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Chess Scotland
Juniors
designed by kids,
for kids!
World Youth Chess Championships
By Amy
Officer
photos
The World Youth Chess
Championships were held from 18 – 29 July 2005 in Belfort, France. The Scottish party was bigger
than usual, having 14 players and 22 accompanying adults. The coaches were
Graeme Kafka and Esben Lund and the chaperone was
Donna Officer.
The flights from Prestwick to Basel were
pretty uneventful and our little party of 17 was met by the bus and
transported to Belfort
where we eventually met up with the rest of the Scottish group. On arrival at
the registration hall we waited and waited …….and waited for Donna to
register the players and accompanying people. The crowds were huge and the
disorganisation was an experience. After about three hours we were given the
all clear and told to get our evening meal and then we could get a bus to our
hotel. In the meantime Jeremy and family who were travelling by car failed to
find the venue and after some frantic searching and phoning they eventually
gave up and went straight to the hotel. The meals were served buffet style
which meant long queues and a lot of waiting. The food was pretty awful and
there was not much choice. Don’t ever mention ‘potato wedges’ to anyone who
attended!!!!!
At last we arrived at
our hotel to discover it was miles away from the playing venue. The hotel was
pretty basic and the rooms were damp, smelly and not too clean. Some of the
rooms were not good enough but there were no alternatives to offer. My room
had a massive damp patch on the ceiling above my bed and it reminded me of
‘The Grudge’. It was a very tired and unhappy party which fell asleep on
night one!!!
Next day – the sun
was shining when we woke up for breakfast. We hurried down to eat but were
disappointed by the standard of food. Breakfast was a croissant roll, bread,
juice, tea or coffee. Then, onto the bus for our journey to the playing
venue.
We had to wait for the opening ceremony to start but that was delayed so we just
had to hang around for a couple of hours. The opening ceremony was going to
consist of all of the countries coming into the hall in French alphabetical
order, lined up behind their national flag. The players had to go in through
the back entrance which was basically, a set of double doors. There was a
disorganised rabble at the back entrance so we literally had to shove our way
through crowds of people to get into the hall. During the two hour wait
outside we saw something which made everything that we had experienced so far
look good!!! The player’s toilets!! These consisted of…..wait for it…..EIGHT
PORTALOOS!!!! No water, no soap – no chance!!! These “toilets” were to be
used by 1200 mixed sex players. The girls promptly decided that there was no
way that they were going to use toilets that boys had…dripped on!! The new
tactic was if you don’t drink anything, you won’t need to go to the toilet,
not the greatest thing to do in about 35 degrees heat
(no air-con in the hall!). Anyway, back to the opening ceremony. We
eventually got in, paraded around the hall, sat down and waited…and
waited…and waited! Some players got a little bit bored (believe it or not!!)
and started playing friendlies against each other,
only to be told over the loudspeaker – “YOU WILL NOT PLAY CHESS!” Just remind
me, where were we again????
The tournament began!
Very quickly we settled into our daily routine – wake up, go to breakfast,
preparation, bus, lunch, game, analysis, dinner, bus, bed. There was no
chance to see Belfort
other than when the bus drove through it. Despite all this we were having a
brilliant time! How can this be? It turned out that the worse things got, the
better we pulled together as a team! We made our own entertainment – and it
rocked! We became “brilliant” tennis players, even better singers and most
important of all – great friends! Esben and Graeme
were seeing to the chess side of things and proved to be really encouraging
and helpful. They worked long hours making sure that we were fully prepared
for our games and they helped to calm our frazzled nerves, before and after
our games. Graeme was even coached by our own new “talent” – Claire Officer!
She taught him how to lose a rook in an opening to a non-chess playing girl,
and then how to win a rook endgame, a rook down!! He was genuinely worried at
one stage! Notable performances on the chess playing front were by Ali Roy
who was on 3/3 at one stage, Steven Tweedie who was
taking on the really strong players and showing them who was the boss!! Okay,
so he accepted some help, before each of his games, Donna rubbed his arm and
said “Come on son, you’ll be fine!”
Because there was no
real evening entertainment, (the last bus was at 7pm and our village
consisted of a hotel, a shop and a few houses) we spent most evenings
socialising in the restaurant. There was a table football and a pinball
machine and, of course, the inevitable blitz games! The adults partook of
some refreshments ;-P. However, the hotel manager
decided each night that we had to go to bed and he switched the lights out at
midnight. A couple of the players thought it might be an idea to put on a
talent contest! Anyone could put their name on the programme and before long
we had a full bill. Of course, some people took it more seriously than others, there were varying degrees of rehearsals. Ali, Ellys, Claire, Lynsey and I (aka
Baby Spice, Sporty Spice, Scary Spice, Posh Spice and Ginger Spice) decided
to become the Spice Girls for a night – performing “Wannabe”. Brilliant
performances from Ivan Stokes with “Love Me Do” (singing to our judge –
Lloyd!), Chris with his rendition of Dire Straits “Romeo and Juliet”, Calum
Wright and myself doing Sir Mixalot’s “I Like Big
Butts”, Steven and Graeme singing “Tribute” – classic and Esben,
deodorant microphone and all, singing a Danish love-song! The winner however,
was a brilliant performance of Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” by Graeme
complete with his “girl” Steven, and his dancers Claire, Blair and Jonathan!
We laughed so much we attracted the attention of some Chinese tourist
residents who came down to see what all the noise was,
by the end of the show they looked quite scared!! Many thanks to our
brilliant compere, Paul McDonald, and judge Lloyd
Hughes (who DOES accept bribes by the way!! ;-))
All too soon it was
the end of the tournament, after a refreshing swim, with LOVELY matching speedos, which certain boys (not mentioning names of
course!) went out and bought, it was time for the closing ceremony. Which
didn’t disappoint us – it was JUST as disorganised as the rest of the
tournament! Cue Connor “I don’t feel too good, can we go!” THANK-YOU!!!!!!
The flight back was
exhilarating, we got to have fights with airport personnel over excess
baggage – needless to say – Donna won!! We got the opportunity to do the
movie style “airport dash” by running through the departure lounge at Stansted
Airport, catching our
flight with minutes to spare! All in all, a great trip, never to be
forgotten! We were very sad to say goodbye to Steven Tweedie,
as it was his last appearance playing for Scotland at the World Youth Chess
Championships!
Team 2005
U/10
Calum Fraser McDonald 2.5 points
Ali Roy 6 points
U/12
Jonathan Wright 4 points
Rhian Hughes 6.5 points
U/14
Connor Woods 4.5 points
Amy Officer 5 points
Ian MacGregor 4 points
Blair Hawthorne 4 points
U/16
Christopher Macdonald 5 points
Lynsey Shovlin 4.5 points
Ivan Stokes 5 points
Andrew Green 5 points
Lloyd Hughes 3.5 points
U/18
Steven Tweedie 6 points
photos

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