
Xiao Cheng, Ga. State Champion
Xiao Cheng is the new Georgia State Champion, having scored 4.5 points in the Championship section.

Joseph Moon, U2000 Winner
Joseph Moon won the U2000 section, after an exciting blitz playoff against Boris Xu (each player having 4.5 points). Joseph won the playoff after the third blitz game. This was the first year the GCA implemented a blitz playoff to resolve ties. Are we turning into FIDE? :) Chances are if you ever tie me in one of these tournaments, you’ll get the trophy since I’m not the greatest blitz player.

Chima Umeakunne, U1600 Winner
Chima Umeakunne won the U1600 section with 4.5 points.
Congratulations to all the winners. Be sure to check out the Georgia Chess magazine for in-depth coverage of the tournament.
At the GCA meeting three people were elected to positions, all running unopposed:

Scott Parker, President

Rich Mielke, Secretary
and Henry Moon, 2nd Member at Large (no picture)
Amongst other topics, the subject of introducing online tournament registration was mentioned. That gets an enthusiastic vote from me. Online registration would have saved me $12 for this tournament. Don’t put it off — embrace procrastination now.
I played in the U2000 section and scored 3 points. I was pleased since I haven’t played in tournaments since last September. I also got to play my new 1.d4 repertoire with White (I’ve never opened with 1.d4 before) three times, and gathered a lot of useful lessons.
Here’s some highlights:

Jones - Kilgore, 2006
Black to Move
White just reacted to the threat on g2 with Re3, intending threats down the g-file. Was this a strong move? Solution

Kilgore - Hedger, 2006
White to Move
White is a pawn up and has worked hard to damage Black’s pawn structure on both sides of the board, followed by trading down to a king and pawn endgame. How does White now go on to win the game? Solution

Bedell - Kilgore, 2006
Black to Move
White has just played Qc1, with ideas of sacrificing on h6. Should Black allow this? Solution
Now that the curse of Emory is broken, will you be playing at the Emory Castle?
Comment by Steve — May 10, 2006 @ 2:53 pm
Yes I believe I will. It’s hard to pass up that tournament anyway, with all the GMs there. Those kids are deadly after a week of solid chess training though.
Comment by Chris — May 10, 2006 @ 4:11 pm
Hi, Chris
I had to come here to get the results. Congratulations. See you Sunday after next.
Mom
Comment by Mom — May 11, 2006 @ 11:19 am
Chris, call your mother.
:)
Comment by Blue Devil Knight — May 16, 2006 @ 6:34 pm
Very nice blog you got here! I just joined the Knights and wanted to say hi. I also have a question: Where do you get those sweet diagrams?
Comment by Samuraipawn — September 7, 2006 @ 5:49 pm
Thanks! Welcome to the Knights and good luck with your chess. The diagrams are screen captures from Chessbase. The solutions are also output from Chessbase as HTML/Javascript. You can use any chess program for the diagrams. Just "PrintScreen", open up your favorite bitmap image editor, paste the captured screen, crop it, and save to a file.
Comment by Chris — September 8, 2006 @ 7:53 am
Eh, whats a bitmap image editor!?
Comment by Samuraipawn — September 8, 2006 @ 10:45 am
If you are running in Windows, a free one called Paintbrush comes with it. Bitmap images are essentially all the pictures you see on your machine and on the web. These files have extensions such as .jpg, .bmp, .gif, and so on. Programs such as Paintbrush (and Photoshop) allow you to edit these pictures.
Comment by Chris — September 8, 2006 @ 11:28 am