Cercle d'Echecs Monte Carlo 2414 3,0 6 50,0 1
28 WGM Kovanova Baira 2379 Economist SGSEU Saratov 2413 4,5 7 64,3 3
29 IM Atalik Ekaterina 2432 EPAM 2407 3,5 7 50,0 2
30 IM Ciuksyte Dagne 2339 Panevezys Chess Club 2405 4,5 7 64,3 1
31 IM Socko Monika 2434 Cercle d'Echecs Monte Carlo 2386 2,5 5 50,0 3
32 WGM Zhukova Natalia 2488 Finek St. Petersburg 2384 3,0 6 50,0 2
33 IM Danielian Elina 2513 MIKA Yerevan 2383 3,5 7 50,0 1
34 IM Paehtz Elisabeth 2471 Economist SGSEU Saratov 2375 3,5 7 50,0 2
35 WGM Stojanovic Andjelija 2357 Rudar Ugljevik 2368 4,5 7 64,3 1
36 WFM Congiu Mathilde 2230 Vandoeuvre Echecs 2341 3,5 7 50,0 1
37 IM Gaponenko Inna 2473 T-com Podgorica 2327 3,5 7 50,0 3
38 WFM Fakhretdinova Margarita 2147 Aspropirgos Attikis 2311 4,0 7 57,1 3
39 WGM Voicu Carmen 2239 SK Gross-Lehna 2285 3,5 6 58,3 2
40 WGM Demina Julia 2357 Finek St. Petersburg 2268 2,5 4 62,5 3
41 WGM Chelushkina Irina 2360 Radnicki Rudovci 2266 3,0 7 42,9 1
42 IM Kosintseva Nadezhda 2468 Spartak Vidnoe 2263 2,0 4 50,0 3
43 WGM Cosma Elena Luminita 2340 CS Cotnari-Politehnica Iasi 2262 4,5 7 64,3 2
44 IM Peptan Corina-Isabela 2430 CS Cotnari-Politehnica Iasi 2252 3,0 7 42,9 1
45 IM Turova Irina 2381 Finek St. Petersburg 2251 4,0 6 66,7 4
46 WFM Botvinnik Irina 2239 Herzliya Chess Club 2251 3,0 7 42,9 1
47 WGM Pitam Ella 2295 Madatech Haifa Chess Club 2234 3,0 7 42,9 1
48 WFM Steil-Antoni Fiona 2166 Vandoeuvre Echecs 2229 3,0 7 42,9 2
49 Porat Maya 2167 Madatech Haifa Chess Club 2202 5,0 7 71,4 4
50 WIM Daulyte Deimante 2278 Panevezys Chess Club 2196 3,0 7 42,9 2
51 WIM Papadopoulou Vera 2196 Aspropirgos Attikis 2172 1,5 7 21,4 1
52 WIM Boric Elena 2292 Rudar Ugljevik 2153 3,5 7 50,0 2
53 WFM Vujic-Katanic Branka 2107 Rudar Ugljevik 2147 4,0 7 57,1 3
54 Genzling Sylvie 1936 Bischwiller 2140 2,0 7 28,6 1
55 WGM Karlovich Anastazia 2256 SK Gross-Lehna 2138 2,5 6 41,7 1
56 IM Petrenko Svetlana 2285 SK Gross-Lehna 2135 2,0 6 33,3 1
57 WFM Limontaite Simona 2197 Panevezys Chess Club 2105 4,5 7 64,3 4
58 Klipper Rebecca 2023 Vandoeuvre Echecs 2101 2,5 7 35,7 3
59 WGM Olarasu Gabriela 2297 Radnicki Rudovci 2099 3,0 7 42,9 3
60 Iordanidou Zoi 2110 Aspropirgos Attikis 2096 2,5 7 35,7 4
61 WIM Makka Ioulia 2220 Panevezys Chess Club 2089 3,0 7 42,9 3
62 WGM Igla Bella 2254 Madatech Haifa Chess Club 2087 2,5 7 35,7 2
63 WIM Paulet Iozefina 2307 CS Cotnari-Politehnica Iasi 2083 4,0 6 66,7 4
64 Nagel Verena 2052 SK Gross-Lehna 2023 2,0 5 40,0 3
65 Len Irina 2091 Herzliya Chess Club 2016 2,0 7 28,6 2
66 Grapsa Georgia 2121 Galaxias Thessaloniki 2006 1,5 7 21,4 1
67 Vovinkina Natalia 2147 Madatech Haifa Chess Club 2002 2,0 7 28,6 3

12th Essent Chess Tournament (Hoogeveen)
October 17 - 25, 2008
GM Marie Sebag (FRA 2533), the world's newest minted female to earn the coveted GM title, had a tough time in this event.  You'll recall that Sebag earned her third and final GM norm by hanging tough in the "Open" section of the 2008 Individual European Chess Championships (April 21 - May 3, 2008, finishing  with 6.5/11, good enough for 71st place out of 337 (covered in the May, 2008 column).  (Sebag was the Featured Chess Femme in the June, 2008 column).  Sebag skipped the 2008 Women's World Chess Championship (I don't blame her one bit!), but will be competing for France in the Dresden Olympiad.  Here are the final standings from Hoogeveen:

1. Sokolov, Ivan NED g NED 2650 5 2847
2. Adly, Ahmed g EGY 2586 2½ 2538
3. Smeets, Jan g NED 2604 2½ 2532
4. Sebag, Marie g FRA 2533 2 2488

16th North American FIDE Invitational 
October 18 -24, 2008
The North American Chess Association has slowly and steadily been increasing the scope of its activities under the watchful eye of Bill Goichberg's megalith, the Continental Chess Association, and is currently organizing at least one event of national scope a month.  NACA recently held its 16th FIDE invitational event, again in near-suburban Chicago.  These invitational events are specifically designed to give up-and-coming players an opportunity to earn FIDE norms (as well as getting some good OTB experience against seasoned players) and often feature one or two chess femmes.  In the 16th, WFM Alisa Melekhina played, aiming for one or more norms.  You'll remember Melekhina from her fine play a few years ago in the 2007 U.S. Women's Chess Championship (she was the youngest player), when she came in tied with veteran WGM Camilla Baginskaite for 6-7 place, with 4.0/9.  Besides being a young American player I've been keeping on my eye on, Melekhina came to my attention because of her interest in "The Eight," a book I can say, looking back, changed my life.  (Scroll down the Chess Cafe article for information on Melekhina and "The Eight.")  (Photo: Melekhina, NACA website).  

1st - IM Valay Parikh - 7/9
2nd - IM Ben Finegold - 6.5/9
3rd - IM Angelo Young - 5.5/9
4th-5th - FM Peter Bereolos & FM Florin Felecan - 5/9
6th-7th - FM Dale Haessel & IM Emory Tate - 4/9
8th - FM Mehmed Pasalic - 3.5/9
9th - WFM Alisa Melekhina - 3/9
10th - FM Aleksander Stamnov - 1.5/9

WMSGlead.jpg1st World Mind Sports Games 
October 3 - 18, 2008 

Beijing, China
FIDE published this official list of female chessplayer participants.  According to this press release from the United States Chess Federation on July 24, 2008, this was the American line-up for the chess femmes.

It was not a good event for American players, darlings.  Not a single medal won by the USA.  Nor was a single medal won by England, France, Spain, Germany, Italy, Turkey, etc. etc.  Hmmm...  Total medal count (courtesy of The Week in Chess):

1. China: 4 Gold, 3 Silver, 2 Bronze;
2. Russia: 2 Gold, 1 Silver
3. Ukraine: 1 Gold, 3 Silver; 3 Bronze;
4. Bulgaria: 1 Gold, 1 Silver;
5-6. Ecuador, Hungary: 1 Gold each;
7. Vietnam: 1 Silver, 1 Bronze
8. India: 1 Silver;
9. Iran: 2 Bronze;
10-11. Greece, Singapore: 1 Bronze each.

Individual Women's Blitz Championship:  (All games here in PGN and for replay)

Photo from official website: Kosteniuk takes Women's Gold in Individual Blitz.  Stevanova takes Silver, Hou Yifan takes Bronze.  Chessdom.com provided an analysis of the final Armageddon game between Kosteniuk and Stefanova that decided the title.

Individual Women's Rapid Championship:

1 GM Stefanova Antoaneta BUL 2548 8
2 GM Zhao Xue CHN 2518 7
3 WGM Huang Qian CHN 2430 6
4 IM Houska Jovanka ENG 2399 6

Team Blitz Championship Women:  (All games here in PGN and for replay)

1 2 Russia
2 1 China
3 3 Vietnam
4 4 Turkey

 

 

 

 

Women: CHN - RUS (Final Game)
1.1   Hou Yifan (CHN) 0-1   Kosteniuk Alexandra (RUS)  View 
1.2   Pogonina Natalija (RUS) 1-0   Zhao Xue (CHN)  View 
1.3   Huang Qian (CHN) 0-1   Gunina Valentina (RUS)  View 
1.4   Vasilevich Irina (RUS) 0-1   Ruan Lufei (CHN)  View 
Women: TUR - VIE (Final Game)
2.1   Topel Zehra (TUR) 0-1   Hoang Thi Nhu Y (VIE)  View 
2.2   Hoang Thi Bao Tram (VIE) 1-0   Yildiz Betul Cemre (TUR)  View 
2.3   Ozturk Kubra (TUR) 0-1   Pham Le Thao Nguyen (VIE)  View 
2.4   Le Kieu Thien Kim (VIE) 1-0   Bayrak Asli (TUR)  View 

Team Rapid Championship Women:  (All games here in PGN and for replay)

1 2 China
2 4 Ukraine
3 1 Russia
4 3 Vietnam

 

 

 

 

Women: UKR - CHN (Final Game)
1.1   Vasilevich Tatjana (UKR) 0-1   Hou Yifan (CHN)  View 
1.2   Zhao Xue (CHN) 1-0   Zdebskaja Natalia (UKR)  View 
1.3   Hryhorenko Nataliya (UKR) ½-½   Xu Yuhua (CHN)  View 
1.4   Huang Qian (CHN) ½-½   Arutyunova Diana (UKR)  View 
Women: RUS - VIE (Final Game)
2.1   Kosteniuk Alexandra (RUS) ½-½   Hoang Thi Bao Tram (VIE)  View 
2.2   Pham Le Thao Nguyen (VIE) ½-½   Pogonina Natalija (RUS)  View 
2.3   Gunina Valentina (RUS) 1-0   Le Kieu Thien Kim (VIE)  View 
2.4   Dang Bich Ngoc (VIE) 0-1   Vasilevich Irina (RUS)  View 

Cap d'Agade
October 25 - November 1, 2008
Sixteen players formed 2 teams to face off against each other in this rapid chess invitational, and several chess femmes were on each team.  Unfortunately, none of them made it to the quarter-finals.  Here were the Teams:

"A" Team: "B" Team:
Vassily Ivanchuk
2786
Magnus Carlsen
2786
Maxime Vachier Lagrave
2716
Teimour Radjabov
2751
Bu Xiangzhi
2704
Hikaru Nakamura
2704
Ivan Cheparinov 
2696
Anatoly Karpov
2651
Fabiano Caruana 
2640
Humpy Koneru
2618
Marie Sebag 
2533
Hou Yifan
2578
Alexandra Kosteniuk
2525
Sebastien Feller
2526
Katerina Lahno 
2488
Almira Skripchenko
2455
Average Elo
2636
Average Elo
2634

Photo:  Experience versus Youth (Karpov v. Hou)

This kind of event starkly shows the still-existing gap between some of the best chess femmes in the world and top-ranked male players.  Sebag is a newly-minted GM, having shown her mettle in the "Open" Section at the 2008 European Individual Chess Championships, Kosteniuk is the newly-minted Women's World Chess Champion and won a gold medal in Women's Individual Blitz at the 1st World Mind Sports Games, Lahno won a repeat Gold in the Women's event at the 2008 European Individual Chess Championships, Hou won medals at the 1st World Mind Sports Game and went all the way to the finals in the 2008 Women's World Chess Championship, only to lose to GM Alexandra Kosteniuk.  These are some seasoned female players - but the relative differences in ELO (even allowing for the artificially depressed ELOs of the chess femmes because they mostly play against other chess femmes with equally low ELOs) demonstrates that rankings do tell - there's just no way to overcome a 200 to 300 point differential in ELO without earning lots of bumps and bruises along the way -- assuming these chess femmes will continue along that rocky road (hope they will!)  On the other hand, not many top ranked chess hommes can beat Ivanchuk (he's had a tremendous 2007-2008 season) and future World Champion Carlsen :)

Photo:  The Geek versus the Beauty ( Vachier Lagrave v. Lahno)

Only the top 4 finishers in each group moved on to the quarter-finals:

Fabiano Caruana (2640) : 5,5 - Magnus Carlsen (2786) : 5,5
Vassily Ivanchuk (2786) : 5,0 - Hikaru Nakamura (2704) : 5,5
Maxime Vachier Lagrave (2716) : 4,5 - Teimour Radjabov (2751) : 5,0
Bu Xiangzhi (2704) : 4,5 - Anatoly Karpov (2651) : 3,5
Ivan Cheparinov (2696) : 4,0 - Hou Yifan (2578) : 3,5
Alexandra Kosteniuk (2525) : 2,0 - Humpy Koneru (2618) : 2,0
Katerina Lahno (2488) : 2,0 - Sebastien Feller (2526) : 2,0
Marie Sebag (2533) : 0,5 - Almira Skripchenko (2455) : 1,0

 

Current Events:

The Casino De Barcelona
October 30 - November 7, 2008
The Casino of Barcelona (Marina Avenue, 19-21 ), 10 player round-robin.  GM Antoaneta Stefanova (BUL 2550), on her non-stop schedule this year, is the lone chess femme playing in this invitational.  Here are the other players:  GM Alexey Dreev (2670); GM Baadur Jobava (2664); GM Kiril Georgiev (2644); GM Holden Hernández (2580); GM Artur Kogan (2561); GM Boris Gulko (2552) IM Fidel Corrales (2551); GM JM. López (2547); GM Marc Narciso (2511). (Photo:  Chessdom.com)

Through the first four rounds, Stefanova has 4 draws:

R1: GM Gulko Boris 2552 - GM Stefanova Antoaneta 2548 ½-½
R2: GM Stefanova Antoaneta 2548 - GM Georgiev Kiril 2645 ½-½
R3: GM Narciso Dublan Marc 2511 - GM Stefanova Antoaneta 2548 ½-½
R4: 10 GM Stefanova Antoaneta 2548 - GM Kogan Artur 2561 ½-½

Games.  Interestingly, Stefanova started her Round 2 game as white with (1) d4 (does that remind you of something we've all seen recently???) and Round 3, where Stefanova was playing black, also started (1) d4.  The new rage darlings - yawn.

Upcoming Events:

World Blitz Chess Championship 2008
November 7 - 8, 2008
Almaty, Republic of Kazakhstan
GM Judit Polgar is playing in this fluff invitation only event - a good way to "spread the wealth" among the top money earners of the chess world. Prize Fund of 350, 000 Swiss Francs. 80% of them (280, 000 Swiss Francs) are for the participants, and the rest is for FIDE (what a racket!) All players will receive prizes. The champion will receive 80 000 Swiss Francs and the 16th place is awarded 5000 Swiss Francs.  B-O-R-I-N-G not to mention S-O-C-I-A-L-I-S-T!

2008 Chess Olympiad
November 12 - 25, 2008
Dresden, Germany
A record number of teams will be participating, and some of the strongest teams ever will be representing traditional chess power houses such as Russia, China, Armenia - and that's the Women's Teams.  [At this point I'm not sure how much coverage I'll be giving this event.  I'll be following Team USA and probably the Russians, Chinese and Indian Women's teams as well.]

In the News:

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October 3, 2008:  Rashida Corbin is New Barbados Chess Queen, Barbados National Champion Named, from The Barbados Advocate.  

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October 8, 2008: Soraya Homam wins the Women's World Open II, Women's World Open result from Live pokerPartyPoker.com.

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October 9, 2008:  From Russia With Love. Profile of GM Alexandra Kosteniuk, the newest Women's World Chess Champion, from The Times of India.

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October 10, 2008:  Lan Huong brings home xiangqi bronze. VietNamNet Bridge – Ngo Lan Huong yesterday secured a bronze medal in the women's individual xiangqi (Chinese chess) event at the first-ever World Mind Sports Games, held in Beijing, China.

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October 11, 2008:  Second Aqaprofit-Polgar Chess Day.  Judit Polgar, Zsuzsa Polgar and Zsofia Polgar played simuls against 100 in Budapest.  There are many photographs of the Polgar sisters. 

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October 13, 2008:  WGM Hou Yifan Wins First Gold Medal at Mindsports Games, from People's Daily Online.

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October 14, 2008:  Lady chessers sow terror in 14U class, from The Philippines Sun Star.  

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October 14, 2008:  Alisha Chawa, Chess Princess:  Fremont girl is a chess star at age 7

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October 15, 2008:  Chess Princess: Margaret Hua.  Ten-year old set to compete in World Chess Tournament, from the KWMU (Public Broadcasting).  

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October 15, 2008:  Judit Polgar:  Queen of chess players makes the right moves, from The Financial Times (as reported at Susan Polgar's blog).

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October 16, 2008:  Sarah Chiang Makes Second Trip to World Youth Chess Championship, from the Southlake Times Star.  

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October 30, 2008:  Padmini Rout bags gold in World Youth Chess Championship, from The Times of India.

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October 30, 2008:  Philippines University Games, from The Visayan Daily Star: Women from Bacolod schools hogged the spotlight yesterday as University of Negros Occidental-Recoletos woodpushers blitzed the opposition to successfully defend their women’s chess crown, while University of St. La Salle Lady Stingers defeated University of Sto. Tomas to arrange a title showdown against Far Eastern University today in 13th Philippine University Games in Dumaguete City.

Fresh from its 2008 NOPSSCEA championship run and after placing four members in the Top 10 at last week’s Raymundo R. Dizon Jr. Chess Championships in Bacolod City, the Recoletos women swept the seven-round Swiss System tournament with emphatic wins, which included a 3-1 drubbing of eventual runner-up De La Salle University, and a 3.5-.5 win over perennial Bacolod rival and tournament third placer West Negros University.

Powering the Recoletos squad in the 12-team women’s field were Mary Grace Tambasen, Jeniffer Nacion and Cherry Gimarangan – gold medalists on Boards 2, 4 and 5 respectively, and Board 3 bronze medalist Rolanie Villanueva.  Reserve player was Chessie Dela Peña. 

UNO-R’s other victims were Central Philippine University (3.5-.5), Holy Cross of Davao College (4-0), Jose Maria College (3.5-.5), Xavier University (3-1) and Holy Angel University (4-0).  So far ahead were the UNO-Rians that they could have lost their last match to HAU and still emerged champion.

bulletNovember 2, 2008:  I'm not the only woman behind Anand's success, from DNA India.com.  
bulletNovember 2, 2008:  Ugandan chess teams need money to get to Dresden Olympiad (and back?), from The Ugandan Monitor.  (Total needed to send the Men's and Women's teams is approximately 13,338 Euros, of which approximately 1,544 Euros plus one return (round trip?) airline ticket have been donated.  How can this Chess Federation raise that kind of money in such a short period of time, in such a poor country?)  
bulletSpecial Editorial:  Supporting Girls' Scholastic Chess.  My home state (Wisconsin) is a microcosm of what's happening in the United States.  Some important issues to think about, and a blatant plug for the Chess, Goddess and Everything blog.  
bulletSuper-Duper Special:  The long-awaited sequel to the very best chess mystery novel of ALL time has been released!  Yes, it's true darlings!  Katherine Neville's "The Fire" is finally out!  Fans of "The Eight" have been waiting 20 years for the sequel which answers most (but by no means all) of the questions left dangling at the end of "The Eight."  Okay - I know none of you macho chess dudes may ever admit it in a million years, but I'll bet some of you read Dan Brown's "The Da Vinci Code" and his "prequel", "Angels and Demons," which is also a mega hit and soon to hit the big screen with Tom Hanks reprising his role as Professor Robert Langdon.  Rip-roaring good reads, if a bit shallow on the history and stretching things a bit at times.  

Not so Neville.  Her historical research and insight are in-depth and first class all the way.  This is a book that you can't read 5 chapters at a time and figure out where it's going, nosirree!  It's a book you can really get your teeth into.  Read a couple of pages and you're full for the evening!  Yeah, in Neville's writing the most important character is female, and in "The Fire" not only is the main character a female, she is a former child chess prodigy who gave up the game at 12 when her father was killed before her eyes just before a seminal match was to be held in Russia.  Can't deal with strong women - don't read Neville!  If you want a rip-roaring good story with non-stop action (think about how you felt when you first saw "Raiders of the Lost Ark", still one of the best action and faux-archaeology movies of all time), lots of interest historical back-stories about chess, and aren't afraid of human-interaction and psychological conflict, this (and "The Eight") is the book for you.  
bulletSusan Polgar is involved in everything!  She was invited to and at the release party for "The Fire" and rubbed shoulders with people I would eat dirt to meet.  I'm so jealous...
bulletA  review of "The Fire" (there have been many):  Cult classic author Katherine Neville makes next move
| Mystery Fiction Columnist, October 31, 2008
bulletAn excerpt from "The Fire" published at USA Today (September 4, 2008).
bulletTruly Out of This World Special:  Those Gorgeous, Fabulous Las Vegas Showgirls, Candi Kane and Bambi Darlin, provided some special coverage of the World Chess Championship Match between GM Vladimir Kramnik (challenger) and GM "Vishy" Viswanathan Anand to Goddesschess and serialized some reports at the Goddesschess blog - we're waiting with baited breath for the grande denouement, which the Girls have assured me will be coming soon.  The Girls are up to their necks in chess, mystery and intrigue... October 21, 2008 episodeOctober 22, 2008 episodeOctober 23, 2008 episode.

Featured Chess Femme:

Kelly Wang (CAN 1209)

August 3, 2008, entry on Kelly Wang at Goddesschess' Random Round-up:  

CONGRATULATIONS KELLY WANG !  Winner of The Goddesschess Promoted Pawn Award at the 2008 Canadian Open Chess Championship!

With much appreciated assistance from the Quebec Chess Federation and Richard Berube, our most recent award (prize of $100 USD) was presented to Kelly Wang of Montreal, Canada as "the most improved" young women player participating in the 2008 Canadian Open Chess Championship, (section E) held this year in Montreal Quebec.  [Kelly, one of 87 players in the E Group, finished in 42nd place with 4.5/9.] 

Since last year's Turkish Open, those who have been closely following Kelly's progress have remarked upon exceptional improvements in her overall play. Sporting an ELO of 1209, Kelly has also been chosen as this year's Canadian representative in the World Youth Under 8 category for the upcoming international tournament to be held in Vietnam. In a brief telephone interview with Kelly's sister, we learned that she had already put her prize money to good use, purchasing two books - "Sillman's Complete End Game Course" and "The Anthology of Chess Combinations". These choices leave no doubt that Kelly is quite serious about her chess and has a very promising future ahead of her.

Although it was our original intention to dedicate this award to the player who promoted the first pawn of the tournament, we believe this slight change of plan is far better suited to the special skills involved in chess play and wish to thank Richard Berube of the Quebec Chess Federation for his role in facilitating the presentation of our award to Kelly.

In fact, The Goddesschess Partnership is most appreciative of the fact that our award found its way into the hands of a young, up and coming eight year old female chess player promoting her way through the ranks of women's and international chess. It didn't work out the way we planned - but - could this be the hand of a goddess at work?

You betcha, darlings!  Caissa was smiling upon young Ms. Wang (already a seasoned chess veteran) as she ventured forth to the 2008 World Youth Chess Championships in Vietnam. Kelly, ranked 51st upon the start, finished 4th overall in the Girls U-8, scoring 8.0/11 category and did Canada and Montreal proud!   

Ms. Wang won the U-8 Girls section of the 2007and 2008 Canadian Youth Chess Championships.  

Expect to see more of Ms. Wang in the future.

More news and views about women in chess at the Goddesschess Blog

        

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