The 1st Anastasia Chess School on Krk Island
By Valery Golubenko
The world is often very unfair, especially to its best. Perhaps, they are just
more valuable to the eternal skies than to our bomb-happy earthians. Anastasia
taught her students to fight a war with chessmen, but in everyday life she was
helpless to fight the arbitrary rules of its administration. A quarter of a
century ago she came to Estonia from Volgograd, a town that had been victorious
in World War II. But in the third millennium it's turned out a war is still
in progress, one against herself and her family. This vibrant young woman, the
best chess coach in the country, passed away last Easter. Naturally we keep
Anastasia in our hearts, minds, and memory, but we want to continue her professional
life as well.
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The 1st Anastasia Chess School was held this August in the Punat, Krk Island,
Croatia. It was not a simple journey for me, Anastasia's husband, and our daughters,
Valentina and Alexandra, all chess players. Four years ago all four of us went
to the same place, to swim, tan and prepare for the Women's World Championship
2008. We were full of energy and happy family:

Anastasia and our daughters Sanja and Valja on Krk Island in August 2008

Happy moments in the Adriatic sea: Anastasia and Sanja

Preparation for the Women's
World Chess Championship 2008 with GM Ognjen Cvitan
[Photo by Anastasia Golubenko]
We are most grateful to our Croatian friends, for the umpteenth time providing
us with our little home away from home, and to ChessBase for the generous prize
funding. Ivan Mandekic, the chess organizer from Rijeka, changed the schedule
of his August chess school on the Krk Island, including into its program two
rapid tournaments: U17 for advanced players, and U11, for beginners.
It was my dream that participants of the U11 tournament should get prizes from
ChessBase, namely Fritz & Chesster programs. Ivan Mandekic expected about
ten players for the beginners' competition, and we agreed with ChessBase that
they will provide seven copies of Fritz & Chesster 3 for the seven first
places, and three complete sets of Fritz & Chesster (1, 2, and 3) for the
last three. For the stronger U17 competition we expected about twenty participants,
and ChessBase provided six valuable chess program as prizes for the three best
girls and three best boys: a starting pack of Chessbase 11, Deep Fritz 13, and
the ChessBase Opening Encyclopedia for the best boys, and three Fritz 13, also
signed by Garry Kasparov, for best girls

ChessBase prizes for the U17 tournament
Ivan Mandekic, for his part, named this event the Anastasia Chess Summer (Anastasia
Chess School + Anastasia Chess Cup), and published a special announcement on
the site of Chess Club Draga Rijeka he runs: http://www.sah-draga.com. Thanks
to these efforts the event gained additional popularity and more participants.
For the beginners' tournament U11 twice the expected number of participants
turned up, and we faced a problem with prizes to give all 20 players. So we
unpacked the complete sets of Fritz & Chesster 1, 2 and 3, and luckily for
us there were several pairs of siblings (sister + brother, two sisters, and
two brothers!).

Prizes for the U11 tournament
The final prize was a special one personally from Anastasia Golubenko. In her
last days she asked me to give to the children all our Kasparov Chess Computers
left from my distribution activity (for the Hong Kong company Saitek, with whom
Garry Kasparov was affiliated from 1983). I brought one, and it became a very
special prize from Anastasia and from all our family. And especially for these
tournaments, U11 and U17, Ivan Mandekic prepared commemorative medals for all
prize winners with the engraving "Anastasijin Kup" Škola Šaha.
The first several days of the Anastasia Chess Summer 2012 were working days
in the chess school. GM Ognjen Cvitan and FIDE Trainer Ivan Mandekic with his
assistants gave their students chess lessons and tested their performance with
thematic chess studies. Then, on August 24th the tournament among advanced players
U17 was held in the People House of Punat.

The results of this competition can be found on the chess
results. The rating favorites and master candidates Ivan Vihor Krsnik Cohar
(2141) and Sven Tica (2112) scored 6.5/7 points and shared 1-2 places. The smallest
possible tie-break decimals gave victory to Ivan. He was really happy with the
first prize, the ChessBase 11 Starting Package, and didn't hesitate to show
his pleasure that.

Happy winner of the main ChessBase prize Ivan Vihor Krsnik Cohar

The prize-giving ceremony was headed by the vice-mayor of Punat, Gordan Franolic
(right). The ChessBase prizes were given to the winners by WGM Valentina Golubenko.
On the left is the organiser of the event Ivan Mandekic.
The second prize, the latest Deep Fritz 13, signed by Garry Kasparov, was presented
to Sven. The final boy's prize, a ChessBase Opening Encyclopedia, went to the
next rating favorite Emil Rajter (1974), who scored two points less. A peloton
of two boys and three girls, all with four points, produced all winners amongst
the girls: Viktorija Vujic, master candidate Ena Cvitan (daughter of GM Cvitan),
and Jelena Dašic. They all got the Fritz 13 package, with only the first
prize winner getting one that was signed by Garry Kasparov.

All U17 winners. From left: Ivan Mandekic, Emil Rajter, Valentina Golubenko,
Ivan Vihor Krsnik Cohar, Sven Tica, Gordan Franolic, Jelena Dašic, Viktorija
Vujic, Ena Cvitan.
The same evening, on the town esplanade, former junior world champions Ognjen
Cvitan and Valentina Golubenko gave simultaneous exhibitions for the participants
of the U17 tournament.

Ivan Mandekic's announcement of the simul by grandmasters Valentina Golubenko
and Ognjen Cvitan
It wasn't a walk-over for both, and they lost by half a point. Valentina let
her opponents choose the color:

The simuls in progress
Three days later Valentina and Ognjen joined the Croatian national teams in
Zagreb to fly to the World Chess Olympiad in Istanbul, Valentina as a player
for women's team, and Ognjen as a coach of the Swiss men's team.
Anastasia Chess Summer 2012 days were completed by the U11 rapid tournament.
As you already know all twenty participants got the ChessBase prizes! There
was a tough fight for first place between two nine-year-old girls, Sanja Golubenko
and Paula Kraljic, who had shared 2-3 places in the Croatian 2012 championship
G9.

Sanja Golubenko vs Paula Kraljic
They played the hidden final in the second round.
In this position Alexandra played 1.Ne6 Kd7 2.b7 etc. Both
girls won all their remaining games and with it the overall tournament among
boys and girls. Alexandra took the boy's gold medal, and Paula took girl's gold
medal.

Second boy was Andrijan Kovacic...

...and third was Paula's brother Emanuel Kraljic, both with four points each

Second and third girls were the Grškovic sisters: Ana with three points...

... and little Mare with two points
The prize-giving ceremony was headed again by the vice-mayor of Punat Gordan
Franolic. Special prize from Anastasia Golubenko, the Kasparov chess computer,
was given to Ante Starcevic as the most assiduous disciple of the chess school
lessons. Ante took fifth place and thus left without the boy's bronze medal.

The special prize from Anastasia Golubenko has been given to Ante Starcevic

The vice-mayor of Punat Gordan Franolic with Sanja Golubenko
In this rapid competition I followed only games of my daughter and would like
to offer some moments from her other games:
1st round: Igor Lukicic-Sanja Golubenko
1...Nxc3+! 2.bxc3 Qxd5+ and Black won
4th round: Sanja Golubenko-Silvio Franolic-Kukina
1.Bxf6! Bxf6 2.e5 Bh4? 3.Qxg4 and White won
5th round: Andrijan Kovacic-Sanja Golubenko

This was the real final, as both players had four points from four games. Sanja
played 1...Bd7!? with the idea, which came true: 2.Bh6?
Nh5! and White lost a piece and then the game.
The next day, after the first Anastasia Chess Summer had finished, Ivan Mandekic
published some very heartfelt words on the Chess Club Draga Rijeka website.
My translation from Croatian is here: "We often say that life is a novelist.
This is a real chess story dropped into an unusual and soulful human context:
the overall winner of the tournament is Anastasia's younger daughter, nine-year
old Sanja Golubenko. Surely her mother, somewhere there among the stars, feels
pride at seeing her daughter wearing a gold medal with the name of her mother."
Previous stories
 |
The Personal Island of Anastasia Golubenko (Part one)
10.06.2012 – Like a bright comet in the cool
Estonian sky she appeared, a quarter-century ago, from her far-off Volgograd
island, to mass-produce a youthful army of chess champions of Estonia,
Russia, Europe and the world. Then she made her final journey back to
her home and her parents, full of vitality, which slowly ebbed from her.
After a long illness Anastasia Golubenko, 46, died. She
will not be forgotten.
|
 |
The Personal Island of Anastasia Golubenko (Part two)
25.06.2012 – She was one of the most dedicated
and successful coaches Estonia ever had, producing national, European
and even world champions in the junior categories. But as a Russian she
was ostracized, as were some of her students. Her tireless battle for
their rights ended when Anastasia passed away at the age of 46. Her loving
family and friends are planning a tribute for her. You
can contribute. |
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Golubenko/ChessBase