Good ol' Walter Browne!
At the end of day two of the AF4C US Chess Championships taking place in Seattle,
there’s a five-way tie at the top as the elite 58 chess player’s from
around the US do battle once again for the crown made famous by Bobby Fischer,
which this year has a record prize fund of $255,000 – the biggest annual
prize for a chess tournament anywhere in the world.
When Fischer won his record-breaking eighth title in 1966, he only took home
$2,500. This year there’s $25,000 slotted for the winner of the nine round
event taking place at the Northwest Rooms at the Seattle Centre, which runs
daily until 18 January.
Early leaders on full points with two wins from two games are top seed Gregory
Kaidanov (Kentucky), Yury Lapshun (Brooklyn), Gennadi Zaitshik (Philadelphia),
Varuzhan Akobian (California) and Jesse Kraai (New Mexico) – four of whom
will have to play each other in round three. On their tail however is an ominous
chasing pack of 16 just a half point behind the pace setters, including defending
champion Larry Christiansen (Massachusetts) and six-time former champion Walter
Browne (California), who celebrated his 54th birthday during round two.
Late for his birthday: legendary GM Walter Browne
We organised a present of a bottle of vintage wine for Walter and it was placed
by his board. We even went as far as wishing this living-legend a Happy Birthday
before the start of play. We were even prepared to give him a rousing rendition
of 'Happy Birthday'. Typically Walter arrived five minutes late and missed everything!
Big shock of the day was the defeat of second seed Alexander Goldin, formerly
of Israel. Though he's been in the United States for quite a few years now,
this is his first Championship and he is one of the pre-tournament favourites.
He has won numerous tournaments in the USA, and managed to maintain a very high
FIDE rating (he is 2621 in January 2003) while playing in these opens. His defeat
to IM Yury Lapshun therefore comes as a big surprise - and also makes Goldin's
task of becoming one of the few to win on their debut even harder.
Also falling behind at an early stage is three-time winner and local hero Yasser
Seirawan. A second successive draw to tournament 'old hand' Anatoly Lein (a
sprightful 71) likewise leaves Seirawan one point of the lead and leaves him
now playing catch-up with the leaders. Someone who is however pleased with her
two draws is last year's woman's champion Jennifer Shahade, who looks to be
continuing where she left off last year. After an opening round draw with Hikaru
Nakamura, the defending champion followed this up with a solid draw against
GM Gregory Serper.
US Championships, Round 2:
1 GM Gregory Kaidanov 1-0 GM Alex Fishbein; 2 Julia Shiber 0-1 GM Gennadi Zaitshik;
3 GM Boris Gulko draw GM Walter Browne; 4 GM Dmitry Gurevich draw GM Alexander
Shabalov; 5 WIM Jennifer Shahade draw GM Gregory Serper; 6 GM Larry Christiansen
draw IM Eugene Perelshteyn; 7 GM Maurice Ashley draw GM Alex Yermolinsky; 8
IM Yury Lapshun 1-0 GM Alexander Goldin; 9 GM Nick De Firmian draw FM Igor Foygel;
10 IM Ben Finegold 0-1 IM Jesse Kraai; 11 IM Michael Mulyar 0-1 IM Varuzhan
Akobian; 12 GM Anatoly Lein draw GM Yasser Seirawan; 13 GM Joel Benjamin draw
FM Stephen Muhammad; 14 IM John Donaldson 0-1 GM Alexander Stripunsky; 15 WGM
Irina Krush 1-0 Anna Levina; 16 GM Alexander Ivanov draw IM Stanislav Kriventsov;
17 GM Sergey Kudrin 1-0 David Pruess; 18 IM John Watson 0-1 IM Hikaru Nakamura;
19 IM Boris Kreiman draw IM Justin Sarkar; 20 GM John Fedorowicz 1-0 FM Allan
Bennett; 21 WGM Elena Donaldson 1-0 WIM Olga Sagalchik; 22 IM Greg Shahade 1-0
FM Gregory Markzon; 23 Marc Esserman 0-1 FM Tegshsuren Enhbat; 24 IM William
Paschall 1-0 WIM Tsagaan Battsetseg; 25 WIM Anna Hahn 0-1 FM Aaron Pixton; 26
IM Dean Ippolito 1-0 WIM Esther Epstein; 27 WIM Cindy Tsai 0-1 IM Ron Burnett;
28 WFM Laura Ross draw IM Larry Kaufman; 29 WIM Elina Groberman draw WGM Kamile
Baginskaite.
Leader board: 1-5 Kaidanov, Akobian, Zaitshik, Lapshun, Kraai 2/2; 6-19 Gulko,
Shabalov, De Firmian, Stripunsky, Christiansen, Yermolinsky, Kudrin, Nakamura,
Fedorowicz, Browne, Gurevich, Foygel, Ashley, Perelshteyn 1½; 20-42 Goldin,
Seirawan, Benjamin, Finegold, Ivanov, Serper, Kreiman, Fishbein, Mulyar, G.
Shahade, Enkhbat, Paschall, Pixton, Kriventsov, Ippolito, Burnett, Lein, E.
Donaldson, Krush, Muhammad, Sarkar, J. Shahade, Shiber 1; 43-52 J. Donaldson,
Kaufman, Baginskaite, Watson, Pruess, Bennett, Ross, Groberman, Markzon, Esserman
½; 53-58 Battsetseg, Hahn, Epstein, Tsai, Sagalchik, Levina 0
You can follow all 29 games live over the Internet at www.af4c.org.
About
America’s Foundation for Chess
Founded in 2000, America's Foundation for Chess (formerly the Seattle Chess
Foundation) is committed to bringing chess into every U.S. classroom. By first
making chess a larger part of America's cultural fabric — accessible in
schools and in popular culture — AF4C hopes to elevate the profile of chess
in America. To this end, AF4C is providing chess instruction materials and training
to teachers, who have little or no chess background. In addition, by sponsoring
high-level competitions such as the U.S. Chess Championships, AF4C is cultivating
chess role models and a venue for chess excellence in America. By forging partnerships
with schools and corporations, AF4C plans to make chess a part of every classroom
experience.