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Press Release by John Henderson
2003 AF4C US Chess Championships, 9-18 January Northwest
Rooms, Seattle.
ROUND FIVE 13th January 2002
Morphy's Law

Shabalov - Kaidanov a tough draw
As in many countries the championship title gradually
evolved through time. Whilst many in the world would immediately identify with
legends of the game such as the great Paul Morphy or perhaps George Mackenzie
(a Scottish mercenary who became a Captain fighting for the North during the
Civil War), they, along with little known first champion Charles Stanley, only
became US Champions by "popular acclaim" - hailed as such by virtue of their
playing strength in matches and tournaments of that particular era.
In the days before such official titles were organised to
be fought over, they rightly were acclaimed champions one and all in the record
books: Stanley 1845-57; Morphy 1857-71, and MacKenzie 1871-90. For the purisits
however, the first official champion was actually the 'Kentucky Lion' Jackson
Showalter (who also has another claim to fame as being reputedly accredited
with the invention of the curve ball in baseball) who won the title in 1890.
For nearly half a century thereafter, the US title was decided by a match
between the two top players in the country - another legend Frank Marshall
being the last incumbent to reign in such a way, who held the title from 1905
through to 1936.
This all changed in 1936 when the national title became an
invitational affair between the top players in the country - dominated in the
process (and in order) by three players: Sammy Reshevsky, who won the first of
his six titles in 1936 (his last in 1969!); Bobby Fischer, who broke all the
records for the championship; and the redoubtable Walter Browne, a competitor
in this year's championship, with six titles to his name.
The new-styled Open format of the championship created by
the America's Foundation for Chess has breathed new life - and money - into an
ailing tournament; one which unbelievably was all but cancelled by the USCF
until the intervention at the eleventh hour of the then Seattle Chess
Foundation in 2000.
This new format created by the AF4C has added an extra
dynamism and prestige to the championship as the elite field of the US's finest
battle it out for a world record prize fund for a national title of $253,000,
with $25,000 slotted to the winner. And, as the competition hots up for this
year's title, the race is well and truly open as the championship reaches its
metaphoric midway point of the rest day.

Yasser Seirawan dispatched Yury Lapshun with a "Greek
Gift"
A tough top-board encounter between the leaders Gregory
Kaidanov, looking for his first title, and former champion Alexander Shabalov
ended after a 31-move draw. This left the door open for a number of former
champions to play 'catch-up' with some decisive play. First to join the chasing
pack was local hero and four-time title winner Yasser Seirawan, who wasted no
time in dispatching Yury Lapshun as the 'Greek Gift' of Bxh7+ won the day with
a brisk 24 move win. Next up was two-time winner Joel Benjamin, whose timely
exchange on c3 against Eugene Perelshteyn led to a positionally won game.
Another two-time winner Alex "The Yerminator" Yermolinsky gradually ground down
tournament veteran Anatoly Lein (a sprightly 71) in a long ending.

Stripunsky on his way to a beautiful win against
Browne
Draws between former champion (both US and USSR) Boris
Gulko and 2002 Samford Fellowship recipient Varuzhan Akobian, and defending
champion Larry Christiansen and US Junior champion Hikaru Nakamura, kept not
only two top juniors in the hunt for a dream first title and their final GM
norms, but also another two seasoned champions. In a round with many
spectacular games, that will no doubt feature in the list of best game prizes,
check out, apart from Seirawan-Lapshun and Perelshteyn-Benjamin, Stripunsky's
win over six-time champion Walter Browne with a beautiful combination, and
Serper's stunning 24 Rh8+!! over Ippolito - all likely candidates for the Paul
Albert Jnr. $1,000 Brilliancy Prize.
It's Murphy's law I suppose (the principle that if anything
can go wrong, it will), but with no clear runaway leader the logjam now at the
top, especially with the addition of more ex champions and a couple of hungry
young wannabes to the chasing pack, means that this year the title could yet
again be decided by a nerve-wracking playoff, which will be slotted in for
Sunday the 19th if needed.
Round 5 RESULTS
1 GM Alexander Shabalov draw GM Gregory Kaidanov; 2 IM
Varuzhan Akobian draw GM Boris Gulko; 3 IM Hikaru Nakamura draw GM Larry
Christiansen; 4 IM Eugene Perelshteyn 0-1 GM Joel Benjamin; 5 GM Yasser
Seirawan 1-0 IM Yury Lapshun; 6 WGM Elena Donaldson draw WIM Jennifer Shahade;
7 GM Alex Fishbein 1-0 GM Nick De Firmian; 8 GM Alexander Stripunsky 1-0 GM
Walter Browne; 9 GM Alex Yermolinsky 1-0 GM Anatoly Lein 1-0; 10 IM William
Paschall draw IM Ben Finegold; 11 IM Jesse Kraai 1-0 WGM Irina Krush; IM Justin
Sarkar draw GM Alexander Ivanov; 13 GM Gennadi Zaitshik draw GM Dmitry
Gurevich; 14 FM Igor Foygel draw IM Boris Kreiman; 15 WGM Kamile Baginskaite
draw IM Greg Shahade; 16 FM Stephen Muhammad 1-0 GM Sergey Kudrin; 17 FM
Tegshsuren Enkhbat draw GM Alexander Goldin; 18 GM Gregory Serper 1-0 IM Dean
Ippolito; 19 WIM Tsagaan Battsetseg 1-0 WIM Elina Groberman; 20 IM Ron Burnett
0-1 GM Maurice Ashley; 21 IM Larry Kaufman 0-1 IM Michael Mulyar; 22 David
Pruess 0-1 FM Aaron Pixton; 23 IM John Donaldson draw IM John Watson; 24 FM
Allan Bennett draw WIM Esther Epstein; 25 IM Stanislav Kriventsov draw GM John
Fedorowicz; 26 WIM Olga Sagalchik 0-1 WIM Anna Hahn; 27 Julia Shiber 0-1 FM
Gregory Markzon; 28 WFM Laura Ross 1-0 Marc Esserman; 29 WIM Cindy Tsai draw
Anna Levina.
STANDINGS
1-2 Kaidanov, Shabalov 4/5; 3-12 Gulko, Seirawan, Benjamin,
Stripunsky, Christiansen, Yermolinsky, Akobian, Nakamura, Fishbein, Muhammad
3.5; 13-25 Finegold, Ivanov, Serper, Zaitshik, Kreiman, Gurevich, Foygel,
Perelshteyn,Mulyar, Kraai, Paschall, Burnett, Sarkar 3.5; 26-37 Goldin, De
Firmian, Fedorowicz, Lapshun, Browne, G Shahade, Enhbat, Pixton, Kriventsov,
Lein, Baginskaite, Watson 2.5; 38-47 Kudrin, Ashley, J Donaldson, Ippolito,
Kaufman, E Donaldson, Krush, J Shahade, Battsetseg, Hahn 2; 48-52 Pruess,
Markzon, Bennett, Epstein, Ross 1.5; 53-57 Tsai, Sagalchik, Levina, Groberman,
Shiber 1; 58 Esserman 0.5
 You can follow
all 29 games live over the Internet at: http://www.af4c.org |