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Press Release by John Henderson
2003 AF4C US Chess Championships, 9-18 January Northwest
Rooms, Seattle.
In the shoes of the Fischerman Round Four 12th January
2003
Despite having last played in the US Championships in 1966,
to this day Bobby Fischer continues to cast a giant shadow over the US
Championships by holding just about all the major records for the event.
The erratic genius first came to world prominence in 1957
when he made his debut in the national championships in New York. The
precarious fourteen-year-old rank-outsider proved to be the shock winner that
year to become (and still is) the youngest title holder. "I just got good", was
Fischer's explanation of his unexpected victory and rise to prominence. From
there he never looked back.
In 1964, Fischer exceeded Sammy Reshevsky's record of five
titles (though Sammy did go on to claim another two after Fischer 'retired'
himself from the Championships) in impressive style as he notched up the most
extraordinary record ever achieved in a modern, national competition: He won
all eleven games, most of which were against top grandmaster-level opponents.
By 1966 when he played in his eighth and final US Championships, Fischer set
yet another record: Winning the title on every appearance - played eight, won
eight! The only one of his records so far that has been beaten is that of
youngest-ever competitor - an honor that now belongs to last year's AF4C wild
card Hana Itkis, who was 13 when she played.

Gregory Kaidanov
By the end of the fourth round of the current championship,
Fischer can rest in the knowledge that this year the rest of his records will
remain intact - and in particular that of winning with a perfect score as sole
leader Gregory Kaidanov ceded the draw to 2002 Samford Fellowship recipient
Varuzhan Akobian. At one stage it looked as if Kaidanov, who is in the hunt for
his first US title, was coming under a lot of pressure in the good knight vs.
bad bishop ending. However Kaidanov held on to stay unbeaten and in the joint
lead with 3.5/4. Joining him in equal first is two-time joint winner (1993 and
2000) Alexander "Shabba" Shabalov who expertly converted his endgame advantage
against Yuri Lapshun through for the full point. In a nice little note to this
game, Lapshun, who was the 'guilty' party in his 164-move game the previous
round to Akobian, picked up his tournament bulletin before the start of the
game, looked at the amount of space (nearly a whole page!) his game had taken
up and just shook his head in disbelief - and no wonder when at least 80 of
them were superfluous!

Maurice Ashley vs. Hikaru Nakamura
Joining the chasing pack just a half point behind the
leaders is defending champion Larry Christiansen, who beat Santa Fe's finest
Jesse Kraai. Also getting in on the action is the 2001 US Junior Champion
Hikaru Nakamura, 15, after Maurice Ashley's sacrificial assault spectacularly
back-fired after he failed to spot the obvious defence. Nakamura, who holds the
national record for being (at 10) the youngest American ever to earn the master
title, puts himself up with the leaders and the chance to become the youngest
winner of the title since Fischer. And, with two GM norms already under his
belt, Nakamura could be in-line for a third and final norm to become the
youngest American GM since Fischer.
 http://www.af4c.org
Round 4 Results
1 GM Gregory Kaidanov draw IM Varuzhan Akobian; 2 GM Boris
Gulko draw IM Eugene Perelshteyn; 3 IM Yury Lapshun 0-1 GM Alexander Shabalov;
4 IM Boris Kreiman draw GM Yasser Seirawan; 5 GM Joel Benjamin draw GM Gennadi
Zaitshik; 6 GM Sergey Kudrin draw WGM Kamile Baginskaite; 7 WIM Jennifer
Shahade 0-1 GM Alex Fishbein; 8 GM Nick De Firmian draw GM Walter Browne; 9 FM
Igor Foygel draw GM Alexander Stripunsky; 10 GM Larry Christiansen 1-0 IM Jesse
Kraai; 11 GM Dmitry Gurevich draw GM Alex Yermolinsky; 12 IM Ben Finegold draw
FM Stephen Muhammad; 13 GM Alexander Ivanov draw IM William Paschall; 14 GM
Maurice Ashley 0-1 IM Hikaru Nakamura; 15 GM Alexander Goldin draw IM Justin
Sarkar; 16 WGM Irina Krush draw GM Gregory Serper; 17 GM John Fedorowicz draw
IM Larry Kaufman; 18 IM John Watson draw FM Tegshsuren Enkhbat; 19 GM Anatoly
Lein 1-0 David Pruess; 20 IM Michael Mulyar 1-0 WIM Tsagaan Battsetseg; 21 IM
Greg Shahade 1-0 WIM Olga Sagalchik; 22 FM Aaron Pixton draw WGM Elena
Donaldson; 23 WIM Anna Hahn 0-1 IM Stanislav Kriventsov; 24 IM Dean Ippolito
1-0 Julia Shiber; 25 WIM Esther Epstein 0-1 IM Ron Burnett; 26 IM John
Donaldson 1-0 WFM Laura Ross; 27 WIM Elina Groberman draw FM Allan Bennett; 28
FM Gregory Markzon draw WIM Cindy Tsai; 29 Marc Esserman draw Anna Levina.
STANDINGS
1-2 Kaidanov, Shabalov 3.5/4; 3-7 Gulko, Christiansen,
Akobian, Nakamura, Perlelshteyn 3; 8-25 Seirawan, Benjamin, De Firmian,
Stripunsky, Yermolinsky, Finegold, Ivanov, Zaitshik, Kreiman, Fishbein,
Lapshun, Browne, Gurevich, Foygel, Paschall, Lein, Muhammad, Sarkar 2.5; 26-41
Goldin, Serper, Kudrin, Fedorowicz, Ashley, Mulyar, Kraai, G Shahade, Enhbat,
Kriventsov, Ippolito, Burnett, Kaufman, Baginskaite, Krush, Watson 2; 42-46
Pixton, J Donaldson, E Donaldson, J Shahade, Pruess 1.5; 47-53 Bennett,
Battsetseg, Hahn, Epstein, Sagalchik, Groberman, Shiber 1; 54-58 Markzon,
Esserman, Tsai, Ross, Levina 0.5.
You can follow all 29 games live over the Internet at
http://www.af4c.org. |