Broadstairs  2½         Bridge A 4½ 

1 Nick McBride  (173) 0-1    Vishnu Singh (205)
2 Paul Carfrae (133) 0-1    Richard Eales (195)
3 Richard Clement (e130) 0-1    Alan Atkinson (173)
4 John Couzens (116) 1-0    Patrick Burns (156)
5 Reg Pidduck (107) ½-½    Jeff Green (e150)
6 Bob Cronin ½-½    Ian Redmond (75)
7 Michael Doyle (81) ½-½    Ray Rennells (75)

Reg Pidduck writes:

This was a match of two halves – top three and bottom three – with star of the evening John Couzens in the middle on Board 4, winning in style against his much higher graded opponent. John’s swap-off left him a check to pick up an easy rook and Patrick resigned. I had already finished with a draw after 32 moves when Jeff had no choice than to keep repetitive moves on my queen to thwart my attempt of mating him. When Bob and Ian on Board 6 agreed a draw soon afterwards, Broadstairs were looking good at 2-1 as the other games looked close. Michael Doyle on Board 7 had gone a queen down to a rook but crafty play by him got him the exchange back and half hour later a draw was agreed. So at 2½-1½ to us we slowly watched Bridge take control. First to go was Richard on Board 3 after looking in good shape with a passed pawn. Alan was never going to let him advance it and after forcing Richard away was able to pick it up and slowly squeeze Richard away to pick off the remaining pawns. Although Richard Eales on Board 2 had used up more time, Paul was slowly running out of good choice moves and the inevitable happened to Paul after his long hard struggle. So now at 3½-2½ down we were looking at Nick facing 23 year old International Master Vishnu Singh (also by the way the 5th highest graded player for Trinidad and Tobago) to halve the match. Nick held on gamely to be last to finish and resigned after Vishnu’s pressure was too much. So a 4½-2½ loss but a very enjoyable evening – especially for Gullbuster John – and many thanks to the Bridge players.

 

                                                Broadstairs  4     Ramsgate  0 

1 Reg Pidduck (107) 1-0    Malcolm Snashall (107)
2 Andy Flood (106) 1-0    Kenneth Keeler (91)
3 Bob Cronin (104) 1-0    Bob Wallace (85)
4 Gary Hilleard (e100) 1-0    Don Richards (65)

Bob Page writes:

This was a tremendous victory, one that puts Broadstairs in with a real chance of winning the Walker Shield. Two weeks ago the team needed to win each of its last three matches 4-0 to overtake Ramsgate. Two of those results have been achieved but there is still one final hurdle to cross next week against Woodnesborough A and, again, victory is not enough – it has to be 4-0. A mere glance at the respective grades fails to do justice to the tension in this match. With Captain Michael magnanimously standing down in favour of the jet-lagged but willing Andy, Broadstairs outgraded Ramsgate on three of the four boards. However, Ramsgate had won eight of their nine matches going into this game and all four of their players had win percentages of 70%+ with Malcolm on 88%! Bob was the first to win, quickly winning a piece against his opponent and his two rooks easily finished the game off. Gary also had a fairly straightforward game although Don refused to resign until he had almost nothing left. The real drama, however, was saved for the top two boards. Andy was a pawn down for a long time in an unpromising position and a win looked extremely unlikely. On Board 1 the situation was no better. Reg and Malcolm were locked in a knight v bishop ending that surely Malcolm could hold, knowing that was all he needed to do. But Reg has never played a better game. He ensured his pawns were safe from Malcolm’s bishop, split the opposing pawns, carefully manoeuvred his king up the board, winning one pawn then another until Malcolm decided enough was enough. At 3-0, however, we still needed Andy to win and when the rooks came off, leaving another knight v bishop ending, victory still seemed a tall order but as Andy joked later, ‘superior endgame technique’ told in the end. 4-0 – what a match! Now do it all again next week!

                                            Broadstairs  3         Bridge   1                                        

1 Bob Page (135) 1-0  Chris Stampe (127)
2 Paul Carfrae (133) 1-0  Tim Spencer (121)
3 Richard Clement (e130) ½-½  Peter Blundell (120)
4 John Couzens (116) ½-½  Ian Redmond (75)

Bob Page writes:

Broadstairs comfortably beat Bridge in the final Hargreaves match of the season to win the Shield for the second time in three years and the third in the last five. Putting out our strongest side, we were quietly confident beforehand and Paul got us off to a great start by gaining revenge for his defeat by the same opponent in September. Winning a piece early on, he carefully manoevred his queen and knights to trap the king and force resignation. In Andy’s absence, Captain Bob was next on the scoreboard. Chris played in his usual aggressive style but left gaps, lost a piece and the end was surprisingly swift. Richard’s game was always close and when he was offered a draw by his opponent, having checked that we only needed half a point to win the match, he accepted. The match concluded in a slightly farcical manner. John had been behind for most of his game, first a pawn down then two and eventually three. With the match won, he decided he had had enough and he offered his hand in resignation which was clearly misinterpreted by Ian who sportingly announced: ‘Yes, I’ll accept a draw’! In the past we have featured Game of the Week, Blunder of the Week, Swindle of the Week and we now have Draw of the Week although this one will not be published.  Well played, everyone!

                                               Broadstairs  4     Woodnesborough B  0 

1 Reg Pidduck (107) 1-0    Oli Garrett (58)
2 Bob Cronin (104) 1-0    James Gill (e24)
3 Gary Hilleard (e100) 1-0    Daniel Watkins (e23)
4 Michael Doyle (81) 1-0    Jacob Henderson (e20)

Reg Pidduck writes:

BOARD 1. NOT MANY MISTAKES. Broadstairs needed to win this 4-0. Oli may only be 8 or 9 years old but he doesn’t make any mistakes. I was only able to win tactically by going a knight up and then later a rook as well and Oli resigned. 1-0 up.

BOARD 3. ANOTHER WIN FOR GARY. No sooner had I won than Gary stood up with a win against his young opponent, Daniel. 2-0 up

BOARD 2. PASSED PAWN. Our Bob like Gary and me played a steady game and won with a passed pawn down the a-file . But well played, James. 3-0 up

BOARD 4. CAPTAIN FINISHES LAST FOR A CHANGE. Normally Michael is first to finish. So young Jacob did well to hold him off for so long. Michael set himself up to checkmate on move 32 with a queen and bishop. Jacob another promising player. 4-0 to us.

Harry, Steve and all the parents have so many up and coming (and polite) youngsters at their club. Thanks Woodnesborough for making us so welcome and carry on the good work.

On May 25 the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) comes into effect, replacing the 1998 Data Protection Act.  Currently, personal data i.e. information relating to living individuals however it is processed, collected, recorded, stored or disposed of must comply with the Data Protection Act. This is being updated next month under the new regulation and will have implications for all organisations that store information on individuals including chess clubs, leagues and congresses. The ECF has been considering the implications for some time and has just produced this helpful guide:

https://www.englishchess.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/GDPR-County-and-Club-Guide.pdf

Club and league secretaries together with congress organisers are strongly advised to read the guide and act upon it sooner rather than later. While it may seem unlikely that authorities would pursue humble chess clubs that fail to abide by the law, fines for failing to do so could be considerable. The changes under GDPR relate specifically to information collected and stored by clubs and organisations and how it is handled. Therefore, officials need to explain to their members or entrants the following:

  • what data is collected
  • how it is stored
  • to whom it is passed and for what purpose
  • for how long the data is kept
  • what individuals can do to limit how their data is used

One of the key differences between current and new legislation is that it is insufficient for a club or organisation to assume that individuals are happy for their personal  information to be used in any way stated by the club or congress on websites, emails or printed leaflets or entry forms – consent needs to be established i.e. ‘opt in’ will become the default setting and not ‘opt out’.

At Broadstairs (and the Thanet Chess Congress) we are preparing for GDPR and an update will be provided in due course.  Congress organisers might be interested to see how the British Championships have approached the new regulations and this may provide a useful template for other congresses:

https://www.britishchesschampionships.co.uk/conditions-2018/2/

More information on GDPR is available from the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO):

https://ico.org.uk/for-organisations/guide-to-the-general-data-protection-regulation-gdpr/