English Championships 2023
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English Championships 2023
We now have a date and place for these.
They are over the Spring Bank Holiday weekend, starting on the 26th May (Friday) and finishing on the 29th May (Monday). It doesn't say how many rounds, presumably 7 or 8.
It's at the Holiday Inn Kenilworth which was last year's venue as well.
Unlike the Cambridge Open, there's minimum ratings of 2000 for the Open and 1800 for the Women's.
Calendar link
https://www.englishchess.org.uk/event-c ... 00?popup=1
They are over the Spring Bank Holiday weekend, starting on the 26th May (Friday) and finishing on the 29th May (Monday). It doesn't say how many rounds, presumably 7 or 8.
It's at the Holiday Inn Kenilworth which was last year's venue as well.
Unlike the Cambridge Open, there's minimum ratings of 2000 for the Open and 1800 for the Women's.
Calendar link
https://www.englishchess.org.uk/event-c ... 00?popup=1
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English Championships 2023
These start on Friday 26th May
https://chess-results.com/tnr771194.aspx?lan=1
https://chess-results.com/tnr771195.aspx?lan=1&art=0
The seedings would seem to be using the higher of the May FIDE list and the May "Original" ECF list.
This could result in some first round pairings towards the bottom where the player's FIDE ratings are about equal even if their ECF ratings are a couple of hundred points apart.
https://chess-results.com/tnr771194.aspx?lan=1
https://chess-results.com/tnr771195.aspx?lan=1&art=0
The seedings would seem to be using the higher of the May FIDE list and the May "Original" ECF list.
This could result in some first round pairings towards the bottom where the player's FIDE ratings are about equal even if their ECF ratings are a couple of hundred points apart.
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Re: English Championships 2023
Good start from Roger.
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Re: English Championships 2023
Is this the same event?
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Re: English Championships 2023
Round 5 is currently in progress, the Forum has two threads which require merging, Adams is about to lead with 4.5/5, but I'm watching 8-year-old Kushal Jakhria who is having a fine tournament.
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Re: English Championships 2023
Kushal Jakhria together with Bodhana Sivanandan dominate the ECF Under 8 rating list atLeonard Barden wrote: ↑Sun May 28, 2023 12:38 pmbut I'm watching 8-year-old Kushal Jakhria who is having a fine tournament.
2032A and 1971A respectively.
I'd be interested in Leonard telling how these two stack up compared with other similar aged English juniors since the 1970s.
Do they stand out from the crowd?
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Re: English Championships 2023
Two pawns up in a rook ending, but didn't he show yesterday that this isn't enough?
If you want a picture of the future, imagine a QR code stamped on a human face — forever.
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Re: English Championships 2023
From the Guardian, 21 April:John Upham wrote: ↑Sun May 28, 2023 1:17 pmKushal Jakhria together with Bodhana Sivanandan dominate the ECF Under 8 rating list atLeonard Barden wrote: ↑Sun May 28, 2023 12:38 pmbut I'm watching 8-year-old Kushal Jakhria who is having a fine tournament.
2032A and 1971A respectively.
I'd be interested in Leonard telling how these two stack up compared with other similar aged English juniors since the 1970s.
Do they stand out from the crowd?
England’s gold standard for its youngest talents is Luke McShane’s 1993 world under-10 championship at age nine, outpacing a field which included several future elite grandmasters. Also in the frame are David Howell’s blitz victory at eight years nine months over John Nunn at the 1999 Mind Sports Olympiad, the youngest ever win against a GM in an official event, and Howell’s subsequent qualifying for the 2000 British Championship and scoring a 2200-plus rated performance there at nine.
All that was 20-30 years ago. Nobody has approached the McShane and Howell landmarks since, until last weekend, when Kushal Jakhria and Bodhana Sivanandan, both aged eight, made quantum leaps.
Jakhria was the youngest entrant at the powerful Menorca Open, won by India’s 16-year-old star Dommaraju Gukesh, and was seeded a lowly 196 out of 200, but he scored 4.5/9, earning a 2213 master level tournament rating plus a best performance prize.
Sivanandan, who shared the England women’s blitz championship last December at seven, scored 6/11 to tie for second woman in the British Rapidplay at Bradford, where the overall champion was IM Ameet Ghasi on 10/11. Her rating performance was 2130, the level of a Women’s Fide Master, and this strategic endgame was impressive.
These are not yet results at the level which McShane and Howell achieved at eight and nine, but both children only had their eighth birthdays in March. They are likely to be ranked the world Nos 1 and 2 under-nines when Fide publishes its May rating list next weekend.
There is currently no official backing for chess, despite a vigorous campaign by the charity Chess in Schools and Communities, but Jakhria and Sivanandan receive help from the ECF’s Accelerator Programme for elite talents. Both are being supported by the John Robinson Youth Chess Trust, while Sivanandan’s coaching is sponsored by the biotech company e-therapeutics, whose chief executive is IM Ali Mortazavi.
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Re: English Championships 2023
Roger is doing well.
Currently on 2 and a half points, out of 5.
Currently on 2 and a half points, out of 5.
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Re: English Championships 2023
Adams escaped with a draw after an exchange sacrifice from Willow, who might have missed a win near the end, so wins outright with 6/7. Tied on second were Harvey and Wadsworth, who both won, on 5.5/7.
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Re: English Championships 2023
I managed to finish on 50% with 3 and a half.
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Re: English Championships 2023
Really good performance by the English juniors.
Worth mentioning (points as per chess-results, may not be accurate)
Well done to all of them and to the many ones I know and did not mention!
Worth mentioning (points as per chess-results, may not be accurate)
- Jude Shearsby on 4.5, +36 pts (I expect him to now qualify for the British Championship through the British Grand Prix)
- Badacsonyi, Stanley on 4, +77pts
- Ismail, Mohammed Aayan on 4, -25pts (played 3 strong juniors and dropped points along the way)
- Hobson, Kenneth on 4, +55 pts
- Murawski, Jan on 4, +65 pts
- Southcott-Moyers, Indy on 4, +20
- Badacsonyi, Frankie on 4, -8
- Jackson, Edward on 4, -2
Well done to all of them and to the many ones I know and did not mention!
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Re: English Championships 2023
Any thoughts Roger on how the venue compares to previous versions? Is the format the same? Well done, by the way
Any postings on here represent my personal views
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Re: English Championships 2023
I didn't play in the English last year, only at the English Seniors. The Seniors at was in Kenilworth last year, Leamington this year. The Women's event was in a separate room and unless the hotel have some other rooms, it was more or less at comfortable capacity with around 64 in the Open. All the recent events have been seven rounds with 90 30 move rates and two rounds most days.Mick Norris wrote: ↑Mon May 29, 2023 5:45 pmAny thoughts Roger on how the venue compares to previous versions? Is the format the same? Well done, by the way
The hotel in Kenilworth has the advantage over some other venues that it's on the main street, so no need to feel confined to the hotel.
If it were nine rounds, could it for Norms? There might be a problem that the British Championship is already claiming exemption from the need to play non-ENG players.