Young & old in Argentina
28 October 2009, 22.46 CET | Last modified: 23:59 | By Peter Doggers | Filed under: Reports | Tags:
Sergei Zhigalko is leading the World Youth Championship in Argentina after 7 of 13 rounds. The Belarus grandmaster scored 6 points so far and is half a point ahead of Maxime Vachier-Lagrave, Eduardo Iturrizaga and Falko Bindrich. And, also in Argentina, last week 100-year-old Aaron Schwartzman and 99-year-old Francisco Benkö met behind the chess board.
The World Youth Championship 2009 takes place October 21 – November 4 in Puerto Madryn, Argentina. Originally it was supposed to be held in Mar del Plata but just a few weeks ago FIDE communicated the switch to Puerto Madryn, a city in the province of Chubut in the Argentine Patagonia. It is the head town of the Viedma Department, and has about 58,000 inhabitants.
According to FIDE regulations, only those born on or after 1st January 1989 are eligible to participate in the Championships. In this category we find players such as Magnus Carlsen, Sergei Karjakin, Wang Hao and Fabiano Caruana, who are not present, but still this year’s World Youth is extremely strong. Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (2718) is the top seed; apparently the winner of Biel this year preferred a trip to Argentina over Novi Sad. Rating wise Dmitry Andreikin (Russia), Sergei Zhigalko (Belarus), David Howell (England) and Maxim Rodshtein (Israel) are his biggest competitors.
The tournament is a big Swiss open of 13 rounds and 84 participants in the boys section (45 in the girls). The rate of play is 90 minutes for the first 40 moves followed by 30 minutes for the rest of the game with an addition of 30 seconds per move starting from move one.
Wednesday is the only rest day and at the moment Sergei Zhigalko is leading the standings with 6/7. In round 6 he drew with Vachier-Lagrave and yesterday he beat Rodshtein with Black. In the next round Zhigalko will face Iturrizaga, whom we know from this year’s Corus Chess Tournament.
The official website encounters problems, especially in Firefox which reports it as an attacking site. But you’re not missing much; trying it in Opera I found it ugly and incomplete, the PGN files are behind two rounds and the photos are horrible too. It’s unbelievable that we still regularly see such amateurism in web coverage in the world of chess, even at a World Championship…

Selection of games rounds 1-5
Game viewer by ChessTempo
Links
- Official website (possibly corrupted)
- Argentina Chess Federation
- Games in PGN | Boys | Girls
So much for the youngsters. A bit over a week ago (October 20th), also in Argentina, two grand maîtres of Argentine Chess met at the famous Club Argentino de Ajedrez in Buenos Aires: 100-year-old Aaron Schwartzman and 99-year-old Francisco Benkö.
Schwartzman, a physician and surgeon, was club champion between 1931 and 1948. Benkö (not to be confused with the American grandmaster Pal Benkö) played in the Argentine Championship between 1943 and 2004. As a German citizen he fled to Argentina to escape from Nazism. The first game Benkö played at the Club Argentino, in 1936, was against… Schwartzman.

Francisco Benkö (l.) and Aaron Schwartzman, 73 years after their first game | Photo courtesy of the Club Argentino de Ajedrez
The exhibition match, which celebrated the bicentennial of Argentina’s first national government in May next year, consisted of one game. The two played without a clock (having their own ideas about time anyway) and quickly agreed to a draw, but of course nobody cared about that.
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yes the WJC site is truly terrible! Thank you for calling it like it is. Such pathetic sites should receive our disdain.
Gracias nuevamente a ChessVibes por el reportaje.
Y como habia escrito antes, es realmente una pena que no se pueda cubrir un evento tan importante como el Campeonato Mundial Juvenil. La pagina oficial es de lo peor, todos los links relacionados al campeonato generan una advertencia severa de seguridad en Firefox y aun no tenemos las partidas en formato PGN.
El ajedrez no merece aquello.
I’m happy to see you blow the whistle on the deplorable coverage of a world class event. The tournament organizers should hang their heads in shame ( and by extension, so should the FIDE) for denying chess fans the opportunity to follow what is obviously an exciting tournament in real time.
Muito Obrigado pela cobertura deste campeonato.
Ja mandei alguns emails a FIDE a pedir do porquê que no seu website não existe uma cobertura detalhada sobre um evento tão importante como aquele. Fico realmente espantado de como a FIDE aceita a realização deste tipo de eventos sem que haja a garantia de uma cobertura minima.
No entanto, devo ainda acrescentar que este tipo de eventos deveria ser uma oportunidade para se realizarem feira s de material de xadrez como se faz nas olimpiadas e me parece que nada disto se faz. GENS UNA SUMUS.
What happened in Maenhout-Zhigalko (10th game of the selection) ? Zeitnot? Bad pgn? In the final position White can promote by force, but the result says “0-1″.
Must be flag.