H
sport
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

CONTACT

EMAILmukum.sherma@gmail.com
© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Chess: Ukraine soldier grandmaster wins gold medal at European team championships

about 19 hours ago
A picture


Ukraine was the most successful nation at this week’s European Team Championships, winning gold in the open event and silver in the women’s.It also sparked one of the most memorable results of recent years, as Igor Kovalenko, a serving army soldier who played no chess for three years, won the individual gold on fourth board with 6.5/8, the best percentage of the entire tournament.Kovalenko’s games included a key win against Serbia’s 2024 European individual champion, Aleksander Indjic, and a draw with Gawain Maroroa Jones in the final round when the Englishman was in pole position for third board gold.A recent chess.

com article provides more details of how Kovalenko combined chess pseudo-warfare with real life war.He is a radio operator, where “the shift lasts 12 hours a day, with no holidays, weekends, or days of rest.You do everything in a trench with mice and constant dirt.” The Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, awarded him a decoration for courage in 2023.Kovalenko is pessimistic about the future: “I think the war, in its broader context, will never end.

”Has there ever been anyone in chess history comparable to Kovalenko? The only name that comes to mind is Alexander Tolush, who served as a Soviet tank officer in the second world war, played in the 1944 USSR championship in his army uniform, then returned to the front to join the final journey to Berlin.During that 1944 championship in Moscow, Tolush became one of a handful of players who have checkmated a world No 1 in competitive play.Tolush v Mikhail Botvinnik was an old style Centre Game 1 e4 e5 2 d4 exd4 3 Qxd4.As Tolush made his 56th move he exclaimed: “You’re mated, Mikhail Moiseevich!” The future world champion never forgave the disrespect.England’s open team made a great effort in the closing rounds to snatch a medal from what had earlier seemed an inevitable mid-table position, despite Michael Adams and Shreyas Royal being below form.

The former Russian champion Nikita Vitiugov was rock solid against high-rated top board opponents, winning one game and drawing the rest.The engine room for the English recovery was the duo of Maroroa Jones, who was close to the board three gold and ended up with bronze, including this sharply tactical game, and Luke McShane, who began rustily with a loss and a narrow escape, then found his best form to finish fourth on his board, just missing a medal.His games included this intriguing variation of the Two Knights’ Defence.Before the European Teams, England seemed flattered by their fifth-place seeding, while in the event they went close to overperforming.The problem now is the team have a narrow base of players who can be reliably expected to compete at a 2600-plus level: Vitiugov, Maroroa Jones, McShane if match fit, and the 2022 Olympiad gold medallist David Howell, absent from Batumi on commentary duties.

Royal, 16, may still need another year or two to join them.In the context of the 2026 Olympiad in Goa, India, it therefore looks desirable for an optimum England performance and outside chances to medal for Howell to be persuaded to take a break from commentating.There are once again government funds for elite chess, so this could be an occasion to use them.Final Euroteam scores were Open: 1 Ukraine 15 board points (21.5 game points); 2 Azerbaijan 13 (20.

5), 3 Serbia 13 (19.5).Also: 9 England 11 (20).English scores: Vitiugov 4.5/8, Adams 3/7, Jones 6/8 (bronze medal), McShane 4.

5/8, Royal 2/5.Women: 1 Poland 16 (23.5), 2 Ukraine 14 (22.5), 3 Germany 13 (21,5).Also: 22 England 8 (18.

5).English scores: Jovanka Houska 1.5/7, Lan Yao 3/7, Harriet Hunt 5/8, Elmira Mirzoeva 5/8, Bodhana Sivanandan 4/6.England’s top boards found the going tough, and it was disheartening for Houska to lose in round six after outplaying her Georgian opponent for most of the game.On the positive side, Hunt and Mirzoeva had good tournaments, while Sivanandan, England’s youngest ever player at age 10, performed much better than in last year’s Olympiad where she had seemed overawed, and won some impressive technical grinds in the style of Magnus Carlsen.

Scotland’s Freddy Waldhausen Gordon, 15, scored 4,5/9 against a field which included two GMs and five IMs,His team finished 40th and last, with Gordon, Scotland’s best ever chess prospect, totalling more points than the other four players combined,The Edinburgh schoolboy is close to his own IM title, but a sponsor would be helpful,Sign up to The RecapThe best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend’s actionafter newsletter promotionThe 2025 US Championship is in progress in St Louis.

After four of the 11 rounds Wesley So leads with 3/4, ahead of Fabiano Caruana, Levon Aronian and Hans Niemann on 2,5/4,Caruana’s first round win was incisive, and prepared by the unusual 6 bxc3 rather than 6 Qxc3,In round three, So outplayed Sam Shankland in a sharp tactical battle,Immediately after the US championship, St Louis will stage an elite quadrangular tournament with the world No 1, Carlsen, the world No 2, Hikaru Nakamura, the world No 3, Caruana, and the reigning world champion, Gukesh Dommaraju.

Quadrangulars are a very rare format, and the only real precedent is St Petersburg 1895-96, with the world champion, Emanuel Lasker, the former champion Wilhelm Steinitz, Russia’s Mikhail Chigorin and USA’s Harry Pillsbury.Norway chess, in association with Fide, has just announced a four event “total world championship” combining “Fast Classic”, Rapid, and Blitz, to start in 2027.The winner will be the best across all three disciplines.Fast Classic is 45 minutes per player per game, plus a 30 second per move increment.That speeded-up time rate will now be eligible for Fide classical rating, so will further diminish slower classical chess as we know it.

What do Guardian readers think?3994: 1 c8=B! b3 2 Bg4 b2 3 Bd1! Kxb1 4 Bb3 mate.The trap is 1 c8=Q? b3 2 Qh3 b2 3 Rfc1 when 3…bxc1=Q? allows 4 Qb3 mate but 3…bxc1=N! escapes.
recentSee all
A picture

Nearly £11bn wiped off UK banks after US regional banking fears spooked markets – as it happened

Nearly £11bn has been wiped off the value of the largest banks listed in London today.Banks were among the big fallers in today’s sell-off, with Barclays down 5.66%, NatWest losing 2.88%, HSBC down 2.5%, Standard Chartered losing 3

about 9 hours ago
A picture

Bank shares lead global market fall amid jitters over US private credit

European stock markets fell on Friday and gold hit a record high after two US regional banks said they had been exposed to millions of dollars of bad loans and alleged fraud.Signs of credit stress rattled markets across Europe and Asia. In London the FTSE 100 fell 0.9%, Germany’s Dax fell 1.8%, Italy’s FTSE Mib fell 1

about 10 hours ago
A picture

UK MPs warn of repeat of 2024 riots unless online misinformation is tackled

Failures to properly tackle online misinformation mean it is “only a matter of time” before viral content triggers a repeat of the 2024 summer riots, MPs have warned.Chi Onwurah, the chair of the Commons science and technology select committee, said ministers seemed complacent about the threat and this was putting the public at risk.The committee said it was disappointed in the government’s response to its recent report warning social media companies’ business models contributed to disturbances after the Southport murders.Replying to the committee’s findings, the government rejected a call for legislation tackling generative artificial intelligence platforms and said it would not intervene directly in the online advertising market, which MPs claimed helped incentivise the creation of harmful material after the attack.Onwurah said the government agreed with most of its conclusions but had stopped short of backing its recommendations for action

about 9 hours ago
A picture

The teamwork behind Bletchley Park’s Colossus computer | Letter

Andrew Smith is right to applaud the work of Tommy Flowers for building Colossus, the world’s first digital programmable computer, delivered to Bletchley Park in 1944 (Move over, Alan Turing: meet the working-class hero of Bletchley Park you didn’t see in the movies, 12 October). The piece concludes with Flowers stressing: “It’s never just one person in one place” – teamwork and collaboration are key. This is even truer than the article might imply, when it says “subsequent models” of Colossus “included many new features and innovations”, as if these had been the result of Flowers working alone, just upgrading his design. Quite the contrary.It is well documented (for example, in the 2006 book Colossus by B Jack Copeland and others) that the Bletchley Park codebreakers Jack Good and Donald Michie not only utilised Colossus to help break the codes, they enhanced the computer; it was these developments that were so successfully incorporated by Flowers in subsequent machines

about 10 hours ago
A picture

Risk of wheel bashing and strategy sets up complicated US Grand Prix

At the mid-point of this season it might have been considered that the title fight between McLaren’s Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri would simply be decided by which driver had the edge to take the flag at each remaining meeting. Going into this weekend’s US Grand Prix, however, the contest has become far more complicated and far more interesting.While only 22 points separate the pair neither has now won for three races, the team’s longest drought of the season. Moreover, they have been beaten on merit across a variety of tracks. At the fast, low downforce challenge of Monza and Baku, where Red Bull’s Max Verstappen took the flag, and the slow, high downforce of Singapore, where Mercedes’ George Russell more than had their measure

about 3 hours ago
A picture

Taunts add spice as big three vie for Champion Stakes in thrilling Ascot finale

If you were to sit down with a blank piece of paper to design an ideal finale for the 2025 Flat season, the result would probably be a race with a striking resemblance to Saturday’s Champion Stakes at Ascot.It will be run over a mile-and-a-quarter, an ideal test for speed and stamina, and on good ground, with three of the world’s top-10 racehorses on ratings going head-to-head. The double-figure field also includes some very live “dark” horses that could spring a surprise, and a runner apiece for Ireland, Britain and France, European racing’s leading nations, among the three main contenders. The strength and depth of the competition is so high that punters who successfully unravel the puzzle can expect at least a 180% return on their stake, in the space of a couple of minutes.There is even a little needle to add further spice, after Aidan O’Brien, the trainer of Delacroix, suggested to a media briefing on Thursday that John Gosden, who trains Ombudsman, the favourite, “can whinge a little bit after races, whether he wins or he loses”

about 7 hours ago
technologySee all
A picture

Dan and Phil’s relationship revelation is a reminder of how toxic fandoms can be | Eilish Gilligan

about 24 hours ago
A picture

Banks need stricter controls to prevent romance fraud, says City regulator

1 day ago
A picture

Launch of veteran card will be used to test UK government’s digital ID scheme

1 day ago
A picture

Heed warnings from Wolmar on robotaxis | Brief letters

1 day ago
A picture

Barrister found to have used AI to prepare for hearing after citing ‘fictitious’ cases

1 day ago
A picture

Italian news publishers demand investigation into Google’s AI Overviews

1 day ago