Lucky and Good: Lenderman and Yip Score at Eastern Open

i-b7xtbvz-X3Aleksandr Lenderman, Eastern Open Champion, Photo courtesy Bill Simmons
Bethesda, Maryland — When Nikki Khmelnitsky and Prani Gunasekaren first started playing at the Tri-Bridges Chess Club back in 2013, neither girl had an official rating. So it ended up being a sweet reunion this past week when they met up here at the 43rd annual Eastern Open and both girls scored five out of six points — despite squaring off against each other in Round 4 — to share first place in the Under 1300 section. Although Nikki, 11, who is the daughter of chess author IM Igor Khmelnitsky, was pleased with her result, she didn’t let the victory go to her head. “I’m neutral,” Nikki said of her feelings about winning her section of the tournament. “I’m happy but I’m neutral.” Prani, 12, said initially she didn’t think she could win her section but after an online prep session with her coach — Saket Kumar, of India — she found her rhythm on the board. “I used to go fast and sometimes when I go very fast in games, I lose,” Prani said. “So my coach said, ‘Take your time, think three to four moves ahead,’ because it’s really important to see all the strategies that you have.” Both girls won $290 apiece. But the high fives they were able to give each other after they found out they both won first place were priceless. Joshua Anderson, founder of the Tri-Bridges Chess Club, located just outside of Philadelphia, said he was pleased to hear the good news about his former club members — whom he described as the “first wave” of kids to hail from the club  — but declined to take any credit for the girls’ success. “I think we probably benefited more from them, but I certainly hope they were able to gain some experience playing other kids of similar level,” Anderson said. The girls’ joint first-place victory was just one of several uplifting stories that unfolded at the Eastern, one of the East Coast’s longstanding premier holiday season tournaments. For instance, brothers Trung and Tan Nguyen, 14 and 13, of Virginia, captured 1st and 2nd place in the Blitz tournament. “It was too easy,” FM Trung said of the blitz victory. GM Aleksandr Lenderman — one of four well-known GMs who competed in the event — won clear first place in the open section for the third time and said he considers the Eastern his “lucky tournament.” “I don’t win clear first very often but somehow this is just my lucky tournament,” said Lenderman, who won clear first place at the Eastern back in 2009 and 2010. Lenderman — who scored 6.5 out of 7 points in the Open Section to take home $2,000 — said he enjoys playing in the Eastern because he has several good friends in the area, including tournament organizer Tom Beckman and GM Larry Kaufman, who competed in the tournament, and one of his students, Carla Naylor. The two have undoubtedly had some good chess fortune over the years. For instance, Lenderman and Naylor won first place and $3,000 in the Mixed Doubles division of the World Open back in 2015. Lenderman said one of his more instructive games was his final round game against IM Tegshsuren Enkhbat. “I had a good knight against a bad bishop,” Lenderman said, explaining that Enkhbat’s bishop was cramped and unable to attack the pawns that remained on opposite colors of the bishop, whereas Lenderman’s knight was more mobile. When asked if he had purposefully sought a good knight vs. bad bishop endgame, Lenderman said: “He kind of forced it. Maybe he shouldn’t have. I basically allowed it because I thought it was favorable for me.” He also said the game bears some resemblance to Game of 11 of the 1963/64 US Championships in which Bobby Fischer beat Anthony Saidy. “It has similar tendencies,” Lenderman said of the game. Here is Lenderman’s game against Enkbat:
[pgn][Event "?"]
[Site "?"]
[Date "2016.12.30"]
[Round "?"]
[White "Lenderman, Aleksandr"]
[Black "Enkhbat, Tegshsuren"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "D45"]
[PlyCount "87"]
[EventDate "2017.01.01"]
[SourceDate "2017.01.01"]1. d4 d5 2. c4 c6 3. Nc3 Nf6 4. e3 a6 5. Qc2 e6 6. Nf3 c5 7. cxd5 exd5 8. Be2
Nc6 9. O-O cxd4 10. Nxd4 Nxd4 11. exd4 Be7 12. Bg5 Be6 13. Bf3 Qd7 14. Qb3 Rd8
15. Rac1 Ne4 16. Bxe7 Nd2 17. Qd1 Nxf3+ 18. Qxf3 Qxe7 19. Na4 O-O 20. Nc5 Bc8
21. Rfe1 Qd6 22. Qg3 Qxg3 23. hxg3 Rfe8 24. Rxe8+ Rxe8 25. f3 Kf8 26. Kf2 Rd8
27. Rc3 Re8 28. g4 h6 29. a3 f6 30. Nd3 Be6 31. Rc7 Re7 32. Nc5 b6 33. Nxa6
Rxc7 34. Nxc7 Bf7 35. Na8 b5 36. Nc7 b4 37. axb4 Ke7 38. Nb5 g5 39. Nc3 Kd6 40.
Ke3 Bg6 41. b5 f5 42. b6 f4+ 43. Kf2 Bf7 44. Nb5+ 1-0[/pgn]
For comparison, here is Fischer’s game against Saidy, known as  "The 11th Hour." GM Alexander Shabalov took second place and won $1,000 after scoring six points. WFM Carissa Yip, 13, of Massachusetts, scored an upset with Black against GM Sergey Erenburg. “I think it was just luck,” said Yip, who broke the world record for the youngest female to defeat a grandmaster in rated play back in 2014 at the age of 10. “He just made a mistake and I definitely capitalized on it,” she said of 24. g5 in the following game:
[pgn]

[Event "Annual Eastern Open"]
[Site "?"]
[Date "2016.12.28"]
[White "Erenburg, Sergey"]
[Black "Yip, Carissa"]
[Result "0-1"]
[ECO "B78"]
[WhiteElo "2647"]
[BlackElo "2302"]
[Annotator "yip"]
[PlyCount "78"]
[EventDate "2016.??.??"]

1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 d6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 g6 6. Be3 Bg7 7. f3 O-O 8. Qd2
Nc6 9. Bc4 Bd7 10. O-O-O Rc8 11. Bb3 Nxd4 {Topalov Variation} 12. Bxd4 b5 13.
a3 a5 14. e5 {I had never seen this move before but I think it's pretty good}
dxe5 15. Bxe5 Bc6 16. Qe3 Qe8 {book ends here} 17. Rd4 b4 $11 {lets my queen
get back in the game} 18. axb4 axb4 19. Rxb4 Qd8 20. Re1 Qa5 21. Rd4 Rfd8 22.
g4 Rxd4 23. Bxd4 Rd8 $4 24. g5 $4 (24. Bxf7+ $3 Kxf7 $4 25. Qxe7+ Kg8 26. Bxf6
(26. Qe6+ Kh8 27. Bxf6) 26... Bh6+ {We both stopped calculating after this
move, and so ignored this variation.} 27. g5 $1 {We both missed this move
during the game} Re8 28. gxh6 Rxe7 29. Rxe7 $16) 24... Rxd4 $1 25. Qxd4 $2 Ne4
$3 26. Qxg7+ {the best move} (26. Qc4 $2 {planning to attack f7} Qxg5+ 27. Kb1
Nd2+) (26. Qe3 $2 Bxc3 27. bxc3 Qa1#) 26... Kxg7 {The rest is easy} 27. fxe4
Qxg5+ 28. Kb1 Qd2 29. Re2 Qf4 30. Bc4 h5 31. Bd3 Qe5 32. Kc1 g5 33. Kd1 g4 34.
Ke1 h4 35. Kf1 Qf4+ 36. Kg1 Qc1+ 37. Kg2 f5 38. h3 Qxb2 39. Nd1 Qe5 0-1[/pgn]
Yip — who scored 4.5 out of 7 points in the open section of the Eastern — said she wanted spend the week playing in the North American Open in Las Vegas but opted for the Eastern because of the cost cross country airfare. Her father drove 12 hours so that she could play in the Eastern. As for Nikki and Prani — the two young girls who won the Under 1300 Section — both were also accompanied by very supportive fathers. In the case of Nikki, her father was on hand to promote and sign copies of his “Chess Exam” series of books.
IMG_1546IM Igor Khmelnitsky with his daughter Nikki
“I used to be a professional player,” explained IM Igor Khmelnitsky, who works as a health insurance company actuary. “Now, I’m a professional father. And I’m a driver, too,” he joked in reference to driving his daughter from the Philadelphia area to the Greater Washington, DC area to play in the Eastern. In the case of Prani, her father, Guna Kuppusamy is a software architect with a specific reason for supporting his daughter in chess. “I want her to be a champion in chess so that we can show this achievement and get some scholarships when she goes to college,” Kuppusamy said. He said chess helps build math and analytical skills. “That’s why I want her to concentrate on a mind game.” Find full standings and results from the Eastern Open here. 

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