Showing posts with label Hungary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hungary. Show all posts

Friday, August 19, 2011

First Saturday August



First Saturday Chess Tournament Series Budapest, Hungary

August 2011

NORMS - IM: 5; GM: 7



Organizer(s) : Nagy Laszlo, IO











Tournament Director : Mr. Nagy Laszlo









Chiefarbiter : Orsó MIklós, IA











Town : Budapest











Category : 7 (Rating-Ø : 2417)











Date : 2011/08/06 To 2011/08/15


SN

Name Rtg FED 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Pts SB. Res. Rank
1 GM Czebe Attila 2526 HUN * 1 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 1 ½ 21.75 0 3
2 IM Konnyu Janos 2370 HUN 0 * 0 ½ 0 0 ½ 1 ½ 0 9.50 0 10
3 IM Szabolcsi Janos 2357 HUN 1 1 * ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ ½ 6 24.75 0 2
4 GM Varga Zoltan 2483 HUN ½ ½ ½ * ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ ½ 20.25 0 6
5 GM Vajda Levente 2504 ROU ½ 1 ½ ½ * 1 0 ½ 1 1 6 25.25 0 1
6

Baghdasaryan Vahe 2289 ARM ½ 1 ½ ½ 0 * ½ ½ 0 1 18.00 0 7
7 GM Simonian Hrair 2461 ARM ½ ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ * ½ 0 ½ 20.75 0 5
8 FM Illingworth Max 2389 AUS 0 0 0 ½ ½ ½ ½ * 0 ½ 11.75 0 9
9 IM Kovacs Gabor 2496 HUN 0 ½ ½ ½ 0 1 1 1 * ½ 5 20.00 0 4
10 IM Rodriguez Lopez Rafael 2292 ESP ½ 1 ½ ½ 0 0 ½ ½ ½ * 4 16.50 0 8


Official website: http://www.firstsaturday.hu/

Monday, August 15, 2011

Balog Wins Arad Open 2011



GM Imre Balog Wins Arad Open 2011

5-11th August in the Great Concert Hall of the Arad Cultural Palace



After a tumultuous battle on the top boards, Arad Open 2011 ended with the victory of the main favourite - Hungarian GM Imre Balog. In the final round Balog defeated GM Andrei Murariu in 109 moves, reaching 7.5 points, while his pursuers GM Marius Manolache and IM Dan Bogdan agreed to a short draw.



Following a loss in the second round, Balog had a spectacular comeback, with six victories and one draw with FM Anton Teodor, who finished on 2nd place. The 3rd position was occupied by the Romanian FM Tamas-Kristof Balla.



The first tie-break criteria chosen in the lottery was the number of wins, with advantage for Anton and Balla, while the other players with 7 points finished outside the podium - 4th place GM Marius Manolache, 5th place GM Petar Drenchev (Bulgaria) and 6th place IM Dan Bogdan.



Top 15 finishers:

The ex-leader of the tournament, IM Lucian-Costin Miron, finished on 7th place, being the first between the nine players with 6.5 points. Among them are also the talented 16-years old junior Radu-Marian Doros, the beautiful WFM Silvia-Raluca Sgircea and the last year winner GM Vlad-Cristian Jianu.

It was an elegant award ceremony at the Cultural Palace of Arad, honoured by Levente Bognar, Deputy Mayor of the city, personally invited by the organizer IO Alin-Vivian Campeanu.

The tournament website www.aradopen.com provides photos and daily chronicles with interviews, all in a modern presentation.

Final standings:

1 GM Balog Imre HUN 2539 - 7.5

2 FM Anton Teodor ROU 2355 - 7

3 FM Balla Tamas-Kristof ROU 2406 - 7

4 GM Drenchev Petar BUL 2523 - 7

5 GM Manolache Marius ROU 2533 - 7

6 IM Bogdan Dan ROU 2362 - 7

7 IM Miron Lucian-Costin ROU 2506 - 6.5

8 GM Murariu Andrei ROU 2499 - 6.5

9 NM Doros Radu-Marian ROU 2338 - 6.5

10 I Ungureanu Sandu ROU 2050 - 6.5

11 IM Florescu Codrut-Constantin ROU 2266 - 6.5

12 GM Jianu Vlad-Cristian ROU 2518 - 6.5

13 FM Petre Nad-Titus ROU 2354 - 6.5

14 FM Dobre Claudiu-Cristian ROU 2353 - 6.5

15 WFM Sgircea Silvia-Raluca ROU 2224 - 6.5

Friday, July 22, 2011

With 4 rounds to go, Armenia 1st, Russia and Hungary 2nd


Ranking crosstable


Rk.Team12345678910 TB1 TB2 TB3
1Armenia * 2


2
813.50
2Russia2 * 3

13

3712.00
3Hungary
1 *

2
711.50
4Ukraine

*

610.50
5China

* 2

511.01
6Azerbaijan
32 *

3
511.01
7USA21

½
*
3510.00
8Israel½
½


* 348.00
9India

2
11 *
38.00
10Egypt½1


½1
* 04.50

Annotation:

Tie Break1: Matchpoints (2 for wins, 1 for Draws, 0 for Losses)
Tie Break2: points (game-points)
Tie Break3: The results of the teams in then same point group according to Matchpoints

With 4 rounds to go, Armenia 1st, Russia and Hungary 2nd


Ranking crosstable


Rk.Team12345678910 TB1 TB2 TB3
1Armenia * 2


2
813.50
2Russia2 * 3

13

3712.00
3Hungary
1 *

2
711.50
4Ukraine

*

610.50
5China

* 2

511.01
6Azerbaijan
32 *

3
511.01
7USA21

½
*
3510.00
8Israel½
½


* 348.00
9India

2
11 *
38.00
10Egypt½1


½1
* 04.50

Annotation:

Tie Break1: Matchpoints (2 for wins, 1 for Draws, 0 for Losses)
Tie Break2: points (game-points)
Tie Break3: The results of the teams in then same point group according to Matchpoints

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Armenia back on top, Azerbaijan, China, Russian & Hungary tie for 2nd


Armenia is still the only country which is undefeated so far after 4 rounds. Azerbaijan and China are tied for 2nd on tiebreaks while Russia and Hungary are a little further behind in tiebreak points.

Standings after 4 rounds

Rk.SNoTeamGames + = - TB1 TB2 TB3
12Armenia4220611.00
27Azerbaijan421159.51
34China421159.51
410Russia421159.00
56Hungary421158.00
68Ukraine420248.00
79Israel420247.50
85India411237.00
91USA411237.00
103Egypt400403.50

http://chess-results.com/tnr53136.aspx?art=46&lan=1

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Sasikiran helps India share honours with Hungary


Sasikiran helps India share honours with Hungary
NINGBO (China): Grandmaster Krishnan Sasikiran survived some anxious moments before eventually defeating Zoltan Almasi to help India salvage a 2-2 draw with Hungary in the first round of the World Team Chess Championship that got underway.

Much before Sasikiran's hard-earned victory, P Harikrishna did well to hold highly regarded Peter Leko on the top board while GN Gopal split the point with Csaba Balogh on the fourth, but Surya Shekhar Ganguly went down to world's best woman player Judit Polgar to give Hungary the lead which forced Sasikiran to play for a victory with black pieces.

Meanwhile Armenia emerged as the early leader in world's premier team championship giving Israel a 3.5-0.5 drubbing.

Without their star player Boris Gelfand, Israeli team lacked sting and Levon Aronian led from the front at the expense of Emil Sutovsky in this white wash.

The United States went down to Russia 1-3 losing with black pieces on second and fourth board while lowest rank Egypt sprang a surprise knocking down 1.5 points off Ukraine.

The other match in the ten-teams round-robin event was a 2-2 draw between China and Azerbaijan.

Sasikiran had reasons to be worried in the middle game after Almasi seized the initiative out of a Breyer variation in the Ruy Lopez. It was a typical middle game with white striving for a king side attack but Sasikiran did well to stay in the game after complicating matters a great deal.

Almasi was on top for quite some time but let the game slip out of hand gradually after being an exchange up.

Earlier Harikrishna played his pet Ctalan opening as white and apparently had a slight edge in the ensuing endgame against Peter Leko. Subsequent exchanges led to further simplifications and Harikrishna liquidated to a drawn rook endgame with three pawns on the same flank.

Judit Polgar turned out to be a tough opponent for Ganguly in the Sicilian defense wherein the former played black. Ganguly could not prove an advantage and was slowly saddled with a passive position but did well to stay in the game creating some problems on the king side.

It was in the late stages of the middle game when the Indian faltered and allowed Judit a strong king side attack that proved decisive.

GN Gopal was the preferred choice for India ahead of national champion Parimarjan Negi and he did not disappoint, drawing a fine game against Csaba Balogh. Interestingly, all Hungarian opponents were higher ranked than Indians who had won the Bronze medal in the last edition at Turkey.

Results round 1: USA lost to Russia 1-3. Gata Kamsky drew with Sergey Karjakin; Ian Nepomniachtchi beat Alexander Onischuk; Yuri Shulman drew with Peter Svidler Nikita Vitiugov beat Robert Hess;

Armenia beat Israel 3.5-1.5. Levon Aronian beat Emil Sutovsky; Michael Roiz drew with Sergei Movsesian; Vladimir Akopian beat Evgeny Postny; Tamir Nabaty lost to Gabriel Sargissian;

Egypt lost to Ukraine 1.5-2.5. Ahmed Adly lost to Vassily Ivanchuk; Zahar Efimenkov drew with Amin Bassem; El Gindy Essam lost to Alexander Moiseenko; Samy Shoker beat Alexander Areshchenko;

China drew with Azerbaijan 2-2; Wang Hao drew with Teimour Radjabov; Vugar Gashimov lost to Wang Yue; Li Chao drew with Rauf Mamedov; Shakhriyar Mamedyarov beat Yu Yangyi;

India drew with Hungary 2-2. P Harikrishna drew with Peter Leko; Zoltan Almasi lost to Krishnan Sasikiran; Surya Shekhar Ganguly lost to Judit Polgar; Csaba Balogh drew with G N Gopal.

Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com

Friday, October 22, 2010

Danube, Donau, Dunaj, Dunav, Duna, Дунав, Dunărea, Дунáй (Dunay), Tuna River - a heraldic journey

The most important river in Europe, and the second-longest after Volga, is the Danube.

"Since the Norman conquest of England, the English language has used the French word Danube. In the languages of the modern countries through which the river flows, it is:



Let's take a quick (modern national heraldic) journey on the Danube, for some historical spots along the way.
I'll show you some very nice maximum cards from Romania, produced by Romfilatelia.
I don't have the souvenir sheet (with Germany) from the first stamp series of Danube's Coats of Arms, so I'll show it from the Romfilatelia's website (please visit http://www.romfilatelia.ro/marci/colectia.php?ContentID=505&Year=2010 and http://www.romfilatelia.ro/marci/colectia.php?ContentID=534&Year=2010)
):

Now a simple postcard from the Danube port of Regensburg, Germany:

Bratislava Castle, Slovakia:

Melk Abbey, Austria:

Parliament Palace, Budapest, Hungary:

Ilok [ILOK] Fortress, Croatia:

Ram Fortress, Serbia:

Dramatic Theater, Ruse, Bulgaria:

Navigation Palace, Galați ([ɡaˈlatsʲ]) , Romania:

"Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu" University, Cahul, Rep. of Moldova:

"Assumption of the Virgin" Church, Izmail, Ukraine:
Thank you again, my dear friend Teodor Ghiata-Melnic (Romania), for these great MCs, like hundreds of others that I got from you over the years! :)

Now, a quick info on the Danube Delta:
"The Danube Delta (RomanianDelta DunăriiUkrainian:Дельта Дунаю, Del'ta Dunaju) is the second largest river delta in Europe, after the Volga Delta, and is the best preserved on the continent [1]. The greater part of the Danube Delta lies in Romania (Tulcea county), while its northern part, on the left bank of the Chilia arm, is situated inUkraine (Odessa Oblast). The approximate surface is 4152 km², of which 3446 km² are in Romania. If the lagoons of Razim-Sinoe (1015 km² of which 865 km² water surface; situated in the south, but attached to the Danube Delta from geological and ecological perspectives, as well as being the combined territory of the World Heritage Site) are to be added, the considered area of the Danube Delta grows to 5165 km²."

"Situated on major migratory routes, and providing adequate conditions for nesting and hatching, the Danube Delta is a magnet for birds from six major eco-regions of the world, including the Mongolian, Arctic and Siberian. There are over 320 species of birds found in the delta during summer,[4] of which 166 are hatching species and 159 are migratory. Over one million individuals (swans, wild ducks, bald coots, etc.) winter here."

The first 2 minutes of this -> "The Waves of Danube" song.


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Happy PFF (Postcard Friendship Friday)!