Wednesday, 14 August 2024

2024 Kingston Invitational, Day 2, Rounds 2 & 3, 13 August

After another sultry day of chess here in TrafficJam-upon-Thames, the leaders are now Irish IM Conor Murphy, Polish FM Maciej Czopor and English CM Stanley Badacsonyi on 3/3.

First we must congratulate all the players in the tournament, not to mention the officials, on managing to get to the venue at all. As mentioned yesterday, there are huge traffic problems in Kingston-upon-Thames at the moment. Kingston Council reported that "Queen Elizabeth Road Kingston - Urgent Road Closure at the junction with Birkenhead Avenue due to the discovery of a large void in the carriageway. Estimated end date is currently 16 August 2024." Note that those dates coincide exactly with the start and end dates of the tournament, and the road closed happens to be the one immediately outside the venue. How unlucky can we get? The only tournament that comes close in misfortune in this respect is probably the recent British Championship in Hull which coincided with an outbreak of public disorder in Hull which led to the hotel venue having to lockdown at one point. However, thankfully, the large void in the adjoining road has not led to an equivalent void in the list of competitors.

ROUND TWO

One of the other most impressive features of the competitors is their fighting spirit. Round one featured 17 decisive results and just four draws. Perhaps not so surprising for a top vs bottom starter round but the trend has continued. In round two there were again four draws and 18 decisive games. In round three there were six draws and 16 decisive games. The draws have nearly all been full-blooded battles, too, with one going to an eye-watering 137 moves. The tournament organiser keeps nagging me to make a come-back and play the odd game as a filler, but he's got another think coming. Chess as played these days is too relentless for my cowardly blood and I shall remain a devoted spectator, thank you very much. I'm not the only one. We're told that the tournament's LiChess live audience is steadily growing.

Vladyslav Larkin
A tough start for IM Vladyslav Larkin but he won his round 3 game to reach 1½/3.


Good day at the office for Bob Eames: IM scalp in the morning and a smart win in the afternoon.

In the morning round the higher rated generally did better than in the first round but there were still some surprises. Top seed Ukrainian IM Vladyslav Larkin, who took a half-point bye in the opening round, lost to English FM Bob Eames. Larkin appeared to have escaped some early difficulties and secured an advantage but then blundered away material. 

Some of the youngsters who had excelled in round one ran out of luck in round two. George Zhao seemed to be matching Michael Healey blow for blow beyond move 40 and was a pawn up when a small slip enabled White to mount a decisive kingside attack. Similarly Zain Patel ran into tactical trouble against Tom Villiers whose back rank threats proved more potent than his opponent's.

Remy Rushbrooke
Remy Rushbrooke won an impressive game against IM Peter Large

There was a further surprise as Cambridge University player Remy Rushbrooke beat Peter Large. The veteran IM arrived 20 minutes late for the start - no doubt the traffic problem was to blame - and his opening play proved a little too provocative.

ROUND THREE


All-Irish clash on the top board: Conor Murphy defeated Gavin Wall

Board one in round three was an all-Irish clash between IMs Conor Murphy and Gavin Wall. Black opened with his trusty Philidor's defence but once 12...c5 was played it started to resemble a Sicilian with players attacking kings on opposite flanks. White's 14 Na4 looked odd at first sight but it proved to be a subtle plan to lure Black's light-squared bishop to go after it and win a pawn, enabling its opposite number to control the light squares on the opposite side unchallenged. The plan proved very effective and White's kingside assault soon crashed through. 


Macieja Czopor joined the overnight triumvirate of leaders with 3/3 after grinding down Tom Villiers.

Macieja Czopor joined Murphy and Badacsonyi in the joint lead after beating Tom Villiers in a 92-move marathon. After 52 moves it came down to an endgame of knight and two unconnected pawns versus bishop and one pawn, which the tablebase tells us is a draw. A further 40 moves ensued until the black king managed to circumnavigate the white forces and reach a position where White had only one move which maintained the draw. It wasn't a particularly hard one to find, involving the 'shouldering off' of the black to prevent it reaching the passed black pawn via the back gate (if you see what I mean), but, probably in a state of exhaustion, White missed it and was soon lost.


Stanley Badacsonyi reached 3/3 after beating Alex Browning

Stanley Badacsonyi is the third member of the round three leadership group, after beating German-registered Alex Browning. This talented 15-year-old from East Finchley, who won the British Junior Under-16 Rapidplay and Blitz titles in Hull, has started in great shape in Kingston. In round three he opened with the Trompowski against the German FM and was quickly on the offensive after Browning went in for an inferior line which ceded the dark squares and also a pawn to his opponent. It was all over in 28 moves.

I mentioned earlier that Bob Eames had a nice win in the afternoon, neatly bookending his IM scalp of the morning. Let's end by having a look at it.

Round four starts at 1000 BST on Wednesday 14 August, with round five at 1530 the same day. Follow the action live at Lichess.org and find the latest results at chess-results.com. Also look out for me on X/Twitter for regular comments - @johnchess - and also @KingstonChess.

Tuesday, 13 August 2024

2024 Kingston Invitational, Round 1, 12 August

 The 3rd Kingston Invitational got underway on a baking hot day at Tiffin Boys' School this afternoon. As well as the extreme heat, those travelling to the venue for the 3.30pm start had to cope with a gridlocked town centre which added an hour or even more to some journeys of those arriving by road, and it seems the rail services weren't great either. (I'm assuming no one arrived by river though that is a feasible option in this suburb of south west London through which the River Thames flows.) It's fair to say that organiser Stephen Moss feared the worst as the clock ticked round to the half hour. But his worries proved unfounded. His opening address, followed by chief arbiter Lance Leslie-Smith's technical briefing, meant that clocks were started only a little later than scheduled at 3.40pm and within another five minutes all 21 boards featured two players. An added bonus was air-conditioning in the playing room, which is not something to be taken for granted in the UK.

Barden Cup
The Barden Cup will be presented to the under-16 player with the best score.
Named after (who else?) Guardian chess columnist Leonard Barden, with his permission.

Incidentally, if you're wondering why this daily report is appearing on my personal chess blog and not on Kingston Chess Club's excellent website, it's a purely technical thing. The organiser's computer malfunctioned a few days before the tournament and he hasn't had a chance to remedy it. Rest assured, normal service will be resumed as soon as possible. 

This year's Kingston Invitational is being run for the first time as a Swiss, which meant the usual first round pairing of top vs bottom. If you wander over to the chess-results.com page expecting to see a monotonous series of 0-1, 1-0, 0-1, 1-0, 0-1 digits in the results (or vice versa), you're in for a surprise as there were quite a number of giant-killing performances this afternoon, as those sporting 2200+ ratings struggled to beat their supposed inferiors weighing in around Elo 2000.


Top board saw Conor Murphy overcome Alistair Hill

That said, the 2023 Kingston Invitational winner, IM Conor Murphy, was not one of them. His opponent, Battersea Chess Club's Alistair Hill, soon found himself in trouble when his knight was trapped behind enemy lines and unable to help defend against the Irish IM's kingside attack which soon crashed through. View the game on LiChess.

Board four was the scene of a surprise as Oxford University player Jem Gurner defeated IM Graeme Buckley. The titled player is known as a risk-taker but he pushed his luck a bit too far when he surrendered a piece for a kingside attack which had insufficient venom. But the game featured one inexplicable moment: when White played 33 Bxc5, why didn't Black reply 33...Bxc5 34 Qxc5 Qg3+ and Black must win. A scoring error somewhere?


14-year-old Elis Denele Dicen defeated FM Roland Bezuidenhout on board 5

The next board saw an extraordinary number of swings of fortune as the sole female competitor, WCM Elis Denele Dicen won against FM Roland Bezuidenhout. The South African player went in for a very timid Réti set-up with White and it took him until beyond move 40 to emerge from a grovelly position against his tenacious 14-year-old opponent. Eventually a chance came to attack for White to attack on the kingside but White hesitated and Black found a powerful move threatening the exposed white king. I've no doubt the brisk time limit now played a significant part as fleeting chances came and went for both sides. Two or three times White missed chances to play a g4-g5 pawn push to attack the black king but, irony of ironies, when he finally played it, it turned out to be a blunder losing material. A tremendous performance from the 14-year-old player of the black pieces whose fighting spirit and determination finally paid off.

Zain Patel
"Sorry I'm a bit late!" Zain Patel seems to be saying to Daniel Gallagher.

Zain Patel was the last competitor to arrive, having spent more than an hour stuck in the Kingston traffic with his mother, but he looked none the worse for the ordeal as he shook hands with his opponent and got the game underway. On move 12 Black snaffled his opponent's a-pawn with a knight - "pawn snatching at the expense of development," the old-time chess primers would have called it, but it seemed to work out rather well, though it was touch and go in the opening. Let's look at the game, which was very entertaining.

Tom Villiers seemed doomed to be the victim of yet another giant-killing when he lost the exchange in the middlegame against Balahari Bharat Kumar leaving him with a hopeless position. But a misstep by the 15-year-old allowed Villiers to give up his queen for rook and knight simply to stay in the game. Villiers also had two extra pawns which made a draw the likeliest result. On move 56 Black's last pawn was exchanged off leaving Black's lone queen to defend against rook, knight and three pawns (though two were doubled). In theory the draw was still attainable - it remained the analysis engine verdict for some time after - but in practice the defence of such positions where the opposing king can be shielded from a long series of checks is next to impossible. White could now continue playing with no fear of defeat and Black eventually cracked. At 82 moves this was the longest game of the round.


George Zhao, British Under-12 Champion, scored an excellent victory over Peter Lalic.

Another big surprise unfolded on board 12 where CM Peter Lalic succumbed to the newly-crowned British Under-12 Champion, George Zhao. Lalic met the 11-year-old's Queen's Gambit with 2...e5 and the game followed theory until move 11 where Zhao opted to capture a stray a-pawn, much as we saw Patel do above, though, with the queens already off, the pawn was less 'hot'. Initially Black had sufficient compensation for the pawn but a careless 14...Be7 allowed a neat combination which turned the extra pawn into a solid plus for White. Not long after, White netted a second pawn and set up an unstoppable phalanx of three connected pawns on the queenside. Thereafter Black's attempts at counterplay were easily quelled. This is the first time I've seen a game of George Zhao's and I am mightily impressed by what I've seen. Here is a link to the game: look out for a very classy series of moves by his light-squared bishop, particularly the precise 18 Bf5! in a position where I'd bet most 11-year-olds, indeed all ages up to and including 71-year-olds like yours truly, would simply snap off the c7-pawn. 


Robin Haldane (White) defeated Clive Frostick. Beyond Haldane is Stanley Badacsonyi, who beat Billy Fellowes, and beyond Badacsonyi you can just make out George Zhao who beat Peter Lalic.

Two players of pensionable age met on board 14 where the more senior but lower rated Robin Haldane defeated Clive Frostick. I wouldn't classify this as a surprise, however, since Haldane seems to have been underrated for the best part of half a century. The game was decided by a senior moment on move 20 committed by the junior partner, leading to an exchange of major pieces and the loss of a pawn and allowing White to show off his impeccable endgame technique. (Note: Robin Haldane is only playing as a filler so is not in the second round pairings but might return later in the event should he be needed.)

Mark Josse was another victim of a lower-rated opponent, namely Ewan Wilson. An injudicious exchange of pieces by White allowed Black to exploit the weakness of the white queenside pawns in an endgame. Black allowed White one fleeting chance to achieve a perpetual check on move 33 but White missed it and was soon lost. Link to the game.


Will Taylor of Kingston CC scored a 'home' win against Tim Seymour

The seventh and final success for the lower-rated opponents in round one was achieved by Kingston CC's very own Will Taylor against Tim Seymour of Surbiton. As an old-time King's Indian Defence addict myself I would have been glad to see White's slow-motion development unfold before me, rather than the usual high-speed pawn storm that used to pen me into my back two ranks and cause me much suffering. As a rule of thumb you should never allow a KID-ologist an even break or suffer the consequences. Black, playing with the freedom of a man who had expected a long term of KID imprisonment but had unexpectedly beaten the rap, engineered a temporary exchange sacrifice which guaranteed him complete control of the dark squares on the kingside, and that was enough to ensure victory.

That's it for now. Round two starts at 1000 BST on Tuesday 13 August, with round three at 1530 the same day. Follow the action live at Lichess.org and find the latest results at chess-results.com. Also look out for me on X/Twitter for regular comments - @johnchess - and also @KingstonChess.

Monday, 4 December 2023

Using ChessBase: A Technophobe's Guide to Sending Chess Game Scores by Email

This is a personal guide to emailing chess games when using ChessBase*. Like everything else, it's easy when you know how, but I've come across experienced players, long established in the chess world, even professional players, who are a little unsure about how best to go about it.

I'll give you an example of someone who is a little unsure about it: me. OK, I'm joking but there is a point to this. It occurs to me that ChessBase probably has a built-in 'email game' function but I don't know, despite being an assiduous and regular user of their software for nigh on 30 years. Does it? I just checked and it does, right there on the File drop-down menu - 'Email Selected Database'. But there is no way in the world that I am ever going to use it as I don't need to. I choose to use the email client of my choice, giving me control over the drafting of the message and the attachment of files. This is a purely personal guide to how I carry out this function.

(* note: I use ChessBase 14 - I can't guarantee that all of the functions and options I refer to in what follows will be present in earlier or later versions of ChessBase)


FIRST STEP: SETTING THE 'OLD PGN' OPTION IN CHESSBASE

In my first draft of this post, I completely forgot to include this first step. It's easy enough to do but a bit harder to explain why it's necessary. So I won't bother - just trust me, OK?

In ChessBase, press CTRL+ALT+O to invoke the options menu - that's three keys pressed simultaneously, and it's the letter 'o' not zero. 

A small window headed 'Options' will appear in the centre of your screen. Click where you see Clipboard on the left, and you should now see a screen that looks something like the following...

The Options window: set PGN to Old Format

There are various clickable options towards the right of the screen, but the only one we care about right now is the one I've crudely surrounded by a red circle. Set that to OLD FORMAT and then click OK. That's the set-up done. (I personally leave this option set permanently to OLD FORMAT and have suffered no ill effects from it.)

SENDING A SINGLE GAME

Let's say you want to send someone a single game. This is fairly simple and doesn't require a deep knowledge of ChessBase functionality. I'm assuming the reader has some basic knowledge of how ChessBase works.

  1. load the game in a ChessBase window;
  2. copy it (CTRL + C on Windows, COMMAND+C on a Mac);
  3. switch to your email client and start a new message;
  4. paste the game (CTRL+V or COMMAND+V) into the message window.

In the email message window the game will look something like the text between the lines below...


[Event "Hastings Premier 1932/33 13th"]
[Site "White Rock Pavilion"]
[Date "1932.12.31"]
[Round "4"]
[White "Sultan Khan, Mir"]
[Black "Menchik, Vera"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "D35"]
[PlyCount "79"]
[EventDate "1932.12.28"]
[EventType "tourn"]
[EventRounds "9"]
[EventCountry "ENG"]
[SourceTitle "BritBase"]
[Source "John Saunders"]
[SourceDate "2023.12.02"]
[SourceVersion "1"]
[SourceVersionDate "2023.12.02"]
[SourceQuality "1"]

1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 d5 4. Nc3 Nbd7 5. cxd5 exd5 6. g3 Bd6 7. Bg2 c6 8.O-O O-O 9. Nh4 Re8 10. Nf5 Bf8 11. Qc2 Nb6 12. Nh4 Be6 13. Rd1 Qd7 14. a4 Rad8 15. a5 Nc8 16. Na4 Bh3 17. Bg5 Bxg2 18. Nxg2 Qg4 19. Bxf6 Rxe2 20. Qxe2 Qxe2 21. Bxd8 f6 22. Bc7 g5 23. Ne3 h5 24. a6 bxa6 25. Rdc1 Qb5 26. Nc3 Qxb2 27. Rab1 Qd2 28. Rc2 Qd3 29. Rb8 Ne7 30. Bd6 Kf7 31. Ncd1 a5 32. Rcb2 a4 33. R2b7 a3 34. Rxa7 a2 35. Rxa2 f5 36. Raa8 Bg7 37. Rb7 Bf6 38. Bxe7 Bxe7 39. Raa7 f4 40. Rxe7+ {Sources: The Times, 3 January 1933; Birmingham Daily Post, 5 January 1933} 1-0


... but don't be put off by the looks of it or be tempted to edit it to look friendlier to the human eye. It's a PGN representation of a chess game score, where PGN stands for Portable Game Notation - and the recipient of your email (assuming they are reasonably ChessBase-savvy and are interested in the game) will be more than happy to see it set out like this. They'll copy your game score straight from your email with one deft stroke of their mouse, paste it into a new ChessBase game window and save it into their own database without having to retype a single character.

5) Any explanatory text and comments you can add to the email before or after the PGN game score segment.

6) Type in the recipient's email address, click send and you're done. And you've hardly needed to know anything about ChessBase except how to load a game and copy it.


SENDING MULTIPLE GAMES

Now let's find the best way to send more than one game: two games, half a dozen, 20, 30...

You could simply follow the above directions, cut and paste multiple games into an email window as before. That's a reasonable solution where you're only dealing with 2-6 games but it's a bit cumbersome when you're starting to deal with a larger number of games. This is where you'll need to learn a few ChessBase tricks.

In ChessBase we're not going to start from a game window this time but from a game list, which includes the games that we wish to transmit.

Starting from the database window which we can think of as ChessBase's home page, double-click on the database that has the game scores that you want to send by email.

1) mouse-click left on the 'Games' tab to show you a list of games in the database
2) highlight a game by mouse-clicking left on a game in the list;
3) whilst holding down the shift key, mouse-click left on another game below (or above) the game already highlighted, so that you've got about half a dozen games highlighted;

Highlight the games to include in the PGN file

What you see on the screen should look something like the above, showing a number of games highlighted. These are the games which we are about to turn into a PGN file which can be sent to an email recipient.

4) position the mouse pointer somewhere in the highlighted area and mouse-click right; you should now see a drop-down menu. Now move the mouse pointer over the OUTPUT option, which reveals a further drop-down where you're going to choose the SELECTION TO TEXT FILE option...

Here's what you should be looking at on the screen...

Highlight the games to be sent, hover over OUTPUT, click SELECTION TO TEXT FILE

... with the red circles I've crudely drawn showing where OUTPUT and SELECTION TO TEXT FILE options appear on the screen.

5) You now want to mouse-click left on SELECTION TO TEXT FILE (but PLEASE DON'T CLICK on the Email Selected games option immediately above it! That might sound like the thing that you want to be doing but, trust me, it isn't)

This opens up a new small window on the screen...

Click on PGN in the left-hand column (not the middle column)


6) ignore the two columns to the right for now and in the left-hand column, 6th item down, click PGN

This opens up another window, which looks like this...


Click on PGN (left-hand column) and put a tick in the OLD FORMAT box


7) mouse-click left where it says OLD FORMAT to put a tick in the box and click OK. (I could explain why we make this choice but it's better not to know and just trust me.)

8) This opens up a new window which is inviting you to create a PGN file containing the games that you have previously highlighted. First making sure that the SAVE AS TYPE field shows PGN Format (*.pgn), it's now up to you to choose a meaningful name for the file you are creating and a suitable folder to locate it.

That concludes the ChessBase part of the process. You can now prepare your email message, attach the PGN file which you have just created (just the one file suffixed *.PGN - ChessBase may create other small files with the same name but different suffixes but you don't need to send them) and send the email. Job Done.


THERE IS ANOTHER WAY TO DO THIS BUT BEWARE...

... it may seem simpler at first but it can work out more problematic in the long run. I'll describe it in outline: you create a PGN database in ChessBase, copy games into it, then attach it to an email, and then send it. Sounds simpler and more logical but there are snags. Over the years I've come to dislike creating PGN files in that way. For one thing ChessBase is very 'clingy' when it comes to such databases. For example, it might not let you upload PGN files created in this way to the web without first closing the ChessBase software. (That's the sort of thing that could take you hours to figure out.) And the resultant PGN file may also include some strange-looking gobbledegook generated by later versions of ChessBase that may confuse recipients of your email. (That all-important tick in the OLD FORMAT box at step 7 above eliminates this strange stuff. Similarly, I can now reveal that the reason we took that first step, right at the beginning of the post, to set PGN to OLD FORMAT in the Options menu, was to eliminate this meaningless gunk from appearing in PGN notation when copied from a game window)


CHOOSING WHICH GAMES TO SEND

This is slightly off-topic and more about understanding ChessBase functionality but I thought I would share a couple of thoughts about how to get games ready for transmission.

The example I gave above was simplistic - a sequence of half a dozen games in precise order on a games list. The games you want to send out may be from different areas of your ChessBase set-up, e.g. from a player index, a tournament Index or from separate databases.

In those circumstances, the Clip Database function in ChessBase is your friend. It's worth getting to know how it works, how to put games in it, how to sort them into a given order, how to clear it, etc.

ChessBase's Clip Database is your friend

The Database Window (Home Screen - 'My Databases') should have a database icon labelled CLIP DATABASE. One important use for it is to gather together some games which you want to send  to someone.

Double-click on CLIP DATABASE. If you've never used it before, it will be empty. Just headers, no games. If it has games in it, and assuming that you've now finished whatever it was you were doing with them, you can get rid of them. To do this, go back to the database window, mouse-click right on the icon and choose ERASE CLIPBOARD (or CTRL-ALT-V) on the keyboard. Don't let the word ERASE frighten you - none of the games on your databases will be harmed in the process. This does NOT delete games from the database in which they reside, it simply removes them from the Clip Database, which you can think of as a place where you temporarily make copies of games and group them for further action.

Now you have an empty clip database, you can (re)populate it with the selection of games you wish to put in your PGN file to send out. You do this by going to any database, highlighting a game or games from a list and clicking function key F5 (there's another mouse-driven alternative to using the function key but it's a bit clunky so let's not worry about it - just try to remember that F5 adds games to the Clip Database, or, if they are already on it, removes them). 

Once you've finished selecting the games you want to put in your PGN file, you return to the database window, double-click on the Clip Database icon and you should see all the games that you've added. If you've accidentally added a couple that you don't intend to send, highlight them and press the F5 function key again and they'll disappear from the Clip Database (again, they will not disappear from their home database, just from the Clip Database). 

You can change the order in which the clipped games appear on the screen by clicking a header. (Typically, you'll want to put them in chronological order so you'll probably click the 'date' header.) Once you've got the list of games you want to send in the order that you like, you highlight all the games. CTRL+A highlights all the games in the Clip Database window. Now you can proceed to point 4 above to create the output PGN file. The rest of the steps are the same as given there. 


SENDING BIG DATABASES

A much less likely scenario arises when you want to send a really big database, let's say, one containing upwards of 20,000 games. For this the PGN file option is not ideal. In fact, it may not work. A lot of email servers prevent users from sending large attachments. A PGN file of 20,000 games could weigh in at 10+ megabytes. In those circumstances ChessBase's own solution becomes almost essential, namely a ChessBase archive file (suffixed *.cbv in the Windows Explorer list).

Creating a ChessBase archive file is quite easy. Highlight a database in the database window by mouse-clicking left, then mouse-click right, hover with the mouse over the TOOLS option and select BACKUP DATABASE. (the keyboard equivalent is easier - CTRL + Z). A small window appears, offering encrypted or non-encrypted format, set unencrypted (it's the default setting) and click OK. It now invites you to choose a name for the backup/archive file. Make sure you choose a meaningful name and remember which folder you chose to save it in. The backup file (look for the file you named suffixed *.cbv in Windows Explorer - ignore all the other files suffixed otherwise) contains the entire database in a more compact format and can be sent as an email attachment with a better chance of staying within limits for email transmission.
Back-up to a ChessBase archive (*.cbv) file - CTRL+Z or right-click TOOLS / BACKUP DATABASE



WHY DON'T I RECOMMEND CHESSBASE ARCHIVE (*.CBV) FILES FOR SENDING ANY DATABASES? 

Now I've told you about the advantages of creating ChessBase archives - ease of creation, saving space - you might be tempted to use them for sending database files of small and medium sizes, not just whoppers. You create a new ChessBase database, put all the games you need to send in it, archive it and attach the archive to an email and that's it.

Yes, you can do that. But I wouldn't recommend it.

The problem is compatibility, or, rather, incompatibility. For a start, not everyone uses ChessBase and, if they don't, a ChessBase archive (*.cbv) will be unreadable on their computer, whereas the PGN format is universal - all chess software is (or should be) capable of importing it. 

The incompatibility situation has worsened in the past year or so. Even if  your intended recipient has ChessBase, their version of the software and yours may be incompatible. This didn't use to be a problem but ChessBase have seen fit to bring out a new version, ChessBase 17, which uses a database system which is incompatible with all previous versions in this respect. So if you're using ChessBase 17 and you create a database archive using the latest database format and send it to a friend who is still using an earlier version, they won't be able to do anything with it.

I personally use ChessBase 14. It is stable and does everything I need it to do and am not planning to upgrade to ChessBase 17. People occasionally send me CBV files (as I call ChessBase archive files) produced in ChessBase 17 and there's nothing I can do with them. I could ask them to send me material in the older database format, which CB 17 still supports - allegedly - but they could then get confused. (If you don't believe me, take a look at the 300+ pages of the ChessBase 17 user manual -  it does have solutions to compatibility problems but they are not easily discoverable. Seriously, if you are a ChessBase 17 user and wondering how to create a file of games which will be compatible with other people's chess databases, go to the linked page, click where it says 'Reference' on the left-hand menu, then 'Database Formats', then 'Database Formats' - or simply click on this link to go straight to the relevant page - and you can see how you can create a PGN format database in ChessBase 17.

So let's just stick to PGN for transmitting games. I hope this has been of some use to those who are unfamiliar with ChessBase - and if you know better ways to do some of these things, don't hesitate to get in contact with me at BritBase.info. That said, I probably won't take a blind bit of notice and carry on doing what I always do anyway. I'm an experienced user but a technophobe at heart.

Finally, a belated acknowledgement to Nick Murphy who, many years ago, achieved the impossible in weaning this grumpy old technophobe off ChessBase 7 and onto later versions of the software.

Wednesday, 4 October 2023

Mrs Ludovici, Chess Player

I don't blog here very often but I thought it would be a good place to post stray games which I come across in my researches. Here's a game between the well-known Mary Rudge and a lesser known adversary, Mrs Ludovici. Annotations are by Miss Rudge...


I did a bit of biographical research on Mrs Ludovici. Her maiden name was Sarah Anne Rogers and she was born in Stafford (or thereabouts) in the third quarter of 1837. Her brother John was also a chess player, incidentally. Sarah married a German, Heinrich Ludovici, in 1865 and thereafter they seem to have lived in Germany though Sarah returned to the UK to play chess occasionally (and this game score has a reference to her in St Albans). She died in Wiesbaden on 27 July 1904.

'BatGirl' on Chess.com has previously published a couple of games played by her: https://www.chess.com/blog/batgirl/madame-ludovici-of-wiesbaden

There are further biographical details on Sarah Anne Ludovici at the EDO Historical Ratings website.

Sunday, 10 July 2022

Calling All Would-Be Bicycle Thieves...

Here's a bit of advice for would-be bicycle thieves. Let's imagine you've been apprehended eyeing up some bikes by an observant member of the constabulary and you're in the nick being given the third degree. Speaking as your (admittedly unqualified) brief, I'm recommending you keep schtum for the time being as the optimal time for using your trump card will be when you're up before the beak.

That's when you play your get-out-of-jail-free card. Or rather three cards. You tell the magistrate...

  • I was waiting for my brother; 
  • I can't ride a bike; 
  • I'm a chess player.

Sounds ridiculous? It worked for this bloke...


Croydon Times - Saturday 24 September 1932

Warning: you attempt this at your own risk - don't come crying to me if you get sent to prison. (And if anyone from Crown Prosecution Service happens to be reading this, it's not an incitement to crime, I'm joking, for heaven's sake.) Interesting, though, isn't it? Particularly that phrase "chess playing would account for concentrated gazing."

Seriously, though, folks: I can't help wondering, though I've zero evidence for this, whether Gilbert Victor Butler might have suffered from something along the lines of Asperger's Syndrome which might have caused him to stand and stare in an unusual way that the watching constable found suspicious. 

There seems little doubt that Gilbert Butler was entirely innocent of this bizarre charge brought against him. His track record as a chess player was impressive. Sadly, he contracted tuberculosis and died on 9 August 1942, aged only 39. His obituary appeared in the January 1943 issue of BCM:

"The passing of G. V. Butler deprives Sussex of one of their strongest and most dependable players. He had been ailing for some time and he died at Thornton Heath a comparatively young man, under 40.

"He was a former Sussex Champion as his father, H. W. Butler, the founder of the Sussex Chess Association was before him. It was no unusual occurrence for G. V. Butler to go through a season of the Counties’ Championship without loss, playing for Sussex on a high board, a tribute to his steadiness and resource. The following games demonstrate his unusual talent for carrying out powerful attacks by the simplest means. A great loss to British chess."

Gilbert Butler was born on 2 November 1902 and in 1939 he was living with his widowed mother and shown in the September 1939 as having no occupation. This was unusual in wartime and perhaps another indicator that he was unwell or unfit, although we know from the newspaper cutting that he had been a store-keeper in 1932, so maybe he was one of many who lost his job in the hungry Thirties.

Here are the three games given in the BCM obituary:

Sunday, 8 November 2020

Shooting Chess Players: No.1 - Caruana - Korchnoi, Gibraltar 2011

Here's a photo you might have seen before...

... of Fabiano Caruana playing Viktor Korchnoi in the Tradewise Gibraltar Masters in 2011. The age differential was an amazing 61 years (which is greater than that between, for example, Karpov and Alekhine). And, more amazing still - it was the older guy who won!

I'm proud of the fact that I took this photo. Only this morning, renowned chess photographer David Llada said of it, "That photo from Gib is a piece of chess history. I wouldn’t have minded to have taken it!" That makes me prouder still - a bit like being a rank and file player and having Kasparov or Carlsen telling you, "that was a good game you played there."

That said, David and I both know that, technically, it's actually a terrible photo! A professional photographer, judging it on a ten-point scale, might give it a generous 'one' on the grounds that at least the two heads of the players are in it and recognisable. Everything else sucks. The focus is sharpest on Korchnoi's water bottle. The composition isn't great; it looks like Korchnoi is about to reach out and play a move, though Fabi hasn't made his own first move yet. So definitely not what Cartier-Bresson would call the "decisive moment". To be fair to myself, the light coming through the window is challenging, as David Llada also pointed out, but I guess someone a bit more proficient with a camera than me could have coped better with that.

However, little of the above matters. We could have wished that David Llada, Ray Morris-Hill, Lennart Ootes, Niki Riga, Maria Emelianova or Sophie Triay had been there to take the shot as they would surely have nailed it. With my infinitely better camera and significantly improved photographic technique of now (I've learnt a lot from the aforementioned photographers in the last decade and digital camera technology has also moved on by leaps and bounds) I might have done a bit better job had it been 2020 and not 2011. But no point dwelling on that: it was just me and my Nikon D90 and my shaky technique to capture this remarkable meeting of the generations with its sensational result, and that outweighs any photographic aesthetics. Famously, Viktor went on to defeat Fabi in a stunning game - see it analysed by Agadmator on YouTube.

Technical note: Nikon D90, 50.0mm f/1.4 lens, ISO 250, f/4.5, 1/60sec. Shot as a JPG. I've tried improving it using Adobe Lightroom software but with only marginal success.

Saturday, 9 November 2019

David Welch (1945-2019)

I have just heard the sad news of the death of David Welch, who contributed so much to British chess as an arbiter and organiser over so many years.

David Welch at the Gibraltar Festival in 2015 (photo John Saunders)

Dave was born in Brampton (Chesterfield), Derbyshire, on 30 October 1945. After attending Chesterfield Grammar School, where he captained the chess team, he took a degree at Cambridge University before taking up a teaching job at Liverpool in 1968. Also starting teaching the same day at the same school was Peter Purland, who like Dave was to become an equally distinguished servant of British chess over the past half century. The two spent their entire teaching careers at the same school, and often worked in tandem as arbiters and organisers over the same period of time and long into their retirement from teaching.

Dave joined Liverpool Chess Club in 1968 and eventually became its president, and organiser of the Liverpool Congress. He became involved in organising and arbiting at British Championships in 1981, later taking on roles as chief arbiter of the British (later English) Chess Federation and director/manager of congress chess. He was also chief arbiter of the 4NCL for some years. He was awarded the FIDE International Arbiter title in 1977 and the FIDE International Organiser title in 2010. He received the ECF President's Award in 2007.

I first came into regular contact with Dave at the Isle of Man and Gibraltar tournaments where he also officiated as chief arbiter for some years. His vast experience of chess organisation made him a safe pair of hands, and almost the automatic go-to man when a major congress needed someone to take charge, as happened at the Monarch Assurance Isle of Man tournament when Richard Furness passed away. Dave's firmness of resolve and stentorian voice (albeit not quite matching the molto fortissimo of his Welsh colleague Peter Purland) will remain a particular memory of these events. These schoolmasterly traits gave way to a more whimsical personality, and a wicked sense of humour, when off-duty over a pint in the bar at the end of play. One small example: when musing over the experimental one-game knock-out tournament format being proposed by Stewart Reuben for the Hastings Congress in 2004/5, Dave told me, "if it works, we will call it the Hastings System. If it doesn't work, we will call it the Reuben System."

Dave died on 9 November 2019 after suffering a stroke which left him greatly debilitated some two years ago. His is a great loss to British chess. I shall miss him greatly. RIP.

(c) 2019 John Saunders