Latest news with #ManxLiberty


Spectator
4 days ago
- Sport
- Spectator
Four Nations
The final weekend of the Four Nations Chess League (4NCL) took place on the early May bank holiday, and promised a close race between the defending champions Wood Green and the strong Manx Liberty team, who began the weekend a couple of match points in front. The league looked likely to be decided in a final round pairing between the two. It was an underdog team, The Sharks, which played the role of kingmaker. They began by holding the Manx team to a draw, enabling Wood Green to narrow the gap in the title race. But in the next (penultimate) round, The Sharks faced Wood Green, who fielded England heavyweight Michael Adams on top board (whose win is shown below). Despite that, the Sharks scored a 4.5-3.5 upset. Meanwhile, Manx Liberty won their match easily, leaving them three points ahead of Wood Green in the title race. That dashed Wood Green's hopes, so their final match with Manx Liberty mattered only for pride, and ended in a 4-4 tie. Michael Adams-Peter Roberson 4NCL, May 2025 1 e4 e6 2 d4 d5 3 e5 c5 4 c3 Nc6 5 Nf3 Bd7 6 Be2 Nge7 7 O-O cxd4 8 cxd4 Nf5 9 Nc3 Rc8 10 a3 a6 11 Rb1 Qb6 12 Be3 Na5 13 Bd3 Nxe3 14 fxe3 Be7 15 Nd2 O-O 16 Qh5 16 Rf6!! was even stronger, e.g. 16…gxf6 17 Qg4+ Kh8 18 exf6 Bxf6 19 Qh5. Bobby Fischer played a similar blocking move with a rook to win a famous game against Pal Benko at the 1963/64 US Championship. g6 17 Qh6 (see diagram) f5 White threatened Rf1-f3-h3, so this appears essential. But 17….Qd8 was better. After 18 Nf3 (to prevent Be7-g5), the rook's path is blocked, so there is time for counterplay with 18…Na5-c4. 18 exf6 Rxf6 19 Rxf6 Bxf6 20 Bxg6 hxg6 21 Qxg6+ Bg7 22 Nxd5! Using the pin on the sixth rank.
Yahoo
20-05-2025
- Sport
- Yahoo
Magnus Carlsen v The World: chess champion's 46-day match ends in draw
Magnus Carlsen and Fabiano Caruana in the final of the GOAT Freestyle Chess finals in Hamburg last year. Magnus Carlsen and Fabiano Caruana in the final of the GOAT Freestyle Chess finals in Hamburg last year. Photograph: Lennart Ootes On the surface it hardly seemed like a fair fight. But after 46 days the online freestyle chess match between the Norwegian grandmaster Magnus Carlsen and 143,000 enthusiasts from around the globe has ended in a surprise draw. There was, however, a major consolation for Carlsen as he smashed the record for facing the biggest number of opponents in an online chess match. Advertisement Related: Manx Liberty's wildcards deliver in style to regain British team chess crown The game, which was billed as Magnus Carlsen vs The World, began on on 4 April, with the former world champion and highest-rated player in history regarded as a significant favourite. After he played his first move, Team World then voted on a reply, with each side then having 24 hours to make their next move. Despite appearing to have the early initiative against Team World, Carlsen was unable to find a way to further improve his position. The match ended after 32 moves when Team World was able to force a draw by checking Carlsen's king and repeating the position three times. 'I felt that I was a little bit better, early in the opening, then maybe I didn't play that precisely,' said Carlsen. 'Honestly, since then, they haven't given me a single chance.' Advertisement With freestyle chess, the bishops, knights, rooks, queen and king have randomised starting positions, while the pawns remain in their usual spots. Carlsen has proven a master at the format, which allows for more creative and unusual positions, and last month won a tournament against other grandmasters in Grenke with a staggering 9/9 score. However, he admitted he had been able to find a way past the Team World's defences, with many casual fans using chess computers to help them choose sensible moves. 'Overall, 'the world' has played very, very sound chess from the start,' added Carlsen. 'Maybe not going for most enterprising options, but kind of keeping it more in vein with normal chess – which isn't always the best strategy, but it worked out well this time.' Advertisement The match was the third record-setting online chess match between a grandmaster and the World. In 1999, Russian grandmaster Garry Kasparov played against more than 50,000 people on the Microsoft Network. The former world champion won after four months and hailed it as 'the greatest game in the history of chess.' Last year another chess legend, the Indian grandmaster Viswanathan Anand, won his 'vs. The World' match last year against nearly 70,000 players on The goal of the Carlsen match was to break Anand's 70,000-player mark, and ended up doubling it.
Yahoo
09-05-2025
- Sport
- Yahoo
Manx Liberty's wildcards deliver in style to regain British team chess crown
The Four Nations Chess League (4NCL) is a bedrock of British chess. Staged over 11 rounds and five weekends from October to May at Midlands hotels, with teams of eight in the top division and six in divisions two to four, it attracts players from club level to grandmaster, many of whom do not compete in any other national event. Its organisation, by the English Chess Federation chief executive, Mike Truran, and a hardworking team of arbiters, is consistently excellent. As expected, the 2024-25 season ended last Monday with a close 11th round match between the favourites and defending champions, Wood Green, and the winners for the two previous years, Manx Liberty. The outcome was a rarity. All eight games were drawn for a 4-4 scoreline, although most were hard fought and Manx missed a winning endgame chance. Related: Eze does it: England footballer wins celebrity chess tournament Contrary to predictions, the title was already decided in the previous round when The Sharks, who had tied 4-4 with Manx in round nine, defeated Wood Green 4.5-3.5. Final leading scores were Manx Liberty 20/22 match points, Wood Green 17, Wood Green Youth 16, Chessable White Rose 16, Cheddleton Savills Catering 13, The Sharks 13, CSC/Kingston 11. In previous seasons the top teams often brought in a world-class wildcard for the final weekend. This time Wood Green added the eight-time British champion Michael Adams, who duly delivered one of the best games of the weekend in round 10, complete with bishop and knight sacrifices, but was held to draws in the crunch matches of rounds nine and 11. Manx, who in their previous winning seasons had brought in the Fire on Board author, Alexei Shirov, for the decisive rounds, opted instead for a different approach, signing up the 2022 British champion, Harry Grieve, and England's youngest grandmaster, Shreyas Royal, for the whole season to supplement their core squad of Romanian, Hungarian and Polish GMs and IMs. It worked brilliantly. Grieve, with 9.5/11, amassed the highest points total of any player in the top division, while Royal's 8/11 included a streak of six consecutive wins. The outcome should encourage Grieve, 24, to make a renewed push for his third and final GM norm, while Royal is now consistently producing 2500-rated performances. Grieve won in style in this game. The human story of the weekend was Richard Pert scoring his second GM norm at age 44, 19 years after his first norm which was also achieved in the 4NCL, watched by his twin brother, Nick, his son Max and his daughter Nina, who all played in the same Cheddleton Savills Catering team on Sunday. Victory was no easy matter, for his opponent needed a win for his own IM norm. The Pert family celebrations continued on Monday when Nina, 16, checkmated an international master. Additionally to Richard Pert, Tom O'Gorman of The Sharks and Ireland scored his first GM norm, Zoe Varney of Blackthorne and England her second WIM norm, and Svyatoslav Bazakutsa of Wood Green and Ukraine his second GM norm. The 4NCL has an important role in developing young British talent. England's star junior of the moment is Supratit Banerjee, 11, of Coulsdon, Surrey, who plays for the CSC/Kingston 4NCL team. Banerjee's Fide rating has surged impressively this year, rising over 170 points in four months to his current 2312 Fide Master level. In that period he has played more than 100 games, with tournaments in Spain and Hungary as well as in England. At 11 years and two months, Banerjee has a serious chance to surpass the UK record of Luke McShane and David Howell, who became international masters at 13 years and two months in 1997 and 2004 respectively. Royal did it at 13 years and seven months and Nigel Short at 14years and six months, while Freddy Waldhausen Gordon, at 14 possibly Scotland's best ever talent, now has the required three norms and 2400 rating and expects his IM title to be ratified at the next Fide council meeting. It is not a done deal for Banerjee, as some talents hit a ceiling above 2300 but miss out on the higher level. He scored 6.5/11 for CSC/Kingston in the 4NCL season including this round seven win, but there was a warning sign in the final round when his gung-ho attack led to defeat. One of Banerjee's coming norm opportunities will be at the Kingston Invitational in August, organised by the Guardian's Stephen Moss. At international level, the boy to watch is Roman Shogdzhiev. The Russian, already world under-eight champion with 11/11 and world under-10 champion with 10/11, achieved his first IM norm last year aged nine, and has just scored his second IM norm at the Baku Open, registering a tournament performance of over 2500. Shogdzhiev is now on track to break the record of Argentina's 'chess Messi' Faustino Oro as the youngest ever international master. The Garry Kasparov of the 21st century? In 1975, this column forecast that the then unknown 11-year-old Garik Weinstein (later Kasparov) would succeed Anatoly Karpov as world champion by 1990. Now, Shogdzhiev looks the part as the player to restore Russia's lost chess glories in the next decade. 3971: 1 Qxh6+! Kxh6 (if gxh6 2 Rxh8 mate) 2 Rxh8+ Kg5 3 Rh5 mate.
Yahoo
09-05-2025
- Sport
- Yahoo
Manx Liberty's wildcards deliver in style to regain British team chess crown
The Four Nations Chess League (4NCL) is a bedrock of British chess. Staged over 11 rounds and five weekends from October to May at Midlands hotels, with teams of eight in the top division and six in divisions two to four, it attracts players from club level to grandmaster, many of whom do not compete in any other national event. Its organisation, by the English Chess Federation chief executive, Mike Truran, and a hardworking team of arbiters, is consistently excellent. As expected, the 2024-25 season ended last Monday with a close 11th round match between the favourites and defending champions, Wood Green, and the winners for the two previous years, Manx Liberty. The outcome was a rarity. All eight games were drawn for a 4-4 scoreline, although most were hard fought and Manx missed a winning endgame chance. Advertisement Related: Eze does it: England footballer wins celebrity chess tournament Contrary to predictions, the title was already decided in the previous round when The Sharks, who had tied 4-4 with Manx in round nine, defeated Wood Green 4.5-3.5. Final leading scores were Manx Liberty 20/22 match points, Wood Green 17, Wood Green Youth 16, Chessable White Rose 16, Cheddleton Savills Catering 13, The Sharks 13, CSC/Kingston 11. In previous seasons the top teams often brought in a world-class wildcard for the final weekend. This time Wood Green added the eight-time British champion Michael Adams, who duly delivered one of the best games of the weekend in round 10, complete with bishop and knight sacrifices, but was held to draws in the crunch matches of rounds nine and 11. Advertisement Manx, who in their previous winning seasons had brought in the Fire on Board author, Alexei Shirov, for the decisive rounds, opted instead for a different approach, signing up the 2022 British champion, Harry Grieve, and England's youngest grandmaster, Shreyas Royal, for the whole season to supplement their core squad of Romanian, Hungarian and Polish GMs and IMs. It worked brilliantly. Grieve, with 9.5/11, amassed the highest points total of any player in the top division, while Royal's 8/11 included a streak of six consecutive wins. The outcome should encourage Grieve, 24, to make a renewed push for his third and final GM norm, while Royal is now consistently producing 2500-rated performances. Grieve won in style in this game. The human story of the weekend was Richard Pert scoring his second GM norm at age 44, 19 years after his first norm which was also achieved in the 4NCL, watched by his twin brother, Nick, his son Max and his daughter Nina, who all played in the same Cheddleton Savills Catering team on Sunday. Victory was no easy matter, for his opponent needed a win for his own IM norm. The Pert family celebrations continued on Monday when Nina, 16, checkmated an international master. Additionally to Richard Pert, Tom O'Gorman of The Sharks and Ireland scored his first GM norm, Zoe Varney of Blackthorne and England her second WIM norm, and Svyatoslav Bazakutsa of Wood Green and Ukraine his second GM norm. Advertisement The 4NCL has an important role in developing young British talent. England's star junior of the moment is Supratit Banerjee, 11, of Coulsdon, Surrey, who plays for the CSC/Kingston 4NCL team. Banerjee's Fide rating has surged impressively this year, rising over 170 points in four months to his current 2312 Fide Master level. In that period he has played more than 100 games, with tournaments in Spain and Hungary as well as in England. At 11 years and two months, Banerjee has a serious chance to surpass the UK record of Luke McShane and David Howell, who became international masters at 13 years and two months in 1997 and 2004 respectively. Royal did it at 13 years and seven months and Nigel Short at 14years and six months, while Freddy Waldhausen Gordon, at 14 possibly Scotland's best ever talent, now has the required three norms and 2400 rating and expects his IM title to be ratified at the next Fide council meeting. It is not a done deal for Banerjee, as some talents hit a ceiling above 2300 but miss out on the higher level. He scored 6.5/11 for CSC/Kingston in the 4NCL season including this round seven win, but there was a warning sign in the final round when his gung-ho attack led to defeat. One of Banerjee's coming norm opportunities will be at the Kingston Invitational in August, organised by the Guardian's Stephen Moss. At international level, the boy to watch is Roman Shogdzhiev. The Russian, already world under-eight champion with 11/11 and world under-10 champion with 10/11, achieved his first IM norm last year aged nine, and has just scored his second IM norm at the Baku Open, registering a tournament performance of over 2500. Shogdzhiev is now on track to break the record of Argentina's 'chess Messi' Faustino Oro as the youngest ever international master. Advertisement The Garry Kasparov of the 21st century? In 1975, this column forecast that the then unknown 11-year-old Garik Weinstein (later Kasparov) would succeed Anatoly Karpov as world champion by 1990. Now, Shogdzhiev looks the part as the player to restore Russia's lost chess glories in the next decade. 3971: 1 Qxh6+! Kxh6 (if gxh6 2 Rxh8 mate) 2 Rxh8+ Kg5 3 Rh5 mate.


The Guardian
09-05-2025
- Sport
- The Guardian
Manx Liberty's wildcards deliver in style to regain British team chess crown
The Four Nations Chess League (4NCL) is a bedrock of British chess. Staged over 11 rounds and five weekends from October to May at Midlands hotels, with teams of eight in the top division and six in divisions two to four, it attracts players from club level to grandmaster, many of whom do not compete in any other national event. Its organisation, by the English Chess Federation chief executive, Mike Truran, and a hardworking team of arbiters, is consistently excellent. As expected, the 2024-25 season ended last Monday with a close 11th round match between the favourites and defending champions, Wood Green, and the winners for the two previous years, Manx Liberty. The outcome was a rarity. All eight games were drawn for a 4-4 scoreline, although most were hard fought and Manx missed a winning endgame chance. Contrary to predictions, the title was already decided in the previous round when The Sharks, who had tied 4-4 with Manx in round nine, defeated Wood Green 4.5-3.5. Final leading scores were Manx Liberty 20/22 match points, Wood Green 17, Wood Green Youth 16, Chessable White Rose 16, Cheddleton Savills Catering 13, The Sharks 13, CSC/Kingston 11. In previous seasons the top teams often brought in a world-class wildcard for the final weekend. This time Wood Green added the eight-time British champion Michael Adams, who duly delivered one of the best games of the weekend in round 10, complete with bishop and knight sacrifices, but was held to draws in the crunch matches of rounds nine and 11. Manx, who in their previous winning seasons had brought in the Fire on Board author, Alexei Shirov, for the decisive rounds, opted instead for a different approach, signing up the 2022 British champion, Harry Grieve, and England's youngest grandmaster, Shreyas Royal, for the whole season to supplement their core squad of Romanian, Hungarian and Polish GMs and IMs. It worked brilliantly. Grieve, with 9.5/11, amassed the highest points total of any player in the top division, while Royal's 8/11 included a streak of six consecutive wins. The outcome should encourage Grieve, 24, to make a renewed push for his third and final GM norm, while Royal is now consistently producing 2500-rated performances. Grieve won in style in this game. The human story of the weekend was Richard Pert scoring his second GM norm at age 44, 19 years after his first norm which was also achieved in the 4NCL, watched by his twin brother, Nick, his son Max and his daughter Nina, who all played in the same Cheddleton Savills Catering team on Sunday. Victory was no easy matter, for his opponent needed a win for his own IM norm. The Pert family celebrations continued on Monday when Nina, 16, checkmated an international master. Additionally to Richard Pert, Tom O'Gorman of The Sharks and Ireland scored his first GM norm, Zoe Varney of Blackthorne and England her second WIM norm, and Svyatoslav Bazakutsa of Wood Green and Ukraine his second GM norm. The 4NCL has an important role in developing young British talent. England's star junior of the moment is Supratit Banerjee, 11, of Coulsdon, Surrey, who plays for the CSC/Kingston 4NCL team. Banerjee's Fide rating has surged impressively this year, rising over 170 points in four months to his current 2312 Fide Master level. In that period he has played more than 100 games, with tournaments in Spain and Hungary as well as in England. Sign up to The Recap The best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend's action after newsletter promotion At 11 years and two months, Banerjee has a serious chance to surpass the UK record of Luke McShane and David Howell, who became international masters at 13 years and two months in 1997 and 2004 respectively. Royal did it at 13 years and seven months and Nigel Short at 14years and six months, while Freddy Waldhausen Gordon, at 14 possibly Scotland's best ever talent, now has the required three norms and 2400 rating and expects his IM title to be ratified at the next Fide council meeting. It is not a done deal for Banerjee, as some talents hit a ceiling above 2300 but miss out on the higher level. He scored 6.5/11 for CSC/Kingston in the 4NCL season including this round seven win, but there was a warning sign in the final round when his gung-ho attack led to defeat. One of Banerjee's coming norm opportunities will be at the Kingston Invitational in August, organised by the Guardian's Stephen Moss. At international level, the boy to watch is Roman Shogdzhiev. The Russian, already world under-eight champion with 11/11 and world under-10 champion with 10/11, achieved his first IM norm last year aged nine, and has just scored his second IM norm at the Baku Open, registering a tournament performance of over 2500. Shogdzhiev is now on track to break the record of Argentina's 'chess Messi' Faustino Oro as the youngest ever international master. The Garry Kasparov of the 21st century? In 1975, this column forecast that the then unknown 11-year-old Garik Weinstein (later Kasparov) would succeed Anatoly Karpov as world champion by 1990. Now, Shogdzhiev looks the part as the player to restore Russia's lost chess glories in the next decade. 3971: 1 Qxh6+! Kxh6 (if gxh6 2 Rxh8 mate) 2 Rxh8+ Kg5 3 Rh5 mate.