Light-weight wins Wine Open

by Evi Zickelbein
8/5/2018 – The fourth edition of the Wine Open took place in Hourtin, near Bordeaux. The traditional prices in this unique event are bottle of wines delivered according to the winners' weight. 15-year-old Antoine Bournel took first place and took home 51 bottles after the weigh-in was made. | Photos: Eva Maria Zickelbein, Jean-Luc Feit, Paula Nenciu Lazar

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The fourth Wine Open in Hourtin

When July came, we knew it was time to go to the beautiful French region of Aquitaine, as the fourth edition of the Wine Open was about to begin! The tournament took place during 20 years — up until 2014 — at Naujac-sur-Mer, where Rike and Jules Armas organized a great chess camp. Then, the tournament moved to the small port of Hourtin, near France's (supposedly) largest lake, in the immediate vicinity of campsites, apartments and beach houses. The participants get special rates at the very nice Western Village campsite!

Hourtin-Plage beach is 8 km away, while Gironde, with its many wineries and picturesque castles, is also just a short drive away. A trip to Bordeaux is of course also recommended, and you can also visit Arcachon, where Europe's largest dune, the Dune du Pilat, is located.

Refreshment at the Place de la Bourse in Bordeaux

sand dune

The Dune du Pilat is 108 meters high and moves up to five meters east each year

road to beach

Finally, the sea!

During the beginning of summer, there is not much going on and you have the beach almost to yourself!

After a small remission last year, the tournament had over 60 participants once again. It was especially nice that many international guests showed up: a whole group of Belgians arrived in good spirits, as did the Spaniards — despite their loss against Russia in the World Cup — and a large group of Romanians.

At the top of the rating list the tournament had very strong players, such as grandmaster Paul Velten, international masters Antoine Favarel and Vincent Colin, and a large number of FIDE masters.

Paul Velten and Antoine Favarel travelled with a group of young players from Champagne. They train youngsters at Échiquier Châlonnais and do a very good job at coaching promising talents. Nevertheless, the tournament result for a particular youngster was not to be expected: 15-year-old Antoine Bournel was trained during four and a half years by Antoine Favarel and, before the tournament, had a 2066 Elo rating. He managed to incredibly gather seven points in nine rounds! He drew in hard-fought games against his coaches Velten and Favarel, drew against two FIDE masters — Ollier and Robin — and defeated the rest of his opponents, including IM Vincent Colin. As three players reached seven points in the end, the tiebreak criteria decided the tournament winner, and Antoine Bournel prevailed by a nose, with a half-point advantage! Congratulations on this great success and the gigantic rating gain!

Samy Robin could not beat young Antoin Bournel
 Last round: Samy Robin could not beat young Antoin Bournel with White

Before going to the scales, the organizers were not afraid at all: Antoine is quite tall, but also very slim, so this was more likely to be a lowest-weight-ever record situation.

Antoine Bournel

Antoine Bournel on the scales and looking into the audience: "Yes, I know, I do not weigh much..."

Jules Armas

Jules Armas had to recount... Are there really only 51 bottles? Yes, it is correct!

As expected, Antoine became the player who took the least amount of bottles ever from the Wine Open. Another curious fact that was probably appreciated by the hosts Rike and Jules Armas was that the players that finished second to sixth also did not need too many bottles to balance the scales:

  • GM Paul Velten - 51 bottles
  • Samy Robin - 49 bottles
  • IM Antoine Favarel - 64 bottles
  • IM Vincent Colin - 60 bottles
  • Jeremie Devalllée - 54 bottles

Let us hope that one or two of the bottles that survived the weigh-in remain intact for next year. And a tip to heavier players: come back to Aquitaine next year!

The winner of the tournament commented his game from the eighth round. At that time, he was tied with two other players half a point behind the leader, Antoine Favarel. If he wanted to keep a chance of winning the event, he needed to win this game with White necessarily.

Bournel-Hristodorescu commentated by Antoine Bournel:

 
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At this point, there remained two rounds and I was 2nd tied with three other players half a point behind the leader. Therefore, it was absolutely necessary to win this game if I wanted to aim for first place. 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Bc5 4.c3 Qe7?! A dubious blow that my opponent had already played several times and that I had prepared against. 5.d4 Bb6 5...exd4 is very dangerous. I can simply castle and I'm going to have a lot of compensation thanks to my slight development lead and the bad placement of the black queen after opening. 6.0-0 with huge compensation. 6.Bg5 Nf6 7.d5 Nd8! The knight might be stronger on d8 than on b8 if I play 8.Nbd2 (in this case, the knight from b8 could go to d7 after 8...d6), but after the sacrifice on d6 the knight will get the strong e6-square and will be able to attack from f4 later. 7...Nb8?! The knight will be badly placed on b8 after the pawn sacrifice on d6. My opponent had played this shot recently and was in trouble quickly: 8.d6 cxd6 9.0-0 h6 10.Bxf6 Qxf6 11.Na3 a6 12.Bd5 Nc6 13.Nc4 Bc7 14.a4 b6 15.g3± White wants to open roads against the king quickly with f4, while the black pieces are blocked on the queenside. 8.d6! A thematic sacrifice. I give a pawn to turn the black structure into a kind of "prison" for the black pieces. Actually, the c8-bishop and the a8-rook will never be able to play if Black does not react. In addition, I get the d5-post and the d6-pawn is still weak. cxd6 8...Qxd6?! By exchanging queens Black will not release his pieces. 9.Qxd6 cxd6 10.Bxf6 This exchange allows me to get another post on f5. gxf6 11.Nh4± Black has difficulties freeing his pieces and has to defend his structure filled with weaknesses. 9.0-0 9.Na3?! Bxf2+ It's necessary to pay attention to this tactic. 10.Kxf2? 10.Kf1 10...Nxe4+ 11.Kg1 Nxg5 9...h6?! The start of the inaccuracies. Here, with precision, Black could have obtained a good position, but my adversary did not realize that he was in danger of being dominated if he did not look for counterplay. 9...Ne6! Good move. Black gives up the d6-pawn in exchange of dynamic play. 10.Bxf6 Qxf6 11.Na3 is what I had prepared. 11.Qxd6? My opponent stopped here, but the d6-pawn blocked the black pieces. With this continuation, Black will get a lot of play against my king with his knight, his queen and a weakened white king: Bc7 12.Qd2 Nf4 13.g3 Nh3+ 14.Kg2 d6∞ 11...0-0 12.Bxe6! or Black will attack my king with Cf4 and d5, followed by d6 to release the bishop from c8. Qxe6 12...fxe6 13.Qxd6± 12...dxe6 13.Qxd6 Rd8 14.Qb4 Black's queen is out of play. 13.Nb5 9...0-0?! 10.Nh4!± Threatening Nf5 after Bxf6. 9...d5?! A good idea to then play d6 and free the bishop, but Black does not have time to play this shot: 10.exd5 d6 11.Nbd2 Threatening Ne4 to double the pawns. h6 12.Bxf6 Qxf6 13.Bb5+± 10.Bxf6 Qxf6 11.Na3 Here I am going simply to play Bd5 to prevent a sacrifice on d5 followed by Nc4, a4-a5. The idea is to prevent Black from releasing his pieces. a6 11...d5?! We must always pay attention to this move. 12.Qxd5 d6 13.Nb5 0-0 14.Nxd6± 12.Bd5 0-0 Loses time to play b5. 12...Bc7! Black needed to free himself quickly with b5! 13.Nc4 Rb8 14.a4 b5 15.axb5 axb5 16.Ne3 0-0 17.g3 I am still better because Black has too many weak pawns, but he should have played like this. 13.Nc4 Bc7 14.a4 Rb8 15.a5 Nc6?! The knight has no future here. 15...b5 Always a good move. 16.axb6 Bxb6 17.b4± 16.b4 Ne7 17.Nb6 From now on, if I can always keep a piece in d5 and b6, the bishop from c8 and the rook from b8 cannot move. Nxd5?! 18.Qxd5 Re8? Removes last Black's hope. 18...Qd8 to chase my knight and play b5. 19.Nc4± We stay in control and threaten Rd1 followed by Cxd6. b5?! 20.axb6 Bxb6 21.Nxd6+- Followed by Nxe5 and Black still cannot get his pieces out. Moreover the f7-pawn is going to be hard to defend. 19.Nd2+- My knight arrives in c4 to prevent Blacks from chasing the one on b6. I now bring the rooks (with a knight blocking on b6) and I'm winning. h5 20.Ndc4 h4 21.h3 Re6 22.Rad1 Qd8 23.f4 exf4 24.Rxf4 Rf6 25.Rxh4 Qe7 26.Rg4 Qe6 27.Rd3 Bxb6+ 28.Nxb6 Qe8 29.Rdg3 Black resigns, as he cannot defend the g7 point: 1–0
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WhiteEloWBlackEloBResYearECOEventRnd
Antoine Bournel2066Daniel Hristodorescu22481–02018Open des Vins8

The consolation prize for the rest was a Magnum bottle of Médoc. This year, we must thank the Châteaux that supported the tournament with donations, the organizers Rike and Jules Armas, the referee Jean-Luc Feit and the many volunteers who made the event possible.
 
We should mention FM Dan Mitaru, who after 20 years of retirement from chess became the best senior — he knows Jules Armas from playing youth tournaments in Romania. He now trains kids in his homeland!

Escape Game: In addition to their chess activities, Rike and Jules Armas have been creating their own room escape game since last year, with great attention to detail (https://www.escape-game-lesparre.com/). Of course, it has some chess in it, but you can escape without mastering the rules of chess. We created a small group with people from Spain, Romania and Germany and tried it one evening.
 
The game is in English and French, so we had to translate not only to communicate with each other but also to read the instructions. We managed. That is all we can reveal, as maybe some readers will go and participate themselves. Next year there will be a second room — the theme: pirates!
 
As a farewell, we had some oysters and wine at the market in Montalivet. À l'année prochaine!

Translation from German: Antonio Pereira


Eva Maria Zickelbein has been playing chess for many years and, as a daughter of Christan Zickelbein, has been firmly attached to the Hamburg chess club, where she plays for the Women's Bundesliga.

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