Nov 122021
 

This position arose in Barlow vs. Heritage in the round 4 clash between Hebden Bridge D and Belgrave A. It’s Black to move and, despite his king being in the centre, his pieces are starting to menace the Black king. What’s the best next move for Black. You’ll find the answer in the game viewer at the end of this post.

Monday night saw the fourth and fifth rounds of the Calderdale 30 Rapidplay tournament take place at the Belgrave Club in Halifax. Readers may remember from the previous article on this competition that Hebden Bridge D sat atop the table with a perfect record of nine wins from nine games after the first three rounds with Hebden Bridge A a point behind them on eight.

Proceedings were slightly less frenetic on Monday as just two rounds were scheduled so it was just a matter of organising some last minute logistics to fill a couple of empty team rosters (Hebden Bridge arrived with 11 players and needed a twelfth) and jiggling the board orders to accommodate a couple of loan wolves who had turned up hoping for a game. It was great to see one-time Hebden Bridge player, Darwin Ursal, at the Belgrave Club and he slotted onto board 1 for the Nomads whilst Angel Gonzalez moved from board 3 in that team to join Hebden Bridge D on board 3.

As could be expected, team composition did change between rounds 1-3 and 4-5. Hebden A were unchanged but Hebden B saw Ralph Tatt getting his first taste of competitive chess in Calderdale on board 3 and David Wedge kindly making an emergency last minute substitute for an unwell Nick Doody on board 2. The C team welcomed Andy Leatherbarrow on board 2 and, as mentioned above, Angel Gonzalez joined the D team on board 3.

Here’s how the two rounds progressed:

Round 4

Hebden Bridge A had double derby trouble on Monday with two tough assignments against first their ‘B’ team and then their ‘C’ team. The first one was a very hard fought affair and in the balance until the very end of the round with board 1 being the last to finish in the room. Cobus Daneel continued his perfect trajectory with a victory over Ralph Tatt but Dave Shapland lost to David Wedge on board 2 meaning that the fate of the match rested on the top board clash between Matthew Parsons for the A team and Phil Cook for the B team. Much like their classical time limit encounter at the start of the season, this one went right to the wire. Matthew claimed a win on time at the end but Phil hadn’t noticed that Matthew’s allowance had also elapsed and, after a brief discussion a draw was amicably agreed and was probably a fair result. So, the match was tied.

This result gave the D team a chance to increase their lead however, up against a strong Belgrave A side, they were unable to take advantage and slipped to a 2-1 defeat as Sam Swain lost to Dave Patrick on board 2 and Angel Gonzalez lost to Karim Khan on board 3. However, on board 1 Jamie Heritage demolished Dave Barlow convincingly with the Black pieces to keep his perfect record in the competition. This game is given in the game viewer at the end of this post with some annotations by Jamie for your entertainment.

Hebden Bridge C meanwhile were engaged in another tight encounter, this time with Huddersfield A. Andy Leatherbarrow lost to Nick Sykes on board 2 but Martyn Hamer and Jeremy Butts beat Gerald Cuaresma and Colin Frank respectively to seal a victory.

Round 5

Things went from bad to worse for the A team as they were taken apart by their C team colleagues. Dave Shapland lost gain, this time to Andy Leatherbarrow, Matthew Parsons and Martyn Hamer drew on the top board and Cobus even lost his perfect record to his friend Jeremy on board 3. 2.5-0.5 for the C team was a fantastic result and helped to propel them up the standings.

This time the D team were able to take full advantage of the A team’s mis-step as they handed Huddersfield A their second 2-1 defeat to a Hebden side of the evening. This time Colin Frank was able to beat Angel Gonzalez on the bottom board but Sam beat Nick Sykes and Jamie won yet again, this time against Gerald Cuaresma.

The B team also won their match against against Huddersfield B by the same score of 2-1. Phil Cook capped a great evening with a win over Leo Keely and David Wedge beat Alec Ward to see the B team to victory. Ralph had another game with Amin Hossain but ended up on the losing side.

League Table after 5 rounds

Hebden Bridge D – 12
Hebden Bridge A – 10
Belgrave A – 9.5
Hebden Bridge B – 8.5
Hebden Bridge C – 8.5
Huddersfield B – 8.5
Nomads – 7
Huddersfield A – 6
Belgrave B – 3
Halifax – 2

So, although Hebden D extended their lead at the top by a point, there is now a bunch of times gathering behind them and the A team who, despite Monday’s tough results, remain in second place. With plenty of clutch matches to come, including the top two teams facing each other in round 6, and four more rounds still to play, it seems possible that even the teams on 8.5 could catch up if they can string some big wins together.

Top scorers

Jamie Heritage – 5
Phil Cook – 4
Sam Swain – 4
Cobus Daneel – 4
Matthew Parsons – 3.5
Martyn Hamer – 3.5
Dave Patrick – 3.5

The honour of being the top scorer in the competition is also still wide open but someone will have to stop Jamie Heritage if they are going to snatch it from him.

Instructions for using the PGN Viewer

For the benefit of those who are uninitiated, the game viewer above contains one of the games played last Monday night. It will automatically scroll through all of the moves unless you tell it to stop by clicking on the ‘=’ button below the board. You can navigate forwards and backwards using the arrow buttons beneath the board or click on the moves in the text box on the right.

  3 Responses to “Heritage leads Rapid challenge”

  1. Just to clarify –

    What happened is this –

    The game was very tense all the way through. I blundered early and Phil had a won game for a long time but I was able to keep enough material and counter play on the board that it wasn’t simple and kept the game going into time trouble.

    In time trouble Phil then blundered a couple of times and this led to a position that I felt was probably winning for myself but was still unclear enough to be simply played in the remaining time.

    I checked the clock at one point and I had about 35 seconds left and Phil had about 23. We were both playing very quickly.. Phil then I felt missed a forced draw and allowed me to have an easy winning position at which point I noticed his time had ran out, Phil saw this, offered his hand and got up.

    And then about 5 people felt the need to intervene and confuse matters. Apparently my flag had fallen before Phil’s, which initially confused me as the last time I had checked as above I had more time, and I felt we were both playing equally quickly.

    I think what happened was, that in the above time when Phil missed a forced draw, those 2-3 moves threw me and I probably passed him on time at that point.

    Apparently a flag on the clock showed that mine had flagged before Phil’s, which confused me because I didn’t understand how it was possible.

    Some people felt they knew how the clock worked, some people didn’t, some people stayed quiet.

    Frankly, I wish everyone would stay quiet in the absence of an arbiter and just let the players work things out. Its confusing enough when you have just played the game without having to work out anything else with 4-5 people talking to you at once.

    Because of the confusion, I offered Phil a draw which he accepted.

    In the absence of an arbiter it is not for external players to point out or make any comments on a clock situation.

    If people want to make a big deal of things, then Captains can be informed and decisions reached, but in the amateur game, players of mutual respect and decency can resolve these issues themselves, which is what I feel Phil and I did. So thanks to Phil for that, good game.

    Little surprised by Dave Barlow’s game against Jamie. Well played by Jamie, but Dave is much better than that in terms of making it so easy for his opponent.

    Jamie’s point on playing Kd7 is well made, White essentially just made himself a big target by castling queenside and taking on d5.

    Also I agree that g6 was crying out to be played earlier on.

    I think some opponents will be taking Jamie much more seriously the next time they play him. He’s very good. Not saying Dave didn’t, but sometimes its difficult when you play someone unknown.

    Its a bit like a team that gets promoted in football and does well in their first season, the next season either everyone works them out and their results worsen, or they go from strength to strength.

    It will be interested to see how Jamie does when he gets into his round 2/second season games against some of these opponents.

    Should make the last round and my game vs Jamie interesting!

  2. Surprised to see Dave Barlow miscalculated Ba3 move of Jamie. He could have played Rde1, threatening Qd6 next
    And giving the Nc3 a square d1 to defend b2 square and and Bc1 move to strengthen the b2 square more then b3 move will kick out the monster Knight on c5 later on.

  3. Sorry threatening Qxe6 not Qd6

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