Saturday, 18 February 2017

History of the NECL

A number of recent posts have contained material taken from the booklet "History of the North Essex Chess League" by J. R. Priestley. This covers the period from before the NECL was formed in the 1960s to the mid-1980s. The entire booklet can now be read and downloaded from the historical archive which is on the About the club page on this website or by clicking here.

Tuesday, 14 February 2017

NECL Division 2: 1970/71


Final League Table 1970/71

Division 2


P
W
D
L
F
A
P
Colchester
6
3
3
0
14½
9
Maldon
6
2
3
1
15½
7
Wickford
6
3
1
2
11½
10½
7
Witham
6
2
2
2
11
13
6
Marconi
6
2
1
3
10
14
5
Braintree
6
1
2
3
10
14
4
Chelmsford
6
2
0
4
14½
4



Chelmsford dominated the second division in the late 1970's and early 1980's but, as this table shows, things were rather different in 1971.

The match between Colchester and Wickford included two double defaults, which is why the aggregate of game points won and lost by the two totals 22 and not 24.
Colchester finished unbeaten for the second season in succession.

Sunday, 12 February 2017

Fooling the computer

The position below is taken from S Coughlan - I Gooding (Board 1, Witham A v Colchester A, 2017), black to play. When you put this position into the computer it spots the best move straight away but thinks that there are many other moves that are also winning. It is only when you leave it to think for a while that it realises that there is only one move to win. What is it? Answer in the comments.

Wednesday, 1 February 2017

January 2017: ECF grades

The January 2017 ECF Grading List has been published. The standard play grades for active Colchester players are:

RefNameAgeStandardPrevious
139627EGooding, Ian187C191B
186371LStemp, Matt175D176D
302172LVoelker, Norbert174D184D
299554CKjenner, Svein157C152B
140673FBarnes, Nathan156B148A
301977ASchnell, Felix155D155E
120924DWagstaff, Michael145C144C
250046CBellinger, Clive131C129C
213710ASmith, Peter115B108C
155695CDaley, Phil113C119C
293018DJohnson, Mark113A105B
298130AJaufarally, Mohammud111A104A
117812LRemmer, Brian108C110C
227455DDuff-Cole, John95C92C
256466LGoodman, Ed88D86C

A few players have increased their grades - with Nathan Barnes (+8), Mark Johnson (+8), Pete Smith (+7), Mo Jaufarally (+7) and Svein Kjenner (+5) having the most significant increases.

Friday, 13 January 2017

HOCCC: 1966-72 Rapid Development (of the North Essex Chess League) part 3

The material for this post is the sixth extract taken from the booklet "The History of the North Essex Chess League" by J. Priestley.



Ray Keene was elected president of the League, reflecting his visits to give simultaneous displays and his assistance with adjudications. The burden of work which fell upon the shoulders of the General Secretary had become very considerable with the introduction of the knockout competition and the expansion of the championship into two divisions, so separate officers of League Championship Secretary and Knockout Tournament Controller were created to spread the load. The first incumbents were John Standley of Colchester and Gareth Tucker of STL respectively.

Both STL and RAMC withdrew from the championship in 1971/72, and competed only in the Knockout. By so doing, they opened the way for a significant change in the operation of League competitions. Until then, every club had been expected to field its first team in the first division, and to enter the other competitions according to its wishes. But there now followed the rather more logical concept of clubs entering the competitions to which they were best suited. Withdrawal from the championship was a great disappointment for the players of STL, who had performed well enough to finish in mid-table in both of the two preceding seasons, and who on one occasion scored a sensational 5½ - ½ victory over Essex University. The departure of two or three key players was the reason for their enforced retirement from the premier event. Today's players who have been around long enough to have visited STL will remember not only the luxurious playing conditions but also the interesting novelty of a large blackboard on which results were entered as soon as games finished. This could have quite a demoralising effect on visiting teams unfortunate enough to suffer a couple of early reverses!

Voting rights at committee meetings, which had always been vested only in club representatives, were extended so as to include officers. This was a very logical step, as it was the officers who provided much of the continuity, some clubs changing the identity of their representatives fairly frequently.
RAMC departed at the end of the 1971-72 season, as did founder member Hoffmans, who had seen a steady decline in membership and who had latterly been reduced to a playing membership of seven.  Most people playing in the League today are unaware that at one time the whole concept of organised inter-club play in the area probably hinged on the ability of this gallant little club to subscribe to it. Every former club has played its part in the development of the League, but none more so than Hoffmanns. Although never in contention for honours, the club achieved several notable results. At one time or another wins were recorded against every other first division club, with the exception of Essex University, including a famous victory over mighty neighbours Chelmsford.

See also: Essex-Suffolk Border League, formation of the NECL, first two years of NECL

Tuesday, 3 January 2017

NECL Division One: 1966/67

Back in 1967 Colchester won Division One of the NECL, information taken from the History of the NECL booklet used for quite a few of the most recent posts. This was the third season in the competition and the second time that Colchester had won the league.


Final League Table 1966/67


P
W
D
L
F
A
P
Colchester
12
9
2
1
46
26
20
Chelmsford
12
8
1
3
47½
24½
17
Essex University
12
8
0
4
42½
29½
16
Braintree
12
6
2
4
37
35
14
Hoffmans
12
3
2
7
31
41
8
Maldon
12
4
0
8
31
41
8
Coggeshall
12
0
1
11
17
55
1


Full League tables were not published in the League's first two seasons so the above, showing the final outcome in the third season, was the first of its kind. Note that Hoffmanns and Maldon tied for fifth place, as both match points and game points were equal.

Thursday, 29 December 2016

HOCCC: 1966-72 Rapid Development (of the North Essex Chess League) part 2

The material for this post is the fifth extract taken from the booklet "The History of the North Essex Chess League" by J. Priestley.



The League's Individual Championship was divided into two sections, Premier and Challengers, and a total of 26 competed. It remained as two tournaments from then on although the entry did not expand in proportion to the increasing number of players taking part in the team competitions; and in subsequent years was often somewhere around the 20 mark and no higher. Players would meet in their own homes, or at club premises, so that a six round event was likely to require every contestant to make three journeys to an away venue. Journeys could be quite a distance for those living on the perimeter of the League's area, which may explain why the event was not as well supported as might have been expected. Another factor to take into account was that not all the entrants ran cars, especially in the early years. A fairly fanatical degree of enthusiasm was required for a player to take on the travelling commitments to remote places in the depths of winter.  Image the journey by train from Witham to Southminster via Shenfield and Wickford, an itinerary undertaken by Roy Heppinstall in order to play against Maldon's John Dodgson. A Braintree player faced an even more arduous journey, with three changes of train, if paired with the same opponent. It was not until 1984 that anybody had the idea of converting the event into a weekend tournament. Entrants were then only required to undertake two journeys, on successive days, to the venue and could benefit from the competitive atmosphere generated by all the players being congregated together. Certainly the idea was well received, for it attracted some 50 competitors, about double the usual number, and the event has been run in this way ever since.

A strange thing about chessplayers is that they do not seem to socialise with each other to any great extent outside the realms of the game itself. Two players can meet at matches on many occasions over several years, perhaps playing against each other a number of times, yet they are unlikely to meet at any other location and very often each will know very little about the other over and above the way he plays chess.  When the Individual Championship was converted to a weekend tournament it was held at the Sportsman Club in Braintree, where the facilities provided the ideal opportunity for players to get together for activities completely unrelated to chess. Many competitors took full advantage, thus making the event into a useful social gathering as well as a tournament. Any passer-by who happened to see Colchester's Andy Lingard arriving at the venue with snooker cue in hand would probably have needed a lot of convincing that he was there to compete in the area's individual chess championship! By now the Individual was no longer being run as two separate tournaments. Instead it was run as one event with the Challengers Trophy being awarded to the player graded 140 or below who achieved the best score.
League Individual Championship 1968/69
Premier
Points

5
J. A. Dodgson, B. Beavis, A. F. B. Scibor
J. R. Priestley
4
R. Heppinstall
E. Whitehead, A. J. Lait, L. Frain
3
D. R. Gold, K. Lucas
B. J. Hunt, P. C. Elliott
2
D. F. Imrie, F. M. Spiers

Challengers
Points

S. Simpson
P. Lawrence
5
H. A. Travers, C. Vince
V. Goetz
3
P. Hewlett, P. W. Selfe
W. H. Parker
2
C. E. Smith, E. G. Tribe, I. Rumsey
1
S. D. George






Marconi won the championship in 1968/69 to begin a period of domination which extended well into the 1970's. Colchester began a similar period of ascendency in the second division.


In the following season, 1969-70, Wickford and STL joined the League. Wickford had been regarded as prospective members ever since the League was founded, and the eventual arrival of the club brought to fruition the links which had been forged and nurtured over a period of years. The club had joined the Essex League in 1964, but by 1968 the eastern section of that League's third division had been decimated by the withdrawal of Burnham, Ghyllgrove and the Basildon town club. A change of direction had been called for, and the club turned to its old friends in the north for the active competition it so keenly sought. Wickford can claim to have quite a lot in common with Braintree, for not only do both clubs have a solid nucleus of experienced and long serving players quite capable of beating the very best opposition on their day, but also both can justifiably say that playing performance is not accurately reflected in the list of League honours which appears at the end of this book. Such lists are, of course, always about winners rather than those who came close. In their very first match Wickford defeated champions Marconi, their only first division defeat of that season, and went on to finish third. They were also third the following season only two points behind the winners. Often they made a good start to a season, only to fall away later, another characteristic shared with Braintree. Wickford's challenge for honours was, perhaps, strongest in its earliest years of membership when there was no club in the neighbouring town of Billericay. When the chessplayers of Billericay decided the town was quite big enough to support a club of its own some depletion of Wickford’s potential was perhaps inevitable, but always they have remained highly respected opponents never to be taken lightly by the opposition.

The other newcomers, STL, were chessplaying employees of Standard Telecommunications Laboratories, a company based in the far west of Essex at Harlow. The fact that the club's application for membership was so keenly submitted, and received, speaks volumes for the high level of enthusiasm which existed on both sides, for the club faced a journey of at least 20 miles to each away match and a similar journey confronted every other club for the return fixture. As it happened, home and away fixtures were discontinued after the previous playing season, so any given journey was no longer scheduled to take place every season, but every other season instead, which was not quite so daunting. On the other hand, the Knockout Tournament was introduced at this time, so the luck of the draw could cause the same journey to occur twice in the same season, and would inevitably do so for some.

For the first few years the Knockout was run on a similar basis to football's World Cup Finals, with the teams divided into groups and with each group conducted on an all-play-all basis to produce qualifiers for the later rounds, which were run as a straight knockout. Then, as now, the tournament was for teams of four and most clubs entered more than one team. The tournament was structured in this manner so as to guarantee each team a certain number of fixtures before possible elimination, thus compensating for the reduction in the number of championship fixtures resulting from the discontinuation of the home and away system. The tournament threw together players from the entire range of playing strength, and thus offered to second division players the chance to meet first division opponents over the board. This enabled the tournament to take on some of the romance associated with the F.A. Cup, for "giant-killings" soon became a regular feature. 'A' teams were often toppled by 'B' opponents and, now and again, by 'C' category players as well. Even the mighty Chelmsford A once lost to Braintree C. To add even more spice to the event the rate of play was accelerated to 35 moves in 1¼ hours as opposed to the 30 required in the championship. This was designed not only to give the tournament its own identity, but also to reduce the number of unfinished games requiring to be adjudicated.

Nineteen teams competed in the first season. Although the rules provided for tie breaks in the event of 2-2 match results in the Knockout rounds, this did not extend to the final itself. The two finalists, Essex University and Wickford, the latter's strength being a further endorsement of the club's strength in its early years of membership, promptly succeeded in drawing the match and, accordingly, shared the title. This was a remarkable result from the University's point of view, because an unforeseen chain of events obliged them to arrive with only three players and one board was thus lost by default. The rules were later altered to provide for a reply in the event of a drawn match in the final. To date, the amended rule has always produced an outright winner, and the tie of the first season remains unique.

1970 saw arrivals in the form of Writtle and a team from the Royal Army Medical Corps at Colchester. RAMC was another small club owing existence to a temporary preponderance of players in a small community. The club competed for only one season in the championship, where the exploits of leading player Doug Pallett were never going to be enough to disguise the deficiencies in playing strength further down the team. Only six game points were won in the entire season, but as three of them were gained in the same match the indignity of finishing without a single match point was avoided. Writtle also struggled in their opening campaign, but for them a bright future lay ahead. The principal pioneers of Writtle club were Ivor Smith and Len Frain, the league's first secretary who, as a serving police officer, had been stationed at both Braintree and Colchester, and represented both, before moving on to Writtle. He thus had the rare distinction of playing a part in the establishment of two clubs, Braintree and Writtle.
The distribution of honours was becoming very much to a set pattern with Marconi and Colchester carrying off the first and second division championships respectively for the third successive season. Not for the first time, though, the margin of victory for Marconi was game, rather than match, points. Clubs frequently found themselves separated by such slender margins after a whole season of competition. It was often a mistake for a player to concede half a point to his opponent once a match result had been settled, rather than to play on and, if necessary, opt for adjudication. Sometimes, at the end of a season, odd half points so conceded could make all the difference between honours or merely coming close to them. Marconi also won the Knockout in 1970-71 and became the first club to achieve the 'double'. So great was the domination of the club that the feat was promptly repeated in the following season.

See also: Essex-Suffolk Border League, formation of the NECL, first two years of NECL,1966-1972 part 1