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The Budapest Gambit is an exciting and fun way to play against 1.d4 and 2.c4 - replying with 1...Nf6 and 2...e5. In this video you will learn how to pose problems for White with this fascinating opening.

1/17/2020 – Temur Kuybokarov was born on July 22, 2000 in Tashkent, the capital of Uzbekistan. In 2016, he moved to Perth, Australia, with his parents, and since 2018, the year in which he became a grandmaster, he has played for Australia. This year he became Australian Champion. The 19-year-old won the national championship, which took place in Sydney from January 2 to 13, with 9 out of 11.

Australian Championship

The Australian National Championship, for players who are members of the Australian Chess Federation or have lived in Australia for a long time, takes place every two years, alternating with the open Australian Championship, in which players from all over the world can participate. The Australian championships have a long tradition. The first official Australian championship was played in 1885 when the country was still an English colony. The initiator of this championship was George HD Gossip, chess enthusiast, author, journalist and translator.

Gossip was born in New York in 1841, but grew up in England. He played against some of the top players of the time during his life, but mostly ended up in the lower echelons of the standings. In early 1883, Gossip left England with his wife and four children to seek his fortune in Australia. He wrote as a journalist for a number of Australian newspapers, but remained true to his chess passion. He confidently sent a challenge to all Australian chess players in 1885: Gossip agreed to compete against any player in Australia for GBP £20 (about £2,500 in today's pounds). According to Gossip, the winner should not only receive the prize money, but was also allowed to call himself the Australian Champion.

Frederick Karl Esling [Photo: Stuart Tompkins /Box Hill via Wikipedia], an engineer by profession and one of Melbourne's best players, took up the challenge and put Gossip in his place in a surprisingly short competition. Esling won the first game and was better in the second when Gossip dropped out due to illness.

It wasn't until 65 years later, in 1950, the Australian Chess Federation declared this short encounter, in which only one game was played from start to finish, the first official Australian Championship, and made the Esling, born on July 20, 1860, at the age of 90 and just shortly before his death on July 31, 1955, the first official Australian Champion.

The competition between Gossip and Esling may have been short, but it started a tradition: two years later, in 1887, what was in retrospect the second Australian Championship was held in Adelaide, this time as a tournament. Henry Charlick won with 7½ out of 9 ahead of Esling, who finished second, half a point behind.

2020

The Australian Championship 2020 was also a tournament: 21 participants played eleven rounds according to the Swiss system. Anton Smirnov, Bobby Cheng and Zong-Yuan Zhao, the top three in the Australian ranking, did not participate, however, and defending champion GM Max Illingworth, was also absent. That opened the door for Temur Kuybokarov who, with an Elo rating of 2523, was the top seed.

The 19-year-old more than lived up to this role. He started the tournament five straight wins, until some sand got into the gears, and he lost to FM Christopher Wallis (Elo 2322) in round six.

But Kuybokarov quickly recovered and won his next three games. After nine rounds he had racked up 8 points and was 1½ points ahead of IM Junta Ikeda. Two draws in rounds ten and eleven, were enough to become Australian Champion with a final tally of 9 out of 11.

Kuybokarov's most important victory was in round four. He outplayed Ikeda, the eventual runner-up, with Black in an energetic game.

Temur Kuybokarov | Photo: Official site

Final Standings

All available games

Translation from German: Macauley Peterson

Links