The
courtesy draws were conceded according to the canons of gallantry
prevailing at the time. Today, Nadjorf's gesture would be embarrassingly
sexist. It would also be unrealistic in light of the increasing
prowess of women players.
A
few recent events illustrate the point.
The
first was a match between 14-year-old Irina Krush and 68Dyearold
Arthur Bisguier who wondered beforehand whether ``experience, trickery,
and guile would prevail over youth and talent.'' The contest between
teen-age girl and veteran grandmaster ended in a 2-2 standoff.
The
second was a first-place finish in the 1998 U.S Junior Championship
by 18-year-old Jennifer Shahade in a field that was largely male.
And
most recently, 22-year-old Judit Polgar of Hungary tied for first
in the U.S. Open Championship with American grandmaster Boris Gulko.
Only
a decade ago, the achievement of the American teen-agers Krush and
Shahade was inconceivable. But a groundswell of scholastic chess
programs for both boys and girls, the emigration of talented Soviet
women players and the appearance of outstanding role models like
Polgar have created a new era in women's chess.
Below
is a win by the under-14 girl's champion -- Cindy Tsai of the United
States -- from the 1998 Pan-American Youth Championships.
Nadia
Escheveste Tsai
1.
e4 c5
2. Nf3 d6
3. d4 cxd4
4. Nxd4 Nf6
5. Nc3 a6
6. Be3 e5
7. Nb3 Be6
8. f3 Be7
9. Qd2 N (b)d7
10. g4 O-O
11. O-O-O b5
12. h4 Nb6
13. g5 Nh5
14. Qg2 Qc7
15. Rg1 R (f)c8
16. Qd2 b4
17. Nd5 Nxd5
18. exd5 Bxd5!
19. Be2 (a) Be6
20. Bd3 d5
21. Kb1 a5
22. R(d)f1 a4
23. Nc1 d4
24. Bf2 b3
25. cxb3 axb3
26. Bg3 bxa2ch
27. Ka1 Nxg3
28. Rxg3 e4!
White resigns
(a) Not 19. Qxd5 allowing . . . Qxc2 mate.
Solution to Beginner's Corner: 1. g4 Rf6 2, pinning and winning
the bishop.