Scandalous Rumours Swirl in Alberta Chess World

[April 1, 2023]

Late last night, rumours surfaced that ACA President Rafael Arruebarrena was planning an unexpected repertoire change. To the shock of many observers, indications are that he will be focusing his attention on the Dutch Defence.

One anonymous source said, “I couldn’t believe it. Rafael has always been one of the staunchest opponents of the Dutch. He’s even on record saying it willingly creates a bunch of holes in your position.”

Responding to 1. d4 with …f5 is widely considered to be dubious, a belief supported by its lack of appearances on the top level beyond such players as opening eccentric Richard Rapport, “Famous [Freaking] Legend” Gata Kamsy, and elite-player-turned-streamer Hikaru Nakamura.

In response to an e-mail inquiry to the ACA’s official address, Secretary Michael Ludwig answered, “I just run the e-mails,” and advised contacting Arruebarrena and Treasurer Dale Haessel directly. Haessel abstained from commenting.

Arruebarrena initially declined to comment, before insisting it was natural for a player’s tastes to change over time. “I am not confirming any accusations, however even if I did change my openings, I would expect the respect due of a Candidate Master,” he stated.

Sources close to the President also believe that the recent Alberta Closed may be responsible for the sudden switch. Arruebarrena is said to be tired of getting good positions and not converting, so he wants to mix it up by skipping the first step.

Much like the Dutch Defence, the leak is not expected to induce resignation.

Alberta Chess Challenge

Reminder that the Alberta Chess Challenge takes place in Red Deer on Saturday, April 8th — full information here.

There are close to 60 players registered so far! Sign up now to guarantee your spot.

Alberta Closed Results

Congratulations to IM Bitan Banerjee, who secured his sixth Alberta Championship victory with a 5-move draw in the final round! The draw ensured he would at worst finish tied at 4/5 with FM Tymur Keleberda, but having defeated Tymur in the first round Bitan was set to finish first on the head-to-head tiebreak.

Instead, however, Sherzod Khodjimatov survived a highly unpleasant position against Tymur in the last game and turned it around to win in 83 moves. Congratulations to him on solo second place (3.5/5).

You can review the games and standings on the Lichess broadcast, and pictures on the CCC facebook page.

One more congrats to Jinghui Bai, who scored 4.5/5 in the Alberta Reserves to win by half a point over Hemant Srinivasan and Yash Darvekar.

Many thanks to Bhavik Dave for organizing and directing.

2023 Alberta Closed

The Alberta Closed takes place next weekend, March 17-19 in Calgary. Good luck to the participants:

IM Bitan Banerjee (2495) — defending Champion
NM Sherzod Khodjimatov (2317) — Alberta Open winner
CM Rafael Arruebarrena (2265) — rating qualifier #1
FM Tymur Keleberda (2253) — Northern Alberta Open winner
FM Dale Haessel (2236) — rating qualifier #2
NM Anand Rishi Chandra (2192) — Southern Alberta Open winner

Tournament Director Bhavik Dave has provided a write-up on all the players and the event, which you can read here.

You can watch the games live on Lichess or DGT Chess Cloud.

Other players can join the Alberta Reserves, which takes place alongside the Closed on March 18-19. Tournament info here.

2023 Alberta Chess Challenge

Registration is open for the Alberta Chess Challenge, held Saturday, April 8th in Red Deer. This is a grade-level scholastic event, and winners in each grade earn the right to represent Alberta at the Canadian Chess Challenge on the May long weekend. This year, Nationals will be in Montreal.

Full information can be found here.

Alberta Blitz & Rapid Results

Congratulations to Alberta Blitz Champion Bitan Banerjee, who won an armageddon game as black over Paris Dorn. Both finished with 9/11, half a point ahead of Amir Mohammad Bahmani, who defeated Bitan and Paris in the last two rounds. Crosstable here.

Congratulations to Alberta Rapid Champion Tymur Keleberda, who won with a strong 6.5/7 ahead of Amir (5.5/7) and a large tie at 5/7. Crosstable here.

Thanks to Mark Tuvera for organizing and directing. Both events attracted over 40 players!

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