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Walter Becker, rock bohemian of Steely Dan, 67

NEW YORK – Walter Becker, a bassist whose eclectic tastes from jazz to reggae helped create the intricate bohemian rock sound of Steely Dan, died Sunday. He was 67.

His death was announced in a brief notice on his official Web site, with no further details released.

Becker in July missed The Classic East and The Classic West – twin festivals in Los Angeles and New York featuring rock veterans including Steely Dan – with his bandmate Donald Fagen saying Becker was recovering from an unspecified ailment.

Steely Dan – named for a phallic toy from Beat novelist William S. Burroughs’ classic novel Naked Lunch – shared elements of jazz by enlisting a revolving cast of musicians and jamming out in winding tunes that gave ample space for solos even while keeping pop melodies.

In its heyday in the 1970s, the band scored hits with “Reelin’ in the Years,” “Do It Again,” “Rikki Don’t Lose That Number,” and “Deacon Blues.”

Mourning his co-songwriter, Fagen said in a statement that Becker had a “very rough childhood” which he overcame with wit and singular talent.

“He was cynical about human nature, including his own, and hysterically funny,” Fagen said.

“Like a lot of kids from fractured families, he had the knack of creative mimicry, reading people’s hidden psychology and transforming what he saw into bubbly, incisive art,” said Fagen, who promised to keep performing Steely Dan’s music.

With Fagen on vocals, Steely Dan created songs with literate and often cryptic lyricism.

“Do It Again (at the Record Plant),” one of the band’s best-known songs, describes a character named Jack who attacks a man who stole his water but goes unpunished.

ROCK BY WAY OF JAZZ AND REGGAE
Steely Dan was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2001 – where their official biography describes their 1970s albums as “wry, nuanced and hyper-literate” that are “highly regarded by connoisseurs of pop hooks, jazz harmony and desiccating wit” – but never reached number one on the US charts, reaching a height of number four with the 1974 song “Rikki Don’t Lose that Number.”

Born in New York City in 1950, Becker grew up revering the jazz giants Charlie Parker, Duke Ellington and John Coltrane. He and Fagen would bond over their love of this music after meeting as students at Bard College in New York in 1967.

“We started writing nutty little tunes on an upright piano in a small sitting room in the lobby of Ward Manor, a moldering old mansion on the Hudson River that the college used as a dorm,” Fagen said in a statement on Sunday published by Variety.

After working as touring musicians they moved to Los Angeles, releasing the first Steely Dan album in 1972, Can’t Buy a Thrill.While resisting the “jazz fusion” label, Becker acknowledged that jazz informed Steely Dan’s way of recording – smooth and polished.

“It was our perception that if you were going to use jazz harmonies, it had to sound tight, professional; nothing sounds worse (and) sloppy than kids playing jazz,” he told Time Out New York in 2008.

As Steely Dan gained fame, Becker’s life turned turbulent as he wrestled with drug use. He faced legal action after his girlfriend died of a drug overdose in his apartment in New York, where soon afterward he was hit by a taxi and injured.

Becker moved to Hawaii where he set up a studio and started a second career as a producer, notably for China Crisis, a pop group from Britain where Steely Dan enjoyed a particularly sizable following.

After a long hiatus, the band reunited in the late 1990s to record its first studio album in 20 years, according to the Steely Dan Web site. That album, Two Against Nature, would go on to win Album of the Year in 2000 at the Grammy Awards. Becker released his second album, Circus Money, in 2008, in which the bassist experimented with his love of reggae.

In an interview for Circus Money with the blog No More Big Wheels, Becker described his fascination both with the rhythms of reggae and with Jamaican culture and said reggae had always been part of the mix for Steely Dan.

“I used to describe what we did as disco-jazz-space-funk-muzak with a little bit of reggae. It is a sort of a polyglot thing.” – AFP/Reuters

NCAA second round kicks off today; Lyceum battles Mapua

ACTION in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Season 93 men’s basketball resumes today with league-leaders Lyceum Pirates and San Beda Red Lions kicking off festivities in the second round of the country’s longest-standing collegiate against separate opponents.

NCAA second round kicks off today; Lyceum battles Mapua
The league-leading Lyceum Pirates begin their NCAA Season 93 second-round campaign today against the Mapua Cardinals. — ALVIN S. GO

Happening at the FilOil Flying V Centre in San Juan City, the Pirates (9-0) collide with the bottom-scraping Mapua Cardinals (1-8) at 4 p.m. while the Lions (8-1) face off with the College of St. Benide Blazers (2-7) in the preceding 2 p.m. game.

Undeniably the best season it has had so far since joining the league in 2011, Lyceum solidified its standing as a legitimate contender in the ongoing NCAA season by sweeping the first round of the eliminations.

The Pirates have been doing it with a thorough attack on both ends of the court led by league most valuable player candidates Mike Harry Nzeusseu and CJ Perez and under the steady stewardship of head coach Topex Robinson.

The sweep came for Lyceum over Mapua, its opponent today, whom the Pirates defeated, 97-74, on Aug. 25 to notch their ninth win in as many games.

Nzeusseu was at the fore of the victory, doing it all with 18 points, seven rebounds, three assists and two steals.

Seven other players scored six points or more for the Pirates to highlight further the balanced attack it had.

While happy and proud of what they have accomplished to date, Mr. Robinson said the work does not stop for them and that they have to improve some more in second-round play if they are to achieve their goals.

“I’m happy with this win as it showed it’s always about team effort and success for us. We have swept the first round but it’s still a long season and we cannot relax and instead have to double our effort,” the Lyceum coach said following their sweep-clinching victory.

Out to stop the Pirates are the Cardinals who are having it tough this season, losing their last seven games.

With some players deciding to redshirt this season, notably two-time NCAA MVP Allwell Oraeme, coupled with an injury to key player Andoy Estrella, the Atoy Co-coached Cardinals just could not take flight this year.

Christian Buñag has been playing solid of late but apart from him Mapua has been hard-pressed to get steady contributions from the rest of the team.

LIONS ROAR
Like Lyceum, defending champion San Beda hopes to continue to roar in the resumption of regular wars to stay close with the Pirates and possibly overtake them along the way.

Tripped early in their campaign, the Lions have done a good job bouncing back and once again in their defending champions selves.

Robert Bolick and Jayvee Mocon have been leading San Beda well with the former good for 13.6 points, 4.7 rebounds and 4.7 assists (league-high), and Mocon do-it-all with norms of 12 points, 9.9 boards and 3.6 dimes.

Also doing their share for San Beda are Davon Potts and Donald Tankoua.

San Beda opponent St. Benilde, for its part, has been showing flashes of form but remains a work in progress under coach TY Tang, leaving the Blazers still grappling in the bottom half of the standings.

Meanwhile, the NCAA recently released the numbers for the MVP race with Perpetual Help’s Prince Eze leading.

Eze, awarded the NCAA All-Star MVP last Friday, has amassed a leading 52.44 Player All-Around Value (PAV) points on the strength of a league-best 17.2 rebounds, 14.8 points (seventh) and 2.2 blocks in nine games for the Altas (3-6).

Nzeusseu and Perez of Lyceum and San Beda’s Mocon are at second, third and fourth places with 48.67, 47.56 and 47.56 PAVs, respectively, while Emilio Aguinaldo College’s Sydney Onwubere is at no. 5 with 47.11 PAV.

Rounding up the top 10 were San Beda’s Bolick (46.11), Letran’s Rey Nambatac (45.44), Mapua’s Buñag (41.78), Lyceum’s Jaycee Marcelino (40.11) and MJ Ayaay (39.67), and Jose Rizal University’s AbdulWahab AbdulRazak (39.67). — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

EastWest lists LTNCDs

EAST WEST Banking Corp. (EastWest Bank) listed a fresh tranche of long-term debt notes on the Philippine Dealing & Exchange Corp. (PDEx) last week, completing its P10-billion borrowing plan due in five years.

In a statement posted on the PDEx web site, the Gotianun-owned lender said they have listed P2.631 billion worth of long-term negotiable certificates of deposit (LTNCDs) last Thursday.

LTNCDs are similar to regular time deposits which offer higher interest rates, but the difference is that these cannot be pre-terminated. Being “negotiable” means that these can be sold on the secondary market prior to maturity date.

The recent listing marks the fifth and final tranche under EastWest Bank’s offering of LTNCDs totalling P10 billion, which are all due by 2022. Prior to last week’s listing, the listed lender previously issued and listed batches of long-term notes in amounts of P2.704 billion, P995.2 million, P2.592 billion, and P1.078 billion.

The bank’s LTNCDs brought the total listings at PDEx to P157.15 billion. Meanwhile, total tradable corporate debt instruments reached P755.7 billion issued by 44 companies.

EastWest Bank got the nod from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas for the P10-billion note issuance in January. Jose Emmanuel U. Hilado, the bank’s senior executive vice-president and chief operating officer, previously said that the exercise will boost the bank’s fund-raising initiatives and the bank’s deposit profile.

EastWest Bank saw its net income jump to P2.502 billion during the first semester, surging by 60% from P1.563 billion from the comparable year-ago period. With the huge profits, the bank now expects full-year income to P4.8 billion.

Total loans granted by the bank grew by 19% from a year ago to reach P212 billion, largely driven by surge in consumer lending which rose by a third. This helped offset a 6% decline in corporate loans.

On the other hand, deposits held by EastWest Bank totalled P254.9 billion during the first semester, posting a 24% growth from P206.3 billion the year prior. In turn, total assets climbed by a fifth to reach P309.6 billion from P257.4 billion a year ago.

The bank runs 389 branches and 576 automated teller machines nationwide as of June.

Shares in EastWest Bank picked up to P30.80 each yesterday, up 1.32% from P30.40 apiece during Aug. 31.  Melissa Luz T. Lopez

Building trust amidst uncertainty

Uncertainty is the new normal. Greater public demands, extreme vigilantism with our smart phones, and the rise of fake news have created a fearful, anxious society that is constantly uncertain of others’ motives, of political and market outcomes, of the truth.

In a world where a crisis of trust prevails, Filipinos are, ever surprisingly, showing increasing trust for institutions, including the government, business, and the Church. These institutions have seen an unprecedented spike in trust levels, according to the Philippine Trust Index (PTI) 2017, EON Group’s proprietary research, which tracks trust levels of Filipinos for key institutions.

This is a direct contradiction of the findings of EON’s longtime affiliate, global PR agency Edelman, that people around the world have become more skeptical of society’s key institutions amidst the disruptions that have played out in the global stage. In the Philippines, the opposite is happening, showing that trust-building is truly a unique, dynamic process that plays out differently in various contexts, with equally unique drivers.

TRUST INDEX HIGHLIGHTS
Let’s examine how the results of the PTI 2017 bear this out.

For the fourth straight year, the Church remained as the most trusted institution, with a trust level of 93%, a position it has kept since the PTI started in 2012, and just a point lower than its highest recorded rating. In fact, Filipinos’ trust in almost all key institutions continued to rise, with business (75), the government (80), academe (93), and NGOs (59) logging their highest trust levels.

It is worth pointing out that two institutions saw huge jumps in their trust levels.

One is the government, with an unprecedented increment of 30 percentage points (PP), overtaking the trust ratings of media and NGOs. Among government sub-institutions, the Office of the President commanded the highest trust level of 82 PP, with 39 PP saying they have extreme trust for the office. This is hardly surprising, given that President Duterte has consistently logged very high satisfaction ratings in all surveys. Filipinos also have the highest trust levels for those agencies that they interact with frequently — PhilHealth, SSS, and the Department of Education.

The second is the business sector, with an extraordinary 20-PP jump. Business sectors that had the highest trust levels are health services, food and beverage, pharmaceuticals, energy and power, and telecommunications.

WHAT DRIVES TRUST?
Since it is not too often that these big jumps happen, it’s worth examining the drivers that allowed the government and business to build and cultivate trust.

Respondents of the PTI were asked what made them trust an institution. They said that they trust the government when it takes steps to improve their lives in concrete ways, such as by putting corrupt officials in jail, preparing communities for disasters, ensuring national peace and security, providing better job opportunities, and helping the poor access basic needs. They are less concerned about issues such as meeting tax collections, industry development, or preservation of Filipino culture.

For the government, the message is thus clear: it has to take measures that impact people’s lives directly. That means people have to feel safe in their homes and in the streets. They should have their basic needs addressed, gain access to job opportunities, and see actions that have a real meaning in their daily existence.

For businesses, the PTI has shown time and again that Filipinos trust those companies that treat their people well. Three of the five most important drivers of trust in this institution are tied to employee welfare, like providing good salaries and benefits as well as cultivating a fair and non-discriminatory workplace, while the other two are hinged on good customer service.

What this suggests is that companies need to cultivate their greatest asset — their people — while pursuing profitability and ensuring customer excellence at the same time.

INSIGHTS ON TRUST-BUILDING
From a larger perspective, the PTI 2017 findings underscore three important lessons about trust building.

First, trust is built through repeated and regular interactions.

People can only truly trust what they know and understand — whether it’s a government that is able to throw a corrupt politician to jail or a business organization that treats its employees fairly. People will also trust those organizations that they interact with the most, underlining the need for institutions to engage meaningfully with their stakeholders. This starts with knowing what your stakeholders want and need, their priorities and thresholds, their dreams and aspirations, and then to connect with them in ways that add value to their lives.

Second, good communication is important.

People need stories and information that they can understand and relate to. They won’t embrace anything, no matter how lofty, if they cannot understand it. This is why it’s important to talk about people — what matters to them; how their lives have changed. Tell good stories because these are what people truly remember and often turn into affinity for your brand.

Third, institutions need to take charge of online conversations surrounding their brand.

Without a doubt, traditional media is important in building credibility and reaching a wider audience, but this year’s PTI discovered that Filipinos online actually trust social media more than media as an institution. This clearly means that it is critical for organizations to engage stakeholders using digital communications and pay attention to building their digital reputations.

Trust, though, is not an end-all and a be-all.

It is not enough to cultivate trust for a single brand, organization, institution or prominent personality. We also need greater trust in each other — trust that is built through inclusive, respectful, and meaningful interactions. As leaders in our own organizations, communities or institutions, we all have a responsibility to use our trust and influence in upholding truth for good. After all, these trust ratings are not proof that we do well and do good, but only that we are perceived to do so. And sadly, perceptions are not always aligned with reality.

Let’s take these trust ratings not as a pat on our back for a job well done or a sense of security that might lull us into complacency, but as a burden of responsibility.

Junie S. del Mundo is the Chair of the M.A.P. CEO Conference Committee and the CEO of the EON Group, a fully integrated communications agency. EON Group also spearheads thought leadership initiatives including the PTI, a multi-awarded proprietary research that looks into Filipinos’ trust in society’s institutions.

For more information about the latest PTI, e-mail

researchandanalytics@eon.com.ph.

map@map.org.ph

junie.delmundo@eon.com.ph

http://map.org.ph

Taiwan’s unpopular premier Lin resigns

TAIPEI — Taiwan’s Premier Lin Chuan resigned on Monday in a move aimed at reviving dwindling public support for the government of President Tsai Ing-wen.

Ms. Tsai’s office announced in a statement that Mr. Lin tendered his resignation on Sunday, saying that he had “accomplished his periodic tasks,” and it was approved by the president.

Speculation was rife that Mr. Lin would be replaced. The government’s popularity has been hit by a series of controversial policies, ranging from holiday cuts to pension reforms, as well as by worsening relations with China.

Beijing has cut all official communication with Ms. Tsai’s government since she took office in May last year. Her Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), which traditionally leans towards declaring formal independence from China, has refused officially to accept that Taiwan is part of One China.

Ms. Tsai’s popularity has been dropping from a high of nearly 70% when she took power to below 30% in several recent polls, with some in the DPP blaming the unpopular premier for dragging down her support.

In a TVBS poll released last month, Mr. Lin’s support fell to a record low of 19%, while 44% said he should be replaced against 26% who said he should stay.

“I am happy that somebody will take over the heavy burden and I’m grateful that somebody is willing to do that… I’ll accept the criticisms that are reasonable,” Mr. Lin told reporters when asked about his low public support.

Lin, an economist and former finance minister, was rumored to become the next governor of Taiwan’s central bank. But he said Monday that he has no plans to take any government post in the future.

His replacement will be announced on Tuesday. There has been widespread speculation that the popular mayor of the southern city of Tainan, William Lai, will take over. — AFP

Matobato to push for Duterte’s inclusion in death squad case

SELF-CONFESSED killer Edgar Matobato will petition the Office of the Ombudsman to include President Rodrigo R. Duterte in the cases he filed against the alleged Davao Death Squad (DDS), his legal counsel said. Lawyer Jude Josue Sabio said they will “challenge the Ombudsman (for its) failure to include (Mr.) Duterte in the cases” after the agency did not include the president in the charges as he is immune from prosecution due to his position. Mr. Sabio argued that the inclusion of the president is possible because he allegedly committed the crimes not as president but as mayor of Davao City. On Dec. 9 last year, Mr. Matobato filed before the Ombudsman two cases against the group, including Mr. Duterte, for the kidnapping and murder of soldier Gaudencio Bersabal and the murder of broadcaster Juan Pala. The Office of the Ombudsman, however, excluded the president when it required those named in the cases to submit their counter-affidavits. Mr. Matobato claims that it was in 1998 when Mr. Duterte, then mayor of the city, formed a group of killers whose targets were criminals. The so-called DDS, he said, killed about 1,000 individuals between 1998 and 2013. The cases stemmed from the testimony of Mr. Matobato before the Senate. However, the Senate has dismissed his claims after he failed to substantiate his allegations and made contradicting statements. — Carmelito Q. Francisco

URC inks deal to allow Passi City to build a road on its property

UNIVERSAL ROBINA Corp. (URC) is allowing the Passi City government in Iloilo province to use part of its property to build a road leading to a proposed economic zone.

In a statement on Monday, the Gokongwei-led food and beverage firm said it signed the deed with the Passi City Mayor Jesry T. Palmares, giving the city government the “right and privilege” to use 40,329-square meters of URC’s property for the road.

“This is our way of giving back to a community that has been a gracious and generous host to us. It is our hope that through this effort, Passi City can achieve its goals to bring growth and prosperity to its population,” URC President and Chief Executive Officer Lance Y. Gokongwei was quoted as saying in a statement. 

Under the deal, URC will remain to be the owner of the property, which in turn will be maintained and repaired by the city government. The agreement will also exclude URC from paying real property taxes on the parcel of land.

“It’s going to be a major artery that this road will bring about in the heart of Panay Island. It will make the flow of all transports connecting Iloilo, Capiz, Aklan and Northern Antique more feasible,” Mr. Palmares said.

Passi City is primarily an agricultural town, which produces sugarcane, rice, and pineapple. The development of an economic zone within the area would help spread growth from urban centers to farm-dependent regions.

Shares in URC added P3.9 or 2.67% to close at P150 each on Monday. — Arra B. Francia

Mango industry road map hopes to reverse stagnating output, Agri dep’t says

THE Department of Agriculture said a five-year road map to develop the mango industry is due for completion by year’s end.

“The Road Map is expected to be finished before the end of the year and will outline the programs to be implemented so that the country will regain its status as the producer of the best mango in the world,” said Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel F. Piñol in a social media post on Monday.

The road map will include the input of five regional consultations conducted under the High Value Crops Program aimed at rehabilitating the mango industry.

The agency said that mango output in the Philippines has been declining amid increasing demand for the fruit worldwide.

Data from the Philippine Statistics Authority show that mango production declined to 814,000 metric tons (MT) from 902,700 MT in 2016.

Since at least 2011, however, the production of the fruit has been generally rising. That year output was 788,100 MT.

In the first three months of the year, production of mango fell 8% year on year to 107,830 MT due to infestation from the capsid bug and cecid fly in Zambales which resulted in poor fruit quality and premature fruit drop.

Mango is one of the leading export commodities of the Philippines. — Janina C. Lim

Hitman shrugs off box-office doldrums in US to stay on top

LOS ANGELES – For the third consecutive weekend The Hitman’s Bodyguard was the top film in North American box offices, but the cinematic scene remained deep in the summer doldrums, website Exhibitor Relations reported Sunday.

The US Labor Day weekend was shaping up to be the worst in 17 years, industry watchers said, noting the lack of any major new releases. But Lionsgate’s Hitman managed to take in an estimated $10.3 million for the Friday-to-Sunday period, the only movie this summer to cling to the top for three straight weeks.

The action comedy, starring Ryan Reynolds as a bodyguard protecting a notorious hitman (Samuel L. Jackson), outperformed Warner Bros.’s horror film Annabelle: Creation for the second straight week.

Annabelle, part of the popular Conjuring franchise of movies, took in $7.3 million, giving it a shot at passing the $100-million mark domestically, Web site boxofficemojo said.

Crime thriller Wind River from Weinstein Co. came in third, taking in an estimated $5.9 million, up from the previous week’s $4.4 million. It stars Jeremy Renner and Elizabeth Olsen as federal agents trying to solve a murder on an Indian reservation.

In fourth, also from the Weinstein brothers, was the animated family picture Leap! about a young orphan, voiced by Elle Fanning, who dreams of becoming a ballet dancer in 19th century Paris. It netted $4.9 million.

Staying steady at fifth was Steven Soderbergh’s droll action film Logan Lucky, which for the second straight week netted $4.4 million. It stars Channing Tatum, Adam Driver and Riley Keough in an unconventional heist comedy set at a NASCAR race in North Carolina.

Rounding out the top 10 were: Dunkirk ($4.1 million); Spider-Man: Homecoming ($3.7 million); The Emoji Movie ($2.5 million); Despicable Me 3 ($2.4 million); and, Girls Trip ($2.3 million). – AFP

Marvel’s Inhumans makes television history

LOS ANGELES – Superhero show Marvel’s Inhumans will make history on Friday when it becomes the first television series to debut in IMAX theaters before its broadcast premiere.

The first two episodes of ABC’s collaboration with the Disney-owned movie studio have been converted into a 75-minute feature that includes scenes shot on IMAX cameras “that are simply extraordinary and should be seen on that screen,” according to executive producer Jeph Loeb.

The episodes will then air on small screens on Sept. 29 at their full length for a combined running time of 84 minutes.

Marvel’s Inhumans is based on the comic book series by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby about a royal family of super-powered aliens from the Moon who are exiled to Hawaii.

It stars Anson Mount (Straw Dogs, Seal Team Six) as Black Bolt, the enigmatic, commanding king of the species who has a voice so powerful that even the slightest whisper can level a city.

Loeb was speaking at last month’s Television Critics Association Summer Press Tour in Beverly Hills, where studio executives were forced to defend themselves against criticism of the show’s look.

Based on an early version of the first episode made available to reviewers, journalists voiced concerns that it did not match Marvel’s usually high standards.

Among the complaints was the observation that the abilities of Ken Leung’s character Karnak were not clear, and that the visuals did not merit an IMAX release.

The criticism came after fans voiced disappointment on social media over the lackluster appearance of the wig worn by Medusa (Serinda Swan), shown in a trailer that dropped in June.

In the comics, Medusa’s hair moves independently of her body and can be used as extra limbs, but detractors have complained that the CGI used to depict it in the live action show just isn’t up to the job.

“I can tell you that… the show that you have seen is not the finished product,” Loeb said during a terse exchange with critics.

“So if you’re asking me whether or not it was done, it’s not.”

ABC Entertainment president Channing Dungey also defended the show, referring to the episode screened for critics as “a bit of a work in progress.”

Based on characters from Marvel Comics, the series was filmed in Hawaii earlier this year and shares continuity with the movies and other television series of the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

The focus is on the relationship between two brothers – Mount’s Black Bolt, and Maximus, portrayed by Iwan Rheon, who was the sadistic Ramsay Bolton in Game of Thrones.

More visually ostentatious than the grittier, more mature Marvel shows aired by Netflix – such as Luke Cage and Jessica Jones – Inhumans features a giant computer-generated dog which teleports its masters wherever they need to go. – AFP

Oliver Barbosa plays

6th Annual Washington International
Rockville, Maryland
Aug. 12-16, 2017

Final Top Standings
1. GM Oliver Barbosa PHL 2533, 7.0/9

2-4. GM Joshua Friedel USA 2536, GM Eugene Perelshteyn USA 2507, IM Yang Kaiqi CHN 2441, 6.5/9

5-13. GM Niclas Huschenbeth GER 2575, GM Evgeny Postny ISR 2570, GM Fabien Libiszewski FRA 2523, GM Carlos Hevia Alejano CUB 2497, IM John Burke USA 2489, GM Akshat Chandra USA 2480, GM Alexander Fishbein USA 2460, GM Denes Boros HUN 2452, IM Michael Song CAN 2419, 6.0/9

14-21. GM Samuel Sevian USA 2620, GM Mark Paragua PHL 2500, GM Darwin Yang USA 2493, IM Prasanna Rao IND 2455, IM Nicolas Checa USA 2454, IM Prav Balakrishnan USA 2427, IM Rolando Nolte PHL 2394, IM Michael Mulyar USA 2393, 5.5/9

Total of 75 Participants

Time Control: 90 minutes for 40 moves, followed by 20 minutes to the end of the game, with a 30-second increment from move 1

GM Oliver sent me this game from the 6th Annual Washington International with his notes. I believe after going through the game he might be one of the country’s best annotators — his depth and insight into the nuances of the position which he shares with the reader are very impressive!

Barbosa’s opponent in the next game, IM Raja Panjwani (24 years old), is Indian by blood but born and raised in Canada — his parents were working in Kuwait at the time of the 1st Gulf War and they moved to Canada before Panjwani was born. He has an undergraduate degree in physics and philosophy, a Masters degree in Philosophy of Physics from Oxford and currently attends a Master’s program in International and Development Economics at Yale University. In the midst of all of those studies he has managed to rise up to no. 16 in Canada.

* * *
Barbosa, Oliver (2533) — Panjwani, Raja (2408) [A45]
Washington international (5), 14.08.2017

This game was played after my loss to GM Chandra so I needed to bounce back from that.

1.d4 Nf6 2.Bg5

The Trompowsky, an opening used to avoid most of the main lines and to quickly steer the enemy from well-known lines.

2…e6 3.e4

After 3.Nd2 we transpose to the Torre Attack. By the way, this opening is named after Carlos Torre of Mexico who beat former world champion Emanuel Lasker with the famous “Windmill Attack” in the great Moscow Tournament of 1925. It is not named after the Philippine’s El Eugenio, although it might as well be for GM Eugene plays it a lot and has a very good score with it even during the time when it was not so popular. Philippine chess journalist Bobby Ang once told me that one day he will write about this. I hope he does!

3…h6 4.Bxf6 Qxf6 5.c3

[5.Nf3 d5 6.e5 Qd8 7.c3 c5 8.Bd3 I don’t think black has a problem in this position, he has equality and all he has to do is do something to his light squared bishop]

5…d6

[5…d5 6.Nd2 c5 7.Ngf3 Nc6 8.Bb5 cxd4 9.cxd4 Bb4 10.a3 Ba5 11.0–0 0–0 12.e5 Qe7 13.Bxc6 bxc6 becomes a battle of 2 knights vs. 2 bishops. Black would probably try to open up the position while white should strive to keep it closed]

6.Bd3 Nd7 7.Ne2

The best square for the knight you’ll see the idea of this move later.

7…g6 8.0–0 Bg7 9.f4

With the knight on e2, f2–f4 is possible immediately grabbing space and trying to start an attack on the center or the kingside.

9…Qe7 10.e5

[10.Nd2 e5 11.Nf3 0–0 12.Qd2 b6 13.Rae1 Bb7 black has a solid formation and only needs to develop his rook before coming up with a plan to put pressure on white’s center]

10…b6

[10…dxe5 11.fxe5 helps white open up the f-file for his rook; 10…d5 11.Nd2 0–0 12.c4 white should have the advantage here due to his grip on the center and as this is a closed position, the 2 knights should be better than the 2 bishops]

11.a4N

A new move, undermining black’s queenside formation. The idea of this move is to create pressure if possible against black’s queenside. If black plays a5, then the b5 square will be weak and if black tries to cover it by playing c6, then it further exposes the outpost on the d6 square.

11…a6 12.Nd2 Bb7 13.Ng3

I played this move rather quickly. I saw some ideas of playing f5 followed by a piece sacrifice. I’d say this is a psychological ploy to scare him into castling. That way I would be able to direct my pieces towards where his king would be.

13…0–0 14.Nc4

Now black’s c pawn cannot move and won’t be able to generate counterplay to my center as it would expose the d6 square.

14…dxe5?

This move allows white to open up the file. After 15.fxe5 there is no way for black to start putting pressure on white’s center. For example he plays c5, then the d6 square is exposed. If on the other hand he plays f6 then the e6 and g6 pawns becomes weaknesses.

15.fxe5 Rad8 16.Qe2 Nb8 17.Ne4

Centralization! f6 and d6 squares are weak.

17…Bxe4

A sad move to make exchanging his only active piece because It’s going to be more dangerous if he allows Nf6.

18.Qxe4 b5?

Gets rid of black’s weakness but also makes the c5 square an outpost. 18…c5 is the only way to generate some counterplay on white’s center and queenside. 19.Nxb6 cxd4 20.cxd4 Qb4 21.Nc4 Rd5 with counterplay.

19.axb5 axb5 20.Na5 Rd5?

Again 20…c5 is the best chance he has to put pressure on my center. 21.Nb7 Rd5 22.Nxc5 Rxc5 23.dxc5 Qxc5+ 24.Kh1 Nc6 with some chances.

21.b4!

Fixing the queenside pawn structure. Only way he can break my center is to play f6 which would weaken his e6 and g6 pawns.

21…Qg5 22.Bc2 Nd7 23.Nc6

[23.Bb3 Wins the exchange but of course a threat is stronger than it’s execution. Also it would give him some air to breathe so I played a different move which restricts him more]

23…Nb6 24.h4 Qd2 <D>

POSITION AFTER 24…QD2

Find the win!

25.Rf3

Inaccurate! More to the point was 25.Ne7+ Kh8 26.Nxg6+ fxg6 27.Qxg6 Rf5 28.Rxf5 exf5 (28…Qxc2 29.Rf8+) 29.Qe8+ checkmate is coming.

25…h5 26.Ne7+ Kh8 27.Raf1

Everyone should be invited to the party!

27…Nd7 28.Nxd5

[28.Rxf7 Rxf7 29.Rxf7 Qh6 30.Nxd5 exd5 31.Qxg6 is another way]

28…exd5 29.Qd3 Qxd3 30.Bxd3 1–0

To complete the picture here is the complete “windmill attack” that GM Oliver refers to in his comments.

* * *
Torre Repetto, Carlos — Lasker, Emanuel [A46]
Moscow International–01 Moscow (12), 25.11.1925

1.d4 Nf6 2.Nf3 e6 3.Bg5 c5 4.e3 cxd4 5.exd4 Be7 6.Nbd2 d6 7.c3 Nbd7 8.Bd3 b6 9.Nc4 Bb7 10.Qe2 Qc7 11.0–0 0–0 12.Rfe1 Rfe8 13.Rad1 Nf8 14.Bc1 Nd5 15.Ng5 b5 16.Na3 b4 17.cxb4 Nxb4 18.Qh5 Bxg5 19.Bxg5 Nxd3 20.Rxd3 Qa5 21.b4!? Qf5 22.Rg3 h6

Not to spoil the brilliancy, but 22…f6! is correct, after which Black is better.

23.Nc4 Qd5 24.Ne3 Qb5 25.Bf6!

Bogoljubow: One of the most famous chess combinations in history!

25…Qxh5 26.Rxg7+

[Now we get to see the windmill.]

26…Kh8 27.Rxf7+ Kg8 28.Rg7+ Kh8 29.Rxb7+ Kg8 30.Rg7+ Kh8 31.Rg5+ Kh7 32.Rxh5 Kg6 33.Rh3 Kxf6 34.Rxh6+ Kg5 35.Rh3 Reb8 36.Rg3+ Kf6 37.Rf3+ Kg6 38.a3 a5 39.bxa5 Rxa5 40.Nc4 Rd5 41.Rf4 Nd7 42.Rxe6+ Kg5 43.g3 1–0

Bobby Ang is a founding member of the National Chess Federation of the Philippines (NCFP) and its first Executive Director. A Certified Public Accountant (CPA), he taught accounting in the University of Santo Tomas (UST) for 25 years and is currently Chief Audit Executive of the Equicom Group of Companies.

bobby@cpamd.net

Peso ends flat on profit taking

THE PESO moved sideways yesterday amid mixed global developments, which was capped by profit taking as well as quiet trading as financial markets in the United States went on a holiday.

The local unit closed at P51.165 versus the dollar on Monday, barely changed from the P51.17 rate logged last Aug. 31.

The peso opened weaker at P51.20 against the greenback and even touched P51.25 as its intraday trough. It hit P51.15 as its best showing for the day.

Traders interviewed yesterday attributed the exchange rate movement to “mixed signals” from abroad, with the initial weakness drawn from geopolitical tensions in the Korean peninsula.

“The peso traded higher this morning on the back of increasing tensions in Korea. From there, trading was quiet,” one trader said in a phone interview on Monday.

North Korea conducted its sixth and most powerful nuclear test on Sunday as it reportedly detonated an advanced hydrogen bomb for a long-range missile, Reuters said in a report, which was initially thought to be a strong earthquake. Foreign countries including the US condemned Pyongyang’s latest actions, which intensified global tensions.

Most Asian currencies were largely subdued on Monday, with the exception of the won, after North Korea’s bomb test.

The trader noted that the quiet trading also came as US financial markets remain closed on Monday in observance of Labor Day.

Dollars traded on Monday totalled $428.65 million, lower than the $494.5 million that exchanged hands the previous day.

“The peso opened weaker due to North Korea’s nuclear program, but the decline was minimal due to downbeat US labor reports last Friday. Profit taking finally gave the peso a slight end-of-day gain,” a second trader added.

The US Labor Department reported that the economy created 156,000 new jobs last month. The economy created 399,000 jobs in June and July.

On the other hand, unemployment went up to 4.4% while average hourly earnings rose three cents or 0.1% after advancing 0.3% in July.

The first trader expects the peso to trade within P51-P51.30 against the dollar today, with developments in North Korea as well as upcoming policy decisions by the European Central Bank and the Reserve Bank of Australia to drive market dynamics.

On the other hand, the second trader sees the local currency trading within P51.05 to P51.25 versus the greenback. — Melissa Luz T. Lopez with Reuters

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