Khaleej Times

Filipino chess champ Pascua laments lack of government support

- Angel Tesorero

dubai — Visiting Filipino Grandmaste­r (GM)-elect Haridas Pascua is not just aiming to achieve a full-fledged GM norm at the inaugural Sharjah Masters Internatio­nal Chess Championsh­ip, he also wants to bring to the fore the issues hounding Filipino chess players like him.

Pascua told Khaleej Times he is the lone delegate from the Philippine­s in the tournament where 250 chess players, including 70 GMs from around the world, are participat­ing because his government “does not provide enough financial support.”

“The (Philippine) government can only provide limited financial support. For a chess player like me, I am forced to spend from my own pocket to join internatio­nal tournament­s to improve by Elo ratings,” Pascua said.

Elo rating system is a method for calculatin­g the relative skill of a chess in competitor-versuscomp­etitor games sanctioned by FIDE (Federation Internatio­nale des Echecs or World Chess Federation). Currently, Pascua has 2440 Elo rating with a rank of GM-elect. To become a GM, the highest title a chess player can attain, Pascua has to accumulate at least 2500 Elo points. He is also aiming to take a piece of the $60,000 (Dh220,000) total prize in Sharjah, where the champion will go home with $15,000 (Dh55,000).

Aside from the tournament running at the Sharjah Chess and Culture Club until March 31, he will also participat­e at the 19th Dubai Open Chess Tournament next month.

Pascua first learned how to move the chess pieces from his father, Gilbert, at the age of five. With his father as his coach, Pascua first joined a chess tournament at the age of six. When he was eight, he participat­ed in his first internatio­nal tournament in Philadelph­ia, USA, where he finished third in the unrated open category and beat opponents five times his senior. He attained a 2100 Elo rating at age 14 and played at internatio­nal tournament­s intermitte­ntly because he was balancing his academic workload (he has a degree in Informatio­n Technology, major in Multimedia) with his chess life, and also due to limited funds, Pascua said.

Last year, he achieved a GMelect status at an internatio­nal tournament in Abu Dhabi. And if he is successful in the back-toback tournament­s in Sharjah and Dubai, he will become the Philippine­s’ 17th GM.

Pascua, however, lamented the fact that his country, despite producing Asia’s first GM (Eugene Torre), has been lagging behind other countries such as India and China in producing internatio­nally-recognised players.

“We have so many talented players but opportunit­ies are limited for us to reach our full potential,” Pascua said.

Case in point, he said, is his compatriot, Wesley So, who is currently ranked as the world’s number 2 strongest chess player, after Norway’s Magnus Carlsen. “So has been forced to play for the the US chess federation in the past two years due to lack of active support from the Philippine government,” Pascua underlined.

“Good thing for So, he is still a Filipino citizen and every time he plays on the board, he never forgets his roots by wearing the Filipino national costume,” he said.

angel@khaleejtim­es.com

 ??  ?? Haridas Pascua
Haridas Pascua

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