In 1993, he received his first international FIDE rating of 2255. During the same year he finished seventh in the European Under-14 Championship.[1] Williams regularly participated in youth tournaments throughout the 1990s, finishing seventh in the 1997 European Under-20 Championship[2] and finishing second in the Smith and Williamson Young Masters in 1998.[3]
Williams vs. Simons, Scarborough 1999edit
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Final position, with Black to move
Williams competed in the 1999 British Chess Championship, held in Scarborough and won by Julian Hodgson. By the time of the tournament's later rounds, Williams had been eliminated from contention for the championship. He, therefore, chose to play the Hammerschlag (1.f3 e5 2.Kf2) in a game against Martin Simons, a very unusual and "inferior" opening which needlessly exposes White's king to immediate attack. Williams won the game, and it has since been noted as successful use of a disadvantageous opening.[4] Playing an intentionally disadvantageous opening could be considered showboating and fall under rules of poor sportsmanship, especially in a round-robin tournament.
Following White's initial self-imposed handicap, Black established a straightforward pawn centre. White then equalized the position over the next several moves. On the fourteenth move, White activated his bishop pair; however, the players traded all of their bishops on the sixteenth and seventeenth moves. On the thirtieth move, the players traded queens. In the final position, White was up two pawns, with multiple immediate checking threats.
He became a Grandmaster in 2008, achieving the final norm at the Hastings International Chess Congress 2005/2006 and the 2500+ rating at Hastings 2007/2008.[6] His peak rating so far is 2550, achieved in November 2009. In 2009, he organised the Big Slick International in Purley, London, which comprised an invitational GM tournament and FIDE Rated Open.
National performanceedit
In 2003, he finished seventh at the British Chess Championship.[7] Williams later improved his performance in the tournament, finishing equal second in 2009.[8]
International performanceedit
In 2009, Williams finished equal first at the Southend Chess Congress all-play-all tournament.[9]
He was joint winner with Gawain Jones of the London Chess Classic FIDE Rated Open in December 2010, with a rating performance of 2690.
Blitz and rapidplayedit
In 2005, he won the British Blitz Championship.
Chess commentaryedit
Williams works as a chess commentator at tournaments and through online streaming. Most notably, he has provided official commentary at the Gibraltar Chess Festival alongside Irina Krush, Elisabeth Pähtz in 2016 and Jovanka Houska in 2017 and 2018. He has covered a number of other tournaments for ChessBase and Chess.com. Williams also maintains a YouTube channel where he uploads blitz chess games with commentary as well as analysis of his previous games. He has also given commentary on the Chess.com Isle of Man tournament.
Chess publication companyedit
In 2008, he founded a chess media publishing company called "GingerGM" with International Master Simon Ansell. The company produces print books, ebooks and DVDs.
Pension companyedit
Williams was director of the company SKW Investments, which was implicated by HM Revenue and Customs in a pension liberation scheme. Williams said his role was "purely administrative", that he "did not understand the responsibilities required" and that he regretted involvement. The Deputy Pensions Ombudsman ordered him to repay roughly £700,000 into the scheme.[10][11][12]
Worksedit
Booksedit
Williams, Simon (2003). Play The Classical Dutch. Gambit Publications. ISBN 978-1-901983-88-3.
Williams, Simon (2004). Improve Your Attacking Chess. Gambit Publications. ISBN 978-1-904600-09-1.
Williams, Simon (2008). How To Crush Your Chess Opponents. Gambit Publications. ISBN 978-1-904600-99-2.
Williams, Simon (2009). The New Sicilian Dragon. Everyman Chess. ISBN 978-1-85744-615-9.
Williams, Simon (2010). How To Win At Chess - Quickly!. Everyman Chess. ISBN 978-1-85744-631-9.
Palliser, Richard; Williams, Simon; Vigus, James (2010). Dangerous Weapons: The Dutch. Everyman Chess. ISBN 978-1-85744-624-1.
Williams, Simon (2011). Attacking Chess: The French: A Dynamic Repertoire for Black. Everyman Chess. ISBN 978-1857446463.
Williams, Simon (2011). SOS – Secrets of Opening Surprises 13 – Chapter 3 – The Williams Anti-Grunfeld Variation. New in Chess. ISBN 978-90-5691-341-0.
Williams, Simon (2011). SOS – Secrets of Opening Surprises 14 – Chapter 4 – Kings Gambit: Tartakower Variation. New In Chess. ISBN 978-90-5691-366-3.
Williams, Simon (2013). Killer Dutch - The Book. GingerGM and EPlus Books. ISBN 978-1-927179-15-4.
Williams, Simon (2015). The Killer Dutch. Everyman Chess. ISBN 9781781942420.
DVDsedit
Williams, Simon (2009). The Killer Dutch (DVD). United Kingdom: GingerGM.
Williams, Simon (2010). The Killer French Volume 1 (DVD). United Kingdom: GingerGM.
Williams, Simon (2010). The Killer French Volume 2 (DVD). United Kingdom: GingerGM.
Williams, Simon (2011). The Killer Dragon Volume 1 (DVD). United Kingdom: GingerGM.
Williams, Simon (2011). The Killer Dragon Volume 2 (DVD). United Kingdom: GingerGM.
Williams, Simon (2012). Play Like Tal (DVD). United Kingdom: GingerGM.
Williams, Simon (2012). Crash Test Chess Volume 1 Using The Initiative (DVD). United Kingdom: GingerGM.
Williams, Simon (2012). Crash Test Chess Volume 2 Thinking Outside The Box (DVD). United Kingdom: GingerGM.
Williams, Simon (2014). King's Gambit Volume 1 and 2 (DVD). Hamburg: Chessbase.
Williams, Simon (2017). The London System with 2.Bf4 (DVD). Hamburg: Chessbase.