Linton shares East Anglian Team Championship

The Linton club was attempting to retain its title of East Anglian champions for the fifth successive time at Bury St Edmunds on 22 October. Well, we kept one hand on the trophy, sharing it with long-standing rivals, Broadland. Usually there is a good entry in the Open Championship, but with a lot of events on at this time of year it was a straight battle between Linton Tigers and Broadland. After two rounds Broadland had a commanding two point lead, but a late Linton fightback in round 3 left the scores all square at 6-6. Congratulations to the team of Chris Davison, Alan Richardson, Konrad Scheffler and Anthony Chan for an excellent result against the higher-rated Broadland team.

The numbers in the two supporting rating-limited tournaments made up for the Open entry, with record numbers in the U6400 category in which the Linton Zebras played. Seeded eighth out of nine teams the Linton Zebras came third with 7/12, just half a point behind the joint winners Bury St Edmunds and St John’s, Norwich. So another good performance from the team of Simon Marsden, Nate Weersing, Ben Varea and John Nevin, with John winning all three of his games.

The Championships are named after their founder and long-time organiser (and Linton member) Patrick Ribbands who sadly passed away in the spring of 2021. In his memory and from his legacy the Linton Chess Club has provided a magnificent shield for annual presentation to the winners of the Open Tournament. The photo below shows the Linton Tigers team of (left to right) Alan Richardson, Chris Davison, Anthony Chan and Konrad Scheffler.

Review of the 2021/22 Season

This has been a mixed season for the club. It was good to get back to playing over-the-board after 18 months away, but for various reasons there were fewer of us than there were when covid struck, even allowing for the new members that we welcomed.

The first tournament is always in September, a rapidplay jamboree in Bury St Edmunds. Our team of Aarnavh Trivedi, Paul Kemp, Harvey Kelly and Anthony Chan retained the trophy Linton have held for some years now.

In November the East Anglian Team Championships were held, renamed the Patrick Ribbands Team Championships after the Linton member who initiated them in 2009 and who sadly passed away early in 2021. Already the most successful club in the 12 years of these championships we had another terrific year winning the Open tournament outright and sharing first place in the U7200 rating tournament. This gave us a hat-trick of wins in the Open tournaments (the 2020 event being held online). The Open team consisted of Liam Varnam, Paul Kemp, Aarnavh Trivedi and Francis Bowers, and the U7200 team was Paul McMahon, Ruben Evans. Simon Jackson and Anthony Chan.

In the Bury League we found the competition tougher. We were significantly disrupted by covid absences, but battled on without postponements against stronger opposition. Unfortunately our campaign ran out of steam toward the end and two teams (the Leopards in division 1 and the Lynxes in division 2) were relegated. The Lions (division 1) and the Llamas (division 2) both finished in creditable third places, and the Lemurs were second in division 3, having led right until the final match. The coming season gives the club a real opportunity to bounce back.

However we did end the season on a positive note. Having won both divisions of the Roger Goldsmith Tournament (a rating limited competition) when it was last contested in 2019/20 we managed to repeat our success, albeit sharing the division 2 championship with Bury St Edmunds on this occasion.

It is always satisfying to see our younger players improve over the season and this year is no exception. On the new monthly rating system over the period from September to May Abbey Weersing has improved from 1945 to 2041, Ruben Evans from 1788 to 1829, Yoav Pilowsky-Bankirer from 1675 to 1772, Shivum Gordon-Shah from 1540 to 1600 and Benjamin Varea from 1383 to 1500. Well done to all of them.

Finally my thanks to all the captains: Paul McMahon, Oded Pilowsky-Bankirer, Alan Wadsworth, Michael Osborn, Anthony Chan and Rob Davies, and of course to all those members who have played for and supported the club over the past season.

Paul Kemp
Club Captain

Review of 2019/20 and 2020/21 Seasons

We started in September 2019 full of optimism with a record 6 teams in the Bury Area Chess League and 4 Roger Goldsmith teams. We enjoyed early success winning the Bury League Jamboree and knuckled down to the hard work of accumulating League points. However the League was suspended in March, and subsequently terminated by the AGM with positions decided on the basis of points at suspension, adjusted where necessary to take account of games played. Linton Lemurs were declared division 3 winners, with Linnets and Lapwings respectively winning the two Roger Goldsmith grade-limited competitions. Linton Lions were a whisker away from winning division 2.

As well as team success Oren Pilowsky-Bankirer won the third division Player-of-the-Year award, and the Game-of-the-Season prizes were won by Aarnavh Trivedi in division 1 and Giulio Sahinoz in division 2.

Perhaps the playing highlight of the season occurred over two weekends just prior to lockdown. In the East Anglian individual championships Chris Davison won the Open event with Aarnavh Trividi winning the junior title. The following weekend Linton won the East Anglian Team Championship, thus holding the main three regional titles.

With the suspension of over-the-board chess the club went online, thanks to the sterling efforts of Chris Davison. After initially playing in club tournaments we joined the Iceni League, covering Norfolk, Suffolk and Cambridgeshire, with members also competing in their individual championships.

Linton currently has over 30 active online players, and with teams in all three divisions offers members opportunities to play rapidplay team games or Classic slowplay individual games. So far Linton Pandas have won division 2 twice, and the Open individual championship has been won by Chris Davison and twice by Aarnavh Trivedi. The club is indebted to Chris and to Alan Wadsworth and Michael Osborn for their team captaincy and for their general support and promotion of our online activities.

The East Anglian Team Championships have been held online this year, and I’m delighted to say that we retained the title we won over-the-board last year.

Our success has been tempered by the loss of Patrick Ribbands from a heart attack in January. Patrick was an indefatigable chess organiser, Cambridgeshire’s County second team captain for 30 years among many other roles at club, county and regional level. At the Linton club he regularly captained teams and was always ready to fill a gap in the team sheet. He was a kindly and gentle man, a champion of the underdog, who always ensured there were opportunities for juniors and lower-graded players in any events he organised.

PAUL KEMP