Saturday, 29 February 2020

27 February 2020 - Central League Division 2

Cumbernauld B   v   Stirling B
Liam Heron

Mark Heron

Sophie Heron

Emma Heron

Arran Wallace
1225

1085

760

616

u/g
0 - 1

0 - 1

0 - 1

0 - 1

0 - 1
1640

1494

1567

1547

1463
William Spiers

Brad Duthie

David McAlister

Dave Hewitt

Richard Warcup
0 - 5

Stirling B extended their 100% record this season to 10 matches. There are two matches left to play but with this victory the team has already retained the Division 2 title

Tuesday, 25 February 2020

24 February 2020 - Central League Division 2

Stirling C   v   Grangemouth B
Craig Manson

Kris Dimitrov

Tony Pitson

Kenny MacPherson

Gordon Allcock
1448

 

1413

1326

1284
0 - 1

½ - ½

½ - ½

½ - ½

1 - 0
1572

 

1319

1289

1035
Ian Mason

Bill Gray

Hugh Hanlon

Crawford Welsh

Scott Dickson
2½ - 2½

24 February 2020 - Central League Division 2

Stirling Juniors(D)   v   Badgers Brook B
Glen Wilson

Ross Warcup

Alex Brimlow

Gordon Bowie

Nadzieja Lu-Czartoryjska
 

592

406

 

 
0 - 1

0 - 1

0 - 1

0 - 1

0 - 1
1644

 

1445

1267

877
John Smith

Graham Kerr

Kenny Aiston

Gordon Walker

Peter Woollven
0 - 5

Sunday, 23 February 2020

19 February 2020 - Central Allegro League

Grangemouth Tiger 9-7 Stirling Bruce
Round 1
Alan Bell 1 - 0 Brad Duthie
Dougie Will 1 - 0 John Blake
Ian Mason 1 - 0 Dave Hewitt
Alasdair Sandham ½ - ½ Graham Anderson
Round 2
Alan Bell 1 - 0 John Blake
Dougie Will 0 - 1 Bill Cook
Ian Mason 0 - 1 Graham Anderson
Alasdair Sandham ½ - ½ Brad Duthie
Round 3
Alan Bell 1 - 0 Bill Cook
Dougie Will 1 - 0 Graham Anderson
Ian Mason 1 - 0 Brad Duthie
Alasdair Sandham 0 - 1 John Blake
Round 4
Alan Bell 0 - 1 Graham Anderson
Dougie Will 1 - 0 Brad Duthie
Ian Mason 0 - 1 John Blake
Alasdair Sandham 0 - 1 Bill Cook

Monday, 17 February 2020

17 February 2020 - Lindsay Cup

Thanks to Glen for providing the game below, where he had Black against Richard in a Lindsay Cup group game.

Games
Warcup, RichardWilson, G0–1Lindsay CupStirling CC17.02.2020
1.e4 c6 2.f3 d5 3.exd5 cxd5 4.d4 c6 5.c3 g4 6.e3 f6 7.h3 h5 8.g4 g6 9.g5 e6 10.a3 e7 11.d2 b6 12.0-0-0 a5 13.b1 e4 14.xa5 xa5 15.d3 c8 16.e3 0-0 17.e5 b3# 0–1

Nice mate!

Wednesday, 12 February 2020

10 February 2020 - Central League Division 2

Stirling C   v   Stirling B
Craig Manson

Kris Dimitrov

Tony Pitson

Gordon Allcock

Craig Thomson
1448

 

1413

1284

824
0 - 1

0 - 1

½ - ½

½ - ½

0 - 1
1494

1567

1547

1531

1463
Brad Duthie

David McAlister

Dave Hewitt

John Blake

Richard Warcup
1 - 4

10 February 2020 - Central League Division 2

Stirling E   v   Stirling Juniors (D)
Tom Wallace

Kenny MacPherson

Mick Bloor

Martin Pringle

Tom McKay
1389

1376

1158

990

770
1 - 0

1 - 0

1 - 0

1 - 0

1 - 0
 

592

406

 

 
Glen Wilson

Ross Warcup

Alex Brimlow

Gordon Bowie

Douglas Pringle
5 - 0

Game of this match was definitely the bottom board clash between Tom and Douglas. It turned into a slug-fest, lasting well over two hours. Douglas missed an opportunity when the Queen exchange was offered to win Tom's Queen for a Rook, and finally resigned when Tom threatened an indefensible mate. Alex did well to force his way back into the game against Mick, before falling to a back rank mate. Thanks to Tom for providing the game below from board 1.

Games
Wallace, TWilson, G1–0Stirling E v Stirling Juniors(D)Stirling CC10.02.2020
1.e4 c6 2.d4 d5 3.e5 f5 4.d3 xd3 5.xd3 d7 6.f3 e6 7.0-0 g6 8.g5 e7 9.xe7 xe7 10.bd2 0-0 11.g4 b6 12.e3 fc8 13.h6 c5 14.g5 f8 15.h1 cxd4 16.g1 xc2 17.g3 ac8 18.f3 After 17 Rg3, Stockfish started shouting that 17 ... Qxb2 was the move, giving it +2. 17 ... Qxb2 18 Rb1 Rc1+ 19 Rxc1 Qxc1+ 20 Kg2 Qxd2. As soon as the Knight on g5 moves, the Queens can be exchanged and White's mate threat is pretty much gone. Given some more time, though, it settled on 17 ... Nc6 as the best move, presumably going next to e5 to protect f7. Either way, Stockfish is happy with Black's position after either of these options. Unfortunately, Rac8 doesn't really help Black. f5 19.gxf5 exf5 20.b3 b4 21.xh7 d3 22.f6# 1–0

Friday, 7 February 2020

Robert Togneri

Stirling chess club – and the Central Scotland Chess League – lost its longest-serving member with the death on 25 January 2020 of Robert Togneri, aged 81. Both club and league have many pleasant people among their memberships, but no one was more liked, over the half-century-plus of his involvement, than Robert. He was the most thoughtful, committed and diligent member any club could wish to have – and it helped that he was a very handy player, too.

His first appearance in a league match for Stirling appears to have been a draw against J M Allan of Dunfermline on 1 April 1964, and his first win – likewise against Dunfermline, R Roxburgh this time – came on 18 November that same year. Robert also played (and won) for Stirling C earlier this season, so he appeared in 57 of the league’s 62 seasons to date, an unrivalled achievement.

During his time at the Stirling club, Robert served in a variety of roles: secretary, assistant secretary, treasurer, league secretary, first-team regular and then long-time captain of the Stirling B team. He also captained the under-1500 team during the early years of the period when it won that particular trophy nine times in 11 seasons, and was a member of the Stirling team that won the Spens Cup in 1967-68, recording a draw on board seven in the 5-2 final win against Benarty.

Robert was never club champion, as his best playing years coincided with the club having greater top-end strength than it does today, but he was runner-up at least twice, in 1967-68 and 1968-69 (behind Rainer Bartsch and Maxwell Thornton respectively), and he won the Lindsay Cup – the reserve section of the championship – three times, in 1964-65, 1983-84 and 1993-94. Robert also won the Keddie Cup – when it was played as a traditional knockout rather than the handicap tournament of modern times – in 1970-71, and he was runner-up in the club lightning tournament (what would now be called blitz) in 1970-71 and 1971-72. The club used to have something called a matchplay champion – which appears to have been determined by a season-long cumulative tally of overall results – and Robert was runner-up in this three times in a row: 1965-66, 1966-67 and 1967-68. His prowess at fast chess remained into his senior years, and as late as November 2007 he was joint-winner of the twice-yearly club allegro tournament – the five-round Swiss which from 2015 was happily played for the Robert Togneri Trophy, instituted to mark his half-century of involvement with the club.

Almost certainly, however, Robert’s finest tournament achievement was winning the Scottish Open, with a score of 5½/7 (and an extraordinary final-round stalemate to clinch the title – see below) in Dundee in 1967, and he went on to play in the main Scottish championship in the summers of 1968 (Ayr) and 1969 (Glasgow). In those days the Scottish was a closed event, and this gives some indication of Robert’s strength during that time. Grading lists dating back to 1981 show a highest grade of 1715 in 1989-90, and a steady presence in the 1600s during the earlier years of that decade. This in itself represents a very respectable standard of play, but it’s reasonable to assume Robert was quite a bit stronger than that in the pre-grading days, particularly from the mid-1960s to the mid-1970s.

He had a sound and quietly effective technique, with a notable ability in the endgame – for many years he was regarded as the best endgame player at the club, and stories abound of his turning lost endgames into draws and drawn ones into wins. The present writer can recall embarking on a double-knights with pawns endgame against Robert that initially seemed a near-trivial win but gradually became a desperate struggle for survival, with considerable relief when a draw was eventually achieved. Dougie Will of Grangemouth similarly notes that “sometime, possibly in the late 1990s, I went into a rook and pawns endgame against Robert two pawns up, and despite being 400 points higher graded lost dismally…”. There were countless such pieces of endgame magic, and Robert retained this ability well into old age. He was often to be seen studying endgame positions alone in a corner of the club room (or demonstrating some subtlety to other club members), in much the same way that many players opt to study opening theory.

Robert appeared to have a natural aptitude in endgames, but it’s worth remembering that he grew up in the days when games were regularly adjourned – rather than thrashed out in quickplay finishes – and players would take the unfinished scoresheet home with them, study it over the course of several evenings (no computers in those days), before returning to bring the game to a conclusion a week or so later. It was in adjournment analysis that strong endgame players such as Robert honed their ability, and this was something he brought with him into the more frantic modern era.

Another notable feature of Robert’s play was how rarely he found himself in time trouble. Some people – John Blake is another with this ability at the Stirling club – seem able to play simple but strong chess at a steady rate that sees them keep comfortably on the right side of the clock. Robert for many years was Stirling’s prime exponent of this, as his various fast-chess tournament wins demonstrate. At some point in his final year or so he did actually lose a game on time – and he believed that this was the first time it had ever happened to him.

All this tournament and league detail provides only part of the picture of Robert, however. He would play friendlies with anyone, regardless of strength or age – indeed he was a great encourager of junior chess, and the recent upturn in junior enthusiasm at the club, along with the increase in membership generally, is part of his legacy. He was also a notable welcomer of new people: since his death, several of the current club members have commented that Robert was the first person they played at the Stirling club – but there is nothing surprising about this, because that kind of meet-and-greet, fancy a game? thing was what he did, year after year.

Above all, he was almost always there, a near-permanent benevolent presence at the club. There were occasional absences due to ill-health – a heart bypass at one stage and a partial withdrawal from playing, in league matches at least, for a while after his beloved Marie died in 2012 – but he would be back as soon as he was able, as the chess club, and the game itself, meant so much to him. In terms of his chess longevity – and the Stirling club’s habit of producing such people – it’s worth noting that on his 1964 league debut, Robert played on board four (of five), and sitting alongside him on board three was James Keddie – who became club champion for the sixth and final time that same 1963-64 season, having first won it in 1924-25, so the overlap with Robert covers pretty much 100 years of the club.

There is so much more that could be said about Robert – for instance his unwillingness to raise his voice even when he had a strong opinion, and his being the most neatly turned-out person at the club, with his cardigans, his old-fashioned hat and his umbrella. In his final few months he even started sporting a rather natty beard. He had exemplary manners, would always find time for a chat, and numerous of his friends from this club and beyond have described him as “a gentleman” – which is exactly what he was.

Others, elsewhere, will be able to tell of his family life, his work as a teacher, his religious faith; but in chess terms he was an absolute stalwart who gave hugely to the chess scene in central Scotland over half a century, and he will be missed greatly. Condolences to his family, and to his friends elsewhere.

Games
Wilkie, HTogneri, R½–½Scottish Open7Dundee
1.d4 f6 2.c4 c5 3.d5 e6 4.c3 exd5 5.cxd5 d6 6.f3 g6 7.e4 g7 8.e2 0-0 9.0-0 e8 10.c2 a6 11.a4 bd7 12.f4 b6 13.d2 g4 14.d3 h5 15.e3 e7 16.h3 d7 17.a5 c8 18.c4 b8 19.d2 f6 20.f4 h5 21.h2 f8 22.fe1 h6 23.c2 f4 24.f1 f5 25.e5 dxe5 26.xe5 d6 27.d3 e7 28.h1 exd5 29.xd5 g5 30.5xf4 gxf4 31.c4+ e6 32.xf4 c6 33.xe6 xe6 34.xe6+ xe6 35.xb8 c4 36.c5 e8 37.xc4+ g7 38.e6+ f6 39.f4 xf4 40.xf4 e4 41.d5+ e5 42.e3 h5 43.e1 f4 44.c2 xe1+ 45.xe1 d4 46.e2 h4 47.f3+ c5 48.xh4 b4 49.f3 xa5 50.xb7 b6 51.e4 a5 52.c2 b5 53.f3 a4 54.h4 b4 55.h5 a3 56.bxa3+ xa3 57.h6 b2 58.f5 c3 59.h7 c4 60.h8 d5 61.e5+ c6 62.xf4 d5 63.g4 c6 64.g5 d5 65.g6 c6 66.g7 c5 67.e4 d6 68.d4 c5 69.e6 d6 70.f4 c5 71.f5 d6 72.f6 c5 73.f7 d6 74.f8+ c7 75.c8+ d6 76.d7+ c5 77.g8 b4 78.ec6 a3 79.db7 ½–½

Robert's last win for the club is presented below.

Games
Togneri, Rvan der Heever, C1–0Stirling C v Badgers Brook BStirling CC14.10.2019
1.d4 d5 2.c4 c6 3.e3 f6 4.d2 g6 5.f3 e6 6.d3 g7 7.c3 0-0 8.0-0 b5 9.c5 a5 10.b3 c7 11.a3 a6 12.e1 b4 13.axb4 xb4 14.f1 a6 15.xa6 xa6 16.e5 e4 17.xe4 dxe4 18.xb4 xe5 19.dxe5 xe5 20.d4 b8 21.xa5 e5 22.c3 xa5 23.xa5 f5 24.b4 c8 25.c4+ g7 26.c3 e8 27.d1 h5 28.h4 h6 29.d6 f4 30.f7 g8 31.xe5 f3 32.f4# 1–0

Monday, 3 February 2020

3 February 2020 - Central League Division 1

Stirling A   v   Grangemouth A
Kabir Pandit

Steve Smith

Graham Anderson

Bill Cook

John Blake
 

1753

1662

1592

1531
0 - 1

1 - 0

0 - 1

0 - 1

1 - 0
2146

1970

1816

1735

1319
Uby Archibong

Alan Bell

Dougie Will

David Wallace

Hugh Hanlon
    2 - 3    

Uby and Kabir were first finished, in a game which seemed to me to consist of swapping off pieces. Both promoted pawns in the end game, but with Uby's pawn being further advanced he triumphed. David got Bill into a right guddle in the corner, and Bill then resigned. John beat Hugh in a game I saw nothing of. Both Steve and my games went right down to the last minutes. Alan dropped a rook in time trouble, and my game - well, it's below.

Games
Anderson, GWill, D0–1Stirling A v Grangemouth AStirling CC03.02.2020
1.e4 e5 2.f3 c6 3.c4 f6 4.d3 h6 5.c3 d6 6.e3 g5 7.c2 Stockfish recommends 0-0 but there's no way I'm castling into those pawns. g7 8.bd2 0-0 9.0-0-0 a5 10.d4 e8 11.d3 I was happy enough with this move, trying to keep my pieces on the board, until about a minute later I saw 11 dxe5 dxe5 12 Bc5. g4 12.f1 b6 13.h4 An attempt to break up the g and h pawns and get some play towards the King. xe3 14.xe3 g4 15.h2 h5 I had initially intended f3 to this but I've only just spotted Bh6 as the reply. 16.d5 To close the game off. Black's white squared Bishop and Knight on a5 aren't going far. b7 17.g3 Still hoping to get f3 in at some point. c5 18.e2 h6 19.hf1 f5 I'd missed this, forgetting that the Knight on e3 is pinned. 20.b1 fxe4 Where I'd been quite comfortable up until now, I'm feeling the game slipping away from me here. 21.b4 a4 22.h2 a5 23.b5 c5 24.d2 xe3 25.fxe3 f5 Really stuck for a move here 26.b3 d3 27.a4 g6 28.c1 c5 29.hh1 e7 30.de1 f6 31.d1 af8 I'm pretty much resigned to losing here, so let's get rid of the two pawns preventing me from getting near Black's King. 32.xg4 hxg4 33.xg4 h8 34.h5 h7 35.h4 xa4 I hadn't even considered this, but if I let him, this allows Black to get the Knight back to d5 and protect the Queen. 36.e2 6f7 37.xe7 I don't really have a choice about this. xe7 38.g4 f2 39.c2 ef7 40.g5 7f3 41.d1 xe3 42.g6 xc3+ 43.xc3 d3+ 44.c1 xc3+ It's the gaining of the tempo capturing the Knight back that Dougie is really good at - and I am not. 45.b1 g8 46.h6 a3 47.g7+ h7 48.c1 xd5 49.xc7 g8 50.c8 b3+ 51.c1 a3 52.b1 a2+ 53.c1 e6 54.h8+ g6 55.g1+ f6 56.f8+ f7 57.g8 a1# In fairness, we're both down to seconds here. In my excitement, and having been behind for so long, I was that excited at getting to promote the pawn that I completely forgot to look at the whole board. The winning move for White is 56 Rxf7+. If 56 ... Kxf7 57 g8=Q+ (getting the tempo that I need) and if 56 ... Ke6 57 Rxf2 Ra1+ 58 Kc2 Rxg1 59 h7 and one of the pawns will promote. 0–1

Thanks to John Blake for providing the game below, where he had Black against Hugh Hanlon.

Games
Hanlon, HBlake, J0–1Stirling A v Grangemouth AStirling CC03.02.2020
1.e4 b6 2.c4 e6 3.f3 b7 4.d3 g6 5.0-0 g7 6.e3 xb2 7.bd2 g7 8.d4 xd4 9.xd4 a6 10.f4 c5 11.4f3 e7 12.d4 d5 13.exd5 exd5 14.e2 f5 15.f2 0-0 16.dxc5 bxc5 17.b3 c4 18.bd4 xd4 19.xd4 c6 20.c3 f6 21.h4 f5 22.g3 f6 23.b1 a5 24.f3 ab8 25.e2 a8 26.d1 be8 27.e5 xe5 28.fxe5 e6 29.h5 g7 30.e1 d4 31.a3 gxh5 32.xa5 d3 33.cxd3 cxd3 34.f3 xf3 35.gxf3 e8 36.f2 f7 37.f4 c8 38.e3 g7 39.d1 c4 40.xd3 e4+ 41.d2 xf4+ 42.e2 xh2+ 43.e3 g3+ 44.d4 f4+ 0–1