Southern California Chess Federation

News & Notes

Kern County Open
IM Enrico Sevillano swept the field of 32-players at the Kern County Open Championship 5-0. Tied for 2nd-3rd place at 3 1/2 were Matthew Robertson, Indra Lahiri, James Castro, and Gary Latta. 1st place U1800 went to Raul Bugnosen and U1600 was won by Alexander Pearson.

The 23-player Scholastic tournament was won by Stan Liao (4-1) on tiebreaks over Matthew Poh and Joseph Constantine. Other winners: 1st K-2nd -- Grant Cowan; 1st 3rd-5th -- Anoush Sahakyan; 1st 6th-8th Knarik Sahakyan. Upset winner: Michael Slaughter (won $5!) -- Ken Poole


West wins Amateur Team playoff
The 2009 USAT Playoffs was one filled with excitement, drama and even a dose of madness that the month of March usually reserves for college basketball. In the end, after a day of thrilling chess that included game(s) in 15 sudden death tiebreaker matches to decide the semi-final and championship rounds, the West team("ACA Beasts!") came away with this year's U.S. Amateur Team National Championship by defeating the South team("My Girl Is Pissed!")!

The West team was led by 17 year old NM John Daniel Bryant(stepson of 2008 U.S. Open Champion IM Enrico Sevillano), talented young experts 14 year old Michael Yee, 15 year old Vincent Huang and expert Santy Wong. Ironically, Santy is a current Florida resident who moved from Los Angeles only 8 months ago. Due to rating limits, Wong replaced Sevillano this year, so this was especially sweet for Sevillano as his team finished 2nd in the 2007 USATW, missing an opportunity to participate in the playoffs that year.

In the championship round, boards 1 and 4(Bryant and Wong) lost their games which put young teens Yee and Huang in "must win" situations. Incredibly, both boys won endgames in which they had knight vs rook along with pawn advantages. From there, the "ACA Beasts!" won the 15 minute sudden death match 3-1.

Also noteworthy was the 3.5/4 undefeated performance of Michael Yee in the 4 matches today. Huang just won the Southern California High School state championship last week. Both Yee and Huang are top students of IM Armen Ambartsoumian and his American Chess Academy (ACA). ACA's string of success in recent tournaments is truly a tribute to Ambartsoumian's talent as a world class chess coach and is a sign that ACA will be a force to be reckoned with for years to come.

This year, the event moved to the World Chess Live website from ICC. The transition was not without some minor issues. After ending the semi-final round in a draw, teams West and North needed to play their sudden death Game in 15 match but the start of the match was delayed for an hour due to organizational problems at World Chess Live. The championship round started awkwardly as well, with mistakes with colors and pairings.

In the end, the event ultimately delivered the kind of excitement that national championships are famous for. I came away from the event with the lasting memory of the "ACA Beasts!" running out of the Chess Palace tonight...screaming, yelling and celebrating their very first National Championship title. -- Jerry Yee


Victorville Chess Tournament
Mar 21 and April 25 Don Cotten will direct a chess tournament at the Victor Villa Clubhouse, 13393 Mariposa Road. The tournament is planned as Quads, with the strongest four players in the top quad, the next four in the second quad, etc. A three round Swiss System tournament may be used to take care of all entries in the bottom section. There will be three rounds with each player having one hour for all his moves. No one will be eliminated! All players may play three rounds. Players may sign up at 9:30 A.M. with the last round expected to finish about 5 P.M. The entry fee is $10 and first prize in each section is $30.


Bakersfield Open
December 6


The Bakersfield Chess Club's first tournament saw John Bryant take first place in 25-player Open with 4-0. Joel Banawa and state champion Enrico Sevillano tied for second at 3.5. Levi Ormonde won the 38-player scholastic section.


San Luis Obispo County Championship

The September 13 S.L.O. County Championship saw a three-way tie for first place by Vadim Kudryavtsev of Ivine, Robert Reynolds of Santa Ynez, and Warren Williamson of Morro Bay, all scoring 3-1. Robert Reynolds was the qualifier for next year�s State Championship. Warren Williamson became the San Luis Obispo County champion. Zach Lindsay of Atascadero won the prize for U/1500 in the 12-player Open Section. The 12-player U/1400 Reserve Section saw a three way tie for first place by Stephan Bosch of L.A., Tim Forney of San Miguel, and Taylor McCreary of San Luis Obispo. Sanya Bykovtsev of Goleta took the U/1000 prize. The annual tournament was directed by Barbara McCaleb of San Luis Obispo.


Free Chess Books

IM Anthony Saidy of Los Angeles wants to give away chess books in Dutch, German and Czech to anyone who can read them. E-mail him at saidychess@sbcglobal.net to arrange pickup after May 4, or else arrange to meet him at National Open in Las Vegas in June.


Western Class Championships
171 players plus two re-entries participated in this annual CCA event in Agoura Hills. Section winners included: Master: IMs Valentin Yotov and Andranik Matikozyan and Matthew Beelby (Under 2400) equal first with 4.5 of 6; Expert: Carlos Garcia, 5.5; A: Kaylan Burleigh, 5.5; B: David Karapetyan, 5.5; and C: Yash Pershad, 5. The experimental Saturday/Sunday sections were won by: Under 1900: Sergey Yurenok, 5.5; Under 1700: Dennis Neymit, 5;5; D: Ellie Simon, 5; E: Sanjay Siddhanti, 5.5; and Under 900: Alexander Blaine, 5. --Randy Hough



San Luis Obispo County Championship

The September 15 S.L.O. County Championship was won by Vadim Kudryavtsev with a perfect 4-0, qualifying him for next year's State Championship. Mark Keller and Warren Williamson became San Luis Obispo County Co-champions each with a 3-1 score. The 24-player Open saw 6 players tie with a score of 3-1 (in addition to Keller and Williamson, they were Alex Bykovtsev; Tony Miller, Robert Reynolds; Allan Sung). Youth prizes were won by Connor Reck and Zach Lindsay, with Connor taking first on tiebreaks. Jason Mayr provided the tournament site at his art gallery. Barbara McCaleb directed the tournament. -- Barbara McCaleb



Super State Scholastics, March 2-4

Combining the SCCF High School Junior High and Elementary Championships, this event attracted 262 players to Monroe High School in North Hills. John Daniel Bryant won the state high school championship with 6-0, earning an invitation to the Denker Tournament of High School Champions. Experts Francis Chen and Jeremy Stein shared second place at 5-1.

In the Junior High, Austin Hughes and Kelly Zhang tied with 5�-1�. Other prize winners included Kyron Griffith (6-1 in K-6), Peter Kan Veerman (6�-� in K-6 Under 850), Simone Liao (6�-� in K-3), Titan Burl, Austin Chang, Alex Householder, Linus Jen and David Shaw (all 5-2 in K-3 Under 550), and Aaron Householder (5-0 in K-1). Non-rated sections were won by Armon Nejati, Rachel Plummer, David Chen, Adrian Lee and Jimmy Liu. James Bullock directed for organizer Joe Hanley of chess4children.com.




We are saddened to announce the unexpected passing of Razmik Abrahamyan, our beloved Tatev Abrahamyan’s father, while she was participating in the North American Open, in Las Vegas. The cause was a case of severe stroke. He was 52.

Tatev Abrahamyan, 18, who has continuously represented the US in the World Youth Championships is among the strongest female chess players in the nation and the strongest in California. She received 2nd place in the 2005 US Women’s Championship, won the Pan American Championship in 2006, and attained a WGM norm in the World Juniors, October 2006 in Armenia. Those who know Tatev are well acquainted with her father and his dedication and love for his daughter. He was a very pleasant man who will be missed tremendously.

Razmik untimely passing away came as a major shock to the family. Unfortunately, the family is at a dire financial situation and they are struggling to prepare the funeral services to be tentatively held on Friday, January 5th. Those who would like to contribute in donations, please contact Armen Ambartsoumian at (818) 640-5974 or Nshan Keshishian at (323) 578-8424. If you would like to directly contribute to the family, the address is 123 W. Chevy Chase Drive Apt. #4 Glendale, CA 91204. We will keep you updated on the exact time and place of the funeral services. -- Harut Akopyan



San Luis Obispo County Championship
First place in the 10-player Open Section was shared by 3 Southern California residents, James Humphrey, Vadim Kudryavtsev, and Chris Roberts, all scoring 3.5-1.5. Their names will be submitted as State Championship Qualifiers. Eric Montany is the San Luis Obispo County champion with a score of 3-2. The top U1700 prize was shared by Thomas Boyd and Kevin Maxwell, 1.5-3.5.

The 8-player Reserve Section was won by Ben Biesek, 4-1; E. Fred Brown was 2nd, 3.5-1.5; U1200 by Jason Mayr, 3-2; and Top Unrated Chris Becker, 2.5-2.5.

Jason Mayr volunteered his artist gallery for the tournament site. The tournament was directed by Steven Tomak and the club made a small profit. -- Barbara McCaleb



Sean Christian Reader lost his lengthy battle with leukemia on Monday, August 14th, 2006. Sean's determination and dedication were seen in the way he played sports and chess, and in the way he fought this relentless illness. The doctors and nurses openly mourned the loss of the boy they called "a champion and a warrior."

Sean had many passions in sports: Duke basketball, Georgia football, Brett Favre and The Packers, March Madness, and especially The Dodgers. He excelled in chess, capturing the title of 2005 Western States 6th Grade Champion, and leading Meadows Elementary to 2nd at the Nationals in Nashville, TN only days after being diagnosed with leukemia.

Amazingly, Sean had a bigger love: his family and friends. He enjoyed hanging with his friends, whether they played chess, basketball, or tossed the football. The bond he had with his family was truly miraculous. While his father, Chan, was his best friend, his mother, Maria, provided a love so strong that he couldn’t help but reciprocate it. He adored, admired, and loved them as much as humanly possible. During the last year of his life, after his mother re-married, Sean extended his heart and trust to the newest member of the family, his step-father, TJ (and his family).

Sean's extended family loved him very much. Sean’s Grammas each received unsolicited hand-holding during their final visits with Sean. Days with Grampa (Maria's dad) were often spent outdoors, usually hiking. His uncles, Paco, DuWayne, and Chris, and his aunts, Angela and Lori, were always on his mind. He is also survived by his step-sister, Angela. He was preceeded in death by his grandfather, Howard Reader.

Funeral services will be held at Eternal Valley's Chapel on the Hill on Saturday, August 19th, at 12pm. It will be preceded by a visitation 10 a.m.-Noon. Eternal Valley, 23287 Sierra Hwy, Newhall, CA 91321.

The family has asked that in lieu of flowers, donations be sent to Sean’s Fund, c/o California Youth Chess League, 25405 Via Nautica, Valencia, CA 91355. -- Jay Stallings


SCCF HS/JHS/Elementary Championships

The highlight of the scholastic chess season, the Super States tournament, took place April 29-30 at the Burbank Airport Hilton. A total of 233 players competed for state championship titles.

Francis Chen, the 2005 champion, and Derek Tan scored 6-1 to tie for first place in the High School section. They will be considered state high school co-champions. On tiebreak, though, Chen will earn a trip to the Denker Tournament of High School Champions in August.

Anthony Ong and Dingchao Lu were next at 5 1/2-1 1/2. Vanessa West scored 5-2 and earned a trip to the Polgar Tournament as the highest-scoring girl.

Five players shared top honors in the Junior High section: Jared Tan, Armen Samuelian, Michael Yee, Max Chou and Tianye He.

Brendyn Estolas and Ryan Polsky became state elementary co-champions by sharing first place with scores of 6-1 in the grades K-6 section. Kelly Zhang was third at 5 1/2-1 1/2.

Eric Huang, Omar Wiseman and Matthew Mullen tied at 5 1/2-1 1/2 in the grades K-3 section.

Kevin Qian, Shyam Gandhi, Ranon Roberto and Curtis Clemmensen scored 4-1 to share first place in the grades K-1 section.

More winners: Devon Watson, first at 6 1/2-1/2 in the grades K-6 Under-850 section; Scott Xue, first at 7-0 in the grades K-3 Under-550 section; David Mao, Austin Webb and Bill Feng, tied for first at 10-4 in the non-rated K-12 section; Zheng Zhu and Randy Tseng, tied for first at 11-3 in the non-rated K-6 section; and Robert Eli Lawrence, first at 8-2 in the non-rated K-1 section. Complete standings for all sections may be found
here. -- Jack Peters


Igor Ivanov 1947-2005

Igor Ivanov passed away on November 17 at 1 p.m. in St. George, Utah. He died from cancer of the esophagus that was diagnosed this past spring.

Igor's most famous victory, his win from the 1979 Spartakiad, may be seen here. The notes are Igor's from 64 magazine. Jonathan Berry translated them from the Russian. This win helped him to get the invitation to play in Cuba and the opportunity to jump ship in Gander, Newfoundland, a year later.

Igor received his Grandmaster title earlier this year for results achieved in the early 1990s thanks to FIDE Qualification Committee members Mikko Markkula and Stewart Reuben. It meant a lot to Igor that he played the last major tournaments of his life - the National, US and Western States Opens - as a Grandmaster, a title he richly deserved almost his entire career.

Igor nearly received the title and a place in the Candidates at the Toluca Interzonal in 1982 where he was fourth on tiebreak. A two-time member of the Canadian Olympiad team and a record nine-time winner of the USCF Grand Prix, Igor also won several major tournaments in the Soviet Union before defecting in 1980. Among his triumphs were the Zaitsev Memorial in Vladivostok in 1978, Yaroslavl 1979 and the Tashli Taliev Memorial in Tashkent the same year. His score in the latter was 12 from 13 (!), three points ahead of second place finisher Kakadgeldyev. Igor tied for first in the 1978 Soviet Championship Qualifier with a young Garry Kasparov but lost the Soviet Championship spot on tiebreak.

Igor spent the last few years of his life in St. George with his wife Elizabeth and their two cats. He kept busy giving lessons to kids at the local chess club and battling computer programs on the Internet Chess Club. An excellent pianist with a strong singing voice, Igor also gave several performances for the local community. When he was healthy he loved to hike in the surrounding area less than an hour from Zion National Park.

A funeral will be held in St. George on November 28 in St. George and there will be a tribute to Igor at the St. George Chess Club the evening of December 16. A tournament will be held in his honor the following day. Contact Alan Crooks at alan@alancrooks.com for more information. -- John Donaldson


Internet College Chess League
We recently received an announcement for this organization, which may be found at http://students.washington.edu/chessuw/iccl/. The problem of scholastic players dropping out of chess after high school is a real one, and, while this may not be the solution, it is a worthy attempt. They are also seeking to provide a list of college chess clubs nationwide, at http://students.washington.edu/chessuw/iccl/universityClubs.html.


San Luis Obispo County Championship, August 13-15, 2005
IM Ricardo De Guzman and Francisco Anchondo, scoring 4-1, took first and second prizes in the 12-player Open Section of the SLO County Championship. John Williams and Charles Wolff, 3-2, tied for third. The U1800 prize was won by newcomer Steven Tomak, 3-2. De Guzman lost only to John Williams, and Anchondo lost only to De Guzman.
Kevin Maxwell and Steven Porta, Jr. each scored 4.5-.5 to take the top two prizes in the 8-player U1600 Section, drawing with each other in the third round. Zach Lindsay took third, 2.5-2.5, while Shaun Kelly won the U1300 prize, 3-2.

John Williams and Steven Tomak will become State Championship Qualifiers as the two highest scoring Southern California residents.

The tournament was co-sponsored by the S.L.O. Chess Club and the Math Department at Cuesta College, with facilities obtained by Professor Matt Robertson. It was co-directed by Barbara McCaleb and Steven Tomak. Barbara McCaleb


SCCF Candidates
Expert Ron Bruno upset the top seed, IM Jack Peters, in the last round to take clear first, 4-0, in the Southern California Candidates tournament, held June 18-19 at the Chess Palace. Peters, Alaa-Addin Moussa, and Craig Clawitter, at 3-1, took the other three qualifying spots, with Reynaldo del Pilar losing out on tiebreaks. Bruno, Peters, Moussa, and Clawitter will join IMs Enrico Sevillano, Melikset Khachiyan, Andranik Matikozyan, and Cyrus Lakdawala in the round-robin finals, July 9-10 and 16-17. Click here for full results.


Super State Scholastics
More than 220 players competed in the Super State Scholastics, held at the Costa Mesa Hilton May 7-8. This event combined the SCCF High School, Junior High, and Elementary Championships. Congratulations to Southern California's 2005 scholastic champions: Francis Chen, High School; Jared Tan, Junior High; Michael Yee, K-6; and Danil Fedunov and Brendyn Estolas, co-champions in K-3. By winning the High School Championship, Francis Chen qualified to compete in the Denker Tournament of High School Champions, to be held in conjunction with the U.S. Open in Phoenix this August. Joe Hanley directed for chess4children.


2005 SCCF Senior Open
This event had an odd twist in the first round � last year�s Co-Champions, Bruce Baker and Alejandrino (Ed) Baluran were paired on the top board in round one! Bruce won the encounter this year and went on to score 4 � points out of 5 to take first place all for himself. This year�s prize fund was enhanced beyond the guaranteed $1,000 by several generous donors, including Bill Conrad and several others, who felt that this prestigious event should have bigger monetary rewards for the winners. The extra funds made up for a low turnout and allowed Bruce to go home with a $500 check instead of the projected $300. Raoul Crisologo of Murrieta came in second place with 4 points after losing only to Bruce in round 2 and defeating 4 other opponents, including Rick Aeria in a very long and close last round game. Leonard Sussman took third place with 3 �, and four players tied for Best Under 2100 with 3 points: Carey Milton, Dennis Succuzzo, Ed Baluran and Michael Nagaran. The Best Under 1900 went to Keith Wilson with 2 �, and Best Under 1700 was Robert Henderson, who also won the $50 Biggest Upset Prize for a win in Round 1 over Expert Carey Milton. Two former title holders had rough outings. Carl Wagner lost to Leonard Sussman and also blundered badly against Raoul Crisologo. Robert Richard lost to Bruce and to the suddenly very hot Leonard Sussman. But even Lenny couldn�t hold back Bruce in the last round despite having the White pieces. Bruce won with his favorite Dutch Defense as Black even though he had prepared and expected to play with White himself. -- Chuck Ensey


6th Annual Joseph Ileto Memorial
The latest in the SCCF�s series of inexpensive weekenders attracted 51 players. First place went to master Ron Hermansen with 4�-�. Hermansen upset IM Tim Taylor in round 4, then secured first with a draw against expert Ike Miller. The latter tied for second, along with Eduardo Ortiz, Ilia Serpik, Gregg Fritchle, Christopher Slupik, and Ryan Richardson.
Once again, thanks are owed to the city of Monterey Park for providing a new playing site at Sierra Vista Park. Special thanks also to Bill Conrad, who donated $300 to enhance the prize fund, and $50 for a Best Game prize (not yet determined) in honor of the late
Ursula Foster. Randy Hough directed for the SCCF.

Prize Winners 1st: Ron Hermansen, 4�-�; 2nd-3rd: Eduardo Ortiz, Ilia Serpik 4-1; U2200: Ike Miller, Gregg Fritchle, Christopher Slupik, 4-1; U2000: Ryan Richardson, 4-1; U1800: Jacob Alon, 3�-1�; U1600: Nisha Deolalikar, 2�-2�; U1400: Ben Slupik, Philip Voron, 2-3, Unrated: Dennis Bransfield, 2-3

GM Varuzhan Akobian won 11 games simultaneously at the Santa Monica Bay Chess Club on December 6 for a perfect score against a field that ranged up to above 2100. The simul was accompanied by analysis of positions from recent major tournament games of his. The club vows revenge on October 10, 2005. The Santa Monica Bay Chess Club meets Mondays 7-11 p.m. at 633 Kensington Rd., Santa Monica. For information, call Pete Savino (310) 827-2789. -- Pete Savino


San Luis Obispo County Open
This traditional event, held August 14-15 in San Luis Obispo, drew twenty players. John Williams won the Open Section with a perfect 4-0 (defeating experts Matt Robertson in the 3rd round; and Dane Hinrichsen in the last round), capturing the County Champion title and trophy. Scott Mason and Matt Robertson tied for 2nd at 3-1. Joshua Bowman and Mario Raguz tied for the U1700 prize, 2-2. Nine-year-old Hugo Kitano won the upset prize (323 pts difference), defeating �A� player Warren Williamson. Williams and Robertson qualify for the 2005 State Champion play-offs. In the Reserve Section, Howard Gaxiola and Todd Dougherty each scored 3-1, Gaxiola winning the Reserve Champion trophy on tie-breaks. Kevin Maxwell placed 3rd, 2-2. Gaxiola won the upset prize (723 pts difference) in a game with �C� player Maxwell. -- Barbara McCaleb


SCCF Candidates
The 2004 SCCF Candidates Tournament took place at The Chess Center in Costa Mesa on June 26-27. Fifteen players showed up for five available spots in this year's State Championship. There were only three 2300+ masters playing (Kretchetov, Van Buskirk, and Casella). That meant that at least two experts would qualify. After the first day Kretchetov withdrew after drawing his first two games against experts Clawitter and Max Landaw. That left two masters (and at that point it wasn't a foregone conclusion that Van Buskirk would qualify as he also had drawn his first two games with Max Landaw and Clawitter). But in the end both masters made it.
The final standings were:
Michael Casella first with a score of 3.5-.5
Ike Miller and Vanessa West scored 3-1
Charles Van Buskirk and Ron Bruno scored 2�-�
These five will join IM Peters, IM Taylor, and IM Deng to fill out the field of eight. Final standings of the Candidates may be found here. Crosstable and pairings for the Championship are posted here. -- Mike Carr


Santa Monica Invitational
GM Vitali Golod of Israel scored 6.5-2.5 to take first place in the 2004 Santa Monica Invitational, a Category IX international tournament held from May 11 to 19 at the Los Angeles Chess Club, 11514 Santa Monica Blvd., in Los Angeles. Next at 6-3 were GM Victor Mikhalevski and IM Angelo Young. Tournament organizer Alan Stein scored 5-4 to earn an IM norm, despite being the second-lowest rated player in the field. Final standings, photos of the players, and games may be found here.


Ventura County Open, April 17-18, 2004
This traditional event, held at the Days Inn Thousand Oaks, had a slightly disappointing turnout of 36. Taking first place with 3�-� was IM Jack Peters. Next at 3-1 were Charles Van Buskirk (who lost only to Peters), Ron Hermansen, and IM Ganbold Odondoo (who drew with Peters in the final round. Class prizes went to Craig Anderson (X), and Alan Bishop and Greg Hamer (A). The Amateur (U1800) section went to Klaus Schmahle with 3�-�, followed by Harold Deutscher, Eric Leung, Armin Rapaport, and Gary Ware with 3. Class prizes went to Walter Burstein and Dave Rawlings. Dan Nystrom and Jack Cashman directed for the Ventura County Chess Club. A selection of games in PGN format may be found here


2nd Najdorf Invitational

The "2nd Najdorf FIDE Invitational," a 10-player round-robin tournament, ended on March 21 at the the Hancock Foundation Building at the University of Southern California. Clear first with a score of 8.5-.5 was Eduardo Ortiz, followed by Reynaldo del Pilar (7.5) and Michael Casella (6). Complete may be found at www.chadsalinas.com/pages/6/index.htm. A PGN file of the games is available at www.chesschampionschool.com/.


SCCF Junior High School Championship
On January 24, a good turnout of 97 players competed in this scholastic event at St. Paul the Apostle School in Westwood. Tied for first is the 53-player Championship section were Julian Landaw and Armen Shisikyan with 4-0. Next at 3-1 were Michael Ambartsoumian, John Bryant, David Ktshozyan, Aldrich Ong, Tyler De Piero, Michael Liu, Rob Rosenberg, Michael Yee, Derek Tan, top Elementary Jared Tan, and top U1200 Pratik Khanna. Best team was Arshag Dickranian. In the Junior Varsity (44 participants), Christopher Wang topped the field with 5-0, followed by Stephen Porta at 4�-�. Scoring 4-1 were Jonathan Laks, John Kitapszyan, Sisuan Sarhadyan, Omar Wiseman, Arthur Safarian, Alexander Thal, Saul Priever, Grikor Kavoukjian, Armen Sarkissian and Allen Vernik. St. Paul the Apostle was top team. John Surlow directed.


Gufeld Memorial
The "Eduard Gufeld Memorial International," a ten-player event ending November 26, ended in a 3-way tie among IMs Varuzhan Akobian, Melikset Khachiyan and Jesse Kraai. All earned GM norms with their scores of 6.5-2.5. Next at 6-3 was GM Arsen Yegiazarian. Final standings and a PGN file of the games may be found here.


Najdorf Invitational
The "1st Najdorf FIDE Invitational," a 10-player round-robin tournament, ended on November 18 at the California Chess Club, 11610 W. Olympic Blvd. in Los Angeles. Clear first with a score of 7-2 was Eduardo Ortiz, followed by Reynaldo del Pilar (6.5) and Hugo Villanueva (6). Youthful star Vanessa West also did well, finishing with 5.5. Complete standings and games may be found at www.chesschampionschool.com/najdorf/index.html.


Yudasin, Becerra Tie in International
The Los Angeles International, a 10-player, Category X tournament which took place from August 18 though 26 at the California Chess Club, ended in a tie between GMs Leonid Yudasin and Julio Becerra, both with 6�-2�. The undefeated Yudasin drew quickly in the last round with tournament organizer IM Varuzhan Akobian, but Becerra had to battle to the last minutes of sudden death to wrest the full point from IM Melikset Khachiyan, in a crowd-pleasing slugfest. Other notable results include IM Enrico Sevillano's 6-3, good for a GM norm, and Armen Ambartsoumian, who earned his third IM norm with 4�. John Hillery directed. Final standings and games may be found here.


SCCF Candidates

The SCCF Candidates Tournament took place on June 21-22 at The Chess Center in Costa Mesa. Seventeen players accepted invitations to compete for a chance to advance to the State Championship. (Click here for crosstable.)
Taking first place with 3.5-.5 was Gregg Samll, followed at 3-1 by Michael Casella. Six players tied at 2.5-1.5, with Alexandre Krechetov and Ilia Serpik taking the remaining qualifying spots on tiebreak. These four will join State Champion Melikset Khachiyan, Cyrus Lakdawala, Jack Peters, Levon Altounian, Armen Ambartsoumian and Andranik Matikozyan in the round-robin State Championship, to be held at the same site July 18-20 and 26-27.


San Diego County Open

This year 74 players battled in four Sections for the bragging rights in San Diego County. The Open Section was won by the strongest player in the county, Cyrus Lakdawala, who managed to win the four round section with 3� points despite taking a risky bye in Round 2. Fortunately for him, there was a big upset in that same round when Kevin Scull, rated only 1624, defeated Alexandre Kretchetov, rated 2386, for a whopping 762 differential, which easily won the $25 Best Upset Prize. Bruce Baker won Best Under 2350 with 2�, and pooled his prize with the third place winners Craig Clawitter and Kevin Scull, each with 2�.

The other three Sections were five rounds, with the first three games played at 30/60. and G/1 on Saturday, while Sunday was a more traditional 40/2, G/1. Section II, for players Under 2200, was won by Leonard Sussman with 4 points, but he had to pool his winnings with Alan Bishop, who was the Best Under 2050, also with 4 points. The second place prize was won by Carey Milton, with 3� points.

Section III was the largest with 30. players, all Under 1900, and was won by Yan Shainsky with 4� points. Yan accepted a last round draw to seal his victory over three second place winners, Barry Lazarus, Buddy Morris and Thirunathan Sutharsan, all with 4 points. The Best Under 1750. prize was split between Charlie Berkman and Ramon Dalupang, with 3 points. Finally in Section IV, for players Under 1600, William Delaney and Armando Duenas tied for first with 4� points. Marc Dragosz and Luis Castaneda tied for Best Under 1450. Finally, Set Samson won a new digital Clock for the Best Unrated with 3 points. More details, pictures & games from the tournament can be found at the Club website http://groups.msn.com/SanDiegoChess/. -- Chuck Ensey


One hundred players competed in the 2003 SCCF Junior High School Championship, held in Santa Clarita on March 22. Tying for first with 4-0 scores were Julian Landaw and Vanessa West. Other section winners included Alexandre Maldague (Under 1000) and David Shabsovich (Under 700). Randy Hough and Jay Stallings directed. For complete standings, click here.


Long-time players will remember Juan Fong, a frequent competitor in Southern California tournaments until the mid-1990s. We have recently learned that Juan is now living in Colorado, and would like to hear from his old friends in the chess community. He may be reached at (303) 295-2696, or e-mail at  litodenver@aol.com. 


In Passing

James Hilliard, 1943 - 2003
A popular Los Angeles player, James Hilliard, died on January 27. James was on his mail route. Less than three months from retirement, he had been eagerly anticipating the chance to play more chess. James was born in Tennessee, grew up in Chicago, served in the Navy for four years (without being able to swim!), and then spent many years in Los Angeles. A true chess lover, he was a fixture at the Pasadena Club, many weekend tournaments, and various informal playing venues. He is survived by his wife of 21 years, Jacky, and children Akilah, Khafre, and David.
At James's memorial service, several chessplayers joined other friends and work colleagues in speaking of how much his selflessness and cheerfulness had meant to them. We'll miss you, James.

Hilliard (1900) - Conrad (1630)
Crown City Open, Pasadena 2000
A45 TROMPOWSKY ATTACK

1. d4 Nf6 2. Bg5 Ne4 3. Bf4 c5 4. Nd2 Qa5 5. c3 Nxd2 6. Bxd2 cxd4 7. cxd4 Qb6 8. Bc3 d5 9. h3 Bf5 10. Nf3 h6 11. e3 Nc6 12. Qa4 e6 13. Bb5 a6 14. Bxc6+ bxc6 15. 0-0 Qb5 16. Qxb5 cxb5 17. Ba5 Bd6 18. Rfc1 Ke7?! 19. Rc6 Rhc8 20. Rac1 Rxc6 21. Rxc6 Ra7? 22. Bb6! Rb7 23. Bc5 Bxc5 24. dxc5 f6? 25. Rxa6 Rc7 26. b4 e5 27. Rd6 Rd7 28. Rb6 Bd3 29. Ra6 Rb7 30. Nd2 Bc4 31. f4 exf4 32. exf4 f5? 33. Nf3 Bd3 34. Ne5 Be4 35. Kf2 d4 36. g4 fxg4 37. hxg4 Rc7 38. a3 Rb7 39. Rd6 1-0

Ivars Dahlberg 1934-2002
We are saddened to report that Ivars Dahlberg passed away last year on February 28 in Los Angeles. Though he had not played regularly since the late 1980\'92s Dahlberg was one of the strongest players in Southern California for many years. Born in Latvia, he came to the United States in the early 1950s, settling in Oregon where he won several state championship titles. He moved to Southern California around 1970, working as a financial planner. Dahlberg had several excellent results in Futurity tournaments at the Chess Set in Los Angeles in the 1970s and 1980s. Perhaps his best result was Lone Pine 1981, where finished with 4-5 against a filed inclding Korchnoi, Gligorich and Sosonko.
Anyone with more information about Ivars, particularly information on how to locate his relatives, is urged to communicate with Val Zemitis (
chess@davis.com), who is working on an encyclopedia of Latvian chess players.

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