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News

Sunday Puzzle-32

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Sunday, 24 March 2013

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Puzzle courtesy of Barry R. Clarke, columnist for The Daily Telegraph and international puzzle expert

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http://barryispuzzled.com/teacher.jpg

Tiny Tum's mathematics homework book (shown right) was the untidiest in the class. In one of his equations, the two different arithmetic signs were missing. What is the unknown whole number x that balances the equation?

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Last Updated ( Sunday, 24 March 2013 )
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Chess Bet: Team Events - Beating the Bookmakers?

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Sunday, 24 March 2013
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Alberto Santini, author of the ChessBet application

In a recent article titled "Team Events - Beating the Bookmakers?!" Peter Zhdanov suggested a model that allows to calculate the match odds of teams in chess competitions. Alberto Santini was kind and proficient enough to implement the framework in an online application. After a series of trials and consultations, we can finally share a link with you.

ChessBet - Calculate the odds of your team

If you have feedback (improvement tips, bugs, etc.), don't hesitate to contact us.

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Last Updated ( Sunday, 24 March 2013 )
 

Chess Week on Twitter

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Friday, 22 March 2013
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Pogonina.com offers you a selection of some of the most informative chess tweets from last week. All the fresh chess news in one short post:

The Candidates: a race between Carlsen and Aronian

Wiki as a source of information about oneself

No comments

Magnus Carlsen and Andrew Paulson on BBC

We <3 Kramnik

Chess.com has become even more accessible

Another American GM

Live and let die

Chess News: "I envy Tzeshkovsky, who died at the board. I would like to die this way..." - Sveshnikov

Hip-hop & chess

Chess in schools: covering more countries daily


Have we missed some of the best tweets? You can contribute to our next top-10 stories chart by retweeting the post you like and adding @Pogonina to the message so that we can see it.

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Last Updated ( Friday, 22 March 2013 )
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Missed Chess Tactics

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Thursday, 21 March 2013
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Tikkanen (2574) - Ziegler (2363), 2013
Black to move


After a complicated struggle Black had a chance to deliver a devastating blow, but played an inferior line and lost. Can you find the strongest continuation?

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Last Updated ( Thursday, 21 March 2013 )
 

David vs. Goliath: Upsets of the Week

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Wednesday, 20 March 2013

By candidate master Peter Zhdanov, editor of Pogonina.com

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In this special weekly column we will be looking at the most unexpected upsets that happened last week. Players usually face opponents of a comparable level. Considerably less frequent are situations when a significantly lower-rated player succeeds in beating a much stronger adversary.

Top-10 upsets of the week:

Konstantinov (1796) - Vucinic (2253), 1-0, 457 points
Grandelius (2593) - Rahul Kumar (2159), 0-1, 434 points
Onal (1461) - Cvetkovski (1890), 1-0, 429 points
Silivri (1674) - Hadzi Manev (2071), 1-0, 397 points
Peev (1648) - Markovski (2042), 1-0, 394 points
Aksoy (1707) - Arizanov (2099), 1-0, 392 points
Zilbershtein (1793) - Grinberg (2165), 1-0, 372 points
Wimmer (2018) - Braun (2385), 1-0, 367 points
Peev (1648) - Stojanovski (1989), 1-0, 341 points
Kryvoruchko (2679) - Mons (2339), 0-1, 340 points

Average gap: 392; White won 8 games, Black won 2 games

Replay the games


If you have ever won a game against someone rated 300 points or above of yourself, please send it to us for publication. Any additional information (a photo, annotations, etc.) will be appreciated.

Related reading:
Episode 17
Episode 16
Episode 15
Episode 14
Episode 13
Episode 12
Episode 11
Episode 10
Episode 9
Episode 8
Episode 7
Episode 6
Episode 5
Episode 4
Episode 3
Episode 2
Episode 1

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Last Updated ( Wednesday, 20 March 2013 )
 

Guess the Players-74

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Tuesday, 19 March 2013
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Haircut challenge: can you guess the player on the left?

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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 19 March 2013 )
 

Pogonina's passed pawns

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Monday, 18 March 2013

GM Karsten Müller, ChessBase.com

Pogonina's Passed Pawns


Opposite colored bishop endings have a large drawish tendency, but connected passed pawns are very strong, if they can't be blockaded:

View the analysis of Pogonina (2475) vs. Davletbayeva (2272), 1-0

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Last Updated ( Monday, 18 March 2013 )
 

New Chess & Hip-Hop Video

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Sunday, 17 March 2013


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Natalia Pogonina on Women's World Team Chess Championship & The Candidates

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Saturday, 16 March 2013
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Team Russia won bronze at Women's World Team Chess Championship-2013

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Nikolai: 

Good afternoon, Natalia! You have just returned from the Women's World Team Chess Championship which took place in Astana, Kazakhstan. Did the organizers do their job well? Any complaints from the participants?

Natalia: 

The championship was held at a very high level. The organizers were hospitable and friendly. The placement of boards was untypical though. Normally they are lined up in a row, and this time all the four boards were scattered over the playing hall. This is not convenient because it's hard to follow the events on the other boards during time trouble and decide whether you should play for a win or not.

Nikolai:

What about the hotels and food in Kazakstan?

Natalia: 

Spacious rooms, tasty food. It was cold though, but it is not a fault of the organizers :)

Nikolai: 

Can you recall certain critical matches or games which have affected Team Russia's performance?

Natalia: 

A few matches can be named, but the main one was against USA. After this painful loss it became clear that we won't win the gold medals.

Nikolai: 

What are the factors of success behind the Ukrainian team, the new champion?

Natalia: 

It's hard for me to tell because I wasn't part of the team. You should ask them :) They had the strongest possible line-up, including the Women's World Champion Anna Ushenina on board 2. They were all in a good form, while our team and the Chinese have been playing without two first boards.

Nikolai: 

Which of your own games would you highlight and why?

Natalia:

Most memorable is the loss to Tan Zhongyi. The match overall ended in a tie instead of a victory.

Nikolai: 

And what about positive impressions?

Natalia:

Among them I can't choose a single game.

Nikolai:

Was someone's performance unexpected? Not only the Russian players, but anyone's.

Natalia: 

Really surprising? I guess not. All the results were relatively foreseeable.

Nikolai: 

Yesterday the Candidates Tournament has started, and we will soon find out who will challenge Viswanathan Anand for the chess crown. The first round ended in four draws and didn't really affect the chances of the players. Who are you rooting for at this event?

Natalia:

First of all, my heart is with the Russian grandmasters. I won't be original if I say that Carlsen has very high winning chances. During one of the nights in Astana I had a dream about reading Grischuk's interview after his victory in the Candidates. What could it mean? :)

Nikolai: 

Interesting! :) I guess many Russian chess fans would have been happy with such a result. How would you evaluate the chances of Boris Gelfand? As you know, one of his seconds is a grandmaster from Saratov Evgeny Tomashevsky. 


http://sarinform.com/img/lenta/17759_1347427107.JPG
Natalia Pogonina and Evgeny Tomashevsky on their way home from the Chess Olympiad-2012

Natalia: 

I think that in this tournament all the players have certain chances, but I wouldn't like to comment on the odds of each of them in particular. I believe that it will be much harder for Gelfand to qualify for the WCC match vs. Anand once again. Everything is possible though.

Nikolai: 

This year SSEU will be hosting FIDE-rated rapid and blitz tournaments. Are you planning to participate in one of them?

Natalia: 

I have just found out about it from you :) Can't say anything definite. My schedule is rather tight, and I don't spend much time in Saratov.

Nikolai: 

Final question: what events are you going to play in this year?

Natalia: 

I haven't finalized my calendar yet, so I will name only the upcoming tournaments. In April I will be playing in the Russian Team Chess Championship. In May - Russian Rapid Chess Championship.

Nikolai: 

Thanks a lot for the interview and your detailed answers, Natalia!

Interviewer: IM Nikolai Shukh, Saratovchess.ru

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Last Updated ( Saturday, 16 March 2013 )
 

Team Events: Beating the Bookmakers?!

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Saturday, 16 March 2013
"Many of you must have heard about sports betting and odds offered by bookmakers," writes Peter Zhdanov. While he is in no way interested in making money by placing bets, the analytical aspect of the problem seemed to him to be worth researching. His article is a lesson in how to work out the odds in a team tournaments.

Originally published at ChessBase

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Team events: beating the bookmakers?!

By Peter Zhdanov


Lets say you have two teams composed of four chess players each. This is typical for the Chess Olympiad, World Team Chess Championship and other important events. How high is the probability that team A will win? How probable is a draw? Team Bs victory? Here is a relatively easy step-by-step guide. As an example we will use the match Romania-Russia from round one of the recent Womens World Team Chess Championship.
 

Step 1

Calculate the rating differences on each board and find out the expected score of the player.
 

Example: Foisor (2401) vs Gunina (2505), a rating difference of 104 points. If we consult the FIDE Handbook, we will see that it Foisor is expected to score 0.36 points per game against Gunina.

Step 2

Find out the expected probability of a win, draw and loss in each game.
 

Example: Foisor has White. The FIDE website tells us that she won 50% of her White games and drew 34% of them. Alternatively, you can use a ChessBase database. It offers even more accurate statistics. Since a win is worth 1 point and a draw 0.5, we obtain a simple equation:

0.5x+ 0.5*0.34x=0.36

x is about 0.537. The probability of a win is approximately 0.5*x=0.2685, i.e. about 26.9%. The probability of a draw is, correspondingly, (36%-26.9%)*2=18.2%. The probability of a loss is (100%-probability of win probability of draw) = 100-26.9%-18.2%=54.9%

Note: apply this formula to the weaker of the two players. Otherwise you might end up in a situation when there is no solution. For example, if the expected result is 0.9 points per game and the player draws 30% of the games and wins 40%, then it is impossible to achieve a 0.9 result while maintaining the proportion, so we should compose the equation for the second player (expected result is 0.1).
 

Step 3

Repeat steps 2 and 3 for all the four boards in the team.
 

Title ROMANIA Rating
-
Title RUSSIA Rating
IM Foisor Cristina Adela 2401
-
IM Gunina Valentina 2505
WGM Bulmaga Irina 2354
-
GM Kosteniuk Alexandra 2495
WGM Lami Alina 2353
-
IM Galliamova Alisa 2459
WGM Voicu-Jagodzinsky Carmen 2281
-
WGM Girya Olga 2440


These are the input variables:
 

Win1 Draw1 Lose1 Win2 Draw2 Lose2 Win3 Draw3 Lose3 Win4 Draw4 Lose4
0.269 0.182 0.549 0.234 0.13 0.636 0.293 0.113 0.594 0.202 0.175 0.623


Step 4

Each game can have three theoretically possible results: White wins, draw, Black wins. Hence, if we have 4 boards, there are 3^4=81 possible outcomes of the match. It is easy to calculate each probability.
 

Example 1: board 1 wins, board 2 loses, boards three and four make draws. The probability of this outcome (using data from Step 3) is: 0.269*0.612*0.034*0.204*100%= appr. 0.338%. As you can see, this is a very small probability. Example 2: and how high is the chance that Russia will win on all the four boards? 0.549*0.636*0.594*0.623*100%= appr. 12.92%.

Step 5

To calculate the probability of the match ending in a draw/victory for a certain side, we have to add up the probabilities of all the corresponding outcomes. All the 81 possible outcomes:
 

1111, 1110, 111=, 1101, 1100, 110=, 11=1, 11=0, 11==, 1011, 1010, 101=, 1001, 1000, 100=, 10=1, 10=0, 10==, 1=11, 1=10, 1=1=, 1=01, 1=00, 1=0=, 1==1, 1==0, 1===, 0111, 0110, 011=, 0101, 0100, 010=, 01=1, 01=0, 01==, 0011, 0010, 001=, 0001, 0000, 000=, 00=1, 00=0, 00==, 0=11, 0=10, 0=1=, 0=01, 0=00, 0=0=, 0==1, 0==0, 0===, =111, =110, =11=, =101, =100, =10=, =1=1, =1=0, =1==, =011, =010, =01=, =001, =000, =00=, =0=1, =0=0, =0==, ==11, ==10, ==1=, ==01, ==00, ==0=, ===1, ===0, ====
 

Where 1 stands for a win of a player on the corresponding board, = for a draw, 0 for a loss. E.g., 1111 means that all the players in the first team won their matches. 1110 means that three first players won their matches and player #4 lost.
 

Here are the 31 possible outcomes that result in Team 1s victory:

1111, 1110, 111=, 1101, 110=, 11=1, 11=0, 11==, 1011, 101=, 10=1, 1=11, 1=10, 1=1=, 1=01, 1==1, 1===, 0111, 011=, 01=1, 0=11, =111, =110, =11=, =101, =1=1, =1==, =011, ==11, ==1=, ===1
 

Outcomes that result in draws (19):

1100, 1010, 1001, 10==, 1=0=, 1==0, 0110, 0101, 01==, 0011, 0=1=, 0==1, =10=, =1=0, =01=, =0=1, ==10, ==01, ====
 

The remaining 31 outcomes represent Team 2s victories. You dont really need to calculate them, but here is a list anyway:

1000, 100=,10=0, 1=00, 0100, 010=,01=0, 0010, 001=, 0001, 0000, 000=, 00=1, 00=0, 00==,0=10, 0=01, 0=00, 0=0=,0==0, 0===,=100, =010, =001, =000, =00=,=0=0, =0==, ==00, ==0=,===0
 

Step 6

Calculate the probabilities of all the outcomes of Team 1s victories (see Step 4) and add them up. Similarly, calculate the probabilities of outcomes that result in a draw and sum them up.
 

Note: I am using an Excel sheet for this so that I dont have to perform this calculation manually. Just input the variables from Step 3 into the sheet. The software will do the rest.
 

Example: in the example above (Romania-Russia) the chance of Romanias triumph is about 12.91%; the probability of a tie 17.55%. The remaining 69.54% stand for Russias victory.

Step 7

Translate from Math language into bookmakers jargon. If Romanias chance to win is 12.91%, it means that the bookmaker is supposed to offer odds of about 100/12.91=appr. 7.75 for Romanias victory. In the reality the coefficient will probably be lower, because the bookmakers charge a certain commission.
 

Similarly, the odds for a draw should be about 5.7 (100/17.55) and for Russias win 1.44 (100/69.64). I have compared these coefficients to a line offered by one of the bookmakers:
 

Romania 11, Draw 4.5, Russia 1.31
 

We can see that, according to our model, it didnt make much sense to bet on Russia and/or on a draw, because the offered odds were below the expected values. On the opposite, Romania was somewhat underestimated by the bookmakers.
 

I have considered a few other lines, and in most cases the coefficients obtained using our model were relatively close to the ones used by bookmakers. However, there were some notable exceptions too.
 

Remark 1

Unlike the attention-getting title of the article suggests, this model was not designed for beating the bookmakers. It is intended for those inquisitive minds who have always wanted to know how high the chances are for their team to succeed. Naturally, the method described above works for any number of boards, so it is not restricted to 4 vs. 4 competitions. Initially, I have been experimenting with 2 vs. 2 models for the sake of simplicity.
 

Remark 2

No model is perfect. This one has an underlying assumption that players perform according to their FIDE ratings and similarly to their previous results, e.g., a drawmaster makes more draws than an aggressive player. Obviously, other parameters can be considered. For example, the personal score between two people; tournament standings; current shape of the players, etc.
 

Or, another interesting idea, use not FIDE Elo, but estimates of FIDE Elo with White and with Black. Obviously, most people perform stronger with White than with Black, so it does make a difference.
 

Remark 3

Even if you discover that the model suggests the odds to be 20, while the bookmaker offers 40, dont be in a hurry to bet. While this strategy should be beneficial in the long run, your chances to succeed in a particular case are very slim. For example, Romania succumbed to Russia 0.5-3.5:
 

Title ROMANIA Rating
½-3½
Title RUSSIA Rating
IM Foisor Cristina Adela 2401
0:1
IM Gunina Valentina 2505
WGM Bulmaga Irina 2354
½:½
GM Kosteniuk Alexandra 2495
WGM Lami Alina 2353
0:1
IM Galliamova Alisa 2459
WGM Voicu-Jagodzinsky Carmen 2281
0:1
WGM Girya Olga 2440


So if you had bet on Romania (11 is a higher coefficient than 7.55, see Step 7), you would have lost your money.
 

Acknowledgements

This article would not have been written without the support of my best friend and avid math & chess fan Nikolai Smirnov, with whom we discussed the idea in general and the potential application of the model in real life during the Chess Olympiad 2012.
 

Peter Zhdanov is an IT project manager, expert and author of two books on parliamentary debate, BSc in Applied Mathematics & Computer Science and a PhD student in Sociology. In chess he is a Russian candidate master, author, manager of grandmaster Natalia Pogonina and editor of the Pogonina web site.

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Last Updated ( Saturday, 16 March 2013 )
 
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