Tag: Chess

  • The Year 2023 in sports (II)

    The Year 2023 in sports (II)


    Romanian
    athletes in 2023 have been shifting their focus to securing their qualification
    to the Paris Olympics.


    We recall that in June 2023, at the European Games in
    Krakow, Romania won 17 medals, of which 6 were gold, 6 silver and 5 bronze.


    In July 2023, Monica Niculescu
    and Japan’s Eri Hozumi advanced to the women’s’ doubles final as part of the
    WTA tennis tournament in Bad Homburg, where they sustained a nil-6, 6-7 defeat by Lidia Morozova of the Belarus and Ingrid
    Gamarra Martins of Brazil.


    For the second consecutive year, Transylvanian
    team Sepsi Sfântu Gheorghe won Romania’s Supercup in football. In the final hosted
    by a stadium in Ploiesti, Sepsi defeated holders Farul Constanța 1-nil.


    Romanian climber Horia Colibășanu succeeded
    yet another great performance. Horia reached the top of Broad Peak of the Karakorum
    massif, on the Pakistani-Chinese border, at a height of 8, 051 meters. It was
    the 10th over-8,000 meters peak Horia Colibasanu has climbed in his
    career.


    Also in July, Ana Bogdan won the WTA 125 tennis
    tournament in Iasi, an event with 100, 000 Euro in prize money all told. In the
    final, Bogdan defeated a fellow Romanian, Irina Begu, 6-2, 6-3, winning the
    tournament in Iasi for the second year running. Wrapping up the month of July
    were the World Swimming Championships in Japan’s Fukukoa. In high-diving, Constantin
    Popovici won gold, while Cătălin Preda, silver.


    In August 2023, tennis
    player Monica Niculescu proved she deserved to be among the world’s top women’s
    doubles tennis players. Pairing up with Alexa Guarachi
    of Chile, Monica reached as far as the final of the WTA 500 tournament in Washington,
    an event with 780,000 USD up for grabs. In the final, Monica and Alexa were
    defeated by the German-Russian pair made of Laura Siegemund and Vera Zvonareva,
    6-4, 6-4.


    As part of the World Athletics Championships
    in Budapest, Alina Rotaru-Kottmann won the bronze medal in the long-jump event,
    with a jump of 6 meters and 88 de centimeters. The performance was the career-best
    of Alina, who is signed up by Steaua Bucharest sports club. At the Canoe Sprint World
    Championships in Duisburg, also in August, Catalin Chirila won gold in the men’s
    C1 500m race, then Catalin went on to win silver the 1,000m race, an Olympic event.
    Catalin Chirila also secured his qualification
    to the 2024 edition of the Olympic Games in Paris.




    In men’s double canoe,
    Oleg Nuță and Ilie Sprincean won bronze in the 1, 000m race. The two came in
    6th in the 500m race, an Olympic event, booking their tickets for Paris 2024.




    In September, Sorana Cîrstea advanced to
    the quarterfinals of the US Open. However, Sorana was unable to reach the
    semifinals since she sustained a defeat by Czech challenger Karolína Muchová, 6-nil,
    6-3. Ana Bogdan won the WTA 125 tournament in
    Parma, an event with 100,000 Euro in prize money. 2nd-seeded Bogdan
    defeated top-seeded challenger, Slovakia’s Anna
    Karolina Schmiedlova, 7-5, 6-1.




    At the World Canoe Championship in
    Belgrade, Romania came in 4th in the nations’ competition, after The
    Netherlands, Great Britain and Italy. Ancuta Bodnar and Simona Radiș won gold
    in the women’s pair. Also gold won the coxed eight crew. A silver medal went to
    the women’s coxless four. A bronze medal went to the women’s double oars crew.
    Also bronze went to the women’s lightweight double sculls crew.




    In the European Table Tennis Championship
    in Malmoe, Sweden, Romania’s women’s team walked away with silver. In the final
    Germany outclassed Romania, 3-nil.


    Attention-grabbing
    this past fall was the World Rugby Cup in France. Romania lost all four games
    it played. In the debut fixture, Romanian was trounced by Ireland, 82 – 8. South Africa also defeated Romania 76-nil. Romania also
    lost to Scotland, nil-84. The only game where the Romanian national team
    mattered was the match against Tonga, where Romania lost, 24- 45.


    In October 2023, Romania’s women’s gymnastics team reclaimed its place among
    the Olympic-level teams. At the World Championships in Antwerp, Belgium, the
    team secured their qualification to the Paris Olympics. In the individual
    event, best-placed was Sabrina Maneca – Voinea, who
    came in 4th in the floor finals.


    The year’s most important tennis tournament
    held in Romania, the women’s WTA 250 Transylvania Open, an event with 260,000
    USD in prize money was held in Cluj-Napoca.


    Of the Romanians,
    best-placed was Elena Gabriela Ruse who advanced to the final, where she
    sustained a 6-3, 6-4 defeat by Tamara Korpatsch of Germany.


    In November 2023,
    Romania’s women’s tennis team grabbed a 4-nil away win against Serbia. The
    confrontation counted towards Billie Jean King Cup’s playoffs.


    In football, the
    most notable feat was the national team’s qualification to EURO 2024. The national squad succeeded a no-defeat record in Group I.
    In the last fixture, Romanian grabbed a 1-nil win against Switzerland, a team
    that also secured its qualification on the runner-up position. Romania’s national
    team plays in the European Championship’s final tournament for the sixth time.
    We recall Romania had also participated in the competition in 1984, 1996, 2000,
    2008 and 2016.


    Over November 9
    and December 14, the IHF World Women’s Handball Championship was jointly hosted by Denmark,
    Norway and Sweden. In Denmark’s
    Herning, France defeated Norway in the final, 31 to 28. Romania’s national
    squad came in12th, thus failing to secure its participation to the 2024 edition
    of the Olympic Games.

    In chess, Grand master Bogdan Deac walked away with
    bronze at the European Blitz Chess Championship in Zagreb. Deac got 9 points in 11 matches, being outclassed by Russian Grand master, 23-year-old
    Alexey Sarana, who competes for Serbia and who won the European title with 9.5
    points, Silver went to Armenian Grand Master Haik Martirosyan, also with 9 points.

  • Sports Roundup

    Sports Roundup




    The
    Romanian tennis player Sorana Cîrstea won the WTA 100 held in Reus, Spain. On
    Sunday she defeated Elizabeth Mandlik (US) 6-1, 4-6, 7-6. For this achievement,
    Sorana was awarded EUR 13,000 and 160 WTA points. Another performance for
    Romanian tennis players last week was Gabriela Ruse’s qualifying into the
    semi-finals of the doubles competition of the WTA 1000 tournament in Madrid, together
    with Marta Kostiuk (Ukraine). The two athletes were defeated by seeds no. 1 Jessica
    Pegula / Coco Gauff (US), 7-5, 7-6 in the match for the final. Ruse and Kostiuk
    received 390 WTA points.




    Both teams
    representing Romania at the women’s handball Champions League left the
    competition after the quarter-finals. On Saturday, Rapid Bucharest lost to Vipers
    Kristiansand 40 – 31 in Norway, after Vipers had already won the first leg of
    the match, in Bucharest, 31-25. On Sunday, Team Esbjerg, of Denmark, beat CSM
    Bucharest, 33-31, in the Romanian capital city, after a previous 32-28 win at
    home. The Hungarian teams Győr and Ferencváros are the other 2 teams qualified
    into the final tournament of the Champions League, scheduled for June in
    Budapest.




    This
    weekend saw the start of the largest chess tournament hosted by Bucharest:
    Superbet Chess Classic Romania. Scores of the world’s top chess players are
    taking part. Romania is represented by Bogdan Deac and Richard Rapport. After 2
    rounds, 3 players are top of the tables with 1.5 points: Wesley So (US), rusul Ian
    Nepomniachtchi (Russia) and Richard Rapport. The tournament offers USD 350,000
    in total prize money and is the first round of the 2023 Grand Chess Tour.




    Matches
    were played over the weekend counting for the 7th leg of the play-off
    / play-out round of the Romanian football SuperLeague. In the play-out, on
    Friday FC Voluntari Mioveni 1-0, and Petrolul defeated Chindia Târgovişte, 2-1.
    On Saturday, FC Botoşani drew against Universitatea Clu, 0-0, with the last two
    matches, pitting Hermannstadt against FC U Craiova and FC Argeş against UTA
    Arad, scheduled for Monday.




    In the
    play-offs, on Saturday Farul Constanţa thrashed Rapid Bucharest, 7-2, while on
    Sunday CFR Cluj and Universitatea Craiova drew, 1-1. In the last match of this
    leg, FCSB are facing Sepsi Sfântu Gheorghe in Bucharest on Monday. Top of the
    standings so far are Farul Constanta, with 46 points, followed by FCSB (40). (AMP)

  • Sports Roundup

    Sports Roundup




    The
    Romanian tennis player Sorana Cîrstea won the WTA 100 held in Reus, Spain. On
    Sunday she defeated Elizabeth Mandlik (US) 6-1, 4-6, 7-6. For this achievement,
    Sorana was awarded EUR 13,000 and 160 WTA points. Another performance for
    Romanian tennis players last week was Gabriela Ruse’s qualifying into the
    semi-finals of the doubles competition of the WTA 1000 tournament in Madrid, together
    with Marta Kostiuk (Ukraine). The two athletes were defeated by seeds no. 1 Jessica
    Pegula / Coco Gauff (US), 7-5, 7-6 in the match for the final. Ruse and Kostiuk
    received 390 WTA points.




    Both teams
    representing Romania at the women’s handball Champions League left the
    competition after the quarter-finals. On Saturday, Rapid Bucharest lost to Vipers
    Kristiansand 40 – 31 in Norway, after Vipers had already won the first leg of
    the match, in Bucharest, 31-25. On Sunday, Team Esbjerg, of Denmark, beat CSM
    Bucharest, 33-31, in the Romanian capital city, after a previous 32-28 win at
    home. The Hungarian teams Győr and Ferencváros are the other 2 teams qualified
    into the final tournament of the Champions League, scheduled for June in
    Budapest.




    This
    weekend saw the start of the largest chess tournament hosted by Bucharest:
    Superbet Chess Classic Romania. Scores of the world’s top chess players are
    taking part. Romania is represented by Bogdan Deac and Richard Rapport. After 2
    rounds, 3 players are top of the tables with 1.5 points: Wesley So (US), rusul Ian
    Nepomniachtchi (Russia) and Richard Rapport. The tournament offers USD 350,000
    in total prize money and is the first round of the 2023 Grand Chess Tour.




    Matches
    were played over the weekend counting for the 7th leg of the play-off
    / play-out round of the Romanian football SuperLeague. In the play-out, on
    Friday FC Voluntari Mioveni 1-0, and Petrolul defeated Chindia Târgovişte, 2-1.
    On Saturday, FC Botoşani drew against Universitatea Clu, 0-0, with the last two
    matches, pitting Hermannstadt against FC U Craiova and FC Argeş against UTA
    Arad, scheduled for Monday.




    In the
    play-offs, on Saturday Farul Constanţa thrashed Rapid Bucharest, 7-2, while on
    Sunday CFR Cluj and Universitatea Craiova drew, 1-1. In the last match of this
    leg, FCSB are facing Sepsi Sfântu Gheorghe in Bucharest on Monday. Top of the
    standings so far are Farul Constanta, with 46 points, followed by FCSB (40). (AMP)

  • Radio Romania International Sports club

    Radio Romania International Sports club

    Grand master Kyrill Shevchenko, representing Romania, walked away with silver at the European Individual Chess Championship held in Serbia’s Vrnjacka Banja, over March 2nd and the 14th. After 11 rounds played stepping on a step of the podium were Grand masters Alexey Sarana (a Russian chess-player who entered the competition under the flag of the International Chess federation, FIDE), Kyrill Shevchenko (Romania) and Daniel Dardha (Belgium). The three were awarded 8.5 points each, yet they stepped onto a different step of the podium, according to the Bucholtz score, which is calculated by adding the raw scores of each of the opponents they played and multiplying this total by the player’s raw score. Therefore, Kyrill Shevchenko’s success is all the more noteworthy, since the 23rd edition of the European Individual Chess Championship held in the resort of Vrnjacka Banja brought together over 490 chess players of 40 federations affiliated to the European Chess Union. Chess players from Russia, whose chess federation has been suspended because of Russia’s aggression over Ukraine, were allowed to play under the neutral flag of the International Chess Federation.



    Kyrill Shevchenko has recently got transferred on Romania’s list of competitors. We recall that in 2021 Shevchenko won the gold medal with the team of Ukraine, at the European Teams Chess Championship.



    Kyrill Shevchenko was born on September 22nd, 2002 in Kyiv and is rated as one of wonder kids of chess. Shevchenko was awarded the international Grand master title when he was 15 years, 9 months and 23 days old, thus earning a place among the youngest Grand masters in the history of chess. Having been transferred to Romania’s list, Shevchenko has recently played in Romania’s Individual Chess Championship, becoming a national title holder. Kyrill Shevchenko became a European vice-champion and the welcoming he enjoyed when her returned to Bucharest was very special. Kyrill Shevchenko stated that he met lot of wonderful people. He worked with the national team’s head-coach, Bosnian-born Belgium Grand master Ivan Sokolov something he got thrilled with and which fueled confidence in him. Kyrill went on to say you had no choice other than having a bracing start, as in such tournaments, with almost 500 players competing, you need to be able to win 5, 6 matches in a row, so you can relax a bit afterwards and then proceed again, in a bid to win the top position. Kyril admitted to the fact that for him, the start was rather sluggish, yet in the long run he won 4 matches, which placed him on a par with the first place. Kyrill went on to say his biggest dream was to reach his full potential. Kyrill Shevchenko’s remarks have been included in a message posted by the Romanian Chess Federation on its site.



    Kirill Shevchenko is 70th-placed according to the ELO rating system of the world’s best chess players. In the world’s top 100 players, Romania has two other chess players, Richard Rapport, who is 12th-placed, and 39th-placed Bogdan Deac. 2005 was the year when a Romanian last won the European title. Back then Dieter Nisipeanu was the winner of the title, at the edition held in the Polish capital Warsaw. (EN)


  • Radio Romania International Sports club

    Radio Romania International Sports club

    Grand master Kyrill Shevchenko, representing Romania, walked away with silver at the European Individual Chess Championship held in Serbia’s Vrnjacka Banja, over March 2nd and the 14th. After 11 rounds played stepping on a step of the podium were Grand masters Alexey Sarana (a Russian chess-player who entered the competition under the flag of the International Chess federation, FIDE), Kyrill Shevchenko (Romania) and Daniel Dardha (Belgium). The three were awarded 8.5 points each, yet they stepped onto a different step of the podium, according to the Bucholtz score, which is calculated by adding the raw scores of each of the opponents they played and multiplying this total by the player’s raw score. Therefore, Kyrill Shevchenko’s success is all the more noteworthy, since the 23rd edition of the European Individual Chess Championship held in the resort of Vrnjacka Banja brought together over 490 chess players of 40 federations affiliated to the European Chess Union. Chess players from Russia, whose chess federation has been suspended because of Russia’s aggression over Ukraine, were allowed to play under the neutral flag of the International Chess Federation.



    Kyrill Shevchenko has recently got transferred on Romania’s list of competitors. We recall that in 2021 Shevchenko won the gold medal with the team of Ukraine, at the European Teams Chess Championship.



    Kyrill Shevchenko was born on September 22nd, 2002 in Kyiv and is rated as one of wonder kids of chess. Shevchenko was awarded the international Grand master title when he was 15 years, 9 months and 23 days old, thus earning a place among the youngest Grand masters in the history of chess. Having been transferred to Romania’s list, Shevchenko has recently played in Romania’s Individual Chess Championship, becoming a national title holder. Kyrill Shevchenko became a European vice-champion and the welcoming he enjoyed when her returned to Bucharest was very special. Kyrill Shevchenko stated that he met lot of wonderful people. He worked with the national team’s head-coach, Bosnian-born Belgium Grand master Ivan Sokolov something he got thrilled with and which fueled confidence in him. Kyrill went on to say you had no choice other than having a bracing start, as in such tournaments, with almost 500 players competing, you need to be able to win 5, 6 matches in a row, so you can relax a bit afterwards and then proceed again, in a bid to win the top position. Kyril admitted to the fact that for him, the start was rather sluggish, yet in the long run he won 4 matches, which placed him on a par with the first place. Kyrill went on to say his biggest dream was to reach his full potential. Kyrill Shevchenko’s remarks have been included in a message posted by the Romanian Chess Federation on its site.



    Kirill Shevchenko is 70th-placed according to the ELO rating system of the world’s best chess players. In the world’s top 100 players, Romania has two other chess players, Richard Rapport, who is 12th-placed, and 39th-placed Bogdan Deac. 2005 was the year when a Romanian last won the European title. Back then Dieter Nisipeanu was the winner of the title, at the edition held in the Polish capital Warsaw. (EN)


  • Sports Flash

    Sports Flash

    The Romanian boxer Lăcrămioara Perijoc qualified on Wednesday to the final of the 54 kg category of the World Womens Boxing Championships in Istanbul. In the semifinal, the Romanian defeated Dina Jolaman, from Kazakhstan, score 4-1 on points. Perijoc can thus equal the performance of her coach, Mihaela Cijevschi Lăcătuş, who won Romanias first world title in womens boxing in 2005, in Podolsk, Russia. In the final scheduled for Friday, Lăcrămioara Perijoc will be up against Hatice Akbas, from Turkey. This years European youth champion in the 52 kg category, the Turkish athlete defeated Thai Preedakamon Tintabthai 5-0 in the semifinals.



    Romania lined up a team of five athletes at the start of the competition, but Steluţa Duţă, in the 48 kg category, Eugenia Anghel, in the 50 kg category Claudia Nechita, in the 57 kg category, and Alexandra Petcu, in the 81 kg category have already left the tournament. The womens world championships in Istanbul have prizes up for grabs worth 2.4 million dollars, with the gold medalist receiving 100,000 dollars, the silver medalist 50,000 dollars and the bronze medalist 25,000 dollars.



    We stay in the field of boxing and remind you that Romania will be represented by three athletes in the 2022 edition of the European Championships for seniors, which start on Monday in the Armenian capital, Yerevan. Andrei Paul Arădoaie will compete in the 86 kg category, Răzvan Cristian Filip in the 92 kg category, and Constantin Emanuel Mican in the + 92 kg category. All three come from Dinamo Bucharest and go to the European championship together with coach Dumitru Dorobanţu. The competition ends on May 31.



    Now news from tennis. In the quarterfinals of the doubles competition of the WTA 250 tennis tournament in Strasbourg, with total prizes of 200 thousand Euros, the Romanian-Ukrainian pair Raluca Olaru/Nadia Kicenok was defeated by the Czech-Indian couple Lucie Hradecka/Sania Mirza 6-3, 7-6. Also on Wednesday, Irina Bara and Mihaela Buzărnescu managed to advance to the last round of the qualifications on the main singles table of the Roland Garros Grand Slam tournament. Bara defeated 5-7, 6-4, 6-3 the French player Selena Janicijevic, and Buzărnescu defeated Swiss Susan Bandecchi, 6-3, 6-3.



    Next, news from chess. Warsaw, Poland, is hosting these days the second stage of the Grand Chess Tour 2022: Superbet Rapid & Blitz Poland. The competition has prizes worth 175 thousand dollars. Romania will be represented by the young international master David Gavrilescu, aged 17. The winner of the first prize will receive 40 thousand dollars. (LS)

  • Sports Flash

    Sports Flash

    The Romanian boxer Lăcrămioara Perijoc qualified on Wednesday to the final of the 54 kg category of the World Womens Boxing Championships in Istanbul. In the semifinal, the Romanian defeated Dina Jolaman, from Kazakhstan, score 4-1 on points. Perijoc can thus equal the performance of her coach, Mihaela Cijevschi Lăcătuş, who won Romanias first world title in womens boxing in 2005, in Podolsk, Russia. In the final scheduled for Friday, Lăcrămioara Perijoc will be up against Hatice Akbas, from Turkey. This years European youth champion in the 52 kg category, the Turkish athlete defeated Thai Preedakamon Tintabthai 5-0 in the semifinals.



    Romania lined up a team of five athletes at the start of the competition, but Steluţa Duţă, in the 48 kg category, Eugenia Anghel, in the 50 kg category Claudia Nechita, in the 57 kg category, and Alexandra Petcu, in the 81 kg category have already left the tournament. The womens world championships in Istanbul have prizes up for grabs worth 2.4 million dollars, with the gold medalist receiving 100,000 dollars, the silver medalist 50,000 dollars and the bronze medalist 25,000 dollars.



    We stay in the field of boxing and remind you that Romania will be represented by three athletes in the 2022 edition of the European Championships for seniors, which start on Monday in the Armenian capital, Yerevan. Andrei Paul Arădoaie will compete in the 86 kg category, Răzvan Cristian Filip in the 92 kg category, and Constantin Emanuel Mican in the + 92 kg category. All three come from Dinamo Bucharest and go to the European championship together with coach Dumitru Dorobanţu. The competition ends on May 31.



    Now news from tennis. In the quarterfinals of the doubles competition of the WTA 250 tennis tournament in Strasbourg, with total prizes of 200 thousand Euros, the Romanian-Ukrainian pair Raluca Olaru/Nadia Kicenok was defeated by the Czech-Indian couple Lucie Hradecka/Sania Mirza 6-3, 7-6. Also on Wednesday, Irina Bara and Mihaela Buzărnescu managed to advance to the last round of the qualifications on the main singles table of the Roland Garros Grand Slam tournament. Bara defeated 5-7, 6-4, 6-3 the French player Selena Janicijevic, and Buzărnescu defeated Swiss Susan Bandecchi, 6-3, 6-3.



    Next, news from chess. Warsaw, Poland, is hosting these days the second stage of the Grand Chess Tour 2022: Superbet Rapid & Blitz Poland. The competition has prizes worth 175 thousand dollars. Romania will be represented by the young international master David Gavrilescu, aged 17. The winner of the first prize will receive 40 thousand dollars. (LS)

  • Athlete of the Week

    Athlete of the Week

    Bucharest has been, for a few a few days, the international capital of chess. Nine of the worlds top 12 players are currently in Romanias capital city to participate in the SuperBet Chess Classic, the first leg of the Grant Chess Tour circuit. The chess tournament was established in 2015 and was held every year ever since, with the exception of 2020, when it was cancelled due to the pandemic. The circuit is made up of a number of classical chess tournaments, rapid chess and blitz. Chess legend Garry Kasparov is the one who inspired the setting up of the Grand Chess Tour and who contributed to the development of this circuit of tournaments which, starting 2019, also includes Romania. This explains the visit to Bucharest of the former world champion, who took part in the opening ceremony and gave the start of the first round.



    Alongside the first nine players in top 12, Romanias best player, GM Bogdan Deac, aged 20, is also participating, after receiving a wild card. In the first round, Deac played against Russian Ian Nepomniașci and in the second one against the Armenian-born American Evon Aronian. Both matches ended in a draw. Deac won the match against Hungarian Richard Rapport, while the fourth round, against world no. 3, the Iranian Alireza Firouzja, also ended in a draw. Thus, Bogdan Deac collected 3 points and ranks second after the American Wesley So and on the same place with Levon Aronian and the French Vachier-Lagrave.



    Bogdan Deac was born on October 8, 2001 in Ramnicu Vâlcea and currently ranks 59th in the world. He became a GM at the age of 14 years , 7 months and 27 days, setting a world record for the youngest GM. He is the player of CS Politehnica Iași. In September 2016, at the Chess Olympiad in Baku, Azerbaijan, Bogdan Deac played for Romania and had a very good result — 7 points out of 10. His only defeat was in the match against the Georgian GM Levan Pantsulaia. (EE)

  • Athlete of the Week

    Athlete of the Week

    Bucharest has been, for a few a few days, the international capital of chess. Nine of the worlds top 12 players are currently in Romanias capital city to participate in the SuperBet Chess Classic, the first leg of the Grant Chess Tour circuit. The chess tournament was established in 2015 and was held every year ever since, with the exception of 2020, when it was cancelled due to the pandemic. The circuit is made up of a number of classical chess tournaments, rapid chess and blitz. Chess legend Garry Kasparov is the one who inspired the setting up of the Grand Chess Tour and who contributed to the development of this circuit of tournaments which, starting 2019, also includes Romania. This explains the visit to Bucharest of the former world champion, who took part in the opening ceremony and gave the start of the first round.



    Alongside the first nine players in top 12, Romanias best player, GM Bogdan Deac, aged 20, is also participating, after receiving a wild card. In the first round, Deac played against Russian Ian Nepomniașci and in the second one against the Armenian-born American Evon Aronian. Both matches ended in a draw. Deac won the match against Hungarian Richard Rapport, while the fourth round, against world no. 3, the Iranian Alireza Firouzja, also ended in a draw. Thus, Bogdan Deac collected 3 points and ranks second after the American Wesley So and on the same place with Levon Aronian and the French Vachier-Lagrave.



    Bogdan Deac was born on October 8, 2001 in Ramnicu Vâlcea and currently ranks 59th in the world. He became a GM at the age of 14 years , 7 months and 27 days, setting a world record for the youngest GM. He is the player of CS Politehnica Iași. In September 2016, at the Chess Olympiad in Baku, Azerbaijan, Bogdan Deac played for Romania and had a very good result — 7 points out of 10. His only defeat was in the match against the Georgian GM Levan Pantsulaia. (EE)

  • Sports Roundup

    Sports Roundup

    The Romanian women’s handball champion CSM Bucharest was eliminated in the quarterfinals of the Champions League by Team Esbjerg of Denmark. The Romanians needed a victory by two goals, to advance. In the first match, held in Bucharest, the Scandinavians won 26-25. Sunday s match ended in a draw, each side scoring 27 goals. Esbjerg thus qualified for the Final Four which will be played in Budapest.



    Superbet Chess Classic, the first stage of the Grand Chess Tour circuit, brought together in Bucharest nine of the best 12 chess players in the world. In addition to the nine, Bogdan Deac, aged 20, number 1 in Romania, also participates in this tournament. He is the beneficiary of a wild card, as in last year’s edition. In the third round, Deac defeated Richard Rapport, world number 5. After 4 rounds, the American Wesley So, with 3 points ranks first, followed by Maxime Vachier – Lagrave (France), Bogdan Deac of Romania and Levon Aronian (United States), each with 2.5 points. The winner will be decided based on the number of points won by each participant. The total prizes for the Bucharest stage stand at 350,000 dollars.



    The finals of the King’s and Queen’s Oina Cup were held on Saturday morning on the Triumphal Arch stadium in Bucharest. Progresul Băilești and Dacia Mioveni played in the Queen’s Cup, Progresul winning the match 5-2. Frontiera Tomis Constanța and Biruinta Gherăești of Neamț County met in the King’s Cup. Constanta, the defending champions, won 16-12. The medals were handed over by Her Majesty Margareta, the Custodian of the Romanian Crown.



    Last weekend, the eighth round of the Romanian football First League was played, the play-off / play-out phase. In the playoffs, on Saturday, Farul Constanţa – FC Voluntari ended the match in a draw, 1-1, while FC Argeş was defeated by CFR Cluj 0-6. On Sunday, in Craiova, FCSB won the match against Universitatea Craiova, 1-0. CFR Cluj is top of the tables with 54 points, followed by FCSB with 52 points and Universitatea Craiova with 45 points. (EE)


  • Sports Roundup

    Sports Roundup

    The Romanian women’s handball champion CSM Bucharest was eliminated in the quarterfinals of the Champions League by Team Esbjerg of Denmark. The Romanians needed a victory by two goals, to advance. In the first match, held in Bucharest, the Scandinavians won 26-25. Sunday s match ended in a draw, each side scoring 27 goals. Esbjerg thus qualified for the Final Four which will be played in Budapest.



    Superbet Chess Classic, the first stage of the Grand Chess Tour circuit, brought together in Bucharest nine of the best 12 chess players in the world. In addition to the nine, Bogdan Deac, aged 20, number 1 in Romania, also participates in this tournament. He is the beneficiary of a wild card, as in last year’s edition. In the third round, Deac defeated Richard Rapport, world number 5. After 4 rounds, the American Wesley So, with 3 points ranks first, followed by Maxime Vachier – Lagrave (France), Bogdan Deac of Romania and Levon Aronian (United States), each with 2.5 points. The winner will be decided based on the number of points won by each participant. The total prizes for the Bucharest stage stand at 350,000 dollars.



    The finals of the King’s and Queen’s Oina Cup were held on Saturday morning on the Triumphal Arch stadium in Bucharest. Progresul Băilești and Dacia Mioveni played in the Queen’s Cup, Progresul winning the match 5-2. Frontiera Tomis Constanța and Biruinta Gherăești of Neamț County met in the King’s Cup. Constanta, the defending champions, won 16-12. The medals were handed over by Her Majesty Margareta, the Custodian of the Romanian Crown.



    Last weekend, the eighth round of the Romanian football First League was played, the play-off / play-out phase. In the playoffs, on Saturday, Farul Constanţa – FC Voluntari ended the match in a draw, 1-1, while FC Argeş was defeated by CFR Cluj 0-6. On Sunday, in Craiova, FCSB won the match against Universitatea Craiova, 1-0. CFR Cluj is top of the tables with 54 points, followed by FCSB with 52 points and Universitatea Craiova with 45 points. (EE)


  • Collection chess pieces

    Collection chess pieces


    Almost any
    object can become a collection item for a passionate collector. In fact, there are as many collections as
    there are collectors. The first collectors were, naturally, people who could
    afford it: sovereigns, noble men, officers, tradesmen, explorers, clerics, and
    the first collections would usually include art objects and jewelry. Today, some
    of the the biggest collectors are museums around the world, which have
    inherited, bought or have been donated the collections they house today.


    Some of the
    most popular collection items are chess pieces. The game of chess has long been
    one of the most respected games, described as a sport for the mind but used also
    as a metaphor to describe geostrategic, political and economic confrontations.
    So, check players are the big powers that rule the world, while the smaller
    countries are pieces on the board, moved backwards and forwards depending on
    the big players’ interests.


    From staging
    chess games with people, animals and props at kings’ courts to virtual
    realities created by computers, chess is one of the most powerful images of
    confrontation. Beyond any metaphor, the objects used in the game of chess, the
    pieces and the two-colored board, which can be collected, can vary from the
    cheapest and most banal, to the most expensive and exclusivist, genuine works
    of art, accessible only to those who can afford them.


    Florin Gheorghiu is an international chess master, one of the biggest
    Romanian chess players. One of his greatest performances is the draw in direct
    games with the great Bobby Fisher, considered by many the best chess player in
    history. We asked Florin Gheorghiu about the most impressive chess boards he’s
    seen in his career.


    Usually, the most beautiful and most valuable pieces are those that
    collectors keep in their homes, be they politicians, businesspeople, actors,
    directors, officers or regular people. There are pieces made of ivory, silver,
    sometimes even gold. Some of them are diamonds. But these are not pieces to
    play with in a competition. They are there to account for something
    representative from a personal or historical point of view. The collector shows
    their collection to friends or wants to take advantage of the prices that
    change on the international market and therefore gain something out of it. So,
    it has nothing to do with chess playing as a competition.


    There is evidence of important collections in the Romanian territories
    starting with the 19th century. One of the biggest collectors was
    engineer Constantin Orghidan (1874-1944), the one who created an impressive
    collection of coins, jewelry, documents and rare books. Another passionate
    collector was radiologist George Severeanu (1879-1939). He was passionate about
    history, and he collected coins and other artefacts which he donated to the
    Bucharest municipality. As regards chess pieces, they were mainly owned by
    nobility, who would order them from abroad. Collectors today have pieces that
    go back to the 18 hundred. They were sculpted in lacquered wood or ivory, others
    were cast in metal, all genuine objects of art.


    Usually, collectors own chess pieces, as the chess boards are rather
    rare. The game of chess became officially a sports discipline in 1886, when the
    first world championship was documented. 37 years before that, though, the
    English journalist Nathaniel Cooke created standard pieces for the game and the
    producer of sports gear, Jaques of London, bought the manufacturing rights.
    However, history would brand Cooke’s pieces as Staunton, after the name of the
    great chess master who appreciated Cooke’s pieces describing them as easily identifiable,
    very stable and nice looking. They say that the first sets of Staunton originals
    were numbered and signed by the master himself. Florin Gheorghiu told us that
    he too owns a set of Staunton pieces, a gift from the former Cuban leader Fidel
    Castro:


    I have never played with collection pieces, but for us,
    professional chess players, the most important have always been the Staunton
    chess boards. They are largely used in international competitions and world
    championships. I have a set myself, at home, which I received from Fidel Castro
    in 1966. He was probably impressed by my victory against Bobby Fisher, in
    Havana, and turned the event into a political achievement. So, he made me this
    surprise, to honour what, to him, was a victory of communism against
    capitalism. (MI)

  • Stories of Romanian Sports – Chess player Ion Iliescu

    Stories of Romanian Sports – Chess player Ion Iliescu

    Major historic
    events can be life-changing in the life of an athlete. Such is the case of
    Romanian-born chess player Juan Iliescu, whose contribution to Argentinian
    chess has been most notable. Born Ion Traian Iliescu on April 18, 1898 in
    Braila, Ion Iliescu was a seaman in the Romanian navy when Romania entered the
    war in 1916 on the side of the Entente. He was taken prisoner by the German
    army, and was released at the end of the war, after 18 months of captivity in
    Havelberg, Germany. Upon his release he decided to roam the world. He reached
    Paris, a city his French mother had told him stories about, then crossed
    Antwerp, Brussels and Ostend. In 1921 he crossed the Atlantic, reaching Buenos
    Aires, Argentina. He could neither speak Spanish, nor play chess, a sport
    widely spread amongst inmates.


    He did learn to
    play it at Café Marzotto in Buenos Aires, from two players with diverging
    playstyles. Over the next two years he managed to beat all players that
    frequented the venues. He started playing in professional tournaments in 1924,
    and in 1928 he won his first major competition, under his Hispanicized name,
    Juano Iliesco. He then starting coaching chess players at San Lorenzo de
    Almagro, a local sports club. He is widely acknowledged for his notable
    contribution to the development of chess in Argentina. This is noted down in
    the book Lights and shadows of Argentinian chess (Luces y sombras del ajedrez
    argentine), published in 2014. In 1939 Argentina was the first country outside
    Europe to host the chess Olympiad. That year Juan Iliesco won the Argentinian
    chess championship, but he was denied the title, as he wasn’t an Argentinian
    national. When rules changed, Juan Iliesco won and received the champion’s
    title in 1943. A year later he missed another title, losing the playoff against
    Hector Rossetto.


    He defeated all
    of Argentina’s top-notch players, including those who settled there during the
    war, the most famous of whom is Miguel Najdorf, one of the best chess players
    in the world in the late ’50s. Iliesco defeated Najdorf at the tournament held
    in Mar del Plata in 1941. Najdorf at the time was the Olympic vice-champion
    representing Poland. Juan Iliesco went on to become a chess sports commentator,
    featuring as a contributor to El Dia and La Plata sports magazines in the
    1960s. He passed away on February 2, 1968 in Mar del Plata, where he spent the
    last years of his life.


    (Translated by V. Palcu)



  • July 18, 2018 UPDATE

    July 18, 2018 UPDATE

    CCR — The Constitutional Court of Romania on Wednesday postponed for September 18 discussing the notification made by President Klaus Iohannis in relation to modifying and amending the law on the organization and functioning of the Superior Council of Magistracy. President Iohannis claims that Parliament rejected, without any motivation, his request for re-examination of the provisions related to the functioning of the Superior Council of Magistracy, in which he showed that the role of the president as a guarantor of the independence of the judiciary and the functioning of the Judicial Inspection was affected. Also on Wednesday the Constitutional Court rejected the notification of the opposition Liberal Party and Save Romania Union on the modifications to the status of judges and prosecutors and postponed for September 25 debating the notifications of the two parties and of the Supreme Court related to the draft law modifying the criminal procedure code and the law on judicial organization. In another development, the Constitutional Court admitted Wednesday the notifications made by President Iohannis, and the opposition parties: the Liberal Party, Save Romania Union and the People’s Movement Party in relation to the law on the setting up of the Sovereign Fund for Development and Investments. The president of the Court Valer Dorneanu pointed out that the law was declared unconstitutional because the fund should not have been set up by a law but through a government decision. The Constitutional Court of Romania also admitted the notification regarding the right to free movement and stay of same sex spouses in the spirit of the European Court of Justice.



    Legal cooperation — The Romanian chief prosecutor Augustin Lazar on Wednesday talked in Bucharest with Michael Roth, minister of state for Europe with Germany’s Foreign Ministry. According to a communiqué of the General Prosecutor’s Office the two officials talked about bilateral and international legal cooperation, about the progress made by Romania in reforming the judiciary and fighting corruption as well as about current judicial issues, including the recent legislative modifications. Michael Roth remarked the progress made by the Romanian judicial system in the past years but expressed interest in and concern over the recent changes to the criminal legislation, the communiqué also shows.



    Polo — Romania’s national men’s water polo team obtained their first victory on Wednesday at the European Championships in Barcelona, after defeating Slovakia 9-5, in Group D. On Monday, in their debut match, the Romanians were defeated 5-11 by Serbia, holder of the continental title. The Romanians will play the last match of the group on Friday against Russia. The best 16 European water polo teams are participating in the 2018 championships. In the previous European Championship held two years ago the Romanian team was ranked 10th, their best performance being the 4th place in 1993 and 2006.



    Free trade agreement — ‘The signing of the free trade agreement between the EU and Japan is a huge chance for Romanian exporters, who should be aware of the opportunities presented to them. Romania should not miss the opportunity of being massively present on the market of the world’s 3rd biggest economy, said Stefan Radu Oprea, the Romanian minister for the Business Environment, Trade and Entrepreneurship. We recall that on July 17 the EU and Japan signed, in Tokyo, a free trade agreement that will eliminate nearly all tariffs on bilateral trade exchanges between the two sides. This is the biggest trade agreement ever negotiated by the EU, and after ratification in the European Parliament, Japan and the EU will create a free trade area with 600 million inhabitants, that will account for almost one thirds of the world’s GDP.



    Romania – Austria Cooperation — Economic relations with Austria are solid and have a still unexploited potential, said Wednesday the Romanian Foreign Minster Teodor Melesanu after meeting in Bucharest his Austrian counterpart, Mrs. Karin Kneissel. Austria, which on July 1 took over the EU’s rotating presidency, remains the second largest foreign investors in Romania and Romania is interested in continuing to attract further Austrian investments, minister Melescanu added. The Romanian foreign minister showed that the Romanian community was very well integrated within the Austrian society, the Romanian community being the second largest community of European citizens in Austria. In turn, the Austrian Foreign Minister pointed out that the talks touched upon such issues as education, human rights and energy. Karin Kneissel underlined that strengthening the rule of law was an important discussion.



    Inflation — June was the 5th consecutive month when Romania reported the highest annual inflation rate among EU states, with an increase in consumption prices of 4.7%, on the rise in comparison with an annual inflation rate of 4.6% reported in May, show data made public on Wednesday by Eurostat. The annual inflation rate within the EU stagnated in June at 2%, a similar value being reported in the Euro zone. Among the EU states, high annual inflation rates were also reported in Estonia (3.9%) and Hungary (3.2%). In early May, the National Bank of Romania revised upwards to 3.6% the inflation forecast for the end of 2018, the previous forecast pointing to a 3.5% inflation rate in 2018.



    Chess — On Wednesday Romania won gold in the boy’s section and silver in the girls’ section at the U -18 category of the European Youth Team Chess Championship hosted by the German city of Bad Blankenbrug between July 11 and 18. The boys’ team was made up of Gavrilescu, George Stoleriu, Alexandru-Bogdan Banzea and Victor Văsieşiu and the girls’ team of Daria-Miruna Lehaci and Alessia-Mihaela Ciolacu. (news translated and updated by Lacramioara Simion)

  • Chess in School

    Chess in School

    Starting with the 2014-2015 school year, chess becomes an optional subject in Romanian school curricula. As per the order issued by Education Minister Remus Pricopie, the subject will be called “Education through chess”, and will be taught in primary school. Therefore, schools in Romania will be able to introduce this optional course, covering a period of two years, for 1st to 4th graders. Here is Education Minister Remus Pricopie talking about the benefits of this decision.



    “ There will be many benefits, and I can talk about them both as a teacher and as a parent to a child that plays chess. First of all, it enhances one’s ability to focus and teaches them how to be patient. You are supposed to sit 3, 4 even 5 hours in front of a chess board and face your opponent, and you have to be able to manage that. Then, it’s about team spirit. Those who do not play chess may think this is an individual game, but it’s not. The team is extremely important, from preparation to competition, and I believe this is extraordinary for the children who want to play chess. Research has also shown that chess improves school performance in general.”



    Vladimir Danilov is General Secretary of the Romanian Chess Federation and trained as a chess player in Iasi, north-eastern Romania, which is an example of best practices with regard to introducing chess in school.



    “Chess was introduced in schools in 1986, though not necessarily as a subject on the curriculum. It was then that the first chess class was set up. After 1990, chess has been introduced in all schools and kindergartens, usually in the after-school system. There are some 3 thousand pupils in Iasi who play chess. Some of them have become professional players, and also became winners of Olympiads in other subjects. In 2000, chess became an official subject at the Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu school, in various forms: “Computer Chess”, “Chess and Math”, depending on the specialization of the chess teacher. So there are 600 children in primary school who have chess classes every week, between one and four hours.”



    According to a protocol signed recently between the Ministry of National Education and the Romanian Chess Federation, the next stage is to decide which will be the schools where chess gets taught, and who will be the teachers. Here is Minister Remus Pricopie again:



    “ The first problem that we must solve is to find the right teachers. As chess has not been part of school curricula for long, obviously we did not have teachers trained to do that. Under this agreement with the Chess Federation, any teacher will be able to teach chess, provided they get a certificate from the Chess Federation. Therefore, the teaching module is covered by the initial training of the teacher, irrespective of the subject the teacher specializes in — mathematics, biology, chemistry, etc. — and the chess component is assured and certified by the National Chess Federation. This is how we can start the project, and, obviously, in the coming years we will focus on training teachers specializing in chess. The second very important thing is the equipment needed for 500 schools, in order to make teaching chess possible. We are talking about a set of 10 chess games, a demonstration table, manuals, and a teacher’s guide. The decision we made together with the Chess Federation is that these 500 sets should benefit schools in the rural areas, because town and city schools usually have sports clubs.”



    Stefan is a high-school student and plays professional chess, but he is also very good at mathematics. His achievements confirm the positive effects of chess playing:



    “ Chess helps the development of the brain and helps us think in a certain way. It’s helpful not only in school, but also in every-day life. We learn how to make choices and how to be more self-confident.”



    Here is now Victor, another high-school student, winner of medals at national chess championships, but also of awards at other school Olympiads.



    “What matters most in a math or IT competition is how you manage to control your emotions. I myself got very good results at national math competitions as well.”



    Lucian Vasilescu is a physician with a hospital in Bucharest, and when he has the time, he participates in chess tournaments. Here he is, talking about how chess has influenced his school performance, and also his career.



    “ I started playing chess when I was in the first grade, and chess has been pure pleasure to me ever since, all throughout grade school, high-school, university, and also now. At a certain point in time I used to play chess at a very high level, as a professional. Obviously, that helped me develop certain skills, such as perseverance, tenacity, the desire to win, but also team work. I’ve been to many competitions, hosted by beautiful places both in the country and across the world. The fact that at the age of 50 I can still play against some of the best players in Romania means a lot to me. So, I can say I am looking forward to retiring, in order to be able to dedicate more time to chess.”