Quizon slays super GM, but Team PH falters in Budapest


At a glance

  • International Master Daniel Quizon provided the lone light in the darkest of nights for the Philippines after he shell-shocked super Grandmaster Dimitrij Kollars in a stinging 3-1 defeat to Germany in Thursday night’s second round of the 45th FIDE Chess Olympiad at the BOK Sports Hall here.


BUDAPEST -- International Master Daniel Quizon provided the lone light in the darkest of nights for the Philippines after he shell-shocked super Grandmaster Dimitrij Kollars in a stinging 3-1 defeat to Germany in Thursday night’s second round of the 45th FIDE Chess Olympiad at the BOK Sports Hall here.

d0180032-9031-4666-9c88-7ab12ee083eb.jpeg
IM Daniel Quizon, left, and GM Dimitrii Kolllars (FIDE photos)

Quizon’s win—a 54-move result of a Sicilian duel—on top board was the silver lining to what was a bleak day for the Filipinos, whose women’s squad also stumbled in a stinging 3.5-.5 defeat to the powerhouse Americans.

It was a triumph that saw the 20-year-old World Cup veteran, whose trip is bankrolled by the Philippine Sports Commission through chair Richard Bachmann and commissioner Ed Hayco and National Chess Federation of the Philippines chief Butch Pichay, transformed what appeared like a losing position into what turned out as one of the biggest upsets of the round.

“Kumapit lang po ako at hindi nawalan ng pagasa,” said the soft-spoken Quizon, who donned the same lucky black and reversible nylon jacket that helped him tie for first in a super-strong meet in Abu Dhabi early this month.

It also pushed the two-time national champion just two rating points away from breaching the 2500 plateau and claiming the GM title outright after his elo rating jumped to 2498.

Quizon is expected to suit up against Montenegro on board two in the third round in a game where United States-based GM Julio Catalino Sadorra is finally going to suit up on top board after missing the first two days due to previous commitments.

It could have been a better result for the Filipinos though as IM Paulo Bersamina, GM John Paul Gomez all had drawing chances but could not consummate it and succumbed to GMs Matthias Bluebaum, Alexander Donchenko and Frederik Svane, respectively.

Same with the Filipinas, who appeared poised to slay the heavily favored Americans before WGM Janelle Mae Frayna and 16-year-old sensation Ruelle Canino painfully blundered away their winning chances and fell to IMs Carissa Yip and Anna Zatonskih on boards two and four.

WIM Jan Jodilyn Fronda battled a cramped position from early on before eventually losing to IM Alice Lee on board three after the former’s time ran out.

Woman FIDE Master Shania Mae Mendoza averted an embarrassing shutout by holding her own against IM Gulrukhbegim Tohirjonova and escaped with a marathon 74-move draw of a Center-counter duel.

“Sayang ang dami nating chances hindi na-convert,” said an exasperated national women’s coach GM Jayson Gonzales, whose charges were scheduled to collide with Jordan—a 4-0 winner over Malawi—next.