Normally, the first time is always very eventful: the first time you take part in a local tournament, the first time you return home with a prize, the first time you represent the country in a sport event. For organizations, maybe the first time your game is featured in a multi-sport event like the SEA Games. Or the Asian Games.
I remember when chess was first included in the SEA Games in Vietnam in 2003, the Malaysian Chess Federation (MCF) made a lot of fuss over the fact. Rightly so, because it also marked the first time the MCF ever went anywhere under the banner of the OCM.
Chess was also in the 2005 SEA Games in the Philippines and the Malaysian chess players were also right there mixing with the athletes of the other sports. But thereafter, for the 2007 Games in Thailand and the 2009 Games in Laos, chess was dropped from the respective organizer’s calendars.
Nevertheless, there is also the Asian Games which is a much bigger and more significant multi-sport event than the SEA Games. When chess was introduced into the 2006 Asian Games in Doha, Qatar, there was much hope that the MCF would participate but it did not.
But being absent once does not mean that we would be absent a second time. This year at the 16th Asian Games in Guangzhou, China, the Malaysian chess players are finally there.
It was a rather small contingent of three chess players that were picked for duty in Guangzhou: Mok Tze Meng, Alia Anin Bakri and Nur Nabila Azman. They would play in only the men’s and women’s individual rapid chess tournaments and come home immediately. There would be no Malaysian team in the men’s and women’s classical chess tournaments.
When I asked the MCF secretary about this, he said that everything boiled down to mainly two issues: funding and player availability.
As far as the OCM was concerned, chess was in their B category of games, which means that if the MCF wanted to play in the Asian Games, the federation or the players would have to raise their own funds to stay and play in Guangzhou.
As for player availability, many of them were indisposed due to commitment of work. Some had already taken time off for other chess tournaments so it was near impossible for them to play again this year. For the MCF to go down their list of eligible players would mean coming up with a hotchpotch team of dysfunctional players. So a decision was taken not to play in the team events.
All that was left was for Mok, Alia and Nur Nabila to play in the individual rapid chess events. Perhaps for this fact, the MCF decided against making any noise to inform the Malaysian chess public about our participation in this Asian Games. Personally, I feel that instead of keeping it also very low key, the MCF should still have announced it just for the record. But I defer to their decision.
Mok played in the men’s rapid chess individual tournament and finished 38th, while both Alia and Nur Nabila participated in the women’s rapid chess individual tournament and finished in 22nd and 28th spots respectively. Both events consisted of nine rounds of rapid chess games and these were completed in four days flat.
As a measure of the strength of the men’s rapid chess tournament, 12 of the participating countries sent their top grandmasters. Indeed, Mok found out the hard way that negotiating his way through this minefield of grandmasters was no easy task. His quest for a first grandmaster title norm will have to wait till another time.
The rapid chess gold medal went to Uzebekistan’s Ruslan Kasimdzhanov who scored 7½ points. By the way, Kasimdzhanov was the FIDE world chess champion in 2004 and he had been working with Viswanathan Anand in preparation for the latter’s world chess championship matches in 2008 and 2010.
Vietnam’s Le Quang Liem also scored 7½ points but he had to be contented with silver. The bronze medal went to China’s Bu Xiangzhi.
The women’s rapid chess tournament also featured several top-class players that included three women players with the full-fledged grandmaster titles as opposed to the lesser woman grandmaster title.
The Chinese grandmasters made a clean sweep of the top medals with Hou Yifan, as the outright winner of the event, taking the gold and Zhao Xue the silver. India’s Dronavalli Harika took the bronze.
Meanwhile, there are 17 teams taking part in the men’s team tournament and 12 teams in the women’s team tournament. In both events, China are the top seeds for the gold medal. The ninth and final round of both events is scheduled for today.
Up next
Perak closed
The Perak International Chess Association (PICA) together with the Majlis Sukan Negeri Perak and KLK Berhad will jointly organize the Perak closed chess championship at the Dewan MSN in Ipoh tomorrow and on Sunday. Only players born, residing and working in the state are eligible to take part. Nine rounds, 45-minute time control games. Entry fees are RM15 (PICA members and players below the age of 16) and RM20 (others). Contact Yunus (013.3908129) to register.
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.