The Bashkansky family Chess Travel blog


Bashkansky family's Chess Travel blog - parents Guy and Ludmila with children:
NM Ethan and WIM Naomi - World School Chess Champion (Girls Under 13)
Showing posts with label Aviv Friedman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aviv Friedman. Show all posts

Monday, July 25, 2016

Pan-American Youth Chess Championship 2016

¡Montevideo, Uruguay!
Back in May, the US Chess Federation informed us that both Naomi and Ethan will be the US Official Representatives in their categories (Girls U14 and Open U18) at the Pan-American Youth Chess Championship in Montevideo, Uruguay, July 24-31, 2016.  This means they are partly compensated for accommodation and travel.  For cheapskates like us this was the last straw, now we had to go!  


July 22 - Day 1

After the 24-hours-long three-legs flight (SEA-SFO-MIA-MVD), we crashed at the AirBnB unit rented for the first two nights before the chess tournament started.  It's advertised as "a unique place in the depth of the Old Town".  From there we raided the Old Town streets, attractions and restaurants.

Take a look at the photo album to appreciate that unique AirBnB rental, the beautiful Plaza Matriz, the opulent Plaza Independencia, the intimate Peatonal Sarandí, the tucked away Plaza Zabala, the gourmet Mercado del Puerto, and the grandiose Rambla Francia.


Plaza Matriz

At the Cervecería Matriz I made first contact with the delicious popular Uruguayan food chivito.  It's a thin slice of filet mignon in a bun, with mozzarella, tomatoes, mayonnaise, olives, bacon, boiled eggs and ham.  Popularly known as a "cholesterol bomb", it's tasted divine.  Even more divine was my wife's order of lasagna, whose savory meaty creamy hot gentle taste stuck in our yearning memories forever.

July 23 - Day 2

After seeing the General Artigas Mausoleum, under the enormous horse-mounted General Artigas Monument on Plaza Independencia, we hopped onto the Bus Turistico for a guided tour of the city, and hopped off at a few stops.  The City Hall Lookout provided thrilling vistas in all directions.  The grandiose Legislative Palace was closed - for which we successfully compensated later on Day 5.  The nearby Agricultural Market managed to be both abundant and hip.  The Botanical and Japanese Gardens were very walkable, and the Rodó attraction park rides supplied our kids with ample excitement.  We ended the day at the El Cuatro restaurant at the Port Market, by devouring inhuman amounts of meats.


La diligencia (The Stagecoach) by José Belloni

July 24 - Day 3

Early in the morning I climbed onto the AirBnB unit's rooftop to capture on camera the Old Town views, and the view to the Cerro de Montevideo, the famous hill across the Bay of Montevideo.  

At 11 AM we joined the Solis Theater guided tour for a glimpse of this famed 19 century entertainment venue. Later, fútbol replaced teatro as the leading form of popular entertainment, especially after Uruguay topped the World Cup in 1930.

A nice walk along Avenida 18 de Julio, with its plazas, monuments and the unspeakable SUBTE exposition (double entendre), brought us to the Art History Museum, an instant love affair for any cultured person.  On the way back, at the Del Navio restaurant, milanesa and empanadas satisfied our earthly urges as well.

From the AirBnB unit in the Old Town, we've Uber-ed to the Sheraton Montevideo hotel at Punta Carretas, for the remaining week July 24-31.  The day ended with the Pan-American Youth Chess Championship opening ceremony, an inevitably crowded and self-consciously serious affair.


El entrevero (The Struggle) by José Belloni, with 5 allegoric horsemen fighting each other

July 25 - Day 4

We went to the US team meeting, otherwise staying indoors due to rain.  I've discovered the gastronomic joys of the nearby Punta Carretas shopping mall. Chiviteria Mil Salsas, Churrascaria El Fogon, Blas Rincón Gourmet and other restaurants nourished the body way beyond what it needed ;-)

Round 1 started at 5 PM.  Naomi won over Luiza De Oliveira Felix from Brazil, and Ethan drew with Juan Heinechen from Paraguay.


The calm before the storm

Here is the Pan-American Youth Chess Championship website, with live games and video stream:

And here are the tournament crosstables to follow:

July 26 - Day 5

Round 2 started at 9:30 AM.  Naomi defeated Alexandra-Fiore Estrada-Cantaro of Peru, and Ethan beat Dominguez Facundo of Uruguay.

During the game we habitually abandoned the chess venue, flagrantly free from any parental guilt, and Uber-ed to Palacio Legislativo for the 10:30 guided tour.  What a delight!  Apparently back in 1904 when the construction started, Uruguay (along with Argentina) used to be much higher up on the relative world-wide wealth scale.  Palacio Legislativo is a true Italian-style architectural marvel, built with insane amounts of marble, allegorical statues, gilded rooms and epic paintings.  It can easily compete with parliaments of countries 100 times more populous than 3-million-people Uruguay.

In Round 3 Naomi drew with Melanie Dongo of Peru, whereas Ethan has dramatically defeated FIDE Master Francisco-Javier Munoz of Argentina, by gaining a two pawns advantage and realizing it in the endgame.  Since Ethan played on (electronic) Board 3, we watched the whole game broadcast live, all 78 moves!  Here is the online screenshot of Ethan's triangulating moves which craftily denied his opponent the 3-repetitions draw.  After erroneously claiming such draw and being rebuked by an arbiter, his opponent resigned two moves later:


Now both Ethan and Naomi have 2.5 points out of 3, and move to third and second position in their categories respectively.  Ethan's next round opponent will be International Master Kevin-Joel Cori-Quispe of Peru, and Naomi's - Woman FIDE Master Luisa-Fernanda Diaz of Colombia.  The game is on!


Palacio Legislativo - Hall of Lost Steps

July 27 - Day 6

Round 4 started at 10 AM, a new morning game starting time - to let local parents park their cars in the shopping mall when it opens.  Naomi defeated Woman FIDE Master Luisa-Fernanda Diaz, and moved to the top position for now.

And Ethan drew with International Master Kevin-Joel Cori-Quispe of Peru!  Thus, he already played with the two strongest participants.  The rest should be easier, so 3 points out of 4 is a very good start!

There was no afternoon round, so instead we took a walk in the Punta Carretas neighborhood to the oceanfront, Juan Zorrilla de San Martin Museum, Punta Brava cape and its picturesque lighthouse.  Frigid Antarctic winds were piercing our barely adequate clothing. In the Southern Hemisphere, "Winter is Coming".


Ready for action

July 28 - Day 7

In Round 5 Ethan defeated Marco Delgado-Romero and Naomi lost to Stephanie-Beatriz Puppi-Lazo.

In Round 6 Ethan lost to FIDE Master Brian-Sebas Escalante-Ramirez, and Naomi drew with Aleyla Hilario (thanks for having just one first and one last name!).  By chance, all four of our kids' opponents were from Peru on that day.

In the morning we went for the free guided walking tour of the Old Town.  The tour guide provided some fun facts and insights about Uruguay:

"We have 3.5 million people and 12 million cows, so if elections were fair, a cow would be the president.  Instead, we eat beef for breakfast, lunch and dinner...  Most of our early politicians were Freemasons.  The British made us exile our independence hero General Artigas and he died in Paraguay.  Ridden by guilt, we built this huge monument and mausoleum for his remains, at Plaza Independencia."

In the afternoon visited the Visual Arts Museum with some fascinating paintings.


Fishermen


July 29 - Day 8

In Round 7 Ethan lost to Dawton-Almino Lemos of Brazil, and Naomi lost to Woman FIDE Master Javiera-Belen Gomez-Barrera of Chile. ¡Caramba!

In the morning we strolled along Rambla Gandhi to Playa Pocitos, which is Montevideo puny answer to Copacabana.  In the evening we Uber-ed across Montevideo Bay to Fortaleza del Cerro, for spectacular views of the city at sunset.


A good place for the cannon

July 30 - Day 9

In Round 8 Naomi beat Oriana Mora and Ethan lost to FIDE Master Santiago Zapata-Charles, both from Argentina.

Our touristic order of the day was the "number 1 attraction of Montevideo", the grandiose Rambla oceanfront boulevard.  We walked 7 beautiful kilometers from the Sheraton to the Ibis and back.  

Whatever health benefits resulted from this exercise, they have been enthusiastically wasted at dinner by indulging in a glorious Uruguayan steak cut of "bife de vacio".  This has been my dinner routine for the entire stay, though sometimes the steak cut was a trademark "colita de cuadril" or a typical  "asado de tira", but invariably medium-rare and with a jug of  tinto red wine.  You only live once...


Naomi and Ethan, almost done

July 31 - Day 10

In the final Round 9 Naomi defeated Romina Espinal-Reynoso of Mexico.  Her total result 6 out of 9 was OK for her level.  She just happened to get many top opponents, while being one year younger than others in her category.

Ethan drew with Valentin-Alejo Lagar of Argentina.  With the total result 4.5 out of 9, his FIDE rating grew 90 points - not bad at all, given that initially we just hoped he'd be not in the bottom.  Maybe this relative success will shake him up to resume playing chess after a two-year hiatus in college, and finally get to the National Master USCF rating of 2200.

During the game we rode to the Central Cemetery and marveled in awe at its stunning monuments.  The theme of memento mori has positively soothed our parental nerves, ravished by the chess championship's constant tension.

Art Nouveau tomb sculpture by José Luis Zorilla de San Martín (son of poet Juan, see Day 6)

The closing ceremony was nice, entertaining and, most importantly, short -- given it was entirely in Spanish.  The US team did well, taking second place overall, with five gold medals, five silver and one bronze.  Congrats to the team and its unfailing coaches: Friedman, Khodarkovsky, Ambartsoumian.  Read the US Chess write-up.  Special congratulations to Sophie Velea, the Girls Under 8 champion, who also won the North American Youth Chess Championship just one week later!


US team takes the stage

The 24-hours-long three-legs flight (MVD-MIA-SFO-SEA) brought us home the next day, August 1, both exhausted and full of impressions.

Sunday, June 5, 2016

US Chess School / Schein - Friedman chess camp in St. Louis

"The Best Things in Life Are Free"

The Camp

On June 2-5, the 6th Schein - Friedman Chess Camp, in collaboration with the US Chess School, was held at the world-famous St. Louis Chess Club and Scholastic Center.  This exclusive invitation-only camp was offered to some of the most promising young chess players in the USA, and was not only tuition free, but also accommodation free!  The campers had to pay only for travel and food.

Naomi was invited to this camp (yay!) together with other young talents with high chess ratings.  There were 15 kids, of whom 4 were girls.  Incredibly smart, perceptive, top-notch youngsters whose parents should be genuinely proud.

The camp coach was IM Armen Ambartsoumian, a long time US youth team coach in world events.  The organizers and chess guides were FM Aviv Friedman (Schein - Friedman Scholastic Recognition Project) and IM Greg Shahade (US Chess School).  These three guys made it all possible, huge thanks to them, and to the main sponsors: Mark Schein, Dr. Jim Roberts and the Scheinberg family.

Also huge thanks to the St. Louis Chess Club for providing the venue and accomodation.  The camp was on the chess club second floor 10 am - 6 pm daily, with a lunch break.  We all stayed at the nearby historic Chase Park Plaza, absolutely free of charge!  That's unusual for chess parents, who are used to paying a lot.

The chess camp was very fun and entertaining for kids and parents.  After study, many kids and parents would go to the pool.  On the second evening, Naomi played in a local tournament in the St. Louis Chess Club.  She got into the top quad and played with two FIDE Masters and one National Master!  Almost won a couple of games ;-)

On the third evening, Naomi and her friends Nastya and Martha visited the marvelous, phenomenal City Museuм.

Timeline and photos

While the kids enjoyed chess, we enjoyed St. Louis.  Each day we took Uber after 10 AM, back before 1 PM to feed Naomi lunch, then Uber again after 2 PM, back before 6 PM.  

Here are the resulting photo albums, take a look!

June 2: St. Louis chess camp, Cathedral, Riverfront, Arch




Naomi

Arch

June 3: St. Louis Chess Camp, Hall of Fame, Forest Park, Jewel Box, Fun Trolley Tour, Chess Quads




Parents

Kids

June 4: St. Louis Chess Camp, Art Museum, Botanical Gardens, City Museum



Art

Life

June 5: St. Louis Chess Camp, Zoo, Science Center




Eat

Play

Social Media

Thank you letters




Dear U.S. Chess School, Scheinberg family, Greg Shahade, Dr. Jim Roberts;
Dear Schein-Friedman foundation, Aviv Friedman, Mark Schein,

Thank you so much for making the U.S. Chess School camp possible!

I haven't been to a camp with people who are both my age and my rating for a considerable amount of time, and I've certainly never been as captivated in a camp as I was in this one.

In this camp, I not only have learned of new ways to study chess from both my peers and the coaches, but more importantly I know now both my weaknesses and my strengths.

This camp instilled in me a new fascination with chess and invigorated me with the motivation to improve my chess skills, and for that I can thank people like you who sponsor and support this camp.

Sincerely,
Naomi Bashkansky



Dear St. Louis Chess Club and Scholastic Center,

Thank you so much for hosting this camp for us! I've never been in a camp more interesting, nor have I ever learned so much about myself in a camp before. It felt humbling to see the photos of some of the most elite chess players all stacked up in one chess club, and I'm sure I'm not the only one who hopes to be there someday as well.

Onto matters closer to the present day, my favorite part of the camp was when we played out positions that coach Armen showed us. Especially, for obvious reasons, the position with opposite-colored Bishops in which we all played against Greg, and I was the only one who found how to win.

And the hotel itself was one of my favorite parts as well, as it was wondrous to be able to see a hotel with such a classical structure, and there's also the fact that I got the room with the couch-bed all to myself. Though, to be honest, I liked the hotel elevators the best for the simple reason that I'd never imagined that the semi-circle and arrow above the elevator door existed in anything but movies.

Another thing I didn't expect was seeing dear old Benjamin on the hall of fame. I'd already know that he was many great things, but until visiting the hall I could never be sure with absolute certainty that he even knew what chess was. Even better than the hall of fame, however, was the studio.

At first I was bored and slightly confused, seeing seemingly random colors in either square or triangular shapes, but I got a shock when I realized that it was actually an entire game, represented rather creatively. I started trying to figure out the first moves in each game, and for one of the games I managed to figure out the first three whole moves (which I don't remember anymore, but it did help that I knew with over 99% certainty that the first move is not h3).

And then, there's the wooden King the size of a giraffe and many life-size chess sets (Right now, I'm just waiting until the year 2068 when there'll be Harry Potter movie-style animated life-size chess pieces).

And of course, I'm sure my parents are grateful for any excuse to visit St. Louis, take pictures of the arch, go to the zoo, the art museum, the botanical gardens, and whatever else it is they do when I practice and play chess.

This all thanks to your organizing the camp at your club. Thank you!

Sincerely,
Naomi Bashkansky