A selection of chess stories and opinions in The Star newspaper over the decades
26 February 2010
Resident grandmaster
19 February 2010
Spotlight on Topalov
12 February 2010
Packed schedule
The biggest story last week was the welcome news that chess, together with 10 other sports, have been reinstated into the calendar of the Malaysian Schools Sports Council (MSSM).
Well, I really don’t know how long this reinstatement is going to last but at least for one year – this year – the schools and the State Schools Sports Councils can continue running their annual school chess competitions. There’ll also be a national-level MSSM chess championship that players can look forward to.
The removal of the 11 sports from the MSSM programme was a very sore point and parents had been voicing their unhappiness over the whole matter in the newspapers as well as through the Internet.
For once though, parents’ opinions have been heard rather quickly and the policy about-turn was made equally quick by Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin who is also the Education Minister.
He acknowledged that many quarters had been disappointed with the MSSM decision to reduce the number of sports from its calendar.
“However, I have issued a directive for all the sports to be reinstated,” he said and added that there would be an additional allocation of RM89 million under the 10th Malaysia Plan for schools to construct their sports infrastructure.
Of course, the reinstatement of chess in the school calendar will not affect or derail all other age group chess programmes run independently by other chess bodies.
Come this Mar 14, the national age group chess championship shall still proceed as planned. This is an established Malaysian Chess Federation event and has been going on for donkey’s years. It’s part of the MCF’s chess calendar for 2010. This time, however, this tournament will be played outside the Klang Valley. The venue has yet to be ascertained but the MCF and the Penang Chess Association will be joint organisers.
On May 28-30, the MCF will also be organizing a national scholastics age group championship while on Sep 5, the national rapid age group tournament has been scheduled.
Talking about the MCF calendar, I see that this year’s calendar of chess activities looks decently full. Chess enthusiasts shouldn’t have any grounds to complain. There’s no shortage of chess activities to keep players of all levels occupied.
The calendar kicks off with a two-day chess event during Chinese New Year week: the resumption of the annual Malaysia-Singapore match. The last time this event was held was in 2008 and somehow, the 2009 edition didn’t feature at all. But now, it’s the turn for the MCF to play hosts again to our Singapore friends on Feb 16-17.
This double round chess match will be played over 40 boards and will take place at the Cititel Express in Kuala Lumpur. This Tuesday, the players shall fight over two games played with long time controls while on Wednesday, there’ll be two games with rapid time controls.
If all our top players can set some time off from their Chinese New Year celebrations, this will be a very keenly contested match. And if all you can spare some time off from your own celebration, come and watch and support your Malaysian team in action.
Also in the chess calendar this month is the Malaysian Women’s Master tournament slated for five days which starts on Feb 26 with 16 players playing knock-out matches.
Looking forward, April will see two big local events. At the beginning of the month, from Apr 6 until Apr 12, the Kuala Lumpur Chess Association will hold their KL Open event. Then from Apr 29 to May 2, it will be the turn of the Chess Association of Selangor to organize their Selangor Open tournament.
June’s events will include the Penang Open from Jun 10 to 14, the national closed championship and the national women’s closed championship from Jun 16 to Jun 20. In July, expect the second Malaysian Masters tournament to take place.
Traditionally, August is the month of the Malaysian Chess Festival which includes the Arthur Tan Malaysian Open tournament, the AmBank Chess Challenge and the Merdeka team championship. However for this year, both the Malaysian Open and the Chess Challenge have been pushed to Sep 1-8, which leaves the Merdeka team tournament as the only big item slotted into August.
As part of the Malaysian Chess Festival, there may be a new event introduced this year: the Seniors Open chess championship. I know that this event has been long discussed in private at MCF level since last year. Personally, I believe that if this tournament becomes a reality, it will generate a lot of interest among the older chess players in this region.
In November there will be the 15th GACC Chess Challenge organized by the Universiti Malaya and in December, both the Malaysian inter-state team chess championship and the third national junior chess championship.
Getting excited over these interesting tournaments? Well, start your chess training from today!
Up next
Rookie tornado chess
The Dato' Arthur Tan Chess Centre in Kuala Lumpur will organise a chess tournament for beginners, first-time tournament players and all other players who are below the national rating of 1400 points. If there is sufficient response, the event will be separated into different tournaments for the Under-15 and Under 11 sections. For more information, call Hamid Majid (019.3158098) or Najib Wahab (016.3382542).
KL rapid grand prix
The Kuala Lumpur Chess Association (KLCA) and Polgar Chess Asia will jointly organize the second leg of the KL rapid grand prix on Mar 6-7. The grand prix, sponsored by the Malaysian Intellectual Development Foundation and the Royal Selangor Club (RSC), will feature four legs from February to May and followed by the grand final in June.
Each leg will have six rounds with a 45-minute rate of play per player for each round. The top 10 winners of the open and under-12 sections will be given free entry to their respective sections in the final. Total prize fund for the grand prix is RM6,600.
Entry fees for the open section are RM15 for members of the KLCA and the RSC and RM20 for non-members. For the under-12 section, the entry fees are RM5 for children of KLCA and RSC members and RM10 for others. All legs will be played at the RSC’s Card Room at Dataran Merdeka, Kuala Lumpur. More details at the KLCA website, (http://www.klchess.com/)
Pearl Point age group
The Excel Chess Academy will organize the Pearl Point age group chess tournament for under-11 and under-9 players at the Pearl Point shopping mall , Old Klang Road, Kuala Lumpur on Feb 21.
Entry fees are RM18 per player but it will cost only RM15 to register through a school. Closing date is Feb 19. More details from Jax Tham (jaxtham@hotmail.com)
UTP open
The Universiti Teknologi Petronas will organize their UTP chess open tournament at their campus in Bandar Seri Iskandar, Tronoh, Perak on Feb 21. There will be an open section as well as an under-18 and under-12 sections.
Entry fees are RM20 for the open, RM15 for under-18 and RM10 for under-12. UTP students and staff need pay only RM15 upon presentation of their matrix cards. Closing date is Feb 7. More details, contact Hussein (017.6410194, husseinnordin@gmail.com), Faizal (017.3934291, faizalakram91@gmail.com) or Qistina (019.2602094).
3rd DATCC chess league
The third DATCC Kuala Lumpur commercial and recreational chess league at the Datuk Arthur Tan Chess Centre, Wilayah Complex will kick off on Mar 24. The DATCC chess league is a Fide-rated team tournament played over nine rounds with long time controls. Each round will be played on Wednesdays at the chess centre.
Entry fee is RM400 per team of a maximum 10 players. Junior teams (players below 20 years old) are charged at RM200. Any entry received after Mar 12 will need to pay an extra RM100. Details are available from Hamid Majid (019.3158098, aham@pc.jaring.my) or Najib Abdul Wahab (016.3382542, najib.wahab@hotmail.com).
05 February 2010
Youths rule!
Introduction
A very good day if you have found your way to this blog. Hello, I am Quah Seng Sun. I am known to some of my friends as SS Quah. A great par...

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This one-off story, written some six years after my column stopped, commemorated a friend who had been associated with the game almost as lo...
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A very good day if you have found your way to this blog. Hello, I am Quah Seng Sun. I am known to some of my friends as SS Quah. A great par...