In the semi-finals of the blindfold knockout tournament, Ben was Black against Sonny Kamberi. Unfortunately for Sonny, Sonny hung a Bishop in the middlegame and resigned. Sonny forgot that Ben had a Queen on b6.
Then, in the finals, Ben had White against GM Jaan Ehlvest.
As you can tell from the picture, the opening was a King's Indian. Also notice that the game was being played outdoors and the kids were wearing T-shirts. Wow, it is nice and warm in Arizona in November.
Ben was doing very well, but then............
In this position, all Ben had to do was play Qxf3 and he would have been two pawns up with no compensation for Black, an easy win for someone of Ben's caliber........
However, Ben hallucinated. He saw a quicker win and went for it. He played Qe8+ Kh7 and now, Rc7?? supposedly pinning and winning the Queen. Apparently, Ben thought that his Queen was on d8, not e8, and realized his mistake right after he moved. The game continued Qxc7 Bc6 Qa7+ Resigns.
Sunday, November 19, 2006
Ben Finegold Visiting
Ben is in Phoenix this weekend for some chess-related stuff. Today was a busy day.
Here is a picture of Ben (left in the yellow shirt) playing blindfolded against Atoufi. Ben won.
In the evening, they held a 16-player, 4-round swiss blitz tournament. Here is Round 3, where Ben was playing Grandmaster Sergey Kudrin. The game ended in a draw, when Kudrin accidentally stalemated Ben.
In Round 4, Ben was on board 1 against Grandmaster Jaan Ehlvest. Ben was lost on the board (K+R+N+P vs. K+R) but Ehlvest offered a draw while low on time and Ben accepted. Behind them are Jeremy Silman (International Master) and Kudrin. Ehlvest and Kudrin both ended up with 3.5, whereas Ben had 3. But to Ben's credit, he had the most difficult pairings (e.g. he had to play both Ehlvest and Kudrin, whereas Ehlvest and Kudrin did not play each other).
After the blitz tournament, Ben held a simul. Out of 35 games, Ben officially had 34 wins and 1 draw. But the 1 draw has an interesting story to it. Ben was lost against an 800-rated player (in the picture, Ben is at that player's board). At one point, the guy had two Queens on the board and a pawn about to promote. But Ben used his magic and tricked the guy and conjured up a winning position! But he felt very bad for the kid, so he sacked his Queen for a Pawn for an instant draw.
Here is a picture of the final position of another one of the simul games. The final move was: f8=N Double-Check Mate!
Here is a picture of Ben (left in the yellow shirt) playing blindfolded against Atoufi. Ben won.
In the evening, they held a 16-player, 4-round swiss blitz tournament. Here is Round 3, where Ben was playing Grandmaster Sergey Kudrin. The game ended in a draw, when Kudrin accidentally stalemated Ben.
In Round 4, Ben was on board 1 against Grandmaster Jaan Ehlvest. Ben was lost on the board (K+R+N+P vs. K+R) but Ehlvest offered a draw while low on time and Ben accepted. Behind them are Jeremy Silman (International Master) and Kudrin. Ehlvest and Kudrin both ended up with 3.5, whereas Ben had 3. But to Ben's credit, he had the most difficult pairings (e.g. he had to play both Ehlvest and Kudrin, whereas Ehlvest and Kudrin did not play each other).
After the blitz tournament, Ben held a simul. Out of 35 games, Ben officially had 34 wins and 1 draw. But the 1 draw has an interesting story to it. Ben was lost against an 800-rated player (in the picture, Ben is at that player's board). At one point, the guy had two Queens on the board and a pawn about to promote. But Ben used his magic and tricked the guy and conjured up a winning position! But he felt very bad for the kid, so he sacked his Queen for a Pawn for an instant draw.
Here is a picture of the final position of another one of the simul games. The final move was: f8=N Double-Check Mate!
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