Pretty quiet this morning. I'm sure it's because everyone is holding their breath eagerly awaiting a trip report. So...I am going to give the people what they want!
I was busy until later in the evening but tried following the games as best I could via YouTube. It appeared to me board 3 was in the most trouble but shortly after I showed up he secured a draw which I thought seemed like a very good result.
The other 3 games were quite interesting:
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Board 1
So's game seemed quite drawish when I showed up and it even appeared he was repeating moves. He clearly had whatever edge there was to be had in the position. I was very glad he opted to break through and make things quite dicey, sacrificing a pawn. At that point I had absolutely no clue wtf was going on in the game. Here is the position after he decides to make something happen:
This game ended in a draw and while I was trying to pay attention to it I would be completely lying if I said I had almost any idea of wtf was going on. It seems So was definitively worse at several points after that but still managed to draw anyway. They were both playing on increment so, I mean, anything could have happened I guess. I definitely appreciated that he made it interesting when he very easily could have drawn before making that pawn break.
I really was hoping Wesley would find a win, I wanted Akobian to go down and it also looked like we'd need it. I cannot tell if he was paying much attention to the other games and just went for a draw after realizing we were about to lose on 2 boards or not.
Board 2
John Bartholomew made an interesting choice/plan earlier on in the middlegame by intentionally planting a pawn on e5. I didn't really like his position later on and he was burning a lot of clock. I think he had some interesting ideas he didn't have time to calculate and didn't go for. Until both he and his opponent were basically playing in increment and he went for what I felt was a very dicey move in this position:
Then later on in this position I felt there was a move that held, which to me looked the only move that looked viable to me to draw.
He could have played Kf7 here or after playing e7 but instead went with e7 then Kxh5 and ended up losing.
I mean, there were mistakes made near the end by both sides but I feel relatively proud that I saw that OTB while watching and the computer says it's right,
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Board 4
Our player was down a pawn, and, imo, clearly losing when I got there live. However he did seem to play some tricky stuff and had set up a nice sacrifice in this position:
The opponent didn't notice it and played Nf6, which does appear to lose. At the time I thought Nxb5 would only draw but apparently it's a win. However, our player didn't play Ke2 after black advanced his pawns, which seems to be a draw again and then in this position made what I thought was a clear mistake (and quite weird move):
He played Ne2 but it seems like b5 should hold a draw since black is forced to play Kd4 and then both sides queen, white with an extra pawn and black with the knight. The entire thing was much more complex than I'm making it out to be but I again was a bit stoked I saw the Nxb5 idea in the first place, saw Ke2 afterwards was better and then also saw b5 would save the game. I'm sure I would have lost the game in a bunch of different ways earlier, but still
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Everyone playing was very quiet, except So who had a wooden board in front of him (not uncommon) but kept moving the pieces quite loudly (as it if was a blitz game). He also was very actively sitting in his seat, with it tipping every which way. I also noticed him moving pieces on the board during his opponent's move, which I'm not sure is really kosher/allowed. He was not doing it to analyze for any sort of advantage. He was sometimes replaying the move just played, like it would help him feel the flow of the game better or something. Maybe just a random habit. He didn't write anything down the entire time, which is a good sign for the future,
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I was also impressed with how nice his "entourage" seemed which consisted of Lotis Key (of course), another woman who I'm going to guess is related to her and part of his adopted family and his g/f. I didn't realize he had a g/f but she is in pictures on his facebook of all his recent tournaments. She was cute and seemed really nice, spending the entire time coloring in an adult coloring book. Really beautiful stuff, actually. maybe it wasn't a coloring book at all and she had sketched images and then was coloring them in. I don't know but she had 234234324 colored pens spread out and was pretty into it. I think my wife would like that. Perhaps when I am a 2700 GM she can do that while watching me play in some rinky dink chess club in Midwest America.
After the game I made a point to shake everyone's hand as they all had fought very hard. I thanked Wesley for an interesting game and he thanked me for coming and watching. It seems like a normal thing to say but somehow the way he said it ended up surprising me, like he actually was thankful for it.
I talked with John for a bit and it turns out he is a lurker here! As I described my chess history a bit he actually said "oh, are you the guy with the log on 2p2?" I had to go back and check but I never sent him a link to my log so that was pretty cool! I am that one guy with a log,
. He didn't have a 2p2 name unfortunately. After he correctly guessed who I was I was hoping for some dramatic reveal that he is Rei or something like that,
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Surprising no one, John is possibly even nicer in-person than he seems in his videos. Just a humble and cool guy. He is definitely about the people, having no issue answering some questions I had and taking the time to chat even though it must be a bit weird since I knew so much about him from his videos — I'm not sure there is any way to not come off slightly stalkerish.
There is some small chance he reads this so just in case, keep up the great work John!