Chess Festival attracts quality field
By James Beech on Thu, 15 Jan 2009

Brows will be furrowed in intense concentration when about 120 players compete in the 2009 Queenstown Classic International Chess Festival, which begins today.

Players of all skill levels are expected at the open tournament and it has been billed as the strongest field of chess players assembled in Oceania.

There will be 39 titled competitors going head-to-head, including 11 grandmasters and six women grandmasters.

Players hail from Australia, England, Germany, Norway, Lithuania, Slovenia, Romania, Moldova, Greece, Russia and Israel.

A record $50,000 in prize money is on offer, with $10,000 going to the winner.

Festival promoter Murray Chandler, of Auckland, is this country’s most successful chess player and was ranked in the elite world top 20 in the 1980s when he played professionally full-time.

He is the current New Zealand champion and represented his country on board one at the Chess Olympiad in Dresden.

“The festival is an extraordinary opportunity for New Zealand players of virtually any strength to play against top international players,” Chandler said.

“It’s a tournament when everybody plays in one big event. For example, a novice could play a grandmaster in the first game, because everyone starts with zero points.

“The top players take these early games seriously. The thing about chess is, if you make one mistake you lose.”

The festival will run until January 24 at the Millennium Hotel, in Queenstown.

A total of 62 boards have been set up in the Galaxy Ballroom, the top six linked to a global audience via www.newzealandchess.co.nz.

Here is the full article.

Posted by Picasa
Chess Daily News from Susan Polgar
Tags: ,