Results and Highlights from the January 13th Unrated Rapid Tournament!

Congratulations to all the participants! It was a full day of interesting chess that went by very quickly! After 5 lively rounds starting at 10am and ending right on time at 1pm we had our winners!

1st place with 5 pts: Artem Aleksenko

2nd place with 4pts: Josh Pinchuk

& in 3rd place with 3 pts: Peter Graham

Select Games from Jan 13th

Note: many moves may be incorrectly recorded or missing. Most endings are not recorded due to rules allowing no notation under 5 minutes. Analyses by lichess.com.

Billy Zifchak vs. Stephane Derveaux

A balanced opening if not a somewhat messy game. Both players missed free bishops. After 11. Bf4??, 11…e5 would have won the bishop with a fork, And after 17…Be5?? 18. Qxe5 would have also won a bishop for white with the d6 pawn pinned by the d1 Rook, and ultimately black made the blunder (27…f5??) that gave white the chance to win.

Jacob Kim vs. Joseph Burns

This was a really sharp game but white lost the game early on with 6. Bd2?? The best move is Nxc6 which is a book move for the sharp mainline of the Scotch opening. This blunder ultimately left black up a knight and rook after move 11. After trading queens the endgame began with black up a rook. Finally, a fork with 31…b5! ended any hope of white’s survival. White found checkmate 5 moves later.

Minus the early error, both played very well. Lichess gave white 85% accuracy with 29 average centipawn loss while black had 99% accuracy and 10 centipawn loss! Almost every move in the endgame was an excellent or best move.

Stephane Derveaux vs. Joseph Burns

This started off with an unconventional response to the English opening 1. c4. Black tried to open up the queen side with the Scandinavian defense 1…d5 which was not the engines favorite move. White steadily increased the advantage until 23. Bd2+?? landing on a square guarded by the knight on e5, but black missed it! There must have been some tunnel vision when white played 23. Bd2?? likely aiming for a potential checkmate threat with Bb4. But black caught it this time and white was knocked back with 23…Nxc6. There is no notation after move 28, but white won. One possible continuation saw an interesting checkmate by pawn promotion from the advanced e pawn, but black had ways around it.

Selection of Games from the final day of the December Classic Tournament

It was yet again a dramatic day of top notch chess with some major upsets, and well deserved wins by many players.

Artem Aleksenko vs. Ron Lopez

In the epic final match for first place, Artem and Ron dueled for almost 2hrs and 30 minutes. The critical move was 31…Qa2 when it appears Ron missed a better tactic and gave away his advantage with a losing trade. Artem entered the endgame up a rook and ultimately received Ron’s resignation.

Kareem Khan vs. Billy Zifchak

Kareem did it again! We told everyone to watch out for him. Billy was ahead out of the opening capturing a second knight with his queen, but this left her in a very precarious position. Carelessly, Billy castled and allowed a devastating discovered attack on move 13. Though Billy pressed on, Kareem carefully squeezed his advantage and there was nothing to be done to stop him. Chess.com ranked Kareem’s move 13. Bxh7+ as a “brilliant” move, reported an overall accuracy of 80% for his game, and said he played as if ranked 1050. Well done.

Joe Burns vs. Josh Pinchuk

This was a very competitive game! Josh played an aggressive response to Joe’s Ruy Lopez opening and developed a strong attack in the middle game. Black had white on the back foot with a slight material and positional advantage but let it slip with 34…Rxg2+. Joe played well above his rank to get to the end game where he was able to turn the tables. *transcribed from notation, some moves at the end may be missing or inaccurate

*If you would like us to post one of your games, send a PGN file from lichess.com or chess.com to piermontchess@gmail.com, or hand in a scoresheet at the end of any tournament.

Select Games From December Classic Day 2, 12/9/23

*If you would like us to post one of your games, send us a PGN file from lichess.com or chess.com, or hand in a scoresheet at the end of any tournament.

Josh Pinchuk vs. Billy Zifchak

A solid game lost by an unfortunate blunder. Josh kept things tight with 96% accuracy. Though Billy’s strong opening earned him 85%, it wasn’t enough to make up the loss of his knight, and the defense quickly came apart.

Tom Nassisi vs. Kareem Khan

Tom and Kareem had great battle! Tom unfortunately was a move late for a nasty queen pin, and Kareem ultimately took the win with well connected rooks.

Peter Graham vs. Kareem Khan

An incredible performance from Kareem (91% accuracy!) even though Peter took this game with the masterful (96%!) utilization of his off-beat Polish opening. Great job by both!

Billy Zifchak vs. Anna Kupchik

A wild game for Billy and Anna. He stumbled his way through an English opening, while she did a great job coordinating pieces, and taking an early lead with lots of pressure down the middle of the board. Billy weaseled out of a cramped position with a discovered attack on Anna’s queen which turned the tables, but Anna held on to move 52!

Games from Nov. 4th Rapid, Board #1

The 5 games below are from Board #1 at the Piermont Chess Club November 4th Rapid G/25+5, imported from DGT software. Thanks to Stephane Derveaux for providing the board and the PGN files.

Aleksenko vs. Graham, Piermont 11/4/23


Delabre vs. Graham, Piermont 11/4/23


Derveaux vs. Delabre, Piermont 11/4/23


Levy vs. Burns, Piermont 11/4/23


Derveaux vs. Levy, Piermont 11/4/23


More Games from the Nov 4th Rapid

Here are some more games transcribed from players score sheets. (Forgive any mistakes due to illegibility! Feel free to submit corrections.)

If you would like your games posted too, hand in your score sheets at tournaments, or send a PGN file to piermontchess@gmail.com. We can also include your thoughts and ideas about key moves in the annotations if you include those as well!

Zifchak vs. Aleksenko, Piermont 11/4/23


Pinchuk vs. Zifchak, Piermont 11/4/23


Burns vs. Pinchuk, Piermont 11/4/23