Just last week, I happened to be asking around a few people – they being adult chess players – what they would be doing if they were not playing chess on weekends.
I thought it was quite a reasonable question to ask because right now, in the fourth quarter of the year, there is a certain lull in local chess activities. I wouldn’t say that chess activities have stopped but certainly, they have slowed down considerably.
It happens all the time, almost like clockwork, because the main bulk of chess players get too preoccupied with school revision work and examinations until the end of next month.
The responses I received were varied but almost predictable. Watch football on television. Visit the shopping malls. Join the gym. Go for cinema shows. Indulge in photography pursuits. Catch up on reading. “Chess books?” I murmured. “No, just newspapers,” one replied.
Go web surfing. Yeah, right, I thought, turn to the Internet for some instant chess gratification. “Maybe I’ll catch up with you on one of the Internet chess servers,” I told a friend, adding: “There are some great top-level tournaments going on.” “Erm, no,” he replied, “maybe I’ll see you on facebook instead.”
Like I said, varied but almost predictable responses. To an extent, my own non-chess hobbies may probably overlap with many other people’s too and it is exactly this period that I indulge more in them than at any other time of the year.
There is one person I know who turns himself completely off from chess in a big way at the end of the year. Come every mid-October, he will let go of all his wooden horses and turn his sights to real horses. The chess board at home gets transformed into the race courses of Melbourne’s Spring Racing Carnival. He owns a number of thoroughbred horses in Australia, you see.
Just last Saturday, he watched his horse So You Think thunder down the track at Melbourne’s Moonee Valley race course to lift the Cox Plate for the second time in two years. Come tomorrow, So You Think is again a favourite to win the Mackinnon Stakes at the Victoria Derby.
Just by mentioning the words “horse racing”, I would believe that you already know whom I’m referring to. In Australia, Datuk Tan Chin Nam is regarded as one of the most successful – if not indeed already the most successful – horse owners in recent history. A four-time winner of the Melbourne Cup, raced on the first Tuesday every November.
And come to think of it, that’s just next Tuesday, four days away.
There are two ways to actually enjoy the Melbourne Cup races in Australia. One, be there yourself at the Flemington race course in Melbourne, or Two, entrench yourself in one of the drinking holes around Australia and cheer on the horses on television with scores of other beer guzzlers.
Or alternatively, be an audience of one and watch the races on television at home here in Malaysia. The Australia Network says that they’ll be carrying the races live and it so happens that this channel is available on Astro. There’s definitely not the same thrill as One or Two mentioned above, but that’s what I’ll be doing.
In the meantime, I shall leave you this week with a mention that the annual World Youth Chess Championships are currently taking place in Greece. The official website is http://wycc2010.chessdom.com/
Among the 814 boys and 573 girls from around the world taking part, 14 of them are our own boys and girls battling in the under-8, under-10, under-12, under-14 and under-16 age group events in the championships. The event ends tomorrow.
Up next
Giant Kulai open
The Johor Bahru Chess Association, Rakan Muda Johor Bahru and the Giant Kulai Hypermarket are jointly organizing a Giant Kulai open chess tournament in the hypermarket’s premises in Kulai, Johor this Sunday. Seven rounds, 25-minute time control games. Entry fees are RM12 (players below 12 years old), RM15 (players below 16 years old) and RM30 (other players). Entries close today. More information available from Narayanan Krishnan (013.7717525, jb_chess_association@yahoo.com).
Kepong junior open
The Sekolah Jenis Kebangsaan Cina Kepong Dua in Kuala Lumpur will organize their 16th junior open chess tournament for under-18, under-14, under-12, under-10 and under-8 players at the school this Sunday. Six rounds, 30-minute time control games. More details from Mdm Goh (012.9883351) or Lim Tse Pin (012.2984922).
MSSM-Masterskill chess
The Polgar Chess Asia has postponed indefinitely the organizing of the MSSM-Masterskill national scholastics chess championship that was scheduled for Nov 8-12 at the Masterskill University College campus in Ipoh, Perak. For more details, contact Peter Long (peterlong@aol.asia) or Gregory Lau (greglau64@gmail.com).
SJKC Jln Davidson open
The Sekolah Jenis Kebangsaan Cina Jalan Davidson in Kuala Lumpur will organize an open chess tournament for under-16 players at the school on Nov 14. Six rounds, 30-minute time control games. Entry fees are RM10 (players from SJKC Jalan Davidson) and RM12 (all other players). Entries close on Nov 12. More details from Collin Madhaven (016.2123578) and Bob Yap (012.2878378).
November rating tournament
The Cheras Chess Academy will hold a Fide-rated open tournament, limited to players with Fide ratings of 1950 and below, at the Pusat Kecemerlangan Sukan Cochrane in Jalan Cochrane, Kuala Lumpur on Nov 20-24. Seven rounds, two-hour play-to-finish time control games. Entry fees are RM50 (Fide-rated players) and RM80 (non-Fide-rated players). More details from Collin Madhaven (016.2123578, geodat@yahoo.com).
Chess camp
A fun and informative Kids For Chess camp for beginners, intermediate-level and aspiring tournament players will be held at the Pandan Lake Club in Pandan Perdana, Kuala Lumpur on Dec 1-2. Entry fees are RM90 per participant. Closing date is Nov 30. More details available from http://www.kids4chess.com.
Penang Chess League
The Penang Chess Association (PCA) will organize the annual Penang Chess League at the Sekolah Jenis Kebangsaan Cina Kheng Thean in Jalan Van Praagh, George Town on Dec 4-5. Seven rounds, one-hour time control games. The event is open to teams from the public sector, business community, factories, institutions of learning and registered societies and clubs. Entry fees per team are RM150 (open category), RM90 (under-18 teams) and RM60 (under-12 teams). Entries close on Dec 1. More information from Tan Eng Seong (012.4299517)
Penang open
The Penang Chess Association (PCA) will organize the Penang Heritage City international open chess championship at the Penang City Hall in George Town, Penang on Dec 8-12. This will be a FIDE-rated event with a RM5,000 first prize. Nine rounds, full time control games. Entry fees for the open tournament are RM50 (Fide-rated player), RM150 (PCA member) and RM180 (others), while for the challengers section, they are RM30 (Fide-rated player), RM50 (PCA member) and RM80 (others). Contact Tan Eng Seong (012.4299517, estan64@streamyx.com) for more details.
Sarawak open
The Lanang Chess Association and Sarawak Chess Association will jointly organize the Universal Chinese Sports Sarawak open chess championship at the Premier Hotel in Jalan Kampung Nyabor, Sibu, Sarawak on Dec 17-19. This will be a FIDE-rated event with a RM2,500 first prize. Eight rounds, full time control. Entry fees are RM50 (adults) and RM25 (ladies and players below 18 years old). Contact Joseph Ting (016.8893185, fax: 084.331451) or Lim Kian Hwa (016.8603180, lkhwa@tm.net.my) for more details.