2021 FIDE Online Olympiad Announcement

URGENT: FIDE ON-LINE CHESS OLYMPIAD: SELECTION OF WELSH TEAM AND CAPTAIN:

DEADLINE FOR RESPONSES – END SUNDAY 25 JULY

1. Introduction

The World Chess Federation (‘FIDE’) are organising a second on-line chess Olympiad at very short notice. The full details can be found at:

https://reg-olympiad.fide.com/login.phtml 

and here

https://handbook.fide.com/files/handbook/OnlineOlympiadRegulations2021.pdf

It is open to one team per member country. Entries need to reach FIDE by 31 July and include a list of players and reserves. A team captain also has to be nominated. We therefore need to identify very quickly those who wish to participate (if selected).

2. Action needed

If you wish to take part in this event and are definitely available, please e-mail
Peter Bevan (internationaldirector@welshchessunion.uk) and
Howard Williams (chairmanofselectors@welshchessunion.uk)
by the end of next Sunday 25 July specifying in what capacity (see below).

3. Format of Event

The event consists of matches between teams of six, two places open to anybody, two places for women, one player (either sex), and one girl both born on or after 1 Jan 2001. Each country is entitled also to nominate one reserve for each of these six ‘main’ players.
Games are played on-line at a rapid chess rate, here 15 minutes plus 5 second increments from move 1.
Initially teams will participate in seeded all-play-all ten-team groups. This seeding works generally by allocating teams to divisions of 50 and then splitting the fifty into equal strength groups of ten. The top three teams in each group go on to the next stage; the other seven are eliminated.
A team’s nine matches are played on three consecutive days at a rate of three rounds a day. The timing of the three rounds within those days will take into account the time-zones in which countries are situated.
Games may be played from home though teams are encouraged to gather together at one venue if a country’s lockdown rules, as they then stand, permit. Please assume that you will need to play from home.
Only the ten-team APA tournaments in a particular division will take place simultaneously. All the matches for the bottom division will be completed before the next-to-bottom division’s tournaments start and so on. This enables the top three teams in a lower division APA tournament (15 teams in all from the division) to be promoted into the next division’s APAs. On the completion of the Division 2 tournaments the event moves on to the play-off stage essentially a series of knock-out matches and eventually a winner emerges.
The timetable for the event is set out in full in Section 4 of the FIDE regulations to which there is a link above.

4. Likely Seeding of Welsh Team

Seedings are determined by the average position of teams in the 2018 Olympiad in Batumi and in the 2020 on-line Olympiad and have no link to the ratings of those selected for this event. The rules are complex but we are likely to be seeded to play in Division 3 (as in 2020).

5. Period over which participants must be free

As a result it appears that we will play our nine games over the three days August 27 to August 29. And if, contrary to the seeding expectation, we finish in the top three in our group, we would then play a further nine games in Division 2 over the period Sept 2-4.
FIDE will confirm the allocation of teams to divisions on August 8.

6. Requirements for selection as a player

Players must be registered as Welsh by FIDE and meet the WCU’s domestic eligibility rules for international competitions under the auspices of FIDE.
Access to a lap-top (with a camera turned on during rounds so that an arbiter can observe the player remotely) is necessary. The rules prevent games being played from a tablet or mobile phone.
All Welsh players will need to be registered with a nickname on the CHESS.COM platform before we can enter.
As some rounds are almost bound to fall in the working day players must be free to participate throughout Wales’s playing days (likely to be August 27-29 (see Schedule in Regulations).
All players need to be aware of the FIDE regulations for this event including the fair-play rules (see link to the regulations in Para 1 above).
Experience of playing chess on-line is highly desirable.

7. Team Captain Duties and Requirements

The captain chooses the team for each round from the main players and the reserves.
The captain must participate in the technical meeting (via Zoom) held the day before the start of the games in the division in which Wales is placed.

8. Notification

Those stating their wish to take part in this event (see para 2 above) will be considered for selection next week and will receive a response by Saturday July 31.

ECU E-Magazine June 2021

This can be viewed here.

Welsh Online Junior Champs U16, U13, U11 and U9 Results

Under 16

1st Yuxuan Wu 2nd Bence Szakmany 3rd Milo Davies

Under 13

=1st Khushi Bagga and Tabitha Ryan 3rd Osian Jessop

Under 11

1st Emma Kong 2nd Rishit Desai 3rd Sebastian Hoccom

Under 9

1st Rishit Desai equal 2nd Gruff Dafydd and Lucas Zheng

15th Online Scottish Chess Tour Weekend 2nd-5th July

Scottish Chess are organising this event and they are inviting entries from WCU members.

This event covers Blitz, Open, Major (U1800), Minor (U1300) and Allegro for all, U15, and U11,

Anyone wishing to compete, please see this link.

 

2021 European Individual Championship, Reykjavik, Iceland

EXPRESSIONS OF INTEREST

DEADLINE: 30 June 2021

This announcement invites WCU members, registered as Welsh with FIDE, to let us know by 30 June whether they may be interested in taking part in this event by e-mailing Peter Bevan (internationaldirector@welshchessunion.uk).

Details of Event

This event will take place in Reykjavik, Iceland from 25 August 2021 (date of arrival) to 6 September (date of departure). More detailed information is available here. Briefly, the WCU has not been represented at this event since 2013 but this is an exciting opportunity to play in a high-level event like this so it is an event the WCU should encourage it’s members to participate in wherever possible. Details of accommodation costs and the transportation / registration charge are given in the website announcement. Sadly the WCU is only able to contribute to pay for one player’s entry fee which is 100 Euros. Should more than one member accept the invitation then the WCU contribution would remain at 100 Euros but be split amongst the welsh participants.  

COVID-19

As of 21 June 2021, Iceland is on the Green List so there is no requirement to quarantine. Obviously, the situation may change before the event takes place especially as there are rising COVID-19 cases with the Delta variant in the UK at present. This may result in the Iclandic authorities to prevent British citizens from entering Iceland. Therefore please take this into consideration before booking anything as the WCU can not be liable for any refund as this will be a personal decision by the individual to travel. 

ECU E-Magazine May 2021

This can be viewed here.

Sam Jukes wins 1st Welsh Online Major and Khushi Bagga wins 1st Welsh Minor Championship

Major results:

Sam Jules came 1st with 6/7.

Elliott McNeil came 3nd with 5.5/7.

Yuxuan Wu came 3rd with 4.5/7.

Full results here:

Minor results:

1at Khushi Bagga 6/7.

2nd Anshul Swamy 5.5/7.

=3rd David Norris and Emma Kong 4.7.

Full results here:

Jonathan Blackburn wins the 1st Welsh Online Chess Championship

Jonathan Blackburn won the 1st Welsh Online Chess Championship with a score of 5.5/7.

Tim Kett was second with 5/7.

Grzegorz Toczek was 3rd with 4.5/7.

The full final table can be found here

John Porter RIP

It is  with great sadness that news has reached the WCU that John Porter, De La Beche Chess Club, West Wales recently passed away. His clubmate Ken Huntley has written  this obituary below.

John Porter – an Obituary by Ken Huntley 

I joined the Tycoch Chess club in 1975, played two games and then the club folded.  Paul Headon then persuaded Alan Rosser and myself to join the Hendrefoilan club, and it was here that I first met John Porter.  John was a chartered accountant, and his work brought he and his family to Swansea at much of the same time as myself . We quickly became close friends as we had a lot in common.  John was slightly older than me but born in Penarth, and I was a Cardiffian. Being from the same part of the world, we could relate to many things.  Of interest is the fact that John’s work as an accountant brought he and his wife Maureen together. He was obliged to audit the accounts of the firm where she worked in Cardiff, and their relationship took off from that moment.

 

Although John’s first love in sport was cricket, he was a committed chess player, At Hendrefoilan he soon brought his son Stuart along to join the club, and naturally took over as Treasurer very quickly.  He also took a keen interest in the running of the WWCL and was a regular attendee at AGMs.  It was no surprise therefore that in 1993 John was elected be a Vice President of the League.  In 2003, John was an obvious candidate to take up the post of Treasurer to the League, and he served in this position for 14 years until ill health forced his retirement.  John remains the second longest serving member of this position. Surprisingly, although working as an accountant throughout his life, he could never be persuaded to take any interest in computing.

 

For all the time that I have known John, he has been heavily involved in coaching juniors in various sports.  With John’s encouragement both his sons loved playing cricket and soccer.  They both reached a high standard at both and have represented Swansea City at junior levels. John continued to be involved with Swansea junior cricket long after his sons stopped playing.  When I suggested that John might do the same with chess, he did not hesitate, and ran the junior team at Hendrefoilan school for many a year.  Only when school regulations changed and made this difficult was John forced to give this up.

 

After John’s forced resignation as Treasurer, his persistent illness forced him to spend a considerable time in nursing care, but eventually he was able to return home to his wife Maureen.  He became housebound for a while after falling and breaking an ankle, but over time his health improved considerably.  I lost touch with John over this last year because of the Covid shutdown regime, so it came as a huge surprise to hear that John had died.  Maureen told me that John had spent seven weeks in hospital and died there on the 5th May. Reading between the lines, it is suspected that he died of bowel cancer.

 

John has been a loyal friend of mine throughout the 46 years that we have known each other, and he will be sadly missed.

COVID Precautions Version 1 – May 2021

This document will be updated following further review and input. Organisers should consult the version current on the website at the time of organising an event.

As we continue along the Welsh Government’s relaxation of restrictions, chess players are looking forward to over-the-board play once again, and organisers for clubs, leagues and events will be considering when to open up, what type of events to run, and what precautions to take. Continue reading COVID Precautions Version 1 – May 2021