Howard Staunton, 1810 – 1874 |
Seventh Howard Staunton Memorial
The 2009 Staunton Memorial, sponsored once again by Dutch chess lover Jan Mol,
has been reformatted: a second international round robin tournament added alongside
the main Scheveningen group which pits top British grandmasters against their
Dutch counterparts.
Held since 2003, the Howard Staunton Memorial is played in Simpsons-in-the-Strand,
London, England, in memory of the tournament namesake's habit of frequenting
the restaurant – then a coffee house, known as "The Divan" or
"Simspon's Divan" – in the 19th century, where he would search
out chess play and discussion. From 2003-2005, the tournament was a four-player
double round robin, with GM Jon Speelman sharing or holding the sole lead in
each of those editions. In 2006 the tournament was expanded to a twelve-player
single round robin, won by Michael Adams in 2007 and 2008.
This year, the tournament format has seen a further modification, with two
events occurring simultaneously: a five-player double round Scheveningen system
match between England and the Netherlands, and a ten-player round robin consisting
of five Englanders and five international challengers.
Play at Simpsons-in-the-Strand runs from Saturday 8 August until Monday 17
August inclusive, with the games starting at 14.30 each day, except in the final
round, which starts at 12 noon. Note that Saturday 15 August will be a rest
day in the all-play-all group; there is no rest day in the Scheveningen event.
Entry is free to spectators. The moves are being broadcast live on the official
website, but there is a charge of £5.00 per round to log in and watch.
The games become available
for download in PGN some time after each round is completed. Details can
be found here.
The tournament website is carrying daily reports by Steve Giddins, who describes
the highlights of each round's play. Steve is assisted by some silicon friends,
and the carbon-based entity of Tournament Director, GM Ray Keene. These reports
are available free of charge.
With five of ten games completed, GM Nigel Short has clearly demonstrated there
is something in his water, having scored 4.0/5, dispatching GMs Sokolov, Smeets,
and Werle along the way. Meanwhile, the much younger Michael Adams, sits at
2.5/5, with three draws, one win and a loss. Best Netherlanders are Erwin L'Ami,
Loek van Wely, Ivan Sokolov and Jan Smeets, each with 3.0/5.
In the accompanying round robin tournament, top-seeded Jan Timman leads the
pack with 4.5/5. There are rumours he and Nigel Short are sharing the same glass.
Second-seeded Korchnoi, on the other hand, is languishing in 5-8th place, with
2.5/5 (two win, two losses and a draw).
Round one – Saturday, August 8th, 2009
At the formal opening ceremony at Simpson's in the Strand Professor Michael
Crawford, Director of Brain Chemistry and Human Nutrition at London Metropolitan
University, treated the players to a fascinating speech on human brain development
and the importance thereto of the right type of nutrition. Crawford is world's
leading expert on the role of fatty acids and lipids in the cellular signalling
system. His basic message: eat plenty of fish!
The start of round one was complicated by the near-overlap with the British
Championships, which finished on Friday afternoon, meant that several of the
English players had to make a Saturday morning dash up the M4 from Torquay.
All but one arrived on time. The exception was David Howell, who was late for
the very best of reasons –- having just become the second-youngest-ever
British Champion, he had to stay behind to attend Saturday morning's prize-giving!
Fortunately, his opponent, Jan Smeets, sportingly agreed to delay the start
of their game until David had arrived, and they eventually set to work some
75 minutes after the rest of the players. Results:
England |
2.0-3.0 |
Netherlands |
Short, Nigel |
1-0 |
Werle, Jan |
Adams, Michael |
½-½ |
Van Wely, Loek |
Howell, David |
½-½ |
Smeets, Jan |
Jones, Gawain |
0-1 |
L'Ami, Erwin |
McShane, Luke |
0-1 |
Sokolov, Ivan |
Round two – Sunday, August 9th, 2009
The second day saw some wonderful fighting chess, and just two draws out of
ten games (in both groups). In the Anglo-Dutch Scheveningen match spirited defence
in some suspicious positions, plus the requisite slice of luck here and there
saw the home team emerge from the day as 3-2 winners, thus equalizing the match
score. There was much excitement on board two, where Jan Smeets showed much
imagination against Short's Alekhine Defence, sacrificing a piece for a strong
attack. Indeed, he confessed afterwards that for a while, he thought he might
be on the way to winning the brilliancy prize against Nigel, for the second
year in succession! However, it was not to be. Results:
Netherlands |
2.0-3.0 |
England |
Sokolov, Ivan |
½-½ |
Howell, David |
Van Wely, Loek |
1-0 |
Jones, Gawain |
L'Ami, Erwin |
½-½ |
McShane, Luke |
Smeets, Jan |
0-1 |
Short, Nigel |
Werle, Jan |
0-1 |
Adams, Michael |
Round three – Monday, August 10th, 2009
The England team had a far better day than yours truly, winning the round 3-2
and taking a slender one-point overall lead in the match. The game Howell-L'Ami
was a quiet draw, but Nigel Short maintained his 100% start with an unexpectedly
one-sided win over Ivan Sokolov:
England |
3.0-2.0 |
Netherlands |
Short, Nigel |
1-0 |
Sokolov, Ivan |
Howell, David |
½-½ |
L'Ami, Erwin |
McShane, Luke |
1-0 |
Van Wely, Loek |
Adams, Michael |
0-1 |
Smeets, Jan |
Jones, Gawain |
½-½ |
Werle, Jan |
Short,N (2684) - Sokolov,Ivan (2655) [C58]
7th Staunton Memorial London ENG (3), 10.08.2009
1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4. Just as in round one, Nigel opts
to avoid the customary 35-40 moves of Marshall Gambit theory, so often seen
in games between the elite these days. 3...Nf6!? This move
already deserves comment. For over a century, the Two Knights was accepted as
an excellent way to defend against 3.Bc4, with the world having accepted unchallenged
Tarrasch's indictment of White's next as a "duffer's move". However,
over the last 10 years or so, the influence of computers has swung the pendulum
the other way, and the Two Knights now seems to be viewed much less favourably
amongst the top players, almost all of whom prefer 3...Bc5. Two years ago, Short
used the white side of 4.Ng5 to win a crucial last-round game against Mark Hebden,
to clinch first place in the EU Championships at Liverpool, and he later described
habitual practitioners of the Two Knights as "taking their lives in their
hands". Most leading GMs nowadays play 3...Bc5, against which Nigel is
wont to adopt the Evans Gambit, but he had clearly spotted that Sokolov had
played 3...Nf6 in his first-round game against Luke McShane.
4.Ng5 d5 5.exd5 Na5 6.Bb5+ c6 7.dxc6 bxc6 8.Bd3!? Against
Hebden, Short had preferred 8.Qf3, but the text move has become fashionable
recently. It was originally revived by Dutch GM Daniel Stellwagen, who wrote
an article on it in the popular New in Chess opening series, SOS. More recently,
Nakamura used it to win his critical last-round game in the US Championships,
and only a week ago, it featured in the key game Conquest-Howell, at the British
Championships in Torquay. The main point of he move is to give the Ng5 a more
convenient retreat square than f3 or h3. 8...h6 9.Ne4 Nd5 10.0–0
g6 11.Re1 Bg7 12.Bf1 0–0 13.d3 f5

This is a typical position from the variation. For decades, it has been accepted
that Black's lead in development, active pieces and space advantage, gives him
more than enough compensation, and indeed, many games have been won by Black
in such positions. A mere glance at the position seems to confirm that Black
has a wonderful game. However, the computer, untrammelled by human emotions
and visual impressions, sees only that White has an extra pawn with no weaknesses,
Black's knight on a5 is offside, and his queenside pawns split. 14.Nc5
Qd6 15.Nb3 Nb7 16.g3 Be6 17.c4. Weakening d3, but this pawn can be
defended relatively easily, whilst White enhances his central control. Once
he completes the satisfactory development of his pieces, he will have a clear
advantage. 17...Nb6 18.Qc2 Nd7 19.Nc3 a5 20.Na4 g5 21.Bd2 Bf7 22.Bc3
Rfe8 23.d4 e4. Black cannot win material by taking on d4, in view of
the line 23...exd4 24.Nxd4 Bxd4 25.Bxd4 Qxd4 26.Red1 Qe5 27.Rxd7. 24.Rad1
Bg6 25.c5 Qc7

Compare the two diagrams. Black has been unable to make anything of his early
initiative, and is now virtually lost. 26.d5 cxd5 27.Rxd5 Bxc3 28.Qxc3
Ne5 29.Red1 f4 30.c6 Qxc6? A blunder which hastens the end, but Black
is more or less busted anyway. 31.Rxe5 1-0. A game which must
surely have brought a smile to the celestial face of Wilhelm Steinitz, the one
great player who always insisted the Two Knights was unsound!
Round four – Tuesday, August 11th, 2009
The games Sokolov-Adams and L'Ami-Short were both solid, if slightly uninspiring
efforts, which were agreed drawn in 17 and 28 moves respectively. Jan Smeets
showed yesterday that he is a formidable theoretician, and with Gawain Jones
having long evinced a love of the Dragon Sicilian, a theoretical battle was
always likely on their board. So it was, with Black employing a well-known exchange
sacrifice. But suddenly it became apparent that he has no compensation for the
exchange, and the full point went to the Dutch GM.
Defeats are of course a fact of life at the chess board, and how one reacts
to a defeat is always a key test of a player. Some players tend to be rather
cowed by a loss, and take a day or to to recover their confidence. On the other
hand, there are some players who are at their most dangerous when coming off
a defeat, like the irrepressibly optimistic Loek van Wely, who bounced back
from yesterday's loss to win the most impressive game of the day.
Netherlands |
3.0-2.0 |
England |
L'Ami, Erwin |
½-½ |
Short, Nigel |
Smeets, Jan |
1-0 |
Jones, Gawain |
Van Wely, Loek |
1-0 |
Howell, David |
Sokolov, Ivan |
½-½ |
Adams, Michael |
Werle, Jan |
0-1 |
McShane, Luke |
Round five – Wednesday, August 12th, 2009
After two hours' play, the England team, playing with the white pieces, had
an advantage somewhere between slight and very clear, on virtually every board.
Indeed, Jan Timman, having perused his countrymen's positions, went up to Nigel
Short and joked "It looks like Lucerne 1982 again!", a reference to
the Olympiad of that year, when England defeated The Netherlands 4-0. But it
was not to be. From there until the first time control, English advantages seemed
to shrink inexorably, half points drifted away, and there was even the unthinkable
possibility that England could lose the day's match. In the end, they did not
do so, but a 2.5 - 2.5 draw seemed a relatively poor return for England, from
the positions that had made Timman so pessimistic.
England |
2.5-2.5 |
Netherlands |
Short, Nigel |
½-½ |
Van Wely, Loek |
McShane, Luke |
½-½ |
Smeets, Jan |
Adams, Michael |
½-½ |
L'Ami, Erwin |
Howell, David |
1-0 |
Werle, Jan |
Jones, Gawain |
0-1 |
Sokolov, Ivan |
Score after five rounds
England: 12.5 – Netherlands: 12.5
After five rounds Nigel Short has a point more than any of the other players.
With 4.5/5 the former World Championship challenger is displaying a 2862 performance
and challenging Michael Adams' long-standing place as Britain's top player.
All Play All Group
Here Jan Timman is dominating completely – just like in the good ol'
days, when he was the Dutch demi-god of chess. Jan has conceded just one draw
in his five games so far, and is a full point ahead of his closest rival. His
performance is 2788. Viktor Korchnoi is not having his greatest event, while
the Elo rabbit Terry Chapman has lost all five games so far.

Links
The games are being broadcast live on the official web site and on the
chess server Playchess.com.
If you are not a member you can download the free PGN reader ChessBase
Light, which gives you immediate access. You can also use the program
to read, replay and analyse PGN games. New and enhanced: CB Light 2009! |
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