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 Gary Kasparov. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gary Kasparov. Show all posts

Friday, May 12, 2017

SuperNationals in Nashville

Ten Thousand Chess Hopes

On May 11-15, 2017 Naomi played chess at the SuperNationals VI in Nashville, TN, at the vast Gaylord Opryland Resort.  See our previous trips to the Nationals and SuperNationals at that location: 2009, 2012, 2013, 2015.  There are age sections, but no gender categories.  Naomi played against best US boys.

It's a huge chess event which occurs every 4 years. This year 5,578 kids play (134 players from WA alone), grades K to 12.  Adding parents, coaches and organizers, there might be around 10,000 people involved.  It's the largest chess tournament in the world.

Before the main tournament, on May 11, Naomi played blitz in the K-9 section.  She placed 20th out of 265 participants, and Naomi's school placed second out of 35 teams in blitz.

The last blitz opponent didn't let Naomi move pieces when his time ran out, in order to make her time run out too.  Feeling distressed, Naomi haven't reported this clear violation to tournament directors.  She should have gotten 9 points, rather than 8.5.

The main tournament started on May 12 at 1pm.  Naomi played in the K-8 section -- see the results here.  There are 7 rounds overall.  Naomi has won in Round 1 against Patrick Leary from Georgia.  

Photo album: 2017-05-12 Nashville SuperNationals Opening, Round 1, 2
(don't miss Garry Kasparov's 6 minutes speech video)

(look at the crazy board numbers)

In Round 2 Naomi won against Gatlin Black from North Carolina:


On May 13, in Round 3, Naomi defeated William Wang from Illinois.

At the start of Round 3, Garry Kasparov was about to make the symbolic first move on Board 1 of section K-9.  The great Washington State player Derek Zhang was at the board, but his opponent hasn't appeared on time. Kasparov has made the first move on Board 2 instead, and then proceeded to entertain the audience:



Then Naomi lost Round 4 to Christopher Shen, OH, who went on to take 2nd place, and won Round 5 over Jonathan Gollapudi, MO.  That day, May 13, had three rounds!

On May 14, Naomi won Round 6 over Atticus Halley, GA, and lost Round 7 to Ricky Wang, IL, who went on to take 8th place.

Overall Naomi scored 5 points out of 7, and took 24th place out of 244, while playing against some of the strongest US boys her age.  That's not bad at all.  

Naomi's Odle Middle School chess team shared 2nd/3rd place in the overall team standings.  That's a remarkable result at the US Scholastic Chess SuperNationals!



Sunday, April 28, 2013

All-Girls in Chicago: Naomi Becomes USA National Champion!

All-Girls in Chicago: Naomi Becomes USA National Champion!

2013 All-Girls USA National Champion


On April 26-28, 2013 Naomi Bashkansky and her mom Luda traveled to Chicago, where the All-Girls National Chess Championship is held every year around this time, in Swissotel Chicago Downtown.

This year Naomi won first place at the All Girls Championship, in the Under 10 category!  She has become the reigning chess champion among girls her age in the USA!  And just one week before this, Naomi became Washington State Grade 4 ChampionAtta girl!  

And yes, that's Kasparov at the picture, personally giving Naomi her hard won trophy:




WA Girls Success in All-Girls National Championships


This year in Chicago, Garry Kasparov gave trophies to quite a few WA girls:

Under 10:
Naomi Bashkansky - first place.

Under 12:
Sujatha Chalasani - sixth place.

Under 14:
Sangeeta Dhingra - ninth place,
Olga Cherepakhin - twelfth place.
Both Sangeeta and Olga also got second place in bughouse.

Under 20:
Sarah May - third place.





Chicago!


Downtown Chicago is an amazing masterpiece of modern architecture.  Its Arts Institute houses some of the best art pieces and exhibits in the whole world.  Here are links to Luda’s daily photo albums:











2012 Flashback

2012 All-Girls USA Vice-Champion


Last year we also traveled to the All-Girls National Chess Championship in Swissotel Chicago Downtown, on April 20-23, 2012.

Back then Naomi took second place in the USA among girls 8 years old and under.





Amazing Chicago!

Downtown Chicago is an amazing masterpiece of modern architecture.  Its Arts Institute houses some of the best art pieces and exhibits in the whole world.  Here are links to my daily photo albums:














If you haven’t clicked on the links above to see the photo albums, it’s like you won a lottery prize but lost the winning ticket.

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Scholastic Chess Nationals in Nashville

Scholastic Chess Nationals in Nashville

The Whole Country Comes to the Land of Country

Тhe luxurious and humongous Gaylord Opryland Resort in Nashville, TN frequently holds USCF scholastic chess national championships.

Every four years, all school ages come here to compete, from kindergarten to high school.  This event is known as SuperNationals.  For a few days around spring break time, the place becomes the massive focus of US scholastic chess pilgrimage. This is the most important children's chess tournament in the US.

This post compresses time but not space.  It describes all 3 of our trips to chess nationals in Nashville, TN.  They occurred in April 2009 (SuperNationals IV), 2012 (Elementary Nationals) and April 2013 (Supernationals V).

2009 SuperNationals IV (K-12)


That was our first trip to any Nashville chess championship, still vividly in memory.  Both Naomi (grade K) and Ethan (grade 5) played, and all four of us traveled.  First time we experienced an event of such grand scale (see http://www.chess.com/event/view/supernationals-iv).

Hotel


After a long and tiresome 2-leg flight we waited a long time in the airport for the pre-ordered transfer bus (a taxi would be faster and cheaper) and got to the Gaylord Opryland Hotel and Resort lobby pretty tired.  However, once we got the keys and went on to find our room, the amazement set in.  It’s five stadium-size areas, each a garden city under a glass roof:



Here’s a view of just one tenth of the Delta area (the upper-right corner of the red part above):



Kasparov, Shamitov, Kosteniuk, Polgar


There is a story behind the photo below of Ethan and Naomi with the best chess player in world history, Garry Kasparov.  In the morning of April 3, 2009, Garry Kasparov and the chess playing astronaut Greg Chamitoff were the keynote speakers at the opening ceremony at the Grand Ole Opry House.  Kasparov proclaimed, ironically: “As a young kid, I just hated these opening ceremonies.  The chess functioners just kept talking and talking, and all I wanted was to play chess!”.  This got him an enthusiastic round of applause from the kids audience.


Later that day, back in the hotel, hundreds of people stood in line to get Kasparov’s autograph.  He was signing his own books which people bought specially for this occasion.  We also bought his book in advance, to get an autograph: “How Life Imitates Chess: Making the Right Moves, from the Board to the Boardroom”.  He made periodic breaks from signing, every 15 minutes.  As our turn in line approached, both our kids became quietly excited.  They gave Kasparov his book for signing.

“How old are you?” - he asked Naomi.  Shy silence was the obvious answer.  No self-respecting girl or woman will tell her age just like that.  Garry understood.  He said: “Is it a secret?”  Her eyes were burning with both adoration and indignation.  Ethan laughed and provided the age information (she’s 5, he’s barely 11).  This is when I pressed my camera button, and took the photo below.


Just before going to Kasparov, Naomi posed for a photo with Alexandra Kosteniuk, who was the Women's World Chess Champion at that time.  We simply kept running into chess celebrities ;-)

A couple of days later, we also met Susan Polgar (the oldest Polgár sister).  Susan has won many Women World Championships and Chess Olympiads.  She does a lot for kids chess development in the US.  She is certainly one of the most famous and important chess celebrities.  Naomi posed for a photo with Susan, and soon after that became her online chess school student.

Photos


2009_04_06 Nashville Downtown  -- with a full-size 100 year old copy of the Parthenon, which is quite handy, because the original is in ruins again, in the course of its endless reconstruction.


Nashville’s showily seedy old town oozes country music:

Results


Naomi (rating 786) got 5 points out of 7 and a shared 25th place trophy in the K section.

Ethan (rating 1410) got 4.5 points out of 7.  He played well, but grade 5 competition was strong.

2012 Elementary Nationals 


Only Naomi played in the 2012 Elementary Nationals, because Ethan was in grade 8 already.

Naomi traveled to Nashville with her mom and took 10th place in her K-3 category!  This is her best personal placement result in all 3 trips to Nashville.

Photos





2013 SuperNationals V


2013 is the year of the SuperNationals’ (K-12) fifth edition.  This year, 5335 schoolchildren traveled to Nashville to play in SuperNationals V, making it the largest rated chess tournament in history - see http://uschess.org/tournaments/2013/snv/

Both Ethan and Naomi traveled to Nashville, accompanied by their mom.  During the tournament they spent great time in that amazing hotel with fellow chess parents and their kids.  It’s a small world, where friends from Pennsylvania and Arizona are closer than next door neighbors.

Photos


2013_04_07 Nashville SuperNationals V (thanks to fellow chess parents for award ceremony photos!)

Results

Naomi got 5 points out of 7.  She lost only to 2 players with much higher ratings.  Good job!

Overall there were 1565 teams from all 50 states.  Naomi’s Spiritridge Elementary team won the 2nd place team trophy in the K-5 Open championship.  They missed 1st place by only a half point.  Spiritridge also won the 2nd place team trophy in the K-6 Blitz Championship.



All of Ethan’s opponents (except one) had ratings significantly higher than his own rating.  Despite these overwhelming odds, Ethan managed to wrestle 4.5 points out of 7 and placed 25th in the K-9 Championship.  Very good job!





Monday, November 26, 2012

World Youth Chess Championship 2012

World Youth Chess Championship 2012
Maribor, Slovenia: Chess, Castle, Cave, Cable Car

Earlier this year Naomi Bashkansky qualified to represent the USA at the 2012 World Youth Chess Championship (WYCC2012) in Maribor, Slovenia.  In November 2012 she played there, in the Girls Under 10 category.  Naomi is only 9, so this time she was playing mostly with girls who are older, which is significant at this age.  She took 5.5 out of 11 possible points, which is an OK result, given the age difference.

This is her second time at the world level, last year she already represented the USA at the 2011 World Youth Chess Championship in Caldas Novas, Brazil.  There she played in the Girls Under 8 category, being already 8 years old.  Maybe because of this, her result was better in Brazil than in Slovenia: 6 out of 9 possible points.

Travel

Here is Naomi and Co. travel schedule in November 2012:

4-5:    Flight to Zagreb, Croatia
6:       Sightseeing Zagreb
7:       Bus to Maribor, Slovenia
8-12: WYCC2012 Part I - Rounds 1-6
13:      Free day excursion to Postojna and Ljubljana
14-19: WYCC2012 Part II - Rounds 7 - 11
24:      Sightseeing Vienna
25:      Flight to Seattle

Many of the day-by-day descriptions below are accompanied by that day’s Picasa web photo album, which might give a much better sense of what the real experience was.

In these Picasa web albums descriptions and captions, notice the short web addresses of GPS track maps (made with Google My Tracks), in the form “http://goo.gl/maps/xxx”.  Copy/paste them to your browser’s address bar to see our actual routes and explore the locations on maps.

November 5: Flight

The enormous Frankfurt airport is somewhat skimpy on jetways.  A bit of retro experience, though.

Upon settling in Hotel Jadran in Zagreb, we ventured into the night to get some food and drink.  Mission accomplished at the Cathedral Square:


November 6: Zagreb

In one day, we were able to tour Zagreb's both Upper Town and Lower Town, using the great Step by Step guide book.  The photo album below and the track maps are the lasting evidence to this greatest touristic achievement:


November 7: Maribor

At the Zagreb airport, the organizers put us on the same bus with players who just arrived from Russia, and we rode to the north.  The Croatian-Slovenian border is an EU boundary, so the guard has actually checked and stamped our passports.  The Croatian (aka Serbo-Croatian) and Slovenian languages are almost identical in writing, but sound differently.  Croatian sounds a bit like Russian, while Slovenian does not (to our ears).

We settled in Hotel Bellevue (of all things - being from the town named Bellevue!) high up in the mountains of Mariborsko Pohorje ski resort.  Each day we had to travel in a cable car down to the playing venue in Hotel Habakuk and back, usually 3 (x 2) times: to the US team coach Michael Khodarkovsky at 9am, then to the WYCC2012 game in the afternoon at 3pm, and occasionally one more time to catch bus 6 to Maribor historic center and enjoy a walk there in between, or while Naomi played.

The upside of this mountainous location has been a spacious triple room, great mountain views, clean air, quiet trails and detachment from the championship havoc in Hotel Habakuk, not to mention the fun of each 9-minute cable car ride.  The full 3-daily-meals pansion and the helpful staff of Hotel Bellevue took away all the typical traveler’s worries and allowed us to relax even in the high-pressure competitive atmosphere of the world championship.


WYCC2012 Part I

November 8: Round 1

In the morning, the US chess team met with the US ambassador to Slovenia, who said we were the largest organized US group ever to arrive in this small country.  

Then we left Naomi in Hotel Bellevue to prepare and rest, and rode bus 6 to Maribor historic center.  The ride is 30 minutes long and free of charge for the WYCC2012 guests. Maribor is the 2012 European Capital of Culture.  It has an enchanting small old town with a castle and a town hall, and the oldest-in-the-world 400 years old vine, which still produces grapes for wine, a product so central to the Slovenian identity.


Naomi (playing black) drew against a Women FIDE Master Elizaveta Solozhenkina of Russia, with FIDE rating 1748.  Not bad!

Naomi Bashkansky with the US ambassador to Slovenia

November 9: Round 2

Naomi (white) defeated the Latvian player Dana Vambute.  At the same time, we enjoyed ourselves immensely at the Young Wine Festival (Martinovanje) in Maribor.  Kuhano vino (Mulled wine) does wonders lifting your spirits.


We got into the habit of buying Naomi ice cream after dinner when she played successfully, i.e. won or at least drew a strong player.

The Maribor Castle (Grad)

November 10: Round 3 

Naomi (black) lost to the highest-rated girl in her age at this world championship (FIDE rating 1954) Aleksandra Maltsevskaya of Russia, who will end up third in the final ranking.


November 11: Round 4

Naomi (white) lost to Niklesha Tharushi of Sri Lanka (FIDE rating 1446).  We started to worry a bit and asked Naomi to care more.  Instead of going to Maribor, on this day we walked around the hotel, and witnessed amateur athletes finish their incredible run up the Pohorje mountain.


November 12 morning: Round 5

On this day, there were 2 games: one in the morning, and one in the afternoon.  This arrangement has allowed to free up the next day, November 13, for excursions.

In the morning, Naomi, playing black, defeated Valeria Mocanu of Moldova.  Naomi was satisfied with this game and presents it here:

1. d4 d5 2. Nf3 Nf6 3. e3 e6 4. c4 dxc4 5. Bxc4 c5 6. O-O a6 7. dxc5 Qxd1 8.Rxd1 Bxc5 9. Nc3 b5 10. Bb3 Bb7 11. Nd4 Nc6 12. Kf1 Bb6 13. a3 O-O 14. Nxc6 Bxc6 15. Rd6 Rac8 16. Bc2 Rfd8 17. Rxd8+ Rxd8 18. h3 Nd5 19. Nxd5 Bxd5 20. e4 Bc4+ 21. Kg1 Bd3 22. Bxd3 Rxd3 23. Bf4 Bd4 24. Rc1 f6 25. Rc2 e5 26. Bd2 Rb3 27. Bc1 b4 28. axb4 Rxb4 29. Kf1 Rb6 30. Ke2 g5 31. f3 Kg7 32. Kd3 Rd6 33. Kc4 Kg6 34. b4 Bb6 35. Kb3 h5 36. Rc3 Bd4 37. Rc2 f5 38. exf5+ Kxf5 39. g3 g4 40. hxg4+ hxg4 41. f4 e4 42. Re2 Bb6 43. Ka4 Rd3 44. Rg2 e3 45. b5 a5 46. Re2 Ke4 47. Re1 Bd4 48. Re2 Kf3 49. Re1 Bb6 50. f5 Kf2 51. Bxe3+ Bxe3 52. Rh1 Bc5 53. Ra1 Rf3 54. Kxa5 Rxf5 55. Ka6 Rf6+ 56. Ka5 Kxg3 57. Rb1 Kg2 58. Rb2+ Rf2 59. Rxf2+ Kxf2 60. b6 Bxb6+ 61. Kxb6 g3 62. Kc5 g2 63. Kd4 g1=Q 64. Ke4 Qg5 65. Kd4 Qf5 66. Kc4 Qe5 67. Kb3 Qd4 68. Kc2 Qe3 69. Kd1 Qe2+ 70. Kc1 Ke3 71. Kb1 Kd3 72. Ka1 Kc3 73. Kb1 Qb2# 0-1

Naomi’s comment: “56... I can't believe I missed Rf8 winning a rook.”

They did not let parents into the playing hall at WYCC2012. However they streamed live online video of the hall at wycc2012.com. So, in desperation, I took 50 browser screenshots of that webcast as Naomi was playing the endgame in Round 5:


Webcast screenshot: Naomi indicates she won Round 5

November 12 afternoon: Round 6

Naomi (white) lost to Nusa Hercog (FIDE rating 1627) of Slovenia.  We were really ready for a break now.

Trip to Postojna Cave and Ljubljana

November 13: Free Day Excursion

For the free day, the organizers offered a choice of excursions: Bled-Ljubljana or Postojna-Ljubljana or Vienna.  We already saw Vienna 16 years ago and were planning to spend a day there later anyway, on November 24.  Lake Bled is said to look spectacular, but the weather seemed iffy for a high-visual-expectations outdoor trip.  

So we’ve chosen the Postojna Cave, a world-famous natural wonder, and we were not disappointed.  The many-miles-long karst caves system was first opened to the public in 1819.  A train drives visitors from the entrance to the main halls.  You really must see the photos and videos below to appreciate the views:


Postojna Cave stalagmite named "Brilliant"

After the mind-numbing visit to the cave, we enjoyed a relaxed walking tour of the Slovenian capital Ljubljana, which is charming in its little details.  For example, the pedestrian Padlock Bridge, where lovers lock padlocks on the rail cables, as symbols of their eternal bond, and then throw away the keys to the Ljubljanica River below.  

The eternal love padlocks (keys thrown to the river)

During this trip we became friends with Nastya (whom Naomi will play in Round 8) and her father Oleg.

WYCC2012 Part II

November 14: Round 7

Naomi (black) defeated Woman Candidate Master Anastacia-Anton Lopez-Sanchez of Mexico (FIDE rating 1391), who previously won the North American Youth Championship. That Mexican girl usually plays the King's Indian Attack opening which Naomi never played before. So in the morning Naomi studied this opening and then during the game in the afternoon Naomi survived that opening and won the game!

November 15: Round 8

Naomi (white) lost to her new friend Nastya Vuller of Israel.  

While they played, we met our son Ethan’s first chess coach Vladimir Vainshtein and then rode bus 6 to Maribor for a walk in the romantic Mestni Park.


November 16: Round 9

Naomi (black) lost to Elizaveta Lichii of Moldova (FIDE rating 1453).

During the game, we have finally visited the Maribor Castle Museum, and took photos of its many interesting exhibits and architecture:


With these stone axes, Homo Sapiens annihilated Homo Neanderthalis

November 17: Round 10

In the morning, a fellow Bellevue, WA Chess4Life student Anthony He and his dad rode the cable car up to our Hotel Bellevue, and invited Naomi and me for a walk along the trails.  The notion of two Northwestern chess kids meeting in Slovenian mountains amused us a bit:


In the afternoon, Naomi (white) defeated Nina Marais of South Africa.


Naomi and Nina (South Africa) before Round 10

November 18: Round 11 and Closing Ceremony

In the morning, Naomi defeated Haohao Liu of Finland.

In the afternoon, Naomi and we met Nastya and Oleg at Maribor’s Main Square under the Plague Column.  We went down to the Drava River and fed swans with bread.  After sunset, we visited the Maribor Castle Museum, and the kids were delighted by the experience.

Then we all rode bus 6 to the Ice Arena (Ledna Dvorana), where the WYCC2012 closing ceremony was held.  It featured a local hip-hop band, and speeches by the Maribor mayor, and the unsurpassed World Chess Champion Gary Kasparov.


Aftermath

WYCC2012 has produced 12 new World Youth Chess Champions in categories Open and Girls in ages 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18.  

The US team took the third overall place, with 4 medals (2 gold, 1 silver, 1 bronze) - awarded to the US delegation head Michael Khodarkovsky by his old acquaintance Gary Kasparov.  Good job, Team USA!  India and Russia shared the first and second place, with 8 medals each.

Gary Kasparov gave prizes to the top three players in each category.

In the Girls 8 category, the first place went to Motahara Asadi (Iran) who defeated Naomi a year ago in Brazil 2011.  Back then Naomi told us she was strong, even though just 7, which is why she got to play in G8 again.

In the Open 8 category, the bronze medal was given to Christopher Shen (USA).  One of the US team’s 4 medals.

In Naomi’s Girls 10 category, Priyanka N (India) won the first place, the second went to Olga Badelka (Belarus), and the third to Aleksandra Maltsevskaya (Russia), who defeated Naomi in Round 3.

In the Open 12 category, Samuel Sevian (USA) won the gold medal. The silver medal went to Cameron Wheeler (USA).  Good result here for Team USA: 2 top medals!

In the Open 14 category, FM (FIDE Master) Kayden Troff from Utah, USA won the gold medal.  This is a great achievement.  The US team got 4 medals and the third place overall.


November 24: Touring Beautiful Vienna

In the morning, we flew via Graz to Vienna and walked across the parking lot to the NH Hotel for early check-in.  From there we took the S7 train to Wien Mitte, then the U3 train to Stephansplatz.  

We relished the colorful inside illumination of the Stephansdom, the splendor of the Graben, the Hofburg facades, the wide squares and boulevards.  Seasonal fairs and festive illumination add to the magic of the Parliament and the Rathaus

The personal highlight was our visit to the Natural History Museum with its incredible wealth of artefacts, like the unforgettable 24000 years old “Venus of Willendorf“.  It was followed by savoring true-to-fame Wiener Schnitzels in Café Landtmann (frequented by Sigmund Freud, Gustav Mahler, Imre Kálmán, Romy Schneider).

We capped it all off by classic entertainment with the Vienna Residence Orchestra concert at the Börse Palais.  The concert program, with elements of opera and ballet, had two absolutely unbeatable parts: 1. Mozart; 2. Strauss(es). 

In the end we rode trains U4 and S7 to spend the night in the NH Hotel at the airport, convenient for our 6am flight.  Vienna proved to be even more satisfying than it was during our first visit 16 years ago.  The photos might give you a better idea:


St. Stephen's Cathedral illumination

The unforgettable Wiener Schnitzel in Café Landtmann

November 25: Flight Home

After our plane landed in the Seattle airport, we passed border control, took the train to the main terminal, and ran through the whole length of the main terminal to United Airlines departure counters.  There we caught Grandma just as she was departing, and we had just enough time to say her goodbye and thank you for staying with our son Ethan for 3 weeks while we traveled.


The next World Youth Chess Championship will be in Al Ain, UAE, in December 2013.


Welcome home!  View from our front deck to the lake, downtown and mountains