Sunday, July 24, 2011

The strongest British Chess Championships ever

Leonard Barden wrote in the Guardian yesterday:
The British championship, which starts in Sheffield on Monday, is the strongest in the event's 107-year history, with almost all of England's top grandmasters taking part. There will also probably be a rare head-to-head between the former world finalists Michael Adams and Nigel Short, who are both in good form. Adams tied first at the World Open in Philadelphia, Short at the Commonwealth Open in South Africa.

The other interesting prospect is a clash of generations as the long supremacy of Adams, 39, and Short, 46, is challenged by the ambitious and fast-rising David Howell, 20, and Gawain Jones, 23, who aim to take over the top boards in the national team ...

Short and especially Adams have psychological edges in that their losses to other Englishmen in classic games are very rare. True, most of their chess is played abroad, but they also have an aura of invincibility. Short recently lost to Jones in Bunratty, Ireland, but Adams has not been beaten by an English opponent for more than a decade.
The British Chess Championships 2011 starts tomorrow and has its own website, where some of the games will be relayed live.

For an explanation for the rise and partial fall of British chess see an earlier post of mine.

1 comment:

  1. check out mattywebbchess.com for live coverage of the British!

    ReplyDelete