Guyana raises chess profile with creditable performance at Olympiad

Anthony Drayton (Photo: courtesy of the GCF)
Anthony Drayton (Photo: courtesy of the GCF)

The Guyana chess team which participated in the 44th Chess Olympiad in Chennai, India, returned home last week after some enhanced performances during 11 rounds of sustained play.

Leading the charge on Guyana’s behalf was Anthony Drayton, who, as early as the first round, defeated accredited International Master Jordi Fluvia Poyatos of Andorra. Poyatos (2461) was almost at the level of a grandmaster and Drayton should have been intimidated. But he went on to emerge victorious and score the full point. Drayton accumulated 5.5 points from a total of nine games, winning more than he lost. This was a polished result, taking into consideration the level of competition the Guyanese players encountered.

Deaf player Anaya Lall engaging an opponent at the Olympiad (Photo courtesy of the GCF)

Taffin Khan played Board One for Guyana in the absence of Wendell Meusa. He accumulated a total of 4.5 points from 11 games, second to Drayton. Loris Nathoo and Ethan Lee got three points each from a reduced number of games and Roberto Neto finished with 2.5 points. Those were the five players who represented Guyana in the Open Category.  Guyana moved up from 152 to 148, and defeated Seychelles, Gabon, Brunei and Burundi. A total of 162 teams participated in the Chennai Olympiad. Guyana is ranked fifth among the English-speaking Caribbean chess teams. 

The women players were successful in improving their FIDE rank 16 places from 136 to 120 to enable them to be more competitive. This team was led by 14-year-old Pooja Lam and included 12-year-old deaf player Anaya Lall. In the final round against Libya, Lall outplayed Woman FIDE Master (WFM) Khuloud El Flow (1836), to earn her first FIDE international rating. Jessica Callender was also most impressive against her Libyan counterpart beating WFM Khadija Elfelo (1875). Lam and Sasha Shariff also gained victories over their Libyan opponents. The Guyana women defeated teams from Laos, Central African Republic, Timor-Leste and Libya, thereby guaranteeing their rise up the steep FIDE chess ladder. 

Overall, Uzbekistan won the coveted gold medal in the Open and Ukraine took the gold in the Women’s category. 

Chess Game

White: Anthony Drayton, 1981, Guyana

Black: Jordi Fluvia Poyatos, 246, Andorra

Event: 44th Chess Olympiad 2022, Round 1, July 29

Type of Game: Queen Pawn Opening, Modern Defence

1. d4 d6 2. Bf4 g6 3. Nc3 Bg7 4. e4 a6 5. Qd2 b5 6. a3 Bb7 7. f3 Nc6 8. Nge2 e5 9. Bg5 Qd7 10. d5 Nce7 11. g4 h5 12. gxh5 f6 13. Be3 Rxh5 14. h4 f5 15. Bg5 c6 16. dxc6 Bxc6 17. O-O-O Rd8 18. Ng3 Rh8 19. h5 f4 20. Bh3 Qa7 21. Be6 fxg3 22. h6 g2 23. Qxg2 Nxh6 24. Nd5 Bxd5 25. exd5 Nf7 26. Rxh8+ Bxh8 27. Rh1 Bg7 28. Rh7 Kf8 29. Bf6 Qe3+ 30. Kb1 Bxf6 31. Rxf7+ Ke8 32. Rxf6 Rb8 33. Rxg6 Nxg6 34. Qxg6+ Kd8 35. Qg7. 1-0. Black resigns.

Drayton’s opponent was an International Master. With his victory, Drayton created the biggest upset of the first round at the Olympiad.