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Press Release by John Henderson
2003 AF4C US Chess Championships, 9-18 January Northwest
Rooms, Seattle.
They're coming to America. 11th January 2003

It's ironic that, in the aftermath of Bobby Fischers
historic victory over the legendary Soviet Chess machine, nowadays its
the Russians who dominate the American game - and with the big boost in the
prize fund brought with sponsorship of the AF4C, many more are eagerly signing
up to play under the Star Spangled Banner. This year's new edition to the field
is second seed Alexander Goldin, a former Soviet Junior Champion. Already it
looks as if next year's Alexander Onischuk will be amongst the contestants.
With many émigrés now living in America, many
joke that the U.S. Championships could easily be mistaken for the USSR
Championships. Half the field in the present U.S. Championships (29) belongs to
the former Soviet Union, two of which at the top having contrasting passages to
the West: Gregory Kaidanov and Boris Gulko.
Gulko, who is also one of the few players with a plus score
against Garry Kasparov, spent most of his life in the former Soviet Union and
is the only player to have won both the USSR and US titles (though Elena
Donaldson has also won both the USSR and US Women's title). In 1977 he took
joint first place along with Iosif Dorfman in one of the strongest tournaments
of all time, the USSR championship.
In his early days he was regarded as a potential challenger
for the world crown. However it was not to be due to political persecution that
thwarted a promising career at its peak. During the late 70s, Boris and
his wife, Anna (who after ending a protest fast was deprived of the 1982 USSR
womens title due to a blatant official fraud), attempted to emigrate to
the West and had to endured persecution and even imprisonment as "refusniks" in
a Gulag. As further punishment both werent allowed by the Soviet
authorities to compete in international competition until 1986 when, under
intense international pressure, they were both granted exit visas and
eventually settled in Fairlawn, New Jersey.

Boris Gulko
A two-time U.S. Champion in 1994 and 1999, Boris has also
been a candidate for the World Championship title several times. He also has
represented the U.S. team eight times at chess Olympiads and was a member of
the team that won gold for the U.S. during the World Team Championships in
Lucerne, 1993.
No such hardships however for the sole leader for the
tournament, as No.1 seed Gregory Kaidanov, from Lexington, KY, emerges from the
field of 58 to be the only player on a maximum score of 3/3. In 1990 Gregory
and his wife visited the U.S. for the first time as tourists and it was an
eventful experience (they were held up at gunpoint and lost all their money -
Welcome to America!) which led to an invitation to teach chess for a year in
Kentucky. One year became many, and there have been no second thoughts. In 1992
Kaidanov was the undisputed leader of the Open tournament circuit in the US by
virtue of winning the World Open, the National Open, the U.S. Open and the
Novag Grand Prix. Gregory was a member of the U.S. winning team at the 1993
World Team Championship in Lucerne, Switzerland; bronze-medal winning team at
the 1996 Chess Olympiad in Yerevan and the silver-medal winning team at the
1998 Chess Olympiad in Elista.
Kaidanov has won more than 25 international tournaments in
his career. Among his latest victories is a first place at the 2002 Aeroflot
Open in Moscow, considered to be one of the strongest open tournaments in the
history of chess (82 out of 120 participants were grandmasters). In winning the
tournament, Kaidanov took home $18,500. Then it was one of the biggest prizes
of the chess year 2002 outwith an elite event featuring the likes of Kasparov,
Kramnik, Anand & Co. Yet, despite all his success on the circuit, Kaidanov
has never won the coveted US title, which this year has a record prize fund of
$255,000, with $25,000 slotted for the winner. Now with a good start of 3/3, he
has put himself in an ideal position to go on to capture his first US title -
which would make him the first player from the Bluegrass State of Kentucky to
win the title since Jackson Showalter in 1909. Gregory's website can be found
at http://www.kaidanov.com
Joining Gulko in the chasing pack just a half point behind
Kaidanov is another four players from the former Soviet Union: Alexander
Shabalov, Eugene Perelshteyn, and Varuzhan Akobian and Yury Lapshun, who for
some reason played on a US Championship record-breaking 162 move game that
could have easily have been drawn at move 80!
 http://www.af4c.org
Round 3
1 GM Gennadi Zaitshik 0-1 GM Gregory Kaidanov; 2 IM
Varuzhan Akobian draw IM Yury Lapshun; 3 IM Jesse Kraai 0-1 GM Boris Gulko; 4
GM Alexander Shabalov 1-0 GM John Fedorowicz; 5 IM Hikaru Nakamura draw GM Nick
De Firmian; 6 WGM Elena Donaldson 0-1 IM Boris Kreiman; 7 GM Alex Fishbein draw
WGM Irina Krush; 8 GM Alexander Stripunsky draw GM Dmitry Gurevich; 9 GM Walter
Browne draw GM Larry Christiansen; 10 GM Alex Yermolinsky draw FM Igor Foygel;
11 IM Eugene Perelshteyn 1-0 GM Sergey Kudrin; 12 GM Alexander Goldin draw GM
Maurice Ashley; 13 GM Yasser Seirawan 1-0 IM Dean Ippolito; 14 FM Aaron Pixton
0-1 GM Joel Benjamin; 15 WGM Kamile Baginskaite 1-0 WFM Laura Ross; 16 IM
Stanislav Kriventsov 0-1 IM Ben Finegold; 17 IM Ron Burnett 0-1 GM Alexander
Ivanov; 18 GM Gregory Serper draw GM Anatoly Lein; 19 FM Stephen Muhammad 1-0
IM Michael Mulyar; 20 IM Justin Sarkar 1-0 IM Greg Shahade; 21 FM Tegshsuren
Enkhbat draw WIM Jennifer Shahade; 22 IM William Paschall 1-0 Julia Shiber; 23
David Pruess 1-0 IM John Donaldson; 24 IM Larry Kaufman 1-0 WIM Elina
Groberman; 25 FM Allan Bennett 0-1 IM John Watson; 26 FM Gregory Markzon 0-1
WIM Esther Epstein; 27 WIM Olga Sagalchik 1-0 Marc Esserman; 28 WIM Tsagaan
Battsetseg 1-0 WIM Cindy Tsai; 29 Anna Levina 0-1 WIM Anna Hahn
Leader board: 1 GM G Kaidanov 3/3; 2-6 GM B Gulko, GM A
Shabalov, IM V Akobian, GM Y Lapshun, IM E Perelshteyn 2.5; 7-25 GM Y Seirawan,
GM J Benjamin, GM N De Firmian, GM A Stripunsky, GM L Christiansen, GM A
Yermolinsky, IM B Finegold, GM A Ivanov, IM H Nakamura, GM G Zaitshik, IM B
Kreiman, GM W Browne, GM D Gurevich, FM I Foygel, GM M Ashley, IM J Kraai, IM W
Paschall, FM S Muhammad, IM J Sarkar 2; 26-38 GM A Goldin, GM G Serper, GM S
Kudrin, GM J Fedorowicz, GM A Fishbein, FM T Enhbat, GM A Lein, IM L Kaufman,
WGM K Baginskaite, WGM I Krush, IM J Watson, WIM J Shahade, D Pruess 1.5; 39-50
IM M Mulyar, IM G Shahade, FM A Pixton, IM S Kriventsov, IM D Ippolito, IM R
Burnett, 45 WGM E Donaldson, WIM T Battsetseg, WIM A Hahn, WIM E Epstein, WIM O
Sagalchik, J Shiber 1; 51-54 IM J Donaldson, FM A Bennett, WFM L Ross, WIM E
Groberman 0.5; 55-58 FM G Markzon, M Esserman, WIM C Tsai, A Levina 0.
You can follow all 29 games live over the Internet at
http://www.af4c.org. |