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Monkey Men Berg & Hillarp Persson

29 January 2008 16:25 PM | Last modified: 12:40

This morning Ian & Cathy Rogers, Tiger Hillarp Persson, Emanuel Berg and I went up the Rock of Gibraltar. Especially known for its ape colony. I did an interview with the two Swedish players and the apes (watching them).

Gibraltar is actually just a big city, built around the Rock. Which is very imposing, and so it’s no surprise that it was the subject of many battles in the past. The Castilians and the Moors already fought for it in the 14th century and since 1704 it’s been occupied by the British. The inhabitants are mostly of Andalusian culture and speak Spanish to each other, but English to British people and tourists. The funny thing is that if you’d hold a plebiscite and ask if they want to become part of Spain, probably a big majority would say no.

The Barbary apes or Macaques (Macaca sylvanus) that live on the rock (but can be seen throughout the city) can’t really be native because their DNA is too similar to that of African monkeys. The legend goes that whenever the monkeys leave the Rock, it will mean the end of British ruling.

So how’s the tournament going? Well, after seven of the ten rounds, the terribly strong Chinese player Bu Xiangzhi leads with 6.5 points. Yesterday he beat current title holder Kiril Georgiev. Wang Hao was the first male Chinese to lose in the tournament yesterday (against Efimenko) and dropped to 4th place.

Stefanova had started with 4 out of 4 but then she became victim of the Kramnik Gambit (she caught a cold). Well, she wasn’t affected too much by it, since she kept on playing very well and had good winning chances in a wild game against Bologan yesterday.

The Australian IM Zong-Yuan Zhao is rapidly becoming a GM. For a while, he had been stronger than his title suggested, but didn’t have much time to play. This month he already scored two norms and in this tournament he seems to be on route for his third, beating Nakamura for instance. It would mean that not David Smerdon, but Zong-Yuan would become the next GM in Australia, after Ian Rogers and Darryl Johansen.

On the left, you’ll find a selection of interesting games played so far in Gibraltar.



Gibtelecom Masters (Gibraltar) | Round 7 Standings

Rank Name Score Fed. M/F BH SB Rating TPR W-We
1 GM Bu, Xiangzhi 6.5 CHN M 34.0 31.75 2691 2988 +1.84
2 GM Bologan, Viktor 6.0 MDA M 30.5 25.5 2663 2746 +0.54
3 GM Efimenko, Zahar 6.0 UKR M 29.5 24.75 2638 2730 +0.67
4 GM Wang, Yue 5.5 CHN M 28.5 22.5 2698 2693 +0.01
5 GM Socko, Bartosz 5.5 POL M 33.0 24.0 2635 2723 +0.74
6 GM Petrosian, Tigran L. 5.5 ARM M 28.0 21.5 2606 2647 +0.29
7 GM Malakhatko, Vadim 5.5 BEL M 31.5 24.5 2600 2644 +0.32
8 GM Ni, Hua 5.0 CHN M 31.5 22.0 2680 2684 +0.11
9 GM Nakamura, Hikaru 5.0 USA M 31.0 21.25 2670 2629 -0.26
10 GM Wang, Hao 5.0 CHN M 32.5 22.0 2665 2688 +0.27
11 GM Georgiev, Kiril 5.0 BUL M 33.5 22.5 2662 2697 +0.37
12 GM Areshchenko, Alexander 5.0 UKR M 33.0 23.0 2645 2636 -0.04
13 GM Beliavsky, Alexander G 5.0 SLO M 32.0 22.5 2638 2643 +0.10
14 GM Gurevich, Mikhail 5.0 TUR M 28.0 19.0 2607 2574 -0.18
15 GM Kuzubov, Yuriy 5.0 UKR M 28.0 17.25 2606 2514 -0.61
16 GM Akobian, Varuzhan 5.0 USA M 31.0 20.0 2599 2627 +0.31
17 GM Sandipan, Chanda 5.0 IND M 30.0 20.5 2593 2535 -0.37
18 GM Agdestein, Simen 5.0 NOR M 30.0 20.5 2589 2586 +0.13
19 GM Sulskis, Sarunas 5.0 LTU M 30.5 19.25 2553 2609 +0.62
20 GM Felgaer, Ruben 5.0 ARG M 30.5 18.75 2539 2574 +0.35

Full standings and pairings here.

Not long ago the 8th round has begun, with e.g. Bu Xiangzhi-Bologan, Efimenko-Socko, Malakhatko-Wang Yue and Agdestein-Petrosian. Live games can be followed here.

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Comments

7 Responses to “Monkey Men Berg & Hillarp Persson”

  1. ~~~~ on 29 January 2008 17:46 PM

    Looks like Bu might be winning again today (plus pawn, better bishop, and Bologan has 3 minutes for 12 moves), which would give him a nice 3000+ tpr.

  2. Anneke on 29 January 2008 19:57 PM

    Fantastisch! Haanstra was er niets bij! Ook ik (als niet schaakkenner) heb er van genoten. Veel plezier daar nog en succes.

  3. Amos Sky on 29 January 2008 21:11 PM

    Great Video!!!

  4. Vosuram on 29 January 2008 21:28 PM

    I am not a zoologist, sorry. Is it a chimpanzee?

  5. Robert on 29 January 2008 21:51 PM

    Great video, the muppets in the end! But lets get back to teh chess zoo now, haha

  6. arne on 29 January 2008 22:41 PM

    Great report!
    Just one curious thing (OT alert): to say that the Barbary macaques can’t really be native because their DNA is too similar to African monkeys is a bit like saying that you, Peter, aren’t a native European because your DNA is too silimar to African chimpansees…
    All jokes aside, the DNA studies (e.g. Modolo, Martin & Salzburger, 2005) of the Gibraltar monkeys are very interesting indeed. If I understand the literature correctly, the current Gibraltar monkeys are in any case descended from a macaque-kind of monkey living in Africa, which split up into two subgroups approximately 1,6 million years ago. The two subgroups are now very distinct; however, the Gibraltar monkeys’ DNA shows ancient traces of both subgroups, contrary to what people thought before this research.
    Anyway, what’s most interesting is that on the isolated rock of Gibraltar one would perhaps expect a genetically homogenous population of monkeys, but this is not the case. Because of mixing of the two subgroups, the monkeys are genetically very diverse, and this is one of the reasons why the question on how long the monkeys have been living on Gibraltar, is still unresolved.

  7. bob on 30 January 2008 4:37 AM

    awesome!

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