Sunday, February 20, 2011

Malaysia And FIDE-Rated Chess Events

 Najib Wahab - The Chess Connections
21 February 2011, Kuala Lumpur – On Najib Wahab’s new blog called  The Chess Connections, Najib’s does an analysis of chess players in Malaysia in general and the availability of FIDE Chess Tournaments available in the country at large.
Here is a sampling of Najib’s analysis of Malaysian players’ participation in 10 chess events organised locally in the country.

Based on the 10 events, the following figures were arrived:


EVENTS
TOTAL MALAYSIAN %
1 KUALA LUMPUR OPEN
111 20 18%
2 SELANGOR OPEN
71 70 99%
3 NATIONAL (OPEN)
94 94 100%
4 NATIONAL (WOMEN)
44 44 100%
5 MALAYSIA OPEN
133 26 20%
6 AMBANK CHALLENGE
52 42 81%
7 PENANG OPEN
71 42 59%
8 PENANG CHALLENGE
109 103 94%
9 GACC OPEN
110 69 63%
10 GACC (WOMEN)
50 28 56%

TOTAL
845 538 64%

Based on the Jan 2011 rating list (for the period between November/December 2011), Malaysia was the most active country in the region with 84 of our players (or 29% of that 293 players that Malaysia has in the rating list) played at least 1 FIDE rated event.

A lot of the analysis is quite revealing about the status of chess in Malaysia itself and The Chess Connections’ blog post on Malaysia is simply very interesting and should put the MCF on alert on Malaysia’s future direction.

As First-GM blogger wants Malaysia to achieve our first International Grand Master sooner so that at least Malaysia can be proud of having one home-grown GM locally, therefore instituting a local FIDE Rated chess circuit with foreign players is uppermost and a priority.

Good standing foreign chess players with IM and GM titles would help push further the rating of the event higher and creates more opportunities for our local players to succeed getting either an International Master (IM) or Grand Master (GM) norm. In this regard, efforts by Excel Chess Academy to create a FIDE-Rated chess event locally at its own chess academy is comendable and would help the cause of chess in Malaysia further and create a further pool of FIDE-rated players. With a bigger pool, the chances of creating IM and GM players among Malaysians will increase.

All this analysis is good and should be made available to MCF officials for further understanding.

To read more of Najib’s analysis of chess in Malaysia, please visit this link here.

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