2012 Chess Olympiad
Reports | October 02, 2011 13:33

Sadler to play again, in Oslo

Is it safe to speak of a comeback by now? Apparently his victories in two Haarlem weekenders and a real Swiss in August in Barcelona tasted sweet, and Matthew Sadler can now be found on the list of participants of another open tournament. The English grandmaster entered the Oslo Open, which starts today in the Norwegian capital. Rated 2625, Sadler is second seed, behind another Dutch resident: GM Sergei Tiviakov (2647).

The tournament in Oslo can be seen as a sequel to the legendary Gausdal tournaments, which ceased to exist in 2010. Organizer Hans Olav Lahlum is now cooperating with Akademisk SK (the chess club from the University in Oslo), and with the former Gausdal hotel manager Lars Petter Mathisen (now manager of the new conference hotel Thon Ullevaal Stadion in Oslo).

According to its website, this new international tournament

will try to bring back the combination of serious title tournament and friendly atmosphere which was the hallmark of the Gausdal tournaments, but now also offering participants the many tourist possibilities of Norway’s great capital city Oslo. Whether this will be the start of a new chess tradition in Oslo continuing towards the historical year of 2014, when the Chess Olympiad is to be played in Norway, will be decided by the organizer and the hotel after the 2011 tournament.

The Oslo International includes two groups: a strong open aimed at players who seek IM or GM norms, and a weaker Elo group for other amateurs. Both play a 9-round Swiss, from October 2nd till 9th. The venue is the Thon Hotel Ullevaal Stadion, a large hotel and conference centre, right next to Norway’s national football stadium in Oslo.

Participants top group

Title Name Rating Fed
GM Sergei Tiviakov 2647 NED
GM Matthew D Sadler 2625 ENG
GM Sergey Volkov 2614 RUS
GM Jon Ludvig Hammer 2601 NOR
GM Kaido Kulaots 2592 EST
GM Vladimir Burmakin 2588 RUS
GM Sipke Ernst 2581 NED
GM Eduardas Rozentalis 2575 LTU
GM Victor Mikhalevski 2542 ISR
GM Nick E De Firmian 2516 USA
IM Oleg Spirin 2493 RUS
IM Frode Elsness 2491 NOR
GM Rune Djurhuus 2458 NOR
IM Frode Olav Olsen Urkedal 2447 NOR
FM Geir Sune Tallaksen Østmoe 2443 NOR
IM Timofey Galinsky 2441 UKR
IM Danny Raznikov 2433 ISR
IM Jovanka Houska 2427 ENG
WGM Nino Batsiashvili 2413 GEO
WGM Nazi Paikidze 2412 GEO
IM Roger Moor 2402 SUI
IM Olivier Moor 2399 SUI
IM Nicolai Getz 2391 NOR
IM Øystein Hole 2387 NOR
IM Gil Popilski 2381 ISR
IM Atle Grønn 2378 NOR
IM Eirik Gullaksen 2376 NOR
FM Sander Van Eijk 2372 NED
FM David Klein 2359 NED
FM Javier Aguera Naredo 2345 ESP
FM Daniel Jakobsen Kovachev 2332 NOR
IM Gerard Welling 2322 NED
FM Stig Gabrielsen 2311 NOR
IM Petter Haugli 2300 NOR
IM Yochanan Afek 2299 ISR
WGM Olga Dolzhikova 2275 UKR
WIM Ellen Hagesæther 2263 NOR

 

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Author: Editors

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Comments

Jamie's picture

Absolutely delighted that Sadler is returning to competitive chess!
It's coincidental that I only just started to learn more about him and his achievements in the last few weeks and was sad to see that he has been inactive for so long. Woopee!

Thomas's picture

Some time last spring, the magazine of the Dutch chess federation had an article on the team competitions in general, and Sadler in particular - "World topper now plays just for fun" ("Wereldtopper is nu plezierschaker" of zoiets). It already mentioned that he will play opens in Barcelona and Oslo, so the latter isn't a consequence or spontaneous decision after the former.

Comeback? It seems he will keep playing such events every now and then, but he made it clear that he also still likes his regular job and won't quit it to return as a professional chess player.

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