The Chessmill

Ramblings and ruminations on chess in Milwaukee,

SE Wisconsin, theUSA and the World.

The importance of opening theory is grossly overestimated. Obviously, the knowledge of opening moves comes in handy when setting up a chess game, but this knowledge alone does not bring universal happiness. After this, you still have to play chess, and for that, other things will crop up.

 — Herman Grooten

2006 - Cinderella Drops a Slipper

It was shaping up to be a real Cinderella story. Young Erik Santarius was standing toe-to-toe with the best in the region, and hadn’t blinked.

Round one saw the top of the tournament in no trouble at all. But then came round two, and the story began. IMs Smetankin and Young handled their opponents (Smetankin beating NM Bill Williams and Young beating Ashish Vaja) as did NM Steven Szpisjak and NM Alex Betaneli, who coached Santarius at Madison West. But their comrades at the top didn’t fare as well. FM Ruslan Ahundov, former champion of Turkmenistan, encountered Santarius. Unaware that a 300-point rating deficit should be a fatal handicap, the young man pressed the FM hard, eventually settling for a draw when Ahundov proved too tough a nut to crack completely. And NM Steven Tennant fell to Rene Glen Ancheta in a second upset.

In round three, the story gathered speed.

Smetankin and Betaneli drew, giving Young an opening to take a half-point lead, which he did by defeating Szpisjak. Ahundov recovered from the previous round’s draw, winning handily over Ancheta and moving into a tie with Betaneli and Smetankin for second place, where he was joined by Santarius with a houdini-like escape from a lost position against Patrick McElwee.

This set up some important fourth round pairings. Young drew quickly with Smetankin, while Ahundov defeated Betaneli, moving him into a tie with Young for the lead, Smetankin a half-point back and Betaneli a full point back. Santarius then defeated Szpisjak in the longest game of the round to join Young and Ahundov at the top of the tournament, while Ancheta beat Jon Breider to join Smetankin in second place.

After Young and Ahundov drew in the final round, we thought perhaps we could hear the pumpkin carriage’s wheels on the road outside. If Santarius could reach deep into his bag and pull out just one last trick, he could jump past Young and win the event outright. We held our collective breaths waiting for a Cinderella finish.

But it was not to be. The slipper didn’t fit; the carriage was just a pumpkin after all. IM Smetankin was never really in trouble, and with the win moved into a tie with Ahundov and Young. The three were joined by Ancheta, who won over Williams, and Santarius had to be content with winning the class prize, instead.

In the Reserve section there was a real free-for all. Top-rated Sasha Velikanov was knocked off in round three by second seed Thomas Edelin, who was knocked off the top board in the folowing round by Bill Murtaugh, who fell in turn to David Sagunsky.

Sagunsky won the section clearly, with 4.5/5 (giving up a draw to Sou Her in round three). Velikanov took second place overall, as well as the trophy for Best Junior. Edelin tied with Murtaugh and Geremy Webne-Behrman for third place overall, with the latter two also winning their class prizes as well.

Open Section
No. Name USCF MM Solk Cum Pts Rnd1 Rnd2 Rnd3 Rnd4 Rnd5
1 Ahundov, Ruslan I 2431 14.5 14.5 11.5 4.0 -B- D5 W4 W13 D3
2 Smetankin, Stanislas 2490 13.5 13.5 11.5 4.0 -B- W7 D13 D3 W5
3 Young, Angelo 2460 12.5 14.5 13.5 4.0 W15 W19 W6 D2 D1
4 Ancheta, Rene Glen 2026 12.5 14.5 12.0 4.0 W20 W8 L1 W10 W7
5 Santarius, Erik F 2121 12.5 15.0 12.0 3.5 W14 D1 W12 W6 L2
6 Szpisjak, Steven J 2200 12.5 14.5 10.0 3.0 W17 W9 L3 L5 W16
7 Williams, William 2200 12.0 13.5 10.0 3.0 W22 L2 W15 W19 L4
8 Tennant, Steven 2221 11.5 13.0 7.5 3.0 D12 L4 W22 D9 W15
9 Richards, Joseph P 2029 11.0 12.5 9.5 3.0 W21 L6 W16 D8 D11
10 Breider, Jon P 2163 10.0 10.5 8.0 3.0 L16 W26 W18 L4 W17
11 Thieme, Steffen O 1998 8.0 8.0 7.5 3.0 -H- L22 W23 W12 D9
12 McElwee, Patrick 1982 8.0 13.0 7.5 2.5 D8 W16 L5 L11 W21
13 Betaneli, Alexander 2302 6.0 9.5 10.5 2.5 W25 W18 D2 L1 -U-
14 Coons, James J 1908 4.5 8.0 6.0 2.5 L5 W25 -H- L15 W20
15 Inumerable Jr, Florentino 2010 10.5 14.5 6.0 2.0 L3 W20 L7 W14 L8
16 Hoffman, Guy G 1922 10.5 13.5 7.0 2.0 W10 L12 L9 W18 L6
17 Parker, Anthony Le 1934 8.5 11.5 6.0 2.0 L6 W21 L19 W22 L10
18 Damocles, Job C 2017 6.5 9.5 6.0 2.0 W23 L13 L10 L16 W26
19 Vaja, Ashish 2113 5.5 9.5 8.0 2.0 W26 L3 W17 L7 -U-
20 Biareishyk, Siarhei 1875 5.5 9.5 5.0 2.0 L4 L15 W25 W26 L14
21 Wijetunge, Ivan 1800 6.0 9.0 3.5 1.5 L9 L17 D26 W23 L12
22 Aranovich, Gary 1980 8.0 11.0 4.0 1.0 L7 W11 L8 L17 -U-
23 Forro, Virgilio M 1723 4.0 7.0 2.0 1.0 L18 -H- L11 L21 D25
24 Velikanov Sr, Pete 1886 0.0 0.5 2.0 1.0 -U- -U- -U- W25 -U-
25 Benesa, Arnulfo 2000 8.5 11.5 0.5 0.5 L13 L14 L20 L24 D23
26 Wagner Jr, John 1900 8.0 11.0 1.5 0.5 L19 L10 D21 L20 L18
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