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17th Chess Festival “Citta di Padova” 2014 LIVE!
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World Youth U-16 Olympiad 2014 LIVE!
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Zadar Open 2014 LIVE!
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S P Sethuraman is 2014 Indian Chess Champion
GM S P Sethuraman won the SIB-CMS College 52nd National Premier Chess Championship, organised by Kottayam Chess Academy, with an undefeated score of 8.5 points, at CMS College, Kottayam, in the southern state of Kerala.
Both GM Deep Sengupta of PSPB and IM P. Karthikeyan of ICF, a unit of Railways scored 8 points, but better tiebreak score favoured Deep to finish runner up.

Grandmaster SP Sethuraman
The smile shows as Sethu and Deepan drew their game in 15 moves out of the Ruy Lopez Berlin and Sethuraman to win the National Championship, just in his 3rd attempt. Sethu remained undefeated in his score card of 8.5 points with 5 wins and 7 draws.
From a scotch opening Deep Sengupta and VAV Rajesh of Tamil Nadu were following a game between Anish Giri and David Navara. Anish won the game with 17.Qb5, but Deep varied with 17.Nd5. Unperturbed by the changes Rajesh rallied his knights to defensive post disallowing further attack for the white pieces and the game ended in a draw in 25 moves.

Better tiebreak helped Deep Sengupta to finish second. His final round opponent was IM Rajesh
Catalan was the topic between these two ICF players. White was not interested in reclaiming the sacrificed c4 pawn, allowing black to have a stronghold on the queen side. Laxman unable to revive the position, tried a few tactics which was well averted by Karthik. Laxman resigned on the 41st move, facing the deficit of 2 pawns and no compensation to play for.
From the white side of Rossolimo Sicilian, Girinath played a modest 11.d3 against the highest rated player of the tournament Vidit Santosh Gujrathi of PSPB, instead of the active pawn push in the centre. Interestingly in the middle game both Kings were shielded by pieces and without pawns. Vidit erred with 31…Kh8, which was well used by Girinath who pointed his major pieces successfully towards black king. Vidit threw in the towel on 35th move owing to the irresistible attack by white. Girinath caused a great upset by beating the top seed of the championship.

IM Girinath had a upset win over GM Vidit Santosh Gujrathi
Lalith’s outpost on d5 square did not materialise against Kunte’s Bogo Indian defense. Even the passed centre pawns was unable to create inroads, despite piling of major pieces on the King file by White. The experienced Kunte played the endgame phase innovatively and won the game in 49 moves.

GM Lalith Babu – GM Abhijit Kunte
IM Swayams Mishra of Orissa chose the Rubinstein variation against the Nimzo Indian setup. On the 10th move, his opponent Shyam played out a new move to exchange one of the white’s bishops. Despite Swayams having a good control over the Queen file with array of his major pieces, Shyam’s timely counterattack on white’s king had to be dealt with. Immediately after the defense, both signed a truce in 26 moves.

IM Swayams Mishra – IM Shyam Nikhil
Dr. Babu Sebastin, Vice Chancellor of Mahatma Gandhi University was the chief guest for the prize distribution function, presided by Dr. Roy Sam Daniel, Principal of the host CMS College in the august presence of Mr. Shelly Joseph, Regional Head & Dy. GM, South Indian Bank, the main sponsor.
Final standings:
1. GM Sethuraman S.P. 2622 – 8.5
2-3. GM Sengupta Deep 2566 and IM Karthikeyan P. 2400 – 8
4-5. GM Vidit Santosh Gujrathi 2625 and GM Grover Sahaj 2505 – 7
6. GM Kunte Abhijit 2480 – 6.5
7. GM Lalith Babu M.R. 2547 – 6
8-9. IM Shyam Nikil P. 2454 and GM Deepan Chakkravarthy J. 2489 – 5.5
10. IM Swayams Mishra 2491 – 5
11. GM Laxman R.R. 2408 – 4
12-13. IM Rajesh V A V 2408 and IM Girinath P.D.S. 2333 – 3.5
Report by R. Anantharam
Chief Arbiter
Councillor, Arbiters’ Commission, FIDE
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44th Rilton Cup in Stockholm, Sweden
44th Rilton Cup in Stockholm, Sweden
Dec 19, 2014
The Stockholm Chess Federation is organizing the 44th Rilton Cup, which will be held from 27th December 2014 to 5th January 2015.
The tournament will be played in four groups: Rilton Cup, Rilton Elo, Rilton 1800 and Rilton 1600. All sections will be FIDE rated.
Rilton Cup and Rilton Elo will be rated with FIDE and played over 9 rounds of Swiss system. The first round starts at 3:00 p.m. on 27th December. Round 2-8 start the same time. The last, 9th round starts at noon on 5th January. The 31st December (New Year’s Eve) is free of play.
The winner of the previous Rilton Cup was Norwegian Grandmaster Jon Ludvig Hammer.
The playing venue is at Clarion Hotel Stockholm, Ringvägen 98, Stockholm. Metro station Skanstull, green line.

Clarion Hotel Stockholm
Rilton Cup
Rilton Cup is open for players with an ELO-rating or National rating of at least 2200.
Prizes: 1st 20 000 SEK, 2nd 15 000 SEK, 3rd 12 000 SEK, 4th 10 000 SEK, 5th 8 000 SEK, 6th 6 000 SEK, 7th 5 000 SEK, 8th 4 000 SEK, 9th 3 000 SEK, 10th 3 000 SEK
Rating prizes: 3 000 SEK, 2 000 SEK and 1 000 SEK per rating-group
Rilton Elo
Open for players with an Elo rating and national rating less than 2200.
Prizes: 7,000 – 5,000 – 4,000 – 3,000 – 2,500 – 2,000 – 1,500 – 1,000 – 1,000 – 1,000 SEK.
Rating prizes: 3,000, 2,000 and 1,000 SEK per rating group.
Rilton 1800
Open for players with an Elo rating and national rating less than 1800. 7 rounds, 29/12 – 5/1.
Players registered outside the Nordic countries must have an Elo rating to participate.
Prizes: 4,000 – 2,500 – 1,500 – 1,000 – 1,000 SEK.
Rating prizes: 1,500, 800 and 500 SEK per rating group.
Rilton 1600
Open for players with an Elo rating and national rating less than 1600. 7 rounds with two double rounds, 1/1 – 5/1.
Players registered outside the Nordic countries must have an Elo rating to participate.
Prizes: 2,000 – 1,000 – 800 – 600 – 500 SEK.
Rating prizes: 800, 600 and 400 SEK per rating group.
Official website www.rilton.se
Rilton Cup (top seeds):
1 GM Smirin Ilia ISR 2644
2 GM Romanov Evgeny RUS 2636
3 GM Hammer Jon Ludvig NOR 2635
4 GM Goganov Aleksey RUS 2615
5 GM Krasenkow Michal POL 2614
6 GM Roiz Michael ISR 2592
7 GM Shimanov Aleksandr RUS 2589
8 GM Turov Maxim RUS 2587
9 GM Karen Grigoryan ARM 2586
10 GM Grandelius Nils SWE 2573
11 GM Mikhalevski Victor ISR 2571
12 GM Ivanov Sergey RUS 2559
13 GM Hillarp Persson Tiger SWE 2544
14 GM Tikkanen Hans SWE 2543
15 IM Urkedal Frode NOR 2514
16 GM Blomqvist Erik SWE 2512
17 GM Cramling Pia SWE 2512
18 IM Prizant Jaroslav RUS 2511
19 GM Semcesen Daniel SWE 2482
20 IM Tari Aryan NOR 2479
21 IM Smith Axel SWE 2475
22 GM Åkesson Ralf SWE 2461
23 IM Bekker-Jensen Simon DEN 2458
24 IM Turova Irina RUS 2421
25 IM Sjödahl Pontus SWE 2419
26 FM Vandenbussche Thibaut BEL 2418
27 IM Bellia Fabrizio ITA 2415
28 FM Habu Yoshiharu JPN 2415
29 GM Bellon Juan ESP 2412
30 IM Westerberg Jonathan SWE 2411
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GM Salem Saleh wins Al Ain Rapid Chess
UAE’s Salem A.R. Saleh wins Al Ain rapid chess event
GM scores six out of a possible seven points in precursor to classic championship
Staff Report
Published: 17:12 December 19, 2014
Al Ain: Grandmaster Salem A.R. Saleh of the UAE won the Al Ain Rapid Chess Championship at the Hili Rayhaan by Rotana hotel in Al Ain on Thursday.
Seventy players from 17 countries, including 25 Grandmasters, took part in the one-day precursor to the December 19 to 26 Al Ain Classic Chess Championship.
Saleh finished undefeated with six points from seven rounds. He beat Vugar Asadli of Azerbaijan, Armenians FM Manuel Petrosyan, GM Arman Pashikian and GM Samuel Ter-Sahakyan, GM Rauf Mamedov of Azerbaijan and drew with GM Yuriy Kryvoruchko of Ukraine and GM Mikheil Mchedlishvili of Georgia.
After his fourth-round loss to Saleh, Ter-Sahakyan caught up to tie with six points, but Saleh emerged first in the tie-break.
Kryvoruchko finished third with 5.5 points ahead by tie-break over Mchedlishvili and GM Levon Babujian of Armenia.
Seven players followed with five points each. Finishing in tieb-reak order were GM Miknailo Oleksienko of Ukraine in sixth followed by Marin Kravtsiv, also of Ukraine, GM Viktor Moskalenko of Spain, GM Alexander Kovchan of Ukraine, GM Arman Pashikian of Armenia and IM Amierreza Pourrameezanali of Iran.
Mokal Amruta Sunil of India won the award for best female player, while IM Omar Noaman received the prize for Emirati player and FM Mayed Al Rashedi won the best Al Ain player award.
Many more players are expected to arrive for the Al Ain Chess Classic at the same venue. At stake is $50,000 (Dh 183,000) in cash prizes, with a top prize of $11,000 (Dh40,000), and various category prizes.
Two rounds are scheduled on Saturday at 10am and 5pm. From Sunday, games start at 4pm daily except for the last round, which starts at 2pm. All games will be broadcast live at the alainchess.com website.
Source: http://gulfnews.com
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RCF President Birthday
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Navara wins European Blitz Championship by 2 full points!
European Blitz Chess Championship 2014: David Navara convincing winner
Dec 19, 2014
Grandmaster David Navara won the European Blitz Chess Championship 2014 that was held on 19th December at the Centennial Hall in Wroclaw, Poland.
616 players from 31 European federations (FIDE Zones 1.1 to 1.10), including 176 International title holders, competed in the 11 double-round Swiss event with the time control G-3′+2”.
David Navara finished clear first with 19/22 points, leaving the nearest followers full two points behind. The Czech won ten mini-matches and tied only against GM Marin Bosiocic.
Six players shared the second place with 17/22 points each. According to the additional criteria GM Jan-Krzysztof Duda from Poland claimed the silver medal, while GM Ivan Salgado from Spain took the bronze.

David Navara
Final standings:
1. GM NAVARA David CZE B 2705 – 19,0
2-7. GM DUDA Jan-Krzysztof POL B 2525, GM SALGADO Lopez Ivan ESP B 2522, GM SAVCHENKO Boris RUS B 2733, GM ALEKSEEV Evgeny RUS B 2624, GM ANTON Guijarro David ESP B 2664 and GM EFIMENKO Zahar UKR B 2640 – 17,0
8-13. IM BORTNYK Olexandr UKR B 2679, GM KOROBOV Anton UKR B 2752, GM KOVALENKO Igor LAT B 2682,GM VITIUGOV Nikita RUS B 2695, GM LYSYJ Igor RUS B 2577 and GM BOLOGAN Viktor MDA B 2601 – 16,5
14-19. GM BARTEL Mateusz POL B 2585, GM MATLAKOV Maxim RUS B 2683, IM DOURERASSOU Jonathan FRA B 2523, GM KEMPINSKI Robert POL B 2637, IM GEORGIADIS Nico SUI 2465 and GM GAJEWSKI Grzegorz POL B 2560 – 16,0
20-31. GM MITON Kamil POL B 2621, GM CYBOROWSKI Lukasz POL B 2560, GM KOVALEV Vladislav BLR B 2541,GM SOCKO Bartosz POL B 2632, GM BELOUS Vladimir RUS B 2632, GM KULAOTS Kaido EST B 2560, GM MOISEENKO Alexander UKR B 2607, IM NAGY Gabor HUN B 2472, GM AZAROV Sergei BLR B 2602, GM EDOUARD Romain FRA B 2686, GM BINDRICH Falko GER B 2595 and PUTKA Verners LAT B 2416 – 15,5 etc
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The latest from New In Chess
Sam’s miniature in New In Chess 2014#8
The 13-year-old Sam Sevian recently played a very nice miniature game that found its way into New In Chess magazine, issue 2014#8, that was published this week. The youngest American GM was heralded for his coffeehouse chess in NIC’s Café.
Look, it’s Sam Sevian!
Talking about the United States and records, a remarkable record that may have an impact on the future of American chess was set in St. Louis. In the shadow of an exhibition match between Levon Aronian and Hikaru Nakamura (2-2 in the classical games, the American took the blitz, 9½-6½) the Saint Louis Chess Club organized two 10-player invitational tournaments where IM and GM norms could be made. The GM invitational was a huge success for 13-year-old Sam Sevian (13 years, 10 months and 27 days, to be more precise). The youngster from Boston became the youngest American GM in history, a record previously held by the likes of Fischer, Nakamura and Caruana, and bested the record held by Ray Robson by nearly a full year. Sevian, who had already scored three GM norms before but whose rating was not high enough to claim the GM title, swept the field, 7½/9, and raised his rating above the required 2500 points.
Samuel Sevian - Denes Boros
St. Louis 2014 (1)
1.e4 g6 2.d4 ♗g7 3.♘c3 d6 4.f4 ♘f6 5.♘f3 0‑0 6.e5 ♘fd7 7.h4 c5 8.h5 cxd4 9.♕xd4 dxe5 10.♕f2 A move introduced by David Bronstein at the 1958 Olympiad in Munich against Palmiotti (1-0, 29). 10...♕b6 The Italian took on f4, which was also fine. 11.♕h4 exf4 12.hxg6 h6 Safer was 12...♕xg6. Now White probably would be better after 13.gxf7+, but Sevian has different plans. 13.♗xf4
Wow. This is very sharp. 13...♕xb2 14.♘d5 This was the idea. The white king has a safe hiding place on g3, while his black colleague is in grave danger. 14...♕xa1+ 15.♔f2 ♘c6 16.♗d3 ♕b2 Not ready to give his queen on h1, which was his best chance. 17.♗c1 ♕xa2 Now Black is lost. 18.♗xh6 ♘c5 19.♗xg7 ♘xd3+ 20.♔g3 fxg6 21.♘g5 Black resigned. He will be mated.
New In Chess 2014#8 is available at all specialist chess shops. The magazine can also be downloaded on your iPad o Android tablet. For direct links go to: www.newinchess.com/app
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We are the "chess" world
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Anand: My best is yet to come, hopefully!
Anand: My best is yet to come, hopefully!
Saturday, 20 12 2014 08:01
HYDERABAD (PTI): Indicating that he is still hungry for success, five-time chess world champion Viswanathan Anand said he is not quitting the game anytime soon and is preparing to play more tournaments in the coming year after a decent performance in 2014.
Asked if his best is yet to come, Anand said: "I hope so. I try to be optimistic."
The 45-year-old said he was happy with his performance in the year that is drawing to a close as he won three tournaments, although he acknowledged that in the recent world championship he could not capitalise on the self-created opportunities.
"I am happy with this year. I played well in many tournaments. I won three tournaments. I hope the trend continues," Anand, who earlier launched the NIIT Nguru MathLab Plus at a function organised by Kennedy High global school here, said.
- See more at: http://www.dailykashmirimages.com
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Beating The Pirc Modern Defences - GM Aaron Summerscale ... and more
Our LAST SALE + FREE DVD! - Happy Holidays from the OCL team!
Posted on December 19,2014 By GM Damian Lemos in All Articles w/ Videos, General Chess Articles. Happy Holidays! In the holiday spirit, we want to keep promoting chess and offering premium content for anyone that wants to learn the game and improve. This week we're giving away the chess DVD download ¨The Killer Dragon - Volume 1¨ by GingerGM Simon Williams, this FREE DVD will teach you about one the most dangerous openings available to black against 1. e4. The Dragon is extremely aggressive and places strong pressure on white from the early[...]
What is Zugzwang and How do I Use it?
Posted on December 19,2014 By GM Levan Aroshidze in Strategy & Game Review, General Chess Articles, Beginner's Corner. Zugzwang is a situation when a player is in a disadvantage because it's his turn to play, but all available moves are bad. Zugzwang appears relatively rarely in practice. Zugzwang positions normally arise in the endgames, when the number of pieces and possible moves is reduced. Sometimes creating a Zugzwang position is the only possible way to win the game. In order to discover Zugzwang's motivations, you need to plan not only your own play, but[...]
Beating The Pirc Modern Defences - GM Aaron Summerscale
Posted on December 18,2014 By OnlineChessLessons.NET Contributor in Strategy & Game Review, Chess Openings, All Articles w/ Videos. Control the center and attack your opponent! In the video "Beating The Pirc Modern Defences" by GM Aaron Summerscale, we are taught a simple, yet effective response that White can use against any Pirc or Modern style defense that Black plays. The set-up that is explained in the video is called the "150 Attack". The 150 Attack can be played through tricky move orders that can cause the Black opponent problems if they are not prepared for the types[...]
Weak Squares in the Game
Posted on December 18,2014 By GM Levan Aroshidze in Strategy & Game Review, General Chess Articles, Beginner's Corner. Weak Squares are the squares which can't be defended by the pawns. Generally, they are perfect locations for the minor pieces, especially if the weak square is in the central area. Recognizing importance of the weak squares and studying the technique of using them is an important step toward perfecting your chess strategy. Fixing and taking control over the weak squares may be as important as gaining a material advantage. Using the Weak Squares W[...]
OnlineChessLessons.net is a producer of thousands of free chess articles and free chess videos by FIDE chess masters. They recently released the renowned Empire Chess series that has been taking the chess world by storm. Please consider checking out their chess blog and chess shop with tons of free updated previews.
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Webster University 2014
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Young talent aiming for the record
This Awesome 16-Year-Old Wants To Be The Youngest African American Chess Grandmaster
Posted: 12/19/2014 11:01 am EST Updated: 1 hour ago
Nico Pitney
Senior Editor, The Huffington Post
There were plenty of signs that 16-year-old Joshua Colas was a chess prodigy.
"He told me one day, 'Daddy, I can play you blindfolded,'" his father Guy Colas recounted to The Huffington Post. "And I said, 'You sure? I've never seen you practice.'"
Joshua was right; he could not only match his dad but beat him, with his eyes closed.
At age 12, Joshua became the youngest African American chess master in history. This past weekend, he won the national chess championship for the second consecutive year.
Now a high school junior, Joshua's goal is to attain the highest rank in chess, grandmaster. His family is running an Indiegogo campaign to cover the requisite tournament fees and travel costs. So far, they have raised just over $4,000 -- but they only have until next week to raise a lot more.
"He wants to be the role model for all these other kids from poor neighborhoods everywhere, to understand that chess is not only for the rich kids and for the smartest kids," his father said. "He wants to show, if you work hard enough, you can reach the top level."
The Colas family lives just north of New York City, but both of Joshua's parents were born in Haiti. Joshua grew up watching his dad play chess, and at age seven he asked to be taught the rules.
Within months, Guy said, "I was giving him puzzles that people who'd been playing chess for years couldn't solve, and he was able to solve them instantly."
Full article here.
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Exclusive interview with Wesley So's Mother by Chessdom
Interview with Leny So
Dec 19, 2014
Chessdom: Hello Leny. Thank you very much for doing this interview. We just heard the news about your son Wesley becoming a full time professional. We interviewed his former coach, GM Susan Polgar. We would like to know your perspective.
Are you and your husband chess players?
Leny So: I am not a chess player but I can play a little. I find it interesting and mentally stimulating. It was my husband, a hobby chess player, who taught Wesley chess when he was about 6. But we, as parents, did everything we could to support and nurture him throughout his whole life to give him a chance to succeed.
Q: Did you recognize Wesley’s talent early on?
LS: Yes, we knew he has a special God given talent in chess. We bought him various toys, but it was the chess that caught his interest. He is a very bright boy. He had many early successes and became a very strong player in his early teens. But his talent was not fully realized until later because he did not get proper training and assistance in chess. He needed help.
Q: So what happened? How did the big jump happen?
LS: My husband met GM Susan Polgar and her husband when he accompanied Wesley to the SPICE Cup in the US some years ago. After talking to them at length various times during this event, he understood that Wesley can benefit greatly from their world class chess training system. Our son was still too young at that time to enter university. But we had this idea in mind. And some years later when the time was right, Wesley joined SPICE at Webster University. That was the best decision for him and his chess career.
Q: So what did they do to help Wesley?
LS: First of all, they took Wesley in and treated him like their own son. Secondly, they knew right away what Wesley needed to do to become an elite player. They knew how to help him improve in many areas, on and off the chess board. They also have a very structured chess training / learning system at Webster University. They created for him baby steps to reach one goal at a time such as to break 2700, 2725, 2750, then top 10, etc. Wesley needed to be in a disciplined, positive, and structured environment. He came in as a talented boy and after 2 years became an accomplished man.

Q: So did you talk to Wesley about becoming a full time professional chess player?
LS: Yes, but only after he graduates from Webster University. We had hoped it did not mean that he would give up his education. No matter how good he is as a chess professional, it cannot replace education and a university degree. All of us encouraged him to stay in school. He still has so much to learn.
Unfortunately, there were poor advices given to Wesley which is not to our liking. I have a negative feeling as a mother that this is a very huge mistake on Wesley. It hurts me terribly.
Likewise, he has full plate, has to study and play chess, being distracted is not helpful.
Wesley is an adult and he has made his choice. Unfortunately, we could easily imagine better choices, or better ways for him to have expressed his choice or brought it about. All we can do as parents is to re-express our hope that he will make well-thought-out choices in the future, and display regard for their effects. We also like to reiterate to him our constant message as parents– reassurance of our continued love and welcome for him, and a gentle reminder to keep his upright upbringing and display continued awareness, concern for, sense of gratitude and sensitivity to the welfare and feelings of other people.

Leny So
Q: What is next? What will you do?
LS: We love our son and we will support him any way we can.
We taught him to be a loyal, honest, caring, and loving person, and always remain humble no matter how good he is. We taught him the value of professionalism and strong integrity.
Q: I know that this is a difficult time for you and your family. Is there anything else you wish to say?
LS: So family is very grateful to Paul Truong and GM Susan Polgar for what they have done for Wesley and his development as a person, teaching him to be responsible and reaching top ten in the world. I also thank his friends, supporters, Webster University, Reginald Tee, NCFP and President Pichay, and many more. I hope Wesley will never forget what everyone had sacrificed to help him for so many years. We will remain strong as a family and support our son anyway we can.
Q: Once again, thank you for taking the time to do this interview.
LS: Thank you very much.
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Practical chess tactic
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World Youth U-16 Olympiad 2014 LIVE!
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17th Chess Festival “Citta di Padova” 2014 LIVE!
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Zadar Open 2014 LIVE!
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GM Postny wins Zadar Open
Evgeny Postny wins Zadar Open
Dec 20, 2014
Grandmaster Evgeny Postny from Israel won the main section of the 2014 Zadar Open which was held from 14-20th December in Zadar, Croatia.
Postny completed the event with 7,0/9 points, half a point ahead of the Turkish International Masters Ogulcan Kanmazalp and Burak Firat. Kanmazalp earned a GM norm.
Best placed local player GM Ante Šarić qualified for the next Croatian Championship. Standings below.
In the Group B for players U2300 Mate Ribičić emerged winner with 7,5/9 points. Group B had 91 participants.
Replay games with analysis

Falkensteiner Hotels & Resorts Borik
Open A final standings (top finishers):
1. GM Postny Evgeny ISR 2635 – 7
2. IM Kanmazalp Ogulcan TUR 2433 – 6.5
3. IM Firat Burak TUR 2472 – 6.5
4. GM Šarić Ante CRO 2552 – 6
5. GM Predojević Borki BIH 2610 – 6
6. GM Stević Hrvoje CRO 2601 – 6
7. GM Brkić Ante CRO 2603 – 6
8. GM Zelčić Robert CRO 2534 – 5.5
9. GM Kožul Zdenko CRO 2632 – 5.5
10. IM Žufić Miroslav CRO 2453 – 5.5
11. GM Jovanić Ognjen CRO 2467 – 5
12. FM Deglmann Ludwig GER 2342 – 5
13. IM Režan Saša CRO 2439 – 5
14. IM Schreiner Peter AUT 2433 – 5
15. IM Schachinger Mario AUT 2439 – 5
16. FM Zelić Mladen CRO 2266 – 5
17. Bratkovic Sham SLO 2181 – 5
18. FM Yurtseven Melih TUR 2372 – 5
19. FM Halvax Georg AUT 2314 – 5
20. FM Biliškov Vjekoslav CRO 2342 – 4.5
21. IM Kreisl Robert AUT 2420 – 4.5
22. GM Cebalo Mišo CRO 2392 – 4.5
23. IM Bilobrk Franjo CRO 2384 – 4.5
24. FM Spalir Jernej SLO 2377 – 4.5
25. FM Marjanovic Dejan BIH 2339 – 4.5
26. NM Pećnik Leo CRO 2289 – 4.5
27. FM Burovic Ismet BIH 2387 – 4
28. GM Martinović Saša CRO 2535 – 4
29. IM Plenković Zdenko CRO 2386 – 4
30. FM Matko Ognjen CRO 2286 – 4
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