
The North Urals Cup 2004 is the second international super-tournament
for female chess players was held in Krasnoturinsk, the cultural center of
Northern Ural. Here is our introductory
report on the tournament
The tournament was a round robin with ten very strong female chess players,
amongst them the current women's world champion Antoaneta Stefanova (2527,
BUL), five times world champion Maia Chiburdanidze (2498, GEO) and Russian
women's champion Alisa Galliamova (2490, RUS).
The tournament was won by Almira Skripchenko, the 2001 European champion,
half a point ahead of her nearest rival Maia Chiburdanidze. Almira's Elo performance
in this tournament was a remarkable 2584.

Press conference to celebrate the winner, with the 12th world chess champion
Anatoly Karpov, the general director of BAZ Anatoly Sysoev, the winner of North
Urals Cup 2004 Almira Skripchenko, vice-president of FIDE Andrey Selivanov.
Final Standings of the North Urals Cup 2004


Anatoly Selivanov with Almira Skripchenko (in a dress by Ralph Lauren)
Interview with the winner Almira Skripchenko
This interview was conducted by telephone after Almira's return to her
flat in Paris. The transcription sticks very close to the original recording,
giving us a flavour of a chat with this vivacious and intelligent Women's
Grandmaster.
Frederic Friedel: Hello Almira, congratulations
for winning such a strong and prestigious tournament.
Almira Skripchenko: Thank you. Actually I was waiting for
you to call. You are publishing stories about beautiful women on your web site
and ignoring the final results of our tournament (laughs)…
Frederic: Mea culpa, we got carried away. Okay,
please tell about the tournament. It was very strong, like a Super-GM…

A bevy of top women grandmasters (at the closing ceremony): Svetlana Matveeva,
Antoaneta Stefanova, Almira Skripchenko and Natalia Zhukova.
Almira: Basically this was the strongest tournament that
has ever been organised, sort of like a women’s Linares.
Frederic: So it was the strongest women’s
tournament organised in the history of the game?
Almira: Definitely. And the way they did it was
really great. They did everything for the chess players. You know, when I was
a kid and they were organising tournaments in the Soviet Union, I heard the
stories about what it was like to be a grandmaster. How everyone respected
you. And it was exactly the same here. Everything was done for the chess players,
for the participants. They took enormous care of us. For instance on the city
square where all people gather you could see this giant poster with the slogan
“We salute the participants of the second Super GM tournament North Urals
Cup”. This is incredible. Where else can you see it?

We played in a very beautiful hall with many spectators, with full commentary
and huge screens. Unlike many tournaments today this was one that was definitely
for the chess players. This is where you do feel you are a grandmaster, you
are a chess player and you are appreciated.
You won the tournament! Was it a surprise for you?
Definitely. I couldn’t believe it. You know I didn’t go there
expecting to win the tournament. As one of the leaders of the ACP I have to
promote women’s chess – it is one of my duties. So I simply went
there and played.

Almira in round eight of the tournament
Your performance was something like 2584…
You know, I didn’t realise this at all. If I had won the last game I
think there was a possibility I would have made a male GM norm. But at the
time I didn’t know this and accepted a draw from Ekaterina [Kovalevskaya].
She is the vice world champion, and I had black, and it guaranteed me the first
place. I didn’t really think about a GM norm, who thinks about this in
a women's tournament. You can imagine how strong this event was, how much effort
the organisers had put into getting such strong players together in one tournament.
Which was the key game, the key moment for you in the tournament?

Legendary world champion Maia Chiburdanidze |
Probably I won it because I was the only one who could beat Maia Chiburdanidze.
The game was in the third round, so at the time we did not know it. I could
not believe that I would beat Maia, because she always had the upper hand in
the game. But I defended well, and she did not want to draw. So she tried more
and more, and then she blundered.
Maia is still one of the strongest women players in the world, isn’t
she?
Yes, and she was so well appreciated in this tournament. Her appearances are
becoming quite rare – she plays just two or three tournament per year
– but people still remember this legend, Maia Chiburdanidze. When she
came on the stage she was applauded like a hero, and they were chanting “Ma-ya!
Ma-ya!” It was amazing, just to see and feel it.
What is she like as a person?
She is very, very kind, always smiling. But when she is sitting over the board
she will play up to the very last pawn. This is the contrast in her personality,
the private person and the chess player. A great fighter. She was sitting there
much longer than the other chess players, because she always wanted to get
the maximum. Like in our game. When we finished the game there were like three
pieces on the board.
But for me one of the most important
games was the one against Irina [Krush] because of the forthcoming match
in New York.
It was not really a beautiful game in the combinational
sense. For me it was a very positional game, which was a good strategy
against Irina, because she likes to play actively.
Will you annotate this game for us, please?
Okay, I'll send it to you in the next couple of days.
It is really quite interesting.
[We will publish the game
with Almira's annotations
in the coming week.] |

Former American champion WGM Irina Krush |
Let’s talk about some of the other players. Ekaterina Kovalevskaya.

Women's vice champion of the world Ekaterina Kovalevskaya
Well, she has been basically doing a chess marathon. She played in the world
championship, then the super-final of the Russian championship, then this tournament.
She had very good results in every tournament – she’s a very good
positional chess player.
Youngest Soviet champion ever: Svetlana Matveeva
Svetlana Matveeva.
Svetlana became Soviet champion when she was 15. This record will never be
broken. He has had some ups and downs, but she is a very strong player. I mean
when I went to this tournament and looked at the participants I could only
think: whom am I going to beat, where am I going to win a game?

The "local girl" Maria Kursova
|
The one to beat was obviously the local
girl, Maria Kursova, who does not have so much experience. But even though
she scored just one and a half points she was very close to beating the
current world champion Antoaneta Stefanova, with the black pieces.
So she was pretty strong. She just doesn’t play
as many chess tournaments as she should.
|
What about your friend Antoaneta Stefanova?

Women's world champion Antoaneta Stefanova at the North Urals Cup
Etti was fighting quite a lot in this tournament, but I believe that after
winning the world crown she felt a lot of responsibility. In the press conference
she mentioned that this was my first tournament as a world champion, so obviously
she wanted to show her best. I talked to her a lot, she has so many responsibilities
which don’t have anything to do with chess – meeting important
people, lots of interviews – so she has a lot of other things on her
mind. But still she was fighting really hard. Irina Krush won a beautiful game
against her in the last round, and that prevented her from tying with me for
first place. Maybe it was also because the round was at eleven in the morning,
which is simply unbearable for any chess player (laughs).
Zhukova…

Former European champion Natalia Zhukova
|
Natalia is a very strong positional player.
She won the previous edition of this tournament. This time she had a
very bad start, with minus two, and so even though she won her last three
games she finished fourth/fifth. She was simply not battling for the
first place, this time.
Does she have a big future? She’s
only 25.
Big future? She is already in the middle
of her big future. She was European champion. I mean these girls have
already achieved so much, so that for all of us the next big future would
be to win the world championship like Antoaneta. Unfortunately we only
get a chance once every two years. In the meantime we are playing against
each other.
|
Polovnikova...
Ekaterina was one of the most talented players of her
generation. When she was fifteen she was considered to be the most talented
girl in Russia. But she chose to study, and right now she is finishing
university. She has to defend her thesis in October, and then she will
start working. Chess is just a hobby for her.
|

Great Russian talent Ekaterina Polovnikova |

Former vice champion of the world Alisa Galliamova
|
Galliamova...
Well, Alisa. You know, when you say Galliamova it is
also a legend, because she is known and has had good results for so many
years. For example she played the match against Xie Jun for the world
championship, and she won the candidates in Groningen with something
like plus eight. She doesn’t play that much now, and only accepts
invitations to tournaments that support chess, support the image of chess.
|
Okay, this is certainly one of your best tournaments, probably the best
result you have ever achieved.
Well,
the European Championship in 2001 [which Almira won] was also very strong.
Of course the two tournaments are very different. The European Championship
was a Swiss, and it was a qualifier for the world championship. So you were
playing more carefully, and trying to do your best in the end. In closed tournaments
every win is so rare, you are just fighting and fighting. You can see: with
plus three you can already win the tournament. So the specifics of the tournaments
are very different. The results are comparable, but from the fighting point
of view it is different.
What are your aims in chess, and in life? Are you going to become a big
organiser in the ACP, or are you going to become a grandmaster.
You know, it is just like when you grow older, and you start asking
yourself, what will be the things which will be left behind after you, the
small thing that you have achieved. I don’t have such big aims in chess,
I’m playing mainly for my pleasure. You know, at the press conference
in the end they were asking me, what are you going to do apart from chess?
And I was thinking chess has given me so much in life, that I would like to
give something back. I don’t really want to leave the chess scene, so
maybe I will become one of those organisers who try to do their best for chess.
I could do it for girls, because who knows better than me what it means to
be a woman chess player. I would like to help women’s chess, especially
when I have stopped playing actively myself. For example even now the ACP is
working to establish a women’s Grand Prix, a series of a four tournaments,
and a Masters for 2005.
Almira, we wish you every success with this and with your chess career.
Thank you for this very interesting conversation.

Closing pageantry in Krasnoturinsk

The winner of the North Urals Super-GM 2004 Almira Skripchenko
Links