Friday, 30 September 2011

Koca Position 2-away 4-away correct D/T then TG/P


2 away 4 away. White Doubles. Black Takes. White rolls 66. Black is too good to double.

DailyGammon Counter-Examples


Counter-Example 1: Don't banana split when opponent has a stronger board. Here 25/21 5/4* is compulsory.


Score is 5-4 to White to 7.
Counter-example 2: Don't double 2-away in a gammonish position. Here White wins plenty of gammons but should double anyway because of his losses.


Score is 3-5 to Black to 7.
Counter-example 3: If your opponent is 2-away and doubles, redouble immediately. Here Black doubled with a double shot (admittedly a terrible play) and missed. White definitely should not redouble!

Wednesday, 20 July 2011

What an unbelievable couple of Semi-Finals here in Monte Carlo

A fantastic day of backgammon here at the World Championships. In the first semi-final Weaver took on Gullotta. The match went to DMP. Weaver had 2 checkers off and had a nice distribuion against Gullotta's ace-point anchor. Only 65 would blot. Out pops 65. Gullotta hits. His board is hardly perfect so there is hope for Weaver yet but it is not to be. Weaver looks shell shocked but wishes his opponent luck in the next round - ever the gentleman.

Then in the second semi-final Suzuki comes back from 19-10 down to Mochi to level at 20 all. Then he loses 2 points to go 22-20 down. Then he gets it back to DMP. By this time he is down to just 29 seconds on his clock. Mochy is playing a holding game but rolls double 66 that forces him to break contact and move into a bad race.

Suzuki could still lose on time or lose the race. And then the clock breaks! It starts flashing at 1:00 each and then starts counting upwards! Consternation amongst the spectators. Both players agree to roll the race out without a clock.

Mochi cannot find the big numbers he needs and Suzuki rolls his way into the backgammon history books.

It should be a great final tomorrow. My money is on Suzuki but don't write Gullotta off just yet. It's backgammon and anything can happen.

Weaver thinks about putting the match on the line

He does and Gullotta passes


Knocked out the team tournament

Lost both of my matches.

My record this year so far: Played 6 Lost 5.

It's a good job I am recording all my matches.

Mochy cubes 8 to 4 up to 23

Suzuki takes


Recube to 4


Regular semifinal updates at the website below...



Twittering semi-final updates

Miran sensibly suggested that I use twitter rather than this blog to post live semi-final updates...

Please find my Twitter account here:

Twitter Account

Tricky 62 to play - unlimited match

Excellent film of the London Open by Zoe Cunningham

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tt__f5ru-hY

Unfortunately the interviews are a bit noisy. But the opening is great.

Tuesday, 19 July 2011

Arthur wins. He is in the final.

Well done Arthur!

Sorry for the lack of updates today

Play started late at 3:00 p.m. My match didn't finish till a few minutes ago.

I lost again.

Instead of doing a proper post-mortem I am going to the pub with Myke and Lawrence (also out) to drink my body weight in Sancerre.

Tony, John and Rachel are all doing very well in the Second Consolation - more updates as I have them.

Martin is also doing well in the second conso.

The Main semi-finals do not start until tomorrow.

Tomorrow is also the team tournament. I am entered with John and Lawrence. We are called JLS.

Arthur winning his semi-final match

He was kept waiting to play because the Ladies Tournament took priority!!!

But now the match is in progress and he has taken a commanding lead.

Fingers crossed!

Monte Carlo Photos

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Monte Carlo Photos, a set on Flickr.

Higher resoultion photos from the blog now added on Flickr

Update

Suzuki looks sure to be gammoned but hits the late shot. He has now picked up the second checker and looks to be a favourite. He holds a 2 cube. His opponent looks dejected.


Weaver wins!


Weaver looking good for the Gammon and the match leading 19 to 10


Mochi is our second semi finalist!