Scrabble: Day 3 King’s Cup 2007

24 June 2007 by sonicrick78

(this was typed at the end of Day 3, but only now I have time to post it. Day 4 is almost over) 

Day 3 ends with the familiar situation of Nigel Richards taking his customary sole occupant of top position. After 20 rounds he led the field with 15-5, one clear of a pack of 5 Thais on 14-6. Nigel was at one point 2 points clear, but in the last group of 3, he apparently lost twice (I don’t have details on whom to).

The Thais were fighting hard with extra stake at hand: the two top Thai finishers will qualify for WSC. Atiruth Sandiyakorn, current Thai no. 3, had qualified in an earlier tournament, and must be thankful he did not need to worry that he was stranded at 24th spot (albeit with a huge spread).

I neglected to mention another young Thai yesterday in the list of up-and-coming players: Noppadol D. The oversight was because he already played in the year before, but this year seemed to be his breakout year, winning 8 straight over day 2 and 3 to stake a place at no. 15. He ended the day with a win over Gerry Carter (THA) to stay within reach of top 10. On the board there was a 10-letter word, LIGHTENERS, which came from Gerry’s LIGHT(EN)ER natural, and Noppadol played VIMS to it.

Noppadol is also in the hunt for a new prize category: the handicap prize. This year the organizers grouped people by rating and past results and assign them extra handicap, which will be added to their total number of points (2 points for each win). As a benchmark, there are only 3 people with 0 handicaps: Nigel, Pakorn, and Panupol. Noppadol has 12 points handicap. The current leader though is Chaiwat W, who swept his table of 3 which included Femi Awowade and Charnwit, to vault to 11th place. Chaiwat, a Thai WYSC representative, has a handicap of 16.

Femi’s run up was halted as he remained at no. 25 with 4-3 record today. He has a shot at top 10 still, since he was only 2 wins off the top 10-ers

Top 20 players up to round 20 below:

# Name Record Spread
1 NIGEL RICHARDS (NZ) 15 – 5 1282
2 PAKORN N. 14 – 6 1430
3 KOMOL P. 14 – 6 1133
4 JAKKRIT K. 14 – 6 872
5 THACHA K. 14 – 6 721
6 GERRY C. 14 – 6 708
7 NAWAPADOL S. 13 – 7 1193
8 TONY SIM (SING) 13 – 7 738
9 PANUPOL S. 13 – 7 666
10 CHEAH SH  (SING) 13 – 7 656
11 CHAIWAT W. 13 – 7 502
12 MARLON PRUDENCIO (PHI) 13 – 7 405
13 CHARNWIT S. 12 – 8 818
14 HUBERT WEE (SING) 12 – 8 679
15 NOPPADOL D. 12 – 8 581
16 ODETTE RIO (PHI) 12 – 8 482
17 MICHAEL TANG (SING) 12 – 8 387
18 ALASTAIR RICHARDS (AUS) 12 – 8 302
19 LEONORA LABOG  (PHI) 12 – 8 237
20 APIRAT C. 12 – 8 218

Scrabble: Day 1 and 2 King’s Cup 2007

23 June 2007 by sonicrick78

Day 2 of King’s Cup has just wrapped up, with 13 out of 27 rounds played. Lack of wifi access and charger for my laptop had prevented me from putting up any updates. But now that I have the necessary adapter, I should be able to update in the evening.

Several changes to the format: usually players are paired in groups of 4 to play 2 games, with Player 1 playing Player 2 and P3 playing P4, and then winners play each other and losers likewise and the next round. This year, there are alternating sets of 2 games and 3 games, where in the latter all 4 players in the group play each other. I haven’t managed to identify the pattern when sets of 2 or 3 would apply, but the sets of 3 have allowed people to catapult up by winning all 3 games in their group. Or plummeting by losing all 3.

Day 1 saw 5 rounds of action, and at the end of the day 3 people left unbeaten and all were Thai players: Jakkrit K, Thacha K, and Thien T.

Among the favourites who were upset in the first day, Pakorn N (THA) fell to Karen Richards (AUS) in the first round, Panupol (THA) fell to Thien. Thacha accounted for 2 big guns: Nigel Richards (NZ) and Charnwit S (THA) in games 4 and 5.

Day 2 ended with 5 people on top with 10-3 records: Pakorn, Komol, Panupol, Nigel, and Thitipol B.

Pakorn stormed to the top on the back of an 8-game win streak from round 5 to 12, including a 4 games sequence where he amassed 945 spread by scoring 609, 512, 525, and 579. He had 7 games above 500 out of 13 played so far.

Femi Awowade (NIG) had the misfortune of having his flight delayed in the first day, and hence missing the first four games, forfeiting all by a spread of 100 each. He arrived at the venue only in time to play and lose against Visan V (THA), hence starting far back in the field with 0-5. Today, having sufficiently recovered from jetlag, Femi was making up for lost time, winning 7 out of 8 and making his way up to the front tables. He will start tomorrow at 26th place, with the best spread among players with 7-6 records.

This King’s Cup saw the rise of a new generation of young Thai players. Led by Thai’s best placer in the recent World Youth Scrabble Championship, 16-year old Thacha K (who is now ranked 7 in Thailand), they were jostling for place with the more experienced player at the top. Some other WYSC reps who have surfaced at the top were Chaiwat W and Thanapong K. And there were also some non-WYSC rep like Weera S (Thai no. 8), and Thitipol B, who was being dubbed Nigel-killer for having beaten him twice in this tourney.

I unfortunately didn’t have time to walk around picking up interesting words to post, most of the time being busy ruing my own bad performance. Was 3-7 at one point, before winning last 3 games of day 2 to get to 6-7. Hopefully tomorrow will be better. Will post my own game when I’m back in Singapore.

Top 20 rank below. Michael Tang (SIN), Odette Rio (PHI), Marlon Prudencio (PHI) and Femi Awowade (NIG) are all just outside top 20.

# Name Record Spread
1 PAKORN N. 10 – 3 1342
2 KOMOL P. 10 – 3 1111
3 PANUPOL S. 10 – 3 961
4 NIGEL RICHARDS (NZ) 10 – 3 892
5 THITIPOL B. 10 – 3 175
6 NAWAPADOL S. 9 – 4 985
7 JAKKRIT K. 9 – 4 748
8 CHEAH SH  (SING) 9 – 4 708
9 THACHA K. 9 – 4 594
10 TONY SIM (SING) 9 – 4 356
11 GERRY C. 9 – 4 329
12 BRO.ARUN M. 9 – 4 4
13 LEONORA LABOG  (PHI) 9 – 4 2
14 ROONGROJ H. 8.5 – 4.5 208
15 WEERA S. 8 – 5 836
16 MARTIN DEMELLO (INDIA) 8 – 5 805
17 CHARNWIT S. 8 – 5 627
18 HUBERT WEE (SING) 8 – 5 559
19 KAREN RICHARDS (AUS) 8 – 5 437
20 CHEW HAN EI (SING) 8 – 5 435

Part Three

13 June 2007 by sonicrick78

This is the season for Threes. I don’t know what got into the Hollywood honcho’s heads at the same time, but there are so many Part-3 movies this time of the year that it’s really quirky. From those explictly pronouncing its third-ness (Spidey 3, Shrek 3, Rush Hour 3), to the coy (PotC: At World’s End, Ocean’s Thirteen, The Bourne Ultimatum). They even come in sets of threes. And the sequels which are not 3rd in their respective lines, there are 3 of them too: FF4: Rise of Silver Surfer, Live Free or Die Hard (aka Die Hard 4.0), and Harry Potter: Order of the Phoenix. That is, assuming Evan Almighty is not the sequel to Bruce Almighty, strictly speaking.

Well I guess this means next year summer will be a quiet one as the movie makers ran out of sequels :-) Seriously, Hollywood screenwriters seem to find it incredibly difficult to go beyond 3. Unless they can steal the idea conveniently from a book (aka Harry Potter). The past spawned some long running series like Star Trek, James Bond, the Nightmare on Elm Street series and Friday the 13th, but in recent years, can’t really recall something memorable running beyond 3.

History doesn’t back the studios stretching a series also. It seems to be reeeal difficult to go from 3 to 4. Look at the time between Die Hard 3 and 4; man, writing the new script took 12 years. Or Indiana Jones 4, which took even longer. But I guess they were just learning from experience. Those who have rushed the 4th installment quick often met their demise, or require many years before resurrecting the series without the number 4. Look at Superman and Batman; after their 4th respectively, they had to lay low for so long before a more respectable Superman Returns and Batman Begins breathed new life into the franchise. Look at Rocky IV; he restarted it with Rocky Balboa after how many years? Rambo too, took a long retirement before planning a return. Aliens died with Alien: Resurrection (Aliens versus Predators and its sequel end of this year don’t count as Aliens movie). 

I blame it all on Star Wars. They who perfected the art of first movie to test the interest, second movie where the good guys experience major setback, and the third part finale. Matrix trilogy, Lord Of the Rings, PotC, even X-Men to a certain degree,  have followed that formula.

Oh well, now to see who can first follow Star Wars to have a second run of series / trilogy jumpstarting interest. My money is on Batman, with The Dark Knight coming next year (oh well so there is still at least one sequel showing next year). Though I still can’t imagine Heath Ledger as the Joker. Brokeback Joker, cavorting with Two Face?

At the Garden by The Friends

12 June 2007 by sonicrick78

Thanks to the generosity of my Managing Director, my dearie and I had the opportunity to try out last week one of the premier dining places in Singapore: Au Jardin by Les Amis, nestled inside the Singapore Botanic Gardens.

From outside, the restaurant still maintained an old colonial look, carried over from the past by the architecture of the two-storey house it was located in. We were given a table on the second-floor balcony. Our section of balcony had only two tables, which were set in the corners and were meant to seat no more than two diners. The balcony faced out to a foliage of trees, but was encased in glass wall so you get aircon instead of the night air, and no insects. And we did get to watch the underbellies of houselizards making their way about on the glass wall without them coming too close to our food :-)

The service were personal and the wait staff friendly. After ordering our Riesling, we finally settled for the 9-course degustation menu. We constantly had something to keep our mouth busy while waiting for the food and watching the stars (at least my dearie’s watching the stars; she had the better seat offering trees and stars, rather than mine offering trees and pillars and houselizard underbelly).

First the seaweed canape, which was light, crisp, and good – with slight taste of fish/prawn cracker but lighter thinner version more comparable to Indonesian emping. Then we have the customary bread; we chose olive and walnut breads; there was one more offered but we didn’t try it and I can’t remember what it was. The walnut was quite flavourful and pleased her, while I in the end settled for the softer olive bread in the next servings. We were also served the amuse-bouche: fish (cod?) wrapped in fried coating, and an accompanying vial of celery and apple juice / foam. This was not on the menu, so I don’t really remember what fish it was. I don’t find the fish particularly special. The apple and celery concoction (not really concoction since the two remains quite visibly separate in the tube) was nice.

The first course was Tuna belly carpaccio with Oscietre (wondering whether this is French for Ossetra) caviar. It was delicious; tender flavourful slices with the caviar giving the nice salty bite to it.

Next was the Maine Lobster with apple jelly, white balsamic caramel. The apple jelly didn’t do anything for me, but I liked the lobster itself with just enough chewiness in the texture. The caramel was okay, but dearie didn’t quite like it.

The third dish, served on a hot glass plate, was the Dover sole meuniere with summer truffles, pea puree, enoki. The fish was again wonderful, especially so when it was still warm. The enoki was nice but having had enoki rather often I didn’t find anything outstanding for this version. The pea puree was nice with light taste that matches the fish. The truffle, well, I couldn’t really appreciate it. Perhaps I had too high expectation because of all the hype about truffle. It got thumbs up from dearie though, together with the fish. But all in all, the sole carried the entire dish wonderfully.

The steamed aubergine with bottarga and bonito bouillon was unique, but not really my type of food. Very fusion with the Japaneseness of the bonito on the palate, but the bottarga did not leave an impression. I am guessing it was more just to serve as a transition dish from seafood to land creatures.

Up next was grilled quail breast with leg confit, poached pear, lemon mustard vinaigrette. I love confit, so this dish couldn’t go wrong for me. My dearie was not enamoured with the leg, but the grilled breast did find her favour. For me, both were delicious, savoury, and enjoyable pieces of poultry.

Braised Wagyu short-ribs, roasted flank steak, morel mushrooms were the last main course to be served. We initially mistook the Wagyu for the flank, because we never expected Wagyu to be served in sauce (the braising), which to my dearie diminished the natural flavour of the meat, for which it is famed. I did not have refined enough a taste ;-/ and still enjoyed the Wagyu, and the flank steak. Some morsels of the Wagyu fat sat atop the tender tender meat, and those were good; almost melting in my mouth. The flank steak was good too, good enough that initially we mistook it for the Wagyu (again because we didn’t really expect the sauced one to be a Wagyu). The poor morels, despite holding their own well, were pretty much overshadowed by the beefier competitors on the plate.

The rest of the courses were dessert types. First, blood orange sorbet with tangerine foam. It was refreshing, but I couldn’t remember anything else about it. Then Guanaja chocolate with chantily, Muscat jelly. These were served in martini glasses, and didn’t look like chocolate at all. We couldn’t taste the chocolate either – in fact we couldn’t identify what was what. it was like a white cream with brown specks – I’m guessing the cream is chantily and the chocolate were those specks. My dearie passed hers for me to finish – this is the low point of the nice meal so far.

To round off the evening, we were served tea and mignardises: bite-sized trifles. Sweet but not really sweet enough to be called sweets. They were generally OK but nothing to shout about.

All in all it was a pleasant experience, good ambience with generally tasty food. But it also showed up the risk of degustation menu: the more dishes there are, the more likely something not to your taste will show up. Not that it will deter me from ordering degustations in the future :-)

Weighty matter

7 June 2007 by sonicrick78

Three weeks have passed since the medical check-up, since when I stepped up aerobic exercises (and sacrificing anaerobic ones), and eat healthier. Not healthy yet, but I haven’t touched any Indian food since. And only once Malay (and it was goooood).

And end of last week, my weight had dropped below 60kg again. Lost about 2-3 kg in 2 weeks, now 59.8kg. Gnah. All the hard work to put on those kilos, and in 2 weeks I lost them. So fleeting.

I think I am making many people seeth with anger and envy, so I shall stop. But hey, look at it from my eyes. The world loves irony.

Fat Boy Slim

27 May 2007 by sonicrick78

So the medical check-up said. I have fat above the normal range. And I’m still below my desired weight. I have high LDL / bad cholesterol.

I blame it on Indian and Malay food. I have been eating equally unhealthy Chinese hawker food as when I got wonderfully- low LDL and high HDL two years ago; the main change has been more steaks (but infrequent), larger portions especially after gym, and Indian food almost everytime I work overtime (by dint of the Indian stalls are the only one open that late around office).

And now I start watching my food. I feel old. Bye mutton biryanis, I’m gonna miss you.

Oasis

20 May 2007 by sonicrick78

Last week was a record-breaking week: I had my longest stretch of meetings. First meeting from 9am to 2pm, the meeting adjourned for lunch and I took the time to attend another meeting 2pm-3pm. Then it’s off to rejoin the first meeting as it resumed to 730pm (thankfully someone brought me lunch). 10.5 hours of meeting. Fortunately there was one hour dinner break before teleconference One at 830-930pm and teleconference Two 930-1130 pm. Productive day indeed.

Productive week demands unproductive steamletting. So this weekend was a short jaunt to unwind. And after this I can truly recommend Ritz-Carlton for great service. Now to earn enough to be able to experience it more …

And next week, back to hardscrabble worklife, and hard Scrabbling during Singapore Open weekend.

A Very Long Engagement

5 May 2007 by sonicrick78

Raising my head up above the trenches for a while. It’s been a week of skirmishes in the office after the suddent start of the current project. Have worked through the night to the next morning 3 times in the past week, with normal workday resuming after that for two of those. Coffee, Red Bull, and raisin bread (!) have become battleground ration.

But at least the initial fire is weathered, though it was not a victory (some things weren’t done), and I’m bruised and battered. Now time to consolidate and draw up the battle plan for the next 5 weeks, to the foreseen end of the battle. The initial efforts when we don’t have time to plan have been absolutely draining. And while on plans *sigh*all plans for Scrabble study prior to Singapore Open is now down the drain. Slaughter in the tourney, slaughter in office …

And after the six-week battle, depending on the battle outcome, this may escalate into a full-fledged war of a longer period. Sigh.

Bitter Old Man

30 April 2007 by sonicrick78

Colleague (as he left office): Happy Labour Day tomorrow man.

Me (as I looked at the agenda for the meeting tomorrow): Free-Labour Day you mean.

Mother Nature ain’t helping

29 April 2007 by sonicrick78

I sleep facing the window in my bedroom, because I would like to rely on the sunlight to wake me up in the morning should the alarm rings fail to rouse me.

I didn’t intend it for lightnings in a stormy night to keep flashing me back into consciousness when I really needed a sleep past midnight … lousy curtains ….